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Dive into the research topics where Alessandra Moscatelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandra Moscatelli.


Journal of Cell Science | 2007

Distinct endocytic pathways identified in tobacco pollen tubes using charged nanogold.

Alessandra Moscatelli; F. Ciampolini; Simona Rodighiero; Elisabetta Onelli; Mauro Cresti; Nadia Santo; Aurora Irene Idilli

In an attempt to dissect endocytosis in Nicotiana tabacum L. pollen tubes, two different probes – positively or negatively charged nanogold – were employed. The destiny of internalized plasma membrane domains, carrying negatively or positively charged residues, was followed at the ultrastructural level and revealed distinct endocytic pathways. Time-course experiments and electron microscopy showed internalization of subapical plasma-membrane domains that were mainly recycled to the secretory pathway through the Golgi apparatus and a second mainly degradative pathway involving plasma membrane retrieval at the tip. In vivo time-lapse experiments using FM4-64 combined with quantitative analysis confirmed the existence of distinct internalization regions. Ikarugamycin, an inhibitor of clathrin-dependent endocytosis, allowed us to further dissect the endocytic process: electron microscopy and time-lapse studies suggested that clathrin-dependent endocytosis occurs in the tip and subapical regions, because recycling of positively charged nanogold to the Golgi bodies and the consignment of negatively charged nanogold to vacuoles were affected. However, intact positively charged-nanogold transport to vacuoles supports the idea that an endocytic pathway that does not require clathrin is also present in pollen tubes.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2008

Clathrin-dependent and independent endocytic pathways in tobacco protoplasts revealed by labelling with charged nanogold

Elisabetta Onelli; Cristina Prescianotto-Baschong; Marco Caccianiga; Alessandra Moscatelli

Positively charged nanogold was used as a probe to trace the internalization of plasma membrane (PM) domains carrying negatively charged residues at an ultrastructural level. The probe revealed distinct endocytic pathways within tobacco protoplasts and allowed the morphology of the organelles involved in endocytosis to be characterized in great detail. Putative early endosomes with a tubulo-vesicular structure, similar to that observed in animal cells, are described and a new compartment, characterized by interconnected vesicles, was identified as a late endosome using the Arabidopsis anti-syntaxin family Syp-21 antibody. Endocytosis dissection using Brefeldin A (BFA), pulse chase, temperature- and energy-dependent experiments combined with quantitative analysis of nanogold particles in different compartments, suggested that recycling to the PM predominated with respect to degradation. Further experiments using ikarugamycin (IKA), an inhibitor of clathrin-dependent endocytosis, and negatively charged nanogold confirmed that distinct endocytic pathways coexist in tobacco protoplasts.


Archive | 1999

Fertilization in Higher Plants

Mauro Cresti; Giampiero Cai; Alessandra Moscatelli

Reproductive organs of many plants accumulate carotenoids in specialized plastids called chromoplasts. In this chapter the regulation of carotenogenesis in reproductive organs as well as the possible functions of these pigments during plant reproduction is discussed.


Journal of Integrative Plant Biology | 2009

Pollen Tube Growth: a Delicate Equilibrium Between Secretory and Endocytic Pathways

Alessandra Moscatelli; Aurora Irene Idilli

Although pollen tube growth is a prerequisite for higher plant fertilization and seed production, the processes leading to pollen tube emission and elongation are crucial for understanding the basic mechanisms of tip growth. It was generally accepted that pollen tube elongation occurs by accumulation and fusion of Golgi-derived secretory vesicles (SVs) in the apical region, or clear zone, where they were thought to fuse with a restricted area of the apical plasma membrane (PM), defining the apical growth domain. Fusion of SVs at the tip reverses outside cell wall material and provides new segments of PM. However, electron microscopy studies have clearly shown that the PM incorporated at the tip greatly exceeds elongation and a mechanism of PM retrieval was already postulated in the mid-nineteenth century. Recent studies on endocytosis during pollen tube growth showed that different endocytic pathways occurred in distinct zones of the tube, including the apex, and led to a new hypothesis to explain vesicle accumulation at the tip; namely, that endocytic vesicles contribute substantially to V-shaped vesicle accumulation in addition to SVs and that exocytosis does not involve the entire apical domain. New insights suggested the intriguing hypothesis that modulation between exo- and endocytosis in the apex contributes to maintain PM polarity in terms of lipid/protein composition and showed distinct degradation pathways that could have different functions in the physiology of the cell. Pollen tube growth in vivo is closely regulated by interaction with style molecules. The study of endocytosis and membrane recycling in pollen tubes opens new perspectives to studying pollen tube-style interactions in vivo.


