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Dive into the research topics where Fabio Altieri is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabio Altieri.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2002

Proteins of the PDI family: Unpredicted non-ER locations and functions

Carlo Turano; Sabina Coppari; Fabio Altieri; Anna Ferraro

Protein disulfide isomerases (PDIs) constitute a family of structurally related enzymes which catalyze disulfide bonds formation, reduction, or isomerization of newly synthesized proteins in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). They act also as chaperones, and are, therefore, part of a quality‐control system for the correct folding of the proteins in the same subcellular compartment. While their functions in the ER have been thoroughly studied, much less is known about their roles in non‐ER locations, where, however, they have been shown to be involved in important biological processes. At least three proteins of this family from higher vertebrates have been found in unusual locations (i.e., the cell surface, the extracellular space, the cytosol, and the nucleus), reached through an export mechanism which has not yet been understood. In some cases their function in the non‐ER location is clearly related to their redox properties, but in most cases their mechanism of action has still to be disclosed, although their propensity to associate with other proteins or even with DNA might be the main factor responsible for their activities.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2008

DNA Damage and Repair: From Molecular Mechanisms to Health Implications

Fabio Altieri; Caterina Grillo; Manola Maceroni; Silvia Chichiarelli

DNA is subjected to several modifications, resulting from endogenous and exogenous sources. The cell has developed a network of complementary DNA-repair mechanisms, and in the human genome, >130 genes have been found to be involved. Knowledge about the basic mechanisms for DNA repair has revealed an unexpected complexity, with overlapping specificity within the same pathway, as well as extensive functional interactions between proteins involved in repair pathways. Unrepaired or improperly repaired DNA lesions have serious potential consequences for the cell, leading to genomic instability and deregulation of cellular functions. A number of disorders or syndromes, including several cancer predispositions and accelerated aging, are linked to an inherited defect in one of the DNA-repair pathways. Genomic instability, a characteristic of most human malignancies, can also arise from acquired defects in DNA repair, and the specific pathway affected is predictive of types of mutations, tumor drug sensitivity, and treatment outcome. Although DNA repair has received little attention as a determinant of drug sensitivity, emerging knowledge of mutations and polymorphisms in key human DNA-repair genes may provide a rational basis for improved strategies for therapeutic interventions on a number of tumors and degenerative disorders.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Heterochromatin Protein 1 (HP1a) Positively Regulates Euchromatic Gene Expression through RNA Transcript Association and Interaction with hnRNPs in Drosophila

Lucia Piacentini; Laura Fanti; Rodolfo Negri; Valerio Del Vescovo; Alessandro Fatica; Fabio Altieri; Sergio Pimpinelli

Heterochromatin Protein 1 (HP1a) is a well-known conserved protein involved in heterochromatin formation and gene silencing in different species including humans. A general model has been proposed for heterochromatin formation and epigenetic gene silencing in different species that implies an essential role for HP1a. According to the model, histone methyltransferase enzymes (HMTases) methylate the histone H3 at lysine 9 (H3K9me), creating selective binding sites for itself and the chromodomain of HP1a. This complex is thought to form a higher order chromatin state that represses gene activity. It has also been found that HP1a plays a role in telomere capping. Surprisingly, recent studies have shown that HP1a is present at many euchromatic sites along polytene chromosomes of Drosophila melanogaster, including the developmental and heat-shock-induced puffs, and that this protein can be removed from these sites by in vivo RNase treatment, thus suggesting an association of HP1a with the transcripts of many active genes. To test this suggestion, we performed an extensive screening by RIP-chip assay (RNA–immunoprecipitation on microarrays), and we found that HP1a is associated with transcripts of more than one hundred euchromatic genes. An expression analysis in HP1a mutants shows that HP1a is required for positive regulation of these genes. Cytogenetic and molecular assays show that HP1a also interacts with the well known proteins DDP1, HRB87F, and PEP, which belong to different classes of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) involved in RNA processing. Surprisingly, we found that all these hnRNP proteins also bind heterochromatin and are dominant suppressors of position effect variegation. Together, our data show novel and unexpected functions for HP1a and hnRNPs proteins. All these proteins are in fact involved both in RNA transcript processing and in heterochromatin formation. This suggests that, in general, similar epigenetic mechanisms have a significant role on both RNA and heterochromatin metabolisms.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2002

