Livia Caizzi
University of Turin
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Livia Caizzi.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Livia Caizzi; Giulio Ferrero; Santina Cutrupi; Francesca Cordero; Cecilia Ballaré; Valentina Miano; Stefania Reineri; Laura Ricci; Olivier Friard; Alessandro Testori; Davide Corà; M. Caselle; Luciano Di Croce; Michele De Bortoli
Significance Estrogen receptor-α (ERα) is a key protein in breast cancer and treatments targeting ERα are among the most widely used and effective in clinics. Although the role of estrogen-stimulated ERα in breast cancer has been exhaustively described, the functions of ERα in the absence of estrogen is hill-defined. In this work, we show that ERα binds extensively to the genome of breast cancer cells in the absence of estrogen, where it regulates the expression of hundreds of genes endowed with developmental functions. Our data suggest that ERα has a fundamental role in the homeostasis of luminal epithelial cells also when estrogen is ablated physiologically or pharmacologically. Estrogen receptor-α (ERα) has central role in hormone-dependent breast cancer and its ligand-induced functions have been extensively characterized. However, evidence exists that ERα has functions that are independent of ligands. In the present work, we investigated the binding of ERα to chromatin in the absence of ligands and its functions on gene regulation. We demonstrated that in MCF7 breast cancer cells unliganded ERα binds to more than 4,000 chromatin sites. Unexpectedly, although almost entirely comprised in the larger group of estrogen-induced binding sites, we found that unliganded-ERα binding is specifically linked to genes with developmental functions, compared with estrogen-induced binding. Moreover, we found that siRNA-mediated down-regulation of ERα in absence of estrogen is accompanied by changes in the expression levels of hundreds of coding and noncoding RNAs. Down-regulated mRNAs showed enrichment in genes related to epithelial cell growth and development. Stable ERα down-regulation using shRNA, which caused cell growth arrest, was accompanied by increased H3K27me3 at ERα binding sites. Finally, we found that FOXA1 and AP2γ binding to several sites is decreased upon ERα silencing, suggesting that unliganded ERα participates, together with other factors, in the maintenance of the luminal-specific cistrome in breast cancer cells.
Oncotarget | 2016
Valentina Miano; Giulio Ferrero; Stefania Reineri; Livia Caizzi; Laura Annaratone; Laura Ricci; Santina Cutrupi; Isabella Castellano; Francesca Cordero; Michele De Bortoli
Estrogen Receptor alpha (ERα) activation by estrogenic hormones induces luminal breast cancer cell proliferation. However, ERα plays also important hormone-independent functions to maintain breast tumor cells epithelial phenotype. We reported previously by RNA-Seq that in MCF-7 cells in absence of hormones ERα down-regulation changes the expression of several genes linked to cellular development, representing a specific subset of estrogen-induced genes. Here, we report regulation of long non-coding RNAs from the same experimental settings. A list of 133 Apo-ERα-Regulated lncRNAs (AER-lncRNAs) was identified and extensively characterized using published data from cancer cell lines and tumor tissues, or experiments on MCF-7 cells. For several features, we ran validation using cell cultures or fresh tumor biopsies. AER-lncRNAs represent a specific subset, only marginally overlapping estrogen-induced transcripts, whose expression is largely restricted to luminal cells and which is able to perfectly classify breast tumor subtypes. The most abundant AER-lncRNA, DSCAM-AS1, is expressed in ERα+ breast carcinoma, but not in pre-neoplastic lesions, and correlates inversely with EMT markers. Down-regulation of DSCAM-AS1 recapitulated, in part, the effect of silencing ERα, i.e. growth arrest and induction of EMT markers. In conclusion, we report an ERα-dependent lncRNA set representing a novel luminal signature in breast cancer cells.
