Giulia Fiscon

Giulia Fiscon
  • PhD in Engineering in Computer Science
  • Assistant professor (RTDA ING-INF/06) at Sapienza University of Rome

About

95
Publications
24,058
Reads
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2,224
Citations
Current institution
Sapienza University of Rome
Current position
  • Assistant professor (RTDA ING-INF/06)
Additional affiliations
November 2015 - present
Italian National Research Council
Position
  • PostDoc Position
November 2012 - October 2015
Sapienza University of Rome
Position
  • PhD
Education
November 2012 - October 2015
Sapienza University of Rome
Field of study
  • Computer Engineering
September 2010 - July 2012
Campus Bio-Medico University
Field of study
  • Biomedical Engineering
September 2007 - July 2010
Campus Bio-Medico University
Field of study
  • Biomedical Engineering

Publications

Publications (95)
Article
Full-text available
Identifying and understanding the relationships between drug intake and adverse effects that can occur due to inadvertent molecular interactions between drugs and targets is a difficult task, especially considering the numerous variables that can influence the onset of such events. The ability to predict these side effects in advance would help phy...
Article
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In recent decades, microRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as key regulators of gene expression, and the identification of viral miRNAs (v-miRNAs) within some viruses, including hepatitis B virus (HBV), has attracted significant attention. HBV infections often progress to chronic states (CHB) and may induce fibrosis/cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (...
Article
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Background: BRAF and MEK inhibition is a successful strategy in managing BRAF-mutant melanoma, even if the treatment-related toxicity is substantial. We analyzed the role of drug-drug interactions (DDI) on the toxicity profile of anti-BRAF/anti-MEK therapy. Methods: In this multicenter, observational, and retrospective study, DDIs were assessed...
Article
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Background The recent advances in biotechnology and computer science have led to an ever-increasing availability of public biomedical data distributed in large databases worldwide. However, these data collections are far from being “standardized” so to be harmonized or even integrated, making it impossible to fully exploit the latest machine learni...
Article
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Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a new acknowledged class of RNAs that has been shown to play a major role in several biological functions both in physiological and pathological conditions, operating as critical part of regulatory processes, like competing endogenous RNA (ceRNA) networks. The ceRNA hypothesis is a recently discovered molecular mechanis...
Article
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Background The immune profile of each patient could be considered as a portrait of the fitness of his/her own immune system. The predictive role of the immune profile in immune-related toxicities (irAEs) development and tumour response to treatment was investigated. Methods A prospective, multicenter study evaluating, through a multiplex assay, th...
Article
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Background Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have particular, immune-related adverse events (irAEs), as a consequence of interfering with self-tolerance mechanisms. The incidence of irAEs varies depending on ICI class, administered dose and treatment schedule. The aim of this study was to define a baseline (T0) immune profile (IP) predictive of i...
Article
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Background: The ability to increase their degree of pigmentation is an adaptive response that confers pigmentable melanoma cells higher resistance to BRAF inhibitors (BRAFi) compared to non-pigmentable melanoma cells. Methods: Here, we compared the miRNome and the transcriptome profile of pigmentable 501Mel and SK-Mel-5 melanoma cells vs. non-pi...
Article
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Introduction: Only a minority of patients with platinum refractory head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (PR/HNSCC) gain some lasting benefit from immunotherapy. Methods: The combined role of the comprehensive genomic (through the FoundationOne Cdx test) and immune profiles of 10 PR/HNSCC patients treated with the anti-PD-1 nivolumab was evaluat...
Article
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Breast cancer (BC) is a heterogeneous and complex disease characterized by different subtypes with distinct morphologies and clinical implications and for which new and effective treatment options are urgently demanded. The computational approaches recently developed for drug repurposing provide a very promising opportunity to offer tools that effi...
Article
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Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurologic disorder causing brain atrophy and the death of brain cells. It is a progressive condition marked by cognitive and behavioral impairment that significantly interferes with daily activities. AD symptoms develop gradually over many years and eventually become more severe, and no cure has been found yet to arre...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: The recent advances in biotechnology and computer science have led to an ever-increasing availability of public biomedical data distributed in large databases worldwide. However, these data collections are far from being “big” enough and “standardized” so to be integrated, making impossible to fully exploit latest machine learning techn...
Article
Full-text available
Multiple sclerosis is an autoimmune disease with a strong neuroinflammatory component that contributes to severe demyelination, neurodegeneration and lesions formation in white and grey matter of the spinal cord and brain. Increasing attention is being paid to the signaling of the biogenic amine histamine in the context of several pathological cond...
Article
2553 Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have peculiar, immune-related adverse events (irAEs), as a consequence of interfering with self-tolerance mechanisms. The incidence of irAEs varies by ICI class, administered dose and treatment schedule. The aim of the study was to define a baseline (T0) immune profile (IP) predictive of irAE dev...
Article
Full-text available
Background Recently, we developed a mathematical model for identifying putative competing endogenous RNA (ceRNA) interactions. This methodology has aroused a broad acknowledgment within the scientific community thanks to the encouraging results achieved when applied to breast invasive carcinoma, leading to the identification of PVT1, a long non-cod...
Article
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Despite advances in modern medicine that led to improvements in cardiovascular outcomes, cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of mortality and morbidity globally. Thus, there is an urgent need for new approaches to improve CVD drug treatments. As the development time and cost of drug discovery to clinical application are excessive...
Article
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Drug repurposing strategy, proposing a therapeutic switching of already approved drugs with known medical indications to new therapeutic purposes, has been considered as an efficient approach to unveil novel drug candidates with new pharmacological activities, significantly reducing the cost and shortening the time of de novo drug discovery. Meanin...
Article
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Tumor microenvironment (TME) includes a wide variety of cell types and soluble factors capable of suppressing immune-responses. While the role of NK cells in TME has been analyzed, limited information is available on the presence and the effect of polymorphonuclear (PMN) myeloid-derived suppressor cells, (MDSC). Among the immunomodulatory cells pre...
Article
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In this study, we integrate the outcomes of co-expression network analysis with the human interactome network to predict novel putative disease genes and modules. We first apply the SWItch Miner (SWIM) methodology, which predicts important (switch) genes within the co-expression network that regulate disease state transitions, then map them to the...
Article
The COVID-19 pandemic has overwhelmed the life and security of most of the world countries, and especially of the Western countries, without similar experiences in the recent past. In a first phase, the response of health systems and governments was disorganized, but then incisive, also driven by the fear of a new and dramatic phenomenon. In the se...
Article
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Rewiring glucose metabolism toward aerobic glycolysis provides cancer cells with a rapid generation of pyruvate, ATP, and NADH, while pyruvate oxidation to lactate guarantees refueling of oxidized NAD+ to sustain glycolysis. CtPB2, an NADH-dependent transcriptional co-regulator, has been proposed to work as an NADH sensor, linking metabolism to epi...
Article
We present SWIMmeR, an open-source version of its predecessor SWIM (SWitchMiner) that is a network-based tool for mining key (switch) genes that are associated with intriguing patterns of molecular co-abundance and may play a crucial role in phenotypic transitions in various biological settings. SWIM was originally written in MATLAB®, a proprietary...
Article
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Cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) have self-renewal abilities responsible for cancer progression, therapy resistance, and metastatic growth. The glioblastoma stem-like cells are the most studied among CSC populations. A recent study identified four transcription factors (SOX2, SALL2, OLIG2, and POU3F2) as the minimal core sufficient to reprogram differ...
Article
The availability of the epidemiological data strongly affects the reliability of the several mathematical models in tracing and forecasting COVID-19 pandemic, hampering a fair assessment of their relative performance. The marked difference between the lethality of the virus when comparing the first and second waves is an evident sign of the poor re...
Article
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The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic is a worldwide public health emergency. Despite the beginning of a vaccination campaign, the search for new drugs to appropriately treat COVID-19 patients remains a priority. Drug repurposing represents a faster and cheaper method than de novo drug discovery. In this study, we examined three different network-based approache...
Chapter
Pools of RNA molecules can act as competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs) and indirectly alter their expression levels by competitively binding shared microRNAs. This ceRNA cross talk yields an additional posttranscriptional regulatory layer, which plays key roles in both physiological and pathological processes. MicroRNAs can act as decoys by binding m...
Article
The continuous adherence to the conventional “one target, one drug” paradigm has failed so far to provide effective therapeutic solutions for heterogeneous and multifactorial diseases as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a rare progressive and chronic, debilitating neurological disease for which no cure is available. The present study is aimed a...
Article
Among breast cancer subtypes, triple‐negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive with the worst prognosis and the highest rates of metastatic disease. To identify TNBC gene signatures, we applied the network‐based methodology implemented by the SWIM software to gene expression data of TNBC patients in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) databas...
Article
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Background Currently, no proven effective drugs for the novel coronavirus disease COVID-19 exist and despite widespread vaccination campaigns, we are far short from herd immunity. The number of people who are still vulnerable to the virus is too high to hamper new outbreaks, leading a compelling need to find new therapeutic options devoted to comba...
Article
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The novelty of new human coronavirus COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2 and the lack of effective drugs and vaccines gave rise to a wide variety of strategies employed to fight this worldwide pandemic. Many of these strategies rely on the repositioning of existing drugs that could shorten the time and reduce the cost compared to de novo drug discovery. In this st...
Article
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Background: Rewiring of metabolism induced by oncogenic K-Ras in cancer cells involves both glucose and glutamine utilization sustaining enhanced, unrestricted growth. The development of effective anti-cancer treatments targeting metabolism may be facilitated by the identification and rational combinatorial targeting of metabolic pathways. Method...
Article
Full-text available
Breast cancer (BC) is a heterogeneous and complex disease as witnessed by the existence of different subtypes and clinical characteristics that poses significant challenges in disease management. The complexity of this tumor may rely on the highly interconnected nature of the various biological processes as stated by the new paradigm of Network Med...
Preprint
The novelty of new human coronavirus COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2 and the lack of effective drugs and vaccines gave rise to a wide variety of strategies employed to fight this worldwide pandemic. Many of these strategies rely on the repositioning of existing drugs that could shorten the time and reduce the cost compared to de novo drug discovery. In this st...
Article
Full-text available
Up to date, screening for prostate cancer (PCa) remains one of the most appealing but also a very controversial topics in the urological community. PCa is the second most common cancer in men worldwide and it is universally acknowledged as a complex disease, with a multi-factorial etiology. The pathway of PCa diagnosis has changed dramatically in t...
Article
Network Medicine applies network science approaches to investigate disease pathogenesis. Many different analytical methods have been used to infer relevant molecular networks, including protein–protein interaction networks, correlation‐based networks, gene regulatory networks, and Bayesian networks. Network Medicine applies these integrated approac...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a complex and heterogeneous syndrome. Network-based analysis implemented by SWIM software can be exploited to identify key molecular switches - called “switch genes” - for the disease. Genes contributing to common biological processes or defining given cell types are usually co-regulated and co-expres...
Article
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Background: miRNAs regulate the expression of several genes with one miRNA able to target multiple genes and with one gene able to be simultaneously targeted by more than one miRNA. Therefore, it has become indispensable to shorten the long list of miRNA-target interactions to put in the spotlight in order to gain insight into understanding the re...
Preprint
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a heterogeneous and complex syndrome. Network-based analysis implemented by SWIM software can be exploited to identify key molecular switches - called "switch genes" - for disease. Genes contributing to common biological processes or define given cell types are frequently co-regulated and co-expressed...
Article
Network medicine is a rapidly evolving new field of medical research, which combines principles and approaches of systems biology and network science, holding the promise to uncovering the causes and to revolutionize the diagnosis and treatments of human diseases. This new paradigm reflects the fact that human diseases are not caused by single mole...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose Several studies have shown that different tumour types sharing a driver gene mutation do not respond uniformly to the same targeted agent. Our aim was to use an unbiased network-based approach to investigate this fundamental issue using BRAFV600E mutant tumours and the BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib. Methods We applied SWIM, a software able to...
