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Dive into the research topics where Silvano Bosari is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvano Bosari.


Human Pathology | 1992

Microvessel quantitation and prognosis in invasive breast carcinoma.

Silvano Bosari; Arthur K. Lee; Ronald A. DeLellis; Brian Wiley; Gerald J. Heatley; Mark L. Silverman

The prognostic significance of microvessel quantitation in invasive breast carcinoma was analyzed in a study group that comprised 88 patients with axillary node-negative carcinoma and 32 patients with axillary node-positive carcinoma who had a minimum follow-up period of 9 years. Microvessels were identified by immunohistochemistry using antibodies to endothelial markers, including factor VIII-related antigen and blood group isoantigens (ABH). Factor VIII-related antigen staining provided more consistent results for microvessel quantitation than did staining for ABH isoantigens. The three most vascular areas within a tumor were selected, and the microvessels within a x200 microscopic field of each area were counted by two investigators simultaneously. Node-positive carcinomas demonstrated significantly higher microvessel counts than did node-negative carcinomas (mean +/- SD, 99 +/- 42 and 73 +/- 22, respectively; P less than .001). In node-negative carcinomas, tumors from patients who experienced distant recurrence had higher microvessel counts than did tumors from patients who were disease-free (84 +/- 19 and 70 +/- 22; P = .01). Similarly, in patients with node-positive carcinoma, microvessel counts were considerably higher in tumors from patients who experienced distant recurrence than in patients who did not, although the difference did not reach statistical significance (113 +/- 44 and 93 +/- 34, respectively). Among patients with node-negative carcinoma, those with a microvessel count of less than 84 had a recurrence rate of 20% compared with 57% in patients with counts greater than 84 (P = .003). Microvessel counts were independent of histologic parameters, ploidy status, and S-phase fraction but correlated with peritumoral vascular invasion. Both microvessel counts and vascular invasion were independent prognostic parameters by multivariate analysis. High vessel counts may represent increased tumor angiogenesis and are correlated with tumor aggressiveness. Microvessel quantitation may be an additional prognostic factor that, when used in conjunction with more established parameters, can help in appropriate patient management.


Cancer | 1997

p53 protein accumulation and p53 gene mutation in esophageal carcinoma. A molecular and immunohistochemical study with clinicopathologic correlations.

Guido Coggi; Silvano Bosari; Massimo Roncalli; Daniela Graziani; Paola Bossi; Giuseppe Viale; Roberto Buffa; Stefano Ferrero; Mario Piazza; Stella Blandamura; Andrea Segalin; Luigi Bonavina; A. Peracchia

p53 gene mutation and p53 protein accumulation are common in human cancer. However, their clinical significance is controversial and p53 accumulation may not correlate with gene mutation. The current study investigates the occurrence of p53 alterations in esophageal carcinoma, the correlation between the analyses at the gene and protein level, and their prognostic significance.


Cell Research | 2006

Molecular and phenotypic characterization of human amniotic fluid cells and their differentiation potential.

Patrizia Bossolasco; Tiziana Montemurro; Lidia Cova; Stefano Zangrossi; Cinzia Calzarossa; Simona Buiatiotis; Davide Soligo; Silvano Bosari; Vincenzo Silani; Giorgio Lambertenghi Deliliers; Paolo Rebulla; Lorenza Lazzari

The main goal of the study was to identify a novel source of human multipotent cells, overcoming ethical issues involved in embryonic stem cell research and the limited availability of most adult stem cells. Amniotic fluid cells (AFCs) are routinely obtained for prenatal diagnosis and can be expanded in vitro; nevertheless current knowledge about their origin and properties is limited. Twenty samples of AFCs were exposed in culture to adipogenic, osteogenic, neurogenic and myogenic media. Differentiation was evaluated using immunocytochemistry, RT-PCR and Western blotting. Before treatments, AFCs showed heterogeneous morphologies. They were negative for MyoD, Myf-5, MRF4, Myogenin and Desmin but positive for osteocalcin, PPARgamma2, GAP43, NSE, Nestin, MAP2, GFAP and beta tubulin III by RT-PCR. The cells expressed Oct-4, Rex-1 and Runx-1, which characterize the undifferentiated stem cell state. By immunocytochemistry they expressed neural-glial proteins, mesenchymal and epithelial markers. After culture, AFCs differentiated into adipocytes and osteoblasts when the predominant cellular component was fibroblastic. Early and late neuronal antigens were still present after 2 week culture in neural specific media even if no neuronal morphologies were detectable. Our results provide evidence that human amniotic fluid contains progenitor cells with multi-lineage potential showing stem and tissue-specific gene/protein presence for several lineages.


