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Giuseppina De Petro

Division of Biology and Genetics 
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Biotechnologies
University of Brescia
Brescia, Italy.
tel +390303717-264
fax:+390303701157
depetro@med.unibs.it

Journal articles

2009
Alessandro Salvi, Cristiano Sabelli, Silvia Moncini, Marco Venturin, Bruna Arici, Paola Riva, Nazario Portolani, Stefano M Giulini, Giuseppina De Petro, Sergio Barlati (2009)  MicroRNA-23b mediates urokinase and c-met downmodulation and a decreased migration of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells.   FEBS J 276: 11. 2966-2982 Jun  
Abstract: Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and c-met play a major role in cancer invasion and metastasis. Evidence has suggested that uPA and c-met overexpression may be coordinated in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In the present study, to understand whether the expression of these genes might be coregulated by specific microRNAs (miRs) in human cells, we predicted that Homo sapiens microRNA-23b could recognize two sites in the 3'-UTR of uPA and four sites in the c-met 3'-UTR by the algorithm pictar. The miR-23b expression analysis in human tumor and normal cells revealed an inverse trend with uPA and c-met expression, indicating that uPA and c-met negative regulation might depend on miR-23b expression. Transfection of miR-23b molecules in HCC cells (SKHep1C3) led to inhibition of protein expression of the target genes and caused a decrease in cell migration and proliferation capabilities. Furthermore, anti-miR-23b transfection in human normal AB2 dermal fibroblasts upregulated the expression of endogenous uPA and c-met. Cotransfection experiments in HCC cells of the miR-23b with pGL4.71 Renilla luciferase reporter gene constructs, containing the putative uPA and c-met 3'-UTR target sites, and with the pGL3 firefly luciferase-expressing vector showed a decrease in the relative luciferase activity. This would indicate that miR-23b can recognize target sites in the 3'-UTR of uPA and of c-met mRNAs and translationally repress the expression of uPA and c-met in HCC cells. The evidence obtained shows that overexpression of miR-23b leads to uPA and c-met downregulation and to decreased migration and proliferation abilities of HCC cells.
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Alessandro Salvi, Italia Bongarzone, Francesca Miccichè, Bruna Arici, Sergio Barlati, Giuseppina De Petro (2009)  Proteomic identification of LASP-1 down-regulation after RNAi urokinase silencing in human hepatocellular carcinoma cells.   Neoplasia 11: 2. 207-219 Feb  
Abstract: In human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the high expression of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) is an unfavorable prognostic factor and a therapeutic target. To identify the downstream effects of uPA silencing by RNA interference, we studied proteome modifications of uPA-inhibited SKHep1C3 cells, an HCC-derived cell line. The study with two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry showed Lim and SH3 protein 1 (LASP-1), cytokeratin 1 (CK-1), cytokeratin 10 (CK-10), and heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein H1 down-modulation after uPA inhibition. LASP-1, CK-1, and CK-10 are involved in cytoskeleton dynamics as heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein H1 takes part in the mRNA processing and stability. We first confirmed the proteomic data by Western blot and immunoflorescence and then explored the link between uPA and LASP-1. The ectopic expression of uPA and LASP-1 supported the proteomic results and showed that uPA up-regulation increased LASP-1 expression and that both were implicated in SKHep1C3 motility. siRNA LASP-1 inhibition showed that LASP-1 was involved in actin microfilaments organization of SKHep1C3 cells. The disruption of the actin microfilaments after LASP-1 depletion increased uPA secretion and SKHep1C3 motility. Our results would suggest the hypothesis that uPA and LASP-1 expression may be coordinated in HCC-derived cells. In summary, the proteomic identification of a set of uPA downstream proteins provides new insight into the function of uPA in HCC cells.
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Giuliana Cassinelli, Enrica Favini, Debora Degl'Innocenti, Alessandro Salvi, Giuseppina De Petro, Marco A Pierotti, Franco Zunino, Maria Grazia Borrello, Cinzia Lanzi (2009)  RET/PTC1-driven neoplastic transformation and proinvasive phenotype of human thyrocytes involve Met induction and beta-catenin nuclear translocation.   Neoplasia 11: 1. 10-21 Jan  
Abstract: Activation of the RET gene by chromosomal rearrangements generating RET/PTC oncogenes is a frequent, early, and causative event in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). We have previously shown that, in human primary thyrocytes, RET/PTC1 induces a transcriptional program including the MET proto-oncogene. In PTCs, beta-catenin is frequently mislocated to the cytoplasm nucleus. We investigated the interplay between Ret/ptc1 signaling and Met in regulating the proinvasive phenotype and beta-catenin localization in cellular models of human PTC. Here, we show that Met protein is expressed and is constitutively active in human thyrocytes exogenously expressing RET/PTC1 as well as a mutant (Y451F) devoid of the main Ret/ptc1 multidocking site. Both in transformed thyrocytes and in the human PTC cell line TPC-1, Ret/ptc1-Y451-dependent signaling and Met cooperated to promote a proinvasive phenotype. Accordingly, gene/functional silencing of either RET/PTC1 or MET abrogated early branching morphogenesis in TPC-1 cells. The same effect was obtained by blocking the common downstream effector Akt. Y451 of Ret/ptc1 was required to promote proliferation and nuclear translocation of beta-catenin, suggesting that these oncogene-driven effects are Met-independent. Pharmacologic inhibition of Ret/ptc1 and Met tyrosine kinases by the multitarget small molecule RPI-1 blocked cell proliferation and invasive ability and dislocated beta-catenin from the nucleus. Altogether, these results support that Ret/ptc1 cross talks with Met at transcriptional and signaling levels and promotes beta-catenin transcriptional activity to drive thyrocyte neoplastic transformation. Such molecular network, promoting disease initiation and acquisition of a proinvasive phenotype, highlights new options to design multitarget therapeutic strategies for PTCs.