Chapter
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) involved in several biological processes and diseases. MiRNAs regulate gene expression at the posttranscriptional level, mostly downregulating their targets by binding specific regions of transcripts through imperfect sequence complementarity. Prediction of miRNA-binding sites is challenging, and...
Article
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Background It is well-known that glioblastoma contains self-renewing, stem-like subpopulation with the ability to sustain tumor growth. These cells – called cancer stem-like cells – share certain phenotypic characteristics with untransformed stem cells and are resistant to many conventional cancer therapies, which might explain the limitations in c...
Article
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Network medicine relies on different types of networks: from the molecular level of protein–protein interactions to gene regulatory network and correlation studies of gene expression. Among network approaches based on the analysis of the topological properties of protein–protein interaction (PPI) networks, we discuss the widespread DIAMOnD (disease...
Article
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A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.
Article
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Background: Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is a neurodegenaritive disorder characterized by a progressive dementia, for which actually no cure is known. An early detection of patients affected by AD can be obtained by analyzing their electroencephalography (EEG) signals, which show a reduction of the complexity, a perturbation of the synchrony, and a sl...
Article
Full-text available
Glioblastoma, the most malignant brain cancer, contains self-renewing, stem-like cells that sustain tumor growth and therapeutic resistance. Identifying genes promoting stem-like cell differentiation might unveil targets for novel treatments. To detect them, here we apply SWIM - a software able to unveil genes (named switch genes) involved in drast...
Chapter
In the last decade noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) have been extensively studied in several biological processes and human diseases including cancer. microRNAs (miRNAs) are the best-known class of ncRNAs. miRNAs are small ncRNAs of around 20–22 nucleotides (nt) and are crucial posttranscriptional regulators of protein coding genes. Recently, new classes of...
Chapter
The development of high-throughput Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technologies allows to massively extract at low cost an extremely large amount of biological sequences in the form of reads, i.e., short fragments of an organism’s genome. The advent of NGS poses new issues for computer scientists and bioinformaticians, leading to the design of alg...
Article
Full-text available
SWItchMiner (SWIM) is a wizard-like software implementation of a procedure, previously described, able to extract information contained in complex networks. Specifically, SWIM allows unearthing the existence of a new class of hubs, called “fight-club hubs”, characterized by a marked negative correlation with their first nearest neighbors. Among the...
Article
Full-text available
Recent findings have identified competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs) as the drivers in many disease conditions, including cancers. The ceRNAs indirectly regulate each other by reducing the amount of microRNAs (miRNAs) available to target messenger RNAs (mRNAs). The ceRNA interactions mediated by miRNAs are modulated by a titration mechanism, i.e. lar...
Data
PVT1 isoform abundance. This table reports the percentage of PVT1 abundance, showed in Fig 5, in terms of its isoforms both in normal and cancer tissues of TCGA breast invasive carcinoma. (XLSX)
Data
Visualisation of PVT1 genomic locus in human. This figure shows the 91 PVT1 isoforms (i.e. bases 128,806,789-129,113,603 within the February 2009 human genome build GRCh37/hg19) visualised within the UCSC Genome browser (https://genome.ucsc.edu/) and assembled by the reference-based RNA-Seq transcriptome assembler Cufflinks by using the TCGA breast...
Data
Sequences of two PVT1 isoforms. This file contains the full genome sequences (in FASTA format) of the two PVT1 isoforms that mostly change between normal and cancer tissues: TCONS_147501 (missing the binding site for miR-200 family members) and TCONS_147426 (harbouring the binding site for the miR-200b/200c/429 cluster). (FA)
Data
Principal Component Analysis. This table reports the results of the principal component analysis, in separate and accordingly named sheets: first sheet) the eigenvalues of the covariance matrix of the n-by-p data matrix X, whose rows correspond to observations (i.e. isoforms’ variations that are the difference of the expression levels of the PVT1 i...
Data
PVT1 isoforms variation. This table reports the variations between cancer and normal tissues of the expression levels of all the PVT1 isoforms with respect to the variation of the TCONS_147501 isoform lacking the binding site for the miR-200 family members, showed in Fig 7A. (XLSX)
Data
Differential alternative PVT1 usage analysis. This figure shows the results of a differential alternative exon usage analysis, performed by comparing the normalized reads counts distributions on the Refseq PVT1 exons. It shows a striking pattern supporting the up-regulation of all the exons downstream of exon 5 in the tumour samples. This observati...
Data
Reconstruction of PVT1 genomic locus in human. This file contains PVT1 gene annotations in GTF (Gene Transfer Format) format provided by the reference-based RNA-Seq transcriptome assembler Cufflinks. This file is a simple tab-delimited text file for describing genomic features and it can be uploaded to a genome browser such as the UCSC Genome brows...
Data
PVT1 isoforms expression levels. This table reports the FPKM values of PVT1 isoforms across normal and cancer breast tissues in separate and accordingly named sheets. (XLSX)
Article
Full-text available
Background Data extraction and integration methods are becoming essential to effectively access and take advantage of the huge amounts of heterogeneous genomics and clinical data increasingly available. In this work, we focus on The Cancer Genome Atlas, a comprehensive archive of tumoral data containing the results of high-throughout experiments, m...
Article
Full-text available
Background Continuous improvements in next generation sequencing technologies led to ever-increasing collections of genomic sequences, which have not been easily characterized by biologists, and whose analysis requires huge computational effort. The classification of species emerged as one of the main applications of DNA analysis and has been addre...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Table of contents A1 Highlights from the eleventh ISCB Student Council Symposium 2015 Katie Wilkins, Mehedi Hassan, Margherita Francescatto, Jakob Jespersen, R. Gonzalo Parra, Bart Cuypers, Dan DeBlasio, Alexander Junge, Anupama Jigisha, Farzana Rahman O1 Prioritizing a drug’s targets using both gene expression and structural similarity Griet Laene...
Chapter
The analysis of gene expression profiles from microarray/RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) experimental samples demands new efficient methods from statistics and computer science. This chapter considers two main types of gene expression data analysis such as gene clustering and experiment classification. It introduces the transcriptome analysis, highlightin...
Article
Full-text available
Motivation: Nowadays, knowledge extraction methods from Next Generation Sequencing data are highly requested. In this work, we focus on RNA-seq gene expression analysis and specifically on case-control studies with rule-based supervised classification algorithms that build a model able to discriminate cases from controls. State of the art algorith...
Article
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Feature selection methods are used in machine learning and data analysis to select a subset of features that may be successfully used in the construction of a model for the data. These methods are applied under the assumption that often many of the available features are redundant for the purpose of the analysis. In this paper, we focus on a partic...
Article
Full-text available
RNA structure prediction and structural motifs analysis are challenging tasks in the investigation of RNA function. We propose a novel procedure to detect structural motifs shared between two RNAs (a reference and a target). In particular, we developed two core modules: (i) nbRSSP_extractor, to assign a unique structure to the reference RNA encoded...
Article
Full-text available
Detection of RNA structure similarities is still one of the major computational problems in the discovery of RNA functions. A case in point is the study of the new appreciated long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), emerging as new players involved in many cellular processes and molecular interactions. Among several mechanisms of action, some lncRNAs show...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and its preliminary stage - Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) - are the most widespread neurodegenerative disorders, and their investigation remains an open challenge. ElectroEncephalography (EEG) appears as a non-invasive and repeatable technique to diagnose brain abnormalities. Despite technical advances, the analysis of EE...
Article
Full-text available
Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) machines extract from a biological sample a large number ofshort DNA fragments (reads). These reads are then used for several applications, e.g., sequencereconstruction, DNA assembly, gene expression profiling, mutation analysis. We propose a method to evaluate the similarity between reads. This method does not rely...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Objective: Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, for which actually no cure is known [1]. Different studies have shown that AD has (at least) three major effects on electroencephalography (EEG) signals: enhanced complexity, slowing of signals, and perturbations in EEG synchrony [2]. The aim of this work is to achieve an a...
Article
Full-text available
Specific fragments, coming from short portions of DNA (e.g., mitochondrial, nuclear, and plastid sequences), have been defined as DNA Barcode and can be used as markers for organisms of the main life kingdoms. Species classification with DNA Barcode sequences has been proven effective on different organisms. Indeed, specific gene regions have been...

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