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Dive into the research topics where Sandro Goruppi is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandro Goruppi.


The EMBO Journal | 1996

HGF receptor associates with the anti-apoptotic protein BAG-1 and prevents cell death

Alberto Bardelli; Paola Longati; D Albero; Sandro Goruppi; Claudio Schneider; Carola Ponzetto; Paolo M. Comoglio

The mechanisms by which apoptosis is prevented by survival factors are largely unknown. Using an interaction cloning approach, we identified a protein that binds to the intracellular domain of the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) receptor. This protein was identified as BAG‐1, a recently characterized Bcl‐2 functional partner, which prolongs cell survival through unknown mechanisms. Overexpression of BAG‐1 in liver progenitor cells enhances protection from apoptosis by HGF. Association of the receptor with BAG‐1 occurs in intact cells, is mediated by the C‐terminal region of BAG‐1 and is independent from tyrosine phosphorylation of the receptor. Formation of the complex is increased rapidly following induction of apoptosis. BAG‐1 also enhances platelet‐derived growth factor (PDGF)‐mediated protection from apoptosis and associates with the PDGF receptor. Microinjection or transient expression of BAG‐1 deletion mutants shows that both the N‐ and the C‐terminal domains are required for protection from apoptosis. The finding of a link between growth factor receptors and the anti‐apoptotic machinery fills a gap in the understanding of the molecular events regulating programmed cell death.


Oncogene | 1999

Gas6-mediated survival in NIH3T3 cells activates stress signalling cascade and is independent of Ras

Sandro Goruppi; Elisabetta Ruaro; Brian Varnum; Claudio Schneider

Gas6 is a growth factor membrane of the vitamin K-dependent family of proteins which is preferentially expressed in quiescent cells. Gas6 was identified as the ligand for Axl tyrosine kinase receptor family. Consistent with this, Gas6 was previously reported to induce cell cycle re-entry of serum-starved NIH3T3 cells and to prevent cell death after complete growth factor withdrawal, the survival effect being uncoupled from Gas6-induced mitogenesis. We have previously demonstrated that both Gas6 mitogenic and survival effects are mediated by Src and the phosphatidylinositol3-OH kinase (PI3K). Here we report that Ras is required for Gas6 mitogenesis but is dispensable for its survival effect. Gas6-induced survival requires the activity of the small GTPases of the Rho family, Rac and Rho, together with the downstream kinase Pak. Overexpression of the respective dominant negative constructs abrogates Gas6-mediated survival functions. Addition of Gas6 to serum starved cells results in the activation of AKT/PKB and in the phosphorylation of the Bcl-2 family member, Bad. By ectopic expression of a catalytically inactive form of AKT/PKB, we demonstrate that AKT/PKB is necessary for Gas6-mediated survival functions. We further show evidence that Gas6 stimulation of serum starved NIH3T3 cells results in a transient ERK, JNK/SAPK and p38 MAPK activation. Blocking ERK activation did not influence Gas6-induced survival, suggesting that such pathway is not involved in Gas6 protection from cell death. On the contrary we found that the late constitutive increase of p38 MAPK activity associated with cell death was downregulated in Gas6-treated NIH3T3 cells thus suggesting that Gas6 might promote survival by interfering with this pathway. Taken together the evidence here provided identity elements involved in Gas6 signalling more specifically elucidating the pathway responsible for Gas6-induced cell survival under conditions that do not allow cell proliferation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

Gas6 Induces Growth, β-Catenin Stabilization, and T-Cell Factor Transcriptional Activation in Contact-Inhibited C57 Mammary Cells

Sandro Goruppi; Cristina Chiaruttini; Maria Elisabetta Ruaro; Brian Varnum; Claudio Schneider

ABSTRACT Gas6 is a growth factor related to protein S that was identified as the ligand for the Axl receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) family. In this study, we show that Gas6 induces a growth response in a cultured mammalian mammary cell line, C57MG. The presence of Gas6 in the medium induces growth after confluence and similarly causes cell cycle reentry of density-inhibited C57MG cells. We show that Axl RTK but not Rse is efficiently activated by Gas6 in density-inhibited C57MG cells. We have analyzed the signaling required for the Gas6 proliferative effect and found a requirement for PI3K-, S6K-, and Ras-activated pathways. We also demonstrate that Gas6 activates Akt and concomitantly inhibits GSK3 activity in a wortmannin-dependent manner. Interestingly, Gas6 induces up-regulation of cytosolic β-catenin, while membrane-associated β-catenin remains unaffected. Stabilization of β-catenin in C57MG cells is correlated with activation of a T-cell factor (TCF)-responsive transcriptional element. We thus provide evidence that Gas6 is mitogenic and induces β-catenin proto-oncogene stabilization and subsequent TCF/Lef transcriptional activation in a mammary system. These results suggest that Gas6-Axl interaction, through stabilization of β-catenin, may have a role in mammary development and/or be involved in the progression of mammary tumors.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Signaling pathways and late‐onset gene induction associated with renal mesangial cell hypertrophy

Sandro Goruppi; Joseph V. Bonventre; John M. Kyriakis

In chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus, continuous stress stimuli trigger a persistent, self‐reinforcing reprogramming of cellular function and gene expression that culminates in the pathological state. Late‐onset, stable changes in gene expression hold the key to understanding the molecular basis of chronic diseases. Renal failure is a common, but poorly understood complication of diabetes. Diabetic nephropathy begins with mesangial cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia, combined with excess matrix deposition. The vasoactive peptide endothelin promotes the mesangial cell hypertophy characteristic of diabetic nephropathy. In this study, we examined the signaling pathways and changes in gene expression required for endothelin‐induced mesangial cell hypertrophy. Transcriptional profiling identified seven genes induced with slow kinetics by endothelin. Of these, p8, which encodes a small basic helix–loop–helix protein, was most strongly and stably induced. p8 is also induced in diabetic kidney. Mesangial cell hypertrophy and p8 induction both require activation of the ERK, JNK/SAPK and PI‐3‐K pathways. Small interfering RNA (siRNA)‐mediated RNA interference indicates that p8 is required for endothelin‐induced hypertrophy. Thus, p8 is a novel marker for diabetic renal hypertrophy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Stress-inducible Protein p8 Is Involved in Several Physiological and Pathological Processes

Sandro Goruppi; Juan L. Iovanna

p8 (NUPR1 (nuclear protein-1), Com1 (candidate of metastasis-1)) is a protein related to the high mobility group of transcriptional regulators. It is a key player in the cellular stress response and is involved in metastasis. p8 was first identified as a gene induced in pancreatitis but has been since found overexpressed in several cancers and pathological conditions. Despite its small size and apparently simple structure, p8 functions in several biochemical and genetic pathways, and its expression is crucial for in vivo metastasis in mice, for cytokine induction of metalloproteases, and for stress-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Understanding p8 functions will provide new opportunities for developing more effective therapeutic approaches to cancer and cardiovascular diseases.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

Combined CSL and p53 downregulation promotes cancer-associated fibroblast activation

Maria-Giuseppina Procopio; Csaba Laszlo; Dania Al Labban; Dong Eun Kim; Pino Bordignon; Seung-Hee Jo; Sandro Goruppi; Elena Menietti; Paola Ostano; Ugo Ala; Paolo Provero; Wolfram Hoetzenecker; Victor A. Neel; Witold W. Kilarski; Melody A. Swartz; Cathrin Brisken; Karine Lefort; G. Paolo Dotto

Stromal fibroblast senescence has been linked to ageing-associated cancer risk. However, density and proliferation of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are frequently increased. Loss or downmodulation of the Notch effector CSL (also known as RBP-Jκ) in dermal fibroblasts is sufficient for CAF activation and ensuing keratinocyte-derived tumours. We report that CSL silencing induces senescence of primary fibroblasts from dermis, oral mucosa, breast and lung. CSL functions in these cells as a direct repressor of multiple senescence- and CAF-effector genes. It also physically interacts with p53, repressing its activity. CSL is downmodulated in stromal fibroblasts of premalignant skin actinic keratosis lesions and squamous cell carcinomas, whereas p53 expression and function are downmodulated only in the latter, with paracrine FGF signalling as the probable culprit. Concomitant loss of CSL and p53 overcomes fibroblast senescence, enhances expression of CAF effectors and promotes stromal and cancer cell expansion. The findings support a CAF activation–stromal co-evolution model under convergent CSL–p53 control.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Helix-Loop-Helix Protein p8, a Transcriptional Regulator Required for Cardiomyocyte Hypertrophy and Cardiac Fibroblast Matrix Metalloprotease Induction

Sandro Goruppi; Richard D. Patten; Thomas Force; John M. Kyriakis

ABSTRACT Cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and extracellular matrix remodeling, primarily mediated by inflammatory cytokine-stimulated cardiac fibroblasts, are critical cellular events in cardiac pathology. The molecular components governing these processes remain nebulous, and few genes have been linked to both hypertrophy and matrix remodeling. Here we show that p8, a small stress-inducible basic helix-loop-helix protein, is required for endothelin- and α-adrenergic agonist-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and for tumor necrosis factor-stimulated induction, in cardiac fibroblasts, of matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) 9 and 13—MMPs linked to general inflammation and to adverse ventricular remodeling in heart failure. In a stimulus-dependent manner, p8 associates with chromatin containing c-Jun and with the cardiomyocyte atrial natriuretic factor (anf) promoter and the cardiac fibroblast mmp9 and mmp13 promoters, established activator protein 1 effectors. p8 is also induced strongly in the failing human heart by a process reversed upon therapeutic intervention. Our results identify an unexpectedly broad involvement for p8 in key cellular events linked to cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and cardiac fibroblast MMP production, both of which occur in heart failure.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2012

Nupr1-Aurora Kinase A Pathway Provides Protection against Metabolic Stress-Mediated Autophagic-Associated Cell Death

