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Featured researches published by F. Bisaccia.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

Purification of reconstitutively active α-oxoglutarate carrier from pig heart mitochondria

F. Bisaccia; Cesare Indiveri; Ferdinando Palmieri

The α-oxoglutarate carrier from pig heart mitochondria has been solubilized with Triton X-114 and purified by chromatography on hydroxyapatite and celite in the presence of cardiolipin. When applied to SDS gel electrophoresis, the purified protein consists of only a single protein band with an apparent Mr of 31.5 kDa. It corresponds to band 4 of the five protein bands previously identified in the hydroxyapatite pass-through of Triton X-114 solubilized heart mitochondria (Bisaccia, F. and Palmieri, F. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 766, 386–394). When reconstituted into liposomes the α-oxoglutarate transport protein catalyzes a phthalonate-sensitive α-oxoglutarate / α-oxoglutarate exchange. It is purified 250-fold with a recovery of 62% and a protein yield of 0.1% with respect to the mitochondrial extract. The properties of the reconstituted carrier, i.e., the requirements for a counteranion, the substrate specificity and the inhibitor sensitivity, are similar to those described for α-oxoglutarate transport in mitochondria.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1989

Identification and purification of the tricarboxylate carrier from rat liver mitochondria

F. Bisaccia; A. De Palma; Ferdinando Palmieri

The tricarboxylate carrier from rat liver mitochondria was solubilized with Triton X-100 and purified by chromatography on hydroxyapatite and celite. SDS-gel electrophoresis of the purified fraction showed a single polypeptide band with an apparent Mr of 30,000. When reconstituted into liposomes, the tricarboxylate transport protein catalyzed a 1,2,3-benzenetricarboxylate-sensitive citrate/citrate exchange. We obtained a 1070-fold purification with respect to the mitochondrial extract, the recovery was 22% and the protein yield 0.02%. The properties of the reconstituted carrier, i.e., requirement for a counteranion, substrate specificity and inhibitor sensitivity, were similar to those of the tricarboxylate transport system as characterized in intact mitochondria.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1988

Purification and reconstitution of two anion carriers from rat liver mitochondria: the dicarboxylate and the 2-oxoglutarate carrier

F. Bisaccia; Cesare Indiveri; Ferdinando Palmieri

Two anion-transporting systems, i.e., the dicarboxylate carrier and the 2-oxoglutarate carrier, have been purified from rat liver mitochondria and functionally identified. The dicarboxylate carrier has been isolated in active form by hydroxyapatite chromatography after partial removal of the solubilizing detergent Triton X-114 from the mitochondrial extract. The SDS gel electrophoresis of this preparation consists mainly of one protein band with an apparent Mr of 28,000, identified as the dicarboxylate carrier. Complete purification of the 28 kDa protein in inactive form has been achieved by sequential chromatography on hydroxyapatite and Celite followed by SDS extraction of the retained protein. The 2-oxoglutarate carrier has been purified by hydroxyapatite chromatography after extensive removal of Triton X-114 from the detergent extract. SDS gel electrophoresis of the purified fraction shows a single band with an apparent Mr of 32,500. When reconstituted into liposomes, the functional properties of the two isolated carrier proteins resemble closely those of the dicarboxylate and the 2-oxoglutarate transport systems characterized in mitochondria.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1984

Specific elution from hydroxylapatite of the mitochondrial phosphate carrier by cardiolipin

F. Bisaccia; Ferdinando Palmieri

The role of cardiolipin in the purification of the mitochondrial phosphate carrier by hydroxylapatite has been investigated. Without added cardiolipin, the reconstituted phosphate-transport activity in the hydroxylapatite eluate is small and only confined to the first fraction. With cardiolipin added to the extract, the eluted activity is much higher and present until fraction 6. The activity retained by hydroxylapatite in the absence of cardiolipin is eluted after addition of this phospholipid to the column. The requirement of added cardiolipin diminishes on increasing the concentration of solubilized mitochondria. The hydroxylapatite eluate contains five protein bands in the Mr-region of 30 000-35 000, which are differently distributed in the various fractions. Among these, only the presence and the relative amount of band 3 of Mr 33 000 corresponds to the phosphate transport activity. Cardiolipin is the only phospholipid tested which causes elution of band 3 from hydroxylapatite; on the other hand, it prevents the elution of band 2 and retards that of band 5 (the ADP/ATP carrier). Band 1 starts to appear in the second fraction even without cardiolipin. On increasing the concentration of cardiolipin, in the first fraction of the hydroxylapatite eluate band 3 increases and the contamination of band 4 decreases. Under optimal conditions a preparation of band 3 about 90% pure and with high reconstituted phosphate transport activity is obtained. It is concluded that the elution of the phosphate carrier from hydroxylapatite requires cardiolipin and that the phosphate carrier is identical with (or with part of) band 3 of the hydroxylapatite eluate.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990

KINETIC CHARACTERIZATION OF THE RECONSTITUTED TRICARBOXYLATE CARRIER FROM RAT LIVER MITOCHONDRIA

F. Bisaccia; A. De Palma; G. Prezioso; Ferdinando Palmieri

The tricarboxylate carrier from rat liver mitochondria was purified by chromatography on hydroxyapatite/celite and reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles by removing the detergent using hydrophobic chromatography on Amberlite. Optimal transport activity was obtained by using a Triton X-114/phospholipid ratio of 0.8, 6% cardiolipin and 24 passages through a single Amberlite column. In the reconstituted system the incorporated tricarboxylate carrier catalyzed a first-order reaction of citrate/citrate or citrate/malate exchange. The activation energy of the exchange reaction was 70.1 kJ/mol. The rate of the exchange had a pH optimum between 7 and 8. The half-saturation constant was 0.13 mM for citrate and 0.76 mM for malate. All these properties were similar to those described for the tricarboxylate transport system in intact mitochondria. In proteoliposomes the maximum exchange rate at 25 degrees C reached 2000 mumols/min per g protein. This value was independent of the type of substrate present at the external or internal space of the liposomes (citrate or malate).


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987

Kinetics of the reconstituted 2-oxoglutarate carrier from bovine heart mitochondria

Cesare Indiveri; Ferdinando Palmieri; F. Bisaccia; Reinhard Krämer

The 2-oxoglutarate carrier from the inner membrane of bovine heart mitochondria was purified by chromatography on hydroxyapatite/celite and reconstituted with egg yolk phospholipid vesicles by the freeze-thaw-sonication technique. In the reconstituted system the incorporated 2-oxoglutarate carrier catalyzed a first-order reaction of 2-oxoglutarate/2-oxoglutarate exchange. The substrate affinity for 2-oxoglutarate was determined to be 65 +/- 18 microM (15 determinations) and the maximum exchange rate at 25 degrees C reaches 4000-22,000 mumol/min per g protein, in dependence of the particular reconstitution conditions. The activation energy of the exchange reaction is 54.3 kJ/mol. The transport is independent of pH in the range between 6 and 8. When the first fraction of the hydroxyapatite/celite column eluate was used for reconstitution, besides the 2-oxoglutarate/2-oxoglutarate exchange, a significant activity of unidirectional uptake was observed. This activity may be due to a population of the carrier protein which is in a different state.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1993

Transmembrane Topology, Genes, and Biogenesis of the Mitochondrial Phosphate and Oxoglutarate Carriers.

Ferdinando Palmieri; F. Bisaccia; Loredana Capobianco; V. Dolce; Giuseppe Fiermonte; Vito Iacobazzi; V. Zara

Phosphate and oxoglutarate carriers transport phosphate and oxoglutarate across the inner membranes of mitochondria in exchange for OH− and malate, respectively. Both carriers belong to the mitochondrial carrier protein family, characterized by a tripartite structure made up of related sequences about 100 amino acids in length. The results obtained on the topology of the phosphate and oxoglutarate carriers are consistent with the six α-helix model proposed by Saraste and Walker. In both carriers the N- and C-terminal regions are exposed toward the cytosol. In addition, the oxoglutarate carrier has been shown to be a dimer by means of cross-linking studies. The bovine and human genes coding for the oxoglutarate carrier are split into eight and six exons, respectively, and five introns are found in the same position in both genes. The bovine and human phosphate carrier genes have the same organization with nine exons separated by eight introns at exactly the same positions. The phosphate carrier of mammalian mitochondria is synthesized with a cleavable presequence, in contrast to the oxoglutarate carrier and the other members of the mitochondrial carrier family. The precursor of the phosphate carrier is efficiently imported, proteolytically processed, and correctly assembled in isolated mitochondria. The presequence-deficient phosphate carrier is imported with an efficiency of about 50% as compared with the precursor of the phosphate carrier and is correctly assembled, demonstrating that the mature portion of the phosphate carrier contains sufficient information for import and assembly into mitochondria.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1993