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2008
Alessandro Salvi, Eleonora Marchina, Anna Benetti, Piergiovanni Grigolato, Giuseppina De Petro, Sergio Barlati (2008)  Germline and somatic c-met mutations in multifocal/bilateral and sporadic papillary renal carcinomas of selected patients.   Int J Oncol 33: 2. 271-276 Aug  
Abstract: Papillary renal carcinoma (PRC) comprises about 10% of all kidney epithelial tumors. Familiar/hereditary papillary renal carcinomas (HPRCs) have been described, but the majority of cases seem to be sporadic. HPRC is characterized by the predisposition to develop bilateral, multifocal renal tumors. Activating mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain (TK) of the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) receptor, c-met, have been identified in both hereditary and sporadic PRC. The main aim of this study was to examine a family with no history of PRC in which the proband was a female patient affected by multiple and bilateral PRC at early onset. DNA mutation analysis has been performed by direct sequencing of exons 14-21 of c-met gene which include the TK domain. The proband displayed the germline c-met missense mutation g.3522G--> A in exon 16. Two other family members were found to carry the same mutation. The mutation analysis extended to 15 selected patients, allowed to identify the first case of an Italian patient affected by PRC displaying the somatic missense mutation g.3997 T-->C curved arrow C located in exon 19 of c-met. The mutation frequency of the selected-based population of PRC patients in this report was 12.5%. Furthermore, the phosphorylated c-met expression detected by immunohistochemistry in PRCs with germline/somatic or no c-met mutation, supports the concept that c-met activation may occur in PRC oncogenesis by c-met mutations and/or c-met over-expression.
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2007
Alessandro Salvi, Bruna Arici, Nazario Portolani, Stefano Maria Giulini, Giuseppina De Petro, Sergio Barlati (2007)  In vitro c-met inhibition by antisense RNA and plasmid-based RNAi down-modulates migration and invasion of hepatocellular carcinoma cells.   Int J Oncol 31: 2. 451-460 Aug  
Abstract: The receptor tyrosine kinase c-met is over-expressed in several types of human tumours. In hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), its expression is inversely correlated to patient survival. To determine the role of c-met in the malignant properties of HCC cells, we tested the effectiveness of two ablative strategies to down-modulate c-met expression in SKHep1C3, an HCC-derived cell line, i.e. stable expression of antisense RNA c-met and RNA interference. A plasmid coding a 965-nt fragment complementary to 5' portion of c-met mRNA was constructed for the antisense strategy. RNA interference methodology was applied for transient silencing, achieved by small interfering RNAs, and for stable silencing using an RNA polymerase III promoter carrying plasmid coding small hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) that targeted c-met. The transfected cells showed consistently lower levels of c-met mRNA and protein. The results showed that the antisense and RNAi sequences chosen to target c-met mRNA reduced c-met expression efficiently and inhibited malignant properties of SKHep1C3 cells. These data indicate that c-met is an essential factor in the processes of migration and invasion of hepatocarcinoma cells; and c-met down-regulation may be included in a therapeutic strategy for HCC in experimental animal models.
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A Salvi, B Arici, A Alghisi, S Barlati, G De Petro (2007)  RNA interference against urokinase in hepatocellular carcinoma xenografts in nude mice.   Tumour Biol 28: 1. 16-26 12  
Abstract: The serine protease urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) is overexpressed in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and its expression level is inversely correlated with the patients' survival. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of vector-based RNA interference (RNAi) of u-PA on the growth of human HCC xenografts in nude mice in order to investigate the role of u-PA in human HCC. Our results showed that the subcutaneous injection of small interfering RNAs (siRNA) u-PA SKHep1C3 stable transfected cells (pS siRNA u-PA) led to a growth delay in xenograft development, compared to those generated from empty vector; the molecular characterization of nodules (carried out by PCR, RT-PCR and immunohistochemical analysis) revealed the presence of plasmid DNA, the u-PA gene expression knockdown, at both mRNA and protein levels, giving evidence of a long-term and target-specific inhibition by vector-based RNAi 11 weeks after cell inoculation. We further studied the effects of u-PA down modulation on extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins evaluating the expression and organization of fibronectin (FN; one of the main ECM proteins). Immunohistochemical and immunofluorescence analysis of FN revealed FN fibrils in pS siRNA u-PA xenografts and in pS siRNA u-PA cells, thus identifying the FN fibril organization as a downstream effect of u-PA knockdown in this system.
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2004
Alessandro Salvi, Bruna Arici, Giuseppina De Petro, Sergio Barlati (2004)  Small interfering RNA urokinase silencing inhibits invasion and migration of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells.   Mol Cancer Ther 3: 6. 671-678 Jun  
Abstract: The serine protease urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) is involved in a variety of physiologic and pathological processes; in particular, u-PA mRNA is up-regulated in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) biopsies and its level of expression is inversely correlated with patients' survival. To determine the role of u-PA in the invasiveness properties of HCC, we successfully down-regulated u-PA by RNA interference (RNAi) technology, in an HCC-derived cell line at high level of u-PA expression. RNAi is a multistep process involving generation of small interfering RNAs (siRNA) that cause specific inhibition of the target gene. SKHep1C3 cells were transfected with a U6 promoter plasmid coding for an RNA composed of two identical 19-nucleotide sequence motifs in an inverted orientation, separated by a 9-bp spacer to form a hairpin dsRNA capable of mediating target u-PA inhibition. Stable transfectant cells showed a consistently decreased level of u-PA protein. In biological assays, siRNA u-PA-transfected cells showed a reduction of migration, invasion, and proliferation. In conclusion, u-PA down-regulation by RNAi technology decreases the invasive capability of HCC cells, demonstrating that stable expression of siRNA u-PA could potentially be an experimental approach for HCC gene therapy.
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2003
Daniela Tavian, Alessandro Salvi, Giuseppina De Petro, Sergio Barlati (2003)  Stable expression of antisense urokinase mRNA inhibits the proliferation and invasion of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells.   Cancer Gene Ther 10: 2. 112-120 Feb  
Abstract: Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) plays a key role in malignant tumor behavior. We have previously shown that the expression of high levels of u-PA mRNA in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) biopsies was inversely correlated with the survival of the patients. In order to evaluate the involvement of u-PA in the invasive and infiltrating properties of HCC cells, the SKHep1C3 cell line was stably transfected with an expression vector containing the 5' portion (257 bp) of u-PA cDNA in the antisense orientation. u-PA mRNA expression and its protein level and enzymatic activity were specifically inhibited in the antisense transfectants. A comparable inhibition of the u-PA receptor (u-PAR) mRNA and protein was also evidenced in the antisense transfected cells compared with the control ones. At the functional level, the SKHep1C3-AS cells showed a significant reduction in proliferation, Matrigel invasion, and motility assays compared to parental and vector-alone cells. These results indicate that u-PA is an essential factor in the growth and invasiveness of human hepatocarcinoma cells. Antisense u-PA strategy might be a potential approach to reduce tumor growth as well as the invasive capacity of the malignant cells in HCC.
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Marina Colombi, Nicoletta Zoppi, Giuseppina De Petro, Eleonora Marchina, Rita Gardella, Daniela Tavian, Sergio Ferraboli, Sergio Barlati (2003)  Matrix assembly induction and cell migration and invasion inhibition by a 13-amino acid fibronectin peptide.   J Biol Chem 278: 16. 14346-14355 Apr  
Abstract: Fibronectin (FN) is an extracellular matrix (ECM) protein involved in tumor growth and metastasis. Five human FN cDNA segments encoding for FN fragments, all starting with the II1 repeat and ending with different C-terminal extensions, have been stably expressed in chick embryo fibroblasts (CEF). These FN cDNAs induce the formation of an organized ECM in CEF as long as they retain a sequence coding for a 13-amino acid stretch (FN13), with collagen binding activity, localized between type II2 and I7 repeats. An FN13 synthetic peptide induces in control CEF the assembly of an FN-ECM comparable with that observed in CEF-expressing FN fragments. The activity of FN13 is specific for its amino acid sequence, although the cysteine present in the 6th position can be substituted with a polar serine without affecting the induction of a fibrillar FN-ECM. A less fibrillar matrix is induced by FN13-modified peptides in which the cysteine is methylated or substituted by a non-polar alanine. FN13 induces the assembly of an FN-ECM also in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed CEF lacking the ECM and in hepatoma (SK-Hep1) and fibrosarcoma (HT-1080) human cell lines. FN13 also promotes the adhesion of CEF and Rous sarcoma virus-CEF at levels comparable with those obtained with purified intact FN. Finally, FN13 inhibits the migratory and invasive properties of tumorigenic cells, whereas intact FN favors their migration. All FN13-modified peptides show similar effects, although with reduced efficiency. None of these activities is supported by a scrambled peptide. These data suggest a possible role of FN13 in tumor growth and metastasis inhibition and its possible use as anti-tumorigenic agent.
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Franco Nodari, Gian Luca Baiocchi, Alessandro Salvi, Giuseppina De Petro, Arianna Coniglio, Andrea Ferrari Bravo, Carla Baronchelli, Sergio Barlati, Stefano Maria Giulini (2003)  Telomerase gene expression in intraductal papillary-mucinous tumors (IPMT): preliminary findings.   Acta Biomed 74 Suppl 2: 59-64  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIM: The surgical management of IPMT is based upon a preoperative suspicion of malignancy, that is difficult to obtain from the available diagnostic tools. METHODS: Telomerase gene expression was investigated by means of hTERT/RT-PCR on total RNA from peripheral blood, tumour and non-tumour pancreatic samples of 2 patients with IPMT. RESULTS: Histological diagnosis was mild-grade dysplasia in the first case and invasive carcinoma in the second. Telomerase expression was undetectable in all the samples derived from the first case. Blood and tumour samples from the second patient were positive for telomerase mRNA expression, while the pancreatic non-tumour specimen was not. CONCLUSIONS: The following suggestions are made: 1) the telomerase gene expression seems to be implicated in the malignant evolution of IMPT; 2) the malignant transformation may be limited to a single area of the gland; 3) the presence of invasive carcinoma may be preoperatively suspected by peripheral venous blood sample collection. A possible clinical employment of telomerase gene expression determination in the management of IPMT is thus hypothesized.
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2002
Giuseppina De Petro, Daniela Tavian, Eleonora Marchina, Sergio Barlati (2002)  Induction of fibronectin mRNA by urokinase- and tissue-type plasminogen activator in human skin fibroblasts: differential role of u-PA and t-PA at the fibronectin protein level.   Biol Chem 383: 1. 177-187 Jan  
Abstract: Plasminogen activators of the urokinase- and tissue-type and fetal calf serum (u-PA, t-PA, FCS) exert their mitogenic effect on quiescent human dermal fibroblasts and modulate the mRNA expression of cell-cycle related genes. The present study deals with the effects of PAs on the expression of fibronectin (FN), a heterodimeric extracellular matrix (ECM) protein that can be modulated in different ways by various mitogens. The kinetics of FN gene response was examined in quiescent fibroblasts upon PA stimulation (30 min -24 h). The results obtained evidenced that: (i) all mitogens tested (u-PA, t-PA and FCS) led to an increase of FN mRNA expression in early G1, as shown by the analysis of two sequences, III-9, common to all FN mRNAs, and EDA+, present only in the EDA+FN isoform; (ii) the kinetic profiles of FN mRNA stimulation were comparable for the three mitogens, although the effects on the FN-ECM assembly were distinct; (iii) t-PA and FCS led to FN assembly in the ECM, which was absent or decreased in u-PA-treated cultures. Immunobiochemical analysis of total FN and EDA+ FN showed that FN induced by t-PA was mainly dimeric (450-500 kDa), whereas FN induced by u-PA was mainly monomeric (230-250 kDa). These differences are probably due to the differential enzymatic action of t-PA and u-PA on FN, which might be related to a differential role of the two PAs in several physiopathological conditions.
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D Tavian, G De Petro, A Pitozzi, N Portolani, S M Giulini, S Barlati (2002)  Androgen receptor mRNA under-expression in poorly differentiated human hepatocellular carcinoma.   Histol Histopathol 17: 4. 1113-1119 Oct  
Abstract: Many studies suggest that hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an androgen-dependent tumor with an incidence five times higher in males, but few data are available on the androgen receptor (AR) mRNA levels in different physiological classes of human liver specimens. In this study 108 human hepatic samples have been analyzed for AR mRNA expression by a comparative RT-PCR assay. These consisted of 35 non-tumoral hepatic samples (3 normal parenchymas, 4 steatosis, 10 hepatitis, 18 cirrhosis), 38 tumoral specimens derived from uninodular and multinodular HCCs and 35 peritumoral hepatic tissues. Normalized AR mRNA levels in tumoral and peritumoral liver tissues spanned from 0 to 146% and from 7 to 125% respectively. Only in a relatively small percentage of HCCs, the levels of expression of AR mRNA were higher than in the corresponding peritumoral tissues (16% of total HCCs). Although extremely variable, the AR mRNA levels were related to histological tumoral differentiation and proved to be lower in the highly dedifferentiated HCCs as compared to the well differentiated ones. Therefore, the evaluation of AR expression in HCC patients might be relevant for the planning of clinical studies on anti-androgen therapies, which might be useful only in the cases in which a high level of AR mRNA is detected, considering the high heterogeneity of AR mRNA levels which characterizes HCC samples. It is likely that the HCCs, expressing low or undetectable levels of AR mRNA, would not benefit by the anti-androgen therapy.
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2000
D Tavian, G De Petro, A Benetti, N Portolani, S M Giulini, S Barlati (2000)  u-PA and c-MET mRNA expression is co-ordinately enhanced while hepatocyte growth factor mRNA is down-regulated in human hepatocellular carcinoma.   Int J Cancer 87: 5. 644-649 Sep  
Abstract: Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) is one of the most important humoral mediators of liver regeneration. It is potentially related to molecular mechanisms of hepatocarcinogenesis via a paracrine system involving its cellular receptor, c-met. In this study, the expression patterns of HGF and c-met were evidenced by multiplex RT-PCR in different specimens of human hepatic tissues (n = 71). A significant increase of c-met mRNA expression was detected in hepatitis (P = 0.001), cirrhosis (P = 0.006), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tissue (P = 0.003) compared with normal parenchyma and steatosis. HGF mRNA expression was significantly higher only in hepatitis (P = 0.01). Over-expression of c-met mRNA and under-expression of HGF mRNA were detected in the HCCs compared with the corresponding peri-tumoral tissues. Neither HGF nor c-met expression was related to age, sex, tumor size, grading, presence of pseudocapsula, and proliferative activity of the malignant hepatocytes. A significant inverse correlation was found between c-met mRNA expression level and survival (in months) of patients (P = 0.007), as previously shown for urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) mRNA (P = 0.027). In addition, c-met mRNA expression was strictly associated with u-PA mRNA level in HCC samples (P = 0.001). These data show that a loss of balance concerning HGF, c-met, and u-PA mRNA expression occurs during hepatocarcinogenesis. Particularly, up-regulation of c-met and u-PA mRNA transcription appears to be coordinately regulated, and their levels of expression are inversely correlated with survival; they must therefore play an important role in the development and progression of human HCC and may also be relevant prognostic markers.
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A Copeta, D Tavian, E Marchina, G De Petro, S Barlati (2000)  Gene response of human skin fibroblasts to urokinase- and tissue-type plasminogen activators.   Growth Factors 17: 4. 249-268  
Abstract: In a previous work we have reported evidences on the mitogenic activity of urokinase-type and tissue-type plasminogen activator (u-PA, t-PA) on serum-deprived human dermal fibroblasts. In this work we have studied the transcription-dependent changes of some cell-cycle related genes associated with the biological activity of PAs, as well as the possible involvement of protein tyr kinases (PTK) and/or protein kinase C (PKC) in the mitogenic signal transduction. The data obtained demonstrate that the growth factor activity of PAs is associated with: - a rapid transient activation of early response genes, c-fos, c-jun and c-myc; - the subsequent coordinated down-regulation of p53 and p21CIP1; - the constant expression of the MEK1 mRNA in every phase of the cell cycle. Quiescent (G0) cells did not express c-fos, c-jun, c-myc and cyclin A, but upon stimulation with mitogens (fetal calf serum (FCS), u-PA, t-PA) the cyclin A mRNA expression was observed in concomitance with the activation of DNA synthesis. Therefore u-PA, t-PA and FCS similarly modulate the expression of c-fos, c-jun, c-myc, p53, p21CIP1 and cyclin A with only slight differences likely related to the time required for activation of DNA synthesis. The PAs mitogenic stimulation of serum-starved cells was associated with the internalization of their molecules, as revealed by immunostaining. The biological activity of u-PA, t-PA, as well as that of limiting concentration of FCS (1%), was mediated by PTK and PKC. Conversely, PTK, but not PKC, was involved in the activation of the proliferative response of basic fibroblast growth factor in the same experimental conditions. In conclusion, u-PA and t-PA can utilize two different pathways, one depending on PTK and the other on PKC in a way similar to the mitogenic activity induced by low concentration of FCS (1%).
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1999
S Barlati, N Zoppi, A Copeta, D Tavian, G De Petro, M Colombi (1999)  Quantitative in situ hybridization for the evaluation of gene expression in asynchronous and synchronized cell cultures and in tissue sections.   Histol Histopathol 14: 4. 1231-1240 Oct  
Abstract: We describe an image analysis (IA) system that has been applied for the quantitative evaluation of mRNAs evidenced by in situ hybridization (ISH) with radiolabelled probes in cultured cells and in tissue sections. The ISH-IA method was used for the evaluation of cultured cell morphological parameters such as cell and nucleous area (CA and NA, respectively) in parallel with the levels of mRNAs detected as hybridization grains areas (GA). The evaluation of these parameters, together with the analysis of the levels of mRNAs (c-jun, cyclin A) specific for given cell cycle phases (i.e. G1 and S/G2), allowed the identification, in asynchronous cultures of human skin fibroblasts, of cells in G1 and S/G2 phases. The mRNA levels measured by ISH-AI were comparable with those detected by RT-PCR. This method was also applied for the analysis of fibronectin (FN) gene expression in control skin fibroblasts in relationship with the different phases of the cell cycle and in comparison with a tumor cell line (Sk-Hep1), heterogeneous either for morphometric parameters or for the levels of this transcript. Finally, the ISH-AI was applied for the semiquantitative evaluation of the expression, localization and alternative splicing pattern of FN mRNA in normal liver and in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tissue sections.
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1998
G De Petro, D Tavian, A Copeta, N Portolani, S M Giulini, S Barlati (1998)  Expression of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA), u-PA receptor, and tissue-type PA messenger RNAs in human hepatocellular carcinoma.   Cancer Res 58: 10. 2234-2239 May  
Abstract: Expression of plasminogen activators (PAs) and urokinase-type PA receptor (u-PAR) is associated with tumor growth and invasion. For in vivo human tumor tissues, there is no information on gene expression of PAs in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) or other hepatic pathophysiological conditions. In this study we examined the relative levels of u-PA, tissue-type PA (t-PA), and u-PAR mRNA expression in human HCC by reverse transcription-PCR compared with those expressed in peritumoral hepatic tissues. Twenty-five of 25 HCCs expressed u-PA mRNA, as well as 16 of 25 hepatic peritumoral tissues. However, none of the 14 cases of nontumorous liver samples (i.e., normal parenchyma, steatosis, and nonspecific reactive and chronic hepatitis) showed detectable levels of u-PA mRNA. The same samples analyzed for uPAR and t-PA mRNAs exhibited higher levels of these mRNAs in the malignant tissues compared with nontumorous ones. A strong correlation was found between the relative levels of u-PA and t-PA mRNAs detected in the tumor and in the corresponding peritumoral tissues (P < 0.001 for u-PA; P < 0.02 for t-PA). However, there was no correlation between the expression of u-PA and t-PA in HCC (P = 0.565). Furthermore, a significant inverse correlation was found between survival months of male patients and the relative level of u-PA mRNA (P < 0.05) detected at the time of biopsy, whereas no correlation was found in the case of t-PA mRNA. These results are in line with the possible differential biological role of u-PA and t-PA in the tumor etiopathogenesis and suggest that the detection of relative levels of u-PA mRNA may be a useful prognostic factor for male HCC patients.
