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Dive into the research topics where Elvio Giovannini is active.

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Featured researches published by Elvio Giovannini.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2003

Increased acetylcholinesterase activities in specimens of Sparus auratus exposed to sublethal copper concentrations

Rita Romani; Cinzia Antognelli; Francesca Baldracchini; Alessandra De Santis; Gloria Isani; Elvio Giovannini; Gabriella Rosi

The present study looks at possible changes in the activity of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in tissues (brain and white muscle) of the Mediterranean bony fish Sparus auratus after a 20 days exposure to sublethal concentrations (0.1 or 0.5 ppm) of copper in the marine water and on control untreated animals. The trials also included measurements of Cu concentration in the tissues to evaluate possible metal accumulation. Moreover, sedimentation analysis as well as V(max) and K(m) determination were carried out in tissue extracts of Cu-exposed or control animals. V(max) and K(m) were also determined with or without addition of Cu(2+) in the assay. No Cu accumulation occurred in brain and muscle after Cu exposure. AChE showed in both tissues a molecular polymorphism with putative globular (G) and asymmetric (A) forms. Cu exposition led to an increased specific activity and improved catalytic efficiency of AChE in brain and muscle, seemingly regarding G forms. The increase in catalytic efficiency also resulted from the in vitro assay with tissue extracts and Cu(2+) addition. The higher AChE activity and catalytic efficiency in both tissues after Cu exposition and without metal accumulation, suggests an increase of free Cu aliquot into the cells, likely due to mechanisms of metal homeostasis.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2001

Expression of glyoxalase I and II in normal and breast cancer tissues

Antonio Rulli; Luciano Carli; Rita Romani; Tiziano Baroni; Elvio Giovannini; Gabriella Rosi; Vincenzo Nicola Talesa

The present work aimed to study the activities of glyoxalase system enzymes, glyoxalase I (G I) and glyoxalase II (G II), as well as the expression of their genes in human breast carcinoma. Samples of tumoral tissue and normal counterparts were drawn from several patients during surgery. They served either for preparing extracts to be used in enzyme activity evaluations or for RNA extraction and subsequent northern blot analysis. A far higher activity level of G I and G II occurs in the tumor compared with pair-matched normal tissue, as shown by both spectrophotometrical assay and electrophoretic pattern. Such increased activities of G I and G II likely result from an enhanced enzyme synthesis as a consequence of increased expression of the respective genes in the tumoral tissue, as evidenced by northern blot. The present findings confirm a key-role of glyoxalase system to detoxify cytotoxic methylglyoxal and modulate S-D-lactoylglutathione levels in tumor cells. Moreover, they suggest a possible employment of GI inhibitors as anti-cancer drugs.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1985

Characterization of the soluble alkaline phosphatase from hepatopancreas of Squilla mantis L.

Giovanni B. Principato; M. Cristina Aisa; Vincenzo Nicola Talesa; Gabriella Rosi; Elvio Giovannini

Abstract 1. 1. A soluble alkaline phosphatase (AP) present in the hepatopancreas of Squilla mantis was extracted. 2. 2. The enzyme was purified by acetone fractionation and then by DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-200 chromatography; a single AP form was obtained, which was characterized by studying molecular and catalytic properties. 3. 3. Kinetic studies were carried out using phosphoesters as inhibitors; all these substances led to competitive inhibition. The enzyme shows a higher affinity for ADP and ATP; glucose phosphoesters are weak inhibitors. 4. 4. Possible roles of the studied AP in vivo are discussed.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1988

Demonstration of glyoxalase II in rat liver mitochondria. Partial purification and occurrence in multiple forms.

Vincenzo Talesa; Lasse Uotila; Martti Koivusalo; Giovanni B. Principato; Elvio Giovannini; Gabriella Rosi

Glyoxalase II (S-(2-hydroxyacyl)glutathione hydrolase, EC 3.1.2.6), which has been regarded as a cytosolic enzyme, was also found in rat liver mitochondria. The mitochondrial fraction contained about 10-15% of the total glyoxalase II activity in liver. The actual existence of the specific mitochondrial glyoxalase II was verified by showing that all of the activity of the crude mitochondrial pellet was still present in purified mitochondria prepared in a Ficoll gradient. Subfractionation of the mitochondria by digitonin treatment showed that 56% of the activity resided in the mitochondrial matrix and 19% in the intermembrane space. Partial purification of the enzyme (420-fold) was also achieved. Statistically significant differences were found in the substrate specificities of the mitochondrial and the cytosolic glyoxalase II. Electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing of either the crude mitochondrial extract or of the purified mitochondrial glyoxalase II resolved the enzyme activity into five forms with the respective pI values of 8.1, 7.5, 7.0, 6.85 and 6.6. Three of these forms (pI values 7.0-6.6) were exclusively mitochondrial, with no counterpart in the cytosol. The relative molecular mass of the partially purified enzyme, as estimated by Superose 12 gel chromatography, was 21,000. These results give evidence for the presence of mitochondrial glyoxalase II which is different from the cytosolic enzymes in several characteristics.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2001

Soluble and membrane-bound acetylcholinesterases in Mytilus galloprovincialis (Pelecypoda: Filibranchia) from the northern Adriatic sea.

Vincenzo Nicola Talesa; Rita Romani; Cinzia Antognelli; Elvio Giovannini; Gabriella Rosi

Three forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were detected in samples of the bivalve mollusc Mytilus galloprovincialis collected in sites of the Adriatic sea. Apart from the origin of the mussels, two spontaneously soluble (SS) AChE occur in the hemolymph and represent about 80% of total activity, perhaps hydrolyzing metabolism-borne choline esters. These hydrophilic enzymes (forms A and B) copurified by affinity chromatography (procainamide-Sepharose gel) and were separated by sucrose gradient centrifugation. They are, respectively, a globular tetramer (11.0-12.0 S) and a dimer (6.0-7.0 S) of catalytic subunits. The third form, also purified from tissue extracts by the same affinity matrix, proved to be an amphiphilic globular dimer (7.0 S) with a phosphatidylinositol tail giving cell membrane insertion, detergent (Triton X-100, Brij 96) interaction and self-aggregation. Such an AChE is likely functional in cholinergic synapses. All three AChE forms show a good substrate specificity and are inactive on butyrylthiocholine. Studies with inhibitors showed low inhibition by eserine and paraoxon, especially on SS forms, high sensitivity to 1,5-bis(4-allyldimethylammoniumphenyl)-pentan-3-one dibromide (BW284c51) and no inhibition with propoxur and diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP). The ChE forms in M. galloprovincialis are possibly encoded by different genes. Some kinetic features of these enzymes suggest a genetic polymorphism.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1989

Isolation of glyoxalase II from two different compartments of rat liver mitochondria. Kinetic and immunochemical characterization of the enzymes

Vincenzo Talesa; Lasse Uotila; Martti Koivusalo; Giovanni B. Principato; Elvio Giovannini; Gabriella Rosi

Two separate pools of glyoxalase II were demonstrated in rat liver mitochondria, one in the intermembrane space and the other in the matrix. The enzyme was purified from both sources by affinity chromatography on S-(carbobenzoxy)glutathione-Affi-Gel 40. From both crude and purified preparations polyacrylamide gel-electrophoresis resolved multiple forms of glyoxalase II, two from the intermembrane space and five from the matrix. Among the thioesters of glutathione tested as substrates, S-D-lactoylglutathione was hydrolyzed most efficiently by the enzymes from both sources. Significant differences were observed in the specificities between the intermembrane space and matrix enzymes with S-acetoacetylglutathione, S-acetylglutathione, S-propionylglutathione and S-succinylglutathione as substrates. Pure glyoxalase II from rat liver cytosol was chemically polymerized and used as antigen. Antibodies were raised in rabbits and the antiserum was used for comparison of the two purified mitochondrial enzymes with cytosolic glyoxalase II by immunoblotting. The enzyme purified from the intermembrane space cross-reacted with the antiserum, but the matrix glyoxalase II did not. The results give evidence for the presence in rat liver mitochondria of two species of glyoxalase II with differing characteristics. Only the enzyme from the intermembrane space appears to resemble the cytosolic glyoxalase II forms.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008

Molecular cloning and expression of a full-length cDNA encoding acetylcholinesterase in optic lobes of the squid Loligo opalescens: a new member of the cholinesterase family resistant to diisopropyl fluorophosphate.

Vincenzo Nicola Talesa; Marta Grauso; Martine Arpagaus; Elvio Giovannini; Rita Romani; Gabriella Rosi

Abstract : Acetylcholinesterase cDNA was cloned by screening a library from Loligo opalescens optic lobes ; cDNA sequence analysis revealed an open reading frame coding for a protein of 610 amino acids that showed 20‐41% amino acid identity with the acetylcholinesterases studied so far. The characteristic structure of cholinesterase (the choline binding site, the catalytic triad, and six cysteines that form three intrachain disulfide bonds) was conserved in the protein. The heterologous expression of acetylcholinesterase in COS cells gave a recovery of acetylcholinesterase activity 20‐fold higher than in controls. The enzyme, partially purified by affinity chromatography, showed molecular and kinetic features indistinguishable from those of acetylcholinesterase expressed in vivo, which displays a high catalytic efficiency. Both enzymes are true acetylcholinesterase corresponding to phosphatidylinositol‐anchored G2a dimers of class I, with a marked substrate specificity for acetylthiocholine. The deduced amino acid sequence may explain some particular kinetic characteristics of Loligo acetylcholinesterase, because the presence of a polar amino acid residue (S313) instead of a nonpolar one [F(288) in Torpedo] in the acyl pocket of the active site could justify the high substrate specificity of the enzyme, the absence of hydrolysis with butyrylthiocholine, and the poor inhibition by the organophosphate diisopropyl fluorophosphate.


Neurochemistry International | 1995

Acetylcholinesterase in tentacles of octopus vulgaris (cephalopoda. histochemical localization and characterization of a specific high salt-soluble and heparin-soluble fraction of globular forms

Vincenzo Nicola Talesa; Marta Grauso; Elvio Giovannini; Gabriella Rosi; Jean-Pierre Toutant

Transverse sections of Octopus tentacles were stained for acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity. An intense staining, that was suppressed by preincubation in 10(-5) M eserine, was detected in a number of neuronal cells, nerve fibres and neuromuscular junctions of intrinsic muscles of the arm. Octopus acetylcholinesterase was found as two molecular forms: an amphiphilic dimeric form (G2) sensitive to phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C and a hydrophilic tetrameric (G4) form. Sequential solubilization revealed that a significant portion of both G2 and G4 forms was recovered only in a high salt-soluble fraction (1 M NaCl, no detergent), Heparin (2 mg/ml) was able to solubilize G2 and G4 forms with the same efficiency than 1 M NaCl. The solubilizing effect of heparin was concentration-dependent and was reduced by protamine (2 mg/ml). This suggests that heparin operates through the dissociation of ionic interactions existing in situ between globular forms of AChE and cellular or extracellular polyanionic components. Interaction of AChE molecular forms with heparin has been reported so far in only a few instances and its physiological meaning is uncertain. G2 and G4 forms, interacting or not with heparin, all belong to a single pharmacological class of AChE. This suggests the existence of a single AChE gene. Amphiphilic and hydrophilic subunits thus likely result either from the processing of a single AChE transcript by alternative splicing (as in vertebrate AChE) or from a post-translation modification of a single catalytic peptide.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1993

Evidence for a molecular polymorphis of cholinesterase in Sepia officinalis (cephalopoda: decapoda)

Vincenzo Nicola Talesa; Giovanni Principato; Elvio Giovannini; Marta Grauso; Gabriella Rosi

1. 1. Three forms of cholinesterase were sequentially extracted from head and tentacles of Sepia officinalis and noted as low-salt (LSS), detergent (DS) and high-salt (HSS) soluble. They represent about 24, 30 and 46% of total activity. 2. 2. All enzyme forms seem to be amphiphilic proteins with hydrophobic domains interacting with non-ionic detergent (Triton X-100) and giving self-aggregation (LSS form). 3. 3. The DS form is membrane-anchored by a phosphatidylinositol, while the HSS form is likely linked to some proteoglycan molecule of the extracellular matrix by ionic interactions. 4. 4. According to Vmax/Km values, all the enzymes are acetylcholinesterases, even if hydrolyze propionylthiocoline at the highest rate. 5. 5. Some kinetic and molecular properties of the studied enzymes are compared with those of other cholinesterases from vertebrates and invertebrates. Possible phylogenic and adaptive features are discussed.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Comparative Pharmacology | 1981

Propionylcholinesterase in Hirudo medicinalis: Purification, partial characterization and comparative study with a mammalian acetylcholinesterase

Giovanni B. Principato; M.Vittoria Ambrosini; Francesco Saverio Liotti; Elvio Giovannini

Abstract 1. The authors carried out the purification of a cholinesterase from Hirudo medicinalis by homogenization, ultracentrifugation, (NH4)2SO4 or DEAE-cellulose fractionation and Sephadex G-200 chromatography. 2. Certain molecular properties (mol. wt, electrophoretic pattern) were studied. 3. A comparative study of the kinetic parameters of cholinesterase from H. medicinalis and acetylcholinesterase from rabbit brain was performed, using substrates with a different composition; the enzymes show signs of marked differences in the active site conformation and/or in the catalytic mechanism. 4. The enzyme from H. medicinalis is a propionylcholinesterase, particularly active on propionylthiocholine, and, to a lower extent, on butyrylthiocholine and acetylthiocholine.

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Marta Grauso

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Giovanni Principato

Marche Polytechnic University

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