Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alberto Di Donato is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alberto Di Donato.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 1991

Seminal RNase: a unique member of the ribonuclease superfamily

Giuseppe D'Alessio; Alberto Di Donato; Augusto Parente; Renata Piccoli

The RNase found in bull semen, although a member of the mammalian superfamily of ribonucleases, possesses some unusual properties. Besides its unique structure and enzymic properties, it displays antispermatogenic, antitumor and immunosuppressive activities. Seminal RNase belongs to an interesting group of RNases, the RISBASES (RIbonucleases with Special, i.e. non catalytic, Biological Actions) other members of which include angiogenin, selectively neurotoxic RNases, a lectin and the self-incompatibility factors from a flowering plant.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2003

Evolution of Bacterial and Archaeal Multicomponent Monooxygenases

Eugenio Notomista; Armin Lahm; Alberto Di Donato; Anna Tramontano

We report the results of a comparative analysis of the sequences of multicomponent monooxygenases, a family of enzymes of great interest for bioremediation of contaminated soil. We show that their function, in terms of substrate specificity, can be deduced from their subunit organization and composition, that rearrangements of subunits as well as recruitments of new ones can be used to explain their different properties and functionalities, and that the observed pattern can be rationalized invoking a number of evolutionary events, including horizontal gene transfer. Our analysis highlights the plasticity and modularity of this family of enzymes, which might very well be the reason underlying the extremely rapid emergence of new bacterial strains able to grow on contaminated soils.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Phenol Hydroxylase and Toluene/o-Xylene Monooxygenase from Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1: Interplay between Two Enzymes

Valeria Cafaro; Viviana Izzo; Roberta Scognamiglio; Eugenio Notomista; Paola Capasso; Annarita Casbarra; Piero Pucci; Alberto Di Donato

ABSTRACT Degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons by aerobic bacteria is generally divided into an upper pathway, which produces dihydroxylated aromatic intermediates by the action of monooxygenases, and a lower pathway, which processes these intermediates down to molecules that enter the citric acid cycle. Bacterial multicomponent monooxygenases (BMMs) are a family of enzymes divided into six distinct groups. Most bacterial genomes code for only one BMM, but a few cases (3 out of 31) of genomes coding for more than a single monooxygenase have been found. One such case is the genome of Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1, in which two different monooxygenases have been found, phenol hydroxylase (PH) and toluene/o-xylene monooxygenase (ToMO). We have already demonstrated that ToMO is an oligomeric protein whose subunits transfer electrons from NADH to oxygen, which is eventually incorporated into the aromatic substrate. However, no molecular data are available on the structure and on the mechanism of action of PH. To understand the metabolic significance of the association of two similar enzymatic activities in the same microorganism, we expressed and characterized this novel phenol hydroxylase. Our data indicate that the PH P component of PH transfers electrons from NADH to a subcomplex endowed with hydroxylase activity. Moreover, a regulatory function can be suggested for subunit PH M. Data on the specificity and the kinetic constants of ToMO and PH strongly support the hypothesis that coupling between the two enzymatic systems optimizes the use of nonhydroxylated aromatic molecules by the draining effect of PH on the product(s) of oxidation catalyzed by ToMO, thus avoiding phenol accumulation.


FEBS Letters | 1995

THE ANTITUMOR ACTION OF SEMINAL RIBONUCLEASE AND ITS QUATERNARY CONFORMATIONS

Valeria Cafaro; Claudia De Lorenzo; Renata Piccoli; Aurora Bracale; Maria Rosaria Mastronicola; Alberto Di Donato; Giuseppe D'Alessio

It has been previously shown that the antitumor action of bovine seminal ribonuclease (BS‐RNase) is dependent on its dimeric structure. However, two distinct quaternary structures, each in equilibrium with the other, have been described for the enzyme: one in which the two subunits exchange their N‐terminal ends, the other with no exchange. Antitumor activity assays, carried out on homogeneous quaternary forms of the enzyme, as well as on dimeric mutants of bovine pancreatic RNase A, reveal that another structural determinant of the antitumor activity of BS‐RNase is the exchange of N‐terminal ends between subunits.


