Isabella Saggio
Sapienza University of Rome
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Featured researches published by Isabella Saggio.
Stem cell reports | 2016
Benedetto Sacchetti; Alessia Funari; Cristina Remoli; Giuseppe Giannicola; Gesine Kögler; Stefanie Liedtke; Giulio Cossu; Marta Serafini; Maurilio Sampaolesi; Enrico Tagliafico; Elena Tenedini; Isabella Saggio; Pamela Gehron Robey; Mara Riminucci; Paolo Bianco
Summary A widely shared view reads that mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (“MSCs”) are ubiquitous in human connective tissues, can be defined by a common in vitro phenotype, share a skeletogenic potential as assessed by in vitro differentiation assays, and coincide with ubiquitous pericytes. Using stringent in vivo differentiation assays and transcriptome analysis, we show that human cell populations from different anatomical sources, regarded as “MSCs” based on these criteria and assumptions, actually differ widely in their transcriptomic signature and in vivo differentiation potential. In contrast, they share the capacity to guide the assembly of functional microvessels in vivo, regardless of their anatomical source, or in situ identity as perivascular or circulating cells. This analysis reveals that muscle pericytes, which are not spontaneously osteochondrogenic as previously claimed, may indeed coincide with an ectopic perivascular subset of committed myogenic cells similar to satellite cells. Cord blood-derived stromal cells, on the other hand, display the unique capacity to form cartilage in vivo spontaneously, in addition to an assayable osteogenic capacity. These data suggest the need to revise current misconceptions on the origin and function of so-called “MSCs,” with important applicative implications. The data also support the view that rather than a uniform class of “MSCs,” different mesoderm derivatives include distinct classes of tissue-specific committed progenitors, possibly of different developmental origin.
The EMBO Journal | 1995
Isabella Saggio; Isabelle Gloaguen; Poiana G; Ralph Laufer
Human CNTF is a neurocytokine that elicits potent neurotrophic effects by activating a receptor complex composed of the ligand‐specific alpha‐receptor subunit (CNTFR alpha) and two signal transducing proteins, which together constitute a receptor for leukemia inhibitory factor (LIFR). At high concentrations, CNTF can also activate the LIFR and possibly other cross‐reactive cytokine receptors in the absence of CNTFR alpha. To gain a better understanding of its structure‐function relationships and to develop analogs with increased receptor specificity, the cytokine was submitted to affinity maturation using phage display technology. Variants with greatly increased CNTFR alpha affinity were selected from a phage‐displayed library of CNTF variants carrying random amino acid substitutions in the putative D helix. Selected variants contained substitutions of the wild‐type Gln167 residue, either alone or in combination with neighboring mutations. These results provide evidence for an important functional role of the mutagenized region in CNTFR alpha binding. Affinity enhancing mutations conferred to CNTF increased potency to trigger biological effects mediated by CNTFR alpha and enhanced neurotrophic activity on chicken ciliary neurons. In contrast, the same mutations did not potentiate the CNTFR alpha‐independent receptor actions of CNTF. These CNTF analogs thus represent receptor‐specific superagonists, which should help to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the pleiotropic actions of the neurocytokine.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2006
Mara Riminucci; Isabella Saggio; Pamela Gehron Robey; Paolo Bianco
At a time when significant attention is devoted worldwide to stem cells as a potential tool for curing incurable diseases, fibrous dysplasia of bone (FD) provides a paradigm for stem cell diseases. Consideration of the time and mechanism of the causative mutations and of nature of the pluripotent cells that mutate in early embryonic development indicates that, as a disease of the entire organism, FD can be seen as a disease of pluripotent embryonic cells. As a disease of bone as an organ, in turn, FD can be seen as a disease of postnatal skeletal stem cells, which give rise to dysfunctional osteoblasts. Recognizing FD as a stem cell disease provides a novel conceptual angle and a way to generate appropriate models of the disease, which will continue to provide further insight into its natural history and pathogenesis. In addition, skeletal stem cells may represent a tool for innovative treatments. These can be conceived as directed to alter the in vivo behavior of mutated stem cells, to replace mutated cells through local transplantation, or to correct the genetic defect in the stem cells themselves. In vitro and in vivo models are currently being generated that will permit exploration of these avenues in depth.
