Angela Bachi
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Angela Bachi.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
Tiziana Bonaldi; Fabio Talamo; Paola Scaffidi; Denise Ferrera; Annalisa Porto; Angela Bachi; Anna Rubartelli; Alessandra Agresti; Marco Bianchi
High Mobility Group 1 protein (HMGB1) is a chromatin component that, when leaked out by necrotic cells, triggers inflammation. HMGB1 can also be secreted by activated monocytes and macrophages, and functions as a late mediator of inflammation. Secretion of a nuclear protein requires a tightly controlled relocation program. We show here that in all cells HMGB1 shuttles actively between the nucleus and cytoplasm. Monocytes and macrophages acetylate HMGB1 extensively upon activation with lipopolysaccharide; moreover, forced hyperacetylation of HMGB1 in resting macrophages causes its relocalization to the cytosol. Cytosolic HMGB1 is then concentrated by default into secretory lysosomes, and secreted when monocytic cells receive an appropriate second signal.
Molecular Cell | 1998
Patric Grüter; Carlos Tabernero; Cayetano von Kobbe; Christel Schmitt; Claudio Saavedra; Angela Bachi; Matthias Wilm; Barbara K Felber; Elisa Izaurralde
The constitutive transport element (CTE) of the type D retroviruses promotes nuclear export of unspliced viral RNAs apparently by recruiting host factor(s) required for export of cellular messenger RNAs. Here, we report the identification of TAP as the cellular factor that specifically binds to wild-type CTE but not to export-deficient CTE mutants. Microinjection experiments performed in Xenopus oocytes demonstrate that TAP directly stimulates CTE-dependent export. Furthermore, TAP overcomes the mRNA export block caused by the presence of saturating amounts of CTE RNA. Thus, TAP, like its yeast homolog Mex67p, is a bona fide mRNA nuclear export mediator. TAP is the second cellular RNA binding protein shown to be directly involved in the export of its target RNA.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Maddalena Fratelli; Hans Demol; Magda Puype; Simona Casagrande; Ivano Eberini; Mario Salmona; Valentina Bonetto; Manuela Mengozzi; Francis Duffieux; Emeric Miclet; Angela Bachi; Joël Vandekerckhove; Elisabetta Gianazza; Pietro Ghezzi
Formation of mixed disulfides between glutathione and the cysteines of some proteins (glutathionylation) has been suggested as a mechanism through which protein functions can be regulated by the redox status. The aim of this study was to identify the proteins of T cell blasts that undergo glutathionylation under oxidative stress. To this purpose, we radiolabeled cellular glutathione with 35S, exposed T cells to oxidants (diamide or hydrogen peroxide), and performed nonreducing, two-dimensional electrophoresis followed by detection of labeled proteins by phosphorimaging and their identification by mass spectrometry techniques. We detected several proteins previously not recognized to be glutathionylated, including cytoskeletal proteins (vimentin, myosin, tropomyosin, cofilin, profilin, and the already known actin), enzymes (enolase, aldolase, 6-phosphogluconolactonase, adenylate kinase, ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, phosphoglycerate kinase, triosephosphate isomerase, and pyrophosphatase), redox enzymes (peroxiredoxin 1, protein disulfide isomerase, and cytochrome c oxidase), cyclophilin, stress proteins (HSP70 and HSP60), nucleophosmin, transgelin, galectin, and fatty acid binding protein. Based on the presence of several protein isoforms in control cells, we suggest that enolase and cyclophilin are heavily glutathionylated under basal conditions. We studied the effect of glutathionylation on some of the enzymes identified in the present study and found that some of them (enolase and 6-phosphogluconolactonase) are inhibited by glutathionylation, whereas the enzymatic activity of cyclophilin (peptidylprolyl isomerase) is not. These findings suggest that protein glutathionylation might be a common mechanism for the global regulation of protein functions.