Ribonucleases#R##N#Structures and Functions | 1997

Seminal Ribonuclease: The Importance of Diversity

Giuseppe D'Alessio; Alberto Di Donato; Lelio Mazzarella; Renata Piccoli

Publisher Summary This chapter provides an overview of the seminal ribonuclease. Bovine seminal RNase (BS-RNase) is a diverse RNase “different” from the historic prototype RNase A—and from all other RNases of the vertebrate superfamily—for its dimeric structure, for its non-Michaelian kinetics, and for its special, noncatalytic, biological actions. BS-RNase is also a diverse RNase because it exists in a multiplicity of structural forms, and is endowed with a multiplicity of biological actions. Two quaternary conformations and three isoenzymatic subunit compositions are known for BS-RNase. BS-RNase performs a surprising array of biological actions: aspermatogenic, antitumor, immunosuppressive, and antiviral. BS-RNase may not be the only seminal RNase: an RNase has been purified from human semen and low levels of RNase activity have been detected in the semen of several mammals, including mouse, rabbit, and sheep. This chapter discusses isolation and production of seminal RNase. It explains preparation of seminal ribonuclease from natural sources. Production of recombinant BS-RNase is discussed. The chapter elaborates covalent structure, three-dimensional structure, and folding pathway of seminal RNase. The chapter also outlines the functions of seminal ribonuclease.


FEBS Letters | 1999

Effective expression and purification of recombinant onconase, an antitumor protein

Eugenio Notomista; Valeria Cafaro; Rossano Fusiello; Aurora Bracale; Giuseppe D'Alessio; Alberto Di Donato

Several members of the RNase A superfamily are endowed with antitumor activity, showing selective cytotoxicity toward several tumor cell lines. One of these is onconase, the smallest member of the RNase A superfamily, which is at present undergoing phase III clinical trials. We report here the expression of recombinant onconase in Escherichia coli inclusion bodies, the correct processing of the protein, followed by its purification in high yields. The recombinant protein has biological and catalytic properties identical to those of the natural enzyme.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Regiospecificity of Two Multicomponent Monooxygenases from Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1: Molecular Basis for Catabolic Adaptation of This Microorganism to Methylated Aromatic Compounds

Valeria Cafaro; Eugenio Notomista; Paola Capasso; Alberto Di Donato

ABSTRACT The pathways for degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons are constantly modified by a variety of genetic mechanisms. Genetic studies carried out with Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1 suggested that the tou operon coding for toluene o-xylene monooxygenase (ToMO) was recently recruited into a preexisting pathway that already possessed the ph operon coding for phenol hydroxylase (PH). This apparently resulted in a redundancy of enzymatic activities, because both enzymes are able to hydroxylate (methyl)benzenes to (methyl)catechols via the intermediate production of (methyl)phenols. We investigated the kinetics and regioselectivity of toluene and o-xylene oxidation using Escherichia coli cells expressing ToMO and PH complexes. Our data indicate that in the recombinant system the enzymes act sequentially and that their catalytic efficiency and regioselectivity optimize the degradation of toluene and o-xylene, both of which are growth substrates. The main product of toluene oxidation by ToMO is p-cresol, the best substrate for PH, which catalyzes its transformation to 4-methylcatechol. The sequential action of the two enzymes on o-xylene leads, via the intermediate 3,4-dimethylphenol, to the exclusive production of 3,4-dimethylcatechol, the only dimethylcatechol isomer that can serve as a carbon and energy source after further metabolic processing. Moreover, our data strongly support a metabolic explanation for the acquisition of the ToMO operon by P. stutzeri OX1. It is possible that using the two enzymes in a concerted fashion confers on the strain a selective advantage based on the ability of the microorganism to optimize the efficiency of the use of nonhydroxylated aromatic hydrocarbons, such as benzene, toluene, and o-xylene.


Microbial Ecology | 2011

The Marine Isolate Novosphingobium sp. PP1Y Shows Specific Adaptation to Use the Aromatic Fraction of Fuels as the Sole Carbon and Energy Source

Eugenio Notomista; Francesca Pennacchio; Valeria Cafaro; Giovanni Smaldone; Viviana Izzo; Luca Troncone; Mario Varcamonti; Alberto Di Donato

Novosphingobium sp. PP1Y, isolated from a surface seawater sample collected from a closed bay in the harbour of Pozzuoli (Naples, Italy), uses fuels as its sole carbon and energy source. Like some other Sphingomonads, this strain can grow as either planktonic free cells or sessile-aggregated flocks. In addition, this strain was found to grow as biofilm on several types of solid and liquid hydrophobic surfaces including polystyrene, polypropylene and diesel oil. Strain PP1Y is not able to grow on pure alkanes or alkane mixtures but is able to grow on a surprisingly wide range of aromatic compounds including mono, bi, tri and tetracyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and heterocyclic compounds. During growth on diesel oil, the organic layer is emulsified resulting in the formation of small biofilm-coated drops, whereas during growth on aromatic hydrocarbons dissolved in paraffin the oil layer is emulsified but the drops are coated only if the mixtures contain selected aromatic compounds, like pyrene, propylbenzene, tetrahydronaphthalene and heterocyclic compounds. These peculiar characteristics suggest strain PP1Y has adapted to efficiently grow at the water/fuel interface using the aromatic fraction of fuels as the sole carbon and energy source.


FEBS Journal | 2006

The role of electrostatic interactions in the antitumor activity of dimeric RNases

Eugenio Notomista; José Miguel Mancheño; Orlando Crescenzi; Alberto Di Donato; José G. Gavilanes; Giuseppe D'Alessio

The cytotoxic action of some ribonucleases homologous to bovine pancreatic RNase A, the superfamily prototype, has interested and intrigued investigators. Their ribonucleolytic activity is essential for their cytotoxic action, and their target RNA is in the cytosol. It has been proposed that the cytosolic RNase inhibitor (cRI) plays a major role in determining the ability of an RNase to be cytotoxic. However, to interact with cRI RNases must reach the cytosol, and cross intracellular membranes. To investigate the interactions of cytotoxic RNases with membranes, cytotoxic dimeric RNases resistant, or considered to be resistant to cRI, were assayed for their effects on negatively charged membranes. Furthermore, we analyzed the electrostatic interaction energy of the RNases complexed in silico with a model membrane. The results of this study suggest that close correlations can be recognized between the cytotoxic action of a dimeric RNase and its ability to complex and destabilize negatively charged membranes.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Complete sequencing of Novosphingobium sp. PP1Y reveals a biotechnologically meaningful metabolic pattern

Valeria D’Argenio; Eugenio Notomista; Mauro Petrillo; Piergiuseppe Cantiello; Valeria Cafaro; Viviana Izzo; Barbara Naso; Luca Cozzuto; Lorenzo Durante; Luca Troncone; Giovanni Paolella; F. Salvatore; Alberto Di Donato

BackgroundNovosphingobium sp. strain PP1Y is a marine α-proteobacterium adapted to grow at the water/fuel oil interface. It exploits the aromatic fraction of fuel oils as a carbon and energy source. PP1Y is able to grow on a wide range of mono-, poly- and heterocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Here, we report the complete functional annotation of the whole Novosphingobium genome.ResultsPP1Y genome analysis and its comparison with other Sphingomonadal genomes has yielded novel insights into the molecular basis of PP1Y’s phenotypic traits, such as its peculiar ability to encapsulate and degrade the aromatic fraction of fuel oils. In particular, we have identified and dissected several highly specialized metabolic pathways involved in: (i) aromatic hydrocarbon degradation; (ii) resistance to toxic compounds; and (iii) the quorum sensing mechanism.ConclusionsIn summary, the unraveling of the entire PP1Y genome sequence has provided important insight into PP1Y metabolism and, most importantly, has opened new perspectives about the possibility of its manipulation for bioremediation purposes.

Collaboration


Dive into the Alberto Di Donato's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eugenio Notomista

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Valeria Cafaro

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Viviana Izzo

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giuseppe D'Alessio

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Renata Piccoli

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Molinaro

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elio Pizzo

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antimo Di Maro

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guido Barone

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michelangelo Parrilli

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge