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Dive into the research topics where Domenico Salvatore is active.

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Featured researches published by Domenico Salvatore.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2008

Activation and inactivation of thyroid hormone by deiodinases: Local action with general consequences

Balázs Gereben; Anikó Zeöld; Monica Dentice; Domenico Salvatore; Antonio C. Bianco

Abstract.The thyroid hormone plays a fundamental role in the development, growth, and metabolic homeostasis in all vertebrates by affecting the expression of different sets of genes. A group of thioredoxin fold-containing selenoproteins known as deiodinases control thyroid hormone action by activating or inactivating the precursor molecule thyroxine that is secreted by the thyroid gland. These pathways ensure regulation of the availability of the biologically active molecule T3, which occurs in a time-and tissue-specific fashion. In addition, because cells and plasma are in equilibrium and deiodination affects central thyroid hormone regulation, these local deiodinase-mediated events can also affect systemic thyroid hormone economy, such as in the case of non-thyroidal illness. Heightened interest in the field has been generated following the discovery that the deiodinases can be a component in both the Sonic hedgehog signaling pathway and the TGR-5 signaling cascade, a G-protein-coupled receptor for bile acids. These new mechanisms involved in deiodinase regulation indicate that local thyroid hormone activation and inactivation play a much broader role than previously thought.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Sonic hedgehog-induced type 3 deiodinase blocks thyroid hormone action enhancing proliferation of normal and malignant keratinocytes

Monica Dentice; Cristina Luongo; Stephen A. Huang; Raffaele Ambrosio; Antonia Elefante; Delphine Mirebeau-Prunier; Ann Marie Zavacki; Gianfranco Fenzi; Marina Grachtchouk; Mark Hutchin; Andrzej A. Dlugosz; Antonio C. Bianco; Caterina Missero; P. Reed Larsen; Domenico Salvatore

The Sonic hedgehog (Shh) pathway plays a critical role in hair follicle physiology and is constitutively active in basal cell carcinomas (BCCs), the most common human malignancy. Type 3 iodothyronine deiodinase (D3), the thyroid hormone-inactivating enzyme, is frequently expressed in proliferating and neoplastic cells, but its role in this context is unknown. Here we show that Shh, through Gli2, directly induces D3 in proliferating keratinocytes and in mouse and human BCCs. We demonstrate that Gli-induced D3 reduces intracellular active thyroid hormone, thus resulting in increased cyclin D1 and keratinocyte proliferation. D3 knockdown caused a 5-fold reduction in the growth of BCC xenografts in nude mice. Shh-induced thyroid hormone degradation via D3 synergizes with the Shh-mediated reduction of the type 2 deiodinase, the thyroxine-activating enzyme, and both effects are reversed by cAMP. This previously unrecognized functional cross-talk between Shh/Gli2 and thyroid hormone in keratinocytes is a pathway by which Shh produces its proliferative effects and offers a potential therapeutic approach to BCC.


Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2014

Thyroid hormones and skeletal muscle--new insights and potential implications.

Domenico Salvatore; Warner S. Simonides; Monica Dentice; Ann Marie Zavacki; P. Reed Larsen

Thyroid hormone signalling regulates crucial biological functions, including energy expenditure, thermogenesis, development and growth. The skeletal muscle is a major target of thyroid hormone signalling. The type 2 and 3 iodothyronine deiodinases (DIO2 and DIO3, respectively) have been identified in skeletal muscle. DIO2 expression is tightly regulated and catalyses outer-ring monodeiodination of the secreted prohormone tetraiodothyronine (T4) to generate the active hormone tri-iodothyronine (T3). T3 can remain in the myocyte to signal through nuclear receptors or exit the cell to mix with the extracellular pool. By contrast, DIO3 inactivates T3 through removal of an inner-ring iodine. Regulation of the expression and activity of deiodinases constitutes a cell-autonomous, pre-receptor mechanism for controlling the intracellular concentration of T3. This local control of T3 activity is crucial during the various phases of myogenesis. Here, we review the roles of T3 in skeletal muscle development and homeostasis, with a focus on the emerging local deiodinase-mediated control of T3 signalling. Moreover, we discuss these novel findings in the context of both muscle homeostasis and pathology, and examine how skeletal muscle deiodinase activity might be therapeutically harnessed to improve satellite-cell-mediated muscle repair in patients with skeletal muscle disorders, muscle atrophy or injury.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

