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Dive into the research topics where Carmen Brizio is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmen Brizio.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Riboflavin Uptake and FAD Synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mitochondria INVOLVEMENT OF THE Flx1p CARRIER IN FAD EXPORT

Valeria Bafunno; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Carmen Brizio; Daniela Bufano; Salvatore Passarella; Eckhard Boles; Maria Barile

We have studied the functional steps by which Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria can synthesize FAD from cytosolic riboflavin (Rf). Riboflavin uptake into mitochondria took place via a mechanism that is consistent with the existence of (at least two) carrier systems. FAD was synthesized inside mitochondria by a mitochondrial FAD synthetase (EC 2.7.7.2), and it was exported into the cytosol via an export system that was inhibited by lumiflavin, and which was different from the riboflavin uptake system. To understand the role of the putative mitochondrial FAD carrier, Flx1p, in this pathway, an flx1Δ mutant strain was constructed. Coupled mitochondria isolated from flx1Δ mutant cells were compared with wild-type mitochondria with respect to the capability to take up Rf, to synthesize FAD from it, and to export FAD into the extramitochondrial phase. Mitochondria isolated from flx1Δ mutant cells specifically lost the ability to export FAD, but did not lose the ability to take up Rf, FAD, or FMN and to synthesize FAD from Rf. Hence, Flx1p is proposed to be the mitochondrial FAD export carrier. Moreover, deletion of the FLX1 gene resulted in a specific reduction of the activities of mitochondrial lipoamide dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase, which are FAD-binding enzymes. For the flavoprotein subunit of succinate dehydrogenase we could demonstrate that this was not due to a changed level of mitochondrial FAD or to a change in the degree of flavinylation of the protein. Instead, the amount of the flavoprotein subunit of succinate dehydrogenase was strongly reduced, indicating an additional regulatory role for Flx1p in protein synthesis or degradation.


FEBS Letters | 1998

Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria can synthesise FMN and FAD from externally added riboflavin and export them to the extramitochondrial phase

Maria Luigia Pallotta; Carmen Brizio; Alessandra Fratianni; Caterina De Virgilio; Maria Barile; Salvatore Passarella

Evidence is given that mitochondria isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae can take up externally added riboflavin and synthesise from it both flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) probably due to the existence of the mitochondrial riboflavin kinase already reported and the novel mitochondria FAD synthetase. Moreover Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria can export the newly synthesised flavin derivatives to the extramitochondrial phase. This has been proven to take place with 1:1 stoichiometry with riboflavin decrease outside mitochondria, thus showing that flavin traffic occurs across the mitochondrial membranes.


Mitochondrion | 2010

Mitochondrial localization of human FAD synthetase isoform 1

Enza Maria Torchetti; Carmen Brizio; Matilde Colella; Michele Galluccio; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Cesare Indiveri; Marina Roberti; Maria Barile

FAD synthetase or ATP:FMN adenylyl transferase (FADS or FMNAT, EC 2.7.7.2) is a key enzyme in the metabolic pathway that converts riboflavin into the redox cofactor FAD. We face here the still controversial sub-cellular localization of FADS in eukaryotes. First, by western blotting experiments, we confirm the existence in rat liver of different FADS isoforms which are distinct for molecular mass and sub-cellular localization. A cross-reactive band with an apparent molecular mass of 60 kDa on SDS-PAGE is localized in the internal compartments of freshly isolated purified rat liver mitochondria. Recently we have identified two isoforms of FADS in humans, that differ for an extra-sequence of 97 amino acids at the N-terminus, present only in isoform 1 (hFADS1). The first 17 residues of hFADS1 represent a cleavable mitochondrial targeting sequence (by Target-P prediction). The recombinant hFADS1 produced in Escherichia coli showed apparent K(m) and V(max) values for FMN equal to 1.3+/-0.7 microM and 4.4+/-1.3 nmol x min(-1) x mg protein(-1), respectively, and was inhibited by FMN at concentration higher than 1.5 microM. The in vitro synthesized hFADS1, but not hFADS2, is imported into rat liver mitochondria and processed into a lower molecular mass protein product. Immunofluorescence confocal microscopy performed on BHK-21 and Caco-2 cell lines transiently expressing the two human isoforms, definitively confirmed that hFADS1, but not hFADS2, localizes in mitochondria.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013

