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Dive into the research topics where Almerinda Di Venere is active.

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Featured researches published by Almerinda Di Venere.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Opposite Effects of Ca2+ and GTP Binding on Tissue Transglutaminase Tertiary Structure

Almerinda Di Venere; Antonello Rossi; Fabio De Matteis; Nicola Rosato; Alessandro Finazzi Agrò; Giampiero Mei

Tissue transglutaminase (tTG) belongs to a class of enzymes that catalyze a cross-linking reaction between proteins or peptides. The protein activity is known to be finely tuned by Ca2+ and GTP binding. In this study we report the effects of these ligands on the enzyme structure, as revealed by circular dichroism, and steady-state and dynamic fluorescence measurements. We have found that calcium and GTP induced opposite conformational changes at the level of the protein tertiary structure. In particular the metal ions were responsible for a small widening of the protein molecule, as indicated by anisotropy decay measurements and by the binding of a hydrophobic probe such as 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonic acid (ANS). Unlike Ca2+, the nucleotide binding increased the protein dynamics, reducing its rotational correlation lifetime from 32 to 25 ns, preventing also the binding of ANS into the protein matrix. Unfolding of tTG by guanidinium hydrochloride yielded a three-state denaturation mechanism, involving an intermediate species with the characteristics of the so-called “molten globule” state. The effect of GTP binding (but not that of Ca2+) had an important consequence on the stability of tissue transglutaminase, increasing the free energy change from the native to the intermediate species by at least ≈0.7 kcal/mol. Also a greater stability of tTG to high hydrostatic pressure was obtained in presence of GTP. These findings suggest that the molecular mechanism by which tTG activity is inhibited by GTP is essentially due to a protein conformational change which, decreasing the accessibility of the protein matrix to the solvent, renders more difficult the exposure of the active site.


FEBS Journal | 2004

The importance of being dimeric

Giampiero Mei; Almerinda Di Venere; Nicola Rosato; Alessandro Finazzi-Agrò

Why are there so many dimeric proteins and enzymes? While for heterodimers a functional explanation seems quite reasonable, the case of homodimers is more puzzling. The number of homodimers found in all living organisms is rapidly increasing. A thorough inspection of the structural data from the available literature and stability (measured from denaturation–renaturation experiments) allows one to suggest that homodimers can be divided into three main types according to their mass and the presence of a (relatively) stable monomeric intermediate in the folding–unfolding pathway. Among other explanations, we propose that an essential advantage for a protein being dimeric may be the proper and rapid assembly in the cellular milieu.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Structure-to-function relationship of mini-lipoxygenase, a 60-kDa fragment of soybean lipoxygenase-1 with lower stability but higher enzymatic activity

Almerinda Di Venere; Maria Luisa Salucci; Guus van Zadelhoff; Gerrit A. Veldink; Giampiero Mei; Nicola Rosato; Alessandro Finazzi-Agrò; Mauro Maccarrone

Lipoxygenase-1 (Lox-1) is a member of the lipoxygenase family, a class of dioxygenases that take part in the metabolism of polyunsatured fatty acids in eukaryotes. Tryptic digestion of soybean Lox-1 is known to produce a 60 kDa fragment, termed “mini-Lox,” which shows enhanced catalytic efficiency and higher membrane-binding ability than the native enzyme (Maccarrone, M., Salucci, M. L., van Zadelhoff, G., Malatesta, F., Veldink, G. Vliegenthart, J. F. G., and Finazzi-Agrò, A. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 6819–6827). In this study, we have investigated the stability of mini-Lox in guanidinium hydrochloride and under high pressure by fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Only a partial unfolding could be obtained at high pressure in the range 1–3000 bar at variance with guanidinium hydrochloride. However, in both cases a reversible denaturation was observed. The denaturation experiments demonstrate that mini-Lox is a rather unstable molecule, which undergoes a two-step unfolding transition at moderately low guanidinium hydrochloride concentration (0–4.5 m). Both chemical- and physical-induced denaturation suggest that mini-Lox is more hydrated than Lox-1, an observation also confirmed by 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) binding studies. We have also investigated the occurrence of substrate-induced changes in the protein tertiary structure by dynamic fluorescence techniques. In particular, eicosatetraynoic acid, an irreversible inhibitor of lipoxygenase, has been used to mimic the effect of substrate binding. We demonstrated that mini-Lox is indeed characterized by much larger conformational changes than those occurring in the native Lox-1 upon binding of eicosatetraynoic acid. Finally, by both activity and fluorescence measurements we have found that 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate has access to the active site of mini-Lox but not to that of intact Lox-1. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that the larger hydration of mini-Lox renders this molecule more flexible, and therefore less stable.