REACTION-MECHANISM OF THE RECONSTITUTED TRICARBOXYLATE CARRIER FROM RAT-LIVER MITOCHONDRIA

F. Bisaccia; A. De Palma; Thomas Dierks; Reinhard Krämer; Ferdinando Palmieri

Transport of citrate and malate by the tricarboxylate carrier from rat liver mitochondria has been studied in a reconstituted system. Homologous citrate/citrate antiport and heterologous (electroneutral) citrate/malate antiport was kinetically analyzed. The maximal rates of the two exchange modes did not vary significantly within pH 7.0 to 7.8 which is the optimum pH-range for transport activity. On the other hand, the apparent transport affinity varied considerably within this range. Calculations on the basis of the different pK values for citrate and malate indicate that only H-citrate2- and malate2- are accepted as transport species by the tricarboxylate carrier. A complete set of half-saturation constants was established for citrate and malate on both the external and the internal side of the membrane. Both the Km and Vmax for citrate and malate were independent of the nature of the countersubstrate at the other side of the membrane. Bisubstrate initial velocity analyses of the exchange reaction resulted in a kinetic pattern which is consistent with a sequential antiport mechanism. This type of mechanism implies formation of a ternary complex of the carrier with two substrate molecules before the transport reaction occurs. Thus the tricarboxylate carrier falls into the functional family of mitochondrial carrier proteins showing sequential transport mechanisms.


FEBS Letters | 1995

The N- and C-termini of the tricarboxylate carrier are exposed to the cytoplasmic side of the inner mitochondrial membrane.

L. Capobianco; F. Bisaccia; A. Michel; Francis Sluse; Ferdinando Palmieri

Polyclonal antibodies were raised in rabbits against two synthetic peptides corresponding to the N‐ and C‐terminal regions of the rat‐liver mitochondria) tricarboxylate carrier. ELISA tests performed with intact and permeabilized rat‐liver mitoplasts showed that both anti‐N‐terminal and anti‐C‐terminal antibodies bind only to the cytoplasmic surface of the inner membrane, indicating that both termini of the membrane‐bound tricarboxylate carrier are exposed to the mitochondria) intermembrane space. Furthermore, tryptic digestion of intact mitoplasts markedly decreased the binding of anti‐N‐terminal and anti‐C‐terminal antibodies to the tricarboxylate carrier. These results are consistent with an arrangement of the tricarboxylate carrier monomer into an even number of transmembrane segments, with the N‐ and C‐termini protruding toward the cytosol.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1996

The formation of a disulfide cross-link between the two subunits demonstrates the dimeric structure of the mitochondrial oxoglutarate carrier

F. Bisaccia; V. Zara; Loredana Capobianco; Vito Iacobazzi; M. Mazzeo; Ferdinando Palmieri

Isolated oxoglutarate carrier (OGC) can be cross-linked to dimers by disulfide-forming reagents such as Cu2+-phenanthroline and diamide. Acetone and other solvents increase the extent of Cu2+ -phenanthroline-induced cross-linking of OGC. Cross-linked OGC re-incorporated in proteoliposomes fully retains the oxoglutarate transport activity. The amount of cross-linked OGC calculated by densitometry of scanned gels depends on the method of staining, since cross-linked OGC exhibits a higher sensitivity to Coomassie brilliant blue as compared to silver nitrate. Under optimal conditions the formation of cross-linked OGC dimer (stained with Coomassie brilliant blue) amounts to 75% of the total protein. Approximately the same cross-linking efficiency was evaluated from Western blots. Cross-linking of OGC is prevented by SH reagents and reversed by SH-reducing reagents, which shows that it is mediated by disulfide bridge(s). The formation of S-S bridge(s) requires the native state of the protein, since it is suppressed by SDS and by heating. Furthermore, the extent of cross-linking is independent of OGC concentration indicating that disulfide bridge(s) must be formed between the two subunits of native dimers. The number and localization of disulfide bridge(s) in the cross-linked OGC were examined by peptide fragmentation and subsequent cleavage of disulfide bond(s) by beta-mercaptoethanol. Our experimental results show that cross-linking of OGC is accomplished by a single disulfide bond between the cysteines 184 of the two subunits and suggest that these residues in the putative transmembrane helix four are fairly close to the twofold axis of the native dimer structure.

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