Tewfik Hamidi; Carla E. Cano; Daniel Grasso; Maria Noé Garcia; Maria José Sandi; Ezequiel Calvo; Jean Charles Dagorn; Gwen Lomberk; Raul Urrutia; Sandro Goruppi; Arkaitz Carracedo; Guillermo Velasco; Juan L. Iovanna

Purpose: The limited supply of oxygen and nutrients is thought to result in rigorous selection of cells that will eventually form the tumor. Experimental Design: Nupr1 expression pattern was analyzed in human tissue microarray (TMA) and correlated with survival time of the patient. Microarray analysis was conducted on MiaPaCa2 cells subjected to metabolic stress in Nupr1-silenced conditions. DNA repair and cell cycle–associated gene expression was confirmed by real-time quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR). Nupr1 and AURKA protective role were analyzed using RNA interference (RNAi) silencing or overexpression. DNA damage and autophagy were analyzed by Western blot analysis and immunofluorescence. Results: We showed that both Nupr1 and HIF1α are coexpressed in human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) samples and negatively correlate with survival time. PDAC-derived cells submitted to hypoxia and/or glucose starvation induce DNA damage–dependent cell death concomitantly to the overexpression of stress protein Nupr1. Affymetrix-based transcriptoma analysis reveals that Nupr1 knockdown enhances DNA damage and alters the expression of several genes involved in DNA repair and cell-cycle progression. Expression of some of these genes is common to hypoxia and glucose starvation, such as Aurka gene, suggesting that Nupr1 overexpression counteracts the transcriptional changes occurring under metabolic stress. The molecular mechanism by which hypoxia and glucose starvation induce cell death involves autophagy-associated, but not caspase-dependent, cell death. Finally, we have found that AURKA expression is partially regulated by Nupr1 and plays a major role in this response. Conclusions: Our data reveal that Nupr1 is involved in a defense mechanism that promotes pancreatic cancer cell survival when exposed to metabolic stress. Clin Cancer Res; 18(19); 5234–46. ©2012 AACR.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2011

Decreased metalloprotease 9 induction, cardiac fibrosis, and higher autophagy after pressure overload in mice lacking the transcriptional regulator p8.

Serban P. Georgescu; Mark Aronovitz; Juan L. Iovanna; Richard D. Patten; John M. Kyriakis; Sandro Goruppi

Left ventricular remodeling, including the deposition of excess extracellular matrix, is key to the pathogenesis of heart failure. The stress-inducible transcriptional regulator p8 is increased in failing human hearts and is required both for agonist-stimulated cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and for cardiac fibroblasts matrix metalloprotease-9 (MMP9) induction. In the heart, upregulation of autophagy is an adaptive response to stress and plays a causative role in cardiomyopathies. We have recently shown that p8 ablation in cardiac cells upregulates autophagy and that, in vivo, loss of p8 results in a decrease of cardiac function. Here we investigated the effects of p8 genetic deletion in mediating adverse myocardial remodeling. Unstressed p8-/- mouse hearts manifested complex alterations in the expression of fibrosis markers. In addition, these mice displayed elevated autophagy and apoptosis compared with p8+/+ mice. Transverse aortic constriction (TAC) induced left ventricular p8 expression in p8+/+ mice. Pressure overload caused left ventricular remodeling in both genotypes, however, p8-/- mice showed less cardiac fibrosis induction. Consistent with this, although MMP9 induction was attenuated in the p8-/- mice, induction of MMP2 and MMP3 were strikingly upregulated while TIMP2 was downregulated. Left ventricular autophagy increased after TAC and was significantly higher in the p8-/- mice. Thus p8-deletion results in reduced collagen fibrosis after TAC, but in turn, is associated with a detrimental higher increase in autophagy. These findings suggest a role for p8 in regulating in vivo key signaling pathways involved in the pathogenesis of heart failure.


FEBS Letters | 1997

The product of a gas6 splice variant allows the release of the domain responsible for Axl tyrosine kinase receptor activation

Sandro Goruppi; Harvey Yamane; Paolo Marcandalli; Andy Garcia; Cris Clogston; Monica Gostissa; Brian Varnum; Claudio Schneider

The product of gas6 (Gas6) is a growth factor with high level of similarity to protein S and was identified as the ligand for Axl family of tyrosine kinase receptors. Gas6 contains an N‐terminal γ‐carboxylated domain (Gla), four epidermal growth factor like domains and a large C‐terminal D region. An alternative Gas6 spliced form (Gas6SV) having an additional 43 amino acids between fourth EFG like and D domain was characterised. Here we show data indicating that Gas6SV is specifically cleaved within the inserted sequence, thereby splitting the D domain from the remaining part of the protein. The resulting two proteolytic products of 36 kDa and 50 kDa were separated and the 50 kDa fragment corresponding to region D was shown to be responsible for Axl receptor activation. Furthermore a deletion mutant of Gas6 containing only the D domain was shown to similarly activate Axl receptor phosphorylation unequivocally demonstrating that D domain can act as a signalling molecule. The possible roles of the proteolytic processing of Gas6SV in the regulation of growth factor availability are discussed.

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