11 results on '"Croce, Carlo M."'
Search Results
2. Additional file 2 of A preliminary study of micro-RNAs as minimally invasive biomarkers for the diagnosis of prostate cancer patients
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Giglio, Simona, Nunzio, Cosimo De, Cirombella, Roberto, Stoppacciaro, Antonella, Faruq, Omar, Volinia, Stefano, Baldassarre, Gustavo, Tubaro, Andrea, Ishii, Hideshi, Croce, Carlo M., and Vecchione, Andrea
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Additional file 2: Table S1. Cluster analysis identified two main cluster.
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- 2021
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3. Tumour predisposition and cancer syndromes as models to study gene-environment interactions
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Carbone, Michele, Arron, Sarah T, Beutler, Bruce, Bononi, Angela, Cavenee, Webster, Cleaver, James E, Croce, Carlo M, D'Andrea, Alan, Foulkes, William D, Gaudino, Giovanni, Groden, Joanna L, Henske, Elizabeth P, Hickson, Ian D, Hwang, Paul M, Kolodner, Richard D, Mak, Tak W, Malkin, David, Monnat, Raymond J, Novelli, Flavia, Pass, Harvey I, Petrini, John H, Schmidt, Laura S, and Yang, Haining
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Prevention ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Neoplasms ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Aetiology ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Cancer - Abstract
Cell division and organismal development are exquisitely orchestrated and regulated processes. The dysregulation of the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes may cause cancer, a consequence of cell-intrinsic and/or cell-extrinsic events. Cellular DNA can be damaged by spontaneous hydrolysis, reactive oxygen species, aberrant cellular metabolism or other perturbations that cause DNA damage. Moreover, several environmental factors may damage the DNA, alter cellular metabolism or affect the ability of cells to interact with their microenvironment. While some environmental factors are well established as carcinogens, there remains a large knowledge gap of others owing to the difficulty in identifying them because of the typically long interval between carcinogen exposure and cancer diagnosis. DNA damage increases in cells harbouring mutations that impair their ability to correctly repair the DNA. Tumour predisposition syndromes in which cancers arise at an accelerated rate and in different organs - the equivalent of a sensitized background - provide a unique opportunity to examine how gene-environment interactions influence cancer risk when the initiating genetic defect responsible for malignancy is known. Understanding the molecular processes that are altered by specific germline mutations, environmental exposures and related mechanisms that promote cancer will allow the design of novel and effective preventive and therapeutic strategies.
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- 2020
4. Correction for Melo et al., Small molecule enoxacin is a cancer-specific growth inhibitor that acts by enhancing TAR RNA-binding protein 2-mediated microRNA processing
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Melo, Sónia Rita Cardoso, 1978, Villanueva Garatachea, Alberto, Moutinho, Cátia, Davalos, Veronica, Spizzo, Riccardo, Ivan, Cristina, Rossi, Simona, Setién, Fernando, Casanovas i Ibáñez, Òscar, Simó-Riudalbas, Laia, Carmona, F. Javier, Carrere, Jordi, Vidal-Bel, August, Aytés Meneses, Álvaro, Puertas, Sara, Ropero, Santiago, Kalluri, Raghu, Croce, Carlo M., Calin, George A., and Esteller, Manel
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Micro RNAs ,MicroRNAs ,Multidisciplinary ,Molècules ,Molecules ,Càncer ,Cancer - Abstract
Medical sciences: correction for "Small molecule enoxacin is a cancer-specific growth inhibitor that acts by enhancing TAR RNA-binding protein 2-mediated microRNA processing," by SoniaMelo, Alberto Villanueva, Catia Moutinho, Veronica Davalos, Riccardo Spizzo, Cristina Ivan, Simona Rossi, Fernando Setien, Oriol Casanovas, Laia Simo-Riudalbas, Javier Carmona, Jordi Carrere, August Vidal, Alvaro Aytes, Sara Puertas, Santiago Ropero, Raghu Kalluri, Carlo M. Croce, George A. Calin, and Manel Esteller, which appeared in issue 11, March 15, 2011, of Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (108:4394-4399; first published February 28, 2011; 10.1073/pnas.1014720108).
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- 2017
5. Melanoma and immunotherapy bridge 2015 : Naples, Italy. 1-5 December 2015
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Nanda, Vashisht GY, Peng, Weiyi, Hwu, Patrick, Davies, Michael A, Ciliberto, Gennaro, Fattore, Luigi, Malpicci, Debora, Aurisicchio, Luigi, Ascierto, Paolo Antonio, Croce, Carlo M, Mancini, Rita, Spranger, Stefani, Gajewski, Thomas F, Wang, Yangyang, Ferrone, Soldano, Vanpouille-Box, Claire, Wennerberg, Erik, Pilones, Karsten A, Formenti, Silvia C, Demaria, Sandra, Tang, Haidong, Wang, Yang, Fu, Yang-Xin, Dummer, Reinhard, Puzanov, Igor, Tarhini, Ahmad, Chauvin, Joe-Marc, Pagliano, Ornella, Fourcade, Julien, Sun, Zhaojun, Wang, Hong, Sanders, Cindy, Kirkwood, John M, Chen, Tseng-hui Timothy, Maurer, Mark, Korman, Alan J, Zarour, Hassane M, Stroncek, David F, Huber, Veronica, Rivoltini, Licia, Thurin, Magdalena, Rau, Tilman, Lugli, Alessandro, Pagès, Franck, Camarero, Jorge, Sancho, Arantxa, Jommi, Claudio, de Coaña, Yago Pico, Wolodarski, Maria, Yoshimoto, Yuya, Gentilcore, Giusy, Poschke, Isabel, Masucci, Giuseppe V, Hansson, Johan, Kiessling, Rolf, Scognamiglio, Giosuè, Sabbatino, Francesco, Marino, Federica Zito, Anniciello, Anna Maria, Cantile, Monica, Cerrone, Margherita, Scala, Stefania, D’alterio, Crescenzo, Ianaro, Angela, Cirin, Giuseppe, Liguori, Giuseppina, Bott, Gerardo, Chapman, Paul B, Robert, Caroline, Larkin, James, Haanen, John B, Ribas, Antoni, Hogg, David, Hamid, Omid, Testori, Alessandro, Lorigan, Paul, Sosman, Jeffrey A, Flaherty, Keith T, Yue, Huibin, Coleman, Shelley, Caro, Ivor, Hauschild, Axel, McArthur, Grant A, Sznol, Mario, Callahan, Margaret K, Kluger, Harriet, Postow, Michael A, Gordan, RuthAnn, Segal, Neil H, Rizvi, Naiyer A, Lesokhin, Alexander, Atkins, Michael B, Burke, Matthew M, Ralabate, Amanda, Rivera, Angel, Kronenberg, Stephanie A, Agunwamba, Blessing, Ruisi, Mary, Horak, Christine, and Jiang, Joel
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Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Research ,Immunology ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Cancer - Abstract
MELANOMA BRIDGE 2015 KEYNOTE SPEAKER PRESENTATIONS Molecular and immuno-advances K1 Immunologic and metabolic consequences of PI3K/AKT/mTOR activation in melanoma Vashisht G. Y. Nanda, Weiyi Peng, Patrick Hwu, Michael A. Davies K2 Non-mutational adaptive changes in melanoma cells exposed to BRAF and MEK inhibitors help the establishment of drug resistance Gennaro Ciliberto, Luigi Fattore, Debora Malpicci, Luigi Aurisicchio, Paolo Antonio Ascierto, Carlo M. Croce, Rita Mancini K3 Tumor-intrinsic beta-catenin signaling mediates tumor-immune avoidance Stefani Spranger, Thomas F. Gajewski K4 Intracellular tumor antigens as a source of targets of antibody-based immunotherapy of melanoma Yangyang Wang, Soldano Ferrone Combination therapies K5 Harnessing radiotherapy to improve responses to immunotherapy in cancer Claire Vanpouille-Box, Erik Wennerberg, Karsten A. Pilones, Silvia C. Formenti, Sandra Demaria K6 Creating a T cell-inflamed tumor microenvironment overcomes resistance to checkpoint blockade Haidong Tang, Yang Wang, Yang-Xin Fu K7 Biomarkers for treatment decisions? Reinhard Dummer K8 Combining oncolytic therapies in the era of checkpoint inhibitors Igor Puzanov K9 Immune checkpoint blockade for melanoma: should we combine or sequence ipilimumab and PD-1 antibody therapy? Michael A. Postow News in immunotherapy K10 An update on adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapy for melanom Ahmad Tarhini K11 Targeting multiple inhibitory receptors in melanoma Joe-Marc Chauvin, Ornella Pagliano, Julien Fourcade, Zhaojun Sun, Hong Wang, Cindy Sanders, John M. Kirkwood, Tseng-hui Timothy Chen, Mark Maurer, Alan J. Korman, Hassane M. Zarour K12 Improving adoptive immune therapy using genetically engineered T cells David