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Dive into the research topics where Alberto Calderone is active.

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Featured researches published by Alberto Calderone.


Nature Methods | 2013

mentha: a resource for browsing integrated protein-interaction networks.

Alberto Calderone; Luisa Castagnoli; Gianni Cesareni

Systems-level approaches require access to comprehensive genome-wide and proteome-wide databases. A comprehensive resource that archives all published protein-protein interactions (PPIs) is not available. In fact, primary PPI databases capture only a fraction of published data.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

SIGNOR: a database of causal relationships between biological entities

Livia Perfetto; Leonardo Briganti; Alberto Calderone; Andrea Cerquone Perpetuini; Marta Iannuccelli; Francesca Langone; Luana Licata; Milica Marinkovic; Anna Mattioni; Theodora Pavlidou; Daniele Peluso; Lucia Lisa Petrilli; Stefano Pirrò; Daniela Posca; Elena Santonico; Alessandra Silvestri; Filomena Spada; Luisa Castagnoli; Gianni Cesareni

Assembly of large biochemical networks can be achieved by confronting new cell-specific experimental data with an interaction subspace constrained by prior literature evidence. The SIGnaling Network Open Resource, SIGNOR (available on line at http://signor.uniroma2.it), was developed to support such a strategy by providing a scaffold of prior experimental evidence of causal relationships between biological entities. The core of SIGNOR is a collection of approximately 12 000 manually-annotated causal relationships between over 2800 human proteins participating in signal transduction. Other entities annotated in SIGNOR are complexes, chemicals, phenotypes and stimuli. The information captured in SIGNOR can be represented as a signed directed graph illustrating the activation/inactivation relationships between signalling entities. Each entry is associated to the post-translational modifications that cause the activation/inactivation of the target proteins. More than 4900 modified residues causing a change in protein concentration or activity have been curated and linked to the modifying enzymes (about 351 human kinases and 94 phosphatases). Additional modifications such as ubiquitinations, sumoylations, acetylations and their effect on the modified target proteins are also annotated. This wealth of structured information can support experimental approaches based on multi-parametric analysis of cell systems after physiological or pathological perturbations and to assemble large logic models.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

VirusMentha: a new resource for virus-host protein interactions

Alberto Calderone; Luana Licata; Gianni Cesareni

Viral infections often cause diseases by perturbing several cellular processes in the infected host. Viral proteins target host proteins and either form new complexes or modulate the formation of functional host complexes. Describing and understanding the perturbation of the host interactome following viral infection is essential for basic virology and for the development of antiviral therapies. In order to provide a general overview of such interactions, a few years ago we developed VirusMINT. We have now extended the scope and coverage of VirusMINT and established VirusMentha, a new virus–virus and virus–host interaction resource build on the detailed curation protocols of the IMEx consortium and on the integration strategies developed for mentha. VirusMentha is regularly and automatically updated every week by capturing, via the PSICQUIC protocol, interactions curated by five different databases that are part of the IMEx consortium. VirusMentha can be freely browsed at http://virusmentha.uniroma2.it/ and its complete data set is available for download.


FEBS Journal | 2013

HuPho: the human phosphatase portal

Susanna Liberti; Francesca Sacco; Alberto Calderone; Livia Perfetto; Marta Iannuccelli; Simona Panni; Elena Santonico; Anita Palma; Aurelio Pio Nardozza; Luisa Castagnoli; Gianni Cesareni

Phosphatases and kinases contribute to the regulation of protein phosphorylation homeostasis in the cell. Phosphorylation is a key post‐translational modification underlying the regulation of many cellular processes. Thus, a comprehensive picture of phosphatase function and the identification of their target substrates would aid a systematic approach to a mechanistic description of cell signalling. Here we present a website designed to facilitate the retrieval of information about human protein phosphatases. To this end we developed a search engine to recover and integrate information annotated in several publicly available web resources. In addition we present a text‐mining‐assisted annotation effort aimed at extracting phosphatase related data reported in the scientific literature. The HuPho (human phosphatases) website can be accessed at http://hupho.uniroma2.it.


Database | 2013

DBATE: database of alternative transcripts expression.

Valerio Bianchi; Alessio Colantoni; Alberto Calderone; Gabriele Ausiello; Fabrizio Ferrè; Manuela Helmer-Citterich

Abstract The use of high-throughput RNA sequencing technology (RNA-seq) allows whole transcriptome analysis, providing an unbiased and unabridged view of alternative transcript expression. Coupling splicing variant-specific expression with its functional inference is still an open and difficult issue for which we created the DataBase of Alternative Transcripts Expression (DBATE), a web-based repository storing expression values and functional annotation of alternative splicing variants. We processed 13 large RNA-seq panels from human healthy tissues and in disease conditions, reporting expression levels and functional annotations gathered and integrated from different sources for each splicing variant, using a variant-specific annotation transfer pipeline. The possibility to perform complex queries by cross-referencing different functional annotations permits the retrieval of desired subsets of splicing variant expression values that can be visualized in several ways, from simple to more informative. DBATE is intended as a novel tool to help appreciate how, and possibly why, the transcriptome expression is shaped. Database URL: http://bioinformatica.uniroma2.it/DBATE/.


