The Bonetto Lab at University of 麻豆传媒高清 Anschutz Medical Campus investigates the molecular causes responsible for the onset of muscle and bone complications in cancer (i.e., cachexia). Up to 80 percent of patients diagnosed with advanced cancers will develop cachexia, accompanied by progressive body weight loss. This condition is estimated to cause up to 30 percent of cancer deaths, which also means that a third of cancer patients are expected to die OF cachexia rather than WITH cachexia. Cancer cachexia is more frequently diagnosed in patients with certain types of cancer, especially pancreatic and gastric cancer, lung, esophageal, colorectal and head and neck cancer. Although several factors and disease states can promote significant loss of weight, it is important to highlight that the difference between cachexia and regular weight loss (as simply due to reduced food and calorie intake) is that it happens involuntarily, likely also because of metabolic, hormonal and inflammatory changes that cause the body to break down muscle mass uncontrollably. We and others have shown that the development of cachexia in patients with cancer will also increase the toxicity of anti-cancer treatments and reduce their tolerability, thus also negatively impacting patients’ survival. Although the causes of cachexia remain obscure, we now know that imbalances in the levels of several circulating factors (such as hormones, cytokines and growth factors) usually lead to weight loss and wasting of muscles, as well as to loss of bone mass, even in the absence of bone metastases. In particular, a partially unexplored aspect of cachexia represents the connection between loss of skeletal muscle mass and the occurrence of bone loss and osteoporosis, as often shown in patients affected with cancer or undergoing radio- or chemotherapy treatments. Observations from our group supports the idea that skeletal muscle wasting may also play a role in inducing cancer-associated bone loss, thus leading to the hypothesis that muscle and bone are regulated in tandem in cachexia. Aside from musculoskeletal complications, occurrence of cancers such as colorectal cancer also causes perturbations to the liver, especially in its most advanced/metastatic stages. We and others have recently demonstrated that colorectal cancer triggers oxidative-to-glycolytic shifts in hepatic metabolism, along with increased gluconeogenesis and net negative energy balance, which are hallmarks of cachexia. Our group is actively involved in understanding the musculoskeletal complications resulting from abnormal hepatokine secretion in colorectal cancer to the extent of identifying novel cachexia treatments.
Current projects:
Role or RANKL in ovarian cancer-induced musculoskeletal complications
Role of IGFBP1 in the liver-bone-muscle axis in colorectal cancer
Characterization of cachexia in in vivo models of head and neck cancer
Effects of pre-existing obesity in cancer-induced cachexia
Characterization of chemotherapy-induced cachexia
New mediators of pediatric cancer cachexia
Regulation of muscle regeneration in cancer
Identification of novel regulators of muscle and bone loss in aging
Publications:
cancer cachexia, muscle physiology, muscle pathology, cancer-associated musculoskeletal disease, sarcopenia of aging, IL-6, STAT3, RANKL, chemotherapy toxicities, ovarian cancer, colorectal cancer, tumor-host interactions, muscular dystrophy
UNDERGRADUATE
University of Torino, Italy
MSc., Industrial Biotechnology
07/2004
GRADUATE
University of Torino, Italy
Ph.D., Experimental Pathology
11/2008
POSTDOCTORAL
University of Genova, Italy
Post-Doc, Neuromuscular diseases
01/2009 – 01/2010
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL
Post-Doc, Cancer cachexia
03/2010 – 07/2011
Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA
Post-Doc, Cancer cachexia