F. Stroncek Tumor microenvironment and biomarkers K13 Myeloid cells and tumor exosomes: a crosstalk for assessing immunosuppression? Veronica Huber, Licia Rivoltini K14 Update on the SITC biomarker taskforce: progress and challenges Magdalena Thurin World-wide immunoscore task force: an update K15 The immunoscore in colorectal cancer highlights the importance of digital scoring systems in surgical pathology Tilman Rau, Alessandro Lugli K16 The immunoscore: toward an integrated immunomonitoring from the diagnosis to the follow up of cancer’s patients Franck Pagès Economic sustainability of melanoma treatments: regulatory, health technology assessment and market access issues K17 Nivolumab, the regulatory experience in immunotherapy Jorge Camarero, Arantxa Sancho K18 Evidence to optimize access for immunotherapies Claudio Jommi ORAL PRESENTATIONS Molecular and immuno-advances O1 Ipilimumab treatment results in CD4 T cell activation that is concomitant with a reduction in Tregs and MDSCs Yago Pico de Coaña, Maria Wolodarski, Yuya Yoshimoto, Giusy Gentilcore, Isabel Poschke, Giuseppe V. Masucci, Johan Hansson, Rolf Kiessling O2 Evaluation of prognostic and therapeutic potential of COX-2 and PD-L1 in primary and metastatic melanoma Giosuè Scognamiglio, Francesco Sabbatino, Federica Zito Marino, Anna Maria Anniciello, Monica Cantile, Margherita Cerrone, Stefania Scala, Crescenzo D’alterio, Angela Ianaro, Giuseppe Cirino, Paolo Antonio Ascierto, Giuseppina Liguori, Gerardo Botti O3 Vemurafenib in patients with BRAFV600 mutation–positive metastatic melanoma: final overall survival results of the BRIM-3 study Paul B. Chapman, Caroline Robert, James Larkin, John B. Haanen, Antoni Ribas, David Hogg, Omid Hamid, Paolo Antonio Ascierto, Alessandro Testori, Paul Lorigan, Reinhard Dummer, Jeffrey A. Sosman, Keith T. Flaherty, Huibin Yue, Shelley Coleman, Ivor Caro, Axel Hauschild, Grant A. McArthur O4 Updated survival, response and safety data in a phase 1 dose-finding study (CA209-004) of concurrent nivolumab (NIVO) and ipilimumab (IPI) in advanced melanoma Mario Sznol, Margaret K. Callahan, Harriet Kluger, Michael A. Postow, RuthAnn Gordan, Neil H. Segal, Naiyer A. Rizvi, Alexander Lesokhin, Michael B. Atkins, John M. Kirkwood, Matthew M. Burke, Amanda Ralabate, Angel Rivera, Stephanie A. Kronenberg, Blessing Agunwamba, Mary Ruisi, Christine Horak, Joel Jiang, Jedd Wolchok Combination therapies O5 Efficacy and correlative biomarker analysis of the coBRIM study comparing cobimetinib (COBI) + vemurafenib (VEM) vs placebo (PBO) + VEM in advanced BRAF-mutated melanoma patients (pts) Paolo A. Ascierto, Grant A. McArthur, James Larkin, Gabriella Liszkay, Michele Maio, Mario Mandalà, Lev Demidov, Daniil Stoyakovskiy, Luc Thomas, Luis de la Cruz-Merino, Victoria Atkinson, Caroline Dutriaux, Claus Garbe, Matthew Wongchenko, Ilsung Chang, Daniel O. Koralek, Isabelle Rooney, Yibing Yan, Antoni Ribas, Brigitte Dréno O6 Preliminary clinical safety, tolerability and activity results from a Phase Ib study of atezolizumab (anti-PDL1) combined with vemurafenib in BRAFV600-mutant metastatic melanoma Ryan Sullivan, Omid Hamid, Manish Patel, Stephen Hodi, Rodabe Amaria, Peter Boasberg, Jeffrey Wallin, Xian He, Edward Cha, Nicole Richie, Marcus Ballinger, Patrick Hwu O7 Preliminary safety and efficacy data from a phase 1/2 study of epacadostat (INCB024360) in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced/metastatic melanoma Thomas F. Gajewski, Omid Hamid, David C. Smith, Todd M. Bauer, Jeffrey S. Wasser, Jason J. Luke, Ani S. Balmanoukian, David R. Kaufman, Yufan Zhao, Janet Maleski, Lance Leopold, Tara C. Gangadhar O8 Primary analysis of MASTERKEY-265 phase 1b study of talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC) and pembrolizumab (pembro) for unresectable stage IIIB-IV melanoma Reinhard Dummer, Georgina V. Long, Antoni Ribas, Igor Puzanov, Olivier