The deiodinases and the control of intracellular thyroid hormone signaling during cellular differentiation

Monica Dentice; Alessandro Marsili; Ann Marie Zavacki; P. Reed Larsen; Domenico Salvatore

Background Thyroid hormone influences gene expression in virtually all vertebrates. Its action is initiated by the activation of T4 to T3, an outer ring deiodination reaction that is catalyzed by the type 1 or the type 2 iodothyronine selenodeiodinases (D1 or D2). Inactivation of T4 and T3 occurs via inner ring deiodination catalyzed by the type 3 iodothyronine selenodeiodinases (D3). The T4 concentration is generally quite stable in human plasma, with T3 levels also remaining constant. Deiodinase actions are tightly regulated in both pre- and post-natal life when they are required to make local adjustments of intracellular T3 concentrations in a precise spatio- and temporal manner. Although all the signals governing the dynamic expression of deiodinases in specific cell types are not known, many important regulatory factors have been deciphered. Scope of review This review provides striking examples from the recent literature illustrating how the expression of D2 and D3 is finely tuned during maturation of different organs, and how their action play a critical role in different settings to control intracellular T3 availability. Major conclusions Emerging evidence indicates that in various cell contexts, D2 and D3 are expressed in a dynamic balance, in which the expression of one enzyme is coordinately regulated with that of the other to tightly control intracellular T3 levels commensurate with cell requirements at that time. General significance Deiodinases control TH action in a precise spatio-temporal fashion thereby providing a novel mechanism for the local paracrine and autocrine regulation of TH action. This remarkable tissue-specific regulation of intracellular thyroid status remains hidden due to the maintenance of constant circulating TH concentrations by the hypothalamic–pituitary–thyroid axis. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Thyroid hormone signalling.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

p63 control of desmosome gene expression and adhesion is compromised in AEC syndrome

Giustina Ferone; Maria Rosaria Mollo; Helen A. Thomason; Dario Antonini; Huiqing Zhou; Raffaele Ambrosio; Laura De Rosa; Domenico Salvatore; Spiro Getsios; Hans van Bokhoven; Jill Dixon; Caterina Missero

Ankyloblepharon, ectodermal defects, cleft lip/palate (AEC) syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant disorder caused by mutations in the p63 gene, essential for embryonic development of stratified epithelia. The most severe cutaneous manifestation of this disorder is the long-lasting skin fragility associated with severe skin erosions after birth. Using a knock-in mouse model for AEC syndrome, we found that skin fragility was associated with microscopic blistering between the basal and suprabasal compartments of the epidermis and reduced desmosomal contacts. Expression of desmosomal cadherins and desmoplakin was strongly reduced in AEC mutant keratinocytes and in newborn epidermis. A similar impairment in desmosome gene expression was observed in human keratinocytes isolated from AEC patients, in p63-depleted keratinocytes and in p63 null embryonic skin, indicating that p63 mutations causative of AEC syndrome have a dominant-negative effect on the wild-type p63 protein. Among the desmosomal components, desmocollin 3, desmoplakin and desmoglein 1 were the most significantly reduced by mutant p63 both at the RNA and protein levels. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments and transactivation assays revealed that p63 controls these genes at the transcriptional level. Consistent with reduced desmosome function, AEC mutant and p63-deficient keratinocytes had an impaired ability to withstand mechanical stress, which was alleviated by epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors known to stabilize desmosomes. Our study reveals that p63 is a crucial regulator of a subset of desmosomal genes and that this function is impaired in AEC syndrome. Reduced mechanical strength resulting from p63 mutations can be alleviated pharmacologically by increasing desmosome adhesion with possible therapeutic implications.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Transcription factor Nkx-2.5 induces sodium/iodide symporter gene expression and participates in retinoic acid- and lactation-induced transcription in mammary cells

