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Dive into the research topics where Elena Binda is active.

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Featured researches published by Elena Binda.


Cancer Research | 2004

Isolation and characterization of tumorigenic, stem-like neural precursors from human glioblastoma.

Rossella Galli; Elena Binda; Ugo Orfanelli; Barbara Cipelletti; Angela Gritti; Simona De Vitis; Roberta Fiocco; Chiara Foroni; Francesco DiMeco; Angelo L. Vescovi

Transformed stem cells have been isolated from some human cancers. We report that, unlike other brain cancers, the lethal glioblastoma multiforme contains neural precursors endowed with all of the critical features expected from neural stem cells. Similar, yet not identical, to their normal neural stem cell counterpart, these precursors emerge as unipotent (astroglial) in vivo and multipotent (neuronal-astroglial-oligodendroglial) in culture. More importantly, these cells can act as tumor-founding cells down to the clonal level and can establish tumors that closely resemble the main histologic, cytologic, and architectural features of the human disease, even when challenged through serial transplantation. Thus, cells possessing all of the characteristics expected from tumor neural stem cells seem to be involved in the growth and recurrence of adult human glioblastomas multiforme.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2015

Human neural stem cell transplantation in ALS: initial results from a phase I trial

Letizia Mazzini; Maurizio Gelati; Daniela Celeste Profico; Giada Sgaravizzi; Massimo Projetti Pensi; Gianmarco Muzi; Claudia Ricciolini; Laura Rota Nodari; Sandro Carletti; Cesare Giorgi; Cristina Spera; Frondizi Domenico; Enrica Bersano; Francesco Petruzzelli; Carlo Cisari; Annamaria Maglione; Maria Francesca Sarnelli; Alessandro Stecco; Giorgia Querin; Stefano Masiero; Roberto Cantello; Daniela Ferrari; Cristina Zalfa; Elena Binda; Alberto Visioli; Domenico Trombetta; Antonio Novelli; Barbara Torres; Laura Bernardini; Alessandro Carriero

BackgroundWe report the initial results from a phase I clinical trial for ALS. We transplanted GMP-grade, fetal human neural stem cells from natural in utero death (hNSCs) into the anterior horns of the spinal cord to test for the safety of both cells and neurosurgical procedures in these patients. The trial was approved by the Istituto Superiore di Sanità and the competent Ethics Committees and was monitored by an external Safety Board.MethodsSix non-ambulatory patients were treated. Three of them received 3 unilateral hNSCs microinjections into the lumbar cord tract, while the remaining ones received bilateral (nu2009=u20093u2009+u20093) microinjections. None manifested severe adverse events related to the treatment, even though nearly 5 times more cells were injected in the patients receiving bilateral implants and a much milder immune-suppression regimen was used as compared to previous trials.ResultsNo increase of disease progression due to the treatment was observed for up to18 months after surgery. Rather, two patients showed a transitory improvement of the subscore ambulation on the ALS-FRS-R scale (from 1 to 2). A third patient showed improvement of the MRC score for tibialis anterior, which persisted for as long as 7xa0months. The latter and two additional patients refused PEG and invasive ventilation and died 8xa0months after surgery due to the progression of respiratory failure. The autopsies confirmed that this was related to the evolution of the disease.ConclusionsWe describe a safe cell therapy approach that will allow for the treatment of larger pools of patients for later-phase ALS clinical trials, while warranting good reproducibility. These can now be carried out under more standardized conditions, based on a more homogenous repertoire of clinical grade hNSCs. The use of brain tissue from natural miscarriages eliminates the ethical concerns that may arise from the use of fetal material.Trial registrationEudraCT:2009-014484-39.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2016

Progenitor/Stem Cell Markers in Brain Adjacent to Glioblastoma: GD3 Ganglioside and NG2 Proteoglycan Expression

Gina Lama; Annunziato Mangiola; Gabriella Proietti; Anna Colabianchi; Cristiana Angelucci; Alessio D’Alessio; Pasquale De Bonis; Maria Concetta Geloso; Libero Lauriola; Elena Binda; Filippo Biamonte; Maria Grazia Giuffrida; Angelo L. Vescovi; Gigliola Sica

