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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Augusto Bortolotti is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlo Augusto Bortolotti.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2010

Redox properties of heme peroxidases

Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Marzia Bellei; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Marco Sola

Peroxidases are heme enzymes found in bacteria, fungi, plants and animals, which exploit the reduction of hydrogen peroxide to catalyze a number of oxidative reactions, involving a wide variety of organic and inorganic substrates. The catalytic cycle of heme peroxidases is based on three consecutive redox steps, involving two high-valent intermediates (Compound I and Compound II), which perform the oxidation of the substrates. Therefore, the thermodynamics and the kinetics of the catalytic cycle are influenced by the reduction potentials of three redox couples, namely Compound I/Fe3+, Compound I/Compound II and Compound II/Fe3+. In particular, the oxidative power of heme peroxidases is controlled by the (high) reduction potential of the latter two couples. Moreover, the rapid H2O2-mediated two-electron oxidation of peroxidases to Compound I requires a stable ferric state in physiological conditions, which depends on the reduction potential of the Fe3+/Fe2+ couple. The understanding of the molecular determinants of the reduction potentials of the above redox couples is crucial for the comprehension of the molecular determinants of the catalytic properties of heme peroxidases. This review provides an overview of the data available on the redox properties of Fe3+/Fe2+, Compound I/Fe3+, Compound I/Compound II and Compound II/Fe3+ couples in native and mutated heme peroxidases. The influence of the electron donor properties of the axial histidine and of the polarity of the heme environment is analyzed and the correlation between the redox properties of the heme group with the catalytic activity of this important class of metallo-enzymes is discussed.


ACS Nano | 2015

Multiscale Sensing of Antibody - Antigen Interactions by Organic Transistors and Single-Molecule Force Spectroscopy

Stefano Casalini; Andra C. Dumitru; Francesca Leonardi; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Elena T. Herruzo; Alessandra Campana; Rafael Furlan de Oliveira; Tobias Cramer; Ricardo Garcia; Fabio Biscarini

Antibody-antigen (Ab-Ag) recognition is the primary event at the basis of many biosensing platforms. In label-free biosensors, these events occurring at solid-liquid interfaces are complex and often difficult to control technologically across the smallest length scales down to the molecular scale. Here a molecular-scale technique, such as single-molecule force spectroscopy, is performed across areas of a real electrode functionalized for the immunodetection of an inflammatory cytokine, viz. interleukin-4 (IL4). The statistical analysis of force-distance curves allows us to quantify the probability, the characteristic length scales, the adhesion energy, and the time scales of specific recognition. These results enable us to rationalize the response of an electrolyte-gated organic field-effect transistor (EGOFET) operated as an IL4 immunosensor. Two different strategies for the immobilization of IL4 antibodies on the Au gate electrode have been compared: antibodies are bound to (i) a smooth film of His-tagged protein G (PG)/Au; (ii) a 6-aminohexanethiol (HSC6NH2) self-assembled monolayer on Au through glutaraldehyde. The most sensitive EGOFET (concentration minimum detection level down to 5 nM of IL4) is obtained with the first functionalization strategy. This result is correlated to the highest probability (30%) of specific binding events detected by force spectroscopy on Ab/PG/Au electrodes, compared to 10% probability on electrodes with the second functionalization. Specifically, this demonstrates that Ab/PG/Au yields the largest areal density of oriented antibodies available for recognition. More in general, this work shows that specific recognition events in multiscale biosensors can be assessed, quantified, and optimized by means of a nanoscale technique.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

The Reversible Opening of Water Channels in Cytochrome c Modulates the Heme Iron Reduction Potential

Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Andrea Amadei; Massimiliano Aschi; Marco Borsari; Stefano Corni; Marco Sola; Isabella Daidone

Dynamic protein-solvent interactions are fundamental for life processes, but their investigation is still experimentally very demanding. Molecular dynamics simulations up to hundreds of nanoseconds can bring to light unexpected events even for extensively studied biomolecules. This paper reports a combined computational/experimental approach that reveals the reversible opening of two distinct fluctuating cavities in Saccharomyces cerevisiae iso-1-cytochrome c. Both channels allow water access to the heme center. By means of a mixed quantum mechanics/molecular dynamics (QM/MD) theoretical approach, the perturbed matrix method (PMM), that allows to reach long simulation times, changes in the reduction potential of the heme Fe(3+)/Fe(2+) couple induced by the opening of each cavity are calculated. Shifts of the reduction potential upon changes in the hydration of the heme propionates are observed. These variations are relatively small but significant and could therefore represent a tool developed by cytochrome c for the solvent driven, fine-tuning of its redox functionality.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Phase-Transition-Induced Protein Redistribution in Lipid Bilayers

Heiko M. Seeger; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Andrea Alessandrini; Paolo Facci

We report an atomic force microscopy study on the lateral spatial redistribution of an integral membrane protein reconstituted in supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) subjected to a thermally induced phase transition. KcsA proteins were reconstituted in proteoliposomes of POPE/POPG (3:1, mol/mol), and SLBs, including the proteins, were then obtained by the vesicle fusion technique on mica. By decreasing the temperature, the lipid bilayer passed from a liquid disordered (l(d)) phase in which the proteins are homogeneously distributed to a coexistence of solid ordered (s(o)) and l(d) domains with the proteins preferentially distributed in the l(d) domains. The inhomogeneous distribution eventually led to protein clustering. The obtained results are discussed in light of the role that the lipid/protein interaction can have in determining the function of integral membrane proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Solid-state electron transport via cytochrome c depends on electronic coupling to electrodes and across the protein

Nadav Amdursky; Doron Ferber; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; D. A. Dolgikh; R. V. Chertkova; Israel Pecht; Mordechai Sheves; David Cahen

Significance How well a protein conducts electrical current depends on both the chemical nature of the protein and its contacts to the electrodes between which currents are carried. Investigating conduction via protein monolayers, we find that covalent binding to electrodes doubles room temperature conduction and halves its thermal activation energy. At low temperatures, where transport is by tunneling, covalent binding increases conduction up to 10-fold. To examine the electrical conduction across the protein, we used seven different cytochrome c mutants with surface-exposed cysteine, providing distinct electrode–heme orientations and distances. Remarkably, currents do not depend on the electrodes’ separation distance as set by a given protein binding orientation but rather on the distance between the heme and one of the electrodes. Electronic coupling to electrodes, Γ, as well as that across the examined molecules, H, is critical for solid-state electron transport (ETp) across proteins. Assessing the importance of each of these couplings helps to understand the mechanism of electron flow across molecules. We provide here experimental evidence for the importance of both couplings for solid-state ETp across the electron-mediating protein cytochrome c (CytC), measured in a monolayer configuration. Currents via CytC are temperature-independent between 30 and ∼130 K, consistent with tunneling by superexchange, and thermally activated at higher temperatures, ascribed to steady-state hopping. Covalent protein–electrode binding significantly increases Γ, as currents across CytC mutants, bound covalently to the electrode via a cysteine thiolate, are higher than those through electrostatically adsorbed CytC. Covalent binding also reduces the thermal activation energy, Ea, of the ETp by more than a factor of two. The importance of H was examined by using a series of seven CytC mutants with cysteine residues at different surface positions, yielding distinct electrode–protein(–heme) orientations and separation distances. We find that, in general, mutants with electrode-proximal heme have lower Ea values (from high-temperature data) and higher conductance at low temperatures (in the temperature-independent regime) than those with a distal heme. We conclude that ETp across these mutants depends on the distance between the heme group and the top or bottom electrode, rather than on the total separation distance between electrodes (protein width).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Surface packing determines the redox potential shift of cytochrome c adsorbed on gold

Laura Zanetti-Polzi; Isabella Daidone; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Stefano Corni

Thermodynamic and dynamic properties of iso-1-cytochrome c covalently bound to a bare gold surface are here investigated by large scale atomistic simulations. The reduction potential of the protein for low and high surface concentrations is calculated showing a good agreement with experimental estimates. The origin of the dependence of the reduction potential on the surface concentration is investigated and is demonstrated to stem from the changing polarizability of the environment surrounding the protein, a mechanism reminiscent of crowding effects. Moreover, structural analyses are performed revealing relevant changes induced by the presence of the electrode on the dynamic properties of cytochrome c. In particular, one of the two cavities previously identified on the protein surface [Bortolotti et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2012, 134, 13670], and that reversibly open in cytochrome c freely diffusing in solution, is found to be deformed when the protein is adsorbed on gold. This modification exemplifies a mechanism that potentially leads to changes in the protein properties by surface-induced modification of its dynamical behavior.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Understanding the Mechanism of Short-Range Electron Transfer Using an Immobilized Cupredoxin

