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Dive into the research topics where Nicoletta Carucci is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicoletta Carucci.


Blood | 2010

An emerging player in the adaptive immune response: MicroRNA-146a is a modulator of IL-2 expression and activation-induced cell death in T lymphocytes

Graziella Curtale; Franca Citarella; Claudia Carissimi; Marina Goldoni; Nicoletta Carucci; Valerio Fulci; Debora Franceschini; Francesca Meloni; Vincenzo Barnaba; Giuseppe Macino

Activation of the T cell-mediated immune response has been associated with changes in the expression of specific microRNAs (miRNAs). However, the role of miRNAs in the development of an effective immune response is just beginning to be explored. This study focuses on the functional role of miR-146a in T lymphocyte-mediated immune response and provides interesting clues on the transcriptional regulation of miR-146a during T-cell activation. We show that miR-146a is low in human naive T cells and is abundantly expressed in human memory T cells; consistently, miR-146a is induced in human primary T lymphocytes upon T-cell receptor (TCR) stimulation. Moreover, we identified NF-kB and c-ETS binding sites as required for the induction of miR-146a transcription upon TCR engagement. Our results demonstrate that several signaling pathways, other than inflammation, are influenced by miR-146a. In particular, we provide experimental evidence that miR-146a modulates activation-induced cell death (AICD), acting as an antiapoptotic factor, and that Fas-associated death domain (FADD) is a target of miR-146a. Furthermore, miR-146a enforced expression impairs both activator protein 1 (AP-1) activity and interleukin-2 (IL-2) production induced by TCR engagement, thus suggesting a role of this miRNA in the modulation of adaptive immunity.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Action Mechanism of the Myc Inhibitor Termed Omomyc May Give Clues on How to Target Myc for Cancer Therapy

Mauro Savino; Daniela Annibali; Nicoletta Carucci; Emilia Favuzzi; Michael D. Cole; Gerard I. Evan; Laura Soucek; Sergio Nasi

Recent evidence points to Myc – a multifaceted bHLHZip transcription factor deregulated in the majority of human cancers – as a priority target for therapy. How to target Myc is less clear, given its involvement in a variety of key functions in healthy cells. Here we report on the action mechanism of the Myc interfering molecule termed Omomyc, which demonstrated astounding therapeutic efficacy in transgenic mouse cancer models in vivo. Omomyc action is different from the one that can be obtained by gene knockout or RNA interference, approaches designed to block all functions of a gene product. This molecule – instead – appears to cause an edge-specific perturbation that destroys some protein interactions of the Myc node and keeps others intact, with the result of reshaping the Myc transcriptome. Omomyc selectively targets Myc protein interactions: it binds c- and N-Myc, Max and Miz-1, but does not bind Mad or select HLH proteins. Specifically, it prevents Myc binding to promoter E-boxes and transactivation of target genes while retaining Miz-1 dependent binding to promoters and transrepression. This is accompanied by broad epigenetic changes such as decreased acetylation and increased methylation at H3 lysine 9. In the presence of Omomyc, the Myc interactome is channeled to repression and its activity appears to switch from a pro-oncogenic to a tumor suppressive one. Given the extraordinary therapeutic impact of Omomyc in animal models, these data suggest that successfully targeting Myc for cancer therapy might require a similar twofold action, in order to prevent Myc/Max binding to E-boxes and, at the same time, keep repressing genes that would be repressed by Myc.


Biochimie | 2014

MiR-21 is a negative modulator of T-cell activation

Claudia Carissimi; Nicoletta Carucci; Teresa Colombo; Silvia Piconese; Gianluca Azzalin; Emanuela Cipolletta; Franca Citarella; Vincenzo Barnaba; Giuseppe Macino; Valerio Fulci

microRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small non-coding RNAs acting as post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression and play fundamental roles in regulating immune response and autoimmunity. We show that memory T-lymphocytes express higher levels of miR-21 compared to naïve T-lymphocytes and that miR-21 expression is induced upon TCR engagement of naïve T-cells. We identify bona fide miR-21 targets by direct immuno-purification and profiling of AGO2-associated mRNAs in Jurkat cells over-expressing miR-21. Our analysis shows that, in T-lymphocytes, miR-21 targets genes are involved in signal transduction. Coherently, TCR signalling is dampened upon miR-21 over-expression in Jurkat cells, resulting in lower ERK phosphorylation, AP-1 activation and CD69 expression. Primary human lymphocytes in which we impaired miR-21 activity, display IFN-γ production enhancement and stronger activation in response to TCR engagement as assessed by CD69, OX40, CD25 and CD127 analysis. By intracellular staining of the endogenous protein in primary T-lymphocytes we validate three key regulators of lymphocyte activation as novel miR-21 targets. Our results highlight an unexpected function of miR-21 as a negative modulator of signal transduction downstream of TCR in T-lymphocytes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Restriction of Neural Precursor Ability to Respond to Nurr1 by Early Regional Specification

Chiara Soldati; Emanuele Cacci; Stefano Biagioni; Nicoletta Carucci; Giuseppe Lupo; Carla Perrone-Capano; Isabella Saggio; Gabriella Augusti-Tocco

During neural development, spatially regulated expression of specific transcription factors is crucial for central nervous system (CNS) regionalization, generation of neural precursors (NPs) and subsequent differentiation of specific cell types within defined regions. A critical role in dopaminergic differentiation in the midbrain (MB) has been assigned to the transcription factor Nurr1. Nurr1 controls the expression of key genes involved in dopamine (DA) neurotransmission, e.g. tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and the DA transporter (DAT), and promotes the dopaminergic phenotype in embryonic stem cells. We investigated whether cells derived from different areas of the mouse CNS could be directed to differentiate into dopaminergic neurons in vitro by forced expression of the transcription factor Nurr1. We show that Nurr1 overexpression can promote dopaminergic cell fate specification only in NPs obtained from E13.5 ganglionic eminence (GE) and MB, but not in NPs isolated from E13.5 cortex (CTX) and spinal cord (SC) or from the adult subventricular zone (SVZ). Confirming previous studies, we also show that Nurr1 overexpression can increase the generation of TH-positive neurons in mouse embryonic stem cells. These data show that Nurr1 ability to induce a dopaminergic phenotype becomes restricted during CNS development and is critically dependent on the region of NPs derivation. Our results suggest that the plasticity of NPs and their ability to activate a dopaminergic differentiation program in response to Nurr1 is regulated during early stages of neurogenesis, possibly through mechanisms controlling CNS regionalization.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2017

Neuroserpin polymers cause oxidative stress in a neuronal model of the dementia FENIB

Noemi A. Guadagno; Claudia Moriconi; Valerio Licursi; Emanuela D'Acunto; Paola S. Nisi; Nicoletta Carucci; Antonella De Jaco; Emanuele Cacci; Rodolfo Negri; Giuseppe Lupo; Elena Miranda

The serpinopathies are human pathologies caused by mutations that promote polymerisation and intracellular deposition of proteins of the serpin superfamily, leading to a poorly understood cell toxicity. The dementia FENIB is caused by polymerisation of the neuronal serpin neuroserpin (NS) within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of neurons. With the aim of understanding the toxicity due to intracellular accumulation of neuroserpin polymers, we have generated transgenic neural progenitor cell (NPC) cultures from mouse foetal cerebral cortex, stably expressing the control protein GFP (green fluorescent protein), or human wild type, G392E or delta NS. We have characterised these cell lines in the proliferative state and after differentiation to neurons. Our results show that G392E NS formed polymers that were mostly retained within the ER, while wild type NS was correctly secreted as a monomeric protein into the culture medium. Delta NS was absent at steady state due to its rapid degradation, but it was easily detected upon proteasomal block. Looking at their intracellular distribution, wild type NS was found in partial co-localisation with ER and Golgi markers, while G392E NS was localised within the ER only. Furthermore, polymers of NS were detected by ELISA and immunofluorescence in neurons expressing the mutant but not the wild type protein. We used control GFP and G392E NPCs differentiated to neurons to investigate which cellular pathways were modulated by intracellular polymers by performing RNA sequencing. We identified 747 genes with a significant upregulation (623) or downregulation (124) in G392E NS-expressing cells, and we focused our attention on several genes involved in the defence against oxidative stress that were up-regulated in cells expressing G392E NS (Aldh1b1, Apoe, Gpx1, Gstm1, Prdx6, Scara3, Sod2). Inhibition of intracellular anti-oxidants by specific pharmacological reagents uncovered the damaging effects of NS polymers. Our results support a role for oxidative stress in the cellular toxicity underlying the neurodegenerative dementia FENIB.


Royal Society Open Science | 2017

Transcriptional response of Hoxb genes to retinoid signalling is regionally restricted along the neural tube rostrocaudal axis

Nicoletta Carucci; Emanuele Cacci; Paola S. Nisi; Valerio Licursi; Yu-Lee Paul; Stefano Biagioni; Rodolfo Negri; Peter J. Rugg-Gunn; Giuseppe Lupo

During vertebrate neural development, positional information is largely specified by extracellular morphogens. Their distribution, however, is very dynamic due to the multiple roles played by the same signals in the developing and adult neural tissue. This suggests that neural progenitors are able to modify their competence to respond to morphogen signalling and autonomously maintain positional identities after their initial specification. In this work, we take advantage of in vitro culture systems of mouse neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) to show that NSPCs isolated from rostral or caudal regions of the mouse neural tube are differentially responsive to retinoic acid (RA), a pivotal morphogen for the specification of posterior neural fates. Hoxb genes are among the best known RA direct targets in the neural tissue, yet we found that RA could promote their transcription only in caudal but not in rostral NSPCs. Correlating with these effects, key RA-responsive regulatory regions in the Hoxb cluster displayed opposite enrichment of activating or repressing histone marks in rostral and caudal NSPCs. Finally, RA was able to strengthen Hoxb chromatin activation in caudal NSPCs, but was ineffective on the repressed Hoxb chromatin of rostral NSPCs. These results suggest that the response of NSPCs to morphogen signalling across the rostrocaudal axis of the neural tube may be gated by the epigenetic configuration of target patterning genes, allowing long-term maintenance of intrinsic positional values in spite of continuously changing extrinsic signals.


Blood | 2007

Quantitative technologies establish a novel microRNA profile of chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Valerio Fulci; Sabina Chiaretti; Marina Goldoni; Gianluca Azzalin; Nicoletta Carucci; Simona Tavolaro; Leandro Castellano; Armando Magrelli; Franca Citarella; Monica Messina; Roberta Maggio; Nadia Peragine; Simona Santangelo; Francesca Romana Mauro; Pablo Landgraf; Thomas Tuschl; David B. Weir; Minchen Chien; James J. Russo; Jingyue Ju; Robert L. Sheridan; Chris Sander; Mihaela Zavolan; Anna Guarini; Robin Foà; Giuseppe Macino


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Arsenic exposure triggers a shift in microRNA expression.

Elena Sturchio; Teresa Colombo; Priscilla Boccia; Nicoletta Carucci; Claudia Meconi; Claudio Minoia; Giuseppe Macino


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2014

From pluripotency to forebrain patterning: An in vitro journey astride embryonic stem cells

Giuseppe Lupo; Michele Bertacchi; Nicoletta Carucci; Gabriella Augusti-Tocco; Stefano Biagioni; Federico Cremisi


Giornale italiano di medicina del lavoro ed ergonomia | 2012

Molecular biomarkers in workers and population exposed to inorganic arsenic: preliminary study in vitro.

E. Sturchio; Teresa Colombo; Nicoletta Carucci; C. Meconi; P. Boccia; G. Macino

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Franca Citarella

Sapienza University of Rome

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Valerio Fulci

Sapienza University of Rome

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Claudia Carissimi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Emanuele Cacci

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marina Goldoni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Vincenzo Barnaba

Sapienza University of Rome

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