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Dive into the research topics where Martina Pigazzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Martina Pigazzi.


Blood | 2013

Results of the AIEOP AML 2002/01 multicenter prospective trial for the treatment of children with acute myeloid leukemia

Andrea Pession; Riccardo Masetti; Carmelo Rizzari; Maria Caterina Putti; Fiorina Casale; Franca Fagioli; Matteo Luciani; Luca Lo Nigro; Giuseppe Menna; Concetta Micalizzi; Nicola Santoro; Anna Maria Testi; Marco Zecca; Andrea Biondi; Martina Pigazzi; Sergio Rutella; Roberto Rondelli; Giuseppe Basso; Franco Locatelli

We evaluated the outcome of 482 children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) enrolled in the Associazione Italiana di Ematologia e Oncologia Pediatrica AML 2002/01 trial. Treatment was stratified according to risk group; hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) was used in high-risk (HR) children. Patients with core binding factor leukemia achieving complete remission (CR) after the first induction course were considered standard risk (SR; 99 patients), whereas the others (n = 383) were assigned to the HR group. Allogeneic (ALLO) or autologous (AUTO) HSCT was employed, respectively, in 141 and 102 HR patients after consolidation therapy. CR, early death, and induction failure rates were 87%, 3%, and 10%, respectively. Relapse occurred in 24% of patients achieving CR. The 8-year overall survival (OS), event-free survival (EFS), and disease-free survival (DFS) were 68%, 55%, and 63%, respectively. OS, EFS, and DFS for SR and HR patients were 83%, 63%, and 66% and 64%, 53%, and 62%. DFS was 63% and 73% for HR patients given AUTO-HSCT and ALLO-HSCT, respectively. In multivariate analysis, risk group, white blood cell >100 × 10(9)/L at diagnosis, and monosomal karyotype predicted poorer EFS. Risk-oriented treatment and broad use of HSCT result in a long-term EFS comparing favorably with previously published studies on childhood AML.


Blood | 2013

CBFA2T3-GLIS2 fusion transcript is a novel common feature in pediatric, cytogenetically normal AML, not restricted to FAB M7 subtype

Riccardo Masetti; Martina Pigazzi; Marco Togni; Annalisa Astolfi; Indio; Elena Manara; Rita Casadio; Andrea Pession; G Basso; Franco Locatelli

Pediatric cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) is a heterogeneous subgroup of myeloid clonal disorders that do not harbor known mutations. To investigate the mutation spectrum of pediatric CN-AML, we performed whole-transcriptome massively parallel sequencing on blasts from 7 CN-AML pediatric patients. In 3 patients we identified a recurrent cryptic inversion of chromosome 16, encoding a CBFA2T3-GLIS2 fusion transcript. In a validation cohort of 230 pediatric CN-AML samples we identified 17 new cases. Among a total of 20 patients with CBFA2T3-GLIS2 fusion transcript out of 237 investigated (8.4%), 10 patients (50%) did not belong to the French-American-British (FAB) M7 subgroup. The 5-year event-free survival for these 20 children was worse than that for the other CN-AML patients (27.4% vs 59.6%; P = .01). These data suggest that the presence of CBFA2T3-GLIS2 fusion transcript is a novel common feature of pediatric CN-AML, not restricted to the FAB M7 subtype, predicting poorer outcome.


Haematologica | 2007

cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) overexpression CREB has been described as critical for leukemia progression

Martina Pigazzi; Emanuela Ricotti; Giuseppe Germano; Diego Faggian; Maurizio Aricò; Giuseppe Basso

CREB has been described as critical for leukemia progress. We investigated CREB expression in ALL and AML pediatric patients. CREB protein was significantly high (p<0.001) at diagnosis but not during remission. This study underlines the role of CREB in leukemia and suggests new insights into the transformation process.


Haematologica | 2013

MicroRNA-34b promoter hypermethylation induces CREB overexpression and contributes to myeloid transformation

Martina Pigazzi; Elena Manara; Silvia Bresolin; Claudia Tregnago; Alessandra Beghin; Emma Baron; Emanuela Giarin; Er-Chieh Cho; Riccardo Masetti; Dinesh S. Rao; Kathleen M. Sakamoto; Giuseppe Basso

