Tommaso Cornetta
Roma Tre University
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Featured researches published by Tommaso Cornetta.
Cancer Letters | 2010
Stefano Leone; Tommaso Cornetta; Emiliano Basso; Renata Cozzi
Resveratrol, a stilbene found in grapes and wine, is one of the most interesting natural compound due to its role exerted in cancer prevention and therapy. In particular, resveratrol is able to delay cell cycle progression and to induce apoptotic death in several cell lines. Here we report that resveratrol treatment of human glioblastoma cells induces a delay in cell cycle progression during S phase associated with an increase in histone H2AX phosphorylation. Furthermore, with an in vitro assay of topoisomerase IIalpha catalytic activity we show that resveratrol is able to inhibit the ability of recombinant human TOPO IIalpha to decatenate kDNA, so that it could be considered a TOPO II poison.
Mutation Research | 2010
Silvia Sterpone; Tommaso Cornetta; Luca Padua; Mastellone; Daniela Giammarino; Antonella Testa; Donatella Tirindelli; Renata Cozzi; Donato
Therapeutic exposure to ionising radiation can induce normal tissue side effects which consistently differ among individuals suggesting a possible genetic control. One approach to elucidate the underlying mechanisms is to analyse the relation between genetic traits, biomarkers of in vitro DNA damage and side toxicity in vivo. 43 breast cancer (BC) patients receiving radiotherapy after a breast-conserving surgery were recruited together with 34 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Adverse tissue reactions were recorded as indicators of radiotherapy susceptibility. All blood samples from both patients (35) and controls (34) were irradiated in vitro and DNA primary damage and repair kinetic were measured through Comet assay. All study subjects were genotyped for XRCC1, OGG1 and XRCC3 gene polymorphisms. In our small groups we found a positive association between XRCC1 variant allele (399Gln) and the occurrence of breast cancer [p=0.01; OR=2.41, 95%CI (1.24-4.66)]. BC patients showed a higher degree of basal (p<0.001) and X-ray induced DNA damage (p<0.01) when compared to healthy controls. A reduced repair ability was found in BC patients showing high degrees of tissue side effects as classified by Radiation Morbidity Scoring Scheme. BC patients showed an impairment of their DNA repair capacity associated with the development of radiation sensitivity but not with polymorphisms in any of the considered genes.
Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2008
Stefano Leone; Mario Fiore; M. Giuliana Lauro; Samanta Pino; Tommaso Cornetta; Renata Cozzi
Resveratrol (3,4′,5‐trihydroxystilbene) is a polyphenol synthesized by a wide variety of plant species in response to injury, UV irradiation and fungal attack. Many studies have revealed a variety of resveratrol intracellular targets whose modulation gives rise to overlapping responses leading to growth arrest and death. Many authors have reported different human cancer cell lines, treated with resveratrol at micromolar concentrations, arrested their proliferative cycle in the G1/S boundary or in the S phase and this cell cycle arrest was followed by apoptotic death. Less is known about the ability of resveratrol to modify the effect of radiation exposure in normal and cancer cells. Considering that controlled exposure to ionizing radiation is one of the most used treatments in cancer patients and that these schedules are not always effective in medical practice, as in the case of glioma patients, the testing of combined treatment protocols (resveratrol and ionizing radiation) could be of interest, opening the door to future studies which would examine the pharmacological activity of resveratrol. In this study we have looked into whether resveratrol is able to modulate cell cycle progression in human glioblastoma cells and to regulate GJs expression in cancer cells. With this aim in mind we have performed a cytofluorimetric multiparameter assay to quantify the presence of GJs in U87 glioma cells treated with resveratrol and/or X rays. We report that resveratrol induces a delay in cell cycle progression and both alone and in combination with X rays is able to enhance gap junction Intercellular Communications.
Cell Biology and Toxicology | 2009
Tommaso Cornetta; Selena Palma; Irene Aprile; Luca Padua; P. Tonali; Antonia Carla Testa; Renata Cozzi
Oxidative stress seems to play a major role in the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration. In Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients, the dopaminergic neurons are subjected to oxidative stress resulting from reduced levels of antioxidant defenses such as glutathione and high amount of intracellular iron. Levodopa (LD) is widely used for the symptomatic treatment of PD, but its role in oxidative damage control is still unclear. The aim of this study was to analyze the presence of DNA damage in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of PD patients, during a washout and a controlled LD dosage and to evaluate the oxidative damage fluctuation after LD intake. The standard and the Fpg-modified version of Comet assay were applied in analyzing DNA damage in PBL from blood samples of nine PD patients and nine matched controls. Due to the limited number of patients we cannot reach definite conclusions even if our data confirm the accumulation of DNA lesions in PD patients; these lesions decrease after LD intake.
DNA and Cell Biology | 2012
Monica Colamartino; Luca Padua; Carlo Meneghini; Stefano Leone; Tommaso Cornetta; Antonella Testa; Renata Cozzi
Parkinsons disease (PD) is one of the most common neurodegenerative disorders characterized by decreased levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine (DA) in the striatum of the brain, as a result of degeneration of DA neurons. Levodopa (L-Dopa) crosses the blood-brain barrier and its administration replenishes the loss of DA in dopaminergic neurons in PD patients. Despite the evident beneficial effects, L-Dopa use may cause side effects and its toxicity found in in vitro assays has been attributed to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS): L-Dopa is converted to DA and its metabolism and autoxidation gives rise to quinones, semiquinones, and hydrogen peroxide. Despite this evidence, L-Dopa in some in vivo and in vitro experiments showed no toxic effects, or even antioxidant effects. Two major peripheral L-Dopa metabolic pathways, driven by the enzymes Aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) and catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT), significantly deplete the amount of L-Dopa reaching the brain. The low bioavailability of L-Dopa may cause a wide variation in clinical response between patients. Strategies addressing to improve the bioavailability of L-Dopa include coadministering L-Dopa with carbidopa, a decarboxylase inhibitor, as multiple daily doses. We utilized catecholaminergic human neuroblastoma cells to study DNA damage and ROS production after L-Dopa and carbidopa treatments. Our data lead us to confirm that L-Dopa may have a protective effect on dopaminergic cells especially at certain concentrations, in particular, toward the production of ROS and their toxic effects on DNA. Furthermore in the combined treatment, with induction of ROS following administration of H(2)O(2), carbidopa is effective in reducing the damage caused by reactive oxygen intermediates both alone and in combination with L-Dopa.
BioMed Research International | 2014
Janet Piloto Ferrer; Renata Cozzi; Tommaso Cornetta; Pasquale Stano; Mario Fiore; Francesca Degrassi; Rosella De Salvia; Antonia Remigio; Marbelis Francisco; Olga Quiñones; Dayana Valdivia; Maria L. González; Carlos Pérez; Ángel Sánchez-Lamar
Xanthium strumarium L. is a member of the Asteraceae commonly used in Cuba, mainly as diuretic. Some toxic properties of this plant have also been reported and, to date, very little is known about its genotoxic properties. The present work aims was to evaluate the potential cytotoxic and genotoxic risk of whole extract from Xanthium strumarium L. whole extract of aerial parts. No positive response was observed in a battery of four Salmonella typhimurium strains, when exposed to concentrations up to 5 mg/plate, with and without mammalian metabolic activation (liver microsomal S9 fraction from Wistar rats). In CHO cells, high concentrations (25–100 μg/mL) revealed significant reduction in cell viability. Results from sister chromatid exchanges, chromosome aberrations, and comet assay showed that X. strumarium extract is genotoxic at the highest concentration used, when clear cytotoxic effects were also observed. On the contrary, no increase in micronuclei frequency in bone marrow cells was observed when the extract was orally administered to mice (100, 500, and 2000 mg/Kg doses). The data presented here constitute the most complete study on the genotoxic potential of X. strumarium L. and show that the extract can induce in vitro DNA damage at cytotoxic concentrations.
Biological Research | 2009
Silvia Sterpone; Tommaso Cornetta; Adriano Angioni; Ersilia Fiscarelli; Vincenzina Lucidi; Antonella Testa; Renata Cozzi
Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is an autosomal recessive multisystemic disorder showing a highly heterogeneous phenotype, even among siblings carrying identical CFTR mutations. Moreover, oxidative stress is of central importance in the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis. The present study seeks to value the presence of oxidative damage in CF patients and the possible modifier effect of repair and glutathione-S-transferase genes. We analysed the presence of DNA damage in leukocytes of 63 CF patients at an Italian CF centre and 63 controls, through the alkaline Comet assay to detect DNA strand breaks. Furthermore, controls and 93 CF subjects were genotyped for 5 genes by RFLP-PCR (XRCC1,0GG1,GSTP1) and PCR assay (GSTM1, GSTT1). No difference in Comet assay values was observed comparing controls to CF patients, although CF subjects showed slightly higher mean values. The crude Odds-Ratio (OR) was higher than one for XRCC1 and GSTP1 genotypes and liver status and for XRCC1 and OGG1 genotypes and pancreatic insufficiency, but in all cases the p-values were not significant. In this case-control study, neither DNA damage ñor gene polymorphisms seem to influence CF manifestation.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2006
Tommaso Cornetta; Fabiola Festa; Antonella Testa; Renata Cozzi
Mutation Research | 2008
Tommaso Cornetta; Luca Padua; Antonella Testa; Elena Ievoli; Fabiola Festa; Giovanna Tranfo; Luigi Baccelliere; Renata Cozzi
Mutation Research | 2007
Selena Palma; Tommaso Cornetta; Luca Padua; Renata Cozzi; Massimo Appolloni; Elena Ievoli; Antonella Testa