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Dive into the research topics where Emiliano Bedini is active.

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Featured researches published by Emiliano Bedini.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

The Klebsiella pneumoniae wabG Gene: Role in Biosynthesis of the Core Lipopolysaccharide and Virulence

Luis Izquierdo; Núria Coderch; Núria Piqué; Emiliano Bedini; Maria Michela Corsaro; Susana Merino; Sandra Fresno; Juan M. Tomás; Miguel Regué

To determine the function of the wabG gene in the biosynthesis of the core lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Klebsiella pneumoniae, we constructed wabG nonpolar mutants. Data obtained from the comparative chemical and structural analysis of LPS samples obtained from the wild type, the mutant strain, and the complemented mutant demonstrated that the wabG gene is involved in attachment to alpha-L-glycero-D-manno-heptopyranose II (L,D-HeppII) at the O-3 position of an alpha-D-galactopyranosyluronic acid (alpha-D-GalAp) residue. K. pneumoniae nonpolar wabG mutants were devoid of the cell-attached capsular polysaccharide but were still able to produce capsular polysaccharide. Similar results were obtained with K. pneumoniae nonpolar waaC and waaF mutants, which produce shorter LPS core molecules than do wabG mutants. Other outer core K. pneumoniae nonpolar mutants in the waa gene cluster were encapsulated. K. pneumoniae waaC, waaF, and wabG mutants were avirulent when tested in different animal models. Furthermore, these mutants were more sensitive to some hydrophobic compounds than the wild-type strains. All these characteristics were rescued by reintroduction of the waaC, waaF, and wabG genes from K. pneumoniae.


Chemistry & Biology | 2009

β-Glycosyl Azides as Substrates for α-Glycosynthases: Preparation of Efficient α-L-Fucosynthases

Beatrice Cobucci-Ponzano; Fiorella Conte; Emiliano Bedini; Maria Michela Corsaro; Michelangelo Parrilli; Gerlind Sulzenbacher; Alexandra Lipski; Fabrizio Dal Piaz; Laura Lepore; Mosè Rossi; Marco Moracci

Fucose-containing oligosaccharides play a central role in physio-pathological events, and fucosylated oligosaccharides have interesting potential applications in biomedicine. No methods for the large-scale production of oligosaccharides are currently available, but the chemo-enzymatic approach is very promising. Glycosynthases, mutated glycosidases that synthesize oligosaccharides in high yields, have been demonstrated to be an interesting alternative. However, examples of glycosynthases available so far are restricted to a limited number of glycosidases families and to only one retaining alpha-glycosynthase. We show here that new mutants of two alpha-L-fucosidases are efficient alpha-L-fucosynthases. The approach shown utilized beta-L-fucopyranosyl azide as donor substrate leading to transglycosylation yields up to 91%. This is the first method exploiting a beta-glycosyl azide donor for alpha-glycosynthases; its applicability to the glycosynthetic methodology in a wider perspective is presented.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Semi-Synthesis of Unusual Chondroitin Sulfate Polysaccharides Containing GlcA(3-O-sulfate) or GlcA(2,3-di-O-sulfate) Units

Emiliano Bedini; Cristina De Castro; Mario De Rosa; Annalida Di Nola; Odile Francesca Restaino; Chiara Schiraldi; Michelangelo Parrilli

The extraction from natural sources of Chondroitin sulfate (CS), a polysaccharide used for management of osteoarthritis, leads to very complex mixtures. The synthesis of CS by chemical modification of other polysaccharides has seldom been reported due to the intrinsic complexity that arises from fine chemical modifications of the polysaccharide structure. In view of the growing interest in expanding the application of CS to pharmacological fields other than osteoarthritis treatment, we launched a program to find new sources of known or even unprecedented CS polysaccharides. As part of this program, we report herein on an investigation of the use of a cyclic orthoester group to selectively protect the 4,6-diol of N-acetyl-galactosamine residues in chondroitin (obtained from a microbial source), thereby facilitating its transformation into CSs. In particular, three CS polysaccharides were obtained and demonstrated to possess rare or hitherto unprecedented sulfation patterns by 2D NMR spectroscopy characterization. Two of them contained disaccharide subunits characterized by glucuronic acid residues selectively sulfated at position 3 (GlcA(3S)), the biological functions of which are known but have yet to be fully investigated. This first semi-synthetic access to GlcA(3S)-containing CS could greatly expedite such studies, since it can easily furnish considerable amounts of these polysaccharides, which are usually isolated with difficulty and in very low quantity from natural sources.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2002

Oligomerization of a rhamnanic trisaccharide repeating unit of O-chain polysaccharides from phytopathogenic bacteria☆

Emiliano Bedini; Michelangelo Parrilli; Carlo Unverzagt

An efficient synthesis of a protected trisaccharide building block α-l-Rha(1→3)-α-l-Rha(1→2)-α-l-Rha related to the structure of many lipopolysaccharide O-chains from phytopathogenic bacteria has been developed. The protecting group pattern consisting of benzoyl, benzyl and chloroacetyl groups facilitated the use of the trisaccharide building block in the synthesis of two higher oligomers, an oligorhamnosyl hexasaccharide and a nonasaccharide.


Carbohydrate Research | 2012

Synthetic and semi-synthetic chondroitin sulfate oligosaccharides, polysaccharides, and glycomimetics

Emiliano Bedini; Michelangelo Parrilli

Chondroitin sulfate (CS) is a sulfated polysaccharide involved in a myriad of biological processes. Due to the variable sulfation pattern of CS polymer chains, the need to study in detail structure-activity relationships regarding CS biomedical features has provoked much interest in obtaining synthetic CS species. This paper reviews two decades of synthetic and semi-synthetic CS oligosaccharides, polysaccharides, and glycomimetics obtained by chemical, chemoenzymatic, enzymatic, and microbiological-chemical strategies.


Biomacromolecules | 2015

Chemical Fucosylation of a Polysaccharide: A Semisynthetic Access to Fucosylated Chondroitin Sulfate.

Antonio Laezza; Alfonso Iadonisi; Cristina De Castro; Mario De Rosa; Chiara Schiraldi; Michelangelo Parrilli; Emiliano Bedini

Chemical O-glycosylation of polysaccharides is an almost unexplored reaction. This is mainly due to the difficulties in derivatizing such complex biomacromolecules in a quantitative manner and with a fine control of the obtained structural parameters. In this work, chondroitin raw material from a microbial source was chemo- and regioselectively protected to give two polysaccharide intermediates, that acted in turn as glycosyl acceptors in fucosylation reactions. Further manipulations on the fucosylated polysaccharides, including multiple de-O-benzylation and sulfation, furnished for the first time nonanimal sourced fucosylated chondroitin sulfates (fCSs)-polysaccharides obtained so far exclusively from sea cucumbers (Echinoidea, Holothuroidea) and showing several very interesting biological activities. A semisynthetic fCS was characterized from a structural point of view by means of 2D-NMR techniques, and preliminarily assayed in an anticoagulant test.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

A route to oligosaccharide-appended salicylaldehydes: Useful building blocks for the synthesis of metal-salophen complexes

Emiliano Bedini; Gianpiero Forte; Cristina De Castro; Michelangelo Parrilli; Antonella Dalla Cort

A simple and general synthetic protocol to obtain oligosaccharide-appended salicylaldehydes, key intermediates for the synthesis of water-soluble metal-salophen complexes, is here reported. Six new aldehydes have been prepared and fully characterized as well as the corresponding zinc- and uranyl-salophen complexes. These new derivatives show very good solubility in water. Preliminary studies on the association of compound 19-U, that is, the uranyl maltotetraose derivative, with hydrogen phosphate and fluoride provide very encouraging results and open up the possibility of using such compounds for the efficient recognition of anions in pure water.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

A Modular Approach to a Library of Semi-Synthetic Fucosylated Chondroitin Sulfate Polysaccharides with Different Sulfation and Fucosylation Patterns.

Antonio Laezza; Alfonso Iadonisi; Anna Virginia Adriana Pirozzi; Paola Diana; Mario De Rosa; Chiara Schiraldi; Michelangelo Parrilli; Emiliano Bedini

Fucosylated chondroitin sulfate (fCS)-a glycosaminoglycan (GAG) found in sea cucumbers-has recently attracted much attention owing to its biological properties. In particular, a low molecular mass fCS polysaccharide has very recently been suggested as a strong candidate for the development of an antithrombotic drug that would be safer and more effective than heparin. To avoid the use of animal sourced drugs, here we present the chemical transformation of a microbial sourced unsulfated chondroitin polysaccharide into a small library of fucosylated (and sulfated) derivatives thereof. To this aim, a modular approach based on the different combination of only five reactions was employed, with an almost unprecedented polysaccharide branching by O-glycosylation as the key step. The library was differentiated for sulfation patterns and/or positions of the fucose branches, as confirmed by detailed 2D NMR spectroscopic analysis. These semi-synthetic polysaccharides will allow a wider and more accurate structure-activity relationship study with respect to those reported in literature to date.


Carbohydrate Research | 2012

Synthesis of the trisaccharide outer core fragment of Burkholderia cepacia pv. vietnamiensis lipooligosaccharide.

Emiliano Bedini; Luigi Cirillo; Michelangelo Parrilli

The synthesis of β-Gal-(1→3)-α-GalNAc-(1→3)-β-GalNAc allyl trisaccharide as the outer core fragment of Burkholderia cepacia pv. vietnamiensis lipooligosaccharide was accomplished through a concise, optimized, multi-step synthesis, having as key steps three glycosylations, that were in-depth studied performing them under several conditions. The target trisaccharide was designed with an allyl aglycone in order to open a future access to the conjugation with an immunogenic protein en route to the development of a synthetic neoglycoconjugate vaccine against this Burkholderia pathogen.


Carbohydrate Research | 2003

Structural determination of the O-specific chain of the lipopolysaccharide from the mushrooms pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas tolaasii

Antonio Molinaro; Emiliano Bedini; Renata Ferrara; Rosa Lanzetta; Michelangelo Parrilli; Antonio Evidente; Pietro Lo Cantore; Nicola S. Iacobellis

The complete structure of the O-specific polysaccharide of the lipopolysaccharide isolated from the cultivated mushrooms pathogen Pseudomonas tolaasii is described. The structural determination, achieved by chemical and spectroscopical analyses, indicates a novel tetrasaccharide repeating unit built up of two units of 2-acetamido-2,6-di-deoxy-glucopyranose (Quinovosamine, QuipNAc) and two units of 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-gulopyranuronamide (GulpNAcAN), one of which is acetylated at C-3 position:

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Michelangelo Parrilli

University of Naples Federico II

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Alfonso Iadonisi

University of Naples Federico II

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Maria Michela Corsaro

University of Naples Federico II

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Chiara Schiraldi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Mario De Rosa

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Rosa Lanzetta

University of Naples Federico II

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Marco Moracci

National Research Council

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Annalida Di Nola

University of Naples Federico II

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Antonio Molinaro

University of Naples Federico II

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