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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Zanetta is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Zanetta.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

Control of type IV collagenase activity by components of the urokinase–plasmin system: a regulatory mechanism with cell‐bound reactants

Roberta Mazzieri; Laura Masiero; Lucia Zanetta; Sara Monea; Maurizio Onisto; Spiridione Garbisa; Paolo Mignatti

The urokinase‐type plasminogen activator (uPA) and the matrix‐degrading metalloproteinases MMP‐2 and MMP‐9 (type IV collagenases/gelatinases) have been implicated in a variety of invasive processes, including tumor invasion, metastasis and angiogenesis. MMP‐2 and MMP‐9 are secreted in the form of inactive zymogens that are activated extracellularly, a fundamental process for the control of their activity. The physiological mechanism(s) of gelatinase activation are still poorly understood; their comprehension may provide tools to control cell invasion. The data reported in this paper show multiple roles of the uPA–plasmin system in the control of gelatinase activity: (i) both gelatinases are associated with the cell surface; binding of uPA and plasmin(ogen) to the cell surface results in gelatinase activation without the action of other metallo‐ or acid proteinases; (ii) inhibition of uPA or plasminogen binding to the cell surface blocks gelatinase activation; (iii) in soluble phase plasmin degrades both gelatinases; and (iv) gelatinase activation and degradation occur in a dose‐ and time‐dependent manner in the presence of physiological plasminogen and uPA concentrations. Thus, the uPA–plasmin system may represent a physiological mechanism for the control of gelatinase activity.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2005

Histone deacetylase activity is essential for the expression of HoxA9 and for endothelial commitment of progenitor cells

Lothar Rössig; Carmen Urbich; Thomas Brühl; Elisabeth Dernbach; Christopher Heeschen; Emmanouil Chavakis; Ken-ichiro Sasaki; Diana Aicher; Florian Diehl; Florian Seeger; Michael Potente; Alexandra Aicher; Lucia Zanetta; Elisabetta Dejana; Andreas M. Zeiher; Stefanie Dimmeler

The regulation of acetylation is central for the epigenetic control of lineage-specific gene expression and determines cell fate decisions. We provide evidence that the inhibition of histone deacetylases (HDACs) blocks the endothelial differentiation of adult progenitor cells. To define the mechanisms by which HDAC inhibition prevents endothelial differentiation, we determined the expression of homeobox transcription factors and demonstrated that HoxA9 expression is down-regulated by HDAC inhibitors. The causal involvement of HoxA9 in the endothelial differentiation of adult progenitor cells is supported by the finding that HoxA9 overexpression partially rescued the endothelial differentiation blockade induced by HDAC inhibitors. Knockdown and overexpression studies revealed that HoxA9 acts as a master switch to regulate the expression of prototypical endothelial-committed genes such as endothelial nitric oxide synthase, VEGF-R2, and VE-cadherin, and mediates the shear stress–induced maturation of endothelial cells. Consistently, HoxA9-deficient mice exhibited lower numbers of endothelial progenitor cells and showed an impaired postnatal neovascularization capacity after the induction of ischemia. Thus, HoxA9 is regulated by HDACs and is critical for postnatal neovascularization.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2005

Mesoangioblasts, Vessel-Associated Multipotent Stem Cells, Repair the Infarcted Heart by Multiple Cellular Mechanisms A Comparison With Bone Marrow Progenitors, Fibroblasts, and Endothelial Cells

Daniela Galli; Anna Innocenzi; Lidia Staszewsky; Lucia Zanetta; Maurilio Sampaolesi; Antonio Bai; Elena Martinoli; Eleonora Carlo; Giovanna Balconi; Fabio Fiordaliso; Stefano Chimenti; Gabriella Cusella; Elisabetta Dejana; Giulio Cossu; Roberto Latini

Objective—To test the potential of mesoangioblasts (Mabs) in reducing postischemic injury in comparison with bone marrow progenitor cells (BMPCs), fibroblasts (Fbs), and embryonic stem cell–derived endothelial cells (ECs), and to identify putative cellular protective mechanisms. Methods and Results—Cells were injected percutaneously in the left ventricular (LV) chamber of C57BL/6 mice, 3 to 6 hours after coronary ligation, and detected in the hearts 2 days and 6 weeks later. Echocardiographic examinations were performed at 6 weeks. LV dilation was reduced and LV shortening fraction was improved with Mabs and BMPCs but not with ECs and Fbs. Donor cell colonization of the host myocardium was modest and predominantly in the smooth muscle layer of vessels. Capillary density was higher in the peripheral infarct area and apoptotic cardiomyocytes were fewer with Mabs and BMPCs. Mabs and BMPCs, but not Fbs or ECs, promoted survival of cultured cardiocytes under low-oxygen in culture. This activity was present in Mab-conditioned medium and could be replaced by a combination of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), all of which are produced by these cells. Conditioned medium from Mabs, but not from Fbs, stimulated proliferation of smooth muscle cells in vitro. Conclusions—Mabs appear as effective as BMPCs in reducing postinfarction LV dysfunction, likely through production of antiapoptotic and angiogenic factors.