Monica Dentice; Cristina Luongo; Antonia Elefante; Romina Romino; Raffaele Ambrosio; Mario Vitale; Guido Rossi; Gianfranco Fenzi; Domenico Salvatore

ABSTRACT The sodium/iodide symporter (NIS) is a plasma membrane protein that mediates active iodide transport in thyroid and mammary cells. It is a prerequisite for radioiodide treatment of thyroid cancer and a promising diagnostic and therapeutic tool for breast cancer. We investigated the molecular mechanisms governing NIS expression in mammary cells. Here we report that Nkx-2.5, a cardiac homeobox transcription factor that is also expressed in the thyroid primordium, is a potent inducer of the NIS promoter. By binding to two specific promoter sites (N2 and W), Nkx-2.5 induced the rNIS promoter (about 50-fold over the basal level). Interestingly, coincident with NIS expression, Nkx-2.5 mRNA and protein were present in lactating, but not virgin, mammary glands in two human breast cancer samples and in all-trans retinoic acid (tRA)-stimulated MCF-7 breast cancer cells. A cotransfected dominant-negative Nkx-2.5 mutant abolished tRA-induced endogenous NIS induction, which shows that Nkx-2.5 activity is critical for this process. Remarkably, in MCF-7 cells, Nkx-2.5 overexpression alone was sufficient to induce NIS and iodide uptake. In conclusion, Nkx-2.5 is a novel relevant transcriptional regulator of mammary NIS and could thus be exploited to manipulate NIS expression in breast cancer treatment strategies.


Endocrinology | 2010

Type 2 Iodothyronine Deiodinase Levels Are Higher in Slow-Twitch than Fast-Twitch Mouse Skeletal Muscle and Are Increased in Hypothyroidism

Alessandro Marsili; Waile Ramadan Md; John W. Harney; Michelle A. Mulcahey; Luciana A. Castroneves; Iuri Martin Goemann; Simone Magagnin Wajner; Stephen A. Huang; Ann Marie Zavacki; Ana Luiza Maia; Monica Dentice; Domenico Salvatore; J. Enrique Silva; P. Reed Larsen

Because of its large mass, relatively high metabolic activity and responsiveness to thyroid hormone, skeletal muscle contributes significantly to energy expenditure. Despite the presence of mRNA encoding the type 2 iodothyronine-deiodinase (D2), an enzyme that activates T(4) to T3, very low or undetectable activity has been reported in muscle homogenates of adult humans and mice. With a modified D2 assay, using microsomal protein, overnight incubation and protein from D2 knockout mouse muscle as a tissue-specific blank, we examined slow- and fast-twitch mouse skeletal muscles for D2 activity and its response to physiological stimuli. D2 activity was detectable in all hind limb muscles of 8- to 12-wk old C57/BL6 mice. Interestingly, it was higher in the slow-twitch soleus than in fast-twitch muscles (0.40 ± 0.06 vs. 0.076 ± 0.01 fmol/min · mg microsomal protein, respectively, P < 0.001). These levels are greater than those previously reported. Hypothyroidism caused a 40% (P < 0.01) and 300% (P < 0.001) increase in D2 activity after 4 and 8 wk treatment with antithyroid drugs, respectively, with no changes in D2 mRNA. Neither D2 mRNA nor activity increased after an overnight 4 C exposure despite a 10-fold increase in D2 activity in brown adipose tissue in the same mice. The magnitude of the activity, the fiber specificity, and the robust posttranslational response to hypothyroidism argue for a more important role for D2-generated T(3) in skeletal muscle physiology than previously assumed.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Pendrin is a novel in vivo downstream target gene of the TTF-1/Nkx-2.1 homeodomain transcription factor in differentiated thyroid cells.