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1995
M Colombi, D Bellotti, G De Petro, S Barlati (1995)  Plasminogen activators in nude mice xenotransplanted with human tumorigenic cells.   Invasion Metastasis 15: 1-2. 22-33  
Abstract: Nude mice have been subcutaneously inoculated with human tumorigenic fibrosarcoma cells (HT-1080) producing urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) or with human tumorigenic melanoma cells (G-361) producing tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA). Human u-PA (hu-PA) and t-PA (ht-PA) were found in the plasma and in the tumors of mice injected with HT-1080 or G-361 cells, respectively. Metastases containing ht-PA were observed in different organs of mice transplanted with G-361 cells, while mice injected with HT-1080 cells did not develop metastases. These data would suggest a relationship between the metastatic potential of G-361 cells and t-PA. The parallel increase of the levels of endogenous murine PAs (m-PA) activities might play a crucial role in the early stages of tumor growth and metastasis, since the biological effects of the PAs produced by the transplanted tumor cells can not be dissociated from those of the PAs induced in the host.
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S Barlati, G De Petro, C Bona, F Paracini, M Tonelli (1995)  Phosphorylation of human plasminogen activators and plasminogen.   FEBS Lett 363: 1-2. 170-174 Apr  
Abstract: Plasminogen (PG), urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and tissue-type PA (t-PA) are the main molecules involved in fibrinolysis and in many other physiological and pathological processes. In the present study we report that human t-PA, purified from human melanoma cells, and PG, purified from human plasma, both contain P-Tyr residues, as revealed by immunoblotting analyses with monoclonal anti-P-Tyr antibodies. In addition HPLC amino acid analysis of acid-hydrolyzed t-PA, PG and u-PA, shows that: (i) P-Ser and P-Tyr residues are present in t-PA; (ii) P-Thr and P-Tyr are present in PG; (iii) P-Ser, P-Thr and P-Tyr are present in u-PA. The utilization of monoclonal anti-P-Ser and anti-P-Thr antibodies in immunoblotting experiments has confirmed these data which indicate that phosphorylation is a common feature of PAs and of PG.
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1994
G De Petro, A Copeta, S Barlati (1994)  Urokinase-type and tissue-type plasminogen activators as growth factors of human fibroblasts.   Exp Cell Res 213: 1. 286-294 Jul  
Abstract: In this study we have verified the mitogenic effect of urokinase-type (u-PA) and tissue-type plasminogen activators (t-PA) on human normal fibroblasts. We report that both PAs can induce DNA replication and cell division in serum-deprived cultured human skin fibroblasts. The activity of u-PA and t-PA is, respectively, three- and twofold more potent than that exerted by epidermal growth factor (EGF) with an activity slightly lower (50-60%) than that induced by basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). The u-PA and t-PA, but not plasmin, induced DNA synthesis, which could be neutralized by anti-u-PA and anti-t-PA antibodies, respectively, but was insensitive to aprotinin treatment. The addition of anti-u-PA-receptor (u-PAR) monoclonal antibodies to the assays selectively suppressed the mitogenic effect exerted by u-PA, but not that of t-PA, and the amino-terminal fragment of u-PA, containing the EGF-like domain and the kringle module, did not elicit any mitogenic activity. Anti-bFGF antibodies completely suppressed the mitogenic activity of bFGF, but did not have any effect on that of u-PA and t-PA; the activity of both PAs was inhibited by anti-fibronectin IgG concentrations ineffective on bFGF. These results indicate that PAs may be considered growth factors of human fibroblasts.
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D Tavian, G De Petro, M Colombi, N Portolani, S M Giulini, R Gardella, S Barlati (1994)  RT-PCR detection of fibronectin EDA+ and EDB+ mRNA isoforms: molecular markers for hepatocellular carcinoma.   Int J Cancer 56: 6. 820-825 Mar  
Abstract: Alternative splicing of fibronectin pre-mRNA has been shown to be independently regulated at the EDA and EDB regions in a tissue and developmental stage-specific manner. In this study, RT-PCR approaches were developed for the detection of EDA and EDB FN mRNA isoforms in hepatocarcinoma cells (SK-Hep-I) grown in vitro and in human liver biopsies. While EDA+ and EDB+ isoforms were not present in control adult liver, they were detectable in the hepatocarcinoma cells and in fetal liver. The RT-PCR analysis, extended to biopsies of malignant and non-malignant hepatic tissues, showed that FN mRNAs containing the EDA and EDB sequences were present in the 14 hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) tested but absent in the non-tumorous liver tissues (i.e., normal parenchyma, non-specific reactive and chronic hepatitis, steatosis). The EDB+ FN mRNA isoforms were also detected in 3 cases of benign neoplasm (hepatocellular adenoma, HCA, I; nodular focal hyperplasia, NFH, 2), while the EDA+ was only detectable in I of the 2 cases of NFH. In addition, both EDA+ and EDB+ isoforms were expressed in 5 out of 9 cirrhotic livers surrounding the tumors. This molecular analysis, which can also be performed on small liver biopsies (2 mg), may therefore be a useful additional tool in the diagnosis of HCC.
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1993
1991
S Barlati, F Paracini, D Bellotti, G De Petro (1991)  Tyrosine phosphorylation of human urokinase-type plasminogen activator.   FEBS Lett 281: 1-2. 137-140 Apr  
Abstract: Immunoblotting analysis of purified human urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA), gives a positive signal when reacted with anti-phosphotyrosine monoclonal antibodies (MoAb anti-P-Tyr); competition with o-phospho-DL-tyrosine (P-Tyr) but not o-phospho-DL-threonine or serine (P-Treo, P-Ser) completely suppresses this signal. Either the 55 kDa u-PA form and the lower Mw form (33 kDa) derived from the 55 kDa u-PA are Tyr-phosphorylated also the u-PA secreted in the culture media of human fibrosarcoma cells (HT-1080) is phosphorylated in tyrosine as well as u-PA present in tissue extracts of tumors induced in nude mice by HT-1080 cells. These data show that urine purified human u-PA and u-PA produced by human fibrosarcoma cells, in vitro and in vivo, are phosphorylated in tyrosine; furthermore our data show that u-PA is the major Tyr-phosphorylated protein present in these human tumor cells.
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1989
1988
1987
1984
E M Salonen, T Vartio, V Miggiano, C Stähli, B Tacács, G Virgallita, G De Petro, S Barlati, A Vaheri (1984)  A rapid and highly sensitive solid-phase enzyme immunoassay specific for human fibronectin using a characterized monoclonal antibody.   J Immunol Methods 72: 1. 145-156 Aug  
Abstract: A solid-phase enzyme immunoassay (EIA) was developed for the quantitation of human fibronectin in body fluids and cell culture media. In the assay a human fibronectin-specific murine monoclonal IgG1 (f-33) was used as capture antibody and polyclonal rabbit anti-fibronectin as detector antibody. The antibody showed no reactivity to purified monkey, dog, rabbit, horse, sheep, mouse, bovine or chicken fibronectins. The determinant of the monoclonal antibody was mapped to the cell-binding region of the fibronectin molecule. This localization was based on the use of purified fragments of fibronectin, immunoblotting, EIA and inhibition of fibroblast adhesion and spreading by the antibody. The detection limit of the fibronectin assay was 2 ng/ml. The assay was used for the quantitation of fibronectin in human plasma, urine and cerebrospinal fluid specimens and culture media of human cells.
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G De Petro, T Vartio, E M Salonen, A Vaheri, S Barlati (1984)  Tissue type plasminogen activator, but not urokinase, exerts transformation-enhancing activity.   Int J Cancer 33: 5. 563-567 May  
Abstract: Previous studies have established that plasma cryoprecipitates of tumor patients, culture media of transformed cells and defined proteolytic fragments of fibronectin enhance the morphological cell transformation ( TEF activity) in cultures of chicken embryo fibroblasts infected with temperature-sensitive mutants of Rous sarcoma virus. We now report that purified human tissue type plasminogen activator (t-PA), but not urokinase (u-PA), has a similar TEF activity, at doses as low as 2 ng/ml (30 pM). Specific antibodies effectively neutralized the activity. No significant contamination (less than or equal to 1%) between the preparations of t-PA and fibronectin (FN) or its fragments ( FNdp ) was detected. The results suggest that t-PA may have a direct role in the process of morphological cell transformation in vitro.
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1983
T Vartio, A Vaheri, G De Petro, S Barlati (1983)  Fibronectin and its proteolytic fragments. Potential as cancer markers.   Invasion Metastasis 3: 3. 125-138  
Abstract: Since the discovery of fibronectin as a transformation-sensitive 'cell surface' protein, it has been the focus of intensive studies. Fibronectin has multiple interactions and functions and is composed of distinguishing properties of malignant cells, properties. Invasiveness and metastasis, distinguishing properties of malignant cells, involve penetration through components of the extracellular matrix. Enzymatic degradation of matrix components is involved in these phenomena. Proteolytic targets of the pericellular matrices of cells in culture include fibronectin that has been found to be even selectively susceptible to proteinases. Defined fragments of fibronectin have transformation-promoting activity in experimental conditions and such fragments, detected in tumor patient body fluids, may serve as markers for tumor progression.
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T Vartio, S Barlati, G de Petro, V Miggiano, C Stähli, B Takács, A Vaheri (1983)  Evidence for preferential proteolytic cleavage of one of the two fibronectin subunits and for immunological localization of a site distinguishing them.   Eur J Biochem 135: 2. 203-207 Sep  
Abstract: Purified plasma fibronectin was digested sequentially by thrombin and cathepsin G or by cathepsin G alone and the degradation products and their gelatin-binding and heparin-binding fractions were analyzed in NaDodSO4-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by immunoblotting with a defined monoclonal anti-fibronectin antibody. In early cathepsin G digests, several gelatin-binding fragments were detected: a few large (Mr greater than or equal to 150 000) polypeptides and fragments of Mr = 85 000, 72 000, 64 000 and 40 000. The 85 000-Mr and 64 000-Mr fragments appeared as closely spaced doublets and reacted with the antibody while the 72 000-Mr and 40 000-Mr fragments did not. Therefore the 64 000-Mr fragments are likely to be derived from the 85 000-Mr fragments. Three large fragments that bound to heparin, but not to gelatin were detected: Mr = 145 000, 135 000 and 120 000. Of these only the 135 000-Mr peptide reacted with the antibody. When fibronectin was digested with thrombin, polypeptides of Mr = 180 000-200 000 and a 30 000-Mr NH2-terminal fragment were produced. Cathepsin G added to this mixture further cleaved the fragments to a digestion pattern resembling that obtained from intact fibronectin except that the 85 000-Mr and 64 000-Mr fragments appeared as single bands and the amount of the 72 000-Mr fragment was reduced. The results suggest that thrombin cleaves the 30 000-Mr fragment preferentially from the NH2-terminal end of one of the two subunits of fibronectin and that the 85 000-Mr, 72 000-Mr and 64 000-Mr fragments obtained by the additional cathepsin G digestion were derived from the other chain. The results are consistent with the model that the antigenic determinant resides 72 000-85 000 Da from the NH2-terminus and is cleaved by cathepsin G alternatively at one of its sides. Thus, the components of the 85 000-Mr and 64 000-Mr doublets are derived from different subunits and the region located by the antibody may be responsible for the difference in their migration in the polyacrylamide gel.
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T Vartio, E M Salonen, G De Petro, S Barlati, V Miggiano, C Stähli, G Virgallita, B Takács, A Vaheri (1983)  Monoclonal antibody against the N-terminal end of human plasma fibronectin.   Biochem J 215: 1. 147-151 Oct  
Abstract: Purified human plasma fibronectin was digested with cathepsin G and the degradation products were tested for reactivity towards a monoclonal antibody. In an immunoblotting assay, after sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of the digestion products, the 85 000-Mr and 72 000-Mr gelatin- and heparin-binding fragments as well as the N-terminal 30 000-Mr heparin-binding fragment reacted with the antibody, whereas the 64 000-Mr gelatin- and heparin-binding fragment did not. In enzyme immunoassay the antibody reacted with intact fibronectin and the 30 000-Mr fragment but not with a 40 000-Mr gelatin-binding fragment. The alignment of the binding domains in these fragments and in the intact molecule [Vartio (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 123, 223-233] localizes the antigenic determinant to the 21 000 Da N-terminal Staphylococcus aureus-binding region of fibronectin.
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1981
G De Petro, S Barlati, T Vartio, A Vaheri (1981)  Transformation-enhancing activity of gelatin-binding fragments of fibronectin.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 78: 8. 4965-4969 Aug  
Abstract: Studies have established that cryoprecipitates of the plasma of tumor patients contain a biological activity enhancing morphological cell transformation (transformation-enhancing factor; TEF) in cultures of chicken embryo fibroblasts infected with temperature-sensitive mutants of Rous sarcoma virus. We report here that similar TEF activity is effected by defined fragments of human plasma fibronectin obtained by limited digestion with major humoral or tissue proteinases. TEF activity was obtained from plasminolytic fragments of fibronectin and from cathepsin G-treated fibronectin. No activity was recorded from intact dimeric fibronectin or its reduced and alkylated subunits, from fibrinogen or its plasminolytic fragments, or from plasmin (EC 3.4.21.7) or cathepsin G (EC 3.4.21.20) treated or untreated with proteinase inhibitors. All of the TEF activity of the proteolytic fragments of fibronectin was located on the gelatin-binding peptides. The minimum effective doses in the TEF assay were 750 ng/ml of plasmin-treated fibronectin, 100 ng/ml of gelatin-binding plasminolytic fibronectin (enriched in Mr 180,000--190,000 polypeptides), and 100 ng/ml of gelatin-binding fragments of cathepsin G-treated fibronectin (enriched in a Mr 30,000 fragment). TEF activity of proteinase-treated fibronectin was inhibited by gelatin and by intact dimeric fibronectin. The potent TEF activity of proteolytic fragments of fibronectin raises the possibility that they may have a role in malignant transformation.
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1980
G de Petro, A Brega, P Mignatti, S Barlati (1980)  Inhibition of Rous sarcoma-virus-induced transformation by proteins involved in blood coagulation.   Int J Cancer 25: 5. 557-560 May  
Abstract: Plasma, serum and the main proteins involved in the final steps of blood coagulation, fibrinogen, thrombin and plasma transglutaminase, have been tested for their ability to inhibit cell transformation and/or to induce reversion of the transformed to the normal phenotype in RSV-infected chicken embryo fibroblasts. The results obtained show that plasma, and not serum, fibrinogen, when converted to fibrin by thrombin, and activated transglutaminase alone prevent focus appearance and cause reversion of transformed to normal cell morphology.
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1977
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