Breast Cancer Research | 2014
Helena Aguilar; Ander Urruticoechea; Pasi Halonen; Kazuma Kiyotani; Taisei Mushiroda; Xavier Barril; Jordi Serra-Musach; Abul B.M.M.K. Islam; Livia Caizzi; Luciano Di Croce; Ekaterina Nevedomskaya; Wilbert Zwart; Josefine Bostner; Elin Karlsson; Gizeh Pérez Tenorio; Tommy Fornander; Dennis C. Sgroi; Rafael Garcia-Mata; Maurice P.H.M. Jansen; Nadia García; Núria Bonifaci; Fina Climent; María Teresa Soler; Alejo Rodríguez-Vida; Miguel Gil; Joan Brunet; Griselda Martrat; Laia Gómez-Baldó; Ana I. Extremera; Agnes Figueras
IntroductionEndocrine therapies targeting cell proliferation and survival mediated by estrogen receptor α (ERα) are among the most effective systemic treatments for ERα-positive breast cancer. However, most tumors initially responsive to these therapies acquire resistance through mechanisms that involve ERα transcriptional regulatory plasticity. Herein we identify VAV3 as a critical component in this process.MethodsA cell-based chemical compound screen was carried out to identify therapeutic strategies against resistance to endocrine therapy. Binding to ERα was evaluated by molecular docking analyses, an agonist fluoligand assay and short hairpin (sh)RNA–mediated protein depletion. Microarray analyses were performed to identify altered gene expression. Western blot analysis of signaling and proliferation markers, and shRNA-mediated protein depletion in viability and clonogenic assays, were performed to delineate the role of VAV3. Genetic variation in VAV3 was assessed for association with the response to tamoxifen. Immunohistochemical analyses of VAV3 were carried out to determine its association with therapeutic response and different tumor markers. An analysis of gene expression association with drug sensitivity was carried out to identify a potential therapeutic approach based on differential VAV3 expression.ResultsThe compound YC-1 was found to comparatively reduce the viability of cell models of acquired resistance. This effect was probably not due to activation of its canonical target (soluble guanylyl cyclase), but instead was likely a result of binding to ERα. VAV3 was selectively reduced upon exposure to YC-1 or ERα depletion, and, accordingly, VAV3 depletion comparatively reduced the viability of cell models of acquired resistance. In the clinical scenario, germline variation in VAV3 was associated with the response to tamoxifen in Japanese breast cancer patients (rs10494071 combined P value = 8.4 × 10−4). The allele association combined with gene expression analyses indicated that low VAV3 expression predicts better clinical outcome. Conversely, high nuclear VAV3 expression in tumor cells was associated with poorer endocrine therapy response. Based on VAV3 expression levels and the response to erlotinib in cancer cell lines, targeting EGFR signaling may be a promising therapeutic strategy.ConclusionsThis study proposes VAV3 as a biomarker and a rationale for its use as a signaling target to prevent and/or overcome resistance to endocrine therapy in breast cancer.
Oncogene | 2012
Santina Cutrupi; Stefania Reineri; A. Panetto; E. Grosso; Livia Caizzi; Laura Ricci; Olivier Friard; S Agati; M Scatolini; G. Chiorino; A. E. Lykkesfeldt; M. De Bortoli
Pharmacological resistance is a serious threat to the clinical success of hormone therapy for breast cancer. The antiproliferative response to antagonistic drugs such as tamoxifen (Tam) critically depends on the recruitment of NCoR/SMRT corepressors to estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) bound to estrogen target genes. Under certain circumstances, as demonstrated in the case of interleukin-1β (IL-1β) treatment, the protein Tab2 interacts with ERα/NCoR and causes dismissal of NCoR from these genes, leading to loss of the antiproliferative response. In Tam-resistant (TamR) ER-positive breast cancer cells, we observed that Tab2 presents a shift in mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate--PAGE (SDS-PAGE) similar to that seen in MCF7 wt upon stimulation with IL-1β, suggesting constitutive activation. Accordingly, TamR treatment with Tab2-specific short interfering RNA, restored the antiproliferative response to Tam in these cells. As Tab2 is known to directly interact with the N-terminal domain of ERα, we synthesized a peptide composed of a 14-aa motif of this domain, which effectively competes with ERα/Tab2 interaction in pull-down and co-immunoprecipitation experiments, fused to the carrier TAT peptide to allow internalization. Treatment of TamR cells with this peptide resulted in partial recovery of the antiproliferative response to Tam, suggesting a strategy to revert pharmacological resistance in breast cancer. Silencing of Tab2 in TamR cells by siRNA caused modulation of a gene set related to the control of cell cycle and extensively connected to BRCA1 in a functional network. These genes were able to discern two groups of patients, from a published data set of Tam-treated breast cancer profiles, with significantly different disease-free survival. Altogether, our data implicate Tab2 as a mediator of resistance to endocrine therapy and as a potential new target to reverse pharmacological resistance and potentiate antiestrogen action.
The EMBO Journal | 2013
Elisabeth Simboeck; Arantxa Gutierrez; Luca Cozzuto; Malte Beringer; Livia Caizzi; William M Keyes; Luciano Di Croce
Cellular senescence is an intrinsic defense mechanism to various cellular stresses: while still metabolically active, senescent cells stop dividing and enter a proliferation arrest. Here, we identify DPY30, a member of all mammalian histone H3K4 histone methyltransferases (HMTases), as a key regulator of the proliferation potential of human primary cells. Following depletion of DPY30, cells show a severe proliferation defect and display a senescent phenotype, including a flattened and enlarged morphology, elevated level of reactive oxygen species (ROS), increased SA‐β‐galactosidase activity, and formation of senescence‐associated heterochromatin foci (SAHFs). While DPY30 depletion leads to a reduced level of H3K4me3‐marked active chromatin, we observed a concomitant activation of CDK inhibitors, including p16INK4a, independent of H3K4me3. ChIP experiments show that key regulators of cell‐cycle progression, including ID proteins, are under direct control of DPY30. Because ID proteins are negative regulators of the transcription factors ETS1/2, depletion of DPY30 leads to the transcriptional activation of p16INK4a by ETS1/2 and thus to a senescent‐like phenotype. Ectoptic re‐introduction of ID protein expression can partially rescue the senescence‐like phenotype induced by DPY30 depletion. Thus, our data indicate that DPY30 controls proliferation by regulating ID proteins expression, which in turn lead to senescence bypass.
eLife | 2016
Seychelle M. Vos; David Pöllmann; Livia Caizzi; Katharina B Hofmann; Pascaline Rombaut; Tomasz Zimniak; Franz Herzog; Patrick Cramer
Transcription regulation in metazoans often involves promoter-proximal pausing of RNA polymerase (Pol) II, which requires the 4-subunit negative elongation factor (NELF). Here we discern the functional architecture of human NELF through X-ray crystallography, protein crosslinking, biochemical assays, and RNA crosslinking in cells. We identify a NELF core subcomplex formed by conserved regions in subunits NELF-A and NELF-C, and resolve its crystal structure. The NELF-AC subcomplex binds single-stranded nucleic acids in vitro, and NELF-C associates with RNA in vivo. A positively charged face of NELF-AC is involved in RNA binding, whereas the opposite face of the NELF-AC subcomplex binds NELF-B. NELF-B is predicted to form a HEAT repeat fold, also binds RNA in vivo, and anchors the subunit NELF-E, which is confirmed to bind RNA in vivo. These results reveal the three-dimensional architecture and three RNA-binding faces of NELF. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.14981.001
FEBS Journal | 2011
Livia Caizzi; Santina Cutrupi; Alessandro Testori; Davide Corà; Francesca Cordero; Olivier Friard; Cecilia Ballaré; Roberta Porporato; Giorgio Giurato; Alessandro Weisz; Enzo Medico; M. Caselle; L Di Croce; Michele De Bortoli
Resumen del poster presentado al 36th FEBS Congress celebrado en Torino (Italia) del 25 al 30 de Junio de 2011.-- et al.
FEBS Journal | 2011
Alessandro Testori; Davide Corà; Livia Caizzi; Santina Cutrupi; Olivier Friard; M De Bortoli; M. Caselle
Resumen del poster presentado al 36th FEBS Congress celebrado en Torino (Italia) del 25 al 30 de Junio de 2011.-- et al.
FEBS Journal | 2011
Stefania Reineri; Santina Cutrupi; S Agati; Livia Caizzi; Laura Ricci; A. Panetto; E. Grosso; G. Chiorino; A. E. Lykkesfeldt; M De Bortoli
Resumen del poster presentado al 36th FEBS Congress celebrado en Torino (Italia) del 25 al 30 de Junio de 2011.-- et al.
BMC Genomics | 2012
Alessandro Testori; Livia Caizzi; Santina Cutrupi; Olivier Friard; Michele De Bortoli; Davide Corà; M. Caselle