Monica Dentice; Cristina Luongo; Antonia Elefante; Raffaele Ambrosio; Salvatore Salzano; Mariastella Zannini; Roberto Nitsch; Roberto Di Lauro; Guido Rossi; Gianfranco Fenzi; Domenico Salvatore

ABSTRACT Thyroid transcription factor gene 1 (TTF-1) is a homeobox-containing gene involved in thyroid organogenesis. During early thyroid development, the homeobox gene Nkx-2.5 is expressed in thyroid precursor cells coincident with the appearance of TTF-1. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying thyroid-specific gene expression. We show that the Nkx-2.5 C terminus interacts with the TTF-1 homeodomain and, moreover, that the expression of a dominant-negative Nkx-2.5 isoform (N188K) in thyroid cells reduces TTF-1-driven transcription by titrating TTF-1 away from its target DNA. This process reduced the expression of several thyroid-specific genes, including pendrin and thyroglobulin. Similarly, down-regulation of TTF-1 by RNA interference reduced the expression of both genes, whose promoters are sensitive to and directly associate with TTF-1 in the chromatin context. In conclusion, we demonstrate that pendrin and thyroglobulin are downstream targets in vivo of TTF-1, whose action is a prime factor in controlling thyroid differentiation in vivo.


Cell Metabolism | 2014

Intracellular Inactivation of Thyroid Hormone Is a Survival Mechanism for Muscle Stem Cell Proliferation and Lineage Progression

Monica Dentice; Raffaele Ambrosio; Valentina Damiano; Annarita Sibilio; Cristina Luongo; Ombretta Guardiola; Siham Yennek; Paola Zordan; Gabriella Minchiotti; Annamaria Colao; Alessandro Marsili; Silvia Brunelli; Luigi Del Vecchio; P. Reed Larsen; Shahragim Tajbakhsh; Domenico Salvatore

Summary Precise control of the thyroid hormone (T3)-dependent transcriptional program is required by multiple cell systems, including muscle stem cells. Deciphering how this is achieved and how the T3 signal is controlled in stem cell niches is essentially unknown. We report that in response to proliferative stimuli such as acute skeletal muscle injury, type 3 deiodinase (D3), the thyroid hormone-inactivating enzyme, is induced in satellite cells where it reduces intracellular thyroid signaling. Satellite cell-specific genetic ablation of dio3 severely impairs skeletal muscle regeneration. This impairment is due to massive satellite cell apoptosis caused by exposure of activated satellite cells to the circulating TH. The execution of this proapoptotic program requires an intact FoxO3/MyoD axis, both genes positively regulated by intracellular TH. Thus, D3 is dynamically exploited in vivo to chronically attenuate TH signaling under basal conditions while also being available to acutely increase gene programs required for satellite cell lineage progression.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2009

Role of type 3 deiodinase in cancer

Monica Dentice; Raffaele Ambrosio; Domenico Salvatore

Thyroid hormone (TH) influences a wide variety of biological events in vertebrates. Among them, the balance between proliferation and differentiation is crucial in TH action in normal and pathological conditions, including cancer. Thyroid hormone signaling results from the interaction of T3 with nuclear receptors that, in concert with other transcription factors, stimulate or repress the expression of target genes, some of which are involved in the control of cellular proliferation. Ligand (T3) availability is under tight control at both extracellular and intracellular levels. Intracellular T3 concentrations are influenced by the action of selenodeiodinases. These enzymes can, within the single cell, enhance (D1 and D2) or reduce (D3) T3 concentrations, thereby constituting a potent mechanism of pre-receptoral control of TH action. Type 3 deiodinase, the major physiological inactivator of TH, is highly expressed in developing tissues and in some tumoral tissues, with a mostly unknown function. Recent studies suggest that D3 enzyme plays an important role in the control of TH metabolism and action during tumorigenesis. In this review, we focus on D3 and its potential as a novel tumoral marker and new molecular target in cancer treatment.

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Monica Dentice

University of Naples Federico II

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Raffaele Ambrosio

University of Naples Federico II

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Gianfranco Fenzi

University of Naples Federico II

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P. Reed Larsen

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Cristina Luongo

University of Naples Federico II

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Alfredo Fusco

University of Naples Federico II

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Annarita Sibilio

University of Naples Federico II

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Giancarlo Vecchio

University of Naples Federico II

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