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Dive into the research topics where Cristiano Chiarabelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristiano Chiarabelli.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2007

From Never Born Proteins to Minimal Living Cells: Two Projects in Synthetic Biology

Pier Luigi Luisi; Cristiano Chiarabelli; Pasquale Stano

The Never Born Proteins (NBPs) and the Minimal Cell projects are two currently developed research lines belonging to the field of synthetic biology. The first deals with the investigation of structural and functional properties of de novo proteins with random sequences, selected and isolated using phage display methods. The minimal cell is the simplest cellular construct which displays living properties, such as self-maintenance, self-reproduction and evolvability. The semi-synthetic approach to minimal cells involves the use of extant genes and proteins in order to build a supramolecular construct based on lipid vesicles. Results and outlooks on these two research lines are shortly discussed, mainly focusing on their relevance to the origin of life studies.


PLOS ONE | 2011

HIV-1 Nef Induces Proinflammatory State in Macrophages through Its Acidic Cluster Domain: Involvement of TNF Alpha Receptor Associated Factor 2

Giorgio Mangino; Zulema A. Percario; Gianna Fiorucci; Gabriele Vaccari; Filippo Acconcia; Cristiano Chiarabelli; Stefano Leone; Alessia Noto; Florian A. Horenkamp; Santiago Manrique; Giovanna Romeo; Fabio Polticelli; Matthias Geyer; Elisabetta Affabris

Background HIV-1 Nef is a virulence factor that plays multiple roles during HIV replication. Recently, it has been described that Nef intersects the CD40 signalling in macrophages, leading to modification in the pattern of secreted factors that appear able to recruit, activate and render T lymphocytes susceptible to HIV infection. The engagement of CD40 by CD40L induces the activation of different signalling cascades that require the recruitment of specific tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factors (i.e. TRAFs). We hypothesized that TRAFs might be involved in the rapid activation of NF-κB, MAPKs and IRF-3 that were previously described in Nef-treated macrophages to induce the synthesis and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines and IFNβ to activate STAT1, -2 and -3. Methodology/Principal Findings Searching for possible TRAF binding sites on Nef, we found a TRAF2 consensus binding site in the AQEEEE sequence encompassing the conserved four-glutamate acidic cluster. Here we show that all the signalling effects we observed in Nef treated macrophages depend on the integrity of the acidic cluster. In addition, Nef was able to interact in vitro with TRAF2, but not TRAF6, and this interaction involved the acidic cluster. Finally silencing experiments in THP-1 monocytic cells indicate that both TRAF2 and, surprisingly, TRAF6 are required for the Nef-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT1 and STAT2. Conclusions Results reported here revealed TRAF2 as a new possible cellular interactor of Nef and highlighted that in monocytes/macrophages this viral protein is able to manipulate both the TRAF/NF-κB and TRAF/IRF-3 signalling axes, thereby inducing the synthesis of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines as well as IFNβ.


FEBS Letters | 2012

Approaches to chemical synthetic biology

Cristiano Chiarabelli; Pasquale Stano; Fabrizio Anella; Paolo Carrara; Pier Luigi Luisi

Synthetic biology is first represented in terms of two complementary aspects, the bio‐engineering one, based on the genetic manipulation of extant microbial forms in order to obtain forms of life which do not exist in nature; and the chemical synthetic biology, an approach mostly based on chemical manipulation for the laboratory synthesis of biological structures that do not exist in nature. The paper is mostly devoted to shortly review chemical synthetic biology projects currently carried out in our laboratory. In particular, we describe: the minimal cell project, then the “Never Born Proteins” and lastly the Never Born RNAs. We describe and critically analyze the main results, emphasizing the possible relevance of chemical synthetic biology for the progress in basic science and biotechnology.


Science Progress | 2014

Chemical synthetic biology

Cristiano Chiarabelli; Pier Luigi Luisi

Although both the most popular form of synthetic biology (SB) and chemical synthetic biology (CSB) share the biotechnologically useful aim of making new forms of life, SB does so by using genetic manipulation of extant microorganism, while CSB utilises classic chemical procedures in order to obtain biological structures which are non-existent in nature. The main query concerning CSB is the philosophical question: why did nature do this, and not that? The idea then is to synthesise alternative structures in order to understand why nature operated in such a particular way. We briefly present here some various examples of CSB, including those cases of nucleic acids synthesised with pyranose instead of ribose, and proteins with a reduced alphabet of amino acids; also we report the developing research on the “never born proteins” (NBP) and “never born RNA” (NBRNA), up to the minimal cell project, where the issue is the preparation of semi-synthetic cells that can perform the basic functions of biological cells.


Computational and structural biotechnology journal | 2014

Open questions in origin of life: experimental studies on the origin of nucleic acids and proteins with specific and functional sequences by a chemical synthetic biology approach.

Katarzyna Adamala; Fabrizio Anella; Rafal Wieczorek; Pasquale Stano; Cristiano Chiarabelli; Pier Luigi Luisi

In this mini-review we present some experimental approaches to the important issue in the origin of life, namely the origin of nucleic acids and proteins with specific and functional sequences. The formation of macromolecules on prebiotic Earth faces practical and conceptual difficulties. From the chemical viewpoint, macromolecules are formed by chemical pathways leading to the condensation of building blocks (amino acids, or nucleotides) in long-chain copolymers (proteins and nucleic acids, respectively). The second difficulty deals with a conceptual problem, namely with the emergence of specific sequences among a vast array of possible ones, the huge “sequence space”, leading to the question “why these macromolecules, and not the others?” We have recently addressed these questions by using a chemical synthetic biology approach. In particular, we have tested the catalytic activity of small peptides, like Ser-His, with respect to peptide- and nucleotides-condensation, as a realistic model of primitive organocatalysis. We have also set up a strategy for exploring the sequence space of random proteins and RNAs (the so-called “never born biopolymer” project) with respect to the production of folded structures. Being still far from solved, the main aspects of these “open questions” are discussed here, by commenting on recent results obtained in our groups and by providing a unifying view on the problem and possible solutions. In particular, we propose a general scenario for macromolecule formation via fragment-condensation, as a scheme for the emergence of specific sequences based on molecular growth and selection.


Chemistry & Biodiversity | 2006

Investigation of de novo totally random biosequences Part III RNA Foster : A novel assay to investigate RNA folding structural properties

Davide De Lucrezia; Marco Franchi; Cristiano Chiarabelli; Enzo Gallori; Pier Luigi Luisi

Fold is essential to RNA properties, and, in particular, its thermodynamic stability can be used to monitor RNA–protein or RNA–ligand interactions, and to engineer RNA with novel or improved properties. While clearly valuable, experimental determination of RNA folding stability by traditional biophysical techniques requires substantial amounts of pure sample and rather expensive equipment. In this paper, we report a new, simple approach to the determination of RNA folding stability by coupling enzymatic digestion and temperature denaturation. The assay, named RNA folding stability Test (RNA Foster), is designed to probe the fraction of folded RNA (ffold) in an equilibrium mixture of folded and unfolded ones as a function of temperature. The simplicity of RNA Foster suggests that it can easily be scaled up for high‐throughput studies of RNA folding stability both in basic and applied research.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2007

Question 5: On the Chemical Reality of the RNA World

Davide De Lucrezia; Fabrizio Anella; Cristiano Chiarabelli

The discovery of catalytic RNA has revolutionised modern molecular biology and bears important implications for the origin of Life research. Catalytic RNA, in particular self-replicating RNA, prompted the hypothesis of an early “RNA world” where RNA molecules played all major roles such information storage and catalysis. The actual role of RNA as primary actor in the origin of life has been under debate for a long time, with a particular emphasis on possible pathways to the prebiotic synthesis of mononucleotides; their polymerization and the possibility of spontaneous emergence of catalytic RNAs synthesised under plausible prebiotic conditions. However, little emphasis has been put on the chemical reality of an RNA world; in particular concerning the chemical constrains that such scenario should have met to be feasible. This paper intends to address those concerns with regard to the achievement of high local RNA molecules concentration and the aetiology of unique sequence under plausible prebiotic conditions.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2013

Chemical synthetic biology: a mini-review

Cristiano Chiarabelli; Pasquale Stano; Pier Luigi Luisi

Chemical synthetic biology (CSB) is a branch of synthetic biology (SB) oriented toward the synthesis of chemical structures alternative to those present in nature. Whereas SB combines biology and engineering with the aim of synthesizing biological structures or life forms that do not exist in nature – often based on genome manipulation, CSB uses and assembles biological parts, synthetic or not, to create new and alternative structures. A short epistemological note will introduce the theoretical concepts related to these fields, whereas the text will be largely devoted to introduce and comment two main projects of CSB, carried out in our laboratory in the recent years. The “Never Born Biopolymers” project deals with the construction and the screening of RNA and peptide sequences that are not present in nature, whereas the “Minimal Cell” project focuses on the construction of semi-synthetic compartments (usually liposomes) containing the minimal and sufficient number of components to perform the basic function of a biological cell. These two topics are extremely important for both the general understanding of biology in terms of function, organization, and development, and for applied biotechnology.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2007

Question 3: The Worlds of the Prebiotic and Never Born Proteins

Cristiano Chiarabelli; Davide De Lucrezia

Starting from the statement that no reliable methods are known to produce high molecular weight polypeptides under prebiotic conditions, a possible approach, at least to understand the differences between extant proteins and the possible large number of never born proteins, could be biological. Using the phage display method a large library of totally random amino acidic sequences was obtained. Consequently, different experiments to directly consider the frequency of stable folds were performed, and the interesting results obtained from such new approach are discussed in terms of contingency, contributing to the discussion on the selection mechanism of extant proteins.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2009

Chemical approaches to synthetic biology

Cristiano Chiarabelli; Pasquale Stano; Pier Luigi Luisi

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Davide De Lucrezia

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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Fabrizio Anella

Delft University of Technology

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Alessia Noto

Sapienza University of Rome

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Gabriele Vaccari

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Gianna Fiorucci

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Giorgio Mangino

Sapienza University of Rome

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