Human Pathology | 1995

bcl-2 oncoprotein in colorectal hyperplastic polyps, adenomas, and adenocarcinomas

Silvano Bosari; Laura Moneghini; Daniela Graziani; Arthur K.C. Lee; John J. Murray; Guido Coggi; Giuseppe Viale

The bcl-2 gene is an oncogene that inhibits programmed cell death (apoptosis). We investigated by immunocytochemistry bcl-2 expression in normal colonic mucosa, hyperplastic polyps, adenomas, and adenocarcinomas of the large bowel. The purpose of the investigation was twofold; to assess the possible role of bcl-2 in colorectal tumorigenesis and to evaluate its clinical significance. The cases studied included 24 hyperplastic polyps, 49 adenomas, and 205 colorectal carcinomas. In both normal mucosa and hyperplastic polyps bcl-2 immunoreactivity was detected only in the proliferative cells of the colonic crypts. Conversely, bcl-2 immunoreactivity was noted in all adenomas irrespective of the degree of dysplastic change; it was diffuse in 84% of adenomas and focal in the remaining cases. In colorectal carcinomas bcl-2 expression was undetectable in 50% and focal (less than 50% immunostained neoplastic cells) in 38% of tumors. The remaining 12% of the carcinomas displayed diffuse (more than 50% immunostained neoplastic cells) bcl-2 immunoreactivity. In colorectal carcinomas bcl-2 expression was not correlated with relevant clinicopathologic parameters, including disease stage, tumor location and growth fraction, DNA ploidy, and p53 protein accumulation, and had no prognostic significance by univariate or multivariate analysis. These results suggest that bcl-2 oncoprotein may play a role in colorectal tumorigenesis, probably in the early phases of the adenoma-carcinoma sequence. bcl-2 expression in established tumors has no prognostic significance.


Oncogene | 2007

Regulation of survivin expression by IGF-1/mTOR signaling

Valentina Vaira; Connie Wing-Ching Lee; Hira Lal Goel; Silvano Bosari; Lucia R. Languino; Dario C. Altieri

Survivin is a dual regulator of cell proliferation and cell viability overexpressed in most human tumors. Although strategies to lower survivin levels have been pursued for rational cancer therapy, the molecular circuitries controlling survivin expression in tumors have not been completely elucidated. Here, we show that stimulation with insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) results in increased survivin expression in prostate cancer cells. This response is independent of de novo gene transcription, changes in mRNA expression or modifications of survivin protein stability. Instead, IGF-1 induced persistence and translation of a pool of survivin mRNA, in a reaction abolished by the mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) inhibitor, rapamycin. Forced expression of the mTOR target p70S6K1 reproduced the increase in survivin expression in prostate cancer cells, whereas acute ablation of endogenous p70S6K1 by small interfering RNA downregulated survivin levels. Rapamycin, alone or in combination with suboptimal concentrations of taxol reduced survivin protein levels, and decreased viability of prostate cancer cells. Therefore, IGF-1/mTOR signaling elevates survivin in prostate cancer cells via rapid changes in mRNA translation. Antagonists of this pathway may be beneficial to lower an antiapoptotic threshold maintained by survivin in prostate cancer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Preclinical model of organotypic culture for pharmacodynamic profiling of human tumors

Valentina Vaira; Giuseppe Fedele; Saumyadipta Pyne; Ester Fasoli; Giorgia Zadra; Dyane Bailey; Eric L. Snyder; Alice Faversani; Guido Coggi; Richard Flavin; Silvano Bosari; Massimo Loda

Predicting drug response in cancer patients remains a major challenge in the clinic. We have perfected an ex vivo, reproducible, rapid and personalized culture method to investigate antitumoral pharmacological properties that preserves the original cancer microenvironment. Response to signal transduction inhibitors in cancer is determined not only by properties of the drug target but also by mutations in other signaling molecules and the tumor microenvironment. As a proof of concept, we, therefore, focused on the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway, because it plays a prominent role in cancer and its activity is affected by epithelial–stromal interactions. Our results show that this culture model preserves tissue 3D architecture, cell viability, pathway activity, and global gene-expression profiles up to 5 days ex vivo. In addition, we show pathway modulation in tumor cells resulting from pharmacologic intervention in ex vivo culture. This technology may have a significant impact on patient selection for clinical trials and in predicting response to small-molecule inhibitor therapy.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Met Activation in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Is Associated with de Novo Resistance to EGFR Inhibitors and the Development of Brain Metastasis

Elisa Benedettini; Lynette M. Sholl; Michael Peyton; John F. Reilly; Christopher Ware; Lenora Davis; Natalie Vena; Dyane Bailey; Beow Y. Yeap; Michelangelo Fiorentino; Azra H. Ligon; Bo Sheng Pan; Victoria M. Richon; John D. Minna; Adi F. Gazdar; Giulio Draetta; Silvano Bosari; Lucian R. Chirieac; Bart Lutterbach; Massimo Loda

Most non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients harboring activating epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations respond to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy. However, about 30% exhibit primary resistance to EGFR TKI therapy. Here we report that Met protein expression and phosphorylation were associated with primary resistance to EGFR TKI therapy in NSCLC patients harboring EGFR mutations, implicating Met as a de novo mechanism of resistance. In a separate patient cohort, Met expression and phosphorylation were also associated with development of NSCLC brain metastasis and were selectively enriched in brain metastases relative to paired primary lung tumors. A similar metastasis-specific activation of Met occurred in vitro in the isogenous cell lines H2073 and H1993, which are derived from the primary lung tumor and a metastasis, respectively, from the same patient. We conclude that Met activation is found in NSCLC before EGFR-targeted therapy and is associated with both primary resistance to EGFR inhibitor therapy and with the development of metastases. If confirmed in larger cohorts, our analysis suggests that patient tumors harboring both Met activation and EGFR mutation could potentially benefit from early intervention with a combination of EGFR and Met inhibitors.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1999

Downregulation of p27KIP1 and Ki67/Mib1 labeling index support the classification of thyroid carcinoma into prognostically relevant categories

Giovanni Tallini; Ginesa Garcia-Rostan; A. Herrero; Daniel Zelterman; G. Viale; Silvano Bosari; Maria Luisa Carcangiu

The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27KIP1 has been proposed as a valuable prognostic indicator for a variety of human neoplasms. Immunohistochemical reactivity for p27KIP1 and the proliferation marker Ki67/Mib1 were investigated in 90 thyroid carcinomas of follicular cell origin. The neoplasms were divided into three prognostic groups on the basis of their morphologic features: group 1, well-differentiated papillary or follicular carcinomas with favorable pathologic features (43 papillary carcinomas and 4 minimally invasive follicular carcinomas); group 2, papillary or follicular carcinomas with unfavorable pathologic features (21 poorly differentiated carcinomas and 2 papillary carcinomas, tall cell variant); and group 3, undifferentiated, or anaplastic, carcinomas. p27KIP1 expression (p = 0.007) and Ki67/Mib1 labeling index (p = 0.02) showed a strong correlation with the subdivision of the thyroid carcinomas in the three prognostic groups with a significant linear trend for tumors with low p27KIP1 (p = 0.002) and high Ki67/Mib1 labeling index (p = 0.005) to segregate into the unfavorable categories (groups 2 and 3). Low p27KIP1 expression, but not cellular proliferation, was related to adverse prognostic factors, such as large tumor size (p = 0.03) and extrathyroidal extension (p = 0.01), but the correlation was not independent of the subdivision in the three groups. Low p27KIP1 expression (p = 0.03) and high proliferative rate (p = 0.02) were associated with poor survival, reflecting the close association between patient morbidity and mortality rates and tumor differentiation. No significant association could be seen between p27KIP1 or cellular proliferation and clinicopathologic parameters (e.g., age, sex, tumor size, extrathyroidal extension, vascular invasion, lymph node metastases, distant metastases, tumor stage, and survival rate) within any of the groups, or the histologic diagnosis of papillary versus follicular carcinoma irrespective of their degree of differentiation. Modulation of p27KIP1 and cellular proliferation patterns in thyroid carcinoma correlate with tumor differentiation and support the morphologic classification of thyroid carcinoma into prognostically relevant categories.


BMC Cancer | 2009

Inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) expression and their prognostic significance in hepatocellular carcinoma

Claudia Augello; Luca Caruso; Marco Maggioni; Matteo Donadon; Marco Montorsi; Roberto Santambrogio; Guido Torzilli; Valentina Vaira; Caterina Pellegrini; Massimo Roncalli; Guido Coggi; Silvano Bosari

BackgroundSimilarly to other tumor types, an imbalance between unrestrained cell proliferation and impaired apoptosis appears to be a major unfavorable feature of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The members of IAP family are key regulators of apoptosis, cytokinesis and signal transduction. IAP survival action is antagonized by specific binding of Smac/DIABLO and XAF1. This study aimed to investigate the gene and protein expression pattern of IAP family members and their antagonists in a series of human HCCs and to assess their clinical significance.MethodsRelative quantification of IAPs and their antagonist genes was assessed by quantitative Real Time RT-PCR (qPCR) in 80 patients who underwent surgical resection for HCC. The expression ratios of XIAP/XAF1 and of XIAP/Smac were also evaluated. Survivin, XIAP and XAF1 protein expression were investigated by immunohistochemistry. Correlations between mRNA levels, protein expression and clinicopathological features were assessed. Follow-up data were available for 69 HCC patients. The overall survival analysis was estimated according to the Kaplan-Meier method.ResultsSurvivin and Livin/ML-IAP mRNAs were significantly over-expressed in cancer tissues compared to non-neoplastic counterparts. Although Survivin immunoreactivity did not correlate with qPCR data, a significant relation was found between higher Survivin mRNA level and tumor stage, tumor grade and vascular invasion.The mRNA ratio XIAP/XAF1 was significantly higher in HCCs than in cirrhotic tissues. Moreover, high XIAP/XAF1 ratio was an indicator of poor prognosis when overall survival was estimated and elevated XIAP immunoreactivity was significantly associated with shorter survival.ConclusionOur study demonstrates that alterations in the expression of IAP family members, including Survivin and Livin/ML-IAP, are frequent in HCCs. Of interest, we could determine that an imbalance in XIAP/XAF1 mRNA expression levels correlated to overall patient survival, and that high XIAP immunoreactivity was a poor prognostic factor.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2004

Association between Low-Activity Serotonin Transporter Genotype and Heroin Dependence: Behavioral and Personality Correlates

Gilberto Gerra; L. Garofano; G. Santoro; Silvano Bosari; Caterina Pellegrini; Amir Zaimovic; Gabriele Moi; M. Bussandri; A. Moi; F. Brambilla; Claudia Donnini

In previous studies, serotonin (5‐HT) system disturbance was found involved in a variety of behavioral disorders, psychopathologies, and substance use disorders. A functional polymorphism in the promoter region of the human serotonin transporter gene (5‐HTTLPR) was recently identified and the presence of the short (S) allele found to be associated with a lower level of expression of the gene, lower levels of 5‐HT uptake, type 2 alcoholism, violence and suicidal behavior. In the present study, 101 heroin addicts (males, West European, Caucasians) and 101 healthy control subjects matched for race and gender, with no history of substance use disorder, have been genotyped. Aggressiveness levels were measured in both heroin addicts and controls utilizing Buss‐Durkee‐Hostility‐Inventory (BDHI). Data about suicide attempt and violent criminal behavior in subject history have been collected. The short–short (SS) genotype frequency was significantly higher among heroin dependent individuals compared with control subjects (P = 0.025). The odds ratio for the SS genotype versus the long–long (LL) genotype frequency was 0.69, 95% Cl (0.49–0.97), when heroin addicts were compared with healthy controls. The SS genotype frequency was significantly higher among violent heroin dependent individuals compared with addicted individuals without aggressive behavior (P = 0.02). BDHI mean total scores and suspiciousness and negativism subscales scores were significantly higher in SS individuals, in comparison with LL subjects, among heroin addicts. No association was found between SS genotype and suicide history. Our data suggest that a decreased expression of the gene encoding the 5‐HTT transporter, due to “S” promoter polymorphism, may be associated with an increased risk for substance use disorders, particularly in the subjects with more consistent aggressiveness and impulsiveness.

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Valentina Vaira

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Marco Maggioni

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Mario Nosotti

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Alessandro Del Gobbo

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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