Michielin, Ari VanderWalde, Robert H.I. Andtbacka, Jonathan Cebon, Eugenio Fernandez, Josep Malvehy, Anthony J. Olszanski, Thomas F. Gajewski, John M. Kirkwood, Christine Gause, Lisa Chen, David R. Kaufman, Jeffrey Chou, F. Stephen Hodi News in immunotherapy O9 Two-year survival and safety update in patients (pts) with treatment-naïve advanced melanoma (MEL) receiving nivolumab (NIVO) or dacarbazine (DTIC) in CheckMate 066 Victoria Atkinson, Paolo A. Ascierto, Georgina V. Long, Benjamin Brady, Caroline Dutriaux, Michele Maio, Laurent Mortier, Jessica C. Hassel, Piotr Rutkowski, Catriona McNeil, Ewa Kalinka-Warzocha, Celeste Lebbé, Lars Ny, Matias Chacon, Paola Queirolo, Carmen Loquai, Parneet Cheema, Alfonso Berrocal, Karmele Mujika Eizmendi, Luis De La Cruz-Merino, Gil Bar-Sela, Christine Horak, Joel Jiang, Helene Hardy, Caroline Robert O10 Efficacy and safety of nivolumab (NIVO) in patients (pts) with advanced melanoma (MEL) who were treated beyond progression in CheckMate 066/067 Georgina V. Long, Jeffrey S. Weber, James Larkin, Victoria Atkinson, Jean-Jacques Grob, Reinhard Dummer, Caroline Robert, Ivan Marquez-Rodas, Catriona McNeil, Henrik Schmidt, Karen Briscoe, Jean-François Baurain, F. Stephen Hodi, Jedd D. Wolchok Tumor microenvironment and biomarkers O11 New biomarkers for response/resistance to BRAF inhibitor therapy in metastatic melanoma Rosamaria Pinto, Simona De Summa, Vito Michele Garrisi, Sabino Strippoli, Amalia Azzariti, Gabriella Guida, Michele Guida, Stefania Tommasi O12 Chemokine receptor patterns in lymphocytes mirror metastatic spreading in melanoma and response to ipilimumab Nicolas Jacquelot, David Enot, Caroline Flament, Jonathan M. Pitt, Nadège Vimond, Carolin Blattner, Takahiro Yamazaki, Maria-Paula Roberti, Marie Vetizou, Romain Daillere, Vichnou Poirier-Colame, Michaëla Semeraro, Anne Caignard, Craig L Slingluff Jr, Federica Sallusto, Sylvie Rusakiewicz, Benjamin Weide, Aurélien Marabelle, Holbrook Kohrt, Stéphane Dalle, Andréa Cavalcanti, Guido Kroemer, Anna Maria Di Giacomo, Michaele Maio, Phillip Wong, Jianda Yuan, Jedd Wolchok, Viktor Umansky, Alexander Eggermont, Laurence Zitvogel O13 Serum levels of PD1- and CD28-positive exosomes before Ipilimumab correlate with therapeutic response in metastatic melanoma patients Passarelli Anna, Tucci Marco, Stucci Stefania, Mannavola Francesco, Capone Mariaelena, Madonna Gabriele, Ascierto Paolo Antonio, Silvestris Franco O14 Immunological prognostic factors in stage III melanomas María Paula Roberti, Nicolas Jacquelot, David P Enot, Sylvie Rusakiewicz, Michaela Semeraro, Sarah Jégou, Camila Flores, Lieping Chen, Byoung S. Kwon, Ana Carrizossa Anderson, Caroline Robert, Christophe Borg, Benjamin Weide, François Aubin, Stéphane Dalle, Michele Maio, Jedd D. Wolchok, Holbrook Kohrt, Maha Ayyoub, Guido Kroemer, Aurélien Marabelle, Andréa Cavalcanti, Alexander Eggermont, Laurence Zitvogel POSTER PRESENTATIONS Molecular and immuno-advances P1 Human melanoma cells resistant to B-RAF and MEK inhibition exhibit mesenchymal-like features Anna Lisa De Presbiteris, Fabiola Gilda Cordaro, Rosa Camerlingo, Federica Fratangelo, Nicola Mozzillo, Giuseppe Pirozzi, Eduardo J. Patriarca, Paolo A. Ascierto, Emilia Caputo P2 Anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effect of ABT888 on melanoma cell lines and its potential role in the treatment of melanoma resistant to B-RAF inhibitors Federica Fratangelo, Rosa Camerlingo, Emilia Caputo, Maria Letizia Motti, Rosaria Falcone, Roberta Miceli, Mariaelena Capone, Gabriele Madonna, Domenico Mallardo, Maria Vincenza Carriero, Giuseppe Pirozzi and Paolo Antonio Ascierto P3 Involvement of the L-cysteine/CSE/H2S pathway in human melanoma progression Elisabetta Panza, Paola De Cicco, Chiara Armogida, Giuseppe Ercolano, Rosa Camerlingo, Giuseppe Pirozzi, Giosuè Scognamiglio, Gerardo Botti, Giuseppe Cirino, Angela Ianaro P4 Cancer stem cell antigen revealing pattern of antibody variable region genes were defined by immunoglobulin repertoire analysis in patients with malignant melanoma Beatrix Kotlan, Gabriella Liszkay, Miri Blank, Timea Balatoni, Judit Olasz, Emil Farkas, Andras Szollar, Akos Savolt, Maria Godeny, Orsolya Csuka, Szabolcs Horvath, Klara Eles, Yehuda Shoenfeld and Miklos Kasler P5 Upregulation of Neuregulin-1 expression is a hallmark of adaptive response to BRAF/MEK inhibitors in melanoma Debora Malpicci, Luigi Fattore, Susan Costantini, Francesca Capone, Paolo Antonio Ascierto, Rita Mancini, Gennaro Ciliberto P6 HuR positively regulates migration of HTB63 melanoma cells Farnaz Moradi, Pontus Berglund, Karin Leandersson, Rickard Linnskog, Tommy Andersson, Chandra Prakash Prasad P7 Prolyl 4- (C-P4H) hydroxylases have opposing effects in malignant melanoma: implication in prognosis and therapy Cristiana Lo Nigro, Laura Lattanzio, Hexiao Wang, Charlotte Proby, Nelofer Syed, Marcella Occelli, Carolina Cauchi, Marco Merlano, Catherine Harwood, Alastair Thompson, Tim Crook P8 Urokinase receptor antagonists: novel agents for the treatment of melanoma Maria Letizia Motti, Katia Bifulco, Vincenzo Ingangi, Michele Minopoli, Concetta Ragone, Federica Fratangelo, Antonello Pessi, Gennaro Ciliberto, Paolo Antonio Ascierto, Maria Vincenza Carriero P9 Exosomes released by melanoma cell lines enhance chemotaxis of primary tumor cells Francesco Mannavola, Stella D’Oronzo, Claudia Felici, Marco Tucci, Antonio Doronzo, Franco Silvestris P10 New insights in mitochondrial metabolic reprogramming in melanoma Anna Ferretta, Gabriella Guida, Stefania Guida, Imma Maida, Tiziana Cocco, Sabino Strippoli, Stefania Tommasi, Amalia Azzariti, Michele Guida P11 Lenalidomide restrains the proliferation in melanoma cells through a negative regulation of their cell cycle Stella D’Oronzo, Anna Passarelli, Claudia Felici, Marco Tucci, Davide Quaresmini, Franco Silvestris Combination therapies P12 Chemoimmunotherapy elicits polyfunctional anti-tumor CD8 + T cells depending on the activation of an AKT pathway sustained by ICOS Ornella Franzese, Belinda Palermo, Cosmo Di Donna, Isabella Sperduti, MariaLaura Foddai, Helena Stabile, Angela Gismondi, Angela Santoni, Paola Nisticò P13 Favourable toxicity profile of combined BRAF and MEK inhibitors in metastatic melanoma patients Andrea P. Sponghini, Francesca Platini, Elena Marra, David Rondonotti, Oscar Alabiso, Maria T. Fierro, Paola Savoia, Florian Stratica, Pietro Quaglino P14 Electrothermal bipolar vessel sealing system dissection reduces seroma output or time to drain removal following axillary and ilio-inguinal node dissection in melanoma patients: a pilot study Di Monta Gianluca, Caracò Corrado, Di Marzo Massimiliano, Marone Ugo, Di Cecilia Maria Luisa, Mozzillo Nicola News in immunotherapy P15 Clinical and immunological response to ipilimumab in a metastatic melanoma patient with HIV infection Francesco Sabbatino, Celeste Fusciello1, Antonio Marra, Rosario Guarrasi, Carlo Baldi, Rosa Russo, Di Giulio Giovanni, Vincenzo Faiola, Pio Zeppa, Stefano Pepe P16 Immunotherapy and hypophysitis: a case report Elisabetta Gambale, Consiglia Carella, Alessandra Di Paolo, Michele De Tursi Tumor microenvironment and biomarkers P17 New immuno- histochemical markers for the differential diagnosis of atypical melanocytic lesions with uncertain malignant potential Laura Marra, Giosuè Scognamiglio, Monica Cantile, Margherita Cerrone, Fara De Murtas, Valeria Sorrentino, Anna Maria Anniciello, Gerardo Botti P18 Utility of simultaneous measurement of three serum tumor markers in melanoma patients Angela Sandru, Silviu Voinea, Eugenia Panaitescu, Madalina Bolovan, Adina Stanciu, Sabin Cinca P19 The significance of various cut-off levels of melanoma inhibitory activity in evaluation of cutaneous melanoma patients Angela Sandru, Silviu Voinea, Eugenia Panaitescu, Madalina