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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Paciaroni is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Paciaroni.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Effect of the Environment on the Protein Dynamical Transition: A Neutron Scattering Study

Alessandro Paciaroni; Stefania Cinelli; G. Onori

We performed an elastic neutron scattering investigation of the molecular dynamics of lysozyme solvated in glycerol, at different water contents h (grams of water/grams of lysozyme). The marked non-Gaussian behavior of the elastic intensity was studied in a wide experimental momentum transfer range, as a function of the temperature. The internal dynamics is well described in terms of the double-well jump model. At low temperature, the protein total mean square displacements exhibit an almost linear harmonic trend irrespective of the hydration level, whereas at the temperature T(d) a clear changeover toward an anharmonic regime marks a protein dynamical transition. The decrease of T(d) from approximately 238 K to approximately 195 K as a function of h is reminiscent of that found in the glass transition temperature of aqueous solutions of glycerol, thus suggesting that the protein internal dynamics as a whole is slave to the environment properties. Both T(d) and the total mean square displacements indicate that the protein flexibility strongly rises between 0.1 and 0.2h. This hydration-dependent dynamical activation, which is similar to that of hydrated lysozyme powders, is related to the specific interplay of the protein with the surrounding water and glycerol molecules.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Coincidence of dynamical transitions in a soluble protein and its hydration water: direct measurements by neutron scattering and MD simulations.

Kathleen Wood; Andreas Frölich; Alessandro Paciaroni; Martine Moulin; Michael Härtlein; Giuseppe Zaccai; Douglas J. Tobias; Martin Weik

The coupling between protein dynamics and hydration-water dynamics was assessed by perdeuteration, temperature-dependent neutron scattering, and molecular dynamics simulations. Mean square displacements of water and protein motions both show a broad transition at 220 K and are thus coupled. In particular, the protein dynamical transition appears to be driven by the onset of hydration-water translational motion.


Nature Communications | 2015

Translational diffusion of hydration water correlates with functional motions in folded and intrinsically disordered proteins

Giorgio Schirò; Yann Fichou; François-Xavier Gallat; Kathleen Wood; Frank Gabel; Martine Moulin; Michael Härtlein; Matthias Heyden; Jacques-Philippe Colletier; A. Orecchini; Alessandro Paciaroni; Joachim Wuttke; Douglas J. Tobias; Martin Weik

Hydration water is the natural matrix of biological macromolecules and is essential for their activity in cells. The coupling between water and protein dynamics has been intensively studied, yet it remains controversial. Here we combine protein perdeuteration, neutron scattering and molecular dynamics simulations to explore the nature of hydration water motions at temperatures between 200 and 300 K, across the so-called protein dynamical transition, in the intrinsically disordered human protein tau and the globular maltose binding protein. Quasi-elastic broadening is fitted with a model of translating, rotating and immobile water molecules. In both experiment and simulation, the translational component markedly increases at the protein dynamical transition (around 240 K), regardless of whether the protein is intrinsically disordered or folded. Thus, we generalize the notion that the translational diffusion of water molecules on a protein surface promotes the large-amplitude motions of proteins that are required for their biological activity.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2009

Combining structure and dynamics: non-denaturing high-pressure effect on lysozyme in solution

Maria Grazia Ortore; Francesco Spinozzi; Paolo Mariani; Alessandro Paciaroni; Leandro R.S. Barbosa; Heinz Amenitsch; Milos Steinhart; Jacques Ollivier; Daniela Russo

Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and elastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering techniques were used to investigate the high-pressure-induced changes on interactions, the low-resolution structure and the dynamics of lysozyme in solution. SAXS data, analysed using a global-fit procedure based on a new approach for hydrated protein form factor description, indicate that lysozyme completely maintains its globular structure up to 1500 bar, but significant modifications in the protein–protein interaction potential occur at approximately 600–1000 bar. Moreover, the mass density of the protein hydration water shows a clear discontinuity within this pressure range. Neutron scattering experiments indicate that the global and the local lysozyme dynamics change at a similar threshold pressure. A clear evolution of the internal protein dynamics from diffusing to more localized motions has also been probed. Protein structure and dynamics results have then been discussed in the context of protein–water interface and hydration water dynamics. According to SAXS results, the new configuration of water in the first hydration layer induced by pressure is suggested to be at the origin of the observed local mobility changes.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Broadband Depolarized Light Scattering Study of Diluted Protein Aqueous Solutions