Molecular Plant | 2013

Microtubule Depolymerization Affects Endocytosis and Exocytosis in the Tip and Influences Endosome Movement in Tobacco Pollen Tubes

Aurora Irene Idilli; Piero Morandini; Elisabetta Onelli; Simona Rodighiero; Marco Caccianiga; Alessandra Moscatelli

Polarized organization of the cytoplasm of growing pollen tubes is maintained by coordinated function of actin filaments (AFs) and microtubules (MTs). AFs convey post-Golgi secretory vesicles to the tip where some fuse with specific domains of the plasma membrane (PM). Secretory activity is balanced by PM retrieval that maintains cell membrane economy and regulates the polarized composition of the PM, by dividing lipids/proteins between the shank and the tip. Although AFs play a key role in PM internalization in the shank, the role of MTs in exo-endocytosis needs to be characterized. The present results show that integrity of the MT cytoskeleton is necessary to control exo-endocytosis events in the tip. MT polymerization plays a role in promoting PM invagination in the apex of tobacco pollen tubes since nocodazole affected PM internalization in the tip and subsequent migration of endocytic vesicles from the apex for degradation. MT depolymerization in the apex and shank was associated with misallocation of a significantly greater amount of internalized PM to the Golgi apparatus and its early recycling to the secretory pathway. Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP) experiments also showed that MT depolymerization in the tip region influenced the rate of exocytosis in the central domain of the apical PM.


Plant Biology | 2012

Inhibition of actin polymerisation by low concentration Latrunculin B affects endocytosis and alters exocytosis in shank and tip of tobacco pollen tubes

Alessandra Moscatelli; Aurora Irene Idilli; Simona Rodighiero; Marco Caccianiga

Pollen tube growth depends on the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton that regulates cytoplasmic streaming and secretion. To clarify whether actin also plays a role in pollen tube endocytosis, Latrunculin B (LatB) was employed in internalisation experiments with tobacco pollen tubes, using the lipophilic dye FM4-64 and charged nanogold. Time-lapse analysis and dissection of endocytosis allowed us to identify internalisation pathways with different sensitivity to LatB. Co-localisation experiments and ultrastructural observations using positively charged nanogold revealed that LatB significantly inhibited endocytosis in the pollen tube shank, affecting internalisation of the plasma membrane (PM) recycled for secretion, as well as that conveyed to vacuoles. In contrast, endocytosis of negatively charged nanogold in the tip, which is also conveyed to vacuoles, was not influenced. Experiments of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) of the apical and subapical PM revealed domains with different rates of fluorescence recovery and showed that these differences depend on the actin cytoskeleton integrity. These results show the presence of distinct degradation pathways by demonstrating that actin-dependent and actin-indepedent endocytosis both operate in pollen tubes, internalising tracts of PM to be recycled and broken down. Intriguingly, although most studies concentrate on exocytosis and distension in the apex, the present paper shows that uncharacterised, actin-dependent secretory activity occurs in the shank of pollen tubes.


Plants (Basel, Switzerland) | 2013

Endocytic Pathways and Recycling in Growing Pollen Tubes

Elisabetta Onelli; Alessandra Moscatelli

Pollen tube growth is based on transport of secretory vesicles into the apical region where they fuse with a small area of the plasma membrane. The amount of secretion greatly exceeds the quantity of membrane required for growth. Mechanisms of membrane retrieval have recently been demonstrated and partially characterized using FM (Fei Mao) dyes or charged nanogold. Both these probes reveal that clathrin-dependent and -independent endocytosis occur in pollen tubes and are involved in distinct degradation pathways and membrane recycling. Exocytosis, internalization and sorting of PM proteins/lipids depend on the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton and are involved in actin filament organization. However, some kinds of endocytic and exocytic processes occurring in the central area of the tip still need to be characterized. Analysis of secretion dynamics and data derived from endocytosis highlight the complexity of events occurring in the tip region and suggest a new model of pollen tube growth.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2000

In vitro double fertilization in Nicotiana tabacum (L.) : Polygamy compared with selected single pair somatic protoplast and chloroplast fusions

Meng-Xiang Sun; Alessandra Moscatelli; Hong-Yuan Yang; Mauro Cresti

Abstract In vitro polygamy was studied mainly by using isolated sperm and central cells of tobacco in order to elucidate the mechanism that might be involved in preventing in vivo polygamy. In 17.5% 4000 M.W. polyethylene glycol, only when two sperm cells were made close enough to each other and adhered to a female cell simultaneously was polygamy possible. If one sperm cell fused with the egg or central cell, within 30 min another sperm cell could not fuse with the same egg or central cell. Similar phenomena were found in selected single somatic cell fusion. When more than two protoplasts adhered to each other simultaneously, fusion was always successful; after two protoplasts fused, within 30 min the fusion products could not fuse with another protoplast under the same conditions. This comparative study revealed this characteristic to be shared by both sexual and somatic cell fusion. However, after cytoplasm reorganization was complete in the fusion product, it was possible for the fusion product to fuse with the third protoplast. This indicates that the obstruction to additional fusion was present only during a certain period after the preceding fusion under certain condition. The possible reason for the effect is discussed.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2002

Fluorophore-conjugated lectin labeling of the cell surface of isolated male and female gametes, central cells and synergids before and after fertilization in maize

Meng-Xiang Sun; Erhard Kranz; Hong-Yuan Yang; Horst Lörz; Alessandra Moscatelli; Mauro Cresti

Abstract. Three fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated lectins, Canavalia ensiformis agglutinin (Con A), Triticum vulgaris agglutinin (WGA) and Phaseolus vulgaris erythroagglutinin (PHA-E), were used as probes to localize sugar moieties of glycoconjugates on the cell surface of isolated maize sperm, egg, central, antipodal cells, synergids, and in vitro- and in vivo-fertilized zygotes. Fluorescence signals on the surface of the cells were due to specific binding. Calcium was necessary for WGA and PHA-E binding and enhanced Con A labeling. Differences in glycoconjugate composition of the membranes of gametes and other embryo sac component cells were found. FITC-Con A strongly labeled egg and central cells, but labeled sperm only weakly. FITC-WGA binding sites were detected on egg, but not sperm cells. Con A and WGA binding sites were equally distributed around egg and central cell protoplasts. FITC-PHA-E binding sites were not found on sperm and egg cells before fertilization. Binding sites of these lectins were located on synergids, especially on their filiform apparatus. Interestingly, WGA binding to egg cells was enhanced after fertilization, whereas PHA-E binding to egg cell membranes could only be detected after fertilization. These results suggest the occurrence of fertilization-induced changes in glycoconjugate composition of the maize egg cell membrane. An increase in the number of WGA and PHA-E binding sites was also observed on newly formed cell walls of cultured two-celled embryos derived from in vitro-produced zygotes.


Biology Open | 2015

Characterisation of detergent-insoluble membranes in pollen tubes of Nicotiana tabacum (L.)

Alessandra Moscatelli; Assunta Gagliardi; Lilly Maneta-Peyret; Luca Bini; Nadia Stroppa; Elisabetta Onelli; Claudia Landi; Monica Scali; Aurora Irene Idilli; Patrick Moreau

ABSTRACT Pollen tubes are the vehicle for sperm cell delivery to the embryo sac during fertilisation of Angiosperms. They provide an intriguing model for unravelling mechanisms of growing to extremes. The asymmetric distribution of lipids and proteins in the pollen tube plasma membrane modulates ion fluxes and actin dynamics and is maintained by a delicate equilibrium between exocytosis and endocytosis. The structural constraints regulating polarised secretion and asymmetric protein distribution on the plasma membrane are mostly unknown. To address this problem, we investigated whether ordered membrane microdomains, namely membrane rafts, might contribute to sperm cell delivery. Detergent insoluble membranes, rich in sterols and sphingolipids, were isolated from tobacco pollen tubes. MALDI TOF/MS analysis revealed that actin, prohibitins and proteins involved in methylation reactions and in phosphoinositide pattern regulation are specifically present in pollen tube detergent insoluble membranes. Tubulins, voltage-dependent anion channels and proteins involved in membrane trafficking and signalling were also present. This paper reports the first evidence of membrane rafts in Angiosperm pollen tubes, opening new perspectives on the coordination of signal transduction, cytoskeleton dynamics and polarised secretion.

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