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Dive into the research topics where Gian Maria Fimia is active.

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Featured researches published by Gian Maria Fimia.


Nature Medicine | 2007

Calreticulin exposure dictates the immunogenicity of cancer cell death.

Michel Obeid; Antoine Tesniere; François Ghiringhelli; Gian Maria Fimia; Lionel Apetoh; Jean Luc Perfettini; Maria Castedo; Grégoire Mignot; Theoharis Panaretakis; Noelia Casares; Didier Métivier; Nathanael Larochette; Peter van Endert; Fabiola Ciccosanti; Mauro Piacentini; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer

Anthracyclin-treated tumor cells are particularly effective in eliciting an anticancer immune response, whereas other DNA-damaging agents such as etoposide and mitomycin C do not induce immunogenic cell death. Here we show that anthracyclins induce the rapid, preapoptotic translocation of calreticulin (CRT) to the cell surface. Blockade or knockdown of CRT suppressed the phagocytosis of anthracyclin-treated tumor cells by dendritic cells and abolished their immunogenicity in mice. The anthracyclin-induced CRT translocation was mimicked by inhibition of the protein phosphatase 1/GADD34 complex. Administration of recombinant CRT or inhibitors of protein phosphatase 1/GADD34 restored the immunogenicity of cell death elicited by etoposide and mitomycin C, and enhanced their antitumor effects in vivo. These data identify CRT as a key feature determining anticancer immune responses and delineate a possible strategy for immunogenic chemotherapy.


Nature | 2007

Ambra1 regulates autophagy and development of the nervous system

Gian Maria Fimia; Anastassia Stoykova; Alessandra Romagnoli; Luigi Giunta; Sabrina Di Bartolomeo; Roberta Nardacci; Marco Corazzari; Claudia Fuoco; Ahmet Ucar; Peter Schwartz; Peter Gruss; Mauro Piacentini; Kamal Chowdhury; Francesco Cecconi

Autophagy is a self-degradative process involved both in basal turnover of cellular components and in response to nutrient starvation or organelle damage in a wide range of eukaryotes. During autophagy, portions of the cytoplasm are sequestered by double-membraned vesicles called autophagosomes, and are degraded after fusion with lysosomes for subsequent recycling. In vertebrates, this process acts as a pro-survival or pro-death mechanism in different physiological and pathological conditions, such as neurodegeneration and cancer; however, the roles of autophagy during embryonic development are still largely uncharacterized. Beclin1 (Becn1; coiled-coil, myosin-like BCL2-interacting protein) is a principal regulator in autophagosome formation, and its deficiency results in early embryonic lethality. Here we show that Ambra1 (activating molecule in Beclin1-regulated autophagy), a large, previously unknown protein bearing a WD40 domain at its amino terminus, regulates autophagy and has a crucial role in embryogenesis. We found that Ambra1 is a positive regulator of the Becn1-dependent programme of autophagy, as revealed by its overexpression and by RNA interference experiments in vitro. Notably, Ambra1 functional deficiency in mouse embryos leads to severe neural tube defects associated with autophagy impairment, accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, unbalanced cell proliferation and excessive apoptotic cell death. In addition to identifying a new and essential element regulating the autophagy programme, our results provide in vivo evidence supporting the existence of a complex interplay between autophagy, cell growth and cell death required for neural development in mammals.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Mitotic Phosphorylation of Histone H3: Spatio-Temporal Regulation by Mammalian Aurora Kinases

Claudia Crosio; Gian Maria Fimia; Romain Loury; Masashi Kimura; Yukio Okano; Hongyi Zhou; Subrata Sen; C. David Allis; Paolo Sassone-Corsi

ABSTRACT Phosphorylation at a highly conserved serine residue (Ser-10) in the histone H3 tail is considered to be a crucial event for the onset of mitosis. This modification appears early in the G2 phase within pericentromeric heterochromatin and spreads in an ordered fashion coincident with mitotic chromosome condensation. Mutation of Ser-10 is essential in Tetrahymena, since it results in abnormal chromosome segregation and extensive chromosome loss during mitosis and meiosis, establishing a strong link between signaling and chromosome dynamics. Although mitotic H3 phosphorylation has been long recognized, the transduction routes and the identity of the protein kinases involved have been elusive. Here we show that the expression of Aurora-A and Aurora-B, two kinases of the Aurora/AIK family, is tightly coordinated with H3 phosphorylation during the G2/M transition. During the G2 phase, the Aurora-A kinase is coexpressed while the Aurora-B kinase colocalizes with phosphorylated histone H3. At prophase and metaphase, Aurora-A is highly localized in the centrosomic region and in the spindle poles while Aurora-B is present in the centromeric region concurrent with H3 phosphorylation, to then translocate by cytokinesis to the midbody region. Both Aurora-A and Aurora-B proteins physically interact with the H3 tail and efficiently phosphorylate Ser10 both in vitro and in vivo, even if Aurora-A appears to be a better H3 kinase than Aurora-B. Since Aurora-A and Aurora-B are known to be overexpressed in a variety of human cancers, our findings provide an attractive link between cell transformation, chromatin modifications and a specific kinase system.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Cannabinoid action induces autophagy-mediated cell death through stimulation of ER stress in human glioma cells

María Salazar; Arkaitz Carracedo; Íñigo J. Salanueva; Sonia Hernández-Tiedra; Mar Lorente; Ainara Egia; Patricia Vázquez; Cristina Blázquez; Sofia Torres; Stéphane Garcia; Jonathan Nowak; Gian Maria Fimia; Mauro Piacentini; Francesco Cecconi; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Luis González-Feria; Juan L. Iovanna; Manuel Guzmán; Patricia Boya; Guillermo Velasco

Autophagy can promote cell survival or cell death, but the molecular basis underlying its dual role in cancer remains obscure. Here we demonstrate that delta(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main active component of marijuana, induces human glioma cell death through stimulation of autophagy. Our data indicate that THC induced ceramide accumulation and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2alpha (eIF2alpha) phosphorylation and thereby activated an ER stress response that promoted autophagy via tribbles homolog 3-dependent (TRB3-dependent) inhibition of the Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) axis. We also showed that autophagy is upstream of apoptosis in cannabinoid-induced human and mouse cancer cell death and that activation of this pathway was necessary for the antitumor action of cannabinoids in vivo. These findings describe a mechanism by which THC can promote the autophagic death of human and mouse cancer cells and provide evidence that cannabinoid administration may be an effective therapeutic strategy for targeting human cancers.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

The dynamic interaction of AMBRA1 with the dynein motor complex regulates mammalian autophagy

Sabrina Di Bartolomeo; Marco Corazzari; Francesca Nazio; Serafina Oliverio; Gaia Lisi; Manuela Antonioli; Vittoria Pagliarini; Silvia Matteoni; Claudia Fuoco; Luigi Giunta; Marcello D'Amelio; Roberta Nardacci; Alessandra Romagnoli; Mauro Piacentini; Francesco Cecconi; Gian Maria Fimia

When autophagy is induced, ULK1 phosphorylates AMBRA1, releasing the autophagy core complex from the cytoskeleton and allowing its relocalization to the ER membrane to nucleate autophagosome formation.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 1999

Signaling routes to CREM and CREB: plasticity in transcriptional activation

Dario De Cesare; Gian Maria Fimia; Paolo Sassone-Corsi

The CREB and CREM transcription factors are activated by phosphorylation of a key serine residue by kinases stimulated by cyclic AMP, Ca2+, growth factors and stress signals. Phosphorylation allows recruitment of CREB-binding protein (CBP), a large co-activator that contacts the general transcriptional machinery. Studies of the physiological roles played by CREB and CREM have uncovered novel routes of transcriptional activation. For example, in male germ cells CREM is not phosphorylated but associates with ACT, a member of the LIM-only class of proteins that has intrinsic transcriptional activity. Thus, in some circumstances, CREM can bypass the classical requirement for phosphorylation and association with CBP.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008

The co-translocation of ERp57 and calreticulin determines the immunogenicity of cell death

Theocharis Panaretakis; N. Joza; Nazanine Modjtahedi; Antoine Tesniere; Ilio Vitale; Michael Durchschlag; Gian Maria Fimia; Oliver Kepp; Mauro Piacentini; K. U. Froehlich; P. van Endert; Laurence Zitvogel; Frank Madeo; Guido Kroemer

The exposure of calreticulin (CRT) on the plasma membrane can precede anthracycline-induced apoptosis and is required for cell death to be perceived as immunogenic. Mass spectroscopy, immunofluorescence and immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that CRT co-translocates to the surface with another endoplasmic reticulum-sessile protein, the disulfide isomerase ERp57. The knockout and knockdown of CRT or ERp57 inhibited the anthracycline-induced translocation of ERp57 or CRT, respectively. CRT point mutants that fail to interact with ERp57 were unable to restore ERp57 translocation upon transfection into crt−/− cells, underscoring that a direct interaction between CRT and ERp57 is strictly required for their co-translocation to the surface. ERp57low tumor cells generated by retroviral introduction of an ERp57-specific shRNA exhibited a normal apoptotic response to anthracyclines in vitro, yet were resistant to anthracycline treatment in vivo. Moreover, ERp57low cancer cells (which failed to expose CRT) treated with anthracyclines were unable to elicit an anti-tumor response in conditions in which control cells were highly immunogenic. The failure of ERp57low cells to elicit immune responses and to respond to chemotherapy could be overcome by exogenous supply of recombinant CRT protein. These results indicate that tumors that possess an intrinsic defect in the CRT-translocating machinery become resistant to anthracycline chemotherapy due to their incapacity to elicit an anti-cancer immune response.


Nature | 1999

CBP-independent activation of CREM and CREB by the LIM-only protein ACT

Gian Maria Fimia; Dario De Cesare; Paolo Sassone-Corsi

Transcriptional activation by CREB and CREM requires phosphorylation of a serine residue within the activation domain (Ser 133 in CREB; Ser 117 in CREM) which as a result interacts with the coactivator CBP,. The activator CREM is highly expressed in male germ cells and is required for post-meiotic gene expression. Using a two-hybrid screen, we have isolated a testis-derived complementary DNA encoding a protein that we term ACT (for activator of CREM in testis), a LIM-only protein which specifically associates with CREM. ACT is expressed coordinately with CREM in a tissue- and developmentally regulated manner. It strongly stimulates CREM transcriptional activity in yeast and mammalian cells and contains an intrinsic activation function. As ACT bypasses the classical requirements for activation, namely phosphorylation of Ser 117 and interaction with CBP, it represents a new route for transcriptional activation by CREM and CREB. ACT may define a previously undiscovered class of tissue-specific coactivators whose function could be specific for distinct cellular differentiation programmes.


Science | 2012

An immunosurveillance mechanism controls cancer cell ploidy

Laura Senovilla; Ilio Vitale; Isabelle Martins; Claire Pailleret; Mickaël Michaud; Lorenzo Galluzzi; Sandy Adjemian; Oliver Kepp; Mireia Niso-Santano; Shensi Shen; Guillermo Mariño; Alfredo Criollo; Alice Boilève; B. Job; Sylvain Ladoire; François Ghiringhelli; Antonella Sistigu; Takahiro Yamazaki; Santiago Rello-Varona; Clara Locher; Vichnou Poirier-Colame; Monique Talbot; Alexander Valent; Francesco Berardinelli; Antonio Antoccia; Fabiola Ciccosanti; Gian Maria Fimia; Mauro Piacentini; Antonio Fueyo; Nicole L. Messina

Keeping Cancer Cells At Bay Cancer cells are often aneuploid; that is, they have an abnormal number of chromosomes. But to what extent this contributes to the tumorigenic phenotype is not clear. Senovilla et al. (p. 1678; see the Perspective by Zanetti and Mahadevan) found that tetraploidization of cancer cells can cause them to become immunogenic and thus aid in their clearance from the body by the immune system. Cells with excess chromosomes put stress on the endoplasmic reticulum, which leads to movement of the protein calreticulin to the cell surface. Calreticulin exposure in turn caused recognition of cancer cells in mice by the host immune system. Thus, the immune system appears to serve a protective role in eliminating hyperploid cells that must be overcome to allow unrestricted growth of cancer cells. Polyploid cancer cells trigger an immune response owing to proteins aberrantly exposed on their outer surfaces. Cancer cells accommodate multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations that initially activate intrinsic (cell-autonomous) and extrinsic (immune-mediated) oncosuppressive mechanisms. Only once these barriers to oncogenesis have been overcome can malignant growth proceed unrestrained. Tetraploidization can contribute to oncogenesis because hyperploid cells are genomically unstable. We report that hyperploid cancer cells become immunogenic because of a constitutive endoplasmic reticulum stress response resulting in the aberrant cell surface exposure of calreticulin. Hyperploid, calreticulin-exposing cancer cells readily proliferated in immunodeficient mice and conserved their increased DNA content. In contrast, hyperploid cells injected into immunocompetent mice generated tumors only after a delay, and such tumors exhibited reduced DNA content, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and calreticulin exposure. Our results unveil an immunosurveillance system that imposes immunoselection against hyperploidy in carcinogen- and oncogene-induced cancers.


Molecular Cell | 2001

Late Arrest of Spermiogenesis and Germ Cell Apoptosis in Mice Lacking the TBP-like TLF/TRF2 Gene

Igor Martianov; Gian Maria Fimia; Andrée Dierich; Martti Parvinen; Paolo Sassone-Corsi; Irwin Davidson

Metazoan genomes encode two related proteins, TBP and the TBP-like factor (TLF/TRF2), sharing a highly conserved saddle-like domain. TLF is highly expressed in a finely regulated pattern in the mouse testis during spermatogenesis. The murine TLF gene has been inactivated using homologous recombination. TLF-/- mice are viable, but mutant male mice are sterile due to a late, complete arrest of spermiogenesis. In mutant animals, spermatogonia and spermatocytes develop normally, but round spermatids undergo apoptosis at step 7. Although the expression of the transcriptional activator CREM and many other postmeiotic genes was unaltered in TLF null mice, several spermiogenesis genes transcribed in late round spermatids appeared to be under TLF control. Hence, TLF is not required for embryonic development in the mouse but is essential for spermiogenesis.

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Mauro Piacentini

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Marco Corazzari

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Francesco Cecconi

Boston Children's Hospital

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Alessandra Romagnoli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Roberta Nardacci

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marco Tripodi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppe Ippolito

National Institutes of Health

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Francesca Nazio

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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