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Dive into the research topics where Graziella Pratesi is active.

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Featured researches published by Graziella Pratesi.


Cancer Research | 2005

Isolation and In vitro Propagation of Tumorigenic Breast Cancer Cells with Stem/Progenitor Cell Properties

Dario Ponti; Aurora Costa; Nadia Zaffaroni; Graziella Pratesi; Giovanna Petrangolini; Danila Coradini; Silvana Pilotti; Marco A. Pierotti; Maria Grazia Daidone

Breast cancer-initiating cells have been recently identified in breast carcinoma as CD44+/CD24(-/low) cells, which exclusively retain tumorigenic activity and display stem cell-like properties. However, at present, direct evidence that breast cancer-initiating cells can be propagated in vitro is still lacking. We report here the isolation and in vitro propagation of breast cancer-initiating cells from three breast cancer lesions and from an established breast carcinoma cell line. Our breast carcinoma-derived cultures encompassed undifferentiated cells capable of self-renewal, extensive proliferation as clonal nonadherent spherical clusters, and differentiation along different mammary epithelial lineages (ductal and myoepithelial). Interestingly, cultured cells were CD44+/CD24- and Cx43-, overexpressed neoangiogenic and cytoprotective factors, expressed the putative stem cell marker Oct-4, and gave rise to new tumors when as few as 10(3) cells were injected into the mammary fat pad of SCID mice. Long-term cultures of breast tumorigenic cells with stem/progenitor cell properties represent a suitable in vitro model to study breast cancer-initiating cells and to develop therapeutic strategies aimed at eradicating the tumorigenic subpopulation within breast cancer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Highly tumorigenic lung cancer CD133+ cells display stem-like features and are spared by cisplatin treatment

Giulia Bertolini; Luca Roz; Paola Perego; Monica Tortoreto; Enrico Fontanella; Laura Gatti; Graziella Pratesi; Alessandra Fabbri; Francesca Andriani; Stella Tinelli; Elena Roz; Roberto Caserini; Salvatore Lo Vullo; Tiziana Camerini; Luigi Mariani; Domenico Delia; Elisa Calabrò; Ugo Pastorino; Gabriella Sozzi

The identification of lung tumor-initiating cells and associated markers may be useful for optimization of therapeutic approaches and for predictive and prognostic information in lung cancer patients. CD133, a surface glycoprotein linked to organ-specific stem cells, was described as a marker of cancer-initiating cells in different tumor types. Here, we report that a CD133+, epithelial-specific antigen-positive (CD133+ESA+) population is increased in primary nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) compared with normal lung tissue and has higher tumorigenic potential in SCID mice and expression of genes involved in stemness, adhesion, motility, and drug efflux than the CD133− counterpart. Cisplatin treatment of lung cancer cells in vitro resulted in enrichment of CD133+ fraction both after acute cytotoxic exposure and in cells with stable cisplatin-resistant phenotype. Subpopulations of CD133+ABCG2+ and CD133+CXCR4+ cells were spared by in vivo cisplatin treatment of lung tumor xenografts established from primary tumors. A tendency toward shorter progression-free survival was observed in CD133+ NSCLC patients treated with platinum-containing regimens. Our results indicate that chemoresistant populations with highly tumorigenic and stem-like features are present in lung tumors. The molecular features of these cells may provide the rationale for more specific therapeutic targeting and the definition of predictive factors in clinical management of this lethal disease.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 1989

Protective effect of reduced glutathione against cisplatin-induced renal and systemic toxicity and its influence on the therapeutic activity of the antitumor drug

Franco Zunino; Graziella Pratesi; Antonella Micheloni; Ennio Cavalletti; Franca Sala; Odoardo Tofanetti

