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Dive into the research topics where Chiara Currà is active.

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Featured researches published by Chiara Currà.


Cellular Microbiology | 2009

Egress of Plasmodium berghei gametes from their host erythrocyte is mediated by the MDV-1/PEG3 protein

Marta Ponzi; Inga Siden-Kiamos; Lucia Bertuccini; Chiara Currà; Hans Kroeze; Grazia Camarda; Tomasino Pace; Blandine Franke-Fayard; Eliane C. Laurentino; Christos Louis; Andrew P. Waters; Chris J. Janse; Pietro Alano

Malaria parasites invade erythrocytes of their host both for asexual multiplication and for differentiation to male and female gametocytes – the precursor cells of Plasmodium gametes. For further development the parasite is dependent on efficient release of the asexual daughter cells and of the gametes from the host erythrocyte. How malarial parasites exit their host cells remains largely unknown. We here report the characterization of a Plasmodium berghei protein that is involved in egress of both male and female gametes from the host erythrocyte. Protein MDV‐1/PEG3, like its Plasmodium falciparum orthologue, is present in gametocytes of both sexes, but more abundant in the female, where it is associated with dense granular organelles, the osmiophilic bodies. Δmdv‐1/peg3 parasites in which MDV‐1/PEG3 production was abolished by gene disruption had a strongly reduced capacity to form zygotes resulting from a reduced capability of both the male and female gametes to disrupt the surrounding parasitophorous vacuole and to egress from the host erythrocyte. These data demonstrate that emergence from the host cell of male and female gametes relies on a common, MDV‐1/PEG3‐dependent mechanism that is distinct from mechanisms used by asexual parasites.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2009

The Anopheles gambiae salivary protein gSG6: an anopheline-specific protein with a blood-feeding role.

Fabrizio Lombardo; Raffaele Ronca; Cinzia Rizzo; Montserrat Mestres-Simon; Alessandra Lanfrancotti; Chiara Currà; Gabriella Fiorentino; Catherine Bourgouin; José M. C. Ribeiro; Vincenzo Petrarca; Marta Ponzi; M. Coluzzi; Bruno Arcà

The Anopheles gambiae salivary gland protein 6 (gSG6) is a small protein specifically found in the salivary glands of adult female mosquitoes. We report here the expression of a recombinant form of the protein and we show that in vivo gSG6 is expressed in distal-lateral lobes and is secreted with the saliva while the female mosquito probes for feeding. Injection of gSG6 dsRNA into adult A. gambiae females results in decreased gSG6 protein levels, increased probing time and reduced blood feeding ability. gSG6 orthologs have been found so far only in the salivary glands of Anopheles stephensi and Anopheles funestus, both members of the Cellia subgenus. We report here the gSG6 sequence from five additional anophelines, four species of the A. gambiae complex and Anopheles freeborni, a member of the subgenus Anopheles. We conclude that gSG6 plays some essential blood feeding role and was recruited in the anopheline subfamily most probably after the separation of the lineage which gave origin to Cellia and Anopheles subgenera.


Traffic | 2012

Erythrocyte Remodeling in Plasmodium berghei Infection: The Contribution of SEP Family Members

Chiara Currà; Tomasino Pace; Blandine Franke-Fayard; Leonardo Picci; Lucia Bertuccini; Marta Ponzi

The malaria parasite Plasmodium largely modifies the infected erythrocyte through the export of proteins to multiple sites within the host cell. This remodeling is crucial for pathology and translocation of virulence factors to the erythrocyte surface. In this study, we investigated localization and export of small exported proteins/early transcribed membrane proteins (SEP/ETRAMPs), conserved within Plasmodium genus. This protein family is characterized by a predicted signal peptide, a short lysine‐rich stretch, an internal transmembrane domain and a highly charged C‐terminal region of variable length. We show here that members of the rodent Plasmodium berghei family are components of the parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM), which surrounds the parasite throughout the erythrocytic cycle. During P. berghei development, vesicle‐like structures containing these proteins detach from the PVM en route to the host cytosol. These SEP‐containing vesicles remain associated with the infected erythrocyte ghosts most probably anchored to the membrane skeleton. Transgenic lines expressing the green fluorescent protein appended to different portions of sep‐coding region allowed us to define motifs required for protein export. The highly charged terminal region appears to be involved in protein–protein interactions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Dematin, a component of the erythrocyte membrane skeleton, is internalized by the malaria parasite and associates with Plasmodium 14-3-3.

Marco Lalle; Chiara Currà; Fabio Ciccarone; Tomasino Pace; Serena Cecchetti; Luca Fantozzi; Bernhard Ay; Catherine Breton; Marta Ponzi

The malaria parasite invades the terminally differentiated erythrocytes, where it grows and multiplies surrounded by a parasitophorous vacuole. Plasmodium blood stages translocate newly synthesized proteins outside the parasitophorous vacuole and direct them to various erythrocyte compartments, including the cytoskeleton and the plasma membrane. Here, we show that the remodeling of the host cell directed by the parasite also includes the recruitment of dematin, an actin-binding protein of the erythrocyte membrane skeleton and its repositioning to the parasite. Internalized dematin was found associated with Plasmodium 14-3-3, which belongs to a family of conserved multitask molecules. We also show that, in vitro, the dematin-14-3-3 interaction is strictly dependent on phosphorylation of dematin at Ser124 and Ser333, belonging to two 14-3-3 putative binding motifs. This study is the first report showing that a component of the erythrocyte spectrin-based membrane skeleton is recruited by the malaria parasite following erythrocyte infection.


Cellular Microbiology | 2015

Distinct properties of the egress-related osmiophilic bodies in male and female gametocytes of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei

Anna Olivieri; Lucia Bertuccini; Elena Deligianni; Blandine Franke-Fayard; Chiara Currà; Inga Siden-Kiamos; Eric Hanssen; Felicia Grasso; Fabiana Superti; Tomasino Pace; Federica Fratini; Chris J. Janse; Marta Ponzi

Gametogenesis is the earliest event after uptake of malaria parasites by the mosquito vector, with a decisive impact on colonization of the mosquito midgut. This process is triggered by a drop in temperature and contact with mosquito molecules. In a few minutes, male and female gametocytes escape from the host erythrocyte by rupturing the parasitophorous vacuole and the erythrocyte membranes. Electron‐dense, oval‐shaped organelles, the osmiophilic bodies (OB), have been implicated in the egress of female gametocytes. By comparative electron microscopy and electron tomography analyses combined with immunolocalization experiments, we here define the morphological features distinctive of male secretory organelles, hereafter named MOB (male osmiophilic bodies). These organelles appear as club‐shaped, electron‐dense vesicles, smaller than female OB. We found that a drop in temperature triggers MOB clustering, independently of exposure to other stimuli. MDV1/PEG3, a protein associated with OB in Plasmodium berghei females, localizes to both non‐clustered and clustered MOB, suggesting that clustering precedes vesicle discharge. A P. berghei mutant lacking the OB‐resident female‐specific protein Pbg377 displays a dramatic reduction in size of the OB, accompanied by a delay in female gamete egress efficiency, while female gamete fertility is not affected. Immunolocalization experiments indicated that MDV1/PEG3 is still recruited to OB‐remnant structures.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2012

The Anopheles gambiae cE5, a tight- and fast-binding thrombin inhibitor with post-transcriptionally regulated salivary-restricted expression.

Raffaele Ronca; Michalis Kotsyfakis; Fabrizio Lombardo; Cinzia Rizzo; Chiara Currà; Marta Ponzi; Gabriella Fiorentino; José M. C. Ribeiro; Bruno Arcà

Mosquito saliva carries a large number of factors with anti-hemostatic, anti-inflammatory and immuno-modulatory activities. The cE5 protein was initially identified during an Anopheles gambiae salivary gland transcriptome study and later shown to share sequence similarity with anophelin, a thrombin inhibitor from the saliva of the New World mosquito Anopheles albimanus. The cE5 gene was found to encode different mRNA isoforms coexisting in several tissues of both male and female mosquitoes, a highly unusual profile for a gene potentially encoding an anti-thrombin and involved in blood feeding. Expression of the cE5 protein and assessment of its activity and inhibitory properties showed that it is a highly specific and tight-binding thrombin inhibitor, which differs from the A. albimanus orthologue for the fast-binding kinetics. Despite the widespread occurrence of cE5 transcripts in different mosquito tissues the corresponding protein was only found in female salivary glands, where it undergoes post-translational modification. Therefore, tissue-specific restriction of the A. gambiae cE5 is not achieved by transcriptional control, as common for mosquito salivary genes involved in hematophagy, but by post-trascriptional gene regulatory mechanisms. Our observations provide a paradigm of post-transcriptional regulation as key determinant of tissue specificity for a protein from an important disease vector and point out that transcriptomic data should be interpreted with caution in the absence of concomitant proteomic support.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

Proteomic Analysis of Detergent-resistant Membrane Microdomains in Trophozoite Blood Stage of the Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium falciparum

Xue Yan Yam; Cecilia Birago; Federica Fratini; Francesco Di Girolamo; Carla Raggi; Massimo Sargiacomo; Angela Bachi; Laurence Berry; Gamou Fall; Chiara Currà; Elisabetta Pizzi; Catherine Breton; Marta Ponzi