RNA | 2000
Françoise Stutz; Angela Bachi; Tobias Doerks; Isabelle C. Braun; Bertrand Séraphin; Matthias Wilm; Peer Bork; Elisa Izaurralde
Vertebrate TAP and its yeast ortholog Mex67p are involved in the export of messenger RNAs from the nucleus. TAP has also been implicated in the export of simian type D viral RNAs bearing the constitutive transport element (CTE). Although TAP directly interacts with CTE-bearing RNAs, the mode of interaction of TAP/Mex67p with cellular mRNAs is different from that with the CTE RNA and is likely to be mediated by protein-protein interactions. Here we show that Mex67p directly interacts with Yra1p, an essential yeast hnRNP-like protein. This interaction is evolutionarily conserved as Yra1p also interacts with TAP. Conditional expression in yeast cells implicates Yra1 p in the export of cellular mRNAs. Database searches revealed that Yra1p belongs to an evolutionarily conserved family of hnRNP-like proteins having more than one member in Mus musculus, Xenopus laevis, Caenorhabditis elegans, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe and at least one member in several species including plants. The murine members of the family directly interact with TAP. Because members of this protein family are characterized by the presence of one RNP-motif RNA-binding domain and exhibit RNA-binding activity, we called these proteins REF-bps for RNA and export factor binding proteins. Thus, Yra1p and members of the REF family of hnRNP-like proteins may facilitate the interaction of TAP/Mex67p with cellular mRNAs.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012
Emilie Venereau; Maura Casalgrandi; Milena Schiraldi; Daniel J. Antoine; Angela Cattaneo; Francesco De Marchis; Jaron Liu; Antonella Antonelli; Alessandro Preti; Lorenzo Raeli; Sara Samadi Shams; Huan Yang; Luca Varani; Ulf Andersson; Kevin J. Tracey; Angela Bachi; Mariagrazia Uguccioni; Marco Bianchi
HMGB1 orchestrates leukocyte recruitment and their induction to secrete inflammatory cytokines by switching between mutually exclusive redox states.
RNA | 2000
Angela Bachi; I. C. Braun; João P. Rodrigues; Nelly Panté; Katharina Ribbeck; C. von Kobbe; U. Kutay; Matthias Wilm; Dirk Görlich; Maria Carmo-Fonseca; E. Itzaurralde
Messenger RNAs are exported from the nucleus as large ribonucleoprotein complexes (mRNPs). To date, proteins implicated in this process include TAP/Mex67p and RAE1/Gle2p and are distinct from the nuclear transport receptors of the beta-related, Ran-binding protein family. Mex67p is essential for mRNA export in yeast. Its vertebrate homolog TAP has been implicated in the export of cellular mRNAs and of simian type D viral RNAs bearing the constitutive transport element (CTE). Here we show that TAP is predominantly localized in the nucleoplasm and at both the nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic faces of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). TAP interacts with multiple components of the NPC including the nucleoporins CAN, Nup98, Nup153, p62, and with three major NPC subcomplexes. The nucleoporin-binding domain of TAP comprises residues 508-619. In HeLa cells, this domain is necessary and sufficient to target GFP-TAP fusions to the nuclear rim. Moreover, the isolated domain strongly competes multiple export pathways in vivo, probably by blocking binding sites on the NPC that are shared with other transport receptors. Microinjection experiments implicate this domain in the export of specific CTE-containing RNAs. Finally, we show that TAP interacts with transportin and with two proteins implicated in the export of cellular mRNAs: RAE1/hGle2 and E1B-AP5. The interaction of TAP with nucleoporins, its direct binding to the CTE RNA, and its association with two mRNP binding proteins suggest that TAP is an RNA export mediator that may bridge the interaction between specific RNP export substrates and the NPC.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012
Milena Schiraldi; Angela Raucci; Laura Martínez Muñoz; Elsa Livoti; Barbara Celona; Emilie Venereau; Tiziana Apuzzo; Francesco De Marchis; Mattia Pedotti; Angela Bachi; Marcus Thelen; Luca Varani; Mario Mellado; Amanda E. I. Proudfoot; Marco Bianchi; Mariagrazia Uguccioni
CXCL12 forms a complex with HMGB1 that binds to the chemokine receptor CXCR4 and increases inflammatory cell migration.
