Annarosa Lomartire
University of Turin
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Featured researches published by Annarosa Lomartire.
Molecular Neurobiology | 2010
Marco Piccinini; Federica Scandroglio; Simona Prioni; Barbara Buccinnà; Nicoletta Loberto; Massimo Aureli; Vanna Chigorno; Elisa Lupino; Giovanni DeMarco; Annarosa Lomartire; Maria Teresa Rinaudo; Sandro Sonnino; Alessandro Prinetti
Sphingolipids are polar membrane lipids present as minor components in eukaryotic cell membranes. Sphingolipids are highly enriched in nervous cells, where they exert important biological functions. They deeply affect the structural and geometrical properties and the lateral order of cellular membranes, modulate the function of several membrane-associated proteins, and give rise to important intra- and extracellular lipid mediators. Sphingolipid metabolism is regulated along the differentiation and development of the nervous system, and the expression of a peculiar spatially and temporarily regulated sphingolipid pattern is essential for the maintenance of the functional integrity of the nervous system: sphingolipids in the nervous system participate to several signaling pathways controlling neuronal survival, migration, and differentiation, responsiveness to trophic factors, synaptic stability and synaptic transmission, and neuron–glia interactions, including the formation and stability of central and peripheral myelin. In several neurodegenerative diseases, sphingolipid metabolism is deeply deregulated, leading to the expression of abnormal sphingolipid patterns and altered membrane organization that participate to several events related to the pathogenesis of these diseases. The most impressive consequence of this deregulation is represented by anomalous sphingolipid–protein interactions that are at least, in part, responsible for the misfolding events that cause the fibrillogenic and amyloidogenic processing of disease-specific protein isoforms, such as amyloid β peptide in Alzheimer’s disease, huntingtin in Huntington’s disease, α-synuclein in Parkinson’s disease, and prions in transmissible encephalopathies. Targeting sphingolipid metabolism represents today an underexploited but realistic opportunity to design novel therapeutic strategies for the intervention in these diseases.
Acta Neuropathologica | 2011
Giovanni De Marco; Elisa Lupino; Andrea Calvo; Cristina Moglia; Barbara Buccinnà; Silvia Grifoni; Cristina Ramondetti; Annarosa Lomartire; Maria Teresa Rinaudo; Marco Piccinini; Maria Teresa Giordana; Adriano Chiò
TDP-43, encoded by TARDBP, is a ubiquitously expressed, primarily nuclear protein. In recent years, TDP-43 has been identified as the major pathological protein in ALS due to its mislocalisation in the cytoplasm of motor neurons of patients with and without TARDBP mutations and expression in forms that do not match its predicted molecular weight. In this study, the TDP-43 profile was investigated using western immunoblot analysis in whole lysates, nuclei and cytoplasm of circulating lymphomonocytes from 16 ALS patients, 4 with (ALS/TDP+) and 12 without (ALS/TDP−) TARDBP mutations in the protein C-terminal domain, and thirteen age-matched, healthy donors (controls). Three disease-unaffected first-degree relatives of an ALS/TDP+ patient were also included: one carried the parent mutation (Rel/TDP+) whereas the other two did not (Rel/TDP−). In all ALS patients, relatives and controls, TDP-43 retained the predicted molecular weight in whole cell lysates and nuclei, but in the cytoplasm its molecular weight was slightly smaller than expected. In quantitative terms, TDP-43 was expressed at approximately the same levels in whole cell lysates of ALS patients, relatives and controls. In contrast, TDP-43 accumulated in the cytoplasm with concomitant nuclear depletion in all ALS/TDP+ patients, in about 50% of ALS/TDP− patients and in the Rel/TDP+ subject compared to the controls. In the remaining ALS/TDP− patients and in the two Rel/TDP− subjects, TDP-43 matched the control levels in both subcellular compartments. Were these findings further confirmed, circulating lymphomonocytes could be informative of TDP-43 mislocalisation in nervous tissue and used as a biomarker for future disease risk.
Immunology | 2010
Elisa Lupino; Barbara Buccinnà; Cristina Ramondetti; Annarosa Lomartire; Giovanni De Marco; Emanuela Ricotti; Pier-Angelo Tovo; Maria Teresa Rinaudo; Marco Piccinini
Stimulation of naïve CD4+ T cells through engagement of the T‐cell receptor (TCR) and the CD28 co‐receptor initiates cell proliferation which critically depends on interleukin (IL)‐2 secretion and subsequent autocrine signalling via the IL‐2 receptor. However, several studies indicate that in CD28‐costimulated T cells additional IL‐2‐independent signals are also required for cell proliferation. In this study, using a neutralizing anti‐human IL‐2 antibody and two selective, structurally unrelated, cell‐permeable I‐κB kinase (IKK) inhibitors, BMS‐345541 and PS‐1145, we show that in human naïve CD4+ T cells stimulated through a short engagement of the TCR and the CD28 co‐receptor, IKK controls the expression of the cell cycle regulatory proteins cyclin D3, cyclin E and cyclin‐dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) and the stability of the F‐box protein S‐phase kinase‐associated protein 2 (SKP2) and its co‐factor CDC28 protein kinase regulatory subunit 1B (CKS1B), through IL‐2‐independent mechanisms.
Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology | 2017
G. De Marco; Annarosa Lomartire; Andrea Calvo; A. Risso; E De Luca; Michael Mostert; Jessica Mandrioli; Claudia Caponnetto; Giuseppe Borghero; Umberto Manera; Antonio Canosa; Cristina Moglia; Gabriella Restagno; Nicola Fini; C. Tarella; M. T. Giordana; Mt Rinaudo; Adriano Chiò
Cytoplasmic accumulation of the nuclear protein transactive response DNA‐binding protein 43 (TDP‐43) is an early determinant of motor neuron degeneration in most amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) cases. We previously disclosed this accumulation in circulating lymphomonocytes (CLM) of ALS patients with mutant TARDBP, the TDP‐43‐coding gene, as well as of a healthy individual carrying the parental TARDBP mutation. Here, we investigate TDP‐43 subcellular localization in CLM and in the constituent cells, lymphocytes and monocytes, of patients with various ALS‐linked mutant genes.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014
Giovanni De Marco; Annarosa Lomartire; Giorgia Mandili; Elisa Lupino; Barbara Buccinnà; Cristina Ramondetti; Cristina Moglia; Francesco Novelli; Marco Piccinini; Michael Mostert; Maria Teresa Rinaudo; Adriano Chiò; Andrea Calvo
Accumulation of transactive response DNA binding protein (TDP-43) fragments in motor neurons is a post mortem hallmark of different neurodegenerative diseases. TDP-43 fragments are the products of the apoptotic caspases-3 and -7. Either excessive or insufficient cellular Ca(2+) availability is associated with activation of apoptotic caspases. However, as far as we know, it is not described whether activation of caspases, due to restricted intracellular Ca(2+), affects TDP-43 cleavage. Here we show that in various cell lineages with restricted Ca(2+) availability, TDP-43 is initially cleaved by caspases-3 and -7 and then, also by caspases-6 and -8 once activated by caspase-3. Furthermore, we disclose the existence of a TDP-43 caspase-mediated fragment of 15kDa, in addition to the well-known fragments of 35 and 25kDa. Interestingly, with respect to the other two fragments this novel fragment is the major product of caspase activity on murine TDP-43 whereas in human cell lines the opposite occurs. This outcome should be considered when murine models are used to investigate TDP-43 proteinopathies.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2018
Antonio Canosa; Giovanni De Marco; Annarosa Lomartire; Maria Teresa Rinaudo; Ferdinando Di Cunto; Emilia Turco; Marco Barberis; Maura Brunetti; Federico Casale; Cristina Moglia; Andrea Calvo; Stefan L. Marklund; Peter Andersen; Gabriele Mora; Adriano Chiò
We report an apparently sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patient carrying a heterozygous novel frameshift SOD1 mutation (p.Ser108LeufsTer15), predicted to cause a premature protein truncation. RT-PCR analysis of SOD1 mRNA and SDS-PAGE/Western blot analysis of PBMC demonstrated that mRNA from the mutant allele is expressed at levels similar to those of the wild-type allele, but the truncated protein is undetectable also in the insoluble fraction and after proteasome inhibition. Accordingly, the dismutation activity in erythrocytes is halved. Thus, the pathogenic mechanism associated with this mutation might be based on an insufficient activity of SOD1 that would make motor neurons more vulnerable to oxidative injury. However, it cannot be excluded that p.Ser108LeufsTer15 SOD1 is present in the nervous tissue and, being less charged and hence having less repulsive forces than the wild-type protein, may trigger toxic mechanisms as a consequence of its propensity to aggregate.
Neurinox International Symposium "Innovative Concepts for Treating Neurodegenerative Diseases" | 2015
Federico Casale; G De Marco; Annarosa Lomartire; Giuseppe Marrali; P Salamone; Giuseppe Fuda; E Berrone; P Crociara; Mn Chieppa; Cristiano Corona; Cristina Casalone; Andrea Calvo; Adriano Chiò
Neurinox International Symposium "Innovative Concepts for Treating Neurodegenerative Diseases" | 2015
G De Marco; Annarosa Lomartire; Federico Casale; Giuseppe Marrali; S Cammarosano; Antonio Ilardi; Antonio Canosa; Cristina Moglia; Andrea Calvo; Mt Rinaudo; Adriano Chiò
Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders | 2012
Alessia Pellerino; Annarosa Lomartire; A Naldi; Barbara Buccinnà; E Maffeo; Cristina Ramondetti; Elisa Lupino; Mt Rinaudo; Marco Piccinini; I Rainero; G De Marco; M. T. Giordana
Fifth Meeting on the Molecular Mechanisms of Neurodegeneration | 2011
Barbara Buccinnà; Annarosa Lomartire; Cristina Ramondetti; G De Marco; Mt Rinaudo; Elisa Lupino; Marco Piccinini