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Featured researches published by Loris De Cecco.


Oncogene | 2004

Alternative mutations of BRAF , RET and NTRK1 are associated with similar but distinct gene expression patterns in papillary thyroid cancer

Milo Frattini; Cristina Ferrario; Paola Bressan; Debora Balestra; Loris De Cecco; Piera Mondellini; Italia Bongarzone; Paola Collini; Manuela Gariboldi; Silvana Pilotti; Marco A. Pierotti; Angela Greco

Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is associated with RET and NTRK1 rearrangements and BRAF mutations. A series of 60 PTCs collected in a single center from Italian patients were histologically re-examined and subclassified as well differentiated or tall cell variant. The sample collection was analysed for the presence of all the reported PTC-associated genetic alterations through DNA or cDNA amplification, followed by automated sequencing. The analysis of exons 11 and 15 of BRAF gene revealed the T1796A (V599E) mutation in 32% of cases, and this alteration is significantly associated with PTC tall cell variant. Oncogenic rearrangements of RET and NTRK1 receptors were found in 33 and 5% of cases, respectively. No Ras mutations were detected. Overall, genetic alterations were detected in two-thirds of samples, and in no single case more than one mutational event was found simultaneously. Gene expression profiling of a subset of 31 tumors performed using cDNA microarray chips showed no strong differences in global gene expression among the different cases. However, a supervised analysis of the obtained data identified a subset of genes differentially expressed in tumors carrying BRAF mutation or RTK rearrangement.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2010

MicroRNA Signature of Malignant Mesothelioma with Potential Diagnostic and Prognostic Implications

Sara Busacca; Serena Germano; Loris De Cecco; Maurizio Rinaldi; Federico Comoglio; Francesco Favero; Bruno Murer; Luciano Mutti; Marco A. Pierotti; Giovanni Gaudino

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) post-transcriptionally regulate the expression of target genes, and may behave as oncogenes or tumor suppressors. Human malignant mesothelioma is an asbestos-related cancer, with poor prognosis and low median survival. Here we report, for the first time, a cross-evaluation of miRNA expression in mesothelioma (MPP-89, REN) and human mesothelial cells (HMC-telomerase reverse transcriptase). Microarray profiling, confirmed by real-time quantitative RT-PCR, revealed a differential expression of miRNAs between mesothelioma and mesothelial cells. In addition, a computational analysis combining miRNA and gene expression profiles allowed the accurate prediction of genes potentially targeted by dysregulated miRNAs. Several predicted genes belong to terms of Gene Ontology (GO) that are associated with the development and progression of mesothelioma. This suggests that miRNAs may be key players in mesothelioma oncogenesis. We further investigated miRNA expression on a panel of 24 mesothelioma specimens, representative of the three histotypes (epithelioid, biphasic, and sarcomatoid), by quantitative RT-PCR. The expression of miR-17-5p, miR-21, miR-29a, miR-30c, miR-30e-5p, miR-106a, and miR-143 was significantly associated with the histopathological subtypes. Notably, the reduced expression of two miRNAs (miR-17-5p and miR-30c) correlated with better survival of patients with sarcomatoid subtype. Our preliminary analysis points at miRNAs as potential diagnostic and prognostic markers of mesothelioma, and suggests novel tools for the therapy of this malignancy.


Oncogene | 2004

Gene expression profiling of advanced ovarian cancer: characterization of a molecular signature involving fibroblast growth factor 2

Loris De Cecco; Luigi Marchionni; Manuela Gariboldi; James Francis Reid; M. Stefania Lagonigro; Stefano Caramuta; Cristina Ferrario; Erica Bussani; Delia Mezzanzanica; Fabio Turatti; Domenico Delia; Maria Grazia Daidone; Maria Oggionni; Norma Bertuletti; Antonino Ditto; Francesco Raspagliesi; Silvana Pilotti; Marco A. Pierotti; Silvana Canevari; Claudio Schneider

Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the gynecological disease with the highest death rate. We applied an automatic class discovery procedure based on gene expression profiling to stages III–IV tumors to search for molecular signatures associated with the biological properties and progression of EOC. Using a complementary DNA microarray containing 4451 cancer-related, sequence-verified features, we identified a subset of EOC characterized by the expression of numerous genes related to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and its remodeling, along with elements of the fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) signaling pathway. A total of 10 genes were validated by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, and coexpression of FGF2 and fibroblast growth factor receptor 4 in tumor cells was revealed by immunohistochemistry, confirming the reliability of gene expression by cDNA microarray. Since the functional relationships among these genes clearly suggested involvement of the identified molecular signature in processes related to epithelial–stromal interactions and/or epithelial–mesenchymal cellular plasticity, we applied supervised learning analysis on ovarian-derived cell lines showing distinct cellular phenotypes in culture. This procedure enabled construction of a gene classifier able to discriminate mesenchymal-like from epithelial-like cells. Genes overexpressed in mesenchymal-like cells proved to match the FGF2 signaling and ECM molecular signature, as identified by unsupervised class discovery on advanced tumor samples. In vitro functional analysis of the cell plasticity classifier was carried out using two isogenic and immortalized cell lines derived from ovarian surface epithelium and displaying mesenchymal and epithelial morphology, respectively. The results indicated the autocrine, but not intracrine stimulation of mesenchymal conversion and cohort/scatter migration of cells by FGF2, suggesting a central role for FGF2 signaling in the maintenance of cellular plasticity of ovary-derived cells throughout the carcinogenesis process. These findings raise mechanistic hypotheses on EOC pathogenesis and progression that might provide a rational underpinning for new therapeutic modalities.


BMC Cancer | 2009

Impact of biospecimens handling on biomarker research in breast cancer

Loris De Cecco; Valeria Musella; Silvia Veneroni; Vera Cappelletti; Italia Bongarzone; Maurizio Callari; Barbara Valeri; Marco A. Pierotti; Maria Grazia Daidone

BackgroundGene expression profiling is moving from the research setting to the practical clinical use.Gene signatures able to correctly identify high risk breast cancer patients as well as to predict response to treatment are currently under intense investigation. While technical issues dealing with RNA preparation, choice of array platforms, statistical analytical tools are taken into account, the tissue collection process is seldom considered.The time elapsed between surgical tissue removal and freezing of samples for biological characterizations is rarely well defined and/or recorded even for recently stored samples, despite the publications of standard operating procedures for biological sample collection for tissue banks.MethodsBreast cancer samples from 11 patients were collected immediately after surgical removal and subdivided into aliquots. One was immediately frozen and the others were maintained at room temperature for respectively 2, 6 and 24 hrs. RNA was extracted and gene expression profile was determined using cDNA arrays. Phosphoprotein profiles were studied in parallel.ResultsDelayed freezing affected the RNA quality only in 3 samples, which were not subjected to gene profiling. In the 8 breast cancer cases with apparently intact RNA also in sample aliquots frozen at delayed times, 461 genes were modulated simply as a function of freezing timing. Some of these genes were included in gene signatures biologically and clinically relevant for breast cancer. Delayed freezing also affected detection of phosphoproteins, whose pattern may be crucial for clinical decision on target-directed drugs.ConclusionTime elapsed between surgery and freezing of samples appears to have a strong impact and should be considered as a mandatory variable to control for clinical implications of inadequate tissue handling.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2010

Role of microRNAs in ovarian cancer pathogenesis and potential clinical implications.

Delia Mezzanzanica; Marina Bagnoli; Loris De Cecco; Barbara Valeri; Silvana Canevari

Despite important improvements over the past two decades, the overall cure rate of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) remains only approximately 30%. Although much has been learned about the proteins and pathways involved in early events of malignant transformation and drug resistance, a major challenge still remaining is the identification of markers for early diagnosis and prediction of response to chemotherapy. Recently, it has become clear that alterations in the expression of microRNAs (miRNAs) contribute to the pathogenesis and progression of several human malignancies. In this review we discuss current data concerning the accumulating evidence of the role of miRNAs in EOC pathogenesis and tumor characterization; their dysregulated expression in EOC; and their still undefined role in diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of response to therapy. The most frequently deregulated miRNAs are members of the let-7 and miR-200 families, the latter involved in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). EMT is part of normal ovarian surface epithelium physiology, being the key regulator of the post-ovulatory repair process, and failure to undergo EMT may be one of the events leading to transformation. A general down-modulation of miRNA expression is observed in EOC compared to normal tissue. However, a clear consensus on the miRNA signatures associated with prognosis or prediction of response to therapy has not yet been reached.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Comparison of Microarray Platforms for Measuring Differential MicroRNA Expression in Paired Normal/Cancer Colon Tissues

