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Dive into the research topics where Simona Colla is active.

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Featured researches published by Simona Colla.


Nature | 2011

Telomere dysfunction induces metabolic and mitochondrial compromise

Ergiin Sahin; Simona Colla; Marc Liesa; Javid Moslehi; Florian Muller; Mira Guo; Marcus P. Cooper; Darrell N. Kotton; Attila J. Fabian; Carl Walkey; Richard S. Maser; Giovanni Tonon; Friedrich Foerster; Robert Xiong; Y. Alan Wang; Sachet A. Shukla; Mariela Jaskelioff; Eric Martin; Timothy P. Heffernan; Alexei Protopopov; Elena Ivanova; John E. Mahoney; Maria Kost-Alimova; Samuel R. Perry; Roderick T. Bronson; Ronglih Liao; Richard C. Mulligan; Orian S. Shirihai; Lynda Chin; Ronald A. DePinho

Telomere dysfunction activates p53-mediated cellular growth arrest, senescence and apoptosis to drive progressive atrophy and functional decline in high-turnover tissues. The broader adverse impact of telomere dysfunction across many tissues including more quiescent systems prompted transcriptomic network analyses to identify common mechanisms operative in haematopoietic stem cells, heart and liver. These unbiased studies revealed profound repression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, coactivator 1 alpha and beta (PGC-1α and PGC-1β, also known as Ppargc1a and Ppargc1b, respectively) and the downstream network in mice null for either telomerase reverse transcriptase (Tert) or telomerase RNA component (Terc) genes. Consistent with PGCs as master regulators of mitochondrial physiology and metabolism, telomere dysfunction is associated with impaired mitochondrial biogenesis and function, decreased gluconeogenesis, cardiomyopathy, and increased reactive oxygen species. In the setting of telomere dysfunction, enforced Tert or PGC-1α expression or germline deletion of p53 (also known as Trp53) substantially restores PGC network expression, mitochondrial respiration, cardiac function and gluconeogenesis. We demonstrate that telomere dysfunction activates p53 which in turn binds and represses PGC-1α and PGC-1β promoters, thereby forging a direct link between telomere and mitochondrial biology. We propose that this telomere–p53–PGC axis contributes to organ and metabolic failure and to diminishing organismal fitness in the setting of telomere dysfunction.


Nature | 2014

Oncogene ablation-resistant pancreatic cancer cells depend on mitochondrial function

Andrea Viale; Piergiorgio Pettazzoni; Costas A. Lyssiotis; Haoqiang Ying; Nora Sanchez; Matteo Marchesini; Alessandro Carugo; Tessa Green; Sahil Seth; Virginia Giuliani; Maria Kost-Alimova; Florian Muller; Simona Colla; Luigi Nezi; Giannicola Genovese; Angela K. Deem; Avnish Kapoor; Wantong Yao; Emanuela Brunetto; Ya’an Kang; Min Yuan; John M. Asara; Y. Alan Wang; Timothy P. Heffernan; Alec C. Kimmelman; Huamin Wang; Jason B. Fleming; Lewis C. Cantley; Ronald A. DePinho; Giulio Draetta

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the deadliest cancers in western countries, with a median survival of 6 months and an extremely low percentage of long-term surviving patients. KRAS mutations are known to be a driver event of PDAC, but targeting mutant KRAS has proved challenging. Targeting oncogene-driven signalling pathways is a clinically validated approach for several devastating diseases. Still, despite marked tumour shrinkage, the frequency of relapse indicates that a fraction of tumour cells survives shut down of oncogenic signalling. Here we explore the role of mutant KRAS in PDAC maintenance using a recently developed inducible mouse model of mutated Kras (KrasG12D, herein KRas) in a p53LoxP/WT background. We demonstrate that a subpopulation of dormant tumour cells surviving oncogene ablation (surviving cells) and responsible for tumour relapse has features of cancer stem cells and relies on oxidative phosphorylation for survival. Transcriptomic and metabolic analyses of surviving cells reveal prominent expression of genes governing mitochondrial function, autophagy and lysosome activity, as well as a strong reliance on mitochondrial respiration and a decreased dependence on glycolysis for cellular energetics. Accordingly, surviving cells show high sensitivity to oxidative phosphorylation inhibitors, which can inhibit tumour recurrence. Our integrated analyses illuminate a therapeutic strategy of combined targeting of the KRAS pathway and mitochondrial respiration to manage pancreatic cancer.


Nature | 2010

Lkb1 regulates quiescence and metabolic homeostasis of haematopoietic stem cells

Boyi Gan; Jian Hu; Shan Jiang; Yingchun Liu; Ergun Sahin; Li Zhuang; Eliot Fletcher-Sananikone; Simona Colla; Y. Alan Wang; Lynda Chin; Ronald A. DePinho

The capacity to fine-tune cellular bioenergetics with the demands of stem-cell maintenance and regeneration is central to normal development and ageing, and to organismal survival during periods of acute stress. How energy metabolism and stem-cell homeostatic processes are coordinated is not well understood. Lkb1 acts as an evolutionarily conserved regulator of cellular energy metabolism in eukaryotic cells and functions as the major upstream kinase to phosphorylate AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and 12 other AMPK-related kinases. Whether Lkb1 regulates stem-cell maintenance remains unknown. Here we show that Lkb1 has an essential role in haematopoietic stem cell (HSC) homeostasis. We demonstrate that ablation of Lkb1 in adult mice results in severe pancytopenia and subsequent lethality. Loss of Lkb1 leads to impaired survival and escape from quiescence of HSCs, resulting in exhaustion of the HSC pool and a marked reduction of HSC repopulating potential in vivo. Lkb1 deletion has an impact on cell proliferation in HSCs, but not on more committed compartments, pointing to context-specific functions for Lkb1 in haematopoiesis. The adverse impact of Lkb1 deletion on haematopoiesis was predominantly cell-autonomous and mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1)-independent, and involves multiple mechanisms converging on mitochondrial apoptosis and possibly downregulation of PGC-1 coactivators and their transcriptional network, which have critical roles in mitochondrial biogenesis and function. Thus, Lkb1 serves as an essential regulator of HSCs and haematopoiesis, and more generally, points to the critical importance of coupling energy metabolism and stem-cell homeostasis.


Nature | 2012

Passenger deletions generate therapeutic vulnerabilities in cancer

Florian Muller; Simona Colla; Elisa Aquilanti; Veronica E. Manzo; Giannicola Genovese; Jaclyn Lee; Daniel Eisenson; Rujuta Narurkar; Pingna Deng; Luigi Nezi; Michelle Lee; Baoli Hu; Jian Hu; Ergun Sahin; Derrick Sek Tong Ong; Eliot Fletcher-Sananikone; Lawrence Kwong; Cameron Brennan; Y. Alan Wang; Lynda Chin; Ronald A. DePinho

Inactivation of tumour-suppressor genes by homozygous deletion is a prototypic event in the cancer genome, yet such deletions often encompass neighbouring genes. We propose that homozygous deletions in such passenger genes can expose cancer-specific therapeutic vulnerabilities when the collaterally deleted gene is a member of a functionally redundant family of genes carrying out an essential function. The glycolytic gene enolase 1 (ENO1) in the 1p36 locus is deleted in glioblastoma (GBM), which is tolerated by the expression of ENO2. Here we show that short-hairpin-RNA-mediated silencing of ENO2 selectively inhibits growth, survival and the tumorigenic potential of ENO1-deleted GBM cells, and that the enolase inhibitor phosphonoacetohydroxamate is selectively toxic to ENO1-deleted GBM cells relative to ENO1-intact GBM cells or normal astrocytes. The principle of collateral vulnerability should be applicable to other passenger-deleted genes encoding functionally redundant essential activities and provide an effective treatment strategy for cancers containing such genomic events.


Cell Reports | 2015

Cancer-Associated SF3B1 Hotspot Mutations Induce Cryptic 3′ Splice Site Selection through Use of a Different Branch Point

Rachel Darman; Michael Seiler; Anant A. Agrawal; Kian Huat Lim; Shouyong Peng; Daniel Aird; Suzanna Bailey; Erica B. Bhavsar; Betty Chan; Simona Colla; Laura Corson; Jacob Feala; Peter Fekkes; Kana Ichikawa; Gregg F. Keaney; Linda Lee; Pavan Kumar; Kaiko Kunii; Crystal MacKenzie; Mark Matijevic; Yoshiharu Mizui; Khin Than Myint; Eun Sun Park; Xiaoling Puyang; Anand Selvaraj; Michael Thomas; Jennifer J. Tsai; John Wang; Markus Warmuth; Hui Yang

Recurrent mutations in the spliceosome are observed in several human cancers, but their functional and therapeutic significance remains elusive. SF3B1, the most frequently mutated component of the spliceosome in cancer, is involved in the recognition of the branch point sequence (BPS) during selection of the 3 splice site (ss) in RNA splicing. Here, we report that common and tumor-specific splicing aberrations are induced by SF3B1 mutations and establish aberrant 3 ss selection as the most frequent splicing defect. Strikingly, mutant SF3B1 utilizes a BPS that differs from that used by wild-type SF3B1 and requires the canonical 3 ss to enable aberrant splicing during the second step. Approximately 50% of the aberrantly spliced mRNAs are subjected to nonsense-mediated decay resulting in downregulation of gene and protein expression. These findings ascribe functional significance to the consequences of SF3B1 mutations in cancer.


Cancer Discovery | 2011

Pten Is a Major Tumor Suppressor in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma and Regulates an NF-κB-Cytokine Network

Haoqiang Ying; Kutlu G. Elpek; Anant Vinjamoori; Zimmerman Sm; Gerald C. Chu; Haiyan Yan; Eliot Fletcher-Sananikone; Hailei Zhang; Yingchun Liu; Wei Wang; Xiaojia Ren; Hongwu Zheng; Alec C. Kimmelman; Ji Hye Paik; Carol Lim; Samuel R. Perry; Shan Jiang; Brian Malinn; Alexei Protopopov; Simona Colla; Yonghong Xiao; Nabeel Bardeesy; Shannon J. Turley; Y. Alan Wang; Lynda Chin; Sarah P. Thayer; Ronald A. DePinho

Initiation of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is driven by oncogenic KRAS mutation, and disease progression is associated with frequent loss of tumor suppressors. In this study, human PDAC genome analyses revealed frequent deletion of the PTEN gene as well as loss of expression in primary tumor specimens. A potential role for PTEN as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor is further supported by mouse genetic studies. The mouse PDAC driven by oncogenic Kras mutation and Pten deficiency also sustains spontaneous extinction of Ink4a expression and shows prometastatic capacity. Unbiased transcriptomic analyses established that combined oncogenic Kras and Pten loss promotes marked NF-κB activation and its cytokine network, with accompanying robust stromal activation and immune cell infiltration with known tumor-promoting properties. Thus, PTEN/phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway alteration is a common event in PDAC development and functions in part to strongly activate the NF-κB network, which may serve to shape the PDAC tumor microenvironment.


Leukemia | 2010

Low bone marrow oxygen tension and hypoxia-inducible factor-1α overexpression characterize patients with multiple myeloma: role on the transcriptional and proangiogenic profiles of CD138 + cells

Simona Colla; Paola Storti; Gaetano Donofrio; Marina Bolzoni; Mirca Lazzaretti; Manuela Abeltino; L. Ippolito; Antonino Neri; Domenico Ribatti; Vittorio Rizzoli; Eugenia Martella; Nicola Giuliani

Low bone marrow oxygen tension and hypoxia-inducible factor-1α overexpression characterize patients with multiple myeloma: role on the transcriptional and proangiogenic profiles of CD138 + cells


Leukemia | 2004

Downmodulation of ERK protein kinase activity inhibits VEGF secretion by human myeloma cells and myeloma-induced angiogenesis.

Nicola Giuliani; Paolo Lunghi; Francesca Morandi; Simona Colla; Sabrina Bonomini; Magda Hojden; Vittorio Rizzoli; Antonio Bonati

The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) cascade leading to the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 (ERK1/2) is critical for regulating myeloma cell growth; however, the relationship of ERK1/2 activity with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) production and the effects of its downmodulation in myeloma cells are not elucidated. We found that the treatment with MAP/ERK kinase 1 (MEK1) inhibitors PD98059 or PD184352 produced a reduction of phosphorylated ERK1/2 (p-ERK1/2) levels in myeloma cells of more than 80% and prevented the increase of p-ERK1/2 induced by interleukin-6 (IL-6). MEK1 inhibitors also induced a significant inhibition of myeloma cell proliferation and blunted the stimulatory effect induced by IL-6. A significant inhibition of basal VEGF secretion by myeloma cells as well as a suppression of the stimulatory effect of IL-6 on VEGF was observed by either PD98059 or PD184352. Moreover, we also found that the PI3K kinase inhibitors, but not p38 MAPK inhibitors, reduced VEGF secretion by myeloma cells and increase the inhibitory effect of MEK1 inhibitors. In an ‘in vitro’ model of angiogenesis, we found that MEK1 inhibitors impair vessel formation induced by myeloma cells and restored by VEGF treatment, suggesting that the downmodulation of ERK1/2 activity reduces myeloma-induced angiogenesis by inhibiting VEGF secretion.


Cancer Discovery | 2012

microRNA Regulatory Network Inference Identifies miR-34a as a Novel Regulator of TGF-β Signaling in Glioblastoma

Giannicola Genovese; Ayla Ergun; Sachet A. Shukla; Benito Campos; Jason A. Hanna; Papia Ghosh; Steven N. Quayle; Kunal Rai; Simona Colla; Haoquiang Ying; Chang-Jiun Wu; Sharmistha Sarkar; Yonghong Xiao; Jianhua Zhang; Hailei Zhang; Lawrence Kwong; Katherine Dunn; Wolf Ruprecht Wiedemeyer; Cameron Brennan; Hongwu Zheng; David L. Rimm; James J. Collins; Lynda Chin

UNLABELLEDnLeveraging The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) multidimensional data in glioblastoma, we inferred the putative regulatory network between microRNA and mRNA using the Context Likelihood of Relatedness modeling algorithm. Interrogation of the network in context of defined molecular subtypes identified 8 microRNAs with a strong discriminatory potential between proneural and mesenchymal subtypes. Integrative in silico analyses, a functional genetic screen, and experimental validation identified miR-34a as a tumor suppressor in proneural subtype glioblastoma. Mechanistically, in addition to its direct regulation of platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha (PDGFRA), promoter enrichment analysis of context likelihood of relatedness-inferred mRNA nodes established miR-34a as a novel regulator of a SMAD4 transcriptional network. Clinically, miR-34a expression level is shown to be prognostic, where miR-34a low-expressing glioblastomas exhibited better overall survival. This work illustrates the potential of comprehensive multidimensional cancer genomic data combined with computational and experimental models in enabling mechanistic exploration of relationships among different genetic elements across the genome space in cancer.nnnSIGNIFICANCEnWe illustrate here that network modeling of complex multidimensional cancer genomic data can generate a framework in which to explore the biology of cancers, leading to discovery of new pathogenetic insights as well as potential prognostic biomarkers. Specifically in glioblastoma, within the context of the global network, promoter enrichment analysis of network edges uncovered a novel regulation of TGF-β signaling via a Smad4 transcriptomic network by miR-34a.


Leukemia | 2015

Deregulation of innate immune and inflammatory signaling in myelodysplastic syndromes

Irene Ganan-Gomez; Yue Wei; Daniel T. Starczynowski; Simona Colla; Hui Yang; M Cabrero-Calvo; Zachary S. Bohannan; Amit Verma; Ulrich Steidl; Guillermo Garcia-Manero

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs) are a group of heterogeneous clonal hematologic malignancies that are characterized by defective bone marrow (BM) hematopoiesis and by the occurrence of intramedullary apoptosis. During the past decade, the identification of key genetic and epigenetic alterations in patients has improved our understanding of the pathophysiology of this disease. However, the specific molecular mechanisms leading to the pathogenesis of MDS have largely remained obscure. Recently, essential evidence supporting the direct role of innate immune abnormalities in MDS has been obtained, including the identification of multiple key regulators that are overexpressed or constitutively activated in BM hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. Mounting experimental results indicate that the dysregulation of these molecules leads to abnormal hematopoiesis, unbalanced cell death and proliferation in patients’ BM, and has an important role in the pathogenesis of MDS. Furthermore, there is compelling evidence that the deregulation of innate immune and inflammatory signaling also affects other cells from the immune system and the BM microenvironment, which establish aberrant associations with hematopoietic precursors and contribute to the MDS phenotype. Therefore, the deregulation of innate immune and inflammatory signaling should be considered as one of the driving forces in the pathogenesis of MDS. In this article, we review and update the advances in this field, summarizing the results from the most recent studies and discussing their clinical implications.

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Guillermo Garcia-Manero

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Hagop M. Kantarjian

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Ronald A. DePinho

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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