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All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype

Hutchinson Gilford progeria syndrome is a fatal disorder characterized by accelerated aging, bone resorption and atherosclerosis, caused by a LMNA mutation which produces progerin, a mutant lamin A precursor. Progeria cells display progerin and prelamin A nuclear accumulation, altered histone methyl...

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Autores principales: Pellegrini, Camilla, Columbaro, Marta, Capanni, Cristina, D'Apice, Maria Rosaria, Cavallo, Carola, Murdocca, Michela, Lattanzi, Giovanna, Squarzoni, Stefano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4745772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26359359
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author Pellegrini, Camilla
Columbaro, Marta
Capanni, Cristina
D'Apice, Maria Rosaria
Cavallo, Carola
Murdocca, Michela
Lattanzi, Giovanna
Squarzoni, Stefano
author_facet Pellegrini, Camilla
Columbaro, Marta
Capanni, Cristina
D'Apice, Maria Rosaria
Cavallo, Carola
Murdocca, Michela
Lattanzi, Giovanna
Squarzoni, Stefano
author_sort Pellegrini, Camilla
collection PubMed
description Hutchinson Gilford progeria syndrome is a fatal disorder characterized by accelerated aging, bone resorption and atherosclerosis, caused by a LMNA mutation which produces progerin, a mutant lamin A precursor. Progeria cells display progerin and prelamin A nuclear accumulation, altered histone methylation pattern, heterochromatin loss, increased DNA damage and cell cycle alterations. Since the LMNA promoter contains a retinoic acid responsive element, we investigated if all-trans retinoic acid administration could lower progerin levels in cultured fibroblasts. We also evaluated the effect of associating rapamycin, which induces autophagic degradation of progerin and prelamin A. We demonstrate that all-trans retinoic acid acts synergistically with low-dosage rapamycin reducing progerin and prelamin A, via transcriptional downregulation associated with protein degradation, and increasing the lamin A to progerin ratio. These effects rescue cell dynamics and cellular proliferation through recovery of DNA damage response factor PARP1 and chromatin-associated nuclear envelope proteins LAP2α and BAF. The combined all-trans retinoic acid-rapamycin treatment is dramatically efficient, highly reproducible, represents a promising new approach in Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria therapy and deserves investigation in ageing-associated disorders.
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spelling pubmed-47457722016-02-23 All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype Pellegrini, Camilla Columbaro, Marta Capanni, Cristina D'Apice, Maria Rosaria Cavallo, Carola Murdocca, Michela Lattanzi, Giovanna Squarzoni, Stefano Oncotarget Research Paper Hutchinson Gilford progeria syndrome is a fatal disorder characterized by accelerated aging, bone resorption and atherosclerosis, caused by a LMNA mutation which produces progerin, a mutant lamin A precursor. Progeria cells display progerin and prelamin A nuclear accumulation, altered histone methylation pattern, heterochromatin loss, increased DNA damage and cell cycle alterations. Since the LMNA promoter contains a retinoic acid responsive element, we investigated if all-trans retinoic acid administration could lower progerin levels in cultured fibroblasts. We also evaluated the effect of associating rapamycin, which induces autophagic degradation of progerin and prelamin A. We demonstrate that all-trans retinoic acid acts synergistically with low-dosage rapamycin reducing progerin and prelamin A, via transcriptional downregulation associated with protein degradation, and increasing the lamin A to progerin ratio. These effects rescue cell dynamics and cellular proliferation through recovery of DNA damage response factor PARP1 and chromatin-associated nuclear envelope proteins LAP2α and BAF. The combined all-trans retinoic acid-rapamycin treatment is dramatically efficient, highly reproducible, represents a promising new approach in Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria therapy and deserves investigation in ageing-associated disorders. Impact Journals LLC 2015-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4745772/ /pubmed/26359359 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Pellegrini et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Pellegrini, Camilla
Columbaro, Marta
Capanni, Cristina
D'Apice, Maria Rosaria
Cavallo, Carola
Murdocca, Michela
Lattanzi, Giovanna
Squarzoni, Stefano
All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
title All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
title_full All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
title_fullStr All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
title_full_unstemmed All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
title_short All-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize Hutchinson Gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
title_sort all-trans retinoic acid and rapamycin normalize hutchinson gilford progeria fibroblast phenotype
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4745772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26359359
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