Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Annarita Stringaro is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Annarita Stringaro.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2002

Induction of Lymphocyte Apoptosis by Tumor Cell Secretion of FasL-bearing Microvesicles

Giovanna Andreola; Licia Rivoltini; Chiara Castelli; Veronica Huber; Paola Perego; Paola Deho; Paola Squarcina; Paola Accornero; Francesco Lozupone; Luana Lugini; Annarita Stringaro; Agnese Molinari; Giuseppe Arancia; Massimo Gentile; Giorgio Parmiani; Stefano Fais

The hypothesis that FasL expression by tumor cells may impair the in vivo efficacy of antitumor immune responses, through a mechanism known as ‘Fas tumor counterattack,’ has been recently questioned, becoming the object of an intense debate based on conflicting results. Here we definitely show that FasL is indeed detectable in the cytoplasm of melanoma cells and its expression is confined to multivesicular bodies that contain melanosomes. In these structures FasL colocalizes with both melanosomal (i.e., gp100) and lysosomal (i.e., CD63) antigens. Isolated melanosomes express FasL, as detected by Western blot and cytofluorimetry, and they can exert Fas-mediated apoptosis in Jurkat cells. We additionally show that melanosome-containing multivesicular bodies degranulate extracellularly and release FasL-bearing microvesicles, that coexpress both gp100 and CD63 and retain their functional activity in triggering Fas-dependent apoptosis of lymphoid cells. Hence our data provide evidence for a novel mechanism potentially operating in Fas tumor counterattack through the secretion of subcellular particles expressing functional FasL. Such vesicles may form a sort of front line hindering lymphocytes and other immunocompetent cells from entering neoplastic lesions and exert their antitumor activity.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Protection by Anti-β-Glucan Antibodies Is Associated with Restricted β-1,3 Glucan Binding Specificity and Inhibition of Fungal Growth and Adherence

Antonella Torosantucci; Paola Chiani; Carla Bromuro; Flavia De Bernardis; Angelina S. Palma; Yan Liu; Giuseppina Mignogna; Bruno Maras; Marisa Colone; Annarita Stringaro; Silvia Zamboni; Ten Feizi; Antonio Cassone

Anti-β-glucan antibodies elicited by a laminarin-conjugate vaccine confer cross-protection to mice challenged with major fungal pathogens such as Candida albicans, Aspergillus fumigatus and Cryptococcus neoformans. To gain insights into protective β-glucan epitope(s) and protection mechanisms, we studied two anti-β-glucan monoclonal antibodies (mAb) with identical complementarity-determining regions but different isotypes (mAb 2G8, IgG2b and mAb 1E12, IgM). C. albicans, the most relevant fungal pathogen for humans, was used as a model. Both mAbs bound to fungal cell surface and to the β1,3-β1,6 glucan of the fungal cell wall skeleton, as shown by immunofluorescence, electron-microscopy and ELISA. They were also equally unable to opsonize fungal cells in a J774 macrophage phagocytosis and killing assay. However, only the IgG2b conferred substantial protection against mucosal and systemic candidiasis in passive vaccination experiments in rodents. Competition ELISA and microarray analyses using sequence-defined glucan oligosaccharides showed that the protective IgG2b selectively bound to β1,3-linked (laminarin-like) glucose sequences whereas the non-protective IgM bound to β1,6- and β1,4-linked glucose sequences in addition to β1,3-linked ones. Only the protective IgG2b recognized heterogeneous, polydisperse high molecular weight cell wall and secretory components of the fungus, two of which were identified as the GPI-anchored cell wall proteins Als3 and Hyr1. In addition, only the IgG2b inhibited in vitro two critical virulence attributes of the fungus, hyphal growth and adherence to human epithelial cells. Our study demonstrates that the isotype of anti-β-glucan antibodies may affect details of the β-glucan epitopes recognized, and this may be associated with a differing ability to inhibit virulence attributes of the fungus and confer protection in vivo. Our data also suggest that the anti-virulence properties of the IgG2b mAb may be linked to its capacity to recognize β-glucan epitope(s) on some cell wall components that exert critical functions in fungal cell wall structure and adherence to host cells.


Infection and Immunity | 2008

Direct binding of human NK cell natural cytotoxicity receptor NKp44 to the surfaces of mycobacteria and other bacteria.

Semih Esin; Giovanna Batoni; Claudio Counoupas; Annarita Stringaro; Franca Lisa Brancatisano; Marisa Colone; Walter Florio; Giuseppe Arancia; Mario Campa

ABSTRACT Our previous studies demonstrated that Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) can directly interact with human NK cells and induce the proliferation, gamma interferon production, and cytotoxic activity of such cells without the need for accessory cells. Thus, the aim of the present study was to identify the putative receptor(s) responsible for the recognition of BCG by human NK cells and potentially involved in the activation of NK cells. To this end, we first investigated the surface expression of three NK cell-activating receptors belonging to the natural cytoxicity receptor (NCR) family on highly purified human NK cells upon in vitro direct stimulation with BCG. An induction of the surface expression of NKp44, but not of NKp30 or NKp46, was observed after 3 and 4 days of in vitro stimulation with live BCG. The NKp44 induction involved mainly a particular NK cell subset expressing the CD56 marker at high density, CD56bright. In order to establish whether NKp44 could directly bind to BCG, whole BCG cells were stained with soluble forms of the three NCRs chimeric for the human immunoglobulin G (IgG) Fc fragment (NKp30-Fc, NKp44-Fc, NKp46-Fc), followed by incubation with a phycoerythrin (PE)-conjugated goat anti-human IgG antibody. Analysis by flow cytometry of the complexes revealed a higher PE fluorescence intensity for BCG incubated with NKp44-Fc than for BCG incubated with NKp30-Fc, NKp46-Fc, or negative controls. The binding of NKp44-Fc to the BCG surface was confirmed with immunogold labeling using transmission electron microscopy, suggesting the presence of a putative ligand(s) for human NKp44 on the BCG cell wall. Similar binding assays performed on a number of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria revealed a pattern of NKp44-Fc binding restricted to members of the genus Mycobacterium, to the mycobacterium-related species Nocardia farcinica, and to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Altogether, the results obtained indicate, for the first time, that at least one member of the NCR family (NKp44) may be involved in the direct recognition of bacterial pathogens by human NK cells.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

PE is a functional domain responsible for protein translocation and localization on mycobacterial cell wall.

Alessandro Cascioferro; Giovanni Delogu; Marisa Colone; Michela Sali; Annarita Stringaro; Giuseppe Arancia; Giovanni Fadda; Giorgio Palù; Riccardo Manganelli

The PE family of Mycobacterium tuberculosis includes 98 proteins which share a highly homologous N‐terminus sequence of about 110 amino acids (PE domain). Depending on the C‐terminal domain, the PE family can be divided in three subfamilies, the largest of which is the PE_PGRS with 61 members. In this study, we determined the cellular localization of three PE proteins by cell fractionation and immunoelectron microscopy by expressing chimeric epitope‐tagged recombinant proteins in Mycobacterium smegmatis. We demonstrate that the PE domain of PE_PGRS33 and PE11 (a protein constituted by the only PE domain) contains the information necessary for cell wall localization, and that they can be used as N‐terminal fusion partners to deliver a sufficiently long C‐terminus‐linked protein domain on the mycobacterial cell surface. Indeed, we demonstrate that PE_PGRS33 and Rv3097c (a lipase belonging to the PE family) are surface exposed and localize in the mycobacterial cell wall. Moreover, we found that PE_PGRS33 is easily extractable by detergents suggesting its localization in the mycobacterial outer membrane. Beyond defining the cellular localization of these proteins, and a function for their PE domains, these data open the interesting possibility to construct recombinant mycobacteria expressing heterologous antigens on their surface for vaccine purposes.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2004

Tyrosine phosphatase activity in mitochondria: presence of Shp-2 phosphatase in mitochondria

Mauro Salvi; Annarita Stringaro; Anna Maria Brunati; Enzo Agostinelli; Giuseppe Arancia; Giulio Clari; Antonio Toninello

Tyrosine phosphorylation by unidentified enzymes has been observed in mitochondria, with recent evidence indicating that non-receptorial tyrosine kinases belonging to the Src family, which represent key players in several transduction pathways, are constitutively present in mitochondria. The extent of protein phosphorylation reflects a coordination balance between the activities of specific kinases and phophatases. The present study demonstrates that purified rat brain mitochondria possess endogenous tyrosine phosphatase activity. Mitochondrial phosphatases were found to be capable of dephosphorylating different exogenous substrates, including paranitrophenylphosphate, 32P-poly(Glu-Tyr)4:1 and 32P-angiotensin. These activities are strongly inhibited by peroxovanadate, a well-known inhibitor of tyrosine phosphatases, but not by inhibitors of alkali or Ser/Thr phosphatases, and mainly take place in the intermembrane space and outer mitochondrial membrane. Using a combination of approaches, we identified the tyrosine phosphatase Shp-2 in mitochondria. Shp-2 plays a crucial role in a number of intracellular signalling cascades and is probably involved in several human diseases. It thus represents the first tyrosine phosphatase shown to be present in mitochondria.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Biophysical and structural characterization of 1H-NMR-detectable mobile lipid domains in NIH-3T3 fibroblasts

Amalia Ferretti; Arno Knijn; Egidio Iorio; Simonetta Pulciani; Massimo Giambenedetti; Agnese Molinari; Stefania Meschini; Annarita Stringaro; Annarica Calcabrini; Isabel Freitas; Roberto Strom; Giuseppe Arancia; Franca Podo

Nature and subcellular localization of 1H-NMR-detectable mobile lipid domains (ML) were investigated by NMR, Nile red fluorescence and electron microscopy, in NIH-3T3 fibroblasts and their H-ras transformants (3T3ras) transfected with a high number of oncogene copies. Substantial ML levels (ratio of (CH2)n/CH3 peak areas R=1. 56+/-0.33) were associated in untransformed fibroblasts with both (a) intramembrane amorphous lipid vesicles, about 60 nm in diameter, distinct from caveolae; and (b) cytoplasmic, osmiophilic lipid bodies surrounded by own membrane, endowed of intramembrane particles. 2D NMR maps demonstrated that ML comprised both mono- and polyunsaturated fatty chains. Lower ML signals were detected in 3T3ras (R=0.76+/-0.37), under various conditions of cell growth. Very few (if any) lipid bodies and vesicles were detected in the cytoplasmic or membrane compartments of 3T3ras cells with R<0.4, while only intramembrane lipid vesicles were associated with moderate R values. Involvement of phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis in ML generation was demonstrated by selective inhibition of endogenous phospholipase C (PC-plc) or by exposure to bacterial PC-plc. This study indicates that: (1) both cytoplasmic lipid bodies and membrane vesicles (possibly in mutual dynamic exchange) may contribute (although to a different extent) to ML signals; and (2) high levels of ras-transfection either inhibit ML formation or facilitate their extrusion from the cell.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2014

Effects of Mentha suaveolens Essential Oil Alone or in Combination with Other Drugs in Candida albicans

Annarita Stringaro; Elisabetta Vavala; Marisa Colone; Federico Pepi; Giuseppina Mignogna; Stefania Garzoli; Serena Cecchetti; Rino Ragno; Letizia Angiolella

Candidosis is the most important cause of fungal infections in humans. The yeast Candida albicans can form biofilms, and it is known that microbial biofilms play an important role in human diseases and are very difficult to treat. The prolonged treatment with drugs has often resulted in failure and resistance. Due to the emergence of multidrug resistance, alternatives to conventional antimicrobial therapy are needed. This study aims to analyse the effects induced by essential oil of Mentha suaveolens Ehrh (EOMS) on Candida albicans and its potential synergism when used in combination with conventional drugs. Morphological differences between control and EOMS treated yeast cells or biofilms were observed by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM resp.,). In order to reveal the presence of cell cycle alterations, flow cytometry analysis was carried out as well. The synergic action of EOMS was studied with the checkerboard method, and the cellular damage induced by different treatments was analysed by TEM. The results obtained have demonstrated both the effects of EOMS on C. albicans yeast cells and biofilms and the synergism of EOMS when used in combination with conventional antifungal drugs as fluconazole (FLC) and micafungin (MCFG), and therefore we can hypothesize on its potential use in therapy. Further studies are necessary to know its mechanism of action.


International Journal of Cancer | 1998

Detection of P-glycoprotein in the Golgi apparatus of drug-untreated human melanoma cells

Agnese Molinari; Annarica Calcabrini; Stefania Meschini; Annarita Stringaro; Donatella Del Bufalo; Maurizio Cianfriglia; Giuseppe Arancia

The intracellular location of the MDR1 gene product, known as P‐glycoprotein (P‐gp), has been detected by flow cytometry in 3 stabilized human melanoma cell lines which had never undergone cytotoxic drug treatment and did not express P‐gp on the plasma membrane. In addition, MDR1 mRNA expression was revealed by RT‐PCR in the same cell lines. Immunofluorescence microscopy, performed by using the same 2 monoclonal antibodies (MM4.17 and MRK‐16) as employed in the flow‐cytometric analysis, revealed the presence of P‐gp intracytoplasmically, in a well‐defined perinuclear region. Double immunofluorescence labelling and immunoelectron microscopy strongly suggested the location of the transporter molecule in the Golgi apparatus. The same observations have been obtained on a primary culture from a metastasis of human melanoma. Analysis of the expression of another membrane transport protein, the multidrug‐resistance‐related protein (MRP1), showed that it was present in the cytoplasm of all the melanoma cell lines examined. MRP1 also showed Golgi‐like localization. The study by laser scanning confocal microscopy on the intracellular localization of the anti‐tumoral agent doxorubicin (DOX) during the drug‐uptake and ‐efflux phases, indicated the Golgi apparatus as a preferential accumulation site for the anthracyclinic antibiotic. P‐gp function modulators (verapamil and cyclosporin A) were able to modify DOX intracytoplasmic distribution and to increase drug intracellular concentration and cytotoxic effect in melanoma cells. On the contrary, MRP1 modulators (probenecid and genistein) did not significantly influence either DOX efflux and distribution or the sensitivity of melanoma cells to the cytotoxic drug. Int. J. Cancer 75:885–893, 1998.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2010

A NH2 tau fragment targets neuronal mitochondria at AD synapses: possible implications for neurodegeneration.

Giuseppina Amadoro; Veronica Corsetti; Annarita Stringaro; Marisa Colone; Simona D'Aguanno; Giovanni Meli; M. T. Ciotti; Giuseppe Sancesario; Antonino Cattaneo; Rossana Bussani; Delio Mercanti; Pietro Calissano

Synapses are ultrastructural sites for memory storage in brain, and synaptic damage is the best pathologic correlate of cognitive decline in Alzheimers disease (AD). Post-translational hyperphosphorylation, enzyme-mediated truncation, conformational modifications, and aggregation of tau protein into neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) are hallmarks for a heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative disorders, so-called tauopathies. AD is a secondary tauopathy since it is pathologically distinguished by the presence of amyloid-beta (Abeta)-containing senile plaques and the presence of tau-positive NFTs in the neocortex and hippocampus. Here, we report that a 20-22 kDa NH2-truncated tau fragment is largely enriched in human mitochondria from cryopreserved synaptosomes of AD brains and that its amount in terminal fields correlates with the pathological synaptic changes and with the organelle functional impairment. This NH2-truncated tau form is also found in other human, not AD-tauopathies, while its presence in AD patients is linked to Abeta multimeric species and likely to pathology severity. Finally native, patient-derived, Abeta oligomers-enriched extracts likely impair the mitochondrial function by the in vitro production of 20-22 kDa NH2-tau fragments in mature human SY5Y and in rat hippocampal neurons. Thus our findings suggest that the mitochondrial NH2-derived tau peptide distribution may exacerbate the synapse degeneration occurring in tauopathies, including AD, and sustain the in vivo NH-2 tau cleavage inhibitors as an alternative drug discovery strategies for AD therapy.


International Journal of Cancer | 2000

Intracellular P‐glycoprotein expression is associated with the intrinsic multidrug resistance phenotype in human colon adenocarcinoma cells

Stefania Meschini; Annarica Calcabrini; Elena Monti; Donatella Del Bufalo; Annarita Stringaro; Ersilia Dolfini; Giuseppe Arancia

The 2 clones, LoVo 5 and LoVo 7, derived from untreated LoVo WT human colon adenocarcinoma cells and exhibiting different sensitivity to doxorubicin (DOX), were compared in order to identify possible determinants of intrinsic drug resistance. A multidrug resistant variant cell line, selected from LoVo WT cells by continuous exposure to DOX (LoVo DX), was also included in the study. Analysis of the expression and organization of cytoskeletal elements by flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy evidenced a positive correlation between vimentin expression and DOX resistance in LoVo 7 and LoVo DX cells, whereas differences in actin, tubulin or cytokeratin did not seem to relate to drug response. The expression and localization of different drug transporters commonly implicated in drug resistance, i.e., the MDR1 gene product P‐glycoprotein (P‐gp), the multidrug resistance‐related protein MRP and the lung resistance‐related protein LRP were also investigated by means of flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy, following labeling with specific monoclonal antibodies. Surface expression of P‐gp was only detected in LoVo DX cells, which also exhibited increased MRP and LRP protein levels. However, significant amounts of P‐gp were found at intracellular sites in the intrinsically resistant LoVo 7 clone. Modulation of P‐gp function by cyclosporin A was found to alter DOX accumulation and efflux in LoVo 7 cells, indicating that intracellular P‐gp plays a functional role in drug trafficking and suggesting possible implications in determining the intrinsic resistance displayed by this clone. Int. J. Cancer 87:615–628, 2000.

Collaboration


Dive into the Annarita Stringaro's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marisa Colone

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giuseppe Arancia

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Agnese Molinari

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Annarica Calcabrini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Laura Toccacieli

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Letizia Angiolella

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cecilia Bombelli

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giovanna Mancini

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giuseppina Bozzuto

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Cassone

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge