Rosamaria Mangiacasale
Sapienza University of Rome
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Featured researches published by Rosamaria Mangiacasale.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007
Marilena Ciciarello; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Patrizia Lavia
Abstract.Mitosis is the most potentially dangerous event in the life of a cell, during which the cell genetic identity is transmitted to daughters; errors at this stage may yield aneuploid cells that can initiate a genetically unstable clone. The small GTPase Ran is the central element of a conserved signaling network that has a prominent role in mitotic regulation. Pioneering studies with amphibian oocytes indicated that Ran, in the GTP-bound form, activates factors that regulate spindle assembly and dynamics. An increasing body of data indicate higher specificity and complexity in mitotic control operated by Ran in somatic cells. Newly identified target factors of Ran operate with different specificity, and it is emerging that mitotic progression requires the precise positioning of Ran network components and effectors at specific sites of the mitotic apparatus according to a highly regulated schedule in space and time. In this review we summarize our current understanding of Ran control of mitosis and highlight the specificity of mechanisms operating in mammalian somatic cells.
Oncogene | 2003
Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Carmine Pittoggi; Ilaria Sciamanna; Angela Careddu; Elisabetta Mattei; Rodolfo Lorenzini; Lorena Travaglini; Matteo Landriscina; Carlo Barone; Clara Nervi; Patrizia Lavia; Corrado Spadafora
Endogenous, nontelomeric reverse transcriptase (RT) is encoded by two classes of repeated elements: retrotransposons and endogenous retroviruses. Expression of RT-coding genes is generally repressed in differentiated nonpathological tissues, yet is active in the mammalian germ line, embryonic tissues and tumor cells. Nevirapine is a non-nucleoside RT inhibitor with a well-characterized inhibitory activity on RT enzymes of retroviral origin. Here, we show that nevirapine is also an effective inhibitor of the endogenous RT in murine and human cell lines. In addition, progenitor and transformed cells undergo a significant reduction in the rate of cell growth upon exposure to nevirapine. This is accompanied by the onset of differentiation, as depicted in F9 and C2C7 progenitor cells cultures in which nevirapine triggers the expression of differentiation-specific markers. Consistent with this, an extensive reprogramming of cell cycle gene expression was depicted in nevirapine-treated F9 cultures. Furthermore, nevirapine exposure rescued the differentiation block present in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell lines and primary blasts from two AML patients, as indicated by morphological, functional and immunophenotypic assays. The finding that an RT inhibitor can modulate cell proliferation and differentiation suggests that RT may represent a novel target in the development of therapeutical approaches to neoplasia.
Journal of Cell Science | 2004
Marilena Ciciarello; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Catherine Thibier; Giulia Guarguaglini; Enzo Marchetti; Barbara Di Fiore; Patrizia Lavia
Spatial control is a key issue in cell division. The Ran GTPase regulates several fundamental processes for cell life, largely acting through importin molecules. The best understood of these is protein import through the nuclear envelope in interphase, but roles in mitotic spindle assembly are also established. In mammalian cells, in which centrosomes are major spindle organizers, a link is emerging between the Ran network, centrosomes and spindle poles. Here, we show that, after nuclear envelope breakdown, importin β is transported to the spindle poles in mammalian cells. This localization is temporally regulated from prometaphase until anaphase, when importin β dissociates from poles and is recruited back around reforming nuclei. Importin β sediments with mitotic microtubules in vitro and its accumulation at poles requires microtubule integrity and dynamics in vivo. Furthermore, RNA interference-dependent inactivation of TPX2, the major Ran-dependent spindle organizer, abolishes importin β accumulation at poles. Importin β has a functional role in spindle pole organization, because overexpression yields mitotic spindles with abnormal, fragmented poles. Coexpression of TPX2 with importin β mitigates these abnormalities. Together, these results indicate that the balance between importins and spindle regulators of the TPX2 type is crucial for spindle formation. Targeting of TPX2/importin-β complexes to poles is a key aspect in Ran-dependent control of the mitotic apparatus in mammalian cells.
Journal of Cell Science | 2007
Antonio Tedeschi; Marilena Ciciarello; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Emanuele Roscioli; Wilhelmina Maria Rensen; Patrizia Lavia
The GTPase RAN has an established role in spindle assembly and in mitotic progression, although not all mechanisms are fully understood in somatic cells. Here, we have downregulated RAN-binding protein 1 (RANBP1), a RAN partner that has highest abundance in G2 and mitosis, in human cells. RANBP1-depleted cells underwent prolonged prometaphase delay often followed by apoptosis. Cells that remained viable assembled morphologically normal spindles; these spindles, however, were hyperstable and failed to recruit cyclin B1 or to restrict the localization of HURP (DLG7), a microtubule-stabilizing factor, to plus-ends. RANBP1 depletion did not increase the frequency of unattached chromosomes; however, RANBP1-depleted cells frequently showed lagging chromosomes in anaphase, suggesting that merotelic attachments form and are not efficiently resolved. These data indicate that RANBP1 activity is required for the proper localization of specific factors that regulate microtubule function; loss of this activity contributes to the generation of aneuploidy in a microtubule-dependent manner.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Paola Merlo; Marcella Fulco; Antonio Costanzo; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Sabrina Strano; Giovanni Blandino; Yoichi Taya; Patrizia Lavia; Massimo Levrero
The p53-related p73 proteins regulate developmental processes, cell growth, and DNA damage response. p73 function is regulated by post-translational modifications and protein-protein interactions. At the G2/M transition, p73 is phosphorylated at Thr-86 by the p34cdc2/cyclin B complex; this is associated with its exclusion from condensed chromosomes and loss of DNA binding and transcriptional activation ability. Here we showed that p73 hypo-phosphorylated species reappear during mitotic exit, concomitant with p73 relocalization to telophase nuclei and recovered ability to activate transcription. Functional knock-out of p73 gene expression by small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) alters mitotic progression, yielding an increase of ana-telophase cells, the accumulation of aberrant late mitotic figures, and the appearance of abnormalities in the subsequent interphase. This p73 activity at the M-to-G1 transition is mediated by its transactivating function because expression of the transcription dominant negative mutant p73DD induces the same mitotic exit phenotype. We also found that the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor Kip2/p57 gene is a specific target of p73 regulation during mitotic exit and re-entry into G1. Both knock-out of p73 gene expression by siRNAs and abrogation of p73-dependent transcription by the p73DD mutant abrogate Kip2/p57 increase at the M-to-G1 transition. Moreover, similar abnormalities (e.g. delay in late mitotic stages with the accumulation of aberrant ana-telophase figures, and abnormalities in the following interphase) are observed in cultures in which the expression of Kip2/p57 is abrogated by siRNAs. These results identify a novel p73-Kip2/p57 pathway that coordinates mitotic exit and transition to G1.
Frontiers in Bioscience | 2008
Wilhelmina Maria Rensen; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Marilena Ciciarello; Patrizia Lavia
The GTPase Ran plays a crucial role in nucleo-cytoplasmic transport of tumor suppressors, proto-oncogenes, signaling molecules and transcription factors. It also plays direct roles in mitosis, through which it regulates faithful chromosome segregation and hence the generation of genetically stable cells. Ran operates through a group of effector proteins. In this review we summarize growing evidence suggesting that deregulated activity of Ran or its effectors can contribute to pathways of cell transformation and facilitate tumor progression.
FEBS Letters | 2001
Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Alessandra Tritarelli; Ilaria Sciamanna; Maria Cannone; Patrizia Lavia; Massimo Barberis; Rodolfo Lorenzini; Enrico Cundari
Human lymphoblastoid cells of normal origin and from genetic instability syndromes, i.e. Fanconi anemia (FA) group C and ataxia telangectasia, were continuously exposed to extremely low frequency magnetic field (ELF‐MF). We report that ELF‐MF, though not perturbing cell cycle progression, increases the rate of cell death in normal cell lines. In contrast, cell death is not affected in cells from genetic instability syndromes; this reflects a specific failure of the apoptotic response. Reintroduction of complementation group C in FA cells re‐established the apoptotic response to ELF‐MF. Thus, genes implicated in genetic instability syndromes are relevant in modulating the response of cells to ELF‐MF.
Oncogene | 2009
Wilhelmina Maria Rensen; Emanuele Roscioli; A Tedeschi; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Marilena Ciciarello; S A Di Gioia; Patrizia Lavia
Mitotic microtubule (MT)-targeting drugs are widely used to treat cancer. The GTPase Ran regulates multiple processes, including mitotic spindle assembly, spindle pole formation and MT dynamics; Ran activity is therefore essential to formation of a functional mitotic apparatus. The RanBP1 protein, which binds Ran and regulates its interaction with effectors, is overexpressed in many cancer types. Several observations indicate that RanBP1 contributes to regulate the function of the mitotic apparatus: RanBP1 inactivation yields hyperstable MTs and induces apoptosis during mitosis, reminiscent of the effects of the MT-stabilizing drug taxol. Here we have investigated the influence of RanBP1 on spontaneous and taxol-induced apoptosis in transformed cells. We report that RanBP1 downregulation by RNA interference activates apoptosis in several transformed cell lines regardless of their p53 status, but not in the caspase-3-defective MCF-7 breast cancer cell line. Furthermore, RanBP1-interfered cells show an increased apoptotic response to taxol compared to their counterpart with normal or high RanBP1 levels, and this response is caspase-3 dependent. These results indicate that RanBP1 can modulate the outcome of MT-targeting therapeutic protocols.
Chromosoma | 2010
Marilena Ciciarello; Emanuele Roscioli; Barbara Di Fiore; Laura Di Francesco; Fabrizia Sobrero; Delphine G. Bernard; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Amnon Harel; Maria Eugenia Schininà; Patrizia Lavia
The GTPase Ran regulates nucleocytoplasmic transport in interphase and spindle organisation in mitosis via effectors of the importin beta superfamily. Ran-binding protein 1 (RanBP1) regulates guanine nucleotide turnover on Ran, as well as its interactions with effectors. Unlike other Ran network members that are steadily expressed, RanBP1 abundance is modulated during the mammalian cell cycle, peaking in mitosis and declining at mitotic exit. Here, we show that RanBP1 downregulation takes place in mid to late telophase, concomitant with the reformation of nuclei. Mild RanBP1 overexpression in murine cells causes RanBP1 to persist in late mitosis and hinders a set of events underlying the telophase to interphase transition, including chromatin decondensation, nuclear expansion and nuclear lamina reorganisation. Moreover, the reorganisation of nuclear pores fails associated with defective nuclear relocalisation of NLS cargoes. Co-expression of importin beta, together with RanBP1, however mitigates these defects. Thus, RanBP1 downregulation is required for nuclear reorganisation pathways operated by importin beta after mitosis.
Mechanisms of Development | 2000
Antonella Palena; Rosamaria Mangiacasale; Anna Rosa Magnano; Laura Barberi; Roberto Giordano; Corrado Spadafora; Patrizia Lavia
We have examined the murine genes encoding transcription factors E2F1, -3, -5 and -6 in gametes and early embryos. All genes are expressed as maternal transcripts and all are efficiently transcribed after the blastocyst stage. Between those two stages, each E2F mRNA is transcribed with a distinctive and unique pattern. E2F proteins are also differentially expressed and compartmentalized in pre-implantation embryos.