Nuclear localization and DNA interaction of protein disulfide isomerase ERp57 in mammalian cells

Sabina Coppari; Fabio Altieri; Anna Ferraro; Silvia Chichiarelli; Margherita Eufemi; Carlo Turano

Protein disulfide isomerase ERp57 is localized predominantly in the endoplasmic reticulum, but is also present in the cytosol and, according to preliminary evidence, in the nucleus of avian cells. Conclusive evidence of its nuclear localization and of its interaction with DNA in vivo in mammalian cells is provided here on the basis of DNA–protein cross‐linking experiments performed with two different cross‐linking agents on viable HeLa and 3T3 cells. Nuclear ERp57 could also be detected by immunofluorescence in HeLa cells, where it showed an intracellular distribution clearly different from that of an homologous protein, located exclusively in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mammalian ERp57 resembles the avian protein in its recognition of S/MAR‐like DNA sequences and in its association with the nuclear matrix. It can be hypothesized that ERp57, which is known to associate with other proteins, in particular STAT3 and calreticulin, may contribute to their nuclear import, DNA binding, or other functions that they fulfil inside the nucleus. J. Cell. Biochem. 85: 325–333, 2002.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011

Knock-in reconstitution studies reveal an unexpected role of Cys-65 in regulating APE1/Ref-1 subcellular trafficking and function

Carlo Vascotto; Elena Bisetto; Mengxia Li; Leo Zeef; Chiara D'Ambrosio; Rossana Domenis; Marina Comelli; Daniela Delneri; Andrea Scaloni; Fabio Altieri; Irene Mavelli; Franco Quadrifoglio; Mark R. Kelley; Gianluca Tell

The multifunctional APE1 protein is required for tumor progression and is associated with cancer resistance. It is shown that APE1 presents structural elements that function in distinct cellular roles, highlighting the molecular determinants of the multifunctional nature of this protein and providing the basis for a new role of the C65 residue.


Cancer Letters | 2008

Endogenous reverse transcriptase as a mediator of ursolic acid’s anti-proliferative and differentiating effects in human cancer cell lines

Irene Bonaccorsi; Fabio Altieri; Ilaria Sciamanna; Elisa Oricchio; Caterina Grillo; Giuseppe Contartese; E. M. Galati

Ursolic acid (UA) is a pentacyclic triterpenoid compound that is widely distributed in the plant kingdom and has a broad range of biological effects. Here, we examined the effects of UA on the proliferation and differentiation of human tumor cell lines from melanoma (A375), glioblastoma (U87) and thyroid anaplastic carcinoma (ARO), and on the proliferation of a non-transformed human fibroblast cell line (WI-38). The results show that UA inhibits tumor cell proliferation in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Consistent with this finding, UA treatment promotes differentiation of all of the analyzed tumor cell lines. Interestingly, we found that UA inhibits the endogenous reverse transcriptase (RT) activity in tumor cells, which has recently been shown to be involved in the control of proliferation and differentiation of neoplastic cells. Considering these findings, we suggest that the observed anti-proliferative and differentiating effects of UA may be related to this target.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2007

The stress protein ERp57/GRP58 binds specific DNA sequences in HeLa cells

Silvia Chichiarelli; Anna Ferraro; Fabio Altieri; Margherita Eufemi; Sabina Coppari; Caterina Grillo; Valentina Arcangeli; Carlo Turano

The protein ERp57/GRP58 is a member of the protein disulfide isomerase family and is also a glucose‐regulated protein, which, together with the other GRPs, is induced by a variety of cellular stress conditions. ERp57/GRP58 is mainly located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), but has also been found in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus, where it can bind DNA. In order to identify a possible correlation between the stress‐response and the nuclear location of ERp57/GRP58, its binding sites on DNA in HeLa cells have been searched by chromatin immunoprecipitation and cloning of the immunoprecipitated DNA fragments. Following sequencing of the cloned fragments, 10 DNA sequences have been securely identified as in vivo targets of ERp57/GRP58. Nine of them are present in the non‐coding regions of identified genes, and seven of these in introns. The features of some of these DNA sequences, that is, DNase hypersensitivity, proximity of MAR regions, and homology to the non‐coding regions of orthologue genes of mouse or rat, are compatible with a gene expression regulatory function. Considering the nature of the genes concerned, two of which code for DNA repair proteins, we would suggest that at least part of the mechanism of action of ERp57/GRP58 takes place through the regulation of these, and possibly other still unidentified, stress‐response genes. J. Cell. Physiol. 210: 343–351, 2007.