Cytoskeleton | 2009

Susceptibility of isolated myofibrils to in vitro glutathionylation: Potential relevance to muscle functions.

Chiara Passarelli; Almerinda Di Venere; Anna Pastore; Beatrice Scellini; Chiara Tesi; Stefania Petrini; Patrizio Sale; Enrico Bertini; Corrado Poggesi; Fiorella Piemonte

In this study we investigated the molecular mechanism of glutathionylation on isolated human cardiac myofibrils using several pro‐glutathionylating agents. Total glutathionylated proteins appeared significantly enhanced with all the pro‐oxidants used. The increase was completely reversed by the addition of a reducing agent, demonstrating that glutathione binding occurs by a disulfide and that the process is reversible. A sensitive target of glutathionylation was α‐actin, showing a different reactivity to the several pro‐glutathionylating agents by ELISA. Noteworthy, myosin although highly sensitive to the in vitro glutathionylation does not represent the primary glutathionylation target in isolated myofibrils. Light scattering measurements of the glutathionylated α‐actin showed a slower polymerisation compared to the non‐glutathionylated protein and force development was depressed after glutathionylation, when the myofibrils were mounted in a force recording apparatus. Interestingly, confocal laser scanning microscopy of cardiac cryosections indicated, for the first time, the constitutive glutathionylation of α‐cardiac actin in human heart. Due to the critical location of α‐actin in the contractile machinery and to its susceptibility to the oxidative modifications, glutathionylation may represent a mechanism for modulating sarcomere assembly and muscle functionality under patho‐physiological conditions in vivo.


Biochemistry | 2008

Structural Properties of Plant and Mammalian Lipoxygenases. Temperature-Dependent Conformational Alterations and Membrane Binding Ability †

Giampiero Mei; Almerinda Di Venere; Eleonora Nicolai; Clotilde B. Angelucci; Igor Ivanov; Annalaura Sabatucci; Enrico Dainese; Hartmut Kühn; Mauro Maccarrone

Lipoxygenases form a heterogeneous family of lipid peroxidizing enzymes, which have been implicated in the synthesis of inflammatory mediators, in cell development and in the pathogenesis of various diseases with major health and political relevance (atherosclerosis, osteoporosis). The crystal structures of various lipoxygenase-isoforms have been reported, and X-ray coordinates for enzyme-ligand complexes are also available. Although the 3D-structures of plant and animal lipoxygenase-isoforms are very similar, recent small-angle X-ray scattering data suggested a higher degree of motional flexibility of mammalian isozymes in aqueous solutions. To explore the molecular basis for these differences we performed dynamic fluorescence measurements that allowed us to study temperature-induced conformational changes arising from three-dimensional fluctuations of the protein matrix. For this purpose, we first investigated the impact of elevated temperature on activity, secondary structure, tertiary structure dynamics and conformational alterations. Applying fluorescence resonance energy transfer we also tested the membrane binding properties of the two lipoxygenase-isoforms, and compared their binding parameters. Taken together, our results indicate that the rabbit 12/15-lipoxygenase is more susceptible to temperature-induced structural alterations than the soybean enzyme. Moreover, the rabbit enzyme exhibits a higher degree of conformational flexibility of the entire protein molecule (global flexibility) and offers the possibility of augmented substrate movement at the catalytic center (local flexibility).


Proteins | 2012

Ligand induced formation of transient dimers of mammalian 12/15-lipoxygenase: A key to allosteric behavior of this class of enzymes?