Bolovan, Adina Stanciu, Sabin Cinca P20 The long noncoding RNA HOTAIR is associated to metastatic progression of melanoma and it can be identified in the blood of patients with advanced disease Chiara Botti, Giosuè Scognamiglio, Laura Marra, Gabriella Aquino, Rosaria Falcone, Annamaria Anniciello, Paolo Antonio Ascierto, Gerardo Botti, Monica Cantile Other P21 The effect of Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in melanoma mortality: timing of dissection Cristina Fortes, Simona Mastroeni, Alessio Caggiati, Francesca Passarelli, Alba Zappalà, Maria Capuano, Riccardo Bono, Maurizio Nudo, Claudia Marino, Paola Michelozzi P22 Epidemiological survey on related psychopathology in melanoma Valeria De Biasio, Vincenzo C. Battarra IMMUNOTHERAPY BRIDGE KEYNOTE SPEAKER PRESENTATIONS Immunotherapy beyond melanoma K19 Predictor of response to radiation and immunotherapy Silvia Formenti K20 Response and resistance to PD-1 pathway blockade: clues from the tumor microenvironment Maria Libera Ascierto, Tracee L. McMiller, Alan E. Berger, Ludmila Danilova, Robert A. Anders, George J. Netto, Haiying Xu, Theresa S. Pritchard, Jinshui Fan, Chris Cheadle, Leslie Cope, Charles G. Drake, Drew M. Pardoll, Janis M. Taube and Suzanne L. Topalian K21 Combination immunotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation, protein immunization, and PBMC reinfusion in myeloma patients Sacha Gnjatic, Sarah Nataraj, Naoko Imai, Adeeb Rahman, Achim A. Jungbluth, Linda Pan, Ralph Venhaus, Andrew Park, Frédéric F. Lehmann, Nikoletta Lendvai, Adam D. Cohen, and Hearn J. Cho K22 Anti-cancer immunity despite T cell “exhaustion” Speiser Daniel Immunotherapy in oncology (I-O): data from clinical trial K23 The Checkpoint Inhibitors for the Treatment of Metastatic Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Vera Hirsh
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- 2016
6. TCL1 targeting miR-3676 is codeleted with tumor protein p53 in chronic lymphocytic leukemia
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Balatti, Veronica, Rizzotto, Lara, Miller, Cecelia, Palamarchuk, Alexey, Fadda, Paolo, Pandolfo, Rosantony, Rassenti, Laura Z, Hertlein, Erin, Ruppert, Amy S, Lozanski, Arletta, Lozanski, Gerard, Kipps, Thomas J, Byrd, John C, Croce, Carlo M, and Pekarsky, Yuri
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Leukemia ,Lymphoma ,B-Cell ,Hematology ,Lymphocytic ,MicroRNAs ,Rare Diseases ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Genetics ,Humans ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Chronic ,Aetiology ,17p deletions ,miR-3676 ,Gene Deletion ,CLL ,Cancer ,Biotechnology - Abstract
B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common human leukemia and dysregulation of the T-cell leukemia/lymphoma 1 (TCL1) oncogene is a contributing event in the pathogenesis of the aggressive form of this disease based on transgenic mouse studies. To determine a role of microRNAs on the pathogenesis of the aggressive form of CLL we studied regulation of TCL1 expression in CLL by microRNAs. We identified miR-3676 as a regulator of TCL1 expression. We demonstrated that miR-3676 targets three consecutive 28-bp repeats within 3'UTR of TCL1 and showed that miR-3676 is a powerful inhibitor of TCL1. We further showed that miR-3676 expression is significantly down-regulated in four groups of CLL carrying the 11q deletions, 13q deletions, 17p deletions, or a normal karyotype compared with normal CD19(+) cord blood and peripheral blood B cells. In addition, the sequencing of 539 CLL samples revealed five germ-line mutations in six samples (1%) in miR-3676. Two of these mutations were loss-of-function mutations. Because miR-3676 is located at 17p13, only 500-kb centromeric of tumor protein p53 (Tp53), and is codeleted with Tp53, we propose that loss of miR-3676 causes high levels of TCL1 expression contributing to CLL progression.
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- 2015
7. Evidence for the Role of the WW Domain-Containing Oxidoreductase in Lipoprotein Metabolism: Potential Implications for HDL Biogenesis
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Iatan, Iulia, Bailey, Dana, Hafiane, Anouar, Zanesi, Nicola, Taccioli, Cristian, Abu Odeh Mohammad, Pajukanta, Paeivi, Croce Carlo, M, Aqeilan Rami, I, Krimbou, Larbi, and Genest, Jacques
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- 2010
8. Deficiency of the WW Domain-Containing Oxidoreductase (WWOX) Impairs the HDL Biogenesis Pathway
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Iatan, Iulia, Bailey, Dana, Hafiane, Anouar, Zanesi, Nicola, Taccioli, Cristian, Abu, Ode, Mohammad, Pajukanta, Paivi, Croce Carlo, M, Aqeilan Rami, I, Krimbou, Larbi, and Genest, Jacques
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- 2009
9. Integrated MicroRNA and mRNA Signatures Associated with Survival in Triple Negative Breast Cancer
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Robert, Lafrenie, Luciano, Cascione, Pierluigi, Gasparini, Francesca, Lovat, Stefania, Carasi, Alfredo, Pulvirenti, Alfredo, Ferro, Hansjuerg, Alder, Gang, He, Vecchione, Andrea, Croce, Carlo M., Shapiro, Charles L., and Huebner, Kay
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Receptor, ErbB-2 ,lcsh:Medicine ,Bioinformatics ,Biochemistry ,Metastasis ,RNA interference ,Molecular cell biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Basic Cancer Research ,Breast Tumors ,Gene expression ,Breast ,lcsh:Science ,Triple-negative breast cancer ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,microRNA ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Systems Biology ,Signatures ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Middle Aged ,Phenotype ,3. Good health ,Survival Rate ,Nucleic acids ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Receptors, Estrogen ,Oncology ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Medicine ,Female ,Epigenetics ,Receptors, Progesterone ,Research Article ,Adult ,Triple Negative Breast Cancer ,mRNA ,Biophysics ,Breast Neoplasms ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,survival ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast Cancer ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Survival rate ,030304 developmental biology ,Gene Expression Profiling ,lcsh:R ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Gene expression profiling ,MicroRNAs ,Cancer research ,RNA ,lcsh:Q ,Neoplasm Grading ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local - Abstract
Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogeneous disease at the molecular, pathologic and clinical levels. To stratify TNBCs, we determined microRNA (miRNA) expression profiles, as well as expression profiles of a cancer-focused mRNA panel, in tumor, adjacent non-tumor (normal) and lymph node metastatic lesion (mets) tissues, from 173 women with TNBCs; we linked specific miRNA signatures to patient survival and used miRNA/mRNA anti-correlations to identify clinically and genetically different TNBC subclasses. We also assessed miRNA signatures as potential regulators of TNBC subclass-specific gene expression networks defined by expression of canonical signal pathways. Tissue specific miRNAs and mRNAs were identified for normal vs tumor vs mets comparisons. miRNA signatures correlated with prognosis were identified and predicted anti-correlated targets within the mRNA profile were defined. Two miRNA signatures (miR-16, 155, 125b, 374a and miR-16, 125b, 374a, 374b, 421, 655, 497) predictive of overall survival (P = 0.05) and distant-disease free survival (P = 0.009), respectively, were identified for patients 50 yrs of age or younger. By multivariate analysis the risk signatures were independent predictors for overall survival and distant-disease free survival. mRNA expression profiling, using the cancer-focused mRNA panel, resulted in clustering of TNBCs into 4 molecular subclasses with different expression signatures anti-correlated with the prognostic miRNAs. Our findings suggest that miRNAs play a key role in triple negative breast cancer through their ability to regulate fundamental pathways such as: cellular growth and proliferation, cellular movement and migration, Extra Cellular Matrix degradation. The results define miRNA expression signatures that characterize and contribute to the phenotypic diversity of TNBC and its metastasis.