Journal of Virology | 2003
Barbara Salone; Yuri Martina; Stefania Piersanti; Enrico Cundari; Gioia Cherubini; Laure Franqueville; Cristina Maria Failla; Pierre Boulanger; Isabella Saggio
ABSTRACT Many adenovirus serotypes enter cells by high-affinity binding to the coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor (CAR) and integrin-mediated internalization. In the present study, we analyzed the possible receptor function of α3β1 for adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5). We found that penton base and integrin α3β1 could interact in vitro. In vivo, both Ad5-cell binding and virus-mediated transduction were inhibited in the presence of anti-α3 and anti-β1 function-blocking antibodies, and this occurred in both CAR-positive and CAR-negative cell lines. Peptide library screenings and data from binding experiments with wild-type and mutant penton base proteins suggest that the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) in the penton base protein, the best known integrin binding motif, is only part of the binding interface with α3β1, which involved multiple additional contact sites.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Cristina Cossetti; Luana Lugini; Letizia Astrologo; Isabella Saggio; Stefano Fais; Corrado Spadafora
Mendelian laws provide the universal founding paradigm for the mechanism of genetic inheritance through which characters are segregated and assorted. In recent years, however, parallel with the rapid growth of epigenetic studies, cases of inheritance deviating from Mendelian patterns have emerged. Growing studies underscore phenotypic variations and increased risk of pathologies that are transgenerationally inherited in a non-Mendelian fashion in the absence of any classically identifiable mutation or predisposing genetic lesion in the genome of individuals who develop the disease. Non-Mendelian inheritance is most often transmitted through the germline in consequence of primary events occurring in somatic cells, implying soma-to-germline transmission of information. While studies of sperm cells suggest that epigenetic variations can potentially underlie phenotypic alterations across generations, no instance of transmission of DNA- or RNA-mediated information from somatic to germ cells has been reported as yet. To address these issues, we have now generated a mouse model xenografted with human melanoma cells stably expressing EGFP-encoding plasmid. We find that EGFP RNA is released from the xenografted human cells into the bloodstream and eventually in spermatozoa of the mice. Tumor-released EGFP RNA is associated with an extracellular fraction processed for exosome purification and expressing exosomal markers, in all steps of the process, from the xenografted cancer cells to the spermatozoa of the recipient animals, strongly suggesting that exosomes are the carriers of a flow of information from somatic cells to gametes. Together, these results indicate that somatic RNA is transferred to sperm cells, which can therefore act as the final recipients of somatic cell-derived information.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2009
Stefania Piersanti; Cristina Remoli; Isabella Saggio; Alessia Funari; Stefano Michienzi; Benedetto Sacchetti; Pamela Gehron Robey; Mara Riminucci; Paolo Bianco
Human skeletal progenitors were engineered to stably express R201C mutated, constitutively active Gsα using lentiviral vectors. Long‐term transduced skeletal progenitors were characterized by an enhanced production of cAMP, indicating the transfer of the fundamental cellular phenotype caused by activating mutations of Gsα. Like skeletal progenitors isolated from natural fibrous dysplasia (FD) lesions, transduced cells could generate bone but not adipocytes or the hematopoietic microenvironment on in vivo transplantation. In vitro osteogenic differentiation was noted for the lack of mineral deposition, a blunted upregulation of osteocalcin, and enhanced upregulation of other osteogenic markers such as alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and bone sialoprotein (BSP) compared with controls. A very potent upregulation of RANKL expression was observed, which correlates with the pronounced osteoclastogenesis observed in FD lesions in vivo. Stable transduction resulted in a marked upregulation of selected phosphodiesterase (PDE) isoform mRNAs and a prominent increase in total PDE activity. This predicts an adaptive response in skeletal progenitors transduced with constitutively active, mutated Gsα. Indeed, like measurable cAMP levels, the differentiative responses of transduced skeletal progenitors were profoundly affected by inhibition of PDEs or lack thereof. Finally, using lentiviral vectors encoding short hairpin (sh) RNA interfering sequences, we demonstrated that selective silencing of the mutated allele is both feasible and effective in reverting the aberrant cAMP production brought about by the constitutively active Gsα and some of its effects on in vitro differentiation of skeletal progenitors.
Cell Cycle | 2006
Gioia Cherubini; Tatiana Petouchoff; Milena Grossi; Stefania Piersanti; Enrico Cundari; Isabella Saggio
In order to take advantage of cell replication machinery, viruses have evolved complex strategies to override cell cycle checkpoints and force host cells into S phase. To do so, virus products must interfere not only with the basal cell cycle regulators, such as pRb or Mad2, but also with the main surveillance pathways such as those controlled by p53 and ATM. Recently, a number of defective viruses has been produced which, lacking the latter ability, are incapable of replicating in normal cells but should be able to grow and finally lyse those cells that, such as the tumor cells, have lost their surveillance mechanisms. A prototype of these oncolytic viruses is the E1B55K-defective Adenovirus ONYX-015, which was predicted to selectively replicate and kill p53-deficient cancer cells. We found that, despite wt p53 and notwithstanding the activation of the checkpoint regulators p53, ATM, and Mad2, ONYX-015 actively replicated in HUVEC cells. Furthermore, ONYX-015 replication induced a specific phenotype, which is distinct from that of the E4-deleted adenovirus dlE4 Ad5, although both viruses express the main regulatory region E1A. This phenotype includes overriding of the G1/S and G2/M checkpoints, over-expression of MAD2 and retardation of mitosis and accumulation of polyploid cells, suggesting the occurrence of alterations at the mitotic-spindle checkpoint and impairment of the post-mitotic checkpoint. Our data suggest that viral E1A and E4 region products can override all host cell-checkpoint response even at the presence of a full activation of the ATM/p53 pathway. Furthermore, the E4 region alone seems to act independently of the E1B55K virus product in impairing the ATM-dependent, p53-independent G2/M checkpoint since dlE4 Ad5-infected cells arrested in G2 while ONYX-015-infected cells did enter mitosis.
Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2010
Mara Riminucci; Pamela Gehron Robey; Isabella Saggio; Paolo Bianco
Activating mutations of the GNAS gene, which causes fibrous dysplasia of bone (FD), lead to remarkable changes in the properties of skeletal progenitors, and it is these changes that mediate the pathological effect of this gene on bone. Mutated skeletal stem cells lose the ability to differentiate into adipocytes, and to maintain in situ, and transfer heterotopically, the hematopoietic microenvironment, leading to abnormal bone marrow histology in FD. They overexpress molecular effectors of osteoclastogenesis, thus promoting inappropriate bone resorption leading to fragility of FD bone. They express the phosphate-regulating hormone FGF-23 at normal levels, whose excess in the serum of FD patients correlates with the mass of osteogenic cells within FD lesions, leading to osteomalacia and deformity of the FD bone, and revealing that bone is an endocrine organ regulating renal handling of phosphate. Mechanisms of allelic selection and stem cell selection occur in mutated skeletal stem cells and contribute to the inherent diversity and evolution over time in FD. The definition of the etiological role of GNAS mutations marks the watershed between many decades of descriptive observation and the definition of cellular and molecular mechanisms that would explain and hopefully allow for a cure for the disease. Placing stem cells at center stage has permitted substantial advances in one decade, and promises more for the one to come.
Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2004
Stefania Piersanti; Gioia Cherubini; Yuri Martina; Barbara Salone; Daniele Avitabile; Fabiana Grosso; Enrico Cundari; Giovanni Di Zenzo; Isabella Saggio
In recent years a strong effort has been devoted to the search for new, safe and efficient gene therapy vectors. Phage λ is a promising backbone for the development of new vectors: its genome can host large inserts, DNA is protected from degradation by the capsid and the ligand-exposed D and V proteins can be extensively modified. Current phage-based vectors are inefficient and/or receptor-independent transducers. To produce new, receptor-selective and transduction-efficient vectors for mammalian cells we engineered λ by inserting into its genome a GFP expression cassette, and by displaying the penton base (Pb) of adenovirus or its central region (amino acids 286–393). The Pb mediates attachment, entry and endosomal escape of adenovirus in mammalian cells, and its central region (amino acids 286–393) includes the principal receptor-binding motif (340RGD342). Both the phage chimerae λ Pb and λ Pb (286–393) were able to transduce cell lines and primary cultures of human fibroblasts. Competition experiments showed that the transduction pathway was receptor-dependent. We also describe the different trafficking properties of λ Pb and λ Pb (286–393). Bafilomycin, which blocks endosome maturation, influenced the intracellular distribution of λ Pb (286–393), but not that of λ Pb. The proteasome inhibitor MG-132 improved the efficiency of λ Pb (286–393)-mediated transduction, but not that of λ Pb. In summary, this work shows the feasibility of using λ phage as an efficient vector for gene transfer into mammalian cells. We show that λ Pb and λ Pb (286–393) can both mediate receptor-dependent transduction; while only λ Pb is able to promote endosomal escape and proteasome resistance of phage particles.
Calcified Tissue International | 2006
Stefania Piersanti; Benedetto Sacchetti; Alessia Funari; S. Di Cesare; D. Bonci; Gioia Cherubini; C. Peschle; Mara Riminucci; Paolo Bianco; Isabella Saggio
Systems for gene transfer and silencing in human skeletal stem cells (hSSCs, also stromal or mesenchymal stem cells) are important for addressing critical issues in basic hSSC and skeletal biology and for developing gene therapy strategies for treatment of skeletal diseases. Whereas recent studies have shown the efficacy of lentiviral transduction for gene transfer in hSSCs in vitro, no study has yet proven that lentivector-transduced hSSCs retain their distinctive organogenic potential in vivo, as probed by in vivo transplantation assays. Therefore, in addition to analyzing the in vitro growth and differentiation properties of hSSCs transduced with advanced-generation lentivectors, we ectopically transplanted LV-eGFP-transduced hSSCs (along with an osteoconductive carrier) in the subcutaneous tissue of immunocompromised mice. eGFP-transduced cells formed heterotopic ossicles, generating osteoblasts, osteocytes, and stromal cells in vivo, which still expressed GFP at 2 months after transplantation. eGFP-expressing cells could be recovered from the ossicles 8 weeks posttransplantation and reestablished in culture as viable and proliferating cells. Further, we investigated the possibility of silencing individual genes in hSSCs using lentivectors encoding short hairpin precursors of RNA interfering sequences under the control of the Pol-III-dependent H1 promoter. Significant long-term silencing of both lamin A/C and GFP (an endogenous gene and a transgene, respectively) was obtained with lentivectors encoding shRNAs. These data provide the basis for analysis of the effect of gene knockdown during the organogenesis of bone in the in vivo transplantation system and for further studies on the silencing of alleles carrying dominant, disease-causing mutations.