08/2011 – 07/2013
R21 CA190028-01 (NIH/NCI)
(PQB-3) Roles of skeletal muscle mass in chemotherapy-associated cachexia
09/2014 - 08/2016
V2017-021 (V Foundation Scholar Grant)
Mechanisms and treatment of chemotherapy-induced cachexia and muscle weakness
11/2017 - 10/2019
Research Scholar
Showalter Research Trust
07/2018
Excellence in Research
4th Cancer Cachexia Conference
09/2018
132013-RSG-18-010-01-CCG (American Cancer Society)
Mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced muscle weakness and fatigue
07/2018 - 06/2022
R01 AR079379 (NIH/NIAMS)
Targeting RANKL for the treatment of muscle and bone defects in cachexia
07/2021 - 06/2026
R01 AR080051 (NIH/NIAMS)
IGFBP1 mediates a liver-bone-muscle axis in colorectal cancer cachexia
08/2022 – 07/2027
-Department of Pathology, University of 麻豆传媒高清 Anschutz Medical Campus
-University of 麻豆传媒高清 Comprehensive Cancer Center
MyNCBI BIBLIOGRAPHY: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/myncbi/andrea.bonetto.1/bibliography/public/
PUBLICATIONS (OVER THE PAST 5 YEARS):
1. Bonetto A, Kays JK, Parker VA, Matthews RR, Barreto R, Puppa MJ, Kang KS, Carson JA, Guise TA, Mohammad KS, Robling AG, Couch ME, Koniaris LG, Zimmers TA. Differential bone loss in mouse models of colon cancer cachexia. Front Physiol 7:679 (2017)
2. Mota R, Rodríguez JE, Bonetto A, O’Connell T, Parry TL, Lockyer P, McCudden CR, Asher S, Couch M, Willis MS. Post-Translationally Modified Muscle-Specific Ubiquitin Ligases as Circulating Biomarkers in Experimental Cancer Cachexia. Am J Cancer Res 7(9):1948-1958 (2017)
3. Barreto R, Kitase Y, Matsumoto T, Pin F, Colston KC, Couch KE, O’Connell TM, Couch ME, Bonewald FE, Bonetto A. ACVR2B/Fc counteracts chemotherapy-induced loss of muscle and bone mass. Sci Rep 7(1):14470 (2017)
4. Pin F, Barreto R, Kitase K, Mitra S, Erne CE, Novinger LJ, Zimmers TA, Couch ME, Bonewald LF, Bonetto A. Growth of ovarian cancer xenografts causes loss of muscle and bone mass: a new model for the study of cancer cachexia. J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle, 9(4):685-700 (2018)
5. Pin F, Barreto R, Couch ME, Bonetto A*, O’Connell TM*. Cachexia induced by cancer and chemotherapy yield distinct metabolic perturbations. *co-corresponding authors. J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle, 10(1):140-154 (2019)
6. Pin F, Novinger LJ, Huot JR, Harris RA, Couch ME, O’Connell TM, Bonetto A. PDK4 drives metabolic alterations and muscle atrophy in cancer cachexia. FASEB J, 33(6):7778-7790 (2019)
7. Huot JR, Essex AL, Gutierrez M, Barreto R, Wang M, Waning DL, Plotkin LI, Bonetto A. Chronic treatment with multi-kinase inhibitors causes differential toxicities on skeletal and cardiac muscles. Cancers (Basel), 11(4):571 (2019)
8. Pin F, Bonetto A, Bonewald LF, Gordon KL. Molecular Mechanisms Responsible for the Rescue Effects of Pamidronate on Muscle Cachexia in Pediatric Burn Patients. Frontiers in Endocrinology (Lausanne), 10:543 (2019)
9. O’Connell TM, Pin F, Couch ME, Bonetto A. Treatment with soluble activin receptor type IIB alters metabolic response in chemotherapy-induced cachexia. Cancers (Basel), 11(9):1222 (2019)
10. Mitra S, Tiwari K, Pandhiri T, Podicheti R, Pandhiri T, Rusch DB, Bonetto A, Zhang C, Mitra AK. Transcriptome profiling reveals matrisome alteration is a key feature of ovarian cancer progression. Cancers (Basel), 11(10):1513 (2019)
11. Essex LA, Pin F, Huot JR, Bonewald LF, Plotkin LI, Bonetto A. Bisphosphonate treatment ameliorates chemotherapy-induced bone and muscle abnormalities in young mice. Frontiers in Endocrinology (Lausanne), 10:809 (2019)
12. Huot JR, Novinger LJ, Pin F, Bonetto A. HCT116 colorectal liver metastases exacerbate muscle wasting in a mouse model for the study of colorectal cancer cachexia. Disease Models and Mechanisms, 13(1):dmm043166 (2020)