Stefano Monari; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Sachiko Yanagisawa; Katsuko Sato; Chan Li; Isabelle Salard; Dorota Kostrz; Marco Borsari; Antonio Ranieri; Christopher Dennison; Marco Sola

The hydrophobic patch of azurin (AZ) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an important recognition surface for electron transfer (ET) reactions. The influence of changing the size of this region, by mutating the C-terminal copper-binding loop, on the ET reactivity of AZ adsorbed on gold electrodes modified with alkanethiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) has been studied. The distance-dependence of ET kinetics measured by cyclic voltammetry using SAMs of variable chain length, demonstrates that the activation barrier for short-range ET is dominated by the dynamics of molecular rearrangements accompanying ET at the AZ-SAM interface. These include internal electric field-dependent low-amplitude protein motions and the reorganization of interfacial water molecules, but not protein reorientation. Interfacial molecular dynamics also control the kinetics of short-range ET for electrostatically and covalently immobilized cytochrome c. This mechanism therefore may be utilized for short-distance ET irrespective of the type of metal center, the surface electrostatic potential, and the nature of the protein-SAM interaction.


Chemical Science | 2012

A surface-immobilized cytochrome c variant provides a pH-controlled molecular switch

Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Licia Paltrinieri; Stefano Monari; Antonio Ranieri; Marco Borsari; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Marco Sola

The K72A/K73H/K79A mutant of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c immobilized on a conductive substrate reversibly interconverts between the native-like, His-Met heme-ligated form and a His-His-ligated conformer with remarkably different redox and enzymatic properties. This transition is activated by changing the pH in a narrow range around neutrality.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

The Active Site Loop Modulates the Reorganization Energy of Blue Copper Proteins by Controlling the Dynamic Interplay with Solvent

Licia Paltrinieri; Marco Borsari; Antonio Ranieri; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Stefano Corni; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti

Understanding the factors governing the rate of electron transfer processes in proteins is crucial not only to a deeper understanding of redox processes in living organisms but also for the design of efficient devices featuring biological molecules. Here, molecular dynamics simulations performed on native azurin and four chimeric cupredoxins allow for the calculation of the reorganization energy and of structure-related quantities that were used to clarify the molecular determinants to the dynamics/function relationship in blue copper proteins. We find that the dynamics of the small, metal-binding loop region controls the outer-sphere reorganization energy not only by determining the exposure of the active site to solvent but also through the modulation of the redox-dependent rearrangement of the whole protein scaffold and of the surrounding water molecules.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Immobilized cytochrome c bound to cardiolipin exhibits peculiar oxidation state-dependent axial heme ligation and catalytically reduces dioxygen

Antonio Ranieri; Diego Millo; Giulia Di Rocco; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Marco Borsari; Marco Sola

Mitochondrial cytochrome c (cytc) plays an important role in programmed cell death upon binding to cardiolipin (CL), a negatively charged phospholipid of the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). Although this binding has been thoroughly investigated in solution, little is known on the nature and reactivity of the adduct (cytc–CL) immobilized at IMM. In this work, we have studied electrochemically cytc–CL immobilized on a hydrophobic self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of decane-1-thiol. This construct would reproduce the motional restriction and the nonpolar environment experienced by cytc–CL at IMM. Surface-enhanced resonance Raman (SERR) studies allowed the axial heme iron ligands to be identified, which were found to be oxidation state dependent and differ from those of cytc–CL in solution. In particular, immobilized cytc–CL experiences an equilibrium between a low-spin (LS) 6c His/His and a high-spin (HS) 5c His/− coordination states. The former prevails in the oxidized and the latter in the reduced form. Axial coordination of the ferric heme thus differs from the (LS) 6c His/Lys and (LS) 6c His/OH− states observed in solution. Moreover, a relevant finding is that the immobilized ferrous cytc–CL is able to catalytically reduce dioxygen, likely to superoxide ion. These findings indicate that restriction of motional freedom due to interaction with the membrane is an additional factor playing in the mechanism of cytc unfolding and cytc-mediated peroxidation functional to the apoptosis cascade.

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Marco Borsari

Boston Children's Hospital

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Marco Sola

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Gianantonio Battistuzzi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Antonio Ranieri

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Giulia Di Rocco

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Fabio Biscarini

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Marcello Berto

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Stefano Casalini

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Licia Paltrinieri

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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