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- 2013
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10. A model for the study of human chromosomes associated with malignancy
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Croce, Carlo M. and Koprowski, Hilary
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- 1977
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11. A novel fully human anti-NCL immunoRNase for triple-negative breast cancer therapy
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Francesco Salvatore, Claudia De Lorenzo, Dario Palmieri, Cindy James, Sara L. Cole, Chiara D'Avino, Ashley Braddom, Carlo M. Croce, Nicola Zanesi, D'Avino, Chiara, Palmieri, Dario, Braddom, Ashley, Zanesi, Nicola, James, Cindy, Cole, Sara, Salvatore, Francesco, Croce, Carlo M., and DE LORENZO, Claudia
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Apoptosis ,Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms ,human RNase ,03 medical and health sciences ,Extracellular Vesicles ,Mice ,Breast cancer ,nucleolin ,Cancer immunotherapy ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Triple-negative breast cancer ,Cell Proliferation ,cancer immunotherapy ,microRNA ,business.industry ,Cancer ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Immunotherapy ,Ribonuclease, Pancreatic ,medicine.disease ,Phosphoproteins ,Molecular medicine ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,MicroRNAs ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,triple negative breast cancer ,Cancer cell ,Immunology ,Cancer research ,Female ,business ,Nucleolin ,Single-Chain Antibodies ,Research Paper - Abstract
// Chiara D’Avino 1, 2 , Dario Palmieri 3 , Ashley Braddom 3 , Nicola Zanesi 3 , Cindy James 4 , Sara Cole 5 , Francesco Salvatore 2 , Carlo M. Croce 3 , Claudia De Lorenzo 1, 2 1 Department of Molecular Medicine and Medical Biotechnology, University of Naples “Federico II”, 80131 Naples, Italy 2 Ceinge Advanced Biotechnology S.C.ar.l., 80145 Naples, Italy 3 Department of Molecular Virology, Immunology and Medical Genetics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, 43210 Ohio, USA 4 Department of Mass Spectroscopy and Proteomics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, 43210 Ohio, USA 5 Campus Microscopy and Imaging Facility, The Ohio State University, Columbus, 43210 Ohio, USA Correspondence to: Carlo M. Croce, email: carlo.croce@osumc.edu Claudia De Lorenzo, email: cladelor@unina.it Keywords: triple negative breast cancer, cancer immunotherapy, nucleolin, human RNase, microRNA Received: June 16, 2016 Accepted: October 10, 2016 Published: November 23, 2016 ABSTRACT Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide. A new promising anti-cancer therapy involves the use of monoclonal antibodies specific for target tumor-associated antigens (TAAs). A TAA of interest for immunotherapy of Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) is nucleolin (NCL), a multifunctional protein, selectively expressed on the surface of cancer cells, which regulates the biogenesis of specific microRNAs (miRNAs) involved in tumor development and drug-resistance. We previously isolated a novel human anti-NCL scFv, called 4LB5, that is endowed with selective anti-tumor effects. Here we report the construction and characterization of a novel immunoRNase constituted by 4LB5 and a human pancreatic RNase (HP-RNase) called “4LB5-HP-RNase”. This immunoRNase retains both the enzymatic activity of human pancreatic RNase and the specific binding of the parental scFv to a panel of surface NCL-positive breast cancer cells. Notably, 4LB5-HP-RNase dramatically and selectively reduced the viability and proliferation of NCL-positive tumor cells in vitro and in vivo . Specifically, it induced apoptosis and reduced the levels of the tumorigenic miRNAs miR-21, -221 and -222. Thus, this novel immunoagent could be a valuable tool for the treatment of TNBC patients ineligible for currently available targeted treatments.
- Published
- 2016
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