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Featured researches published by A. Gorini.


Molecular Membrane Biology | 1990

Natural distribution and occurrence of coenzyme Q homologues

Maurizio Battino; Elida Ferri; A. Gorini; R. F. Villa; Jesús R. Huertas; Pierluigi Fiorella; Maria Luisa Genova; Giorgio Lenaz; M. Marchetti

The knowledge of coenzyme Q levels in tissues, organs, and subcellular compartments is of outstanding interest. A wide amount of data regarding coenzyme Q distribution and occurrence was collected in the last decades; nevertheless the data are often hard to compare because of the different extraction methods and different analytical techniques used. We have undertaken a systematic study for detecting the ubiquinone content in subcellular compartments, cells, and whole-tissue homogenates by a previously standardized HPLC method performed after an extraction procedure identical for all samples. It was confirmed that the major coenzyme Q homologue in rat tissues is coenzyme Q9; however, it was pointed out that all the rodents samples tested contain more than one coenzyme Q homologue. The coenzyme Q homologue distribution is tissue dependent with relatively high coenzyme Q10 content in brain mitochondria, irrespective of the rat strain used. There is no constant relationship of the coenzyme Q content in mitochondria and microsomes fractions. Most organisms tested (including other mammals, bird and fish specimens) have only coenzyme Q10, while the protozoan Tetrahymena pyriformis contains only coenzyme Q8.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 1995

Coenzyme Q content in synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondria from different brain regions in the ageing rat.

Maurizio Battino; A. Gorini; R. F. Villa; Maria Luisa Genova; Carla Bovina; Simonetta Sassi; G.P. Littarru; Giorgio Lenaz

We investigated the Coenzyme Q (CoQ) content of different mitochondrial fractions [free mitochondria (FM), synaptic heavy (HM) and light mitochondria (LM)] from three brain areas (cortex, striatum, hippocampus) of rats at different ages. In rats from 2 to 26 months of age, we observed only small differences in total CoQ content (CoQ9 + CoQ10). In FM and LM fractions, values are very similar and appear to be much higher than in HM fractions. The CoQ10/CoQ9 ratios are much higher in brain mitochondria than in other organs, suggesting possible modifications of CoQ biosynthetic pathways in brain; nevertheless they appear to remain constant during ageing. CoQ9 and CoQ10 contents slowly decrease reaching their minimum in rats of 18 months of age, then increase in the older ages. Considering ageing as partially driven by a summation of free radical-mediated processes, we can hypothesize that damage occurring to biological structures in the first half of life might be followed by induction phenomena tending to re-establish the primitive levels of antioxidant molecules.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2003

Affective disorders, antidepressant drugs and brain metabolism.

Antonio Moretti; A. Gorini; R. F. Villa

There is increasing evidence that affective disorders are associated with dysfunction of neurotransmitter postsynaptic transduction pathways and that chronic treatment with clinically active drugs results in adaptive modification of these pathways. Despite the close dependence of signal transduction on adenosine triphosphate (ATP) availability, the changes in energy metabolism in affective disorders are largely unknown. This question has been indirectly dealt with through functional imaging studies (PET, SPECT, MRS). Despite some inconsistencies, PET and SPECT studies suggest low activity in cortical (especially frontal) regions in depressed patients, both unipolar and bipolar, and normal or increased activity in the manic pole. Preliminary MRS studies indicate some alterations in brain metabolism, with reduced creatine phosphate and ATP levels in the brain of patients with affective disorders. However, the involvement of the energy metabolism in affective disorders is still debated. We propose direct neurochemical investigations on mitochondrial functional parameters of energy transduction, such as the activities of (a) the enzymatic systems of oxidative metabolic cycle (Krebs cycle); (b) the electron transfer chain; (c) oxidative phosphorylation, and (d) the enzyme activities of ATP-requiring ATPases. These processes should be studied in affective disorders and in animals treated with antidepressant drugs or lithium.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1991

Structural and functional aspects of the respiratory chain of synaptic and nonsynaptic mitochondria derived from selected brain regions

Maurizio Battino; Enrico Bertoli; Gabriella Formiggini; Simonetta Sassi; A. Gorini; R. F. Villa; Giorgio Lenaz

Studies on brain mitochondria are complicated by the regional, cellular, and subcellular heterogeneity of the central nervous system. This study was performed using synaptic and nonsynaptic mitochondria obtained from cortex, hippocampus, and striatum of male Sprague-Dawley rats (3 months old). Ubiquinone content, detected by HPLC analysis, was about 1.5 nmol/mg protein with an approximate CoQ9/CoQ10 molecular ratio of 2:1. The activities of several respiratory chain complexes were also studied (succinate-cyt.c reductase, NADH-cyt.c reductase, succinate-DCIP, ubiquinol2-cyt.c reductase, and cytochrome oxidase), and generally found to be higher in mitochondria from cortex than from other regions. Study of the activities of some of these enzymes vs. 1/T (Arrhenius plots) showed a straight line with an activation energy between 7 and 10 kcal/mol in all the three areas considered. Only CoQ2H2-cyt.c reductase activity revealed a biphasic temperature dependence. Also anisotropy (as fluorescence polarization) of the hydrophobic probe DPH showed a deviation from linearity; the break points for both enzymatic activity and anisotropy were found at about 23–24°C.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Decrease of rotenone inhibition is a sensitive parameter of complex I damage in brain non-synaptic mitochondria of aged rats

Maria Luisa Genova; Carla Bovina; M. Marchetti; Francesco Pallotti; Catleen Tietz; G. Biagini; Armanda Pugnaloni; Claudio Viticchi; A. Gorini; R. F. Villa; Giorgio Lenaz

We investigated NADH oxidation in non‐synaptic and synaptic mitochondria from brain cortex of 4‐ and 24‐month‐old rats. The NADH oxidase activity was significantly lower in non‐synaptic mitochondria from aged rats; we also found a significant decrease of sensitivity of NADH oxidation to the specific Complex I inhibitor, rotenone. Since the rotenone‐binding site encompasses Complex I subunits encoded by mtDNA, these results are in accordance with the mitochondrial theory of aging, whereby somatic mtDNA mutations are at the basis of cellular senescence. Accordingly, a 5 kb deletion was detected only in the cortex of the aged animals.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2002

ATPases enzyme activities during ageing in different types of somatic and synaptic plasma membranes from rat frontal cerebral cortex.

A. Gorini; Umberto Canosi; Elisabetta Devecchi; Diego Geroldi; R. F. Villa

The catalytic properties of energy-utilizing ATPases enzyme systems related to ions homeostasis were evaluated in different types of synaptic plasma membranes (SPM) and in somatic plasma membranes (SM) from cerebral cortex of rats aged 5, 10, and 22 months. The following enzymes were evaluated: Na+, K+-ATPase, Ca2+, Mg2+-ATPase, Mg2+-ATPase and the activity of acetylcholine esterase (AChE) was also evaluated. The ATPases located on SM and SPM and synaptic vesicles are involved in the regulation of presynaptic nerve ending homeostasis and postsynaptic activities. Different types of SM and SPM (three types) were obtained by combinations of differential and density gradient ultracentrifugation techniques in sucrose-Ficoll media: the first was obtained by purification of the sediment of mitochondrial supernate and the second after synaptosomal lysis and purification on density gradient. In the cerebral cortex of 5-month-old rats, the catalytic properties of ATPases systems markedly differ according to the different types of SPM and SM, thus indicating that the metabolic role of each ATPase is determined by their subcellular in vivo localization. As regards ageing: (i) ATPase enzyme catalytic activities tend to decrease during ageing in a complex way; (ii) ageing induced specific modifications in individual ATPases according to their subsynaptic localization; and (iii) these effects are probably due to specific biochemical situations that take place at each age, reflecting the bioenergetic state of the cerebral tissue with respect to the energy demand. The cerebral concentration and content of SM proteins were increased by ageing suggesting that many defective noncatalytic proteins may be formed during ageing, as shown by immunoblotting techniques.


Neurochemical Research | 1995

Modifications by chronic intermittent hypoxia and drug treatment on skeletal muscle metabolism

O. Pastoris; Maurizia Dossena; P. Foppa; R. Arnaboldi; A. Gorini; R. F. Villa; G. Benzi

The energy metabolism was evaluated in gastrocnemius muscle from 3-month-old rats subjected to either mild or severe 4-week intermittent normobaric hypoxia. Furthermore, 4-week treatment with CNS-acting drugs, namely, α-adrenergic (δ-yohimbine), vasodilator (papaverine, pinacidil), or oxygen-increasing (almitrine) agents was performed. The muscular concentration of the following metabolites was evaluated: glycogen, glucose, glucose 6-phosphate, pyruvate, lactate, lactateto-pyruvate ratio; citrate, α-ketoglutarate, succinate, malate; aspartate, glutamate, alanine; ammonia; ATP, ADP, AMP, creatine phosphate. Furthermore the Vmax of the following muscular enzymes was evaluated: hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase; citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase; total NADH cytochrome c reductase; cytochrome oxidase. The adaptation to chronic intermittent normobaric mild or severe hypoxia induced alterations of the components in the anaerobic glycolytic pathway [as supported by the increased activity of lactate dehydrogenase and/or hexokinase, resulting in the decreased glycolytic substrate concentration consistent with the increased lactate production and lactate-to-pyruvate ratio] and in the mitochondrial mechanism [as supported by the decreased activity of malate dehydrogenase and/or citrate synthase resulting in the decreased concentration of some key components in the tricarboxylic acid cycle]. The effect of the concomitant pharmacological treatment suggests that the action of CNS-acting drugs could be also related to their direct influence on the muscular biochemical mechanisms linked to energy transduction.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 1989

Enzyme activities in perikaryal and synaptic mitochondrial fractions from rat hippocampus during development.

R. F. Villa; A. Gorini; D. Geroldi; A. Lo Faro; C. Dell'Orbo

When pharmacological or basic neurochemical systematic characterization of mitochondrial enzymatic systems correlated to energy transduction processes is attempted, studies must be based on subcellular fractions with a high degree of purity from specific brain areas and from individual animals. Distinct populations of mitochondria heterogenous with respect to biochemical enzyme characteristics from rat brain hippocampus are described. Two mitochondrial populations were derived from synaptosomes by lysis and a third consists of free non-synaptic mitochondria. The maximum rate of some cerebral enzyme activities which are part of energy transduction (citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase; total NADH-cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase) and amino acid metabolism (glutamate dehydrogenase) were tested on these mitochondrial populations of 8- and 16-week-old rats. A comprehensive analysis of the data suggests that extensive but highly diversified catalytic expressions of the enzymes studied occur in the hippocampus. This is true even when a short period of the rat life span is studied. Hence the varying pattern of evolution of the differing cerebral mitochondria, probably a consequence of different metabolic functions, should be taken into account in any pharmacological study on these systems.


Neurochemical Research | 2002

ATPases of Synaptic Plasma Membranes from Hippocampus After Ischemia and Recovery During Ageing

R. F. Villa; A. Gorini; Siegfried Hoyer

Plasticity and relationships between individual ATPases linked to energy-utilizing systems of hippocampus, a very sensitive functional area to both age and ischemia, were studied during ageing on synaptic plasma membranes of 1-year-old “adult” and 2-year-old “aged” rats after 15 min of complete cerebral ischemia and different reperfusion times (01, 24, 48, 72, and 96 h). Activities of Na+, K+, Mg2+-ATPase, Mg2+-ATPase ouabain insensitive, Na+,K+-ATPase, “direct” or “basal” Mg2+-ATPase, and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were evaluated in synaptic plasma membranes, where they play the major role in the regulation of presynaptic nerve ending homeostasis. This in vivo study of recovery time-course from 15 mins of cerebral ischemia indicated specific biochemical assessments of functional meaning: (a) Na+K+-ATPase of synaptic plasma membranes in adult and aged animals is stimulated by ischemia; (b) this “hyperactivity” is more markedly related to adult than to aged animals; (c) these abnormalities still persist after 72 and 96 h during the recirculation times, indicating the delayed postischemic suffering of the brain; (d) specific Mg2+-ATPase enzyme system possess a lower catalytic power in aged animals than in adult ones, but remained unaltered in adult animals by ischemia and reperfusion; (e) Mg2+-ATPase is stimulated in aged animals by ischemia, further increasing during reperfusion up to 72–96 h, indicating the delayed hyperactivity of hippocampus; (f) the increased metabolic activity of hippocampus is indicated by the increased activity of cholinergic system; (g) integrity of synaptic plasma membranes seems not to be altered by 15 min ischemia to a critical extent to compromise their catalytic functionality during reperfusion; (h) AChE activity increases in both adult and aged at some survival times. There are logical reasons for the hypothesis that the modifications in ATPases catalytic activities in synaptic plasma membranes, which have been modified by ischemia in presynaptic terminals, may play important functional role during recovery time in cerebral tissue in vivo, especially as regards its responsiveness to noxious stimuli, particularly during the recirculation period from acute (or chronic) brain injury.


Neurochemical Research | 1998

Action of L-Acetylcarnitine on Different Cerebral Mitochondrial Populations from Cerebral Cortex

A. Gorini; A. D'Angelo; R. F. Villa

The maximum rate (Vmax) of some mitochondrial enzymatic activities related to the energy transduction (citrate synthase, α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, cytochrome oxidase) and amino acid metabolism (glutamate dehydrogenase, glutamate-pyruvate-transaminase, glutamate-oxaloacetate-transaminase) was evaluated in non-synaptic (free) and intra-synaptic mitochondria from rat brain cerebral cortex. Three types of mitochondria were isolated from rats subjected to i.p. treatment with L-acetylcarnitine at two different doses (30 and 60 mg·kg−1, 28 days, 5 days/week). In control (vehicle-treated) animals, enzyme activities are differently expressed in non-synaptic mitochondria respect to intra-synaptic “light” and “heavy” ones. In fact, α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, glutamate-pyruvate-transaminase and glutamate-oxaloacetate-transaminase are lower, while citrate synthase, cytochrome oxidase and glutamate dehydrogenase are higher in intra-synaptic mitochondria than in non-synaptic ones. This confirms that in various types of brain mitochondria a different metabolic machinery exists, due to their location in vivo. Treatment with L-acetylcarnitine decreased citrate synthase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities, while increased cytochrome oxidase and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase activities only in intra-synaptic mitochondria. Therefore in vivo administration of L-acetylcarnitine mainly affects some specific enzyme activities, suggesting a specific molecular trigger mode of action and only of the intra-synaptic mitochondria, suggesting a specific subcellular trigger site of action.

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Maurizio Battino

Marche Polytechnic University

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