British Journal of Cancer | 2016

The cell-autonomous mechanisms underlying the activity of metformin as an anticancer drug.

Francesca Sacco; Alberto Calderone; Luisa Castagnoli; Gianni Cesareni

The biguanide drug metformin profoundly affects cell metabolism, causing an impairment of the cell energy balance and triggering a plethora of pleiotropic effects that vary depending on the cellular or environmental context. Interestingly, a decade ago, it was observed that metformin-treated diabetic patients have a significantly lower cancer risk. Although a variety of in vivo and in vitro observations emphasising the role of metformin as anticancer drug have been reported, the underlying mechanisms are still poorly understood. Here, we discuss our current understanding of the molecular mechanisms that are perturbed by metformin treatment and that might be relevant to understand its antitumour activities. We focus on the cell-autonomous mechanisms modulating growth and death of cancer cells.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2014

Combining affinity proteomics and network context to identify new phosphatase substrates and adapters in growth pathways

Francesca Sacco; Karsten Boldt; Alberto Calderone; Simona Panni; Serena Paoluzi; Luisa Castagnoli; Marius Ueffing; Gianni Cesareni

Protein phosphorylation homoeostasis is tightly controlled and pathological conditions are caused by subtle alterations of the cell phosphorylation profile. Altered levels of kinase activities have already been associated to specific diseases. Less is known about the impact of phosphatases, the enzymes that down-regulate phosphorylation by removing the phosphate groups. This is partly due to our poor understanding of the phosphatase-substrate network. Much of phosphatase substrate specificity is not based on intrinsic enzyme specificity with the catalytic pocket recognizing the sequence/structure context of the phosphorylated residue. In addition many phosphatase catalytic subunits do not form a stable complex with their substrates. This makes the inference and validation of phosphatase substrates a non-trivial task. Here, we present a novel approach that builds on the observation that much of phosphatase substrate selection is based on the network of physical interactions linking the phosphatase to the substrate. We first used affinity proteomics coupled to quantitative mass spectrometry to saturate the interactome of eight phosphatases whose down regulations was shown to affect the activation of the RAS-PI3K pathway. By integrating information from functional siRNA with protein interaction information, we develop a strategy that aims at inferring phosphatase physiological substrates. Graph analysis is used to identify protein scaffolds that may link the catalytic subunits to their substrates. By this approach we rediscover several previously described phosphatase substrate interactions and characterize two new protein scaffolds that promote the dephosphorylation of PTPN11 and ERK by DUSP18 and DUSP26, respectively.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

DISNOR: a disease network open resource

Prisca Lo Surdo; Alberto Calderone; Marta Iannuccelli; Luana Licata; Daniele Peluso; Luisa Castagnoli; Gianni Cesareni; Livia Perfetto

Abstract DISNOR is a new resource that aims at exploiting the explosion of data on the identification of disease-associated genes to assemble inferred disease pathways. This may help dissecting the signaling events whose disruption causes the pathological phenotypes and may contribute to build a platform for precision medicine. To this end we combine the gene-disease association (GDA) data annotated in the DisGeNET resource with a new curation effort aimed at populating the SIGNOR database with causal interactions related to disease genes with the highest possible coverage. DISNOR can be freely accessed at http://DISNOR.uniroma2.it/ where >3700 disease-networks, linking ∼2600 disease genes, can be explored. For each disease curated in DisGeNET, DISNOR links disease genes by manually annotated causal relationships and offers an intuitive visualization of the inferred ‘patho-pathways’ at different complexity levels. User-defined gene lists are also accepted in the query pipeline. In addition, for each list of query genes—either annotated in DisGeNET or user-defined—DISNOR performs a gene set enrichment analysis on KEGG-defined pathways or on the lists of proteins associated with the inferred disease pathways. This function offers additional information on disease-associated cellular pathways and disease similarity.


Current protocols in human genetics | 2017

SIGNOR: A Database of Causal Relationships Between Biological Entities—A Short Guide to Searching and Browsing

Prisca Lo Surdo; Alberto Calderone; Gianni Cesareni; Livia Perfetto


F1000Research | 2015

SIGNOR: a resource to support investigation of signalling networks

Stefano Pirrò; Livia Perfetto; Leonardo Briganti; Alberto Calderone; Andrea Cerquone Perpetuini; Marta Iannuccelli; Francesca Langone; Luana Licata; Milica Marinkovic; Anna Mattioni; Theodora Pavlidou; Daniele Peluso; Lucia Lisa Petrilli; Daniela Posca; Elena Santonico; Alessandra Silvestri; Filomena Spada; Francesca Maria Stefanizzi; Luisa Castagnoli; Gianni Cesareni

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Gianni Cesareni

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Luisa Castagnoli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Livia Perfetto

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Marta Iannuccelli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Elena Santonico

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Francesca Sacco

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Luana Licata

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Daniele Peluso

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Alessandra Silvestri

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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