Claudio Sette
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Claudio Sette.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Claudio Sette; Marco Conti
A cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase (PDE4D3) is activated in rat thyroid cells by TSH through a cAMP-dependent phosphorylation (Sette, C., Iona, S., and Conti, M. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 9245-9252). This short term activation may be involved in the termination of the hormonal stimulation and/or in the induction of desensitization. Here, we have further characterized the protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent phosphorylation of this PDE4D3 variant and identified the phosphorylation site involved in the PDE activation. The PKA-dependent incorporation of phosphate in the partially purified, recombinant rat PDE4D3 followed a time course similar to that of activation. Half-maximal activation of the enzyme was obtained with 0.6 μM ATP and 30 nM of the catalytic subunit of PKA. Phosphorylation altered the Vmax of the PDE without affecting the Km for cAMP. Phosphorylation also modified the Mg2+ requirements and the pattern of inhibition by rolipram. Cyanogen bromide cleavage of the 32P-labeled rat PDE4D3 yielded two or three major phosphopeptide bands, providing a first indication that the enzyme may be phosphorylated at multiple sites in a cell-free system. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed on the serine residues present at the amino terminus of this PDE in the context of preferred motifs for PKA phosphorylation. The PKA-dependent incorporation of 32P was reduced to the largest extent in mutants with both Ser13 → Ala and Ser54 → Ala substitutions, confirming the presence of more than one phosphorylation site in rat PDE4D3. While substitution of serine 13 with alanine did not affect the activation by PKA, substitution of Ser54 completely suppressed the kinase activation. Similar conclusions were reached with wild type and mutated PDE4D3 proteins expressed in MA-10 cells, where the endogenous PKA was activated by dibutyryl cAMP. Again, the PDE with the Ser54 → Ala substitution could not be activated by the endogenous PKA in the intact cell. These findings support the hypothesis that the PDE4D3 variant contains a regulatory domain target for phosphorylation at the amino terminus of the protein and that Ser54 in this domain plays a crucial role in activation.
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2000
Pellegrino Rossi; Claudio Sette; Susanna Dolci; Raffaele Geremia
The tyrosine-kinase receptor c-kit and its ligand, stem cell factor (SCF), are essential for the maintenance of primordial germ cells (PGCs) in both sexes. However, c-kit and a postmeiotic- specific alternative c-kit gene product play important roles also during post-natal stages of spermatogenesis. In the adult testis, the c-kit receptor is re-expressed in differentiating spermatogonia, but not in spermatogonial stem cells, whereas SCF is expressed by Sertoli cells under FSH stimulation. SCF stimulates DNA synthesis in type A spermatogonia cultured in vitro, and injection of anti-c-kit antibodies blocks their proliferation in vivo. A point mutation in the c-kit gene, which impairs SCF-mediated activation of phosphatydilinositol 3-kinase, does not cause any significant reduction in PGCs number during embryonic development, nor in spermatogonial stem cell populations. However males are completely sterile due to a block in the initial stages of spermatogenesis, associated to abolishment of DNA-synthesis in differentiating A1-A4 spermatogonia. With the onset of meiosis c-kit expression ceases, but a truncated c-kit product, tr-kit, is specifically expressed in post-meiotic stages of spermatogenesis, and is accumulated in mature spermatozoa. Microinjection of tr-kit into mouse eggs causes their parthenogenetic activation, suggesting that it might play a role in the final function of the gametes, fertilization.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Claudio Sette; Marco Barchi; Andrea Bianchini; Marco Conti; Pellegrino Rossi; Raffaele Geremia
Okadaic acid (OA) causes meiotic progression and chromosome condensation in cultured pachytene spermatocytes and an increase in maturation promoting factor (cyclin B1/cdc2 kinase) activity, as evaluated by H1 phosphorylative activity in anti-cyclin B1 immunoprecipitates. OA also induces a strong increase of phosphorylative activity toward the mitogen-activated protein kinase substrate myelin basic protein (MBP). Immunoprecipitation experiments with anti-extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) or anti-ERK2 antibodies followed by MBP kinase assays, and direct in-gel kinase assays for MBP, show that p44/ERK1 but not p42/ERK2 is stimulated in OA-treated spermatocytes. OA treatment stimulates phosphorylation of ERK1, but not of ERK2, on a tyrosine residue involved in activation of the enzyme. ERK1 immunoprecipitated from extracts of OA-stimulated spermatocytes induces a stimulation of H1 kinase activity in extracts from control pachytene spermatocytes, whereas immunoprecipitated ERK2 is uneffective. We also show that natural G2/M transition in spermatocytes is associated to intracellular redistribution of ERKs, and their association with microtubules of the metaphase spindle. Preincubation of cultured pachytene spermatocytes with PD98059 (a selective inhibitor of ERK-activating kinases MEK1/2) completely blocks the ability of OA to induce chromosome condensation and progression to meiotic metaphases. These results suggest that ERK1 is specifically activated during G2/M transition in mouse spermatocytes, that it contributes to the mechanisms of maturation promoting factor activation, and that it is essential for chromosome condensation associated with progression to meiotic metaphases.
FEBS Letters | 1996
Georges Nemoz; Ruobo Zhang; Claudio Sette; Marco Conti
To determine whether the expression of different PDE4D variants is unique to the rat or conserved through evolution, we have characterized the different PDE4D mRNAs expressed in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. RT‐PCR was performed using primers based on rat sequences and mRNAs from mononuclear cells. The specifically amplified fragments had a size identical to that predicted for rat PDE4D1, PDE4D2 and PDE4D3. Sequencing confirmed that these fragments are derived from the human PDE4D gene. Their sequence was highly homologous to that reported for the rat variants. cDNAs corresponding to the entire ORF of human PDE4D2 and PDE4D3 were expressed in mammalian cells, causing a large increase in PDE activity. Western blot analysis of human peripheral blood mononuclear cell extracts demonstrated the presence of proteins corresponding to the recombinant PDE4D1 and PDE4D2. The pattern of splicing and different promoter usage of the PDE4D gene is therefore conserved during evolution, which indicates an important physiological role.
Andrologia | 2003
Pellegrino Rossi; Susanna Dolci; Claudio Sette; Raffaele Geremia
The c‐kit proto‐oncogene plays a dual role in the control of male fertility in mice through two alternative gene products: (1) c‐kit [the transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor for stem cell factor (SCF)], which is expressed and functional in differentiating spermatogonia of the postnatal testis, in which c‐kit is essential for pre‐meiotic proliferation; and (2) tr‐kit, an intracellular protein which is specifically accumulated during spermiogenesis through the use of an alternative intronic promoter, and which is able to trigger mouse egg activation when microinjected into the cytoplasm of metaphase II arrested oocytes. Here, we summarize the most recent findings about the molecular pathways through which c‐kit regulates cell cycle progression in mitotic germ cells, and those through which sperm‐derived tr‐kit triggers parthenogenetic completion of meiosis II and pronuclear formation in microinjected mouse eggs.
Archive | 1998
Pellegrino Rossi; Claudio Sette; Arturo Bevilacqua; Franco Mangia; Raffaele Geremia
In many species a series of Ca2+ oscillations is the first event triggered by egg-sperm fusion (Whitaker and Swann 1993). It is widely accepted that this series of increases in intracellular free Ca2+ is responsible for the following egg activation; however, the molecular mechanisms underlying such Ca2+ mobilization within the egg are not fully understood (Kline and Kline 1992; Whitaker and Swann 1993; Homa et al. 1993; Berridge 1996).
Endocrine Reviews | 1995
Marco Conti; Georges Nemoz; Claudio Sette; Elena Vicini
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1994
Claudio Sette; E Vicini; Marco Conti
FEBS Journal | 1997
Samer El Bawab; Olga Macovschi; Claudio Sette; Marco Conti; Michel Lagarde; Georges Nemoz; Annie-France Prigent
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 1994
Claudio Sette; Elena Vicini; Marco Conti