13. Alwani M, Jones AJ, Novinger LJ, Pittelkow E, Bonetto A, Sim MW, Moore MJ, Mantravadi AV. The impact of sarcopenia on postoperative outcomes of autologous free tissue transfer in head and neck reconstruction. Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery, 36(5):369-378 (2020)
14. Huot JR, Novinger LJ, Pin F, Narasimhan A, Zimmers TA, O’Connell TM, Bonetto A. Formation of colorectal liver metastases induces musculoskeletal and metabolic abnormalities consistent with exacerbated cachexia. JCI Insight, 5(9):e136687 (2020)
15. Huot JR, Pin F, Narasimhan A, Novinger LJ, Keith AS, Zimmers TA, Willis MS, Bonetto A. ACVR2B antagonism as a countermeasure to multi-organ perturbations in metastatic colorectal cancer cachexia. J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle, 11(6):1779-1798 (2020)
16. Jones AJ, Campiti VJ, Alwani MA, Novinger LJ, Bonetto A, Sim MW, Yesensky JA, Moore MG, Mantravadi AV. Skeletal muscle index's impact on discharge disposition after head and neck cancer free flap reconstruction. Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, 8:194599820973232 (2020)
17. Kim H-G, Huot JR, Pin F, Guo B, Bonetto A, Nader GA. Reduced rDNA transcription diminishes skeletal muscle ribosomal capacity and protein synthesis in cancer cachexia. FASEB J, 35(2):e21335 (2021)
18. Rupert JE, Narasimhan A, Jengelley DHA, Jiang Y, Liu J, Au E, Silverman L, Bonetto A, Cao S, Lu X, O’Connell TM, Liu Y, KOniaris LG, Zimmers TA. Tumor-derived IL-6 and trans-signaling among tumor, fat, and muscle mediate pancreatic cancer cachexia. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 6(2):200-210 (2021)
19. Jones AJ, Campiti VJ, Alwani MA, Novinger LJ, Bonetto A, Sim MW, Yesensky JA, Moore MG, Mantravadi AV. Sarcopenia is Associated with Blood Transfusions in Head and Neck Cancer Free Flap Surgery. Laryngoscope nvestigative Otolaryngology, 6(2):200-210 (2021)
20. Huot JR, Pin F, Essex AL, Bonetto A. MC38 tumors induce musculoskeletal defects in colorectal cancer. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(3):1486 (2021)
21. Ballarò R, Lopalco P, Audrito V, Beltrà M, Pin F, Angelini R, Costelli P, Corcelli A, Bonetto A, Szeto HH, O’Connell TM, Penna F. Targeting mitochondria by SS-31 ameliorates the whole body energy status in cancer- and chemotherapy-induced cachexia. Cancers (Basel), 13(4):850 (2021)
22. Huot JR, Pin F, Bonetto A. Muscle weakness caused by cancer and chemotherapy is associated with loss of motor unit connectivity. American Journal of Cancer Research, 11(6):2990-3001 (2021)
23. Pin F, Prideaux M, Huot JR, Essex AL, Plotkin LI, Bonetto A, Bonewald LF. Non-bone metastatic cancers promote osteocyte-induced bone destruction. Cancer Letters, 520:80-90 (2021)
24. O’Connell TM, Golzarri-Arroyo L, Pin F, Barreto R, Stephanie D, Couch M, Bonetto A. Metabolic
biomarkers for the early detection of cancer cachexia. Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, 9:720096 (2021)
25. Pin F, Jones AJ, Huot JR, Narasimhan A, Zimmers TA, Bonewald, LF, Bonetto A. RANKL blockade reduces cachexia and bone loss induced by non-metastatic ovarian cancer in mice. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, in press (2022)
26. Pin F, Huot JR, Bonetto A. The mitochondria-targeting agent MitoQ improves muscle atrophy, weakness and oxidative metabolism in C26 tumor-bearing mice. Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, in press (2022)
27. Jones AJ, Davis KP, Novinger LJ, Bonetto A, Mantravadi AV, Sim MW, Yesensky JA, Moore MG,. Postoperative consequences of cancer cachexia after head and neck free flap reconstruction. Head & Neck, in press (2022)
28. Essex AL, Huot JR, Deosthale P, Wagner A, Figueras J, Davis A, Damrath J, Pin F, Wallace J, Bonetto A, Plotkin LI. TREM2 R47H variant causes distinct age- and sex-dependent musculoskeletal alterations in mice. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, in press (2022)
29. Huot JR, Pin F, Chatterjee R, Bonetto A. PGC1飦� overexpression preserves muscle mass and function in cisplatin-induced cachexia. J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle, in press (2022)
PRESENTATIONS (OVER THE PAST 5 YEARS):
LOCAL:
Understanding the mechanisms associated with chemotherapy-derived cachexia and muscle weakness
Indiana University Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center
Indianapolis, IN
01/2017
Ovarian cancer causes loss of muscle and bone mass: a new model for the study of cancer cachexia
Indiana University
Indianapolis, IN
06/2018
Mechanisms of cancer- and chemotherapy-induced cachexia
Indiana University Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center
Indianapolis, IN
02/2019
Musculoskeletal deficits induced by cancer and its treatments
Indiana University Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center Seminar Series
Indianapolis, IN
06/2020
Tumor- and host-derived mediators trigger muscle and bone loss in experimental cancer cachexia
Indiana University Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center
Indianapolis, IN
08/2020
Update on Muscle and Bone Crosstalk Research Team
Indiana Center for Musculoskeletal Health
Indianapolis, IN
08/2020
Functional and molecular analysis of muscle in patients with and without head and neck cancer cachexia Indiana Center for Musculoskeletal Health
Indianapolis, IN
08/2020
Consequences of TREM2 mutations in bone and muscle
Indiana Center for Musculoskeletal Health
Indianapolis, IN
08/2020
INTERNATIONAL:
Modeling cachexia: the impact of anti-neoplastic therapy
10th Cachexia Conference
Rome, Italy
12/2017
Understanding the mechanisms associated with chemotherapy-derived cachexia and muscle weakness
University of Torino
Torino, Italy
12/2017
Understanding the mechanisms responsible for cancer- and chemotherapy-derived cachexia
University of Tennessee Health Science Center
Memphis, TN
05/2018
Understanding the mechanisms associated with chemotherapy-derived cachexia and muscle weakness
Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine
Chicago, IL
09/2018
PDK4 drives metabolic alterations and skeletal muscle atrophy in cancer cachexia
4th Cancer Cachexia Conference
Philadelphia, PA
09/2018
PDK4 drives metabolic alterations and skeletal muscle atrophy in cancer cachexia
11th Cachexia Conference
Maastricht, Netherlands
12/2018
Metabolic abnormalities in cancer cachexia
University of Torino
Torino, Italy
12/2018
Cancer- and chemotherapy-induced musculoskeletal complications
Pennsylvania State University
State College, PA
11/2019
Musculoskeletal complications of cancer and its treatments
12th Cachexia Conference
Berlin, Germany
12/2019
Mitochondria-targeted strategies ameliorate chemotherapy-induced cachexia
The New York Academy of Sciences – Confronting Cachexia
04/2021
Tumor- and host-derived factors drive musculoskeletal complication in cancer cachexia
Indiana University School of Medicine
08/2021
Mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced musculoskeletal complications
6th Cancer Cachexia Hybrid Conference
Virtual
08/2021
Musculoskeletal defects induced by cancer and its treatments
Université Catholique de Louvain
Virtual
10/2021
Musculoskeletal complications of cancer and its treatments
Inside Scientific & American Physiological Society, Webinar
Virtual
11/2021
Targeting RANKL for the treatment of muscle and bone defects in cachexia
XXXVI Annual Meeting of the Chilean Society of Physiological Sciences
Virtual
11/2021
Tumor- and host-derived factors drive musculoskeletal complication in cancer cachexia
Myology Institute Seminar Serie
University of Florida
Virtual
02/2022
CU Anschutz
Academic Office One
12631 East 17th Avenue
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Aurora, CO 80045
303-724-3704