Catia Barsotti
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by Catia Barsotti.
Neurochemistry International | 2007
Francesco Balestri; Catia Barsotti; Ludovico Lutzemberger; Marcella Camici; Piero Luigi Ipata
Uridine, the major circulating pyrimidine nucleoside, participating in the regulation of a number of physiological processes, is readily uptaken into mammalian cells. The balance between anabolism and catabolism of intracellular uridine is maintained by uridine kinase, catalyzing the first step of UTP and CTP salvage synthesis, and uridine phosphorylase, catalyzing the first step of uridine degradation to beta-alanine in liver. In the present study we report that the two enzymes have an additional role in the homeostatic regulation of purine and pyrimidine metabolism in brain, which relies on the salvage synthesis of nucleotides from preformed nucleosides and nucleobases, rather than on the de novo synthesis from simple precursors. The experiments were performed in rat brain extracts and cultured human astrocytoma cells. The rationale of the reciprocal regulation of purine and pyrimidine salvage synthesis in brain stands (i) on the inhibition exerted by UTP and CTP, the final products of the pyrimidine salvage pathway, on uridine kinase and (ii) on the widely accepted idea that pyrimidine salvage occurs at the nucleoside level (mostly uridine), while purine salvage is a 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP)-mediated process, occurring at the nucleobase level. Thus, at relatively low UTP and CTP level, uptaken uridine is mainly anabolized to uridine nucleotides. On the contrary, at relatively high UTP and CTP levels the inhibition of uridine kinase channels uridine towards phosphorolysis. The ribose-1-phosphate is then transformed into PRPP, which is used for purine salvage synthesis.
The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2010
Piero Luigi Ipata; Catia Barsotti; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Marcella Camici; Francesco Balestri
Uridine, a pyrimidine nucleoside essential for the synthesis of RNA and biomembranes, has several trophic functions in the central nervous system, that involve a physiological regulation of pyrimidine nucleotides and phospholipids content, and a maintenance of brain metabolism under ischemia, or pathological situations. The understanding of uridine production in the brain is therefore of fundamental importance. Brain has a limited capacity to synthesize ex novo the pyrimidine ring, and a reasonable source of brain uridine is UTP. The kinetics of UTP breakdown, as catalysed by post-mitochondrial brain extracts and membrane preparations reported herein suggests that in normoxic conditions uridine is locally generated in brain exclusively in the extracellular space, and that any uptaken uridine is salvaged to UTP. It is now well established that cytosolic UTP can be released to interact with a subset of P2Y receptors, inducing a variety of molecular and cellular effects, leading to neuroprotection, while uridine is uptaken via an equilibrative or a Na(+)-dependent transport system, to exert its trophic effects in the cytosol. An ATP driven uridine-UTP cycle can be envisaged, based on the strictly compartmentalized processes of uridine salvage to UTP and uridine generation from UTP, in which uptaken uridine is anabolised to UTP in the cytosol, and converted back to uridine in extracellular space.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Catia Barsotti; Rossana Pesi; Michela Giannecchini; Piero Luigi Ipata
In this paper, we show that in vitro xanthosine does not enter any of the pathways known to salvage the other three main natural purine nucleosides: guanosine; inosine; and adenosine. In rat brain extracts and in intact LoVo cells, xanthosine is salvaged to XMP via the phosphotransferase activity of cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase. IMP is the preferred phosphate donor (IMP + xanthosine → XMP + inosine). XMP is not further phosphorylated. However, in the presence of glutamine, it is readily converted to guanyl compounds. Thus, phosphorylation of xanthosine by cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase circumvents the activity of IMP dehydrogenase, a rate-limiting enzyme, catalyzing the NAD+-dependent conversion of IMP to XMP at the branch point of de novo nucleotide synthesis, thus leading to the generation of guanine nucleotides. Mycophenolic acid, an inhibitor of IMP dehydrogenase, inhibits the guanyl compound synthesis via the IMP dehydrogenase pathway but has no effect on the cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase pathway of guanine nucleotides synthesis. We propose that the latter pathway might contribute to the reversal of the in vitro antiproliferative effect exerted by IMP dehydrogenase inhibitors routinely seen with repletion of the guanine nucleotide pools.
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1999
Antonella Del Corso; Pier Giuseppe Vilardo; Catia Barsotti; Mario Cappiello; I Cecconi; Massimo Dal Monte; I Marini; S Banditelli; Umberto Mura
The occurrence of protein S-thiolation as a consequence of oxidative stress is widely recognized (Thomas et al., 1990; Lou et at, 1990; Schuppe et al., 1992; Giblin, et al., 1995). However, the role and the relevance of this process are still a matter of debate.
The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2004
Catia Barsotti; Piero Luigi Ipata
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2003
Catia Barsotti; Rossana Pesi; Francesca Felice; Piero Luigi Ipata
Biochemical Pharmacology | 2002
Catia Barsotti; Piero Luigi Ipata
45° Congresso Nazionale SIB | 2000
S Banditelli; Enrico Boldrini; I Cecconi; Roberta Moschini; F Buono; Catia Barsotti; Massimo Dal Monte; Mario Cappiello; Antonella Del Corso; Umberto Mura
Riunione Annuale Sezione Toscana-Umbria-Marche Società Italiana di Biochimica | 1999
Pg Vilardo; Mario Cappiello; I Cecconi; M Dal Monte; S Banditelli; Roberta Moschini; Catia Barsotti; F Buono; I Marini; A Del Corso; Umberto Mura
XII Convegno Nazionale del Gruppo Struttura e Funzione delle Proteine | 1997
Mario Cappiello; Pg Vilardo; Micheli; I Cecconi; M Dal Monte; Catia Barsotti; I Marini; A Del Corso; Umberto Mura