Vincenzo Fidanza
Thomas Jefferson University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Vincenzo Fidanza.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
Kristoffel R. Dumon; Hideshi Ishii; Louise Y.Y. Fong; Nicola Zanesi; Vincenzo Fidanza; Rita Mancini; Andrea Vecchione; Raffaele Baffa; Francesco Trapasso; Matthew J. During; Kay Huebner; Carlo M. Croce
The tumor suppressor gene FHIT spans a common fragile site and is highly susceptible to environmental carcinogens. FHIT inactivation and loss of expression is found in a large fraction of premaligant and malignant lesions. In this study, we were able to inhibit tumor development by oral gene transfer, using adenoviral or adenoassociated viral vectors expressing the human FHIT gene, in heterozygous Fhit+/− knockout mice, that are prone to tumor development after carcinogen exposure. We therefore suggest that FHIT gene therapy could be a novel clinical approach not only in treatment of early stages of cancer, but also in prevention of human cancer.
Oncogene | 2002
Monica Fedele; Sabrina Battista; Lawrence Kenyon; Gustavo Baldassarre; Vincenzo Fidanza; Andres J. Klein-Szanto; A F Parlow; Rosa Visone; Giovanna Maria Pierantoni; Eric Outwater; Massimo Santoro; Carlo M. Croce; Alfredo Fusco
Overexpression of the HMGA2 gene is a common feature of neoplastic cells both in experimental and human models. Intragenic and extragenic HMGA2 rearrangements responsible for HMGA2 gene overexpression have been frequently detected in human benign tumours of mesenchymal origin. To better understand the role of HMGA2 overexpression in human tumorigenesis, we have generated transgenic mice carrying the HMGA2 gene under the transcriptional control of the cytomegalovirus promoter. High expression of the transgene was demonstrated in all the mouse tissues analysed, whereas no expression of the endogenous HMGA2 gene was detected in the same tissues from wild-type mice. In this study, two indipendent lines of transgenic mice have been generated. By 6 months of age, 85% of female animals of both transgenic lines developed pituitary adenomas secreting prolactin and growth hormone. The transgenic males developed the same phenotype with a lower penetrance (40%) and a longer latency period (about 18 months). Therefore, these data demonstrate that the overexpression of HMGA2 leads to the onset of mixed growth hormone/prolactin cell pituitary adenomas. These transgenic mice may represent an important tool for the study of this kind of neoplasia.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
Nicola Zanesi; Vincenzo Fidanza; Louise Y.Y. Fong; Rita Mancini; Teresa Druck; Mauro Valtieri; Thomas Rüdiger; Peter McCue; Carlo M. Croce; Kay Huebner
Mice carrying one inactivated Fhit allele (Fhit +/− mice) are highly susceptible to tumor induction by N-nitrosomethylbenzylamine, with 100% of Fhit +/− mice exhibiting tumors of the forestomach/squamocolumnar junction vs. 25% of Fhit +/+ controls. In the current study a single N-nitrosomethylbenzylamine dose was administered to Fhit +/+, +/−, and −/− mice to compare carcinogen susceptibility in +/- and −/− Fhit-deficient mice. At 29 weeks after treatment, 7.7% of wild-type mice had tumors. Of the Fhit −/− mice 89.5% exhibited tumors (average 3.3 tumors/mouse) of the forestomach and squamocolumnar junction; half of the −/− mice had medium (2 mm diameter) to large (>2 mm) tumors. Of the Fhit +/− mice 78% exhibited tumors (average 2.4 tumors/mouse) and 22% showed medium to large tumors. Untreated Fhit-deficient mice have been observed for up to 2 years for spontaneous tumors. Fhit +/− mice (average age 21 mo) exhibit an average of 0.94 tumors of different types; Fhit −/− mice (average age 16 mo) also showed an array of tumors (average 0.76 tumor/mouse). The similar spontaneous and induced tumor spectra observed in mice with one or both Fhit alleles inactivated suggests that Fhit may be a one-hit tumor suppressor gene in some tissues.
Journal of Immunology | 2007
Changchuin Mao; Esmerina Tili; Marei Dose; Mariëlle C. Haks; Susan E. Bear; Ioanna G. Maroulakou; Kyoji Horie; George A. Gaitanaris; Vincenzo Fidanza; Thomas Ludwig; David L. Wiest; Fotini Gounari; Philip N. Tsichlis
Pre-TCR signals regulate the transition of the double-negative (DN) 3 thymocytes to the DN4, and subsequently to the double-positive (DP) stage. In this study, we show that pre-TCR signals activate Akt and that pharmacological inhibition of the PI3K/Akt pathway, or combined ablation of Akt1 and Akt2, and to a lesser extent Akt1 and Akt3, interfere with the differentiation of DN3 and the accumulation of DP thymocytes. Combined ablation of Akt1 and Akt2 inhibits the proliferation of DN4 cells, while combined ablation of all Akt isoforms also inhibits the survival of all the DN thymocytes. Finally, the combined ablation of Akt1 and Akt2 inhibits the survival of DP thymocytes. Constitutively active Lck-Akt1 transgenes had the opposite effects. We conclude that, following their activation by pre-TCR signals, Akt1, Akt2, and, to a lesser extent, Akt3 promote the transition of DN thymocytes to the DP stage, in part by enhancing the proliferation and survival of cells undergoing β-selection. Akt1 and Akt2 also contribute to the differentiation process by promoting the survival of the DP thymocytes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Maria Grazia Narducci; Maria Teresa Fiorenza; Sang Moo Kang; Arturo Bevilacqua; Monica Di Giacomo; Daniele Remotti; Maria Cristina Picchio; Vincenzo Fidanza; Max D. Cooper; Carlo M. Croce; Franco Mangia; Giandomenico Russo
Overexpression of the TCL1 oncogene has been shown to play a causative role in T cell leukemias of humans and mice. The characterization of Tcl1-deficient mice in these studies indicates an important developmental role for Tcl1 in early embryogenesis. In wild-type embryos, Tcl1 is abundant in the first three mitotic cycles, during which it shuttles between nuclei and the embryo cortical regions in a cell-cycle-dependent fashion. The absence of this protein in early embryogenesis results in reduced fertility of female mice. The present studies elucidate the mechanism responsible for the reduced female fertility through analysis of the oogenesis stages and early embryo development in Tcl1-deficient mice. Even though Tcl1−/− females display normal oogenesis and rates of oocyte maturation/ovulation and fertilization, the lack of maternally derived Tcl1 impairs the embryos ability to undergo normal cleavage and develop to the morula stage, especially under in vitro culture conditions. Beyond this crisis point, differentiative traits of zygotic genome activation and embryo compaction can take place normally. In contrast with this unanticipated role in early embryogenesis, we observed an overexpression of TCL1 in human seminomas. This finding suggests that TCL1 dysregulation could contribute to the development of this germinal cell cancer as well as lymphoid malignancies.
Cancer Research | 2006
Monica Fedele; Vincenzo Fidanza; Sabrina Battista; Francesca Pentimalli; Andres J. Klein-Szanto; Rosa Visone; Ivana De Martino; Antonio Curcio; Carmine Morisco; Luigi Del Vecchio; Gustavo Baldassarre; Claudio Arra; Giuseppe Viglietto; Ciro Indolfi; Carlo M. Croce; Alfredo Fusco
The HMGA1 protein is a major factor in chromatin architecture and gene control. It plays a critical role in neoplastic transformation. In fact, blockage of HMGA1 synthesis prevents rat thyroid cell transformation by murine transforming retroviruses, and an adenovirus carrying the HMGA1 gene in the antisense orientation induces apoptotic cell death in anaplastic human thyroid carcinoma cell lines, but not in normal thyroid cells. Moreover, both in vitro and in vivo studies have established the oncogenic role of the HMGA1 gene. In this study, to define HMGA1 function in vivo, we examined the consequences of disrupting the Hmga1 gene in mice. Both heterozygous and homozygous mice for the Hmga1-null allele show cardiac hypertrophy due to the direct role of HMGA1 on cardiomyocytic cell growth regulation. These mice also developed hematologic malignancies, including B cell lymphoma and myeloid granuloerythroblastic leukemia. The B cell expansion and the increased expression of the RAG1/2 endonuclease, observed in HMGA1-knockout spleen tissues, might be responsible for the high rate of abnormal IgH rearrangements observed in these neoplasias. Therefore, the data reported here indicate the critical role of HMGA1 in heart development and growth, and reveal an unsuspected antioncogenic potential for this gene in hematologic malignancies.
The FASEB Journal | 2003
Sabrina Battista; Francesca Pentimalli; Gustavo Baldassarre; Monica Fedele; Vincenzo Fidanza; Carlo M. Croce; Alfredo Fusco
By interacting with transcription machinery, high‐mobility group A 1 (HMGA1) proteins alter the chromatin structure and thereby regulate the transcriptional activity of several genes. To assess their role in development, we studied the in vitro differentiation of embryonic stem (ES) cells that bear one or both disrupted Hmga1 alleles. Here, we report that Hmga1 null ES cells generate fewer T‐cell precursors than do wild‐type ES cells. Indeed, they preferentially differentiate to B cells, probably consequent to decreased interleukin 2 expression and increased interleukin 6 expression. Moreover, a lack of HMGA1 expression induces changes in hemopoietic differentiation, i.e., a reduced monocyte/macrophage population and an increase in megakaryocyte precursor numbers, erythropoiesis, and globin gene expression. Re‐expression of the Hmga1 gene in Hmga1 null ES cells restores the wild‐type phenotype. The effect on megakaryocyte/erythrocyte lineages seems, at least in part, mediated by the GATA‐1 transcription factor, a key regulator of red blood cell differentiation. In fact, we found that Hmga1−/− ES cells overexpress GATA‐1αnd that HMGA1 proteins directly control GATA‐1 transcription. Taken together, these data indicate that HMGA1 proteins play a prime role in lymphohematopoietic differentiation.
Oncogene | 2001
Daniel J. Powell; John P Russell; Guoqi Li; Bruce A Kuo; Vincenzo Fidanza; Kay Huebner; Jay L. Rothstein
Cancers develop and progress via activation of oncogenes and loss of tumor suppressor genes, a progression that can be recapitulated through cross breeding mouse strains harboring genetic mutations. To define the role of RET/PTC3, p53 and Fhit in thyroid carcinogenesis, we intercrossed RET/PTC3 transgenics with p53−/− mice. This new strain, RET/PTC3p53−/−, succumb to rapidly growing and strikingly large multilobed thyroid tumors containing mixtures of both well and poorly differentiated, highly proliferative follicular epithelial cells. Interestingly, transplanted tumors from RET/PTC3p53−/− mice grew in SCID but not syngeneic immunocompetent mice indicating that these advanced tumors were immunogenic. RET/PTC3 protein expression was reduced to undetectable levels in tumors of older mice suggesting that the continued elevated expression of RET/PTC3 may not be necessary for tumor progression. Similarly, expression of Fhit protein was reduced in early tumors and undetected in older tumors irrespective of tumor histopathology. In contrast to RET/PTC3p53−/− mice, RET/PTC3Fhit−/− mice did not develop advanced thyroid carcinomas. These studies support a model of human thyroid cancer whereby thyroid epithelium expresses RET/PTC3 protein at early stages of tumor development, followed by the reduction of RET/PTC3 and loss of p53 function with progressive reduction of Fhit protein expression coincident with malignant progression.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2003
Nicoletta Ferrari; Giulio Lelio Palmisano; Laura Paleari; Giuseppe Basso; Manuela Mangioni; Vincenzo Fidanza; Adriana Albini; Carlo M. Croce; Giovanni Levi; Claudio Brigati
Dlx genes constitute a gene family thought to be essential in morphogenesis and development. We show here that in vertebrate cells, Dlx genes appear to be part of a regulatory cascade initiated by acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)‐1, a master regulator gene whose disruption is implicated in several human acute leukemias. The expression of Dlx2, Dlx3, Dlx5, Dlx6, and Dlx7 was absent in All‐1 −/− mouse embryonic stem cells and reduced in All‐1 +/− cells. In leukemic patients affected by the t(4;11)(q21;q23) chromosomal abnormality, the expression of DLX2, DLX3, and DLX4 was virtually abrogated. Our data indicate that Dlx genes are downstream targets of ALL‐1 and could be considered as important tools for the study of the early leukemic cell phenotype.
Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2000
F. Stefania Falvella; Elena Menegola; Erminio Giavini; Michelle Ottey; Vincenzo Fidanza; Carlo M. Croce; Kay Huebner; Tommaso A. Dragani
Fhit protein has a putative tumor suppressor function in several types of human and experimental cancers. To assess whether Fhit is involved in fetal development we have examined the distribution of Fhit protein in the 12‐ through 16‐day postcoitum mouse fetus and in postnatal day 0 mouse pups by immunocytochemistry. High levels of Fhit protein were observed in the endodermal derivatives, namely, bronchi, trachea, esophagus, stomach, and intestine, in the 12‐ to 16‐day postcoitum mouse fetus and in the postnatal day 0 pup. Other tissues showed a more restricted pattern of Fhit protein expression. These results suggest that Fhit may play a role in the development of specific tissues during mouse development. Anat Rec 260:208–211, 2000.