Characterization of tissue surrounding glioblastoma (GBM) is a focus for translational research because tumor recurrence invariably occurs in this area. We investigated the expression of the progenitor/stem cell markers GD3 ganglioside and NG2 proteoglycan in GBM, peritumor tissue (brain adjacent to tumor, BAT) and cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) isolated from GBM (GCSCs) and BAT (PCSCs). GD3 and NG2 immunohistochemistry was performed in paired GBM and BAT specimens from 40 patients. Double-immunofluorescence was carried out to characterize NG2-positive cells of vessel walls. GD3 and NG2 expression was investigated in GCSCs and PCSCs whose tumorigenicity was also evaluated in Scid/bg mice. GD3 and NG2 expression was higher in tumor tissue than in BAT. NG2 decreased as the distance from tumor margin increased, regardless of the tumor cell presence, whereas GD3 correlated with neoplastic infiltration. In BAT, NG2 was coexpressed with &agr;-smooth muscle actin (&agr;-SMA) in pericytes and with nestin in the endothelium. Higher levels of NG2 mRNA and protein were found in GCSCs while GD3 synthase was expressed at similar levels in the 2 CSC populations. PCSCs had lower tumorigenicity than GCSCs. These data suggest the possible involvement of GD3 and NG2 in pre/pro-tumorigenic events occurring in the complex microenvironment of the tissue surrounding GBM.


Cell Death and Disease | 2013

Murine neural stem cells model Hunter disease in vitro: glial cell-mediated neurodegeneration as a possible mechanism involved

E Fusar Poli; C Zalfa; Francesca D'Avanzo; Rosella Tomanin; Luigi Carlessi; Mario Bossi; L. Rota Nodari; Elena Binda; P Marmiroli; Maurizio Scarpa; Domenico Delia; Angelo L. Vescovi; L De Filippis

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPSII or Hunter Syndrome) is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficit of iduronate 2-sulfatase (IDS) activity and characterized by progressive systemic and neurological impairment. As the early mechanisms leading to neuronal degeneration remain elusive, we chose to examine the properties of neural stem cells (NSCs) isolated from an animal model of the disease in order to evaluate whether their neurogenic potential could be used to recapitulate the early phases of neurogenesis in the brain of Hunter disease patients. Experiments here reported show that NSCs derived from the subventricular zone (SVZ) of early symptomatic IDS-knockout (IDS-ko) mouse retained self-renewal capacity in vitro, but differentiated earlier than wild-type (wt) cells, displaying an evident lysosomal aggregation in oligodendroglial and astroglial cells. Consistently, the SVZ of IDS-ko mice appeared similar to the wt SVZ, whereas the cortex and striatum presented a disorganized neuronal pattern together with a significant increase of glial apoptotic cells, suggesting that glial degeneration likely precedes neuronal demise. Interestingly, a very similar pattern was observed in the brain cortex of a Hunter patient. These observations both in vitro, in our model, and in vivo suggest that IDS deficit seems to affect the late phases of neurogenesis and/or the survival of mature cells rather than NSC self-renewal. In particular, platelet-derived growth factor receptor-α-positive (PDGFR-α+) glial progenitors appeared reduced in both the IDS-ko NSCs and in the IDS-ko mouse and human Hunter brains, compared with the respective healthy controls. Treatment of mutant NSCs with IDS or PDGF throughout differentiation was able to increase the number of PDGFR-α+ cells and to reduce that of apoptotic cells to levels comparable to wt. This evidence supports IDS-ko NSCs as a reliable in vitro model of the disease, and suggests the rescue of PDGFR-α+ glial cells as a therapeutic strategy to prevent neuronal degeneration.


Cancer Research | 2017

Wnt5a drives an invasive phenotype in human glioblastoma stem-like cells

Elena Binda; Alberto Visioli; Fabrizio Giani; Nadia Trivieri; Orazio Palumbo; Silvia Restelli; Fabio Dezi; Tommaso Mazza; Caterina Fusilli; Federico G. Legnani; Massimo Carella; Francesco DiMeco; Rohit Duggal; Angelo L. Vescovi

Brain invasion by glioblastoma determines prognosis, recurrence, and lethality in patients, but no master factor coordinating the invasive properties of glioblastoma has been identified. Here we report evidence favoring such a role for the noncanonical WNT family member Wnt5a. We found the most invasive gliomas to be characterized by Wnt5a overexpression, which correlated with poor prognosis and also discriminated infiltrating mesenchymal glioblastoma from poorly motile proneural and classical glioblastoma. Indeed, Wnt5a overexpression associated with tumor-promoting stem-like characteristics (TPC) in defining the character of highly infiltrating mesenchymal glioblastoma cells (Wnt5aHigh). Inhibiting Wnt5a in mesenchymal glioblastoma TPC suppressed their infiltrating capability. Conversely, enforcing high levels of Wnt5a activated an infiltrative, mesenchymal-like program in classical glioblastoma TPC and Wnt5aLow mesenchymal TPC. In intracranial mouse xenograft models of glioblastoma, inhibiting Wnt5a activity blocked brain invasion and increased host survival. Overall, our results highlight Wnt5a as a master regulator of brain invasion, specifically TPC, and they provide a therapeutic rationale to target it in patients with glioblastoma. Cancer Res; 77(4); 996-1007. ©2016 AACR.


Neuro-oncology | 2014

Ependymoma stem cells are highly sensitive to temozolomide in vitro and in orthotopic models

Daniela Meco; Tiziana Servidei; Giuseppe Lamorte; Elena Binda; Vincenzo Arena; Riccardo Riccardi

BACKGROUNDnEpendymoma management remains challenging because of the inherent chemoresistance of this tumor. To determine whether ependymoma stem cells (SCs) might contribute to therapy resistance, we investigated the sensitivity of ependymoma SCs to temozolomide and etoposide.nnnMETHODSnThe efficacies of the two DNA damaging agents were explored in two ependymoma SC lines in vitro and in vivo models.nnnRESULTSnEpendymoma SC lines were highly sensitive to temozolomide and etoposide in vitro, but only temozolomide impaired tumor-initiation properties. Consistently, temozolomide but not etoposide showed significant antitumoral activity on ependymoma SC-driven subcutaneous and orthotopic xenografts by reducing the mitotic fraction. In vitro temozolomide at the EC50 (10 µM) induced accumulation of cells in the G2/M phase that was unexpectedly accompanied by downregulation of p27 and p21 without modulation of full-length p53 (FLp53). Differentiation-committed ependymoma SCs acquired resistance to temozolomide. Inhibition of proliferation was partly due to apoptosis, that occurred earlier in differentiated cells as compared to neurospheres. The activation of apoptosis correlated with an increase in p53β/γ isoforms without modulation of FLp53 under both serum-free and differentiation-promoting media. Incubation of cells in both conditions with temozolomide resulted in increased glioneuronal differentiation exhibiting elevated glial fibrillary acidic protein, galactosylceramidase, and βIII-tubulin expression compared to untreated controls. O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) transcript levels were very low in SCs, and were increased by treatment and, epigenetically, by differentiation through MGMT promoter unmethylation.nnnCONCLUSIONnEpendymoma growth might be impaired by temozolomide through preferential depletion of a less differentiated, more tumorigenic, MGMT-negative cell population with stem-like properties.


Cell Death and Disease | 2018

Establishment of stable iPS-derived human neural stem cell lines suitable for cell therapies

Jessica Rosati; Daniela Ferrari; Filomena Altieri; Silvia Tardivo; Claudia Ricciolini; Caterina Fusilli; Cristina Zalfa; Daniela Celeste Profico; Francesca Pinos; Laura Bernardini; Barbara Torres; Isabella Manni; Giulia Piaggio; Elena Binda; Massimiliano Copetti; Giuseppe Lamorte; Tommaso Mazza; Massimo Carella; Maurizio Gelati; Enza Maria Valente; Antonio Simeone; Angelo L. Vescovi

Establishing specific cell lineages from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) is vital for cell therapy approaches in regenerative medicine, particularly for neurodegenerative disorders. While neural precursors have been induced from hiPSCs, the establishment of hiPSC-derived human neural stem cells (hiNSCs), with characteristics that match foetal hNSCs and abide by cGMP standards, thus allowing clinical applications, has not been described. We generated hiNSCs by a virus-free technique, whose properties recapitulate those of the clinical-grade hNSCs successfully used in an Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) phase I clinical trial. Ex vivo, hiNSCs critically depend on exogenous mitogens for stable self-renewal and amplification and spontaneously differentiate into astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and neurons upon their removal. In the brain of immunodeficient mice, hiNSCs engraft and differentiate into neurons and glia, without tumour formation. These findings now warrant the establishment of clinical-grade, autologous and continuous hiNSC lines for clinical trials in neurological diseases such as Huntington’s, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, among others.


Cancer Cell International | 2018

Levetiracetam enhances the temozolomide effect on glioblastoma stem cell proliferation and apoptosis

Bianca Maria Scicchitano; Silvia Sorrentino; Gabriella Proietti; Gina Lama; Gabriella Dobrowolny; Angela Catizone; Elena Binda; Luigi Maria Larocca; Gigliola Sica

BackgroundGlioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a highly aggressive brain tumor in which cancer cells with stem cell-like features, called cancer stem cells (CSCs), were identified. Two CSC populations have been previously identified in GBM, one derived from the GBM area called enhanced lesion (GCSCs) and the other one from the brain area adjacent to the tumor margin (PCSCs) that greatly differ in their growth properties and tumor-initiating ability. To date the most effective chemotherapy to treat GBM is represented by alkylating agents such as temozolomide (TMZ), whose activity can be regulated by histone deacetylases (HDACs) inhibitors through the modulation of O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) expression. Levetiracetam (LEV), a relatively new antiepileptic drug, modulates HDAC levels ultimately silencing MGMT, thus increasing TMZ effectiveness. However, an improvement in the therapeutic efficacy of TMZ is needed.MethodsCell proliferation was investigated by BrdU cell proliferation assay and by Western Blot analysis of PCNA expression. Apoptosis was evaluated by Western Blot and Immunofluorescence analysis of the cleaved Caspase-3 expression. MGMT and HDAC4 expression was analyzed by Western Blotting and Immunofluorescence. Statistical analysis was performed using the Student’s t test and Mann–Whitney test.ResultsHere we evaluated the effect of TMZ on the proliferation rate of the IDH-wildtype GCSCs and PCSCs derived from six patients, in comparison with the effects of other drugs such as etoposide, irinotecan and carboplatin. Our results demonstrated that TMZ was less effective compared to the other agents; hence, we verified the possibility to increase the effect of TMZ by combining it with LEV. Here we show that LEV enhances the effect of TMZ on GCSCs proliferation (being less effective on PCSCs) by decreasing MGMT expression, promoting HDAC4 nuclear translocation and activating apoptotic pathway.ConclusionsAlthough further studies are needed to determine the exact mechanism by which LEV makes GBM stem cells more xa0sensitive to TMZ, these results suggest that the clinical therapeutic efficacy of TMZ in GBM might be enhanced by the combined treatment with LEV.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2012

Heterogeneity of cancer-Initiating cells within glioblastoma

Elena Binda; Alberto Visioli; Brent A. Reynolds; Angelo L. Vescovi


Neuro-oncology | 2014

EPHRINA2 RECEPTOR IN HUMAN GLIOBLASTOMA CANCER STEM CELLS AND IDENTIFICATION OF NEW, PUTATIVE THERAPEUTIC TARGETS

Angelo L. Vescovi; Elena Binda; Tommaso Mazza; Francesco Dimeco

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Angelo L. Vescovi

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Tommaso Mazza

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Angela Gritti

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Barbara Torres

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Caterina Fusilli

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Chiara Foroni

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Claudia Ricciolini

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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