Biosynthesis of Flavin Cofactors in Man: Implications in Health and Disease

Maria Barile; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Carmen Brizio; Concetta Panebianco; Cesare Indiveri; Michele Galluccio; Lodovica Vergani; Ivano Eberini; Elisabetta Gianazza

The primary role of the water-soluble vitamin B2, i.e. riboflavin, in cell biology is connected with its conversion into FMN and FAD, the cofactors of a large number of dehydrogenases, reductases and oxidases involved in energetic metabolism, redox homeostasis and protein folding as well as in diverse regulatory events. Deficiency of riboflavin in men and experimental animal models has been linked to several diseases, including neuromuscular and neurological disorders and cancer. Riboflavin at pharmacological doses has been shown to play unexpected and incompletely understood regulatory roles. Besides a summary on riboflavin uptake and a survey on riboflavin-related diseases, the main focus of this review is on discovery and characterization of FAD synthase (EC 2.7.7.2) and other components of the cellular networks that ensure flavin cofactor homeostasis.Special attention is devoted to the problem of sub-cellular compartmentalization of cofactor synthesis in eukaryotes, made possible by the existence of different FAD synthase isoforms and specific molecular components involved in flavin trafficking across sub-cellular membranes.Another point addressed in this review is the mechanism of cofactor delivery to nascent apo-proteins, especially those localized into mitochondria, where they integrate FAD in a process that involves additional mitochondrial protein(s) still to be identified. Further efforts are necessary to elucidate the role of riboflavin/FAD network in human pathologies and to exploit the structural differences between human and microbial/fungal FAD synthase as the rational basis for developing novel antibiotic/antimycotic drugs.


FEBS Letters | 1998

Rat liver mitochondria can hydrolyse thiamine pyrophosphate to thiamine monophosphate which can cross the mitochondrial membrane in a carrier-mediated process

Maria Barile; Daniela Valenti; Carmen Brizio; E. Quagliariello; Salvatore Passarella

We show here that TPP→TMP conversion can take place in rat liver mitochondria. This occurs via the novel, putative TPP pyrophosphatase localised in the mitochondrial matrix, as shown both by digitonin titration and by an HPLC enzyme assay carried out on the mitochondrial matrix fraction. Certain features of the reaction, including the substrate and pH dependence, are reported. Additional evidence is given that externally added TMP can cross the mitochondrial membrane in a manner consistent with the occurrence of a carrier‐mediated process. This can occur both via the TPP translocator and via a novel translocator, inhibited by CAT but different from the ADP/ATP carrier.


FEBS Letters | 2002

Flavinylation of the precursor of mitochondrial dimethylglycine dehydrogenase by intact and solubilised mitochondria

Carmen Brizio; Maria Barile; Roderich Brandsch

The flavinylation and the presequence processing of the mitochondrial matrix enzyme dimethylglycine dehydrogenase (Me2GlyDH) were investigated with the reticulocyte lysate translated precursor (pMe2GlyDH) added to solubilised mitoplasts of rat liver mitochondria. The flavinylation of pMe2GlyDH was strictly dependent on the addition of mitochondrial protein(s), among which the mitochondrial flavinylation stimulating factor [Brizio C., et al. (2000) Eur. J. Biochem 267, 4346–4354], that actively promotes holo‐Me2GlyDH formation. The precursor processing, that accompanies the biogenesis of the enzyme, was not required to allow the flavinylation to proceed. The comparison of the time course of the flavinylation and the processing of pMe2GlyDH demonstrated that the covalent attachment of the flavin moiety preceded the presequence processing by mitochondrial processing peptidase.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2008

The purified recombinant precursor of rat mitochondrial dimethylglycine dehydrogenase binds FAD via an autocatalytic reaction

Carmen Brizio; Roderich Brandsch; Maria Douka; Robin Wait; Maria Barile

The precursor of the rat mitochondrial flavoenzyme dimethylglycine dehydrogenase (Me(2)GlyDH) has been produced in Escherichia coli as a C-terminally 6-His-tagged fusion protein, purified by one-step affinity chromatography and identified by ESI-MS/MS. It was correctly processed into its mature form upon incubation with solubilized rat liver mitoplasts. The purified precursor was mainly in its apo-form as demonstrated by immunological and fluorimetric detection of covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). Results described here definitively demonstrate that: (i) covalent attachment of FAD to Me(2)GlyDH apoenzyme can proceed in vitro autocatalytically, without third reactants; (ii) the removal of mitochondrial presequence by mitochondrial processing peptidase is not required for covalent autoflavinylation.