Maurizio Callari; Matteo Dugo; Valeria Musella; Edoardo Marchesi; Giovanna Chiorino; Maurizia Mello Grand; Marco A. Pierotti; Maria Grazia Daidone; Silvana Canevari; Loris De Cecco

Background Microarray technology applied to microRNA (miRNA) profiling is a promising tool in many research fields; nevertheless, independent studies characterizing the same pathology have often reported poorly overlapping results. miRNA analysis methods have only recently been systematically compared but only in few cases using clinical samples. Methodology/Principal Findings We investigated the inter-platform reproducibility of four miRNA microarray platforms (Agilent, Exiqon, Illumina, and Miltenyi), comparing nine paired tumor/normal colon tissues. The most concordant and selected discordant miRNAs were further studied by quantitative RT-PCR. Globally, a poor overlap among differentially expressed miRNAs identified by each platform was found. Nevertheless, for eight miRNAs high agreement in differential expression among the four platforms and comparability to qRT-PCR was observed. Furthermore, most of the miRNA sets identified by each platform are coherently enriched in data from the other platforms and the great majority of colon cancer associated miRNA sets derived from the literature were validated in our data, independently from the platform. Computational integration of miRNA and gene expression profiles suggested that anti-correlated predicted target genes of differentially expressed miRNAs are commonly enriched in cancer-related pathways and in genes involved in glycolysis and nutrient transport. Conclusions Technical and analytical challenges in measuring miRNAs still remain and further research is required in order to increase consistency between different microarray-based methodologies. However, a better inter-platform agreement was found by looking at miRNA sets instead of single miRNAs and through a miRNAs – gene expression integration approach.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2015

Augmentation of Response to Chemotherapy by microRNA-506 Through Regulation of RAD51 in Serous Ovarian Cancers

Guoyan Liu; Da Yang; Rajesha Rupaimoole; Chad V. Pecot; Yan Sun; Lingegowda S. Mangala; Xia Li; Ping Ji; David Cogdell; Limei Hu; Yingmei Wang; Cristian Rodriguez-Aguayo; Gabriel Lopez-Berestein; Ilya Shmulevich; Loris De Cecco; Kexin Chen; Delia Mezzanzanica; Fengxia Xue; Anil K. Sood; Wei Zhang

BACKGROUND Chemoresistance is a major challenge in cancer treatment. miR-506 is a potent inhibitor of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is also associated with chemoresistance. We characterized the role of miR-506 in chemotherapy response in high-grade serous ovarian cancers. METHODS We used Kaplan-Meier and log-rank methods to analyze the relationship between miR-506 and progression-free and overall survival in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) (n = 468) and Bagnoli (n = 130) datasets, in vitro experiments to study whether miR-506 is associated with homologous recombination, and response to chemotherapy agents. We used an orthotopic ovarian cancer mouse model (n = 10 per group) to test the effect of miR-506 on cisplatin and PARP inhibitor sensitivity. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS MiR-506 was associated with better response to therapy and longer progression-free and overall survival in two independent epithelial ovarian cancer patient cohorts (PFS: high vs low miR-506 expression; Bagnoli: hazard ratio [HR] = 3.06, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.90 to 4.70, P < .0001; TCGA: HR = 1.49, 95% CI = 1.00 to 2.25, P = 0.04). MiR-506 sensitized cells to DNA damage through directly targeting the double-strand DNA damage repair gene RAD51. Systemic delivery of miR-506 in 8-12 week old female athymic nude mice statistically significantly augmented the cisplatin and olaparib response (mean tumor weight ± SD, control miRNA plus cisplatin vs miR-506 plus cisplatin: 0.36±0.05g vs 0.07±0.02g, P < .001; control miRNA plus olaparib vs miR-506 plus olaparib: 0.32±0.13g vs 0.05±0.02g, P = .045, respectively), thus recapitulating the clinical observation. CONCLUSIONS MiR-506 is a robust clinical marker for chemotherapy response and survival in serous ovarian cancers and has important therapeutic value in sensitizing cancer cells to chemotherapy.