Intracellular pathogens contribute to a significant proportion of infectious diseases worldwide. The successful strategy of evading the immune system by hiding inside host cells is common to all the microorganism classes, which exploit membrane microdomains, enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids, to invade and colonize the host cell. These assemblies, with distinct biochemical properties, can be isolated by means of flotation in sucrose density gradient centrifugation because they are insoluble in nonionic detergents at low temperature. We analyzed the protein and lipid contents of detergent-resistant membranes from erythrocytes infected by Plasmodium falciparum, the most deadly human malaria parasite. Proteins associated with membrane microdomains of trophic parasite blood stages (trophozoites) include an abundance of chaperones, molecules involved in vesicular trafficking, and enzymes implicated in host hemoglobin degradation. About 60% of the identified proteins contain a predicted localization signal suggesting a role of membrane microdomains in protein sorting/trafficking. To validate our proteomic data, we raised antibodies against six Plasmodium proteins not characterized previously. All the selected candidates were recovered in floating low-density fractions after density gradient centrifugation. The analyzed proteins localized either to internal organelles, such as the mitochondrion and the endoplasmic reticulum, or to exported membrane structures, the parasitophorous vacuole membrane and Maurers clefts, implicated in targeting parasite proteins to the host erythrocyte cytosol or surface. The relative abundance of cholesterol and phospholipid species varies in gradient fractions containing detergent-resistant membranes, suggesting heterogeneity in the lipid composition of the isolated microdomain population. This study is the first report showing the presence of cholesterol-rich microdomains with distinct properties and subcellular localization in trophic stages of Plasmodium falciparum.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The ETRAMP Family Member SEP2 Is Expressed throughout Plasmodium berghei Life Cycle and Is Released during Sporozoite Gliding Motility

Chiara Currà; Marco Di Luca; Leonardo Picci; Carina de Sousa Silva Gomes dos Santos; Inga Siden-Kiamos; Tomasino Pace; Marta Ponzi

The early transcribed membrane proteins ETRAMPs belong to a family of small, transmembrane molecules unique to Plasmodium parasite, which share a signal peptide followed by a short lysine-rich stretch, a transmembrane domain and a variable, highly charged C-terminal region. ETRAMPs are usually expressed in a stage-specific manner. In the blood stages they localize to the parasitophorous vacuole membrane and, in described cases, to vesicle-like structures exported to the host erythrocyte cytosol. Two family members of the rodent parasite Plasmodium berghei, uis3 and uis4, localize to secretory organelles of sporozoites and to the parasitophorous membrane vacuole of the liver stages. By the use of specific antibodies and the generation of transgenic lines, we showed that the P. berghei ETRAMP family member SEP2 is abundantly expressed in gametocytes as well as in mosquito and liver stages. In intracellular parasite stages, SEP2 is routed to the parasitophorous vacuole membrane while, in invasive ookinete and sporozoite stages, it localizes to the parasite surface. To date SEP2 is the only ETRAMP protein detected throughout the parasite life cycle. Furthermore, SEP2 is also released during gliding motility of salivary gland sporozoites. A limited number of proteins are known to be involved in this key function and the best characterized, the CSP and TRAP, are both promising transmission-blocking candidates. Our results suggest that ETRAMP members may be viewed as new potential candidates for malaria control.


Nature Communications | 2016

Release of Plasmodium sporozoites requires proteins with histone-fold dimerization domains

Chiara Currà; Renate Gessmann; Tomasino Pace; Leonardo Picci; Giulia Peruzzi; Vassiliki Varamogianni-Mamatsi; Lefteris Spanos; Célia R.S. Garcia; Roberta Spaccapelo; Marta Ponzi; Inga Siden-Kiamos

The sporozoite, the stage of the malaria parasite transmitted by the mosquito, first develops for ∼2 weeks in an oocyst. Rupture of the oocyst capsule is required for release of sporozoites, which then transfer to the salivary gland where they are injected into a new host. Here we identify two parasite proteins that we call oocyst rupture proteins 1 (ORP1) and ORP2. These proteins have a histone-fold domain (HFD) that promotes heterodimer formation in the oocyst capsule at the time of rupture. Oocyst rupture is prevented in mutants lacking either protein. Mutational analysis confirms the HFD as essential for ORP1 and ORP2 function, and heterodimer formation was verified in vitro. These two proteins are potential targets for blocking transmission of the parasite in the mosquito.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2017

An Integrated Approach to Explore Composition and Dynamics of Cholesterol-rich Membrane Microdomains in Sexual Stages of Malaria Parasite

Federica Fratini; Carla Raggi; Gabriella Sferra; Cecilia Birago; Anna Sansone; Felicia Grasso; Chiara Currà; Anna Olivieri; Tomasino Pace; Stefania Mochi; Leonardo Picci; Carla Ferreri; Antonella Di Biase; Elisabetta Pizzi; Marta Ponzi

Membrane microdomains that include lipid rafts, are involved in key physiological and pathological processes and participate in the entry of endocellular pathogens. These assemblies, enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids, form highly dynamic, liquid-ordered phases that can be separated from the bulk membranes thanks to their resistance to solubilization by nonionic detergents. To characterize complexity and dynamics of detergent-resistant membranes of sexual stages of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei, here we propose an integrated study of raft components based on proteomics, lipid analysis and bioinformatics. This analysis revealed unexpected heterogeneity and unexplored pathways associated with these specialized assemblies. Protein-protein relationships and protein-lipid co-occurrence were described through multi-component networks. The proposed approach can be widely applied to virtually every cell type in different contexts and perturbations, under physiological and/or pathological conditions.

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Marta Ponzi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Tomasino Pace

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Leonardo Picci

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Federica Fratini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Lucia Bertuccini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Blandine Franke-Fayard

Leiden University Medical Center

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Anna Olivieri

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Bruno Arcà

Sapienza University of Rome

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Carla Raggi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Cecilia Birago

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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