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Dive into the research topics where Antonietta Capone is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonietta Capone.


FEBS Letters | 2009

Glycoproteomics: Past, present and future

Bérangère Tissot; Simon J. North; Alessio Ceroni; Poh-Choo Pang; Maria Panico; Floriana Rosati; Antonietta Capone; Stuart M. Haslam; Anne Dell; Howard R. Morris

This invited paper reviews the study of protein glycosylation, commonly known as glycoproteomics, beginning with the origins of the subject area in the early 1970s shortly after mass spectrometry was first applied to protein sequencing. We go on to describe current analytical approaches to glycoproteomic analyses, with exemplar projects presented in the form of the complex story of human glycodelin and the characterisation of blood group H eptitopes on the O‐glycans of gp273 from Unio elongatulus. Finally, we present an update on the latest progress in the field of automated and semi‐automated interpretation and annotation of these data in the form of GlycoWorkBench, a powerful informatics tool that provides valuable assistance in unravelling the complexities of glycoproteomic studies.


Research in Microbiology | 2003

Envelope glycosylation determined by lectins in microscopy sections of Acinetobacter venetianus induced by diesel fuel.

Franco Baldi; Milva Pepi; Antonietta Capone; Cinzia Della Giovampaola; Claudio Milanesi; Renato Fani; Riccardo Focarelli

It was suggested in a previous study that cells of Acinetobacter venetianus VE-C3 adhere to diesel fuel by synthesizing a capsular polysaccharide containing glucose and/or mannose. To study the fine structure of cells and localization of bacterial polysaccharide in the presence of diesel fuel, two lectins were used: ConA, an agglutinin from Canavalia ensiformis specific for mannose and/or glucose residues, and PNA, an agglutinin from Arachis hypogaea, for terminal galactose residues. The lectins were conjugated with electron dense ferritin for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) for scanning confocal laser microscopy (SCLM). Samples were prepared by freeze substitution, which allows glycosylation to be determined in situ in thin sections of specimens. The distribution of glycosylation was imaged with and without treatment of specimens with their specific hapten (glucose and galactose). The glycosylation activity produced a polysaccharide capsule. Emulsified diesel fuel nanodroplets were observed at the cell envelope perimeter. Fine structure of vesicles consisted of polysaccharide and diesel fuel nanodroplets. Lectin blotting analysis showed ConA-positive glycoprotein with an apparent molecular mass of 22 kDa in the outer membrane. Its production was induced by diesel fuel. This glycoprotein was probably responsible for bioemulsifying activity at the cell envelope. Several other glycoproteins were positive for PNA lectin, the main constituent migrating with an apparent molecular weight of 17.8 kDa. However, they were all constitutive and probably involved in cell biofilm formation at the oil surface.


Glycoconjugate Journal | 2001

Structural characterization of the N-glycans of gp273, the ligand for sperm-egg interaction in the mollusc bivalve Unio elongatulus

Lisa Di Patrizi; Antonietta Capone; Riccardo Focarelli; Floriana Rosati; Ricardo Gutiérrez Gallego; Gerrit J. Gerwig; Johannes F.G. Vliegenthart

Gp273, a glycoprotein of the egg extracellular coats of the mollusc bivalve Unio elongatulus, is the ligand molecule for sperm-egg interaction during fertilization. In this study we have analyzed the N-glycans from gp273. N-glycans were enzymatically released by PNGase F digestion and their structures were elucidated by normal phase HPLC profiling of the 2-aminobenzamide-labeled N-glycans, MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and 1H NMR spectroscopy. The combined data revealed that the N-glycans of gp273 consist of Glc1Man9GlcNAc2 and Man9GlcNAc2. In Unio, the presence of noncomplex-type N-glycans parallels the inefficacy of these glycans in the ligand function. Their role in the protection of the polypeptide chain from proteolytic attack is suggested by the electrophoretic patterns obtained after enzymatic digestion of the native and the N-deglycosylated protein. These results are discussed in the light of the evolution of the recognition and adhesion properties of oligosaccharide chains in the fertilization process.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017

Formulation of liposomes functionalized with Lotus lectin and effective in targeting highly proliferative cells

Cinzia Della Giovampaola; Antonietta Capone; Leonardo Ermini; Pietro Lupetti; Elisa Vannuccini; Federica Finetti; Sandra Donnini; Marina Ziche; Agnese Magnani; Gemma Leone; Claudio Rossi; Floriana Rosati; Claudia Bonechi

BACKGROUND Liposomes, used to improve the therapeutic index of new and established drugs, have advanced with the insertion of active targeting. The lectin from Lotus tetragonolobus (LTL), which binds glycans containing alpha-1,2-linked fucose, reveals surface regionalized glycoepitopes in highly proliferative cells not detectable in normally growing cells. In contrast, other lectins localize the corresponding glycoepitopes all over the cell surface. LTL also proved able to penetrate the cells by an unconventional uptake mechanism. METHODS We used confocal laser microscopy to detect and localize LTL-positive glycoepitopes and lectin uptake in two cancer cell lines. We then constructed doxorubicin-loaded liposomes functionalized with LTL. Intracellular delivery of the drug was determined in vitro and in vivo by confocal and electron microscopy. RESULTS We confirmed the specific localization of Lotus binding sites and the lectin uptake mechanism in the two cell lines and determined that LTL-functionalized liposomes loaded with doxorubicin greatly increased intracellular delivery of the drug, compared to unmodified doxorubicin-loaded liposomes. The LTL-Dox-L mechanism of entry and drug delivery was different to that of Dox-L and other liposomal preparations. LTL-Dox-L entered the cells one by one in tiny tubules that never fused with lysosomes. LTL-Dox-L injected in mice with melanoma specifically delivered loaded Dox to the cytoplasm of tumor cells. CONCLUSIONS Liposome functionalization with LTL promises to broaden the therapeutic potential of liposomal doxorubicin treatment, decreasing non-specific toxicity. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Doxorubicin-LTL functionalized liposomes promise to be useful in the development of new cancer chemotherapy protocols.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Beta-actin deficiency with oxidative posttranslational modifications in Rett syndrome erythrocytes: insights into an altered cytoskeletal organization.

Alessio Cortelazzo; Claudio De Felice; Alessandra Pecorelli; Giuseppe Belmonte; Cinzia Signorini; Silvia Leoncini; Gloria Zollo; Antonietta Capone; Cinzia Della Giovampaola; Claudia Sticozzi; Giuseppe Valacchi; Lucia Ciccoli; Roberto Guerranti; Joussef Hayek

Beta-actin, a critical player in cellular functions ranging from cell motility and the maintenance of cell shape to transcription regulation, was evaluated in the erythrocyte membranes from patients with typical Rett syndrome (RTT) and methyl CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) gene mutations. RTT, affecting almost exclusively females with an average frequency of 1∶10,000 female live births, is considered the second commonest cause of severe cognitive impairment in the female gender. Evaluation of beta-actin was carried out in a comparative cohort study on red blood cells (RBCs), drawn from healthy control subjects and RTT patients using mass spectrometry-based quantitative analysis. We observed a decreased expression of the beta-actin isoforms (relative fold changes for spots 1, 2 and 3: −1.82±0.15, −2.15±0.06, and −2.59±0.48, respectively) in pathological RBCs. The results were validated by western blotting and immunofluorescence microscopy. In addition, beta-actin from RTT patients also showed a dramatic increase in oxidative posttranslational modifications (PTMs) as the result of its binding with the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE). Our findings demonstrate, for the first time, a beta-actin down-regulation and oxidative PTMs for RBCs of RTT patients, thus indicating an altered cytoskeletal organization.


Neuroscience Research | 2016

Abnormal N-glycosylation pattern for brain nucleotide pyrophosphatase-5 (NPP-5) in Mecp2-mutant murine models of Rett syndrome.

Alessio Cortelazzo; Claudio De Felice; Roberto Guerranti; Cinzia Signorini; Silvia Leoncini; Alessandra Pecorelli; Francesco Scalabrì; Michele Madonna; Stefania Filosa; Cinzia Della Giovampaola; Antonietta Capone; Thierry Durand; Cristiana Mirasole; Lello Zolla; Giuseppe Valacchi; Lucia Ciccoli; Jacky Guy; Maurizio D’Esposito; Joussef Hayek

Neurological disorders can be associated with protein glycosylation abnormalities. Rett syndrome is a devastating genetic brain disorder, mainly caused by de novo loss-of-function mutations in the methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) gene. Although its pathogenesis appears to be closely associated with a redox imbalance, no information on glycosylation is available. Glycoprotein detection strategies (i.e., lectin-blotting) were applied to identify target glycosylation changes in the whole brain of Mecp2 mutant murine models of the disease. Remarkable glycosylation pattern changes for a peculiar 50kDa protein, i.e., the N-linked brain nucleotide pyrophosphatase-5 were evidenced, with decreased N-glycosylation in the presymptomatic and symptomatic mutant mice. Glycosylation changes were rescued by selected brain Mecp2 reactivation. Our findings indicate that there is a causal link between the amount of Mecp2 and the N-glycosylation of NPP-5.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Gp273, the Ligand Molecule for Sperm-Egg Interaction in the Bivalve Mollusk, Unio elongatulus, Binds to and Induces Acrosome Reaction in Human Spermatozoa Through a Protein Kinase C-Dependent Pathway

S. Delle Monache; F. Flori; C. Della Giovampaola; Antonietta Capone; G.B. La Sala; F. Rosati; Rosella Colonna; Carla Tatone; Riccardo Focarelli

Abstract In a previous article, we suggested that gp273, the ligand molecule for sperm-egg interaction in the bivalve mollusk Unio elongatulus has functional carbohydrate epitopes in common with a human zona pellucida glycoprotein, probably ZP3. We demonstrated that: 1) anti-gp273-purified immunoglobulin G (IgG), which recognizes a carbohydrate gp273 epitope including a Lewisa-like structure, interacts with a zona pellucida protein; 2) human sperm specifically bind to gp273; and 3) binding is reversed by anti-gp273 IgG. In the present study, we confirm this suggestion by demonstrating that heat-solubilized zonae pellucidae reverse gp273-human sperm binding, that gp273-binding sites are restricted to the acrosomal region, and that gp273 induces the acrosome reaction in human sperm. We also demonstrated that gp273-binding sites on human sperm function as signaling receptors because exposure of spermatozoa to this glycoprotein results in significant stimulation of protein kinase C (PKC) activity. Because the PKC inhibitor, bisindolylmaleimide I, reverses both PKC activation and the acrosome reaction, this kinase is a key component of the signal transduction pathway activated by gp273 and leading to the exocytotic event.


Tissue & Cell | 2015

Identification of a novel, alpha2-fucosylation-dependent uptake system in highly proliferative cells

Silvia Aldi; Antonietta Capone; Cinzia Della Giovampaola; Leonardo Ermini; Elisa Pianigiani; Giancarlo Mariotti; Floriana Rosati

In this paper we describe a new structure present in highly proliferative cells and absent in cells with normal growth potential. We used cultured bovine venular endothelial cells (CVEC) as examples of high proliferation, and dermal fibroblasts of a primary culture as examples of normal proliferation. The structure, consisting of tubules radiating from the nuclear region to the tips of cell protrusions, was revealed by its strong positivity to the fucose-binding lectin from Lotus (LTL) that prefers glycans with alpha-1,2-linked fucose. Another fucose-binding lectin that prefers glycans with alpha-1,6-linked fucose was instead found to localize glycans exclusively in Golgi complexes. LTL binding sites were also found at the surface of CVEC in a restricted region close to the nucleus. The role of alpha-1,2-linked fucose in forming or maintaining the tubules was confirmed by the fact that down-regulation of the fucosyltransferases FUT1 and FUT2 resulted in disappearance of the tubular structure. LTL also proved able to penetrate the cells through the tubular structures up to the nuclear region and to inhibit proliferation. Endostatin was also found to massively penetrate the cells in the tubular structures in control cells but not in FUT1/2 depleted cells. In cells of a first passage primary culture of dermal fibroblasts the tubular LTL-positive structure was absent as well as the LTL-positive sites at the external surface, and both fucose-binding lectins were found to exclusively localize glycans in Golgi complexes. Tubules were again found progressively in fibroblasts derived from repeated passages, where faster growing cells predominate. Disappearance of LTL-positivity in Golgi complexes paralleled appearance of LTL-positive tubules. The role of Golgi complexes in forming the tubules is discussed.


The International Journal of Developmental Biology | 2000

Sperm-egg interaction at fertilization: glycans as recognition signals.

Floriana Rosati; Antonietta Capone; Cinzia Della Giovampaola; Brettoni C; Riccardo Focarelli


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2008

The GPI-anchored CD52 antigen of the sperm surface interacts with semenogelin and participates in clot formation and liquefaction of human semen.

F. Flori; Leonardo Ermini; Giovanni Battista La Sala; Alessia Nicoli; Antonietta Capone; Riccardo Focarelli; Floriana Rosati; Cinzia Della Giovampaola

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Giovanni Battista La Sala

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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