Romidepsin (FK228) fails in counteracting the transformed phenotype of rhabdomyosarcoma cells but efficiently radiosensitizes, in vitro and in vivo, the alveolar phenotype subtype
Alessandra Rossetti, Francesco Petragnano, Luisa Milazzo, Francesca Vulcano, Giampiero Macioce, Silvia Codenotti, Matteo Cassandri, Silvia Pomella, Francesca Cicchetti, Irene Fasciani, Cristina Antinozzi, Luigi Di Luigi, Claudio Festuccia, Francesca De Felice, Massimo Vergine, Alessandro Fanzani, Rossella Rota, Roberto Maggio, Antonella Polimeni, Vincenzo Tombolini, Giovanni Luca Gravina & Francesco Marampon
To cite this article: Alessandra Rossetti, Francesco Petragnano, Luisa Milazzo, Francesca Vulcano, Giampiero Macioce, Silvia Codenotti, Matteo Cassandri, Silvia Pomella, Francesca Cicchetti, Irene Fasciani, Cristina Antinozzi, Luigi Di Luigi, Claudio Festuccia, Francesca De Felice, Massimo Vergine, Alessandro Fanzani, Rossella Rota, Roberto Maggio, Antonella Polimeni, Vincenzo Tombolini, Giovanni Luca Gravina & Francesco Marampon (2021) Romidepsin (FK228) fails in counteracting the transformed phenotype of rhabdomyosarcoma cells but efficiently radiosensitizes, in vitro and in vivo, the alveolar phenotype subtype, International Journal of Radiation Biology, 97:7, 943-957, DOI: 10.1080/09553002.2021.1928786
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2021.1928786
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INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 2021, VOL. 97, NO. 7, 943–957
https://doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2021.1928786
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Romidepsin (FK228) fails in counteracting the transformed phenotype of rhabdomyosarcoma cells but efficiently radiosensitizes, in vitro and in vivo, the alveolar phenotype subtype
Alessandra Rossettiaω, Francesco Petragnanoaω, Luisa Milazzob, Francesca Vulcanob, Giampiero Macioceb, Silvia Codenottic, Matteo Cassandrid, Silvia Pomellad, Francesca Cicchettie, Irene Fasciania, Cristina Antinozzif, Luigi Di Luigif , Claudio Festucciaa, Francesca De Feliceg, Massimo Vergineh, Alessandro Fanzanic,
Rossella Rotad, Roberto Maggioa, Antonella Polimenii, Vincenzo Tombolinig, Giovanni Luca Gravinaaω, and
Francesco Marampongω
aDepartment of Biotechnological and Applied Clinical Sciences, University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy; bDepartment of Oncology and Molecular Medicine, Istituto Superiore di Sanit`a, Rome, Italy; cDivision of Biotechnology, Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy; dGroup of Epigenetics of Pediatric Sarcomas, Department of Oncohematology, Bambino Gesu` Children’s Hospital, IRCCS, Rome, Italy; ePoliclinico Umberto I Hospital, Roma, Italy; fUnit of Endocrinology, Department of Movement, Human and Health Sciences, University of Rome “Foro Italico”, Rome, Italy; gDepartment of Radiotherapy, Policlinico Umberto I, “Sapienza” University of Rome, Rome, Italy; hDepartment of Surgical Sciences, “Sapienza” University of Rome, Rome, Italy; iDepartment of Oral and Maxillo-Facial Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy
ABSTRACT
Purpose: Herein we describe the in vitro and in vivo activity of FK228 (Romidepsin), an inhibitor of class I HDACs, in counteracting and radiosensitizing embryonal (ERMS, fusion-negative) and alveolar (ARMS, fusion-positive) rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS).
Methods: RH30 (ARMS, fusion-positive) and RD (ERMS, fusion-negative) cell lines and human mul- tipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (HMSC) were used. Flow cytometry analysis, RT-qPCR, western blotting and enzymatic assays were performed. Irradiation was delivered by using an x-6 MV pho- ton linear accelerator. FK228 (1.2 mg/kg) in vivo activity, combined or not with radiation therapy (2 Gy), was assessed in murine xenografts.
Results: Compared to HMSC, RMS expressed low levels of class I HDACs. In vitro, FK228, as single agents, reversibly downregulated class I HDACs expression and activity and induced oxidative stress, DNA damage and a concomitant growth arrest associated with PARP-1-mediated transient non-apoptotic cell death. Surviving cells upregulated the expression of cyclin A, B, D1, p27, Myc and activated PI3K/Akt/mTOR and MAPK signaling, known to be differently involved in cancer che- moresistance. Interestingly, while no radiosensitizing effects were detected, in vitro or in vivo, on RD cells, FK228 markedly radiosensitized RH30 cells by impairing antioxidant and DSBs repair path- ways in vitro. Further, FK228 when combined with RT in vivo significantly reduced tumor mass in mouse RH30 xenografts.
Conclusion: FK228 did not show antitumor activity as a single agent whilst its combination with RT resulted in radiosensitization of fusion-positive RMS cells, thus representing a possible strategy for the treatment of the most aggressive RMS subtype.
ARTICLE HISTORY
Received 26 January 2021
Revised 13 April 2021
Accepted 5 May 2021
KEYWORDS
Rhabdomyosarcoma; radio- therapy; FK228; romidepsin; radioresistance
⦁ Introduction
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is a malignant soft tissue sar- coma occurring preferentially in children and adolescents (Skapek et al. 2019). Standard treatment for localized and locally advanced RMS requires the combination of surgery, radiotherapy (RT) and chemotherapy (CHT) (Bradley et al. 2019). Particularly, RT plays a critical role for local control (Kaushal and Citrin 2008; Zhao et al. 2016) even though it fails in improving RMS patient overall survival (Kaushal and Citrin 2008; Zhao et al. 2016). Furthermore, recent
preclinical evidence indicates that RT could promote the formation of distant metastases due to the emergence of RT-resistant cell populations (Woods et al. 2015; Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Camero, et al. 2020). Thus, new therapeutic strategies urgently need to radiosensitize RMS.
