Annalisa Rossi
University of Trento
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Featured researches published by Annalisa Rossi.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2017
Annalisa Rossi; Albertomaria Moro; Toma Tebaldi; Nicola Cornella; Lisa Gasperini; L. Lunelli; Alessandro Quattrone; Gabriella Viero; Paolo Macchi
Abstract RALY is a member of the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein family (hnRNP), a large family of RNA-binding proteins involved in many aspects of RNA metabolism. Although RALY interactome has been recently characterized, a comprehensive global analysis of RALY-associated RNAs is lacking and the biological function of RALY remains elusive. Here, we performed RIP-seq analysis to identify RALY interacting RNAs and assessed the role of RALY in gene expression. We demonstrate that RALY binds specific coding and non-coding RNAs and associates with translating mRNAs of mammalian cells. Among the identified transcripts, we focused on ANXA1 and H1FX mRNAs, encoding for Annexin A1 and for the linker variant of the histone H1X, respectively. Both proteins are differentially expressed by proliferating cells and are considered as markers for tumorigenesis. We demonstrate that cells lacking RALY expression exhibit changes in the levels of H1FX and ANXA1 mRNAs and proteins in an opposite manner. We also provide evidence for a direct binding of RALY to the U-rich elements present within the 3΄UTR of both transcripts. Thus, our results identify RALY as a poly-U binding protein and as a regulator of H1FX and ANXA1 in mammalian cells.
Molecular Cell | 2018
Toma Tebaldi; Paola Zuccotti; Daniele Peroni; Marcel Köhn; Lisa Gasperini; Valentina Potrich; Veronica Bonazza; Tatiana Dudnakova; Annalisa Rossi; Guido Sanguinetti; Luciano Conti; Paolo Macchi; Vito G. D’Agostino; Gabriella Viero; David Tollervey; Stefan Hüttelmaier; Alessandro Quattrone
Summary The RNA-binding protein HuD promotes neurogenesis and favors recovery from peripheral axon injury. HuD interacts with many mRNAs, altering both stability and translation efficiency. We generated a nucleotide resolution map of the HuD RNA interactome in motor neuron-like cells, identifying HuD target sites in 1,304 mRNAs, almost exclusively in the 3′ UTR. HuD binds many mRNAs encoding mTORC1-responsive ribosomal proteins and translation factors. Altered HuD expression correlates with the translation efficiency of these mRNAs and overall protein synthesis, in a mTORC1-independent fashion. The predominant HuD target is the abundant, small non-coding RNA Y3, amounting to 70% of the HuD interaction signal. Y3 functions as a molecular sponge for HuD, dynamically limiting its recruitment to polysomes and its activity as a translation and neuron differentiation enhancer. These findings uncover an alternative route to the mTORC1 pathway for translational control in motor neurons that is tunable by a small non-coding RNA.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017
Nicola Cornella; Toma Tebaldi; Lisa Gasperini; Jarnail Singh; Richard A. Padgett; Annalisa Rossi; Paolo Macchi
The heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNP) form a large family of RNA-binding proteins that exert numerous functions in RNA metabolism. RALY is a member of the hnRNP family that binds poly-U–rich elements within several RNAs and regulates the expression of specific transcripts. RALY is up-regulated in different types of cancer, and its down-regulation impairs cell cycle progression. However, the RALYs role in regulating RNA levels remains elusive. Here, we show that numerous genes coding for factors involved in transcription and cell cycle regulation exhibit an altered expression in RALY–down-regulated HeLa cells, consequently causing impairments in transcription, cell proliferation, and cell cycle progression. Interestingly, by comparing the list of RALY targets with the list of genes affected by RALY down-regulation, we found an enrichment of RALY mRNA targets in the down-regulated genes upon RALY silencing. The affected genes include the E2F transcription factor family. Given its role as proliferation-promoting transcription factor, we focused on E2F1. We demonstrate that E2F1 mRNA stability and E2F1 protein levels are reduced in cells lacking RALY expression. Finally, we also show that RALY interacts with transcriptionally active chromatin in both an RNA-dependent and -independent manner and that this association is abolished in the absence of active transcription. Taken together, our results highlight the importance of RALY as an indirect regulator of transcription and cell cycle progression through the regulation of specific mRNA targets, thus strengthening the possibility of a direct gene expression regulation exerted by RALY.
Terzo Congresso Nazionale della Società Italiana di Psicopatologia | 1998
Annalisa Rossi; Gabriele Massimetti; L Conti
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2018
Lisa Gasperini; Annalisa Rossi; Nicola Cornella; Daniele Peroni; Paola Zuccotti; Valentina Potrich; Alessandro Quattrone; Paolo Macchi
Archive | 2017
Annalisa Rossi; Ralf Dahm; Paolo Macchi
GIORNALE ITALIANO DI PSICOPATOLOGIA | 2000
L Conti; Gabriele Massimetti; Annalisa Rossi
Terzo Congresso Nazionale della Società Italiana di Psicopatologia | 1998
Gabriele Massimetti; L Conti; Annalisa Rossi
Internet e Salute Mentale | 1998
L Conti; Gabriele Massimetti; Annalisa Rossi; S Bortone; P. Pancheri
II° Congresso Nazionale SOPSI | 1997
Annalisa Rossi; P Falco; E Zaccagnini; Gabriele Massimetti; L Conti