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Dive into the research topics where Gabriella Guida is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriella Guida.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1989

Increase in RNA and protein synthesis by mitochondria irradiated with helium-neon laser.

Margherita Greco; Gabriella Guida; Elda Perlino; Ersilia Marra; E. Quagliariello

To gain further insight into the mechanism of cell photostimulation by laser light, both RNA and protein synthesis were measured in mitochondria irradiated with the low power continuous wave He-Ne laser (Energy dose: 5 Joules/cm2). Following mitochondrial irradiation, both the rate and amount of incorporation of alpha-[32P]UTP and L-[35S]methionine, used to monitor RNA and protein synthesis respectively, proved to increase. Electrophoretic analysis made of the synthesis products clearly shows that He-Ne laser irradiation stimulates the synthesis of all mitochondrial transcription and translation products.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal | 1998

ULTRASTRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL STUDY OF THE LIVER PIGMENT CELLS FROM RANA ESCULENTA L.

Gabriella Guida; Immacolata Maida; Anna Gallone; Domenico Boffoli; Rosa Cicero

SummaryA study of the liver pigment cells of Rana esculenta L. has been performed on both liver in toto and cells in culture. Ultrastructural and cytochemical analyses showed a close relationship between this visceral pigment cell system and the cells of hepatic macrophage lineage. Like the latter, the liver pigment cells present phagocytic activity, in the sinusoids and in vitro, and give a positive response to tests for peroxidase and lipase. The liver pigment cells are isolated, together with the Kupffer cells, from the sinusoidal cell fraction of the liver. In culture, they maintain their melanogenetic ability, demonstrated by the presence of dopaoxidase activity in the soluble, membranous, and melanosome fractions. Analysis of the cultures showed that as culture time increased, so did melanosome dopaoxidase activity, the number of pigmented fields, and the level of pigmentation of the cells. The values of dopaoxidase activity of the pigment cells in culture show the same seasonal oscillations as the system in toto, indicating that the cells maintain an internal clock, at least in the first 72 h of culture. There is evidence that the pigment cells are macrophages which can express a melanogenetic function. Our results and other experimental data provide a basis for hypothesizing that the pigment cells in Rana esculenta L. liver may derive from, or have a common origin with, the Kupffer cells.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2015

Aurora kinase B inhibition reduces the proliferation of metastatic melanoma cells and enhances the response to chemotherapy

Letizia Porcelli; Gabriella Guida; Anna Elisa Quatrale; Tiziana Cocco; Letizia Sidella; Immacolata Maida; Rosa Maria Iacobazzi; Anna Ferretta; Diana A Stolfa; Sabino Strippoli; Stefania Guida; Stefania Tommasi; Michele Guida; Amalia Azzariti

BackgroundThe poor response to chemotherapy and the brief response to vemurafenib in metastatic melanoma patients, make the identification of new therapeutic approaches an urgent need. Interestingly the increased expression and activity of the Aurora kinase B during melanoma progression suggests it as a promising therapeutic target.MethodsThe efficacy of the Aurora B kinase inhibitor barasertib-HQPA was evaluated in BRAF mutated cells, sensitive and made resistant to vemurafenib after chronic exposure to the drug, and in BRAF wild type cells. The drug effectiveness has been evaluated as cell growth inhibition, cell cycle progression and cell migration. In addition, cellular effectors of drug resistance and response were investigated.ResultsThe characterization of the effectors responsible for the resistance to vemurafenib evidenced the increased expression of MITF or the activation of Erk1/2 and p-38 kinases in the newly established cell lines with a phenotype resistant to vemurafenib. The sensitivity of cells to barasertib-HQPA was irrespective of BRAF mutational status. Barasertib-HQPA induced the mitotic catastrophe, ultimately causing apoptosis and necrosis of cells, inhibited cell migration and strongly affected the glycolytic metabolism of cells inducing the release of lactate. In association i) with vemurafenib the gain in effectiveness was found only in BRAF(V600K) cells while ii) with nab-paclitaxel, the combination was more effective than each drug alone in all cells.ConclusionsThese findings suggest barasertib as a new therapeutic agent and as enhancer of chemotherapy in metastatic melanoma treatment.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2015

MicroRNA expression in BRAF-mutated and wild-type metastatic melanoma and its correlation with response duration to BRAF inhibitors

Rosamaria Pinto; Sabino Strippoli; Simona De Summa; Anna Albano; Amalia Azzariti; Gabriella Guida; Ondina Popescu; Vito Lorusso; Michele Guida; Stefania Tommasi

