Publications by authors named "Luca Proietti-De-Santis"

Article Synopsis
  • Eukaryotic cells have developed sophisticated mechanisms to manage genotoxic stress, which is damage to DNA.
  • Cockayne syndrome (CS) is a rare disease caused by mutations in the CSA and CSB genes, initially thought to be solely responsible for DNA repair.
  • Recent findings reveal that CSA and CSB are crucial regulators that coordinate DNA repair, transcription, and cell division by ubiquitinating target proteins, highlighting the role of these proteins in the complex nature of CS.
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Parkinson's disease (PD) is one of the most common neurodegenerative disorders, characterized by an initial and progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons of the via a potentially substantial contribution from protein aggregates, the Lewy bodies, mainly composed of α-Synuclein among other factors. Distinguishing symptoms of PD are bradykinesia, muscular rigidity, unstable posture and gait, hypokinetic movement disorder and resting tremor. Currently, there is no cure for PD, and palliative treatments, such as Levodopa administration, are directed to relieve the motor symptoms but induce severe side effects over time.

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Mutations in CSA and CSB proteins cause Cockayne syndrome, a rare genetic neurodevelopment disorder. Alongside their demonstrated roles in DNA repair and transcription, these two proteins have recently been discovered to regulate cytokinesis, the final stage of the cell division. This last finding allowed, for the first time, to highlight an extranuclear localization of CS proteins, beyond the one already known at mitochondria.

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The serine/threonine kinase Akt modulates the functions of numerous substrates, many of them being involved in cell proliferation and growth, metabolism, angiogenesis, resistance to hypoxia and migration. Akt is frequently deregulated in many types of human cancers, its overexpression or abnormal activation being associated with the increased proliferation and survival of cancer cells. A promising avenue for turning off the functionality of Akt is to either interfere with the K63-linked ubiquitination that is necessary for Akt membrane recruitment and activation or increase the K48-linked polyubiquitination that aims to target Akt to the proteasome for its degradation.

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DNA repair genes are critical for preserving genomic stability and it is well established that mutations in DNA repair genes give rise to progeroid diseases due to perturbations in different DNA metabolic activities. Cockayne Syndrome (CS) is an autosomal recessive inheritance caused by inactivating mutations in CSA and CSB genes. This review will primarily focus on the two Cockayne Syndrome proteins, CSA and CSB, primarily known to be involved in Transcription Coupled Repair (TCR).

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Breast cancer (BC) is the most common cancer with the highest frequency of death among women. BC is highly heterogenic at the genetic, biological, and clinical level. Despite the significant improvements in diagnosis and treatments of BC, the high rate of cancer recurrence and resistance to treatment remains a major challenge in clinical practice.

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Neuroblastoma, the most common extra-cranial solid tumor of early childhood, is one of the major therapeutic challenges in child oncology: it is highly heterogenic at a genetic, biological, and clinical level. The high-risk cases have one of the least favorable outcomes amongst pediatric tumors, and the mortality rate is still high, regardless of the use of intensive multimodality therapies. Here, we observed that neuroblastoma cells display an increased expression of Cockayne Syndrome group B (CSB), a pleiotropic protein involved in multiple functions such as DNA repair, transcription, mitochondrial homeostasis, and cell division, and were recently found to confer cell robustness when they are up-regulated.

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The goal in personalized therapeutic approaches for cancer medicine is to identify specific mutations with prognostic and therapeutic value in order to tailor the therapy for the single patient. The most powerful obstacle for personalized medicine arises from intratumor heterogeneity and clonal evolution, which can promote drug resistance. In this scenario, new technologies, such as next-generation sequencing, have emerged as a central diagnostic tool to profile cancer (epi)genomic landscapes.

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When mutated, csa and csb genes are responsible of the complex phenotype of the premature aging Cockayne Syndrome (CS). Our working hypothesis is to reconcile the multiple cellular and molecular phenotypes associated to CS within the unifying molecular function of CSA and CSB proteins in the cascade of events leading to ubiquitin/proteasome-directed protein degradation, which occurs in processes as DNA repair, transcription and cell division. This achievement may reasonably explain the plethora of cellular UPS-regulated functions that result impaired when either CSA or CSB are mutated and suggestively explains part of their pleiotropic effect.

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Cytokinesis is monitored by a molecular machinery that promotes the degradation of the intercellular bridge, a transient protein structure connecting the two daughter cells. Here, we found that CSA and CSB, primarily defined as DNA repair factors, are located at the midbody, a transient structure in the middle of the intercellular bridge, where they recruit CUL4 and MDM2 ubiquitin ligases and the proteasome. As a part of this molecular machinery, CSA and CSB contribute to the ubiquitination and the degradation of proteins such as PRC1, the Protein Regulator of Cytokinesis, to ensure the correct separation of the two daughter cells.

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Telomere shortening has been supposed to be implicated in both aging and various human diseases especially carcinogenesis process. This phenomenon can lead to a chromosomal instability, contributing to a cell immortalization and tumor induction. In our study, we analyzed the role of telomere shortening in cancer progression, in Tunisian patients with digestive cancer.

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Methyltrioxorhenium mediated oxidative addition/elimination nucleophilic substitution yielded alkylamino and arylamino cambinol derivatives characterized by anti-proliferative activity against wild-type and p53 mutated MGH-U1 and RT112 bladder cancer cell lines. Some of the novel compounds showed an activity higher than that of the lead compound. The reaction was highly regioselective, affording for the first time a panel of C-2 cambinol substitution products.

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The DNA repair protein Cockayne syndrome group B (CSB) is frequently found overexpressed in cancer cells. High CSB levels favor tumor cell proliferation whilst inhibiting apoptosis. Conversely, the suppression of CSB has significant anticancer effects.

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Cockayne syndrome (CS) is caused by mutations in CSA and CSB. The CSA and CSB proteins have been linked to both promoting transcription-coupled repair and restoring transcription following DNA damage. We show that UV stress arrests transcription of approximately 70% of genes in CSA- or CSB-deficient cells due to the constitutive presence of ATF3 at CRE/ATF sites.

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The DNA repair protein Cockayne syndrome group B (CSB) has been recently identified as a promising anticancer target. Suppression, by antisense technology, of this protein causes devastating effects on tumor cells viability, through a massive induction of apoptosis, while being non-toxic to non-transformed cells. To gain insights into the mechanisms underlying the pro-apoptotic effects observed after CSB ablation, global gene expression patterns were determined, to identify genes that were significantly differentially regulated as a function of CSB expression.

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Lamin family proteins are structural components of a filamentous framework, the nuclear lamina (NL), underlying the inner membrane of nuclear envelope. The NL not only plays a role in nucleus mechanical support and nuclear shaping, but is also involved in many cellular processes including DNA replication, gene expression and chromatin positioning. Spermatogenesis is a very complex differentiation process in which each stage is characterized by nuclear architecture dramatic changes, from the early mitotic stage to the sperm differentiation final stage.

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Article Synopsis
  • The CSB protein is part of the SWI/SNF family and is involved in transcription coupled repair (TCR), a subtype of nucleotide excision repair (NER).
  • Mutations in the CSB gene are linked to Cockayne syndrome group B, which leads to growth failure and organ degeneration.
  • Recent research using TAP technology and mass spectrometry identified 33 new proteins interacting with CSB, suggesting it may also play roles in RNA metabolism and chromatin dynamics beyond just DNA repair.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study found that various cancer cell lines have significantly higher levels of the CSB protein, which is crucial for DNA repair and cell survival.
  • Eliminating CSB with antisense technology severely reduces the growth of cancer cells and causes them to undergo apoptosis, while healthy cells remain unaffected.
  • Targeting CSB in cancer cells could be a promising strategy for developing new cancer treatments, as it selectively impacts cancerous cells without damaging normal cells.
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The CSB protein plays a role in the transcription coupled repair (TCR) branch of the nucleotide excision repair pathway. CSB is very often found mutated in Cockayne syndrome, a segmental progeroid genetic disease characterized by organ degeneration and growth failure. The tumor suppressor p53 plays a pivotal role in triggering senescence and apoptosis and suppressing tumorigenesis.

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Mutations in Cockayne syndrome (CS) A and B genes (CSA and CSB) result in a rare genetic disease that affects the development and homeostasis of a wide range of tissues and organs. We previously correlated the degenerative phenotype of patients to the enhanced apoptotic response, exhibited by CS cells, which is associated with the exceptional induction of p53 protein, upon a variety of stress stimuli. Here we showed that the elevated and persistent levels of p53 displayed by CS cells are due to the insufficient ubiquitination of the p53 protein.

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We have previously shown that DNA repair of oxidized bases (either purines or pyrimidines) is inefficient in cells from patients with Cockayne syndrome (cs), a rare developmental and neurological genetic disorder. Here, we show for the first time that resolution of ionizing radiation (IR)-induced pH2AX foci, an indicator of DNA double-strand breaks, is significantly delayed in IR-treated cells belonging to the B complementation group of cs (csb). Using alkaline single-cell gel electrophoresis, which predominantly detects single-strand breaks, we further demonstrate elevated DNA breakage in csb cells early after irradiation.

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Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-associated deaths among men in the western countries. Here, we report that human RecQL4 helicase, which is implicated in the pathogenesis of a subset of cancer-prone Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, is highly elevated in metastatic prostate cancer cell lines. Increased RecQL4 expression was also detected in human prostate tumor tissues as a function of tumor grade with the highest expression level in metastatic tumor samples, suggesting that RecQL4 may be a potential prognostic factor for advanced stage of prostate cancer.

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Our recent data demonstrate that the CSB protein, besides its role in DNA repair, functions also as a master switch factor that can selectively influence the transcription of specific sets of genes, after DNA damage or hypoxia, by influencing the biological functions of p53. It is likely that the CSB protein, by modulating p53 activity after different cellular stresses would re-equilibrate the physiological response towards cell proliferation and survival instead of cell cycle arrest and cell death. Some important implications of these findings are discussed here.

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Acetaldehyde (AA) was tested along with two other crosslinking agents: formaldehyde (FA), an inducer of DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) and mitomycin C (MMC), an inducer of interstrand crosslinks (ICLs), to find out whether the mechanism of action of AA resembles more MMC or FA. Using a modification of the standard protocol for comet assay we demonstrate that AA induces crosslinks. Using a combination of alkaline comet version and proteinase-K, a clear abrogation of AA-induced reduction in DNA migration, like after FA treatment, was observed demonstrating that both agents induce DPCs, whereas MMC induces predominantly ICLs.

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Cockayne syndrome (CS) is a rare genetic disease characterized by neurological problems, growth failure and premature ageing. Many of these features cannot simply be ascribed to the defect that CS cells display during transcription-coupled repair. Here, we show that CSB mutant cells are unable to react to hypoxic stimuli by properly activating the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) pathway, a defect that is further enhanced in the event of a concomitant genotoxic stress.

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