Publications by authors named "Patrizia Reffo"

Differently from the antiapoptotic action most commonly assigned to peroxisome proliferators (PPs), we demonstrated that some of them, clofibrate (CF) in particular, display clearcut apoptogenic properties on rat hepatoma cell lines. We and others could confirm that CF as well as various other PPs can induce apoptosis in a variety of cells, including human liver, breast and lung cancer cell lines. The present study was aimed at investigating the cytotoxic action of CF on a neoplastic line of different origin, the human T leukemia Jurkat cells.

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Depletion of skeletal muscle protein mainly results from enhanced protein breakdown, caused by activation of proteolytic systems such as the Ca2+-dependent and the ATP-ubiquitin-dependent ones. In the last few years, enhanced expression and bioactivity of myostatin have been reported in several pathologies characterized by marked skeletal muscle depletion. More recently, high myostatin levels have been associated with glucocorticoid-induced hypercatabolism.

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Cachexia is a debilitating syndrome characterized by body weight loss, muscle wasting, and anemia. Muscle wasting results from an altered balance between protein synthesis and degradation rates. Reactive oxygen species are indicated as crucial players in the onset of muscle protein hypercatabolism by upregulating elements of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.

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Calcineurin has been proposed to regulate skeletal muscle hypertrophy, while its relevance to the pathogenesis of muscle atrophy is unknown. The present study was aimed to investigate if perturbations of the calcineurin pathway may be involved in causing skeletal muscle atrophy in two different experimental conditions: cancer cachexia (rats bearing the AH-130 hepatoma), and hyperglycemia (rats treated with streptozotocin). Calcineurin expression in the gastrocnemius was comparable between tumor hosts and controls.

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Cancer cachexia is characterized by skeletal muscle wasting that is mainly supported by hypercatabolism. Muscle atrophy has been suggested to depend on impaired IGF-1 signal transduction pathway. The present study has been aimed at investigating the IGF-1 system in rats bearing the AH-130 hepatoma, a well-characterized model of cachexia.

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Skeletal muscle wasting is a prominent feature of cachexia, a complex systemic syndrome that frequently complicates chronic diseases such as inflammatory and autoimmune disorders, cancer and AIDS. Muscle wasting may also develop as a manifestation of primary or neurogenic muscular disorders. It is now generally accepted that muscle depletion mainly arises from increased protein catabolism.

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4-Hydroxynonenal (HNE), a product of lipid peroxidation, inhibits proliferation of several tumor cells. The p53 tumor suppressor protein plays a critical role in cell cycle control, by inducing p21 expression, and in apoptosis, by inducing bax expression. Recently, two other proteins with many p53-like properties, TAp73 (p73) and TAp63 (p63), have been discovered.

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Low concentrations of some peroxisome proliferators have been found to decrease apoptosis in rat liver cells, whereas higher but pharmacological concentrations have been found to inhibit cell proliferation or to induce apoptosis in human and rat hepatoma cells. The highly deviated JM2 rat hepatoma cell line was used to examine the mechanisms underlying the inhibitory effect on cell proliferation. Clofibrate chiefly inhibited cell proliferation in these cells.

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Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are ligand-activated nuclear receptors. Three subtypes of PPARs (alpha, beta, and gamma) have been identified in different tissues. PPAR alpha and PPAR gamma ligands inhibit cell proliferation and induce differentiation in several human cell models.

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Ceramide has been suggested as an important mediator of apoptosis. In HT-29 colorectal cancer cells increased ceramide levels, induced by exogenous N-acetylsphingosine (NAS, also known as C2-ceramide) or by 1-phenyl-2-(decanoylamino)-3-morpholino-1-propanol (PDMP), inhibited the transport and processing of cathepsin D (CD), a lysosomal protease implicated in apoptosis of tumour cells. C2-dihydroceramide (DH-C2), an inactive analogue of NAS, had no effect on CD transport and maturation.

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