RMS is derived from mesenchymal precursors and
includes two major histological subtypes, ‘alveolar’ and ‘embryonal’ RMSThe alveolar RMS (ARMS) frequently expresses PAX3- or PAX7-FOXO1 ‘fusion proteins’ (fusion- positive, FP), which are oncogenic transcription factors
CONTACT Francesco Marampon [email protected] Department of Radiotherapy, Policlinico Umberto I, “Sapienza” University of Rome, Rome, Italy; Giovanni Luca Gravina [email protected] Department of Biotechnological and Applied Clinical Sciences, University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy
*Equal contribution.
Copyright © 2021 Taylor & Francis Group LLC.
944 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
needed for RMS cell survival. The embryonal RMS (ERMS) are devoid of any fusion gene (fusion-negative, FN) but are characterized by various mutations and genomic aberrations converging on a limited number of pathways (Skapek et al. 2019). Interestingly, deregulated signals in ERMS are also perturbed in ARMS, suggesting that some molecular mecha- nisms commonly drive ERMS and ARMS (Skapek et al. 2019). Particularly, the relatively low mutational frequency in both variants, as reported for pediatric cancers in general (Grobner et al. 2018), suggests that an aberrant epigenetic regulation could be critical for the onset and progression of RMS (Pal et al. 2019; Skapek et al. 2019).
Acetylation of nucleosomal histones is a tightly controlled epigenetic mechanism orchestrated by acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases (HDACs) that, respectively, switch between a transcriptional permissive or repressive chromatin structure (Eberharter and Becker 2002). Thus, starting from the evidence that the deregulated expression and/or activity of HDACs have been involved in the devel- opment and progression of several tumors (Mirabella et al. 2016), including RMS (Skapek et al. 2019), several HDACs inhibitors (HDACi) have been successfully tested in the pre- clinical setting (Hedrick et al. 2015; Vleeshouwer-Neumann et al. 2015; Li and Seto 2016; Bharathy et al. 2019; Kurmasheva et al. 2019; Marampon, Di Nisio, et al. 2019). However, whether HDACi are successfully used as single agents for hematological malignancies (Wang et al. 2020), they failed in the treatment of patients with solid tumors (Lee et al. 2012). On the other hand, increasing evidence shows that combining HDACs synergistically improves the therapeutic efficiency of other anticancer therapies (Hontecillas-Prieto et al. 2020) including RT (Groselj et al. 2013). We have recently demonstrated that PXD-101 (Belinostat), a pan-HDACi, radiosensitizes pre-clinical mod- els of RMS (Marampon, Di Nisio, et al. 2019). However, due to the pan-HDACi toxicity, class- or isoform-selective HDACi should be preferred in a clinical setting to reduce side effects, especially when used in combination with other treatments (Guha 2015).
Deregulation of class I HDACs, which includes HDAC1, HDAC2, HDAC3 and HDAC8, has been related to the onset and progression of several tumor types (Zhang et al. 2020), including RMS (Gryder et al. 2019). However, entinostat, a HDACi targeting the class I (Xu et al. 2007) and IV (Buglio et al. 2011), has provided a modest antitumor activity both in ARMS and ERMS pre-clinical models, alone or in com- bination with other cytotoxic agents usually used in RMS clinical setting (Bharathy et al. 2019; Kurmasheva et al. 2019). The reasons for this inefficiency are largely unknown and could be related to the poor selectivity of this drug. In fact, if the oncogenic potential of HDACs class I is now established, class IV has been shown to have also an antitu- mor potential (Leslie et al. 2019) and its inhibition could be responsible for the restrained therapeutic efficacy of the drug.
In the present study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of romidepsin (FK228), a potent class I–selective HDACi (Furumai et al. 2002), alone or in combination with
RT, on RMS cells in vitro and in vivo. Herein, by using RH30 (ARMS) and RD (ERMS) cell lines, the most repre- sentative cell lines in RMS (Hinson et al. 2013), we show that FK228 alone failed in counteracting the transformed phenotype of RMS cell lines but it successfully radiosensi- tized RH30 cells by impairing their antioxidant and DNA- repair abilities.
⦁ Materials and methods
⦁ Cell lines, pharmacological and radiation treatment, growth and clonogenic assay, class I HDACs activity
RD (ERMS) and RH30 (AMRS) human cell lines were pur- chased American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA). Human multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (HMSC) were isolated from Wharton’s jelly of the umbilical cord (WJMSC), as already described (Vulcano et al. 2016). Cells were maintained as already described (Ciccarelli et al. 2016). GenePrint 10 System (Promega Corporation, Madison, WI, USA) was used to authenticate cell cultures by comparing the DNA profile of our cell cultures with those found in GenBank. Romidepsin (FK228, Depsipeptide) was purchased from Selleckchem.com (Houston, TX, USA) (Gravina et al. 2015). Trypan blue (Thermofisher) exclusion was used to assess cell viability. Countess II Automated Cell Counter (ThermoFisher Scientific, Waltham, MA) was used to assess the number of the cells. SigmaPlot (Systat Software, Inc, San Jose, CA, USA) software was used to calculate IC50 values. Histone Deacetylase (HDAC) Activity Assay Kit (Fluorometric) (ab156064) from Abcam (Cambridge, UK) was used to test class I HDACs activity. Radiation exposure and clonogenic assay have been performed as already described (Camero et al. 2020).
⦁ RNA isolation and qPCR
TriPure Isolation Reagent (Euroclone, Italy) was used to extract total RNA. The concentration and quality of RNA were evaluated as already described (Marampon, Codenotti, et al. 2019). QuantiTect Reverse Transcription Kit (Qiagen, Hilde, Germany) was used to perform the reverse transcrip- tion for target genes (NRF2, SOD, CAT and GPx4). A real- time PCR (qPCR) was performed to analyze target genes (Marampon, Codenotti, et al. 2019). For data analysis, the Ct values in each sample and the efficiencies of the primer set were calculated using LinReg Software and then con- verted into relative quantities (RQ) and normalized accord- ing to the Pfaffl model. Normalization was carried out using, as housekeeping genes, HPRT-1 for mRNA targets.
⦁ Cell cycle analysis by flow cytometry, apoptosis and PARP1 activity, mitochondrial superoxide anion (·O22) production assessment
Cell cycle analysis was performed by using a BD FACSCalibur (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ), as previ- ously described (Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Di Nisio, et al.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 945
2020). ModFit LT 3.0 program (Verity Software House) was used to quantify flow cytometry data. Annexin V/PI assay (ab214663, Abcam, Cambridge, UK) was used to assess apop- tosis, as previously described (Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Di Nisio, et al. 2020). PARP1 Enzyme Activity Assay (17-10149) was from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). MitoSOX
Red from Thermo Fisher Scientific (Italy, MI) measured mitochondrial superoxide anion (·O2—) production.
⦁ Protein extraction and western blotting
Protein extraction and immunoblotting were previously described (Illert et al. 2012). The primary antibodies used were: p21WAF1 (C-19), p27KIP1 (F-8), Cyclin A (BF683),
Cyclin D1 (M-20), Cyclin B1 (H-20), myelocytomatosis virus oncogene cellular homolog (c-Myc) (9E10), N-Myc (B.8.4.B), phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kin- ase 1/2 (ERK1/2PO4) (E-4), extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK1/2) (C-14, positive also for ERK1), H2A his- tone family member X (H2AX) (C-20), Glyceraldehyde 3- phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) (6-C5), phospho-ATM (10H11.E12, Ser1981), ATM (H-248), DNA-PKCs (E-6), by
Santa Cruz Biotechnology; phosphorylated H2A histone family member X (cH2AX) (Ser139) (2577) by Cell Signaling Technology (Danvers, MA); phospho-DNA-PKCs (Thr2609) (10B1) by AbCam (Cambridge, UK). Appropriate horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated secondary anti- bodies (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) were used for 1 h at room temperature (Gravina et al. 2013). Quantification of western blot data was performed by using ChemiDoc MP (Bio-Rad) imager (Taylor et al. 2013).
⦁ Animal research ethics statement and in vivo xenograft experiments
The recommendations of the European Community (EC) guidelines (2010/63/UE and DL 26/2014 for the use of laboratory animals) and the University guidelines (the University of L’Aquila, Board Regulations on the use of laboratory animals) were considered to perform in vivo experiments. Six-week-old female CD1 nu/nu mice were purchased from Charles River Laboratories Italia, SRL (Calco, Italy). Experiments were performed as already described (Megiorni et al. 2017). FK228 was injected intra- peritoneally (1.2 mg/kg body weight) (Zhang and Zhong 2014) the day before the irradiation.
2.7. Statistical analysis and data analysis
Three independent experiments, each performed in tripli- cate, were performed and the results were expressed as the mean ± SD. Data normal distribution was confirmed by Shapiro–Wilk, D’Agostino and Pearson and Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests. qPCR experiments were eval- uated by one-way (ANOVA) with a Tukey’s post hoc test using 2—DDCt values for each sample. Flow cytometry data were analyzed by ANOVA with a Bonferroni post hoc test.
All analyses were performed using the SAS System (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) and GraphPad Prism 6.1.
⦁ Results
⦁ Compared to HSMC, class I HDACs are downregulated in RMS cells, with HDAC3 and HDAC2 being the most reduced in ERMS and ARMS, respectively
The expression levels of class I HDACs (HDAC1, 2, 3 and 8) were investigated by RT-qPCR in RD (ERMS), RH30 (ARMS) and in human mesenchymal stromal cells (HMSC) as the normal counterpart (Figure 1(A)). Compared to HMSC, in RD cells the expression of HDAC1, HDAC2, HDAC3 and HDAC8 was reduced by 98.9 ± 0.21%, 99.5 ± 0.043%, 72.9 ± 3.9% and 95.2 ± 0.7%, respectively
Figure 1. Expression of class I HDACs in ARMS and ERMS cell lines. A) HDAC1, 2, 3 and 8 transcript levels in RD (ERMS), RH30 (ARMS) and human mesenchy- mal stromal cells (HMSC) as measured by Q-PCR assays. GAPDH mRNA was used as an endogenous control. The relative mRNA expression levels are pre- sented as the average fold changes in tumor cell lines vs. HMSC, set at 1. Results represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD.
≤ ≤ ≤
Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .05 compared with HMSC
≤ ≤ ≤ þ ≤
cells, $p .05, $$p .01, $$$p .05 compared with HDAC1, p .05,
þþ ≤ þþþ ≤ ≤ ≤
p .01, p .05 compared with HDAC2, #p .05, ##p .01,
###
≤ ≤ ≤ ≤
p .05 compared with HDAC3, ◦p .05, ◦◦p .01, ◦◦◦◦p .05 compared with HDAC8.
946 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
Figure 2. FK228 concomitantly induces reversible cell growth arrest, concomitant transient death, HDAC expression and activity downregulation in ERMS and ARMS rhabdomyosarcoma cells. (A) Dose of FK228 able to reduce by 50% the cell viability of RD (Left Panel) and RH30 (Right Panel) cell lines treated for 24 h with increas- ing doses of FK228 (0, 1, 5, 10, and 20 lM). Results represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD. (B) Effect of FK228 on cell number of adher- ent and floating RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for increasing times (1–10 days); after four days the drug washout was performed or not. Cell viability on floating cells was measured by trypan blue dye exclusion test. Percentage related to floating plot indicate cell death. Results rep-
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resent the mean values of four in- dependent experiments ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001 compared with the respective untreated
cells. C) HDAC1, 2, 3 and 8 transcript levels and class I HDACs activity in RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for 4 days with FK228 and 24 h after FK228 washout. Transcript levels were measured by Q-PCR assays and GAPDH mRNA was used as an endogenous control. The relative mRNA expression levels are presented as the average fold changes in treated tumor cell lines vs. untreated cells, set at 1. Class I HDAC activity was measured by specific enzymatic assay and presented as the average fold changes in treated tumor cell lines vs. untreated cells, set at 1. Results represent the mean values of three inde-
≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ ≤
pendent experiments ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001 FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells, ◦p .05, ◦◦p .01, ◦◦◦p .001 FK228 4 days vs.
FK228 washout.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 947
(Figure 1(A)). Similarly, also in RH30 cells HDAC1, HDAC2, HDAC3 and HDAC8 transcript levels were down- regulated vs the HSMCs cells by 68.7 ± 2.5%, 33.5% ± 4.5%,
87.3 ± 1.3% and 97.3 ± 0.8%, respectively (Figure 1(A)). Thus, compared to normal mesenchymal cells, the expres- sion of class I HDACs result to be lower in RMS cells, with HDAC3 and HDAC2 the most downregulated in RD and RH30, respectively.
⦁ FK228, in vitro, reversibly and not efficiently controls tumor proliferation of RMS cell lines
The concentration of FK228 able to inhibit 50% of cell via- bility (IC50) was 1.4 ± 0.02 nM in RD and 0.6 ± 0.06 nM in RH30 (Figure 2(A)). The ability of FK228 to induce irrevers- ible or reversible growth arrest and/or cell death was assessed by treating cells with the IC50 concentration. To this purpose, 4 days after treatment, FK228 was washed out or not, and cells viability of adherent and floating cells assessed for the next 6 days (Figure 2(B)). Four days of FK228 reduced the number of adherent cells by 32.3 ± 2.6% and 26.8 ± 3.1% in RD and RH30, respectively (Figure 2(B), Adherent, no washout (W/O)) and concomitantly increased the number of floating cells (Figure 2(B), Suspended, no W/
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O) that resulted to be almost all dead (Figure 2(B), Suspended, no W/O Percentage related to Floating Plot). FK228 W/O rapidly restored RMS cell growth (Figure 2(B), Adherent, W/O) and reduced the number of floating/dead cells (Figure 2(B), Suspended, W/O). Four days of FK228 significantly reduced the mRNA expression levels of HDAC1, HDAC2, HDAC3 and HDAC8 by 56.3 ± 4.2%, 82.1 ± 4.3%, 67.9 ± 4.1% and 69.4 ± 1.4% in RD and by 73.2 ± 1.9%, 70.1% ± 1.4%, 65.8 ± 1.1% and 87.1 ± 0.2% in RH30, respectively (Figure 2(C), FK228 4 days, mRNA expression). Moreover, the global activity of class I HDAC was also decreased by 88.7 ± 1.4% and 71.2 ± 1.6% in RD and RH30, respectively (Figure 2(C), FK228 4 days, HDACs activity). However, 24 h after FK228 washout, the expression (Figure 2(C), FK228 4 days 24 h W/O, mRNA expression) and activity (Figure 2(C), FK228 4 days 24 h W/O, HDACs activity) of HDACs were efficiently restored, both in RD and RH30 cells. Cell cycle analysis by flow cytometry on RMS cells treated for 1, 2 and 4 days with FK228 (IC50) did not show any statistically significant change on cell cycle distribution (Figure 3(A)). At the molecular level, RMS treated with FK228 upregulated the expression of several positive cell cycle regulators such as cyclin-A (Cyc-A), B (Cyc-B), D1 (Cyc-D1) in both cell lines and c-Myc, in RD or N-Myc in RH30 cells (Figure 3(B)). Further, the tumor suppressor p27was up-regulated 4 days after treatment in both RMS cell lines (Figure 3(B)). Altogether, these findings indicate that FK228 is unable to hamper the proliferative properties of RMS cells. In addition, they also suggest that surviving cells are able to activate a molecular program potentially responsible for chemoresistance.
⦁ RMS cells escape from FK228-induced cell death by activating anti-apoptotic and pro-surviving signals
HDACi have been shown to induce DNA damage and can- cer cell death by promoting reactive oxygen species (ROS) in several cancer types (Robert and Rassool 2012) including sarcomas (El-Naggar et al. 2019). Thus, the production of ROS and the expression levels of c-H2AX, a sensitive molecular marker of DNA damage and repair (Mah et al. 2010), were assessed on RMS cells treated with FK228 (IC50) for 6 h, 12 h and 4 days. As shown in Figure 4(A), FK228 efficiently increased ROS production starting from 6 h after treatment, both in RD and RH30 (Figure 4(A)). However, ROS accumulation was restored to basal levels 4 days after treatment (Figure 4(A)). FK228 significantly increased c-H2AX expression by 11.3 ± 1.4 folds in 12 h-treated RD, (Figure 4(A)), and by 173.8 ± 18.3 folds in 6 h-treated RH30 (Figure 4(A)). Also, c-H2AX levels returned to basal levels within 4 days of treatment in both RMS cell lines (Figure 4(A)). The activation status of cell death and pro-surviving signals was then investigated. Twenty-four hours of FK228 (IC50) did not induce any significant increase in the number of apoptotic cells (i.e. AnnexinV-positive cells) (Figure 4(B)) and in the levels of cleaved caspase 3 in both RMS cells (Figure 4(C)). On the other hand, FK228 significantly upre- gulated the protein levels of the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL factors (Gross and Katz 2017) (Figure 4(C)) and increased PARP1 activity in both RD and RH30 cells (Figure 4(D)). Finally, FK228 induced the phosphorylation/ activation of ERKs and mTOR, in RD and RH30 and that of Akt in RH30 (Figure 4(E)). Collectively, these results indi- cate that RMS cells can survive to FK228 by counteracting its cytotoxic action by detoxifying from ROS, repairing dam- aged DNA and activating anti-apoptotic/pro-survival signals.
⦁ FK228 in vitro radiosensitizes RH30 but not RD cells, by affecting antioxidant ability of ARMS cells
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The ability of FK228 to counteract the intrinsic and acquired radioresistance of RMS was assessed on parental (PR-RMS) and clinically relevant radioresistant RMS (RR-RMS) cell lines (Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Camero, et al. 2020). To this purpose, cells were pretreated or not with FK228 for 24 h and then irradiated with a single dose of 4 Gy; after irradi- ation, FK228 was washed out and colony formation assay performed. As shown in Figure 5(A), FK228 pretreatment significantly reduced the ability of irradiated parental RH30 to form colonies by 98.3 7.2% compared to the untreated ones (Figure 5(A), PR-RH30, FK228 RT vs. Untreated), improving, in the meantime, the therapeutic efficiency of RT by 83.3 1.2% vs irradiated parental cells (Figure 5(A), PR-RH30, FK228 RT vs. RT). Conversely, no radiosensitiz- ing effects were detected in RD cells (Figure 5(A), PR-RD, FK228 RT vs. RT) and in RR-RMS cell lines, regardless of the histological subtype (Figure 5(A), RR-RD and RR-RH30, FK228 RT vs. RT). Roughly, two-thirds of RT-induced DSBs are triggered by ROS (Gross and Katz 2017) and tumor cells (Zhou et al. 2013), including RMS cells (Marampon, Codenotti, et al. 2019), can efficiently activate
948 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
Figure 3. FK228 does not affect cell cycle distribution but induces cell cycle protein modulation. (A) FACS analysis performed on RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells untreated or treated for 1, 2 or 4 days. Representative of three different experiments (Upper Panel). Data (Lower Panel) showing the percentage of cell cycle phases representing the mean value of four independent experiments. (B) Cell lysates from RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for 6 h, 12 h and 4 days were analyzed by immunoblotting with specific antibodies for indicated proteins; a-Tubulin expression shows
the loading of samples. Histograms (Upper Panel) represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp ≤ .05, ωωp ≤ .01,
þ
ωωωp ≤ .001 FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells.
antioxidant strategies to overcome RT toxicity. Figure 5(B) shows that pre-treating with FK228 enhanced the ability of RT to induce ROS accumulation up to 6 h post-RT (Figure 5(B), RD and RH30, FK228 þ RT vs. RT). However, whereas
in RH30 cells RT-induced ROS accumulation persisted up to 12 h after RT (Figure 5(B), RH30, FK228 RT, 12 h), in RD cells the levels of ROS were restored to baseline within 12 h (Figure 5(B), RD, FK228 þ RT, 12 h). Therefore, we
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 949
Figure 4. FK228 induces ROS-induced DSBs, triggers PARP1 but not caspase cell death cascades and activates PI3K/Akt/mTOR and MAPKs/ERKs signals. (A) Cell lysates from RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for 6 h, 12 h and 4 days were analyzed by immunoblotting with specific anti- bodies for indicated proteins (a-Tubulin expression shows the loading of samples) and mitochondrial superoxide anion production was assessed by MitoSox Red
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staining (ROS). Histograms (Upper Panel) represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001
FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells. Lower Panel shows immunoblotting representative of three different experiments. (B) Annexin V analysis performed on RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells untreated or treated for 24 h. Representative of three different experiments (Upper Panel). Data (Lower Panel) showing the percentage of dead and apoptosis representing the mean value of three independent experiments. (C) Cell lysates from RD (Left Panel, FK228
1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for 6 h, 12 h and 4 days were analyzed by immunoblotting with specific antibodies for indicated proteins;
a-Tubulin expression shows the loading of samples. Histograms (Upper Panel) represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD. Statistical signifi- cance: ωp ≤ .05, ωωp ≤ .01, ωωωp ≤ .001 FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells. Lower Panel shows immunoblotting representative of three different experiments. (D)
950 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
Figure 4. (Continued)
≤ ≤ ≤
PARP1 activity assay performed on RD (Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for 6, 12 h and 4 days. Histograms represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001 FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells. (E) Cell lysates from RD
(Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM) and RH30 (Right Panel, 0.6 nM) cells treated for 6 h, 12 h and 4 days were analyzed by immunoblotting with specific antibodies for indi- cated proteins; a-Tubulin expression shows the loading of samples. Histograms (Upper Panel) represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD.
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Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001 FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells. Lower Panel shows immunoblotting representative of three different
experiments.
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assessed, 12 h after RT, the mRNA expression levels of the nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2 (NRF2), super- oxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT) and glutathione per- oxidase (GPx-4) (Menegon et al. 2016), all known to detoxify RMS cells from RT-induced ROS (Marampon, Codenotti, et al. 2019). As shown in Figure 5(C), RD cells pretreated with FK228 more efficiently activated the tran- scription of NRF2 and CAT after RT (Figure 5(C), FK228 RT vs. FK228 or RT) whilst no differences were found in RH30 cells (Figure 5(C), FK228 RT vs. FK228 vs. RT). Thus, the evidence collected here indicates that FK228 is able to radiosensitize the ARMS cells through mechanisms apparently unrelated to increased oxidative stress or reduced antioxidant response.
⦁ Fk228 impairs ARMS but not ERMS antioxidant and DSBs repair ability
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We then investigated whether FK228 improved the ability of RT to induce DNA damage and/or affected the ability of RMS cells to repair RT-induced damaged DNA. To this pur- pose, the levels of c-H2AX and the activation status of ATM and DNA-PKcs, respectively upstream of either the non- homologous end joining (NHEJ) or the homologous recom- bination (HR) DNA repair pathways (Toulany 2019), were evaluated by western blot. FK228 pretreatment significantly increased the ability of RT to induce c-H2AX expression in RH30 cells, (Figure 6(A), RH30, g-H2AX, FK228 RT vs.
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þ
RT), counteracting the phosphorylation/activation of DNA- PKcs and ATM (Figure 6(A), RH30, DNA-PKcsPO4 and ATMPO4, FK228 RT vs. RT). In contrast, it did not signifi- cantly improve RT toxicity or modified the molecular response to RT of RD cells (Figure 6(A), RD, FK228 RT vs. RT). Of note, the study of the activity of key signal transduction pathways linked to RMS radioresistance did not show any significant difference (Figure 6(B), RD and RH30, FK228 RT vs. RT). However, FK228 restrained the ability of RT to induce N-Myc expression in RH30 cells (Figure 6(B), RH30, N-Myc, FK228 RT vs. RT).
Altogether, these findings suggest that FK228 radiosensitizes ARMS cells also by affecting the DSBs repair network.
⦁ FK228 in vivo radiosensitizes ARMS
For the in vivo experiments, when tumor volume reached
0.5 cm3 (T0), FK228 (1.2 mg/kg body weight) (Zhang and Zhong 2014) or vehicle (PBS) was injected intraperitoneally into the mice the day before (T0) the first, third and fifth fraction of RT, as depicted above the Figure 7(A). Treatment was performed after the animals had received RT
scheduled for that day. Five fractions of 2 Gy were daily delivered for a total dose of 10 Gy. Tumor volumes were measured every 5 days for a period of 20 days after the treat- ment with the HDACi in untreated (Untreated), FK228- treated (FK228), irradiated (RT) and FK228/irradiated (FK228 RT) tumors. As shown in Figure 7(A), combining RT to FK228 significantly improved RT therapeutic effi- ciency in RH30 xenografted mice by 74.5 ± 8.3% (Figure 7(A), RH30, FK228 RT vs. RT). In agreement, tumor weights of RH30 xenografts from mice treated with FK228 RT decreased significantly ranging from 75 to 90% reduction compared to controls (Figure 7(B), RH30, FK228 RT vs. RT). No difference in tumor growth and tumor weight was found after treatment with FK228 in com- bination with RT in RD xenografts (Figure 7(A,B), RD, FK228 RT vs. RT). Notably, FK228 per s`e did not reduce the rate of tumor growth, both in RD and RH30 xenografted mice (Figure 7(A), RD and RH30, FK228 vs. Untreated). Further, the number of mice showing tumor progression (TP) significantly differed across the groups (Figure 7(C)). In the untreated group, tumor progression occurred both in RD and RH30 xenografted mice within 5 days after the beginning of treatment (Figure 7(C), Untreated). In the RT group, tumor progression (TP) started from the 5th day and was completed within the 15th and 10th day after the begin- ning of treatment in RD (Figure 7(C), RD, RT) and RH30 cells (Figure 7(C), RH30, RT), respectively. In the FK228 group, tumor progression occurred within the 5th day and was completed within the 10th day after the beginning of treatment in both RD and RH30 cells (Figure 7(C), RH30, FK228). Finally, when FK228 was combined with RT, tumor progression started from the 5th day in RD (Figure 7(C), RD, FK228 RT) and 15th day in RH30 cells (Figure 7(C), RH30, FK228 RT), was completed within the 15th day after the beginning of treatment in RD (Figure 7(C), RD, FK228 RT) whilst never completed in RH30 cells (Figure 7(C), RH30, FK228 RT). Altogether, the evidence herein collected indicate that FK228 efficiently radiosensitizes the ARMS subtype in vivo.
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⦁ Discussion
The overexpression of HDACs characterizes many cancer types even though, a perfectly opposite condition has been also related to a more aggressive phenotype and a poor prognosis in selected cancer types (Li and Seto 2016). Herein, we show that class I HDACs, known to play a key role in orchestrating RMS gene transcription and function (Phelps et al. 2016; Gryder et al. 2019), resulted in global downregulation compared to human normal mesenchymal cells. Even though further patient-based analysis is required,
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 951
Figure 5. FK228 radiosensitizes ARMS cell lines by affecting the ability of RH30 cells to detoxify from RT-induced oxidative stress. (A) Two hours after RT (4 Gy), cells were seeded at low concentration for colony assays or lysed for total protein extraction. Colony forming efficiency was calculated by crystal violet absorbance after 14 days of FK228( )/RT( ), FK228( )/RT( ), FK228( )/RT( ) or FK228( )/RT( ) treatments (RD, Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM and RH30, Right Panel, 0.6 nM) (Upper Panel). Lower panel shows representative pictures of colonies. Results represent the mean values ± SD of three independent experiments. Statistical significance:
— — þ — — þ þ þ
≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ ≤
ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001 FK228 4 days vs. untreated cells, $p .05, $$p .01, $$$p .05 vs. RT. (B) Mitochondrial super- oxide anion production was
≤ ≤ ≤ ≤
assessed by MitoSox Red staining, half hour (0.5 h), 6 h or 12 h after RT. Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .05 vs. untreated cells, $p .05,
≤ ≤ þ ≤ þþ ≤ þþþ ≤ þ
$$p .01, $$$p .05 vs. FK228, p .05, p .01, p .05 vs. FK228 RT. (C) Gene expression of antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD-2), cata- lase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPx)-4 and nuclear factor erythroid 2 p45-related factor (NRF2) was investigated by real-time PCR, 12 h after RT. The gene expression was referenced to the ratio of the value of interest and basal conditions. The value of basal conditions was reported equal to 1. Single results are repre-
sent- ative of three different experiments performed in triplicate. Statistical significance: ωp ≤ .05, ωωp ≤ .01, ωωωp ≤ .05 vs. untreated cells, $p ≤ .05, $$p ≤ .01,
$$$p ≤ .05 vs. FK228, þp ≤ .05, þþp ≤ .01, þþþp ≤ .05 vs. FK228 þ RT.
952 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
the low levels of class I HDACs could be related to the high aggressiveness of this cancer type. Notably, among class I HDACs, the most expressed were HDAC3 in RD and HDAC2 in RH30 cell line, already respectively shown to sustain ERMS (Pacheco and Nielsen 2012; Phelps et al. 2016) and ARMS (Phelps et al. 2016; Gryder et al. 2019). Therefore, in a context of low general expression of HDAC class I, we assume that HDAC3 in RD and HDAC2 in RH30 could be the most pathogenically important even though a key role cannot be excluded for HDAC1 and HDAC8. Nowadays, FK228 (romidepsin) is the only potent selective inhibitor of class I HDACs (Furumai et al. 2002) already approved for the clinical use (Hedrick et al. 2015) and herein, we have investigated the therapeutic potential of FK228 in treating RMS as monotherapy or in combination with RT.
Low concentrations of FK228 reduced cell viability and reversibly affected RMS proliferation potential, as showed by washout experiments. Furthermore, the presence of FK228 induced non-apoptotic cell death. Molecularly targeted (Kummar et al. 2006) and standard cytotoxic drugs (Rixe and Fojo 2007) often induce concomitant growth arrest and cell death. This double effect depends on tumor heterogenic- ity, whereby within the same tumor there are subpopula- tions exhibiting different sensitivity to therapies (Mirzayans and Murray 2020). Thus, we hypothesized that while FK228 efficiently killed a subpopulation of sensitive RMS, surviving cells could activate molecular mechanisms of resistance to HDACi, has already been described for other tumor types (Lee et al. 2012). Moreover, HDACi promotes cancer cell death also by inducing ROS accumulation and consequent DSBs (Robert and Rassool 2012; El-Naggar et al. 2019). In agreement, FK228 induced ROS accumulation and c-H2AX upregulation, a DSBs-related biomarker, in RMS cells. On the other hand, RMS cells upregulated the expression of Bcl-
2 and Bcl-XL, negative controllers of apoptotic cell death (Gross and Katz 2017) and activated PARP1 signaling, known to mediate non-apoptotic cell death (Ray Chaudhuri and Nussenzweig 2017). Thus, since no apoptosis was detected, it is conceivable that FK228 could trigger PARP1- mediated non-apoptotic cell death in sensitive cells whereas surviving cells counteract the apoptotic stimulus upregulat- ing Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL, in accordance with what has already been described in other cell lines (Dutta et al. 2012). However, other mechanisms of resistance to FK228 seem to be efficiently activated by RMS cells resulting in the activa- tion of ROS detoxifying mechanisms and pro-surviving sig- nals such as PI3K-Akt-mTOR and MAPK pathways. Both pathways have already been involved in chemoresistance (Marampon, Di Nisio, et al. 2019; Lee et al. 2020; Liu et al. 2020). Thus, as shown for other cancer types (Rahmani et al. 2014; Lombard et al. 2019), combining PI3K or MAPKs inhibitors could be a strategy to overcome FK228 resistance. Another potential mechanism of resistance to FK228 could be the early and stable upregulation of cell cycle positive regulators cyclin-A, -B, -D1, c-Myc and N- Myc (Strzyz 2016), as well as of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27, which was associated to the lack of changes in
cell cycle distribution of RMS cells. The upregulation of cyclins and Myc family members has been shown to pro- mote chemoresistance (Akervall et al. 2001; Hydbring et al. 2016; Hochhauser et al. 1996) whilst the upregulation of p27, potentially triggered by Bcl-XL and Bcl-2 (Greider et al. 2002), could be required to maintain a proliferative quies- cence status (Oesterle et al. 2011) and/or sustain chemore- sistance (Le et al. 2010). Finally, even the downregulation of class I HDACs induced by FK228 and its overexpression after the drug washout, could be strategies to acquire a more aggressive/chemoresistant phenotype (Li and Seto 2016). Therefore, RMS seems to have multiple strategies capable of counteracting the potential cytotoxic action of FK228.
Whether FK228 failed as monotherapy, it efficiently sen- sitized to RT the ARMS cells RH30, as demonstrated by the clonogenic survival reduction of more than 90%. On the other hand, FK228 did not radiosensitized the ERMS cells RD as well as the clinically relevant radioresistant RD and RH30 cell lines, recently established and characterized as isogenic background models of acquired radioresistance (Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Di Nisio, et al. 2020).
RT kills cancer cells by inducing, directly or indirectly, DSBs trough ROS accumulation (Toulany 2019). In turn, DSBs triggers a multicomponent signal transduction net- work, known as DNA damage response (DDR), resulting in non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) or homologous recom- bination (HR) pathways, that finally repairs DSBs (Toulany 2019). The aberrant activation of DDR as well as of antioxi- dant systems can promote cancer cells radioresistance (Toulany 2019), as already shown in RMS cells (Ciccarelli et al. 2016; Gravina et al. 2016; Megiorni et al. 2017; Marampon, Codenotti, et al. 2019; Marampon, Di Nisio, et al. 2019; Camero et al. 2020; Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Camero, et al. 2020; Petragnano, Pietrantoni, Di Nisio, et al. 2020). Herein, combining FK228 with RT more efficiently increased ROS accumulation compared to RT alone. However, while RD cells hyper-activated the transcription of NRF2 and CAT antioxidant genes and the activation of DDR response, RH30 cells failed to do so and showed radio- sensitization. Notably, FK228 did not affect the ability of irradiated RD and RH30 cells to activate PI3K-Akt-mTOR and MAPK pathways, known to sustain RMS radioresistance (Ciccarelli et al. 2016; Van Erp et al. 2018). The activation of these pathways could represent a strategy to survive RT and their targeting could represent a strategy to improve in RH30, and to trigger in RD, the radiosensitization by FK228. The ability of FK228 to radiosensitize ARMS, but not ERMS, was also confirmed in vivo. Combining FK228 and RT, more effectively than each treatment alone, reduced tumor volume and weight and prevented the progression of tumors in RH30 xenografted mice.
It is important to underline that FK228 did not show any type of effect in ERMS. Even though further investigation is needed in the future, one possible reason could be the inability of FK228 to inhibit HDAC3. In fact, FK228 has been shown to inhibit HDAC1, HDAC2 (Furumai et al. 2002) and HDAC8 (Tabackman et al. 2016), but to our
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 953
Figure 6. FK228 affects the ability of RH30 cells to repair RT-induced DSBs. (A) and (B) Cell lysates from FK228( )/RT( ), FK228( )/RT( ), FK228( )/RT( ) or FK228( )/RT( ) treatments (RD, Left Panel, FK228 1.4 nM and RH30, Right Panel, 0.6 nM) were analyzed by immunoblotting with specific antibodies for indicated
þ þ
— — þ — — þ
proteins; a-Tubulin expression shows the loading of samples. Histograms (Upper Panel) represent the mean values of three independent experiments ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp ≤ .05, ωωp ≤ .01, ωωωp ≤ .05 vs. untreated cells, $p ≤ .05, $$p ≤ .01, $$$p ≤ .05 vs. FK228, þp ≤ .05, þþp ≤ .01, þþþp ≤ .05 vs. FK228 þ RT. Lower panel shows epresentative immunoblotting of three independent experiments.
knowledge, no data have still been shown for HDAC3. Therefore, considering that HDAC3 is the most represented class I HDAC in ERMS where it plays a crucial
anti-differentiation oncogenic role (Pacheco and Nielsen 2012), its non- or very low-inhibition by FK228 could explain the failure of treatment in this RMS subtype.
954 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
Figure 7. Effects of FK228 combined or not with irradiation on in vivo tumor growth. (A) Growth curve of tumor volumes from xenografted RD and RH30 cell lines, untreated (Untreated), FK228-treated (FK228), irradiated (RT), FK228-pretreated and irradiated (RT FK228). Tumor volumes were evaluated as describes in methods and represent the mean ± SEM of 10 mice. The upper panel shows the sequential treatments of xenografted mice started when tumors reached a volume of
þ
≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ ≤ þ ≤ þþ ≤ þþþ ≤
approximate 50 mm3. FK228 (1.2 mg/kg) was administered for before each irradiation, administered on alternate days. Results represent the mean values ± SD. Statistical significance: ωp .05, ωωp .01, ωωωp .001 vs. untreated mice; $p .05, $$p .01, $$$p .001 vs RT-treated mice; p .05, p .01, p .001
vs. FK228 -treated mice. (B) Tumor weights in mice untreated or treated with FK228, RT or combined treatment. C. Kaplan-Meier estimates for rates of progression for untreated, FK228, RT, or FK228 þ RT combination in RMS-derived tumors.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY 955
Furthermore, FK228 in combination with RT triggered DNA-PKcs activation, which is known to phosphorylate/ activate HDAC3 (Jeyakumar et al. 2007). Thus, FK228 could promote the activation of a loop that could support the uncontrolled activation of HDAC3 in ERMS cells.
Combining surgery, chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy is currently the better strategy to treat RMS but the resistance to treatments often determines treatment failure and poor survival (Zhao et al. 2016; Bradley et al. 2019). Herein, class I HDACi monotherapy showed limited effects in treating RMS but drastically sensitized ARMS to RT, thus represent- ing a potential combination-based therapeutic strategy for treating the most aggressive type of RMS.
Acknowledgments
SC thanks AIRC for support through a fellowship for Italy “Raffaele Anastasio e Lucia Rizzetta in Anastasio” (Rif. 24017) and SP thanks Fondazione Veronesi for providing support.
Ethical approval
This article does not contain any studies with human participants per- formed by any of the authors. Studies on animal models were per- formed according to the guidelines established by the University of L’Aquila, Medical School and Science and Technology School Board Regulations, in compliance with the Italian government regulation
n.116 27 January 1992 for the use of laboratory animals.
Informed consent
This article does not contain any studies with human participants per- formed by any of the authors.
Author contributions
AR, FP, LM, FV and GM conceptualized, designed the study, per- formed the experiments and acquired data. SC, SP, MC, IF and CA performed the experiments and acquired result data. FC, LM, FV and GM performed irradiation. LDL, RM, CF, FDF and MV analyzed and interpre-ted the data. AF, RR, AP, VT, GLG and FM drafted the manuscript and critically revised the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Disclosure statement
Francesco Petragnano graduated as a Biotechnologist from the University of L’Aquila, and has a PhD from the University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy.
Luisa Milazzo graduated as a Biologist from the University of Rome, Sapienza, works at Istituto Superiore della Sanit`a Italiana, Rome, Italy.
Francesca Vulcano graduated as a Biologist from the University of Rome, Sapienza, works at Istituto Superiore della Sanit`a Italiana, Rome, Italy.
Giampiero Macioce is a Technician at the Istituto Superiore della Sanit`a Italiana, Rome, Italy.
Silvia Codenotti graduated as a Biotechnologist from the University of Brescia, and has a PhD from the University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy.
Matteo Cassandri graduated as a Biologist from the University of Rome, Sapienza, and is a Post-Doc at the Department of Oncohematology, Bambino Gesu` Children’s Hospital, Rome, Italy.
Silvia Pomella graduated as a Biologist from the University Alma Mater Studiorum of Bologna, and is a Post-Doc at Department of Oncohematology, Bambino Gesu` Children’s Hospital, Rome, Italy.
Francesca Cicchetti is a Radiologic Technologist at Policlinico Umberto I, Rome, Italy.
Irene Fasciani graduated as a Biotechnologist from the University of L’Aquila, and is a Post-Doc at University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy.
Cristina Antinozzi graduated as a Biologist from the University of Rome, Sapienza, and is a Post-Doc at University of Rome “Foro Italico”, Rome, Italy.
Luigi Di Luigi graduated as Medical Doctor specialized in Endocrinology and in Sports Medicine from the University of Rome, Sapienza, and is a Full Professor of Endocrinology at University of Rome “Foro Italico”, Rome, Italy.
Claudio Festuccia graduated as a Biologist from the University of L’Aquila, and is a Technician at University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy.
Francesca De Felice graduated as Medical Doctor specialized in Radiotherapy from the University of Rome, Sapienza, is a Researcher of Radiotherapy at University of Rome, Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
Massimo Vergine graduated as Medical Doctor specialized in Abdominal Surgery from the University of Rome, Sapienza, is a Researcher of Surgery at University of Rome, Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
Alessandro Fanzani graduated as a Biologist from the University of Milano, and is an Associate Professor at University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy.
Rossella Rota graduated as a Biologist from the University of L’Aquila,
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
and is a Group Leader at Bambino Gesu` Rome, Italy.
Children’s Hospital,
Funding
The research leading to these results has received funding from AIRC under IG 2020 project [24696] – P.I. Marampon Francesco. This work was also supported by the University of Roma, Sapienza (Fondi Ateneo 2019).
Notes on contributors
Alessandra Rossetti graduated as a Biotechnologist from the University of L’Aquila, and has a PhD from the University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy.
Roberto Maggio graduated as a Medical Doctor specialized in Pharmacology from the University of Cagliari, and is a Full Professor of Pharmacology at University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy.
Antonella Polimeni graduated as a Medical Doctor specialized in Odontostomatology from the University of Rome, Sapienza, and is a Full Professor of Odontostomatology at University of Rome, Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
Vincenzo Tombolini graduated as a Medical Doctor specialized in Radiotherapy from the University of Rome, Sapienza, and is a Full Professor of Radiotherapy at University of Rome, Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
956 A. ROSSETTI ET AL.
Giovanni Luca Gravina graduated as a Medical Doctor specialized in Radiotherapy from the University of L’Aquila, and is an Associate Professor of Radiotherapy at University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy.
Francesco Marampon graduated as a Medical Doctor specialized in Radiotherapy from the University of L’Aquila, and is an Associate Professor of Radiotherapy at University of Rome, Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
ORCID
Luigi Di Luigi http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2522-126X
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