Elisa Manzati
University of Ferrara
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Featured researches published by Elisa Manzati.
The FASEB Journal | 2004
Gianluca Aguiari; Manuela Banzi; Stefania Gessi; Yiqiang Cai; Emanuela Zeggio; Elisa Manzati; Roberta Piva; Elisabetta Lambertini; Luisa Ferrari; Dorien J. Peters; Francesco Lanza; Peter C. Harris; Pier Andrea Borea; Stefan Somlo; Laura del Senno
Polycystin‐2 (PC2), encoded by the PKD2 gene, mutated in 10‐15% of autosomal‐dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) patients, is a Ca2+‐permeable cation channel present in kidney epithelia and other tissues. As PC2 was found expressed in B‐lymphoblastoid cells (LCLs) and Ca2+ signaling pathways are important regulators of B cell function activities, we investigated whether PC2 plays some role in B‐LCLs. In LCLs, PC2 was found mainly in ER membranes but ~8 times less than in kidney HEK293 cells. The same reductions were found in PKD2 and PKD1 RNA; thus, PKD genes maintained, in LCLs, the same reciprocal proportion as they do in kidney cells. In LCLs obtained from subjects carrying PKD2 mutations (PKD2‐LCLs) and showing reduced PC2 levels, intracellular Ca2+ concentrations evoked by platelet‐activating factor (PAF), were significantly lower than in non‐PKD‐LCLs. This reduction was also found in PKD1‐LCLs but without PC2 reductions. Likewise, cell proliferation, which is controlled by Ca2+, was reduced in PKD2‐ and PKD1‐LCLs. Moreover, in LCLs with PKD2 nonsense mutations, aminoglycoside antibiotics reduced the PC2 defect by promoting readthrough of stop codons. Therefore, PC2 and PC1 are functionally expressed in LCLs, which provide a model, easily obtainable from ADPKD patients, to study PKD gene expression and function.
Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2001
Marcella Vacca; Francesco Filippini; Alberta Budillon; Valeria Rossi; Grazia Mercadante; Elisa Manzati; Francesca Gualandi; Stefania Bigoni; Cecilia Trabanelli; Giorgio Pini; Elisa Calzolari; Alessandra Ferlini; Ilaria Meloni; Giuseppe Hayek; Michele Zappella; Alessandra Renieri; Michele D'Urso; Maurizio D'Esposito; Fiona Macdonald; Alison Kerr; Seema Dhanjal; Maj A. Hultén
Abstract. Rett syndrome is an X-linked dominant neurological disorder, which appears to be the commonest genetic cause of profound combined intellectual and physical disability in Caucasian females. Recently, this syndrome has been associated with mutations of the MECP2 gene, a transcriptional repressor of still unknown target genes. Here we report a detailed mutational analysis of 62 patients from UK and Italian archives, representing the first comparative study among different populations and one of the largest number of cases so far analyzed. We review the literature on MECP2 mutations in Rett syndrome. This analysis has permitted us to produce a map of the recurrent mutations identified in this and previous studies. Bioinformatic analysis of the mutations, taking advantage of structural and evolutionary data, leads us to postulate the existence of a new functional domain in the MeCP2 protein, which is conserved among brain-specific regulatory factors.
Journal of Dental Research | 2006
P. Sibilla; Alessia Sereni; Gianluca Aguiari; Manuela Banzi; Elisa Manzati; Carlo Mischiati; Leonardo Trombelli; L. del Senno
Biostite® is a hydroxyapatite-derived biomaterial that is used in periodontal and bone reconstructive procedures due to its osteoconductive properties. Since the molecular effects of this biomaterial on osteoblasts are still unknown, we decided to assess whether it may specifically modulate osteoblast functions in vitro. We found that a brief exposure to Biostite® significantly reduced the proliferation of MG-63 and SaOS-2 osteoblast-like cells to ~ 50% of the plateau value. Furthermore, gene array analysis of MG-63 cells showed that Biostite® caused a differential expression of 37 genes which are involved in cell proliferation and interaction, and related to osteoblast differentiation and tissue regeneration. Results were confirmed by RT-PCR, Western blot, and by an increase in alkaline phosphatase (ALP) specific activity. Biostite® also increased levels of polycystin-2, a mechano-sensitive Ca2+ channel, a promising new marker of bone cell differentiation. Biostite®, therefore, may directly affect osteoblasts by enhancing chondro/osteogenic gene expression and cytoskeleton-related signaling pathways, which may contribute to its clinical efficacy.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003
Gianluca Aguiari; Michelangelo Campanella; Elisa Manzati; Paolo Pinton; Manuela Banzi; Sabrina Moretti; Roberta Piva; Rosario Rizzuto; Laura del Senno
Polycystin-1 (PC1) is a membrane protein expressed in tubular epithelia of developing kidneys and in other ductal structures. Recent studies indicate this protein to be putatively important in regulating intracellular Ca(2+) levels in various cell types, but little evidence exists for kidney epithelial cells. Here we examined the role of the PC1 cytoplasmic tail on the activity of store operated Ca(2+) channels in human kidney epithelial HEK-293 cell line. Cells were transiently transfected with chimeric proteins containing 1-226 or 26-226 aa of the PC1 cytoplasmic tail fused to the transmembrane domain of the human Trk-A receptor: TrkPC1 wild-type and control Trk truncated peptides were expressed at comparable levels and localized at the plasma membrane. Ca(2+) measurements were performed in cells co-transfected with PC1 chimeras and the cytoplasmic Ca(2+)-sensitive photoprotein aequorin, upon activation of the phosphoinositide pathway by ATP, that, via purinoceptors, is coupled to the release of Ca(2+) from intracellular stores. The expression of TrkPC1 peptide, but not of its truncated form, enhanced the ATP-evoked cytosolic Ca(2+) concentrations. When Ca(2+) assays were performed in HeLa cells characterized by Ca(2+) stores greater than those of HEK-293 cells, the histamine-evoked cytosolic Ca(2+) increase was enhanced by TrkPC1 expression, even in absence of external Ca(2+). These observations indicate that the C-terminal tail of PC1 in kidney and other epithelial cells upregulates a Ca(2+) channel activity also involved in the release of intracellular stores.
Brain & Development | 2001
Marcella Vacca; Francesco Filippini; Alberta Budillon; Valeria Rossi; Floriana Della Ragione; Maria Luigia De Bonis; Grazia Mercadante; Elisa Manzati; Francesca Gualandi; Stefania Bigoni; Cecilia Trabanelli; Giorgio Pini; Elisa Calzolari; Alessandra Ferlini; Ilaria Meloni; Giuseppe Hayek; Michele Zappella; Alessandra Renieri; Michele D'Urso; Maurizio D'Esposito; Fiona Macdonald; Alison Kerr; Seema Dhanjal; Maj A. Hultén
Rett syndrome (RTT) is an X-linked dominant neurological disorder, which appears to be the most common genetic cause of profound combined intellectual and physical disability in Caucasian females. This syndrome has been associated with mutations of the MECP2 gene, a transcriptional repressor of unknown target genes. We report a detailed mutational analysis of a large cohort of RTT patients from the UK and Italy. This study has permitted us to produce a hot spot map of the mutations identified. Bioinformatic analysis of the mutations, taking advantage of structural and evolutionary data, leads us to postulate the existence of a new functional domain in the MeCP2 protein, conserved among brain-specific regulatory factors.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2006
Bruna Pelucchi; Gianluca Aguiari; Angela Pignatelli; Elisa Manzati; Ralph Witzgall; Laura del Senno; Ottorino Belluzzi
Mutations in either PKD1 or PKD2 gene are associated with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, the most common inherited kidney disorder. Polycystin-2 (PC2), the PKD2 gene product, and the related protein polycystin-L, function as Ca(2+)-permeable, nonselective cation channels in different expression systems. This work describes a nonspecific cation current (I(CC)) that is present in native HEK-293 cells and highly associated with a PC2-channel activity. The current is voltage dependent, activating for potentials that are positive to -50 mV and inactivating in a few milliseconds. It is sensitive to Cd(2+), Gd(3+), La(3+), SKF96365, and amiloride. After silencing of PC2 by RNA interfering, cells show a reduced current that is restored by transfection with normal but not truncated PC2. Consistently, I(CC) is abolished by perfusion with an anti-PC2 antibody. Furthermore, heterologous expression of the PC1 cytoplasmic tail significantly increases I(CC) peak amplitude compared with native cells. This is the first characterization of such a current in HEK-293 cells, a widely used expression system for ion channels. These cells, therefore, could be regarded as a suitable and readily accessible tool to study interactions between native PC2/PC1 complex and other membrane proteins, thus contributing to the understanding of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease pathogenesis.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2013
Camilla Pellegrini; Alessandra Zulian; Francesca Gualandi; Elisa Manzati; Luciano Merlini; M.E. Michelini; Luisa Benassi; Sandra Marmiroli; Alessandra Ferlini; Patrizia Sabatelli; Paolo Bernardi; Nadir M. Maraldi
Dystrophin is a subsarcolemmal protein that, by linking the actin cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix via dystroglycans, is critical for the integrity of muscle fibers. Here, we report that epidermal melanocytes, obtained from conventional skin biopsy, express dystrophin with a restricted localization to the plasma membrane facing the dermal–epidermal junction. In addition the full‐length muscle isoform mDp427 was clearly detectable in melanocyte cultures as assessed by immunohistochemistry, RNA, and Western blot analysis. Melanocytes of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients did not express dystrophin, and the ultrastructural analysis revealed typical mitochondrial alterations similar to those occurring in myoblasts from the same patients. Mitochondria of melanocytes from DMD patients readily accumulated tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester, indicating that they are energized irrespective of the presence of dystrophin but, at variance from mitochondria of control donors, depolarized upon the addition of oligomycin, suggesting that they are affected by a latent dysfunction unmasked by inhibition of the ATP synthase. Pure melanocyte cultures can be readily obtained by conventional skin biopsies and may be a feasible and reliable tool alternative to muscle biopsy for functional studies in dystrophinopathies. The mitochondrial dysfunction occurring in DMD melanocytes could represent a promising cellular biomarker for monitoring dystrophinopathies also in response to pharmacological treatments. J. Cell. Physiol. 228: 1323–1331, 2013.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1999
Gianluca Aguiari; Elisa Manzati; Letizia Penolazzi; Fabiola Micheletti; Giuseppina Augello; Ermanno De Paoli Vitali; Gianni Cappelli; Yiqiang Cai; David M. Reynolds; Stefan Somlo; Roberta Piva; Laura del Senno
The polycystic kidney disease 2 (PKD2) gene, encoding a 968-amino acid integral membrane protein with six predicted membrane-spanning domains and intracellular NH2 and COOH termini, is mutated in approximately 15% of the cases of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), a common genetic disease frequently resulting in renal failure. For a better understanding of the cause of this disorder, we searched for mutations in the PKD2 gene in two PKD2-linked families characterized by different clinical phenotypes. A common polymorphism, a nonsense mutation, and a frameshift mutation were found. Both mutations are predicted to produce truncated proteins of 314 and 386 amino acids, arrested at the first extracellular loop of the protein. Restriction enzyme analysis of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR products, respectively, showed that mutations cosegregated with the disease and mutated alleles were expressed at the messenger RNA level in lymphoblastoid cell lines. However, in these cells, Western blot analysis showed only PKD2 normal protein, and it was expressed at a lower level than that found in cells without the PKD2 mutation. These findings suggest that in lymphoblastoid cells, the truncated protein product of the mutant allele may not be stable.
Leukemia | 2002
Domenica Gandini; C De Angeli; Gianluca Aguiari; Elisa Manzati; Francesco Lanza; Pp Pandolfi; Antonio Cuneo; G Castoldi; L del Senno
HTIF1α, a transcription coactivator which is able to mediate RARα activity and functionally interact with PML, is encoded by a gene on chromosome 7q32–34, which is a critical region in acute myeloid leukemias (AML). With the assumption that this gene may be related to AML, we investigated the HTIF1α DNA structure and RNA expression in leukemic cells from 36 M1–M5 AML patients (28 ‘de novo’ and eight ‘secondary’ to myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)). Abnormal HTIF1α DNA fragments were never found, whereas loss of HTIF1α DNA was observed in the patients with chromosome 7q32 deletion and translocation, and in one case without detectable chromosome 7 abnormality. HTIF1α RNA was found in acute myelocytic leukemic blasts, and was almost undetectable in normal mononuclear cells. The expression varied among the patients: higher in M1 to M3 subtypes, with the highest values in M1; low levels were constantly observed in M4 and M5 AML. In addition, HTIF1α was significantly overexpressed in MDS-related AML (MDR-AML), but not in MDS. We also found that HTIF1α expression was high in myeloid cell lines. In myeloblastic HL60 and promyelocytic NB4 cells, induced to differentiate along the monocytic–macrophage pathway by TPA or vitamin D3, HTIF1α expression decreased, whereas it was maintained at high levels on induction to granulocytic differentiation by RA or DMSO. In K562 cells, HTIF1α RNA levels did not change after hemin-induced erythroid differentiation. These results suggest that HTIF1α could play a role in myeloid differentiation, being distinctly regulated in hematopoietic lineages.
Experimental Cell Research | 2005
Elisa Manzati; Gianluca Aguiari; Manuela Banzi; Michele Manzati; Rita Selvatici; Sofia Falzarano; Iva Maestri; Paolo Pinton; Rosario Rizzuto; Laura del Senno