Objective: Currently, the treatment of BRAF V600-mutated metastatic melanoma with BRAF inhibitors gives a response rate of ∼ 50% with a progression-free survival of ∼ 6 – 7 months. In order to identify predictive biomarkers capable of stratifying BRAF-mutated patients at high risk of shorter response duration to anti-BRAF therapy, the authors analyzed the expression of 15 microRNAs (miRNAs) targeting crucial genes involved in melanoma biology and drug response. Research design and methods: A total of 15 miRNAs and target gene expression were investigated in 43 patients (30 BRAF-mutated, and 13 BRAF wild-type). Moreover, 20 BRAF-mutated patients treated with vemurafenib were analyzed for miRNA expression in respect to time-to-progression. Results: All miRNAs except miR-192 showed low expression in BRAF-mutated as compared with BRAF wild-type patients. In particular, miR-101, miR-221, miR-21, miR-338-3p and miR-191 resulted in significant downregulation in BRAF-mutated patients. Moreover, high expression of miR-192 and miR-193b* and low expression of miR-132 resulted in significant association with shorter progression. Conclusion: Three miRNAs were significantly associated with clinical outcome in metastatic melanoma patients. An increased understanding of the molecular assessment of BRAF-mutated melanomas could allow development of specific molecular tests able to predict response duration.


Biochemistry and Cell Biology | 2012

Melanogenesis in visceral tissues of Salmo salar. A link between immunity and pigment production

Marcella Arciuli; Daniela Fiocco; Rosina Cicero; Immacolata Maida; Paola Zanna; Gabriella Guida; Tor Einar Horsberg; Erling Olaf Koppang; Anna Gallone

Melanogenesis is mostly studied in melanocytes and melanoma cells, but much less is known about other pigment cell systems. Liver, spleen, kidney, and other organs of lower vertebrates harbour a visceral pigment cell system with an embryonic origin that differs from that of melanocytes. In teleosts, melanin-containing cells occur in the reticulo-endothelial system and are mainly in the kidney and spleen. The Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) is an ichthyic breeding species of considerable economic importance. The accumulation of pigments in salmon visceral organs and musculature adversely affects the quality of fish products and is a problem for the aquaculture industry. With the aim to reveal novel functions and behaviour of the salmonid extracutaneous pigment system, we investigated aspects of the melanogenic systems in the tissues of Atlantic salmon, as well as in SHK-1 cells, which is a long-term cell line derived from macrophages of the Atlantic salmon head-kidney. We demonstrate that a melanogenic system is present in SHK-1 cells, head-kidney, and spleen tissues. As teleosts lack lymph nodes and Peyers patches, the head-kidney and spleen are regarded as the most important secondary lymphoid organs. The detection of tyrosinase activity in lymphoid organs indicates that a link exists between the extracutaneous pigmentary system and the immune system in salmon.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Proteomic profile and in silico analysis in metastatic melanoma with and without BRAF mutation.

Vito Michele Garrisi; Sabino Strippoli; Simona De Summa; Rosamaria Pinto; Antonella Perrone; Gabriella Guida; Amalia Azzariti; Michele Guida; Tommasi Stefania

Introduction Selective inhibitors of BRAF, vemurafenib and dabrafenib are the standard of care for metastatic melanoma patients with BRAF V600, while chemotherapy continued to be widely used in BRAF wild type patients. Materials and Methods In order to discover novel candidate biomarkers predictive to treatment, serum of 39 metastatic melanoma vemurafenib (n = 19) or chemotherapy (n = 20) treated patients at baseline, at disease control and at progression, were analyzed using SELDI-TOF technology. In silico analysis was used to identify more significant peaks. Results In patients with different BRAF status, we found 5 peptides significantly deregulated, with the down-regulation of the m/z 9176 peak strongly associated with BRAF mutation. At baseline as predictive biomarkers we identified 2 peptides - m/z 6411, 4075 – as significantly up-regulated in responders to chemotherapy and 4 peaks - m/z 5900, 12544, 49124 and 11724 - significantly up-regulated in longer vs shorter responders to vemurafenib. After response, 3 peptides (m/z 4658, 18639, and 9307) resulted significantly down regulated while 3 peptides m/z 9292, 7765 and 9176 appeared up-regulated respectively in chemotherapy and vemurafenib responder patients. In vemurafenib treated patients, 16 peaks appeared deregulated at progression compared to baseline time. In silico analysis identified proteins involved in invasiveness (SLAIN1) and resistance (ABCC12) as well as in the pathway of detoxification (NQO1) and apoptosis (RBM10, TOX3, MTEFD1, TSPO2). Proteins associated with the modulation of neuronal plasticity (RIN1) and regulatory activity factors of gene transcription (KLF17, ZBTB44) were also highlighted. Conclusion Our exploratory study highlighted some factors that deserve to be further investigated in order to provide a framework for improving melanoma treatment management through the development of biomarkers which could act as the strongest surrogates of the key biological events in stage IV melanoma.


