Giuseppe Costa
University of Palermo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Giuseppe Costa.
Cell Division | 2012
Viviana Barra; Tiziana Schillaci; Laura Lentini; Giuseppe Costa; Aldo Di Leonardo
BackgroundAneuploidy has been acknowledged as a major source of genomic instability in cancer, and it is often considered the result of chromosome segregation errors including those caused by defects in genes controlling the mitotic spindle assembly, centrosome duplication and cell-cycle checkpoints. Aneuploidy and chromosomal instability has been also correlated with epigenetic alteration, however the molecular basis of this correlation is poorly understood.ResultsTo address the functional connection existing between epigenetic changes and aneuploidy, we used RNA-interference to silence the DNMT1 gene, encoding for a highly conserved member of the DNA methyl-transferases. DNMT1 depletion slowed down proliferation of near-diploid human tumor cells (HCT116) and triggered G1 arrest in primary human fibroblasts (IMR90), by inducing p53 stabilization and, in turn, p21waf1 transactivation. Remarkably, p53 increase was not caused by DNA damage and was not observed after p14-ARF post-transcriptional silencing. Interestingly, DNMT1 silenced cells with p53 or p14-ARF depleted did not arrest in G1 but, instead, underwent DNA hypomethylation and became aneuploid.ConclusionOur results suggest that DNMT1 depletion triggers a p14ARF/p53 dependent cell cycle arrest to counteract the aneuploidy induced by changes in DNA methylation.
Oncotarget | 2016
Giuseppe Costa; Viviana Barra; Laura Lentini; Danilo Cilluffo; Aldo Di Leonardo
Aneuploidy, the unbalanced number of chromosomes in a cell, is considered a prevalent form of genetic instability and is largely acknowledged as a condition implicated in tumorigenesis. Epigenetic alterations like DNA hypomethylation have been correlated with cancer initiation/progression. Furthermore, a growing body of evidence suggests the involvement of epigenome-wide disruption as a cause of global DNA hypomethylation in aneuploidy generation. Here, we report that the DNA hypomethylating drug 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (DAC), affects the correct ploidy of nearly diploid HCT-116 human cells by altering the methylation pattern of the chromosomes. Specifically, we show that a DAC-induced reduction of 5-Methyl Cytosine at the pericentromeric region of chromosomes correlates with aneuploidy and mitotic defects. Our results suggest that DNA hypomethylation leads to aneuploidy by altering the DNA methylation landscape at the centromere that is necessary to ensure proper chromosomes segregation by recruiting the proteins necessary to build up a functional kinetochore.
Conservation Science in Cultural Heritage | 2018
Giovanni Fatta; Tiziana Campisi; Mario Li Castri; Giuseppe Costa
Archive | 2013
Aldo Di Leonardo; Laura Lentini; Giuseppe Costa; Sergio Spatafora
Archive | 2009
Giovanni Fatta; Tiziana Campisi; Giuseppe Costa; Mario Li Castri
Archive | 2009
Giuseppe Costa; Giovanni Fatta
Archive | 2008
Giovanni Fatta; Tiziana Campisi; Calogero Vinci; Giuseppe Costa; Mario Li Castri; Fatta G; Campisi T; Costa G; Li Castri M; Lo Piccolo S; Vinci C
Archive | 2008
Giovanni Fatta; Tiziana Campisi; Calogero Vinci; Giuseppe Costa; Mario Li Castri; Fatta G; Campisi T; Costa G; Li Castri M; Lo Piccolo S; Vinci C
Archive | 2008
Giovanni Fatta; Tiziana Campisi; Calogero Vinci; Giuseppe Costa; Mario Li Castri; Fatta G; Campisi T; Costa G; Li Castri M; Lo Piccolo S; Vinci C
Archive | 2008
Giovanni Fatta; Tiziana Campisi; Calogero Vinci; Giuseppe Costa; Mario Li Castri; Fatta G; Campisi T; Costa G; Li Castri M; Lo Piccolo S; Vinci C