👤 Gianna M Colombo

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3
Name variants
Also published as: Lucas L Colombo, N Colombo
articles
Gianna M Colombo, Steven M Corsello · 2024 · Cancer research · added 2026-04-20
Over the past three decades, high-throughput phenotypic cancer cell line screens have revealed unanticipated small-molecule activities and illuminated connections between tumor genotypes and anticance Show more
Over the past three decades, high-throughput phenotypic cancer cell line screens have revealed unanticipated small-molecule activities and illuminated connections between tumor genotypes and anticancer efficacy. Founded in 1984, the National Cancer Institute's "NCI60" screen laid the conceptual groundwork for the contemporary landscape of phenotypic drug discovery. NCI60 first operated as a primary bioactivity screen, but molecular characterization of the NCI60 cell line panel and development of a small-molecule sensitivity pattern recognition algorithm (called "COMPARE") have enabled subsequent studies into drug mechanisms of action and biomarker identification. In this issue of Cancer Research, Kunkel and colleagues report an updated version of the NCI60 screen, dubbed "HTS384" NCI60, that better aligns with current cell proliferation assay standards and has higher throughput. Changes include the use of a 384-well plate format, automated laboratory equipment, 3 days of compound exposure, and a CellTiter-Glo luminescent endpoint. To confirm that data from the HTS384 and classic NCI60 screen are comparable, the authors tested a library of 1,003 anticancer agents using both protocols and applied COMPARE to analyze patterns of cell line sensitivities. More than three dozen groups of targeted therapies showed high comparability between screens. Modernization of NCI60, and closer integration with other large-scale pharmacogenomic screens and molecular feature sets, will help this public screening service remain pertinent for cancer drug discovery efforts for years to come. See related article by Kunkel et al., p. 2403. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-24-1506
anticancer imaging
S Weigelt, RA Weinberg, S Mei +175 more · 2024 · BMC Cancer · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
S Weigelt, RA Weinberg, S Mei, X Chen, K Wang, Y Chen, N Colombo, C Sessa, A du Bois, J Ledermann, WG McCluggage, I McNeish, H Abdel Mageed, K Van Der Speeten, P Sugarbaker, N Ahmed, R Escalona, D Leung, E Chan, G Kannourakis, W Chowanadisai, SM Messerli, DH Miller, JE Medina, JW Hamilton, MA Messerli, AM Haslehurst, M Koti, M Dharsee, P Nuin, K Evans, J Geraci, P Ghosh, C Vidal, S Dey, L Zhang, LF Dong, J Neuzil, HD Osiewacz, M Huang, CR Myers, Y Wang, M You, SE Weinberg, NS Chandel, O WARBURG, DC Wallace, RM Pascale, DF Calvisi, MM Simile, CF Feo, F Feo, G Kroemer, L Galluzzi, C Brenner, N Joza, E Tasdemir, MC Maiuri, M Hengartner, JM Abrams, Y Ding, V Labitzky, K Legler, M Qi, U Schumacher, B Schmalfeldt, L Oliveira-Ferrer, J Dietl, C Bartmann, C Stürken, J Ghulam, C Stuerken, D Wicklein, R Pries, B Wollenberg, M Metzen, M Bruns, W Deppert, N Lüders, E Adam, DJ Flavell, D Boehm, SA Brooks, AJ Leathem, E Hjerpe, S Egyhazi, J Carlson, MF Stolt, K Schedvins, H Johansson, J Guo, X Li, W Zhang, S Zhu, L Chen, S Fulda, L Bockelmann, C Starzonek, AC Niehoff, U Karst, J Thomale, H Schluter, LC Bockelmann, WX Zong, JD Rabinowitz, E White, R Moreno-Sánchez, S Rodríguez-Enríquez, A Marín-Hernández, E Saavedra, Y Kubo, K Tanaka, Y Masuike, T Takahashi, K Yamashita, T Makino, CT Hensley, B Faubert, Q Yuan, N Lev-Cohain, E Jin, J Kim, LA Moukarzel, L Ferrando, H Dopeso, A Stylianou, T Basili, F Pareja, RJ DeBerardinis, JJ Lum, G Hatzivassiliou, CB Thompson, S Dar, J Chhina, I Mert, D Chitale, T Buekers, H Kaur, VW Liu, WC Xue, AN Cheung, HY Ngan, HY Lim, QS Ho, J Low, M Choolani, KP Wong, F Vazquez, JH Lim, H Chim, K Bhalla, G Girnun, K Pierce, EM Kuntz, P Baquero, AM Michie, K Dunn, S Tardito, TL Holyoake, DR Hodge, EM Hurt, WL Farrar, DS Matassa, MR Amoroso, H Lu, R Avolio, D Arzeni, C Procaccini, M Peiris-Pagès, UE Martinez-Outschoorn, RG Pestell, F Sotgia, MP Lisanti, AS Anderson, PC Roberts, MI Frisard, MW Hulver, EM Schmelz Show less
Most cancer patients ultimately die from the consequences of distant metastases. As metastasis formation consumes energy mitochondria play an important role during this process as they are the most im Show more
Most cancer patients ultimately die from the consequences of distant metastases. As metastasis formation consumes energy mitochondria play an important role during this process as they are the most important cellular organelle to synthesise the energy rich substrate ATP, which provides the necessary energy to enable distant metastasis formation. However, mitochondria are also important for the execution of apoptosis, a process which limits metastasis formation. We therefore wanted to investigate the mitochondrial content in ovarian cancer cells and link its presence to the patient’s prognosis in order to analyse which of the two opposing functions of mitochondria dominates during the malignant progression of ovarian cancer. Monoclonal antibodies directed against different mitochondrial specific proteins, namely heat shock proteins 60 (HSP60), fumarase and succinic dehydrogenase, were used in immunohistochemistry in preliminary experiments to identify the antibody most suited to detect mitochondria in ovarian cancer cells in clinical tissue samples. The clearest staining pattern, which even delineated individual mitochondria, was seen with the anti-HSP60 antibody, which was used for the subsequent clinical study staining primary ovarian cancers ( n  = 155), borderline tumours ( n  = 24) and recurrent ovarian cancers ( n  = 26). The staining results were semi-quantitatively scored into three groups according to their mitochondrial content: low ( n  = 26), intermediate ( n  = 50) and high ( n  = 84). Survival analysis showed that high mitochondrial content correlated with a statistically significant overall reduced survival rate In addition to the clinical tissue samples, mitochondrial content was analysed in ovarian cancer cells grown in vitro (cell lines: OVCAR8, SKOV3, OVCAR3 and COV644) and in vivo in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice. In in vivo grown SKOV3 and OVCAR8 cells, the number of mitochondria positive cells was markedly down-regulated compared to the in vitro grown cells indicating that mitochondrial number is subject to regulatory processes. As high mitochondrial content is associated with a poor prognosis, the provision of high energy substrates by the mitochondria seems to be more important for metastasis formation than the inhibition of apoptotic cell death, which is also mediated by mitochondria. In vivo and in vitro grown human ovarian cancer cells showed that the mitochondrial content is highly adaptable to the growth condition of the cancer cells. Show less
đź“„ PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12885-023-11667-8
mitochondria
Juan C Stockert, Richard W Horobin, Lucas L Colombo +1 more · 2018 · Acta histochemica · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
For many years various tetrazolium salts and their formazan products have been employed in histochemistry and for assessing cell viability. For the latter application, the most widely used are 3-(4,5- Show more
For many years various tetrazolium salts and their formazan products have been employed in histochemistry and for assessing cell viability. For the latter application, the most widely used are 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium bromide (MTT), and 5-cyano-2,3-di-(p-tolyl)-tetrazolium chloride (CTC) for viability assays of eukaryotic cells and bacteria, respectively. In these cases, the nicotinamide-adenine-dinucleotide (NAD(P)H) coenzyme and dehydrogenases from metabolically active cells reduce tetrazolium salts to strongly colored and lipophilic formazan products, which are then quantified by absorbance (MTT) or fluorescence (CTC). More recently, certain sulfonated tetrazolium, which give rise to water-soluble formazans, have also proved useful for cytotoxicity assays. We describe several aspects of the application of tetrazolium salts and formazans in biomedical cell biology research, mainly regarding formazan-based colorimetric assays, cellular reduction of MTT, and localization and fluorescence of the MTT formazan in lipidic cell structures. In addition, some pharmacological and labeling perspectives of these compounds are also described. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.acthis.2018.02.005
anticancer imaging tetrazole