7 results on '"Giacomo Diedenhofen"'
Search Results
2. Reduced replication fork speed promotes pancreatic endocrine differentiation and controls graft size
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Lina Sui, Yurong Xin, Qian Du, Daniela Georgieva, Giacomo Diedenhofen, Leena Haataja, Qi Su, Michael V. Zuccaro, Jinrang Kim, Jiayu Fu, Yuan Xing, Yi He, Danielle Baum, Robin S. Goland, Yong Wang, Jose Oberholzer, Fabrizio Barbetti, Peter Arvan, Sandra Kleiner, and Dieter Egli
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Cell biology ,Stem cells ,Medicine - Abstract
Limitations in cell proliferation are important for normal function of differentiated tissues and essential for the safety of cell replacement products made from pluripotent stem cells, which have unlimited proliferative potential. To evaluate whether these limitations can be established pharmacologically, we exposed pancreatic progenitors differentiating from human pluripotent stem cells to small molecules that interfere with cell cycle progression either by inducing G1 arrest or by impairing S phase entry or S phase completion and determined growth potential, differentiation, and function of insulin-producing endocrine cells. We found that the combination of G1 arrest with a compromised ability to complete DNA replication promoted the differentiation of pancreatic progenitor cells toward insulin-producing cells and could substitute for endocrine differentiation factors. Reduced replication fork speed during differentiation improved the stability of insulin expression, and the resulting cells protected mice from diabetes without the formation of cystic growths. The proliferative potential of grafts was proportional to the reduction of replication fork speed during pancreatic differentiation. Therefore, a compromised ability to enter and complete S phase is a functionally important property of pancreatic endocrine differentiation, can be achieved by reducing replication fork speed, and is an important determinant of cell-intrinsic limitations of growth.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reduced replication fork speed promotes pancreatic endocrine differentiation and controls graft size
- Author
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Yuan Xing, Jinrang Kim, Lina Sui, Michael V. Zuccaro, Yurong Xin, Sandra Kleiner, Jose Oberholzer, Fabrizio Barbetti, Yi He, Leena Haataja, Danielle Baum, Daniela Georgieva, Jiayu Fu, Giacomo Diedenhofen, Qian Du, Dieter Egli, Yong Wang, Robin Goland, Peter Arvan, and Qi Su
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0301 basic medicine ,DNA Replication ,Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Cell biology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Transplants ,Enteroendocrine cell ,Stem cells ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Islets of Langerhans ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Settore MED/13 ,Aphidicolin ,Insulin-Secreting Cells ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Endocrine system ,Animals ,Humans ,Insulin ,Progenitor cell ,Induced pluripotent stem cell ,Pancreas ,Cell Proliferation ,Cell Cycle ,DNA replication ,Beta cells ,Stem cell transplantation ,Cell Differentiation ,General Medicine ,Cell cycle ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Medicine ,Stem cell ,Research Article - Abstract
Limitations in cell proliferation are important for normal function of differentiated tissues and essential for the safety of cell replacement products made from pluripotent stem cells, which have unlimited proliferative potential. To evaluate whether these limitations can be established pharmacologically, we exposed pancreatic progenitors differentiating from human pluripotent stem cells to small molecules that interfere with cell cycle progression either by inducing G1 arrest or by impairing S phase entry or S phase completion and determined growth potential, differentiation, and function of insulin-producing endocrine cells. We found that the combination of G1 arrest with a compromised ability to complete DNA replication promoted the differentiation of pancreatic progenitor cells toward insulin-producing cells and could substitute for endocrine differentiation factors. Reduced replication fork speed during differentiation improved the stability of insulin expression, and the resulting cells protected mice from diabetes without the formation of cystic growths. The proliferative potential of grafts was proportional to the reduction of replication fork speed during pancreatic differentiation. Therefore, a compromised ability to enter and complete S phase is a functionally important property of pancreatic endocrine differentiation, can be achieved by reducing replication fork speed, and is an important determinant of cell-intrinsic limitations of growth.
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- 2021
4. Differences between Transient Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus Subtypes can Guide Diagnosis and Therapy
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Riccardo Bonfanti, Dario Iafusco, Ivana Rabbone, Giacomo Diedenhofen, Carla Bizzarri, Patrizia Ippolita Patera, Petra Reinstadler, Francesco Costantino, Valeria Calcaterra, Lorenzo Iughetti, Silvia Savastio, Anna Favia, Francesca Cardella, Donatella Lo Presti, Ylenia Girtler, Sarah Rabbiosi, Giuseppe D’Annunzio, Angela Zanfardino, Alessia Piscopo, Francesca Casaburo, Letizia Pintomalli, Lucia Russo, Valeria Grasso, Nicola Minuto, Mafalda Mucciolo, Antonio Novelli, Antonella Marucci, Barbara Piccini, Sonia Toni, Francesca Silvestri, Paola Carrera, Andrea Rigamonti, Giulio Frontino, Michela Trada, Davide Tinti, Maurizio Delvecchio, Novella Rapini, Riccardo Schiaffini, Corrado Mammì, Fabrizio Barbetti, Monica Aloe, Simona Amadeo, Claudia Arnaldi, Marta Bassi, Luciano Beccaria, Marzia Benelli, Giulia Maria Berioloi, Enrica Bertelli, Martina Biagioni, Adriana Bobbio, Stefano Boccato, Oriana Bologna, Franco Bontempi, Clara Bonura, Giulia Bracciolini, Claudia Brufani, Patrizia Bruzzi, Pietro Buono, Roberta Cardani, Giuliana Cardinale, Alberto Casertano, Maria Cristina Castiglione, Vittoria Cauvin, Valentino Cherubini, Franco Chiarelli, Giovanni Chiari, Stefano Cianfarani, Dante Cirillo, Felice Citriniti, Susanna Coccioli, Anna Cogliardi, Santino Confetto, Giovanna Contreas, Anna Corò, Elisa Corsini, Nicoletta Cresta, Fiorella De Berardinis, Valeria De Donno, Giampaolo De Filippo, Rosaria De Marco, Annalisa Deodati, Elena Faleschini, Valentina Fattorusso, Valeria Favalli, Barbara Felappi, Lucia Ferrito, Graziella Fichera, Franco Fontana, Elena Fornari, Roberto Franceschi, Francesca Franco, Adriana Franzese, Anna Paola Frongia, Alberto Gaiero, Francesco Gallo, Luigi Gargantini, Elisa Giani, Chiara Giorgetti, Giulia Bianchi, Vanna Graziani, Antonella Gualtieri, Monica Guasti, Gennaro Iannicelli, Antonio Iannilli, Ignaccolo Giovanna, Dario Ingletto, Stefania Innaurato, Elena Inzaghi, Brunella Iovane, Peter Kaufmann, Alfonso La Loggia, Rosa Lapolla, Anna Lasagni, Nicola Lazzaro, Lorenzo Lenzi, Riccardo Lera, Gabriella Levantini, Fortunato Lombardo, Antonella Lonero, Silvia Longhi, Sonia Lucchesi, Lucia Paola Guerraggio, Sergio Lucieri, Patrizia Macellaro, Claudio Maffeis, Bendetta Mainetti, Giulio Maltoni, Chiara Mameli, Francesco Mammì, Maria Luisa Manca-Bitti, Melania Manco, Monica Marino, Matteo Mariano, Marco Marigliano, Alberto Marsciani, Costanzo Mastrangelo, Maria Cristina Matteoli, Elena Mazzali, Franco Meschi, Antonella MIgliaccio, Anita Morandi, Gianfranco Morganti, Enza Mozzillo, Gianluca Musolino, Rosa Nugnes, Federica Ortolani, Daniela Pardi, Filomena Pascarella, Stefano Passanisi, Annalisa Pedini, Cristina Pennati, Angelo Perrotta, Sonia Peruzzi, Paola Peverelli, Giulia Pezzino, Anita Claudia Piona, Gavina Piredda, Carmelo Pistone, Elena Prandi, Barbara Pedieri, Procolo Di Bonito, Anna Pulcina, Maria Quinci, Emioli Randazzo, Rossella Ricciardi, Carlo Ripoli, Rosanna Roppolo, Irene Rutigliano, Alberto Sabbio, Silvana salardi, Alessandro Salvatoni, Anna Saporiti, Rita Sardi, Mariapiera Scanu, Andrea Scaramuzza, Eleonardo Schiven, Andrea Secco, Linda Sessa, Paola Sogno Valin, Silvia Sordelli, Luisa Spallino, Stefano Stagi, Filomena Stamati, Tosca Suprani, Valentina Talarico, Tiziana Timapanaro, Antonella Tirendi, Letizia Tomaselli, Gianluca Tornese, Adolfo Andrea Trettene, Stefano Tumini, Giuliana Valerio, Claudia Ventrici, Matteo Viscardi, Silvana Zaffani, Maria Zampolli, Giorgio Zanette, Clara Zecchino, Maria Antonietta Zedda, Silvia Zonca, Stefano Zucchini, Bonfanti, R., Iafusco, D., Rabbone, I., Diedenhofen, G., Bizzarri, C., Patera, P. I., Reinstadler, P., Costantino, F., Calcaterra, V., Iughetti, L., Savastio, S., Favia, A., Cardella, F., Presti, D. L., Girtler, Y., Rabbiosi, S., D'Annunzio, G., Zanfardino, A., Piscopo, A., Casaburo, F., Pintomalli, L., Russo, L., Grasso, V., Minuto, N., Mucciolo, M., Novelli, A., Marucci, A., Piccini, B., Toni, S., Silvestri, F., Carrera, P., Rigamonti, A., Frontino, G., Trada, M., Tinti, D., Delvecchio, M., Rapini, N., Schiaffini, R., Mammi, C., and Barbetti, F.
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Proband ,Male ,Pediatrics ,Potassium Channels ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Datasets as Topic ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Diagnostic Techniques, Endocrine ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant, Newborn ,Italy ,Mutation ,Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying ,Remission Induction ,Retrospective Studies ,Sulfonylurea Receptors ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Infant, Newborn, Diseases ,Diseases ,Gastroenterology ,Diabetes mellitus genetics ,Endocrinology ,Settore MED/13 ,Retrospective Studie ,Diagnosis ,Medicine ,Endocrine pancreas, Transient Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus, 6q24 TNDM, KATP TNDM, Sulfonylureas ,Sulfonylureas ,Sulfonylurea Receptor ,biology ,Diabetes Mellitu ,General Medicine ,Metformin ,Inwardly Rectifying ,Settore MED/03 ,6q24 TNDM ,medicine.symptom ,Endocrine ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug ,Human ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,KATP TNDM ,ABCC8 ,Transient Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Macroglossia ,Endocrine pancreas ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Newborn ,Diagnostic Techniques ,Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus ,Differential ,biology.protein ,Sulfonylurea receptor ,business - Abstract
Objective Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus (TNDM) is caused by activating mutations in ABCC8 and KCNJ11 genes (KATP/TNDM) or by chromosome 6q24 abnormalities (6q24/TNDM). We wanted to assess whether these different genetic aetiologies result in distinct clinical features. Design Retrospective analysis of the Italian data set of patients with TNDM. Methods Clinical features and treatment of 22 KATP/TNDM patients and 12 6q24/TNDM patients were compared. Results Fourteen KATP/TNDM probands had a carrier parent with abnormal glucose values, four patients with 6q24 showed macroglossia and/or umbilical hernia. Median age at diabetes onset and birth weight were lower in patients with 6q24 (1 week; −2.27 SD) than those with KATP mutations (4.0 weeks; −1.04 SD) (P = 0.009 and P = 0.007, respectively). Median time to remission was longer in KATP/TNDM than 6q24/TNDM (21.5 weeks vs 12 weeks) (P = 0.002). Two KATP/TNDM patients entered diabetes remission without pharmacological therapy. A proband with the ABCC8/L225P variant previously associated with permanent neonatal diabetes entered 7-year long remission after 1 year of sulfonylurea therapy. Seven diabetic individuals with KATP mutations were successfully treated with sulfonylurea monotherapy; four cases with relapsing 6q24/TNDM were treated with insulin, metformin or combination therapy. Conclusions If TNDM is suspected, KATP genes should be analyzed first with the exception of patients with macroglossia and/or umbilical hernia. Remission of diabetes without pharmacological therapy should not preclude genetic analysis. Early treatment with sulfonylurea may induce long-lasting remission of diabetes in patients with KATP mutations associated with PNDM. Adult patients carrying KATP/TNDM mutations respond favourably to sulfonylurea monotherapy.
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- 2021
5. Human osteogenic differentiation in Space: proteomic and epigenetic clues to better understand osteoporosis
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Gabriele Mascetti, Mauro Maccarrone, Cristina Ruggiero, Giacomo Diedenhofen, Giulia Merlini, Michele Balsamo, Giovanni Valentini, Natalia Battista, Monica Bari, Sara Piccirillo, and Alessandra Gambacurta
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Proteomics ,0301 basic medicine ,Homeobox protein NANOG ,Proteome ,Cellular differentiation ,lcsh:Medicine ,osteogenic differentiation ,Biology ,Article ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,SOX2 ,Osteogenesis ,microgravity ,stem cells ,epigenetic modification ,SOXF Transcription Factors ,Humans ,Cell Lineage ,Epigenetics ,lcsh:Science ,Transcription factor ,Sirolimus ,Otx Transcription Factors ,Multidisciplinary ,Weightlessness ,Settore BIO/11 ,lcsh:R ,Cell Differentiation ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Diagnostic markers ,osteoporosis ,GATA4 Transcription Factor ,Cell biology ,epigenetic modification, osteoporosis, stem cell ,RUNX2 ,stem cell ,030104 developmental biology ,Aerospace Medicine ,H3K4me3 ,lcsh:Q ,Snail Family Transcription Factors ,Reprogramming ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In the frame of the VITA mission of the Italian Space Agency (ASI), we addressed the problem of Space osteoporosis by using human blood-derived stem cells (BDSCs) as a suitable osteogenic differentiation model. In particular, we investigated proteomic and epigenetic changes in BDSCs during osteoblastic differentiation induced by rapamycin under microgravity conditions. A decrease in the expression of 4 embryonic markers (Sox2, Oct3/4, Nanog and E-cadherin) was found to occur to a larger extent on board the ISS than on Earth, along with an earlier activation of the differentiation process towards the osteogenic lineage. The changes in the expression of 4 transcription factors (Otx2, Snail, GATA4 and Sox17) engaged in osteogenesis supported these findings. We then ascertained whether osteogenic differentiation of BDSCs could depend on epigenetic regulation, and interrogated changes of histone H3 that is crucial in this type of gene control. Indeed, we found that H3K4me3, H3K27me2/3, H3K79me2/3 and H3K9me2/3 residues are engaged in cellular reprogramming that drives gene expression. Overall, we suggest that rapamycin induces transcriptional activation of BDSCs towards osteogenic differentiation, through increased GATA4 and Sox17 that modulate downstream transcription factors (like Runx2), critical for bone formation. Additional studies are warranted to ascertain the possible exploitation of these data to identify new biomarkers and therapeutic targets to treat osteoporosis, not only in Space but also on Earth.
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- 2019
6. Rapid Rapamycin-Only Induced Osteogenic Differentiation of Blood-Derived Stem Cells and Their Adhesion to Natural and Artificial Scaffolds
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Arianna, Carpentieri, primary, Eliana, Cozzoli, additional, Flavio, Acri, additional, Marco, Ranalli, additional, Giacomo, Diedenhofen, additional, Manuel, Scimeca, additional, Elena, Bonanno, additional, and Alessandra, Gambacurta, additional
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- 2017
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7. Back on Track: New Perspectives on Cancer Cell Reprogramming
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Arianna, Carpentieri, primary, Giacomo, Diedenhofen, additional, and Alessandra, Gambacurta, additional
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- 2016
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