Stefania Perticaroli; L. Comez; Marco Paolantoni; Paola Sassi; Laura Lupi; D. Fioretto; Alessandro Paciaroni; Assunta Morresi

A broadband depolarized light scattering (DLS) study is performed on diluted lysozyme aqueous solutions as a function of temperature and concentration. The dynamical susceptibility, obtained in a wide spectral range (0.6-36000 GHz) through the coupled use of interferometric and dispersive devices, is interpreted and compared with neutron scattering and Raman-induced optical Kerr-effect literature data, thus giving a general picture of relaxation phenomena. We show that the proposed approach represents a suitable tool for investigating the hydration dynamics of protein-water solutions. A detailed analysis of the quasi-elastic scattering region evidences the existence of two distinct relaxational processes at picosecond time scales. The fast process (fractions of picosecond) is attributed to bulk water dynamics, while the slow one (few picoseconds) is attributed to dynamical rearrangements of water molecules strongly influenced by the protein (hydration water). The retardation effect here estimated of about 6-7 can be regarded as a direct measure of the increased protein-water and water-water hydrogen bond stability of the water molecules within the protein hydration shell. Interestingly, a similar effect was previously observed on small hydrophilic sugar molecules. Moreover, backbone and side chains torsional motions of the protein in the 600-5300 GHz frequency range are found to be insensitive to thermal variations and to eventual changes occurring in the premelting zone.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Evidence of Coexistence of Change of Caged Dynamics at Tg and the Dynamic Transition at Td in Solvated Proteins

S. Capaccioli; K. L. Ngai; S. Ancherbak; Alessandro Paciaroni

Mössbauer spectroscopy and neutron scattering measurements on proteins embedded in solvents including water and aqueous mixtures have emphasized the observation of the distinctive temperature dependence of the atomic mean square displacements, , commonly referred to as the dynamic transition at some temperature T(d). At low temperatures, increases slowly, but it assumes stronger temperature dependence after crossing T(d), which depends on the time/frequency resolution of the spectrometer. Various authors have made connection of the dynamics of solvated proteins, including the dynamic transition to that of glass-forming substances. Notwithstanding, no connection is made to the similar change of temperature dependence of obtained by quasielastic neutron scattering when crossing the glass transition temperature T(g), generally observed in inorganic, organic, and polymeric glass-formers. Evidences are presented here to show that such a change of the temperature dependence of from neutron scattering at T(g) is present in hydrated or solvated proteins, as well as in the solvent used, unsurprisingly since the latter is just another organic glass-former. If unaware of the existence of such a crossover of at T(g), and if present, it can be mistaken as the dynamic transition at T(d) with the ill consequences of underestimating T(d) by the lower value T(g) and confusing the identification of the origin of the dynamic transition. The obtained by neutron scattering at not so low temperatures has contributions from the dissipation of molecules while caged by the anharmonic intermolecular potential at times before dissolution of cages by the onset of the Johari-Goldstein β-relaxation or of the merged α-β relaxation. The universal change of at T(g) of glass-formers, independent of the spectrometer resolution, had been rationalized by sensitivity to change in volume and entropy of the dissipation of the caged molecules and its contribution to . The same rationalization applies to hydrated and solvated proteins for the observed change of at T(g).


European Biophysics Journal | 1999

Incoherent neutron scattering of copper azurin: a comparison with molecular dynamics simulation results

Alessandro Paciaroni; Maria Elena Stroppolo; Caterina Arcangeli; Anna Rita Bizzarri; Alessandro Desideri; Salvatore Cannistraro

Abstract The low-frequency dynamics of copper azurin has been studied at different temperatures for a dry and deuterium hydrated sample by incoherent neutron scattering and the experimental results have been compared with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations carried out in the same temperature range. Experimental Debye-Waller factors are consistent with a dynamical transition at approximately 200 K which appears partially suppressed in the dry sample. Inelastic and quasielastic scattering indicate that hydration water modulates both vibrational and diffusive motions. The low-temperature experimental dynamical structure factor of the hydrated protein shows an excess of inelastic scattering peaking at about 3 meV and whose position is slightly shifted downwards in the dry sample. Such an excess is reminiscent of the “boson peak” observed in glass-like materials. This vibrational peak is quite well reproduced by MD simulations, although at a lower energy. The experimental quasielastic scattering of the two samples at 300 K shows a two-step relaxation behaviour with similar characteristic times, while the corresponding intensities differ only by a scale factor. Also, MD simulations confirm the two-step diffusive trend, but the slow process seems to be characterized by a decay faster than the experimental one. Comparison with incoherent neutron scattering studies carried out on proteins having different structure indicates that globular proteins display common elastic, quasielastic and inelastic features, with an almost similar hydration dependence, irrespective of their secondary and tertiary structure.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Collective dynamics of protein hydration water by brillouin neutron spectroscopy.

A. Orecchini; Alessandro Paciaroni; Alessio De Francesco; C. Petrillo; F. Sacchetti

By a detailed experimental study of THz dynamics in the ribonuclease protein, we could detect the propagation of coherent collective density fluctuations within the protein hydration shell. The emerging picture indicates the presence of both a dispersing mode, traveling with a speed greater than 3000 m/s, and a nondispersing one, characterized by an almost constant energy of 6-7 meV. In agreement with molecular dynamics simulations [Phys. Rev. Lett. 2002, 89, 275501], the features of the dispersion curves closely resemble those observed in pure liquid water [Phys. Rev. E: Stat. Phys., Plasmas, Fluids, Relat. Interdiscip. Top. 2004, 69, 061203]. On the contrary, the observed damping factors are much larger than in bulk water, with the dispersing mode becoming overdamped at Q = 0.6 A(-1) already. Such novel experimental findings are discussed as a dynamic signature of the disordering effect induced by the protein surface on the local structure of water.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

On the Coupling between the Collective Dynamics of Proteins and Their Hydration Water

Valeria Conti Nibali; Giovanna D’Angelo; Alessandro Paciaroni; Douglas J. Tobias; Mounir Tarek

Picosecond time scale dynamics of hydrated proteins has been connected with the onset of biological activity as it coincides with solvent-solute hydrogen bond rearrangements and amino acid rotational relaxation time scales. The presence and fluctuations of protein hydration water (PHW) largely influence protein motions that are believed to be slaved to those of the solvent, yet to date, how protein and hydration water dynamics are coupled remains unclear. Here, we provide a significant advance in characterizing this coupling; we present the first full study of both the longitudinal and transverse coherent collective motions in a protein-solvent system. The data show unexpectedly the presence in the water dynamics of collective modes belonging to the protein. The properties of these modes, in particular, their propagation velocities and amplitudes, indicate a strengthening of the interactions and a higher rigidity of the network of solvent molecules close to the protein surface. Accordingly, the present study presents the most compelling and clear evidence of a very strong dynamical coupling between a protein and its hydration water, previously suggested by studies using various experimental techniques.


Chemical Physics | 2003

Protein dynamics on the picosecond timescale as affected by the environment: a quasielastic neutron scattering study

Alessandro Paciaroni; A. Orecchini; S. Cinelli; G. Onori; R.E. Lechner; J. Pieper

We performed an inelastic and quasielastic neutron scattering investigation of the molecular dynamics of lysozyme solvated in glycerol, at different water contents h (g water/g lysozyme). At low temperature, dry lysozyme solvated with glycerol shows a low-frequency vibrational bump located at around 4 meV. Contrary to the behaviour of strongly hydrated protein powders, this peak is well visible also at room temperature and persists in the experimental spectra at all the hydration degrees. The quasielastic contribution increases remarkably with h, thus suggesting that water molecules perform their plasticizing action by allowing the onset of confined diffusive motions of protein groups. The quasielastic signal could be decomposed in two Lorentzian components, representing motions with characteristic times of, respectively, 15 and 0.8 ps. The Lorentzian curves exhibit constant widths but variable intensities as a function of the hydration degree. The trend of the estimated quasielastic structure factors suggests that a preferential hydration effect may take place in lysozyme solvated with glycerol and water.

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G. Onori

University of Perugia

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V. Crupi

University of Messina

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Martine Moulin

European Bioinformatics Institute

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