MicroRNA-34b down-regulation in acute myeloid leukemia was previously shown to induce CREB overexpression, thereby causing leukemia proliferation in vitro and in vivo. The role of microRNA-34b and CREB in patients with myeloid malignancies has never been evaluated. We examined microRNA-34b expression and the methylation status of its promoter in cells from patients diagnosed with myeloid malignancies. We used gene expression profiling to identify signatures of myeloid transformation. We established that microRNA-34b has suppressor ability and that CREB has oncogenic potential in primary bone marrow cell cultures and in vivo. MicroRNA-34b was found to be up-regulated in pediatric patients with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (n=17) and myelodysplastic syndromes (n=28), but was down-regulated in acute myeloid leukemia patients at diagnosis (n=112). Our results showed that hypermethylation of the microRNA-34b promoter occurred in 66% of cases of acute myeloid leukemia explaining the low microRNA-34b levels and CREB overexpression, whereas preleukemic myelodysplastic syndromes and juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia were not associated with hypermethylation or CREB overexpression. In paired samples taken from the same patients when they had myelodysplastic syndrome and again during the subsequent acute myeloid leukemia, we confirmed microRNA-34b promoter hypermethylation at leukemia onset, with 103 CREB target genes differentially expressed between the two disease stages. This subset of CREB targets was confirmed to associate with high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes in a separate cohort of patients (n=20). Seventy-eight of these 103 CREB targets were also differentially expressed between healthy samples (n=11) and de novo acute myeloid leukemia (n=72). Further, low microRNA-34b and high CREB expression levels induced aberrant myelopoiesis through CREB-dependent pathways in vitro and in vivo. In conclusion, we suggest that microRNA-34b controls CREB expression and contributes to myeloid transformation from both healthy bone marrow and myelodysplastic syndromes. We identified a subset of CREB target genes that represents a novel transcriptional network that may control myeloid transformation.


PLOS ONE | 2011

BAG1: The Guardian of Anti-Apoptotic Proteins in Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Sanja Aveic; Martina Pigazzi; Giuseppe Basso

BCL2 associated Athano-Gene 1 (BAG1) is a multifunctional protein that has been described to be involved in different cell processes linked to cell survival. It has been reported as deregulated in diverse cancer types. Here, BAG1 protein was found highly expressed in children with acute myeloid leukemia at diagnosis, and in a cohort of leukemic cell lines. A silencing approach was used for determining BAG1s role in AML, finding that its down-regulation decreased expression of BCL2, BCL-XL, MCL1, and phospho-ERK1/2, all proteins able to sustain leukemia, without affecting the pro-apoptotic protein BAX. BAG1 down-regulation was also found to increase expression of BAG3, whose similar activity was able to compensate the loss of function of BAG1. BAG1/BAG3 co-silencing caused an enhanced cell predisposition to death in cell lines and also in primary AML cultures, affecting the same proteins. Cell death was CASPASE-3 dependent, was accompanied by PARP cleavage and documented by an increased release of pro-apoptotic molecules Smac/DIABLO and Cytochrome c. BAG1 was found to directly maintain BCL2 and to protect MCL1 from proteasomal degradation by controlling USP9X expression, which appeared to be its novel target. Finally, BAG1 was found able to affect leukemia cell fate by influencing the expression of anti-apoptotic proteins crucial for AML maintenance.


Leukemia | 2014

Core-binding factor acute myeloid leukemia in pediatric patients enrolled in the AIEOP AML 2002/01 trial: screening and prognostic impact of c-KIT mutations.

Elena Manara; Valeria Bisio; Riccardo Masetti; Valzerda Beqiri; Roberto Rondelli; Giuseppe Menna; Concetta Micalizzi; Nicola Santoro; F Locatelli; G Basso; Martina Pigazzi

Core-binding factor acute myeloid leukemia in pediatric patients enrolled in the AIEOP AML 2002/01 trial: screening and prognostic impact of c - KIT mutations


Advances in Hematology | 2009

CREB: A Key Regulator of Normal and Neoplastic Hematopoiesis

Salemiz Sandoval; Martina Pigazzi; Kathleen M. Sakamoto

The cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) is a nuclear transcription factor downstream of cell surface receptors and mitogens that is critical for normal and neoplastic hematopoiesis. Previous work from our laboratory demonstrated that a majority of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL) overexpress CREB in the bone marrow. To understand the role of CREB in leukemogenesis, we examined the biological effect of CREB overexpression on primary leukemia cells, leukemia cell lines, and CREB overexpressing transgenic mice. Our results demonstrated that CREB overexpression leads to an increase in cellular proliferation and survival. Furthermore, CREB transgenic mice develop a myeloproliferative disorder with aberrant myelopoiesis in both the bone marrow and spleen. Additional research from other groups has shown that the expression of the cAMP early inducible repressor (ICER), a CREB repressor, is also deregulated in leukemias. And, miR-34b, a microRNA that negative regulates CREB expression, is expressed at lower levels in myeloid leukemia cell lines compared to that of healthy bone marrow. Taken together, these data suggest that CREB plays a role in cellular transformation. The data also suggest that CREB-specific signaling pathways could possibly serve as potential targets for therapeutic intervention.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2015

LncRNA Expression Discriminates Karyotype and Predicts Survival in B-lymphoblastic Leukemia

Thilini R. Fernando; Norma I. Rodriguez-Malave; Ella V. Waters; Weihong Yan; David Casero; Giuseppe Basso; Martina Pigazzi; Dinesh S. Rao

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNA) have been found to play a role in gene regulation with dysregulated expression in various cancers. The precise role that lncRNA expression plays in the pathogenesis of B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is unknown. Therefore, unbiased microarray profiling was performed on human B-ALL specimens, and it was determined that lncRNA expression correlates with cytogenetic abnormalities, which was confirmed by qRT-PCR in a large set of B-ALL cases. Importantly, high expression of BALR-2 correlated with poor overall survival and diminished response to prednisone treatment. In line with a function for this lncRNA in regulating cell survival, BALR-2 knockdown led to reduced proliferation, increased apoptosis, and increased sensitivity to prednisolone treatment. Conversely, overexpression of BALR-2 led to increased cell growth and resistance to prednisone treatment. Interestingly, BALR-2 expression was repressed by prednisolone treatment and its knockdown led to upregulation of the glucocorticoid response pathway in both human and mouse B cells. Together, these findings indicate that BALR-2 plays a functional role in the pathogenesis and/or clinical responsiveness of B-ALL, and that altering the levels of particular lncRNAs may provide a future direction for therapeutic development. Implications: lncRNA expression has the potential to segregate the common subtypes of B-ALL, predict the cytogenetic subtype, and indicate prognosis. Mol Cancer Res; 13(5); 839–51. ©2015 AACR.


Leukemia | 2011

MLL partner genes drive distinct gene expression profiles and genomic alterations in pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: an AIEOP study

Martina Pigazzi; Riccardo Masetti; Silvia Bresolin; A Beghin; A Di Meglio; Sabrina Gelain; Luca Trentin; E Baron; Marco Giordan; Andrea Zangrando; Barbara Buldini; Anna Leszl; Maria Caterina Putti; Carmelo Rizzari; F Locatelli; Annalisa Pession; G te Kronnie; G Basso

MLL partner genes drive distinct gene expression profiles and genomic alterations in pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: an AIEOP study


Nature Genetics | 2017

Pediatric non-Down syndrome acute megakaryoblastic leukemia is characterized by distinct genomic subsets with varying outcomes

Jasmijn D.E. de Rooij; Cristyn Branstetter; Jing Ma; Yongjin Li; Michael P. Walsh; Jinjun Cheng; Askar Obulkasim; Jinjun Dang; John Easton; Lonneke J. Verboon; Heather L. Mulder; Martin Zimmermann; Cary Koss; Pankaj Gupta; Michael Edmonson; Michael Rusch; Joshua Yew Suang Lim; Katarina Reinhardt; Martina Pigazzi; Guangchun Song; Allen Eng Juh Yeoh; Lee Yung Shih; Der Cherng Liang; Stephanie Halene; Diane S. Krause; Jinghui Zhang; James R. Downing; Franco Locatelli; Dirk Reinhardt; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink

Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL) is a subtype of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in which cells morphologically resemble abnormal megakaryoblasts. While rare in adults, AMKL accounts for 4–15% of newly diagnosed childhood AML cases. AMKL in individuals without Down syndrome (non-DS-AMKL) is frequently associated with poor clinical outcomes. Previous efforts have identified chimeric oncogenes in a substantial number of non-DS-AMKL cases, including RBM15-MKL1, CBFA2T3-GLIS2, KMT2A gene rearrangements, and NUP98-KDM5A. However, the etiology of 30–40% of cases remains unknown. To better understand the genomic landscape of non-DS-AMKL, we performed RNA and exome sequencing on specimens from 99 patients (75 pediatric and 24 adult). We demonstrate that pediatric non-DS-AMKL is a heterogeneous malignancy that can be divided into seven subgroups with varying outcomes. These subgroups are characterized by chimeric oncogenes with cooperating mutations in epigenetic and kinase signaling genes. Overall, these data shed light on the etiology of AMKL and provide useful information for the tailoring of treatment.

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