Frontiers in chemistry | 2015

Remaining challenges in cellular flavin cofactor homeostasis and flavoprotein biogenesis

Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Matilde Colella; Carmen Brizio; Graziana Difonzo; Giuseppina M Fiorino; Piero Leone; Roderich Brandsch; Francesco Bonomi; Stefania Iametti; Maria Barile

The primary role of the water-soluble vitamin B2 (riboflavin) in cell biology is connected with its conversion into FMN and FAD, the cofactors of a large number of dehydrogenases, oxidases and reductases involved in a broad spectrum of biological activities, among which energetic metabolism and chromatin remodeling. Subcellular localisation of FAD synthase (EC 2.7.7.2, FADS), the second enzyme in the FAD forming pathway, is addressed here in HepG2 cells by confocal microscopy, in the frame of its relationships with kinetics of FAD synthesis and delivery to client apo-flavoproteins. FAD synthesis catalyzed by recombinant isoform 2 of FADS occurs via an ordered bi-bi mechanism in which ATP binds prior to FMN, and pyrophosphate is released before FAD. Spectrophotometric continuous assays of the reconstitution rate of apo-D-aminoacid oxidase with its cofactor, allowed us to propose that besides its FAD synthesizing activity, hFADS is able to operate as a FAD “chaperone.” The physical interaction between FAD forming enzyme and its clients was further confirmed by dot blot and immunoprecipitation experiments carried out testing as a client either a nuclear lysine-specific demethylase 1 (LSD1) or a mitochondrial dimethylglycine dehydrogenase (Me2GlyDH, EC 1.5.8.4). Both enzymes carry out similar reactions of oxidative demethylation, in which tetrahydrofolate is converted into 5,10-methylene-tetrahydrofolate. A direct transfer of the cofactor from hFADS2 to apo-dimethyl glycine dehydrogenase was also demonstrated. Thus, FAD synthesis and delivery to these enzymes are crucial processes for bioenergetics and nutri-epigenetics of liver cells.


Electrophoresis | 2009

Development and characterization of polyspecific anti-mitochondrion antibodies for proteomics studies on in toto tissue homogenates

Emanuele Loro; Elisabetta Gianazza; Silvia Cazzola; Adriana Malena; Robin Wait; Shajna Begum; Carmen Brizio; Federica Dabbeni-Sala; Lodovica Vergani

We describe the characterization of polyclonal antibodies directed against the whole mitochondrial subproteome, as obtained by hyperimmunization of rabbits with an organelle fraction purified from human skeletal muscle and lysed by sonication. After 2‐DE separations with either blue native electrophoresis or IPG as first dimension and blotting, the polyspecific antibodies detect 113 proteins in human muscle mitochondria, representative of all major biochemical pathways and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complexes, and cross‐react with 28 proteins in rat heart mitochondria. Using as sample cryosections of human muscle biopsies lysed in urea/thiourea/CHAPS, the mitochondrial subproteome can be detected against the background of contractile proteins. When comparing with controls samples from mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke‐like episodes patients, immunoblotting shows in the latter a drastic reduction for the subunits of OXPHOS complex I as well as an increase of several enzymes, including ATP synthase. This finding is the first evidence at the proteomic level of massive up‐regulation in a number of metabolic pathways by which the affected tissues try to compensate for the deficit in the OXPHOS machinery.


Brain | 1999

Riboflavin therapy: Biochemical heterogeneity in two adult lipid storage myopathies

Lodovica Vergani; Maria Barile; Corrado Angelini; Alberto Burlina; Leo Nijtmans; Maria Pia Freda; Carmen Brizio; Elisabetta Zerbetto; Federica Dabbeni-Sala

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Robin Wait

Imperial College London

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