Reduced glutathione has been shown to be an effective protector against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity of potential clinical value, since it does not reduce antitumor activity of the cytotoxic drug. This paper extends previous observations on the protective potential of reduced glutathione against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity, in different rodent models. Following i.v. administration, glutathione protection against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity was found to be critically dependent on timing of thiol administration. Whereas the sulfhydryl compound provided almost complete protection in CD rats, the protective effect against toxic renal damage was only partial in mice of different strains. In spite of the modest protection against kidney toxicity, glutathione reduced lethal toxicity in the mouse. Under the same experimental conditions at protective dose levels, the tripeptide thiol did not interfere with the antitumor effectiveness of cisplatin, in any of the tumor models examined. The kidney content of non-protein sulfhydryls of CD rats produced by the effective dose of glutathione was markedly higher than that found in the mouse treated with the same dose. This finding is consistent with a differential protection provided by glutathione against cisplatin-induced renal toxicity in these species.


Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 1998

In vitro and in vivo interaction between cisplatin and topotecan in ovarian carcinoma systems

Simona Romanelli; Paola Perego; Graziella Pratesi; Nives Carenini; Monica Tortoreto; Franco Zunino

Abstract Topotecan, a camptothecin analogue, is a␣specific inhibitor of topoisomerase I approved for use in the treatment of patients with refractory ovarian carcinoma. The drugs mechanism of action suggests a potential efficacy of drug combinations incorporating DNA-damaging agents. In an attempt better to define a␣rational basis for drug combination we examined the effect of topotecan on the cytotoxicity and antitumor activity of cisplatin in an ovarian carcinoma system growing in vitro and in vivo as a tumor xenograft. The in vitro cell system included a cisplatin-sensitive cell line, IGROV-1, and a cisplatin-resistant subline, IGROV-1/Pt0.5, which is characterized by p53 mutation and loss of normal function of the wild-type gene of the parental cell line. This cell system was chosen since the cell sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents appears to be dependent on p53 gene status. Cytotoxicity was assessed by the growth inhibition assay using different schedules: (a) a 1-h period of cisplatin exposure followed by a 24-h topotecan treatment and (b) a 1-h period of simultaneous exposure to cisplatin and topotecan. In the case of the sequential schedule, an additive interaction was observed in IGROV-1 and IGROV-1/Pt0.5 cells. When the simultaneous schedule was used, a synergistic interaction, more evident for the cisplatin-sensitive cells, was found. On the basis of these observations at a cellular level, the effect of concomitant administration of the two drugs (i.e., the most favorable schedule) was studied in the IGROV-1 tumor xenograft, which is moderately responsive to cisplatin and topotecan. Suboptimal doses of each drug (with a low dose of topotecan, 5.1 mg/kg) achieved an antitumor effect comparable with or superior to that of the optimal dose of a single treatment (tumor weight inhibition, 60%), thus indicating a␣pharmacological advantage of the combination over the single treatment. However, an increase in the topotecan dose (7.1 mg/kg) was associated with an evident increase in the toxicity of the combination, thereby suggesting that the drug interaction was not tumor-specific. Although the molecular basis of the drug interaction is not clear, it is likely that inhibition of topoisomerase I affects the ability of cells to repair cisplatin adducts. Such findings may have pharmacological implications since they suggest the potential clinical interest of topoisomerase I inhibitors in combination with cisplatin.


British Journal of Cancer | 1999

A novel charged trinuclear platinum complex effective against cisplatin-resistant tumours: hypersensitivity of p53-mutant human tumour xenografts.

Graziella Pratesi; Paola Perego; Donatella Polizzi; Sabina C. Righetti; Rosanna Supino; Claudia Caserini; Carla Manzotti; Fernando Giuliani; Gabriella Pezzoni; Sergio Tognella; Silvano Spinelli; Nicholas Farrell; Franco Zunino

SummaryMultinuclear platinum compounds were rationally designed to bind to DNA in a different manner from that of cisplatin and its mononuclear analogues. A triplatinum compound of the series (BBR 3464) was selected for preclinical development, since, in spite of its charged nature, it was very potent as cytotoxic agent and effective against cisplatin-resistant tumour cells. Anti-tumour efficacy studies were performed in a panel of human tumour xenografts refractory or poorly responsive to cisplatin. The novel platinum compound exhibited efficacy in all tested tumours and an impressive efficacy (including complete tumour regressions) was displayed in two lung carcinoma models, CaLu-3 and POCS. Surprisingly, BBR 3464 showed a superior activity against p53-mutant tumours as compared to those carrying the wild-type gene. The involvement of p53 in tumour response was investigated in an osteosarcoma cell line, SAOS, which is null for p53 and is highly sensitive to BBR 3464, and in the same cells following introduction of the wild-type p53 gene. Thus the pattern of cellular response was investigated in a panel of human tumour cells with a different p53 gene status. The results showed that the transfer of functional p53 resulted in a marked (tenfold) reduction of cellular chemosensitivity to the multinuclear platinum complex but in a moderate sensitization to cisplatin. In addition, in contrast to cisplatin, the triplatinum complex was very effective as an inducer of apoptosis in a lung carcinoma cell line carrying mutant p53. The peculiar pattern of anti-tumour activity of the triplatinum complex and its ability to induce p53-independent cell death may have relevant pharmacological implications, since p53, a critical protein involved in DNA repair and induction of apoptosis by conventional DNA-damaging agents, is defective in several human tumours. We suggest that the peculiar DNA binding properties of the triplatinum complex may contribute to the striking profile of anti-tumour efficacy. Taken together, the available information supports that anti-tumour activity of the novel compound is mediated by a mechanism different from that of conventional platinum complexes, and compounds of this series could represent a new class of promising anti-tumour agents.


Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs | 2004

Camptothecins in clinical development

Franco Zunino; Graziella Pratesi

Following the realisation that DNA topoisomerase I is a useful therapeutic target to be exploited for the design of potential inhibitors, topoisomerase I inhibitors now represent an established class of effective agents. In spite of intense efforts in the field, only camptothecins have a clinical relevance. Several options in chemical manipulation of natural camptothecin have been explored to overcome the major drawbacks of the drug, which include water insolubility, lactone instability, reversibility of the drug–target interaction and drug resistance. Several analogues are currently in clinical development, including water soluble camptothecins, lipophilic camptothecins and polymer-bound camptothecins. The therapeutic advantages of novel camptothecins over the two analogues (topotecan and irinotecan) approved for clinical use remain to be defined. This article is an overview of the relevant features of the analogues that are undergoing clinical development.


Oncogene | 2004

Ribozyme-mediated inhibition of survivin expression increases spontaneous and drug-induced apoptosis and decreases the tumorigenic potential of human prostate cancer cells

Marzia Pennati; Mara Binda; Gennaro Colella; Monica Zoppé; Marco Folini; Sara Vignati; Alessandra Valentini; Lorenzo Citti; Michelandrea De Cesare; Graziella Pratesi; Mauro Giacca; Maria Grazia Daidone; Nadia Zaffaroni

Survivin is a member of the inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family, which has been implicated in inhibition of apoptosis and control of mitotic progression. The finding that survivin is overexpressed in most human tumors but absent in normal adult tissues has led to the proposal of survivin as a promising therapeutic target for anticancer therapies. We decided to evaluate the effects of a ribozyme-based strategy for survivin inhibition in androgen-independent human prostate cancer cells. We constructed a Moloney-based retroviral vector expressing a ribozyme targeting the 3′ end of the CUA110 triplet in survivin mRNA, encoded as a chimeric RNA within adenoviral VA1 RNA. Polyclonal cell populations obtained by infection with the retroviral vector of two androgen-independent human prostate cancer cell lines (DU145 and PC-3) were selected for the study. Ribozyme-expressing prostate cancer cells were characterized by a significant reduction of survivin expression compared to parental cells transduced with a control ribozyme; the cells became polyploid, underwent caspase-9-dependent apoptosis and showed an altered pattern of gene expression, as detected by oligonucleotide array analysis. Survivin inhibition also increased the susceptibility of prostate cancer cells to cisplatin-induced apoptosis and prevented tumor formation when cells were xenografted in athymic nude mice. These findings suggest that manipulation of the antiapoptotic survivin pathway may provide a novel approach for the treatment of androgen-independent prostate cancer.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 1978

Synthesis and antitumour activity of new daunorubicin and adriamycin analogues

Federico Arcamone; Luigi Bernardi; Bianca Patelli; Pietro Giardino; A. T. Di Marco; Anna Maria Casazza; C. Soranzo; Graziella Pratesi

A new synthetic procedure for the preparation of daunorubicin and adriamycin analogues bearing different substituents on ring D, has been developed. The new compounds display outstanding efficacy against experimental tumours of mice.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2010

Heterogeneous Phenotype of Human Melanoma Cells with In Vitro and In Vivo Features of Tumor-Initiating Cells

Michela Perego; Monica Tortoreto; Gabrina Tragni; Luigi Mariani; Paola Deho; Antonino Carbone; Mario Santinami; Roberto Patuzzo; Pamela Della Mina; Antonello Villa; Graziella Pratesi; Giacomo Cossa; Paola Perego; Maria Grazia Daidone; Malcolm R. Alison; Giorgio Parmiani; Licia Rivoltini; Chiara Castelli

Melanospheres, the melanoma cells that grow as nonadherent colonies and that show in vitro self-renewing capacity and multipotency, were selected from melanoma specimens or from melanoma cell lines. Melanospheres were highly tumorigenic, and intradermal injections in severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice of as few as 100 cells generated tumors that maintained tumorigenic potential into subsequent recipients. Primary and serially transplanted xenografts recapitulated the phenotypic features of the original melanoma of the patient. Melanoma cells cultured in the presence of fetal calf serum (FCS) were also tumorigenic in SCID mice, although with lower efficiency; these xenografts showed a homogeneous phenotype for the expression of melanoma-associated markers, Melan-A/Mart-1, HMB45, and MITF, and contained cells with features of fully differentiated cells. Melanospheres were heterogeneous for the expression of stem cell markers and showed a significantly enhanced expression of the Nanog and Oct3/4 transcription factors when compared with adherent melanoma cells. No direct and unique correlation between any of the examined stem cell markers and in vivo tumorigenicity was found. Taken together, our data provide further evidence on the heterogeneous nature of human melanomas and show that melanospheres and their corresponding tumors, which are generated in vivo in immunocompromised mice, represent a model to investigate melanoma biology.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2001

Role of apoptosis and apoptosis-related genes in cellular response and antitumor efficacy of anthracyclines.

Paola Perego; Elisabetta Corna; Michelandrea De Cesare; Laura Gatti; Donatella Polizzi; Graziella Pratesi; Rosanna Supino; Franco Zunino

Cellular resistance to anthracyclines is a major limitation of their clinical use in the treatment of human tumors. Resistance to doxorubicin is described as a multifactorial phenomenon involving the overexpression of defense factors and alterations in drug-target interactions. Such changes do not account for all manifestations of drug resistance, in particular intrinsic resistance of solid tumors. Since anthracyclines can induce apoptotic cell death, an alternative promising approach to drug resistance has focused on the study of cellular response to drug-induced DNA damage, with particular reference to the relationship between cytotoxicity/antitumor efficacy and apoptotic response. The evidence that a novel disaccharide analog (MEN 10755), endowed with an improved preclinical activity over doxorubicin, was also more effective as an inducer of apoptosis provided additional insights to better understand the cellular processes that confer sensitivity to anthracyclines. Although the presence or alteration of a single apoptosis-related factor (e.g., p53, bcl-2) is not predictive of the sensitivity/resistance status, the complex interplay among DNA damage-activated pathways is likely an important determinant of tumor cell sensitivity to anthracyclines

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Paola Perego

University of California

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