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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Battistoni is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Battistoni.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Expression of a Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase typical of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis induces mitochondrial alteration and increase of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration in transfected neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells

Maria Teresa Carrì; Alberto Ferri; Andrea Battistoni; Laila Famhy; Roberta Gabbianelli; Fabrizio Poccia; Giuseppe Rotilio

We have set up a model system for familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) by transfecting human neuroblastoma cell line SH‐SY5Y with plasmids directing constitutive expression of either wild‐type human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (Cu,ZnSOD) or a mutant of this enzyme (G93A) associated with FALS. We have tested mitochondrial function and determined cytosolic Ca2+ concentration in control cells (untransfected) and in cells expressing either wild‐type Cu,ZnSOD or G93A. We report that G93A induces a significant loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, an increased sensitivity toward valinomycin and a parallel increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration. The above phenomena are not related to total Cu,ZnSOD content and activity in the cell.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2012

Zinc sequestration by the neutrophil protein calprotectin enhances Salmonella growth in the inflamed gut

Janet Z. Liu; Stefan Jellbauer; Adam J. Poe; Vivian Ton; Michele Pesciaroli; Thomas E. Kehl-Fie; Nicole A. Restrepo; Martin P. Hosking; Robert A. Edwards; Andrea Battistoni; Paolo Pasquali; Thomas E. Lane; Walter J. Chazin; Thomas Vogl; J. Roth; Eric P. Skaar; Manuela Raffatellu

Neutrophils are innate immune cells that counter pathogens by many mechanisms, including release of antimicrobial proteins such as calprotectin to inhibit bacterial growth. Calprotectin sequesters essential micronutrient metals such as zinc, thereby limiting their availability to microbes, a process termed nutritional immunity. We find that while calprotectin is induced by neutrophils during infection with the gut pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium, calprotectin-mediated metal sequestration does not inhibit S. Typhimurium proliferation. Remarkably, S. Typhimurium overcomes calprotectin-mediated zinc chelation by expressing a high affinity zinc transporter (ZnuABC). A S. Typhimurium znuA mutant impaired for growth in the inflamed gut was rescued in the absence of calprotectin. ZnuABC was also required to promote the growth of S. Typhimurium over that of competing commensal bacteria. Thus, our findings indicate that Salmonella thrives in the inflamed gut by overcoming the zinc sequestration of calprotectin and highlight the importance of zinc acquisition in bacterial intestinal colonization.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

High-affinity Zn2+ uptake system ZnuABC is required for bacterial zinc homeostasis in intracellular environments and contributes to the virulence of Salmonella enterica.

Serena Ammendola; Paolo Pasquali; Claudia Pistoia; Paola Petrucci; Patrizia Petrarca; Giuseppe Rotilio; Andrea Battistoni

ABSTRACT To investigate the relevance of zinc in host-pathogen interactions, we have constructed Salmonella enterica mutant strains in which the znuA gene, which encodes the periplasmic component of the ZnuABC high-affinity Zn2+ transporter, was deleted. This mutation does not alter the ability of Salmonella to grow in rich media but drastically reduces its ability to multiply in media deprived of zinc. In agreement with this phenotype, ZnuA accumulates only in bacteria cultivated in environments poor in zinc. In spite of the nearly millimolar intracellular concentration of zinc, we have found that znuA is highly expressed in intracellular salmonellae recovered either from cultivated cells or from the spleens of infected mice. We have also observed that znuA mutants are impaired in their ability to grow in Caco-2 epithelial cells and that bacteria starved for zinc display decreased ability to multiply in phagocytes. A dramatic reduction in the pathogenicity of the znuA mutants was observed in Salmonella-susceptible (BALB/c) or Salmonella-resistant (DBA-2) mice infected intraperitoneally or orally. This study shows that the amount of free metals available for bacterial growth within the infected animal is limited, despite the apparent elevated concentration of free metals within cells and in plasma and suggests that Salmonella exploits the ZnuABC zinc transporter to maximize zinc availability in such conditions. These results shed new light on the complex functions of zinc in vertebrate and bacterial physiology and pave the way for a better comprehension of pathogenic mechanisms in Salmonella infections.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Oxidative stress and antioxidant therapy in cystic fibrosis.

Francesco Galli; Andrea Battistoni; Roberto Gambari; Alfonso Pompella; Alessandra Bragonzi; Francesca Pilolli; Luigi Iuliano; Marta Piroddi; Maria Cristina Dechecchi; Giulio Cabrini

Cystic fibrosis is a lethal autosomal recessive condition caused by a defect of the transmembrane conductance regulator gene that has a key role in cell homeostasis. A dysfunctional cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator impairs the efflux of cell anions such as chloride and bicarbonate, and also that of other solutes such as reduced glutathione. This defect produces an increased viscosity of secretions together with other metabolic defects of epithelia that ultimately promote the obstruction and fibrosis of organs. Recurrent pulmonary infections and respiratory dysfunction are main clinical consequences of these pathogenetic events, followed by pancreatic and liver insufficiency, diabetes, protein-energy malnutrition, etc. This complex comorbidity is associated with the extensive injury of different biomolecular targets by reactive oxygen species, which is the biochemical hallmark of oxidative stress. These biological lesions are particularly pronounced in the lung, in which the extent of oxidative markers parallels that of inflammatory markers between chronic events and acute exacerbations along the progression of the disease. Herein, an abnormal flux of reactive oxygen species is present by the sustained activation of neutrophils and other cystic fibrosis-derived defects in the homeostatic processes of pulmonary epithelia and lining fluids. A sub-optimal antioxidant protection is believed to represent a main contributor to oxidative stress and to the poor control of immuno-inflammatory pathways in these patients. Observed defects include an impaired reduced glutathione metabolism and lowered intake and absorption of fat-soluble antioxidants (vitamin E, carotenoids, coenzyme Q-10, some polyunsaturated fatty acids, etc.) and oligoelements (such as Se, Cu and Zn) that are involved in reactive oxygen species detoxification by means of enzymatic defenses. Oral supplements and aerosolized formulations of thiols have been used in the antioxidant therapy of this inherited disease with the main aim of reducing the extent of oxidative lesions and the rate of lung deterioration. Despite positive effects on laboratory end points, poor evidence was obtained on the side of clinical outcome so far. These aspects examined in this critical review of the literature clearly suggest that further and more rigorous trials are needed together with new generations of pharmacological tools to a more effective antioxidant and anti-inflammatory therapy of cystic fibrosis patients. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Antioxidants and Antioxidant Treatment in Disease.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

The Zur-Regulated ZinT Protein Is an Auxiliary Component of the High-Affinity ZnuABC Zinc Transporter That Facilitates Metal Recruitment during Severe Zinc Shortage

Patrizia Petrarca; Serena Ammendola; Paolo Pasquali; Andrea Battistoni

The pathways ensuring the efficient uptake of zinc are crucial for the ability of bacteria to multiply in the infected host. To better understand bacterial responses to zinc deficiency, we have investigated the role of the periplasmic protein ZinT in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. We have found that zinT expression is regulated by Zur and parallels that of ZnuA, the periplasmic component of the zinc transporter ZnuABC. Despite the fact that ZinT contributes to Salmonella growth in media containing little zinc, disruption of zinT does not significantly affect virulence in mice. The role of ZinT became clear using strains expressing a mutated form of ZnuA lacking a characteristic histidine-rich domain. In fact, Salmonella strains producing this modified form of ZnuA exhibited a ZinT-dependent capability to import zinc either in vitro or in infected mice, suggesting that ZinT and the histidine-rich region of ZnuA have redundant function. The hypothesis that ZinT and ZnuA cooperate in the process of zinc recruitment is supported by the observation that they form a stable binary complex in vitro. Although the presence of ZinT is not strictly required to ensure the functionality of the ZnuABC transporter, our data suggest that ZinT facilitates metal acquisition during severe zinc shortage.


FEBS Letters | 1994

Impaired copper binding by the H46R mutant of human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase, involved in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

M.Teresa Carrí; Andrea Battistoni; Francesca Polizio; Alessandro Desideri; Giuseppe Rotilio

Several point mutations in the gene coding for human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase have been reported as being responsible for familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS). However, no direct demonstration has been provided for a correlation between total superoxide dismutase activity and severity of the FALS pathology. In order to get a better insight into the mechanism (s) underlying the FALS phenotype, we have investigated the activity and the copper binding properties of the single mutant H46R, which is associated with a Japanese form of FALS. We have shown that this mutant is structurally stable but lacks significant enzyme activity and has impaired capability of binding catalytic copper. The mutant protein can be fully reconsituted with copper in vitro but its ESR spectrum displays an axial shape quite different from that of the wild‐type.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Role of the Dimeric Structure in Cu,Zn Superoxide Dismutase pH-DEPENDENT, REVERSIBLE DENATURATION OF THE MONOMERIC ENZYME FROM ESCHERICHIA COLI

Andrea Battistoni; Silvia Folcarelli; Laura Cervoni; Francesca Polizio; Alessandro Desideri; Anna Giartosio; Giuseppe Rotilio

To investigate the structural/functional role of the dimeric structure in Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases, we have studied the stability to a variety of agents of the Escherichia coli enzyme, the only monomeric variant of this class so far isolated. Differential scanning calorimetry of the native enzyme showed the presence of two well defined peaks identified as the metal free and holoprotein. Unlike dimeric Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases, the unfolding of the monomeric enzyme was found to be highly reversible, a behavior that may be explained by the absence of free cysteines and the highly polar nature of its molecular surface. The melting temperature of theE. coli enzyme was found to be pH-dependent with the holoenzyme transition centered at 66 °C at pH 7.8 and at 79.3 °C at pH 6.0. The active-site metals, which were easily displaced from the active site by EDTA, were found to enhance the thermal stability of the monomeric apoprotein but to a lower extent than in the dimeric enzymes from eukaryotic sources. Apo-superoxide dismutase from E. coli was shown to be nearly as stable as the bovine apoenzyme, whose holo form is much more stable and less sensitive to pH variations. The remarkable pH susceptibility of theE. coli enzyme structure was paralleled by the slow decrease in activity of the enzyme incubated at alkaline pH and by modification of the EPR spectrum at lower pH values than in the case of dimeric enzymes. Unlike eukaryotic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases, the active-site structure of the E. coli enzyme was shown to be reversibly perturbed by urea. These observations suggest that the conformational stability of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases is largely due to the intrinsic stability of the β-barrel fold rather than to the dimeric structure and that pH sensitivity and weak metal binding of theE. coli enzyme are due to higher flexibility and accessibility to the solvent of its active-site region.


FEBS Letters | 1995

Isolation of an active and heat-stable monomeric form of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase from the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli

Andrea Battistoni; Giuseppe Rotilio

We have purified the Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) from the periplasmic space of an Escherichia coli strain unable to synthesize MnSOD and FeSOD. Gel filtration chromatography evidenced that under all the experimental conditions tested the enzyme was monomeric. The catalytic activity of this CuZnSOD was comparable to that of other well characterized dimeric eukaryotic isoenzymes, indicating that a dimeric structure is not essential to ensure enzymatic efficiency. Furthermore the purified enzyme proved to be highly heat‐stable and, uniquely among CuZnSODs, protease‐sensitive. The latter property may explain the previously described lability of this protein in cell extracts.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Increased Expression of Periplasmic Cu,Zn Superoxide Dismutase Enhances Survival of Escherichia coli Invasive Strains within Nonphagocytic Cells

Andrea Battistoni; Francesca Pacello; Silvia Folcarelli; Maria Ajello; Giovanna Donnarumma; Rita Greco; Maria Grazia Ammendolia; Danièle Touati; Giuseppe Rotilio; Piera Valenti

ABSTRACT We have studied the influence of periplasmic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase on the intracellular survival of Escherichia colistrains able to invade epithelial cells by the expression of theinv gene from Yersinia pseudotuberculosis but unable to multiply intracellularly. Intracellular viability assays, confirmed by electron microscopy observations, showed that invasive strains of E. coli engineered to increase Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase production are much more resistant to intracellular killing than strains containing only the chromosomalsodC copy. However, we have found only a slight difference in survival within HeLa cells between a sodC-null mutant and its isogenic wild-type strain. Such a small difference in survival correlates with the very low expression of this enzyme in the wild-type strain. We have also observed that acid- and oxidative stress-sensitiveE. coli HB101(pRI203) is more rapidly killed in epithelial cells than E. coli GC4468(pRI203). The high mortality ofE. coli HB101(pRI203), independent of the acidification of the endosome, is abolished by the overexpression of sodC. Our data suggest that oxyradicals are involved in the mechanisms of bacterial killing within epithelial cells and that high-level production of periplasmic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase provides bacteria with an effective protection against oxidative damage. We propose that Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase could offer an important selective advantage in survival within host cells to bacteria expressing high levels of this enzyme.


Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology | 2013

Competition for zinc binding in the host-pathogen interaction

Mauro Cerasi; Serena Ammendola; Andrea Battistoni

Due to its favorable chemical properties, zinc is used as a structural or catalytic cofactor in a very large number of proteins. Despite the apparent abundance of this metal in all cell types, the intracellular pool of loosely bound zinc ions available for biological exchanges is in the picomolar range and nearly all zinc is tightly bound to proteins. In addition, to limit bacterial growth, some zinc-sequestering proteins are produced by eukaryotic hosts in response to infections. Therefore, to grow and multiply in the infected host, bacterial pathogens must produce high affinity zinc importers, such as the ZnuABC transporter which is present in most Gram-negative bacteria. Studies carried in different bacterial species have established that disruption of ZnuABC is usually associated with a remarkable loss of pathogenicity. The critical involvement of zinc in a plethora of metabolic and virulence pathways and the presence of very low number of zinc importers in most bacterial species mark zinc homeostasis as a very promising target for the development of novel antimicrobial strategies.

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Giuseppe Rotilio

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Serena Ammendola

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Paolo Pasquali

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Francesca Pacello

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Melania D'Orazio

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Peter O'Neill

Medical Research Council

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Mattia Falconi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Michele Pesciaroli

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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