Cell | 2000
Mutsuhito Ohno; Alexandra Segref; Angela Bachi; Matthias Wilm; Iain W. Mattaj
In metazoa, assembly of spliceosomal U snRNPs requires nuclear export of U snRNA precursors. Export depends upon the RNA cap structure, nuclear cap-binding complex (CBC), the export receptor CRM1/Xpo1, and RanGTP. These components are however insufficient to support U snRNA export. We identify PHAX (phosphorylated adaptor for RNA export) as the additional factor required for U snRNA export complex assembly in vitro. In vivo, PHAX is required for U snRNA export but not for CRM1-mediated export in general. PHAX is phosphorylated in the nucleus and then exported with RNA to the cytoplasm, where it is dephosphorylated. PHAX phosphorylation is essential for export complex assembly while its dephosphorylation causes export complex disassembly. The compartmentalized PHAX phosphorylation cycle can contribute to the directionality of export.
The EMBO Journal | 1999
Tilmann Achsel; Hero Brahms; Berthold Kastner; Angela Bachi; Matthias Wilm; Reinhard Lührmann
We describe the isolation and molecular characterization of seven distinct proteins present in human [U4/U6·U5] tri‐snRNPs. These proteins exhibit clear homology to the Sm proteins and are thus denoted LSm (like Sm) proteins. Purified LSm proteins form a heteromer that is stable even in the absence of RNA and exhibits a doughnut shape under the electron microscope, with striking similarity to the Sm core RNP structure. The purified LSm heteromer binds specifically to U6 snRNA, requiring the 3′‐terminal U‐tract for complex formation. The 3′‐end of U6 snRNA was also co‐precipitated with LSm proteins after digestion of isolated tri‐snRNPs with RNaseT1. Importantly, the LSm proteins did not bind to the U‐rich Sm sites of intact U1, U2, U4 or U5 snRNAs, indicating that they can only interact with a 3′‐terminal U‐tract. Finally, we show that the LSm proteins facilitate the formation of U4/U6 RNA duplices in vitro, suggesting that the LSm proteins may play a role in U4/U6 snRNP formation.
The EMBO Journal | 1999
Christel Schmitt; Cayetano von Kobbe; Angela Bachi; Nelly Panté; João P. Rodrigues; Cécile Boscheron; Guillaume Rigaut; Matthias Wilm; Bertrand Séraphin; Maria Carmo-Fonseca; Elisa Izaurralde
Dbp5 is a DEAD‐box protein essential for mRNA export from the nucleus in yeast. Here we report the isolation of a cDNA encoding human Dbp5 (hDbp5) which is 46% identical to yDbp5p. Like its yeast homologue, hDbp5 is localized within the cytoplasm and at the nuclear rim. By immunoelectron microscopy, the nuclear envelope‐bound fraction of Dbp5 has been localized to the cytoplasmic fibrils of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Consistent with this localization, we show that both the human and yeast proteins directly interact with an N‐terminal region of the nucleoporins CAN/Nup159p. In a conditional yeast strain in which Nup159p is degraded when shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, yDbp5p dissociates from the NPC and localizes to the cytoplasm. Thus, Dbp5 is recruited to the NPC via a conserved interaction with CAN/Nup159p. To investigate its function, we generated defective hDbp5 mutants and analysed their effects in RNA export by microinjection in Xenopus oocytes. A mutant protein containing a Glu→Gln change in the conserved DEAD‐box inhibited the nuclear exit of mRNAs. Together, our data indicate that Dbp5 is a conserved RNA‐dependent ATPase which is recruited to the cytoplasmic fibrils of the NPC where it participates in the export of mRNAs out of the nucleus.