American Journal of Pathology | 2004

VE-Cadherin Expression and Clustering Maintain Low Levels of Survivin in Endothelial Cells

Monica Iurlaro; Fabio Demontis; Monica Corada; Lucia Zanetta; Cristopher Drake; Manuela Gariboldi; Sandra Peiró; Amparo Cano; Pilar Navarro; Anna Cattelino; Simona Tognin; Pier Carlo Marchisio; Elisabetta Dejana

Survivin is strongly expressed in embryonic organs and in tumor cells but is low or absent in differentiated normal tissues. Resting endothelium expresses low levels of survivin but can up-regulate its synthesis on activation to proliferate. The mechanisms responsible for survivin down-regulation in resting conditions are still unknown. We report here that confluence and vascular endothelial-cadherin (VE-cadherin) expression induce contact inhibition of cell growth and survivin down-regulation in the endothelium. Using beta-catenin null and positive isogenic endothelial cell lines we found that the effect requires beta-catenin expression and its association to VE-cadherin cytoplasmic tail. Furthermore, in allantois organ cultures, survivin expression is up-regulated in areas of growing vessels where VE-cadherin is partially dismantled from junctions or in VE-cadherin -/- specimens. Overall, these data indicate that VE-cadherin and beta-catenin may negatively regulate survivin synthesis in endothelial cells. Consistently, in epidermal and pancreatic cell lines or ovarian tumors, epithelial-cadherin (E-cadherin) and survivin expression is inversely related, suggesting a non-cell-specific role of cadherins in reducing survivin synthesis.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2005

Downregulation of vascular endothelial-cadherin expression is associated with an increase in vascular tumor growth and hemorrhagic complications

Lucia Zanetta; Monica Corada; Maria Grazia Lampugnani; Adriana Zanetti; Ferruccio Breviario; Lieve Moons; Peter Carmeliet; Michael S. Pepper; Elisabetta Dejana

The pathogenesis of vascular tumors such as angiosarcomas is poorly understood. Cadherin expression inversely correlates with tumor malignancy and the endothelial specific VE-cadherin is low or absent in angiosarcomas, suggesting an inhibitory role for this protein in tumor progression. In this paper we report that PmyT VE-cadherin null (VEC null) endothelial cells form larger vascular tumors in nude mice when injected subcutaneously as compared to isogenic VE-cadherin positive (VEC pos) cells. This effect requires the association of beta-catenin to VEcadherin, since a VE-cadherin mutant lacking the domain responsible for beta-catenin binding (Deltabetacat) cannot rescue the phenotype. In VEC null cells beta-catenin is phosphorylated and partly degraded. N-cadherin is increased and detected at junctions. VEC null cells also present an altered fibrinolytic activity with increases in tPA, uPA, uPAR and a strong reduction in PAI-1, which may be correlated to the high incidence of abrupt hemorrhages in VEC null tumors. Overall, these data strongly suggest that downregulation of VE-cadherin in endothelial tumors may have important consequences for tumor growth and bleeding complications.


Experimental Cell Research | 2003

Skeletal myogenic progenitors in the endothelium of lung and yolk sac

Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Giovanna Balconi; Sergio Bernasconi; Lucia Zanetta; Renata Boratto; Daniela Galli; Elisabetta Dejana; Giulio Cossu

We previously showed that clonable skeletal myogenic cells can be derived from the embryonic aorta but become very rare in the more mature and structured fetal aorta. The aim of this study was to investigate whether, during fetal and postnatal development, these myogenic progenitors progressively disappear or may rather associate with the microvascular district, being thus distributed to virtually all tissues. To test this hypothesis, we used F1 embryos (or mice) from a transgenic line expressing a striated muscle-specific reporter gene (LacZ) crossed with a transgenic line expressing a different endothelial-specific reporter genes (GFP). Endothelial cells were isolated from yolk sac (at E11) and lung (at E11, E17, P1, P10, and P60), two organs embryologically unrelated to paraxial mesoderm, rich in vessels, and devoid of skeletal muscle. Endothelial cells, purified by magnetic bead selection (CD31/PECAM-1(+)) or cell sorting (Tie2-GFP(+)) were then challenged for their skeletal myogenic potential in vitro and in vivo. The results demonstrated that both yolk sac and lung contain progenitor cells, which express endothelial markers and are endowed with a skeletal myogenic potential that they reveal when in the presence of differentiating myoblasts, in vitro, and regenerating muscle, in vivo. The number (or potency to generate skeletal muscle) of these vessels associated cells decreases rapidly with age and is very low in mature animals, possibly correlating with reduced regenerative capacity of adult mammalian tissues.


Blood | 2002

A monoclonal antibody to vascular endothelial-cadherin inhibits tumor angiogenesis without side effects on endothelial permeability.

Monica Corada; Lucia Zanetta; Fabrizio Orsenigo; Ferruccio Breviario; Maria Grazia Lampugnani; Sergio Bernasconi; Fang Liao; Daniel J. Hicklin; Peter Bohlen; Elisabetta Dejana


Blood | 2004

Gas1 is induced by VE-cadherin and vascular endothelial growth factor and inhibits endothelial cell apoptosis

Raffaella Spagnuolo; Monica Corada; Fabrizio Orsenigo; Lucia Zanetta; Ulrich Deuschle; Peter Sandy; Claudio Schneider; Christopher J. Drake; Ferruccio Breviario; Elisabetta Dejana


Blood | 2005

VE-cadherin is not required for the formation of nascent blood vessels but acts to prevent their disassembly

Christopher V. Crosby; Paul A. Fleming; W. Scott Argraves; Monica Corada; Lucia Zanetta; Elisabetta Dejana; Christopher J. Drake


Cancer Research | 2000

Monoclonal Antibody to Vascular Endothelial-cadherin Is a Potent Inhibitor of Angiogenesis, Tumor Growth, and Metastasis

Fang Liao; Yiwen Li; William O'Connor; Lucia Zanetta; Rajiv Bassi; Angel Santiago; Jay Overholser; Andrea T. Hooper; Paolo Mignatti; Elisabetta Dejana; Daniel J. Hicklin; Peter Bohlen

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Elisabetta Dejana

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Christopher J. Drake

Medical University of South Carolina

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Fabrizio Orsenigo

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Peter Bohlen

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Maria Grazia Lampugnani

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Christopher V. Crosby

Medical University of South Carolina

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Paul A. Fleming

Medical University of South Carolina

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