Igor Ivanov; Weifeng Shang; Lea Toledo; Laura Masgrau; Dmitri I. Svergun; Sabine Stehling; Hansel Gómez; Almerinda Di Venere; Giampiero Mei; José M. Lluch; Ewa Skrzypczak-Jankun; Àngels González-Lafont; Hartmut Kühn

Mammalian lipoxygenases (LOXs) have been implicated in cellular defense response and are important for physiological homeostasis. Since their discovery, LOXs have been believed to function as monomeric enzymes that exhibit allosteric properties. In aqueous solutions, the rabbit 12/15‐LOX is mainly present as hydrated monomer but changes in the local physiochemical environment suggested a monomer–dimer equilibrium. Because the allosteric character of the enzyme can hardly be explained using a single ligand binding‐site model, we proposed that the binding of allosteric effectors may shift the monomer–dimer equilibrium toward dimer formation. To test this hypothesis, we explored the impact of an allosteric effector [13(S)‐hydroxyoctadeca‐9(Z),11(E)‐dienoic acid] on the structural properties of rabbit 12/15‐LOX by small‐angle X‐ray scattering. Our data indicate that the enzyme undergoes ligand‐induced dimerization in aqueous solution, and molecular dynamics simulations suggested that LOX dimers may be stable in the presence of substrate fatty acids. These data provide direct structural evidence for the existence of LOX dimers, where two noncovalently linked enzyme molecules might work in unison and, therefore, such mode of association might be related to the allosteric character of 12/15‐LOX. Introduction of negatively charged residues (W181E + H585E and L183E + L192E) at the intermonomer interface disturbs the hydrophobic dimer interaction of the wild‐type LOX, and this structural alteration may lead to functional distortion of mutant enzymes. Proteins 2011.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2006

NMR structure of the p63 SAM domain and dynamical properties of G534V and T537P pathological mutants, identified in the AEC syndrome

Daniel O. Cicero; Mattia Falconi; Eleonora Candi; Sonia Mele; Bruno Cadot; Almerinda Di Venere; Stefano Rufini; Gerry Melino; Alessandro Desideri

The p63 protein is crucial for epidermal development, and its mutations cause the extrodactyly ectodermal dysplasia and cleft lip/palate syndrome. The three-dimensional solution structure of the p63 sterile α-motif (SAM) domain (residues 505–579), a region crucial to explaining the human genetic disease ankyloblepharon-ectodermal dysplasia-clefting syndrome (AEC), has been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The structure indicates that the domain is a monomer with the characteristic five-helix bundle topology observed in other SAM domains. It includes five tightly packed helices with an extended hydrophobic core to form a globular and compact structure. The dynamics of the backbone and the global correlation time of the molecule have also been investigated and compared with the dynamical properties obtained through molecular dynamics simulation. Attempts to purify the pathological G534V and T537P mutants, originally identified in AEC, were not successful because of the occurrence of unspecific proteolytic degradation of the mutated SAM domains. Analysis of the structural dynamic properties of the G534V and T537P mutants through molecular dynamics simulation and comparison with the wild type permits detection of differences in the degree of free-dom of individual residues and discussion of the possible causes for the pathology.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Dynamics and Flexibility of Human Aromatase Probed by FTIR and Time Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy

Giovanna Di Nardo; Maximilian Breitner; Sheila J. Sadeghi; Silvia Castrignanò; Giampiero Mei; Almerinda Di Venere; Eleonora Nicolai; Paola Allegra; Gianfranco Gilardi

Human aromatase (CYP19A1) is a steroidogenic cytochrome P450 converting androgens into estrogens. No ligand-free crystal structure of the enzyme is available to date. The crystal structure in complex with the substrate androstenedione and the steroidal inhibitor exemestane shows a very compact conformation of the enzyme, leaving unanswered questions on the conformational changes that must occur to allow access of the ligand to the active site. As H/D exchange kinetics followed by FTIR spectroscopy can provide information on the conformational changes in proteins where solvent accessibility is affected, here the amide I region was used to measure the exchange rates of the different elements of the secondary structure for aromatase in the ligand-free form and in the presence of the substrate androstenedione and the inhibitor anastrozole. Biphasic exponential functions were found to fit the H/D exchange data collected as a function of time. Two exchange rates were assigned to two populations of protons present in different flexible regions of the protein. The addition of the substrate androstenedione and the inhibitor anastrozole lowers the H/D exchange rates of the α-helices of the enzyme when compared to the ligand-free form. Furthermore, the presence of the inhibitor anastrozole lowers exchange rate constant (k1) for β-sheets from 0.22±0.06 min−1 for the inhibitor-bound enzyme to 0.12±0.02 min−1 for the free protein. Dynamics effects localised in helix F were studied by time resolved fluorescence. The data demonstrate that the fluorescence lifetime component associated to Trp224 emission undergoes a shift toward longer lifetimes (from ≈5.0 to ≈5.5 ns) when the substrate or the inhibitor are present, suggesting slower dynamics in the presence of ligands. Together the results are consistent with different degrees of flexibility of the access channel and therefore different conformations adopted by the enzyme in the free, substrate- and inhibitor-bound forms.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2012

The endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglicerol decreases calcium induced cytochrome c release from liver mitochondria

Patrizia Zaccagnino; Susanna D’Oria; Luigi Luciano Romano; Almerinda Di Venere; Anna Maria Sardanelli; Michele Lorusso

Abstract2-Arachidonoylglicerol (2-AG) is an endocannabinoid that mimics the pharmacological effects of Δ9 tetrahydrocannabinol, the psychoactive component of the plant Cannabis sativa. It is present in many mammalian tissues, such as brain, liver, spleen, heart and kidney, where it exerts different biological effects either receptor mediated or independently of receptor activation. This work analyzes the effects of 2-AG on liver mitochondrial functions. It is shown that 2-AG causes a relevant decrease of calcium induced cyclosporine A sensitive cytochrome c release from mitochondria, a process representing an early event of the apoptotic program. Cyclosporin sensitive matrix swelling and ROS production measured under the same conditions are, on the contrary, almost unaffected or even enhanced, respectively, by 2-AG. Furthemore, 2-AG is found to stimulate resting state succinate oxidase activity and to inhibit oligomycin sensitive FoF1 ATP synthase activity. All these effects are apparently associated with 2-AG dependent alteration in the fluidity of the mitochondrial membranes, which was measured as generalized polarization of laurdan fluorescence.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Tight association of N-terminal and catalytic subunits of rabbit 12/15-lipoxygenase is important for protein stability and catalytic activity.

Igor Ivanov; Almerinda Di Venere; Thomas Horn; Patrick Scheerer; Eleonora Nicolai; Sabine Stehling; Constanze Richter; Ewa Skrzypczak-Jankun; Giampiero Mei; Mauro Maccarrone; Hartmut Kühn

12/15-Lipoxygenases (12/15-LOXs) have been implicated in inflammatory and hyperproliferative diseases but the structural biology of these enzymes is not well developed. Most LOXs constitute single polypeptide chain proteins that fold into a two-domain structure. In the crystal structure the two domains are tightly associated, but small angle X-ray scattering data and dynamic fluorescence studies suggested a high degree of structural flexibility involving movement of the N-terminal domain relative to catalytic subunit. When we inspected the interdomain interface we have found a limited number of side-chain contacts which are involved in interactions of these two structural subunits. One of such contact points involves tyrosine 98 of N-terminal domain. This aromatic amino acid is invariant in vertebrate LOXs regardless of overall sequence identity. To explore in more detail the role of aromatic interactions in interdomain association we have mutated Y98 to various residues and quantified the structural and functional consequences of these alterations. We have found that loss of an aromatic moiety at position 98 impaired the catalytic activity and membrane binding capacity of the mutant enzymes. Although CD and fluorescence emission spectra of wild-type and mutant enzyme species were indistinguishable, the mutation led to enlargement of the molecular shape of the enzyme as detected by analytic gel filtration and this structural alteration was shown to be associated with a loss of protein thermal stability. The possible role of tight interdomain association for the enzymes structural performance is discussed.

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Giampiero Mei

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Nicola Rosato

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

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Eleonora Nicolai

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Mauro Maccarrone

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fabio De Matteis

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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