Cell Death and Disease | 2014

Expression of base excision repair key factors and miR17 in familial and sporadic breast cancer

S. De Summa; Rosamaria Pinto; Brunella Pilato; Domenico Sambiasi; Letizia Porcelli; Gabriella Guida; E Mattioli; A. Paradiso; Giuseppe Merla; Lucia Micale; P De Nittis; Stefania Tommasi

Understanding of BRCA1/2 interaction with the base excision repair (BER) pathway could improve therapy based on ‘synthetic lethality’, whose effectiveness is based on homologous recombination deficiency in cells lacking functional BRCA genes. However, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors failed in some patients and for this reason we explored BER key enzyme expression. In this study, the expression of BER enzymes (redox factor 1/apurinic-apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (REF1/APEX1), NTH endonuclease III-like 1 (NTHL1), 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (OGG1), PARP1) and of the scaffold protein XRCC1 (X-ray repair complementing defective repair in Chinese hamster cells 1) were investigated in familial (BRCA-related and not) and sporadic breast cancer cases. Furthermore, miR17 expression was measured because of its role in the epigenetic regulation of BRCA1. Gene expression was evaluated in BRCA1-mutated cell lines, SUM149PT and SUM1315MO2, and in a BRCA1-proficient triple-negative MDA-MB-231 cell line. A cohort of 27 familial and 16 sporadic breast cancer patients was then examined to confirm results obtained from the cell line model. APEX1/REF1 was found to be upregulated in familial BRCA-wild-type and sporadic cases, indicating this enzyme as a potential therapeutic target. Furthermore, XRCC1 was overexpressed in BRCAX patients; consequently, we suggest to test the effectiveness of inhibitors targeting two different BER components in preclinical studies. XRCC1, which is also involved in the non-homologous end-joining pathway, was found to be downregulated in BRCA2-related patients concurrently with no change in PARP1 expression. Interestingly, no difference in PARP1 and miR17 expression was found in BRCA-related and sporadic breast cancer cases. PARP1 and miR17 could therefore be further investigated as molecular biomarkers of ‘BRCAness’ phenotype, indicating patients which could really benefit from PARP inhibitor therapies.


Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2015

Metastatic melanoma cells with BRAF G469A mutation: nab-paclitaxel better than vemurafenib?

Letizia Porcelli; Gabriella Guida; Stefania Tommasi; Michele Guida; Amalia Azzariti

PurposeBRAF G469A is a missense mutation within exon 11 of the BRAF gene resulting in a constitutively activated enzyme frequently associated with MAP kinase cascade signaling activation. No evidence currently exists about its role in determining sensitivity/resistance to BRAF inhibitors, utilized in the treatment of patients carrying BRAF V600 mutations, and to chemotherapy. The newly established metastatic melanoma (MM) cell line MO-1 was characterized for its sensitivity to vemurafenib and nab-paclitaxel, both already utilized for the treatment of MM.MethodsAll analyses were carried out by comparing results with those found in MM cells wild type for BRAF or mutated in V600. In addition, cellular effectors were investigated by ELISA kits, western blotting and flow cytometry.ResultsThe exposure to vemurafenib inhibited MO-1 cell proliferation at concentrations similar to those obtained in vemurafenib-resistant melanoma models, and an explanation of this sensitivity is the strong activation of Erk1/2 and the low expression of MITF. Nab-paclitaxel strongly reduced proliferation of MO-1 cells perhaps for the very low expression level of PMEL17, transcriptionally regulated by MITF and negatively involved in determining sensitivity to taxanes.ConclusionsThus, the mutation BRAF G469A in MM might be related to a weak effectiveness of therapy with BRAF inhibitors and a promising therapeutic approach may be with nab-paclitaxel.


Archives of Dermatological Research | 2015

Sporadic melanoma in South-Eastern Italy: the impact of melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) polymorphism analysis in low-risk people and report of three novel variants.

Stefania Guida; Nicola Bartolomeo; Paola Zanna; Claudia Grieco; Immacolata Maida; S. De Summa; Stefania Tommasi; Michele Guida; Amalia Azzariti; Caterina Foti; Raffaele Filotico; Gabriella Guida

Environmental and genetic risk factors are involved in the development of melanoma. The role of the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) gene has been investigated and differences according to geographic areas have been described. To evaluate the role of some clinical and genetic risk factors in melanoma development, we performed a case–control study involving 101 melanoma patients and 103 controls coming from South-Eastern Italy (Puglia), after achieving informed consent. We confirmed the role of known clinical risk factors for melanoma. Furthermore, 42 MC1R polymorphisms were observed. Three of these variants (L26V, H232L, D294Y) were not previously reported in the literature. Their predicted impact on receptor function was evaluated using bioinformatic tools. We report an overall frequency of MC1R variants in our population higher than in Northern or Central Italy. The most common polymorphism found was V60L, that has been recently reported to spread among South Mediterranean population. This variant influenced phenotypic characteristics of our population while it did not impinge on melanoma risk. An increased risk of melanoma was associated with two or more MC1R variants, when at least one was RHC, compared to people carrying the MC1R consensus sequence or a single MC1R polymorphism. Interestingly, we observed an increased risk of melanoma in subjects with darker skin and lower nevus count, usually considered at low risk, when carrying MC1R polymorphisms.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2016

Association of Melanocortin-1 Receptor Variants with Pigmentary Traits in Humans: A Pooled Analysis from the M-Skip Project

Elena Tagliabue; Sara Gandini; José C. García-Borrón; Patrick Maisonneuve; Julia Newton-Bishop; David Polsky; DeAnn Lazovich; Rajiv Kumar; Paola Ghiorzo; Leah M. Ferrucci; Nelleke A. Gruis; Susana Puig; Peter A. Kanetsky; Tomonori Motokawa; Gloria Ribas; Maria Teresa Landi; Maria Concetta Fargnoli; Terence H. Wong; Alexander J. Stratigos; Per Helsing; Gabriella Guida; Philippe Autier; Jiali Han; Julian Little; Francesco Sera; Sara Raimondi; Saverio Caini; Albert Hofman; Manfred Kayser; Fan Liu

Bishop, J; Polsky, D; Lazovich, D; Kumar, R; Ghiorzo, P; Ferrucci, L; Gruis, NA; Puig, S; Kanetsky, PA; Motokawa, T; Ribas, G; Landi, MT; Fargnoli, MC; Wong, TH; Stratigos, A; Helsing, P; Guida, G; Autier, P; Han, J; Little, J; Sera, F; Raimondi, S; M-SKIP Study group, ; , COLLABORATORS; Raimondi, S; Autier, P; Fargnoli, MC; Garca-Borrn, JC; Han, J; Kanetsky, PA; Landi, MT; Little, J; Newton-Bishop, J; Sera, F; Caini, S; Gandini, S; Maisonneuve, P; Hofman, A; Kayser, M; Liu, F; Nijsten, T; Uitterlinden, AG; Kumar, R; Scherer, D; Bishop, T; Newton-Bishop, J; Elliott, F; Nagore, E; Lazovich, D; Polsky, D; Hansson, J; Hoiom, V; Ghiorzo, P; Pastorino, L; Gruis, NA; Bouwes Bavinck, JN; Aguilera, P; Badenas, C; Carrera, C; Gimenez-Xavier, P; Malvehy, J; Potrony, M; Puig, S; Puig-Butille, JA; Tell-Marti, G; Dwyer, T; Blizzard, L; Cochrane, J; Fernandez-de-Misa, R; Branicki, W; Debniak, T; Morling, N; Johansen, P; Mayne, S; Bale, A; Cartmel, B; Ferrucci, L; Pfeiffer, R; Palmieri, G; Ribas, G; Menin, C; Stratigos, A; Kypreou, K; Bowcock, A; Cornelius, L; Council, ML; Motokawa, T; Anno, S; Helsing, P; Andresen, PA; Guida, G; Guida, S; Wong, TH (2016) Association of Melanocortin-1 Receptor Variants with Pigmentary Traits in Humans: A Pooled-Analysis from the M-SKIP Project. The Journal of investigative dermatology, 136 (9). pp. 1914-7. ISSN 0022-202X DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jid.2016.05.099

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Stefania Tommasi

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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Stefania Guida

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Letizia Porcelli

International Agency for Research on Cancer

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