Oncogene | 2000

p53 is involved in the p120E4F-mediated growth arrest

Peter Sandy; Monica Gostissa; Valentina Fogal; Loris De Cecco; Katalin Szalay; Robert J Rooney; Claudio Schneider; Giannino Del Sal

Control of cell growth and division by the p53 tumor suppressor protein requires its abilities to transactivate and repress specific target genes and to associate in complex with other proteins. Here we demonstrate that p53 binds to the E1A-regulated transcription factor p120E4F, a transcriptional repressor of the adenovirus E4 promoter. The interaction involves carboxy-terminal half of p120E4F and sequences located at the end of the sequence-specific DNA-binding domain of p53. Ectopic expression of p120E4F leads to a block of cell proliferation in several human and murine cell lines and this effect requires the association with wild-type (wt) p53. Although p120E4F can also bind to mutant p53, the growth suppression induced by overexpression of the protein is severely reduced in a cell line that contains mutant p53. These data suggest that p120E4F may represent an important element within the complex network of p53 checkpoint functions.


PLOS ONE | 2014

miR-342 Regulates BRCA1 Expression through Modulation of ID4 in Breast Cancer

Elisabetta Crippa; Lara Lusa; Loris De Cecco; Edoardo Marchesi; George A. Calin; Paolo Radice; Siranoush Manoukian; Bernard Peissel; Maria Grazia Daidone; Manuela Gariboldi; Marco A. Pierotti

A miRNAs profiling on a group of familial and sporadic breast cancers showed that miRNA-342 was significantly associated with estrogen receptor (ER) levels. To investigate at functional level the role of miR-342 in the pathogenesis of breast cancer, we focused our attention on its “in silico” predicted putative target gene ID4, a transcription factor of the helix-loop-helix protein family whose expression is inversely correlated with that of ER. ID4 is expressed in breast cancer and can negatively regulate BRCA1 expression. Our results showed an inverse correlation between ID4 and miR-342 as well as between ID4 and BRCA1 expression. We functionally validated the interaction between ID4 and miR-342 in a reporter Luciferase system. Based on these findings, we hypothesized that regulation of ID4 mediated by miR-342 could be involved in the pathogenesis of breast cancer by downregulating BRCA1 expression. We functionally demonstrated the interactions between miR-342, ID4 and BRCA1 in a model provided by ER-negative MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell line that presented high levels of ID4. Overexpression of miR-342 in these cells reduced ID4 and increased BRCA1 expression, supporting a possible role of this mechanism in breast cancer. In the ER-positive MCF7 and in the BRCA1-mutant HCC1937 cell lines miR-342 over-expression only reduced ID4. In the cohort of patients we studied, a correlation between miR-342 and BRCA1 expression was found in the ER-negative cases. As ER-negative cases were mainly BRCA1-mutant, we speculate that the mechanism we demonstrated could be involved in the decreased expression of BRCA1 frequently observed in non BRCA1-mutant breast cancers and could be implicated as a causal factor in part of the familial cases grouped in the heterogeneous class of non BRCA1 or BRCA2-mutant cases (BRCAx). To validate this hypothesis, the study should be extended to a larger cohort of ER-negative cases, including those belonging to the BRCAx class.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2012

Induction of Paneth cell degranulation by orally administered Toll‐like receptor ligands

Cristiano Rumio; Michele Sommariva; Lucia Sfondrini; Marco Palazzo; Daniele Morelli; Laura Viganò; Loris De Cecco; Elda Tagliabue; Andrea Balsari

The secretory activity of Paneth cells is related to the bacterial milieu in the small intestine; however, the molecules involved in inducing Paneth cell secretion of enzymes and antimicrobial peptides are not well‐defined. Mice treated orally with CpG‐oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN), an agonist of Toll‐like receptor (TLR) 9, showed rapid and massive Paneth cell degranulation. CpG‐ODN‐induced degranulation was not observed in TLR9−/− mice or in chimeric TLR9−/− mice reconstituted with wild‐type (WT) bone marrow, but was observed in WT mice reconstituted with TLR9−/− bone marrow, indicating a role for TLR9‐expressing gastrointestinal cells in CpG recognition. The TLR3 agonist polyinosinic‐polycytidylic acid also induced rapid degranulation, whereas the TLR4 and TLR5 agonists LPS and flagellin, respectively, induced late degranulation mediated by TNF‐α. Our evidence that TLR9 and TLR3 agonists induce Paneth cell degranulation points to the need for further studies of the mechanisms underlying Paneth cell function as an avenue toward preventing infection and treating inflammatory bowel diseases. J. Cell. Physiol. 227: 1107–1113, 2012.

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Marco A. Pierotti

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Delia Mezzanzanica

National Institutes of Health

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