RNA | 2000

Fibrillarin binds directly and specifically to U16 box C/D snoRNA

Alessandro Fatica; Silvia Galardi; Fabio Altieri; Irene Bozzoni

Eukaryotic nucleoli contain a large family of box C/D small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein complexes (snoRNPs) that are involved in processing and site-specific methylation of pre-rRNA. Several proteins have been reported to be common factors of box C/D snoRNPs in lower and higher eukaryotes; nevertheless none of them has been clearly shown to directly interact with RNA. We previously identified in Xenopus laevis, by means of UV crosslinking in vivo, two proteins associated with box C/D snoRNAs, fibrillarin and p68. Here we show that fibrillarin interacts directly and specifically with the U16 box C/D snoRNA in a X. laevis oocyte nuclear extract and that it does not require p68 for binding. Specific binding is also obtained with a recombinant fibrillarin demonstrating that the protein is able to bind directly and specifically to U16 snoRNA by itself.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

A Strategic Protein in Cytochrome c Maturation THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE OF CcmH AND BINDING TO APOCYTOCHROME c

Adele Di Matteo; Stefano Gianni; M. Eugenia Schininà; Alessandra Giorgi; Fabio Altieri; Nicoletta Calosci; Maurizio Brunori; Carlo Travaglini-Allocatelli

CcmH (cytochromes c maturation protein H) is an essential component of the assembly line necessary for the maturation of c-type cytochromes in the periplasm of Gram-negative bacteria. The protein is a membrane-anchored thiol-oxidoreductase that has been hypothesized to be involved in the recognition and reduction of apocytochrome c, a prerequisite for covalent heme attachment. Here, we present the 1.7Å crystal structure of the soluble periplasmic domain of CcmH from the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa-CcmH*). The protein contains a three-helix bundle, i.e. a fold that is different from that of all other thiol-oxidoreductases reported so far. The catalytic Cys residues of the conserved LRCXXC motif (Cys25 and Cys28), located in a long loop connecting the first two helices, form a disulfide bond in the oxidized enzyme. We have determined the pKa values of these 2 Cys residues of Pa-CcmH* (both >8) and propose a possible mechanistic role for a conserved Ser36 and a water molecule in the active site. The interaction between Pa-CcmH* and Pa-apocyt c551 (where cyt c551 represents cytochrome c551) was characterized in vitro following the binding kinetics by stopped-flow using a Trp-containing fluorescent variant of Pa-CcmH* and a dansylated peptide, mimicking the apocytochrome c551 heme binding motif. The kinetic results show that the protein has a moderate affinity to its apocyt substrate, consistent with the role of Pa-CcmH as an intermediate component of the assembly line for c-type cytochrome biogenesis.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 1999

Binding of the protein disulfide isomerase isoform ERp60 to the nuclear matrix-associated regions of DNA.

Anna Ferraro; Fabio Altieri; Sabina Coppari; Margherita Eufemi; Silvia Chichiarelli; Carlo Turano

Protein ERp60, previously found in the internal nuclear matrix in chicken liver nuclei, is a member of the protein disulfide isomerase family. It binds DNA and double helical polynucleotides in vitro with a preferential recognition toward the matrix‐associated regions of DNA and poly(dA)·poly(dT), and its binding is inhibited by distamycin. ERp60 can be cross‐linked chemically to DNA in the intact nuclei, suggesting that its association with DNA is present in vivo. As a whole, these results indicate that ERp60 is a component of the subset of nuclear matrix proteins that are responsible for the attachment of DNA to the nuclear matrix and for the formation of DNA loops. A distinctive feature of this protein, which has two thioredoxin‐like sites, is that its affinity to poly(dA)·poly(dT) is strongly dