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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Mammucari is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Mammucari.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2012

Mitochondria as sensors and regulators of calcium signalling

Rosario Rizzuto; Diego De Stefani; Anna Raffaello; Cristina Mammucari

During the past two decades calcium (Ca2+) accumulation in energized mitochondria has emerged as a biological process of utmost physiological relevance. Mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake was shown to control intracellular Ca2+ signalling, cell metabolism, cell survival and other cell-type specific functions by buffering cytosolic Ca2+ levels and regulating mitochondrial effectors. Recently, the identity of mitochondrial Ca2+ transporters has been revealed, opening new perspectives for investigation and molecular intervention.


Cell Metabolism | 2009

Autophagy Is Required to Maintain Muscle Mass

Eva Masiero; Lisa Agatea; Cristina Mammucari; Bert Blaauw; Emanuele Loro; Masaaki Komatsu; Daniel Metzger; Carlo Reggiani; Stefano Schiaffino; Marco Sandri

The ubiquitin-proteasome and autophagy-lysosome pathways are the two major routes for protein and organelle clearance. In skeletal muscle, both systems are under FoxO regulation and their excessive activation induces severe muscle loss. Although altered autophagy has been observed in various myopathies, the specific role of autophagy in skeletal muscle has not been determined by loss-of-function approaches. Here, we report that muscle-specific deletion of a crucial autophagy gene, Atg7, resulted in profound muscle atrophy and age-dependent decrease in force. Atg7 null muscles showed accumulation of abnormal mitochondria, sarcoplasmic reticulum distension, disorganization of sarcomere, and formation of aberrant concentric membranous structures. Autophagy inhibition exacerbated muscle loss during denervation and fasting. Thus, autophagy flux is important to preserve muscle mass and to maintain myofiber integrity. Our results suggest that inhibition/alteration of autophagy can contribute to myofiber degeneration and weakness in muscle disorders characterized by accumulation of abnormal mitochondria and inclusions.


Skeletal Muscle | 2011

Regulation of skeletal muscle growth by the IGF1-Akt/PKB pathway: insights from genetic models

Stefano Schiaffino; Cristina Mammucari

A highly conserved signaling pathway involving insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1), and a cascade of intracellular components that mediate its effects, plays a major role in the regulation of skeletal muscle growth. A central component in this cascade is the kinase Akt, also called protein kinase B (PKB), which controls both protein synthesis, via the kinases mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β), and protein degradation, via the transcription factors of the FoxO family. In this paper, we review the composition and function of this pathway in skeletal muscle fibers, focusing on evidence obtained in vivo by transgenic and knockout models and by muscle transient transfection experiments. Although this pathway is essential for muscle growth during development and regeneration, its role in adult muscle response to mechanical load is less clear. A full understanding of the operation of this pathway could help to design molecularly targeted therapeutics aimed at preventing muscle wasting, which occurs in a variety of pathologic contexts and in the course of aging.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2009

Smad2 and 3 transcription factors control muscle mass in adulthood.

Roberta Sartori; Giulia Milan; Maria Patron; Cristina Mammucari; Bert Blaauw; Reimar Abraham; Marco Sandri

Loss of muscle mass occurs in a variety of diseases, including cancer, chronic heart failure, aquired immunodeficiency syndrome, diabetes, and renal failure, often aggravating pathological progression. Preventing muscle wasting by promoting muscle growth has been proposed as a possible therapeutic approach. Myostatin is an important negative modulator of muscle growth during myogenesis, and myostatin inhibitors are attractive drug targets. However, the role of the myostatin pathway in adulthood and the transcription factors involved in the signaling are unclear. Moreover, recent results confirm that other transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) members control muscle mass. Using genetic tools, we perturbed this pathway in adult myofibers, in vivo, to characterize the downstream targets and their ability to control muscle mass. Smad2 and Smad3 are the transcription factors downstream of myostatin/TGF-beta and induce an atrophy program that is muscle RING-finger protein 1 (MuRF1) independent. Furthermore, Smad2/3 inhibition promotes muscle hypertrophy independent of satellite cells but partially dependent of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling. Thus myostatin and Akt pathways cross-talk at different levels. These findings point to myostatin inhibitors as good drugs to promote muscle growth during rehabilitation, especially when they are combined with IGF-1-Akt activators.


Autophagy | 2008

Downstream of Akt: FoxO3 and mTOR in the regulation of autophagy in skeletal muscle

Cristina Mammucari; Stefano Schiaffino; Marco Sandri

The balance between synthesis and degradation of intracellular components determines the overall muscle fiber size. Muscle atrophy occurs when the degradation rate is higher than the synthesis rate, for example during disuse, fasting or systemic diseases such asdiabetes, cancer and renal failure. The two main catabolic systems that are activated during atrophy are the ubiquitin-proteasome and the autophagy-lysosome pathways. FoxO3 transcription factor causes marked atrophy in adult skeletal muscle and induces the musclespecificubiquitin ligase Atrogin-1/MAFbx.1 In addition, we recently reported that FoxO3 is necessary and sufficient for the induction of autophagy in skeletal muscle.2 Transcription of autophagy related genes, such as LC3B and Bnip3, is activated during fasting and is mediatedby FoxO3. In particular, Bnip3 induces autophagosome formation and is responsible for the induction of autophagy by FoxO3. Surprisingly, rapamycin is not able to induce autophagy in skeletal muscle in vivo, indicating that the Akt-FoxO axis, rather than the Akt-mTORpathway, is involved in this process. Here we discuss the major implications of our recent work. Addendum to: Mammucari C, Milan G, Romanello V, Masiero E, Rudolf R, Del Piccolo P, Burden SJ, Di Lisi R, Sandri C, Zhao J, Goldberg AL, Schiaffino S, Sandri M. FoxO3 controls autophagy in skeletal muscle in vivo. Cell Metab 2007; 6:458-71.


The FASEB Journal | 2009

Inducible activation of Akt increases skeletal muscle mass and force without satellite cell activation

Bert Blaauw; Marta Canato; Lisa Agatea; Luana Toniolo; Cristina Mammucari; Eva Masiero; Reimar Abraham; Marco Sandri; Stefano Schiaffino; Carlo Reggiani

A better understanding of the signaling pathways that control muscle growth is required to identify appropriate countermeasures to prevent or reverse the loss of muscle mass and force induced by aging, disuse, or neuromuscular diseases. However, two major issues in this field have not yet been fully addressed. The first concerns the pathways involved in leading to physiological changes in muscle size. Muscle hypertrophy based on perturbations of specific signaling pathways is either characterized by impaired force generation, e.g., myostatin knockout, or incompletely studied from the physiological point of view, e.g., IGF‐1 overexpression. A second issue is whether satellite cell proliferation and incorporation into growing muscle fibers is required for a functional hypertrophy. To address these issues, we used an inducible transgenic model of muscle hypertrophy by short‐term Akt activation in adult skeletal muscle. In this model, Akt activation for 3 wk was followed by marked hypertrophy (̃50% of muscle mass) and by increased force generation, as determined in vivo by ankle plantar flexor stimulation, ex vivo in intact isolated diaphragm strips, and in single‐skinned muscle fibers. No changes in fiber‐type distribution and resistance to fatigue were detectable. Bromodeoxyuridine incorporation experiments showed that Akt‐dependent muscle hypertrophy was accompanied by proliferation of interstitial cells but not by satellite cell activation and new myonuclei incorporation, pointing to an increase in myonuclear domain size. We can conclude that during a fast hyper‐trophic growth myonuclear domain can increase without compromising muscle performance.—Blaauw, B., Canato, M., Agatea, L., Toniolo, L., Mammucari, C., Masiero, E., Abraham, R., Sandri, M., Schiaffino, S., Reggiani, C. Inducible activation of Akt increases skeletal muscle mass and force without satellite cell activation. FASEBJ. 23, 3896‐3905 (2009). www.fasebj.org


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

The Mitochondrial Calcium Uniporter (MCU): Molecular Identity and Physiological Roles

Maria Patron; Anna Raffaello; Veronica Granatiero; Anna Tosatto; Giulia Merli; Diego De Stefani; Lauren E. Wright; Giorgia Pallafacchina; Anna Terrin; Cristina Mammucari; Rosario Rizzuto

The direct measurement of mitochondrial [Ca2+] with highly specific probes demonstrated that major swings in organellar [Ca2+] parallel the changes occurring in the cytosol and regulate processes as diverse as aerobic metabolism and cell death by necrosis and apoptosis. Despite great biological relevance, insight was limited by the complete lack of molecular understanding. The situation has changed, and new perspectives have emerged following the very recent identification of the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter, the channel allowing rapid Ca2+ accumulation across the inner mitochondrial membrane.


The Journal of Physiology | 2010

Two novel/ancient myosins in mammalian skeletal muscles: MYH14/7b and MYH15 are expressed in extraocular muscles and muscle spindles

Alberto Rossi; Cristina Mammucari; Carla Argentini; Carlo Reggiani; Stefano Schiaffino

The mammalian genome contains three ancient sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (MYH) genes, MYH14/7b, MYH15 and MYH16, in addition to the two well characterized clusters of skeletal and cardiac MYHs. MYH16 is expressed in jaw muscles of carnivores; however the expression pattern of MYH14 and MYH15 is not known. MYH14 and MYH15 orthologues are present in frogs and birds, coding for chicken slow myosin 2 and ventricular MYH, respectively, whereas only MYH14 orthologues have been detected in fish. In all species the MYH14 gene contains a microRNA, miR‐499. Here we report that in rat and mouse, MYH14 and miR‐499 transcripts are detected in heart, slow muscles and extraocular (EO) muscles, whereas MYH15 transcripts are detected exclusively in EO muscles. However, MYH14 protein is detected only in a minor fibre population in EO muscles, corresponding to slow‐tonic fibres, and in bag fibres of muscle spindles. MYH15 protein is present in most fibres of the orbital layer of EO muscles and in the extracapsular region of bag fibres. During development, MYH14 is expressed at low levels in skeletal muscles, heart and all EO muscle fibres but disappears from most fibres, except the slow‐tonic fibres, after birth. In contrast, MYH15 is absent in embryonic and fetal muscles and is first detected after birth in the orbital layer of EO muscles. The identification of the expression pattern of MYH14 and MYH15 brings to completion the inventory of the MYH isoforms involved in sarcomeric architecture of skeletal muscles and provides an unambiguous molecular basis to study the contractile properties of slow‐tonic fibres in mammals.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2016

Calcium at the Center of Cell Signaling: Interplay between Endoplasmic Reticulum, Mitochondria, and Lysosomes.

Anna Raffaello; Cristina Mammucari; Gaia Gherardi; Rosario Rizzuto

In recent years, rapid discoveries have been made relating to Ca2+ handling at specific organelles that have important implications for whole-cell Ca2+ homeostasis. In particular, the structures of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ channels revealed by electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM), continuous updates on the structure, regulation, and role of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) complex, and the analysis of lysosomal Ca2+ signaling are milestones on the route towards a deeper comprehension of the complexity of global Ca2+ signaling. In this review we summarize recent discoveries on the regulation of interorganellar Ca2+ homeostasis and its role in pathophysiology.


Autophagy | 2008

The role of autophagy in neonatal tissues: Just a response to amino acid starvation?

Stefano Schiaffino; Cristina Mammucari; Marco Sandri

Autophagy is activated soon after birth in neonatal tissues and is essential for survival because mice deficient in Atg5 or Atg7 autophagy genes die within 1 day after birth. Amino acid starvation has been considered as a major deleterious effect of autophagy deficiency, since the concentration of amino acids in plasma was decreased by 20% in the two knockout models, whereas blood glucose and fatty acid levels were apparently not affected. However, autophagy may have other important functions in neonatal physiology, including glycogen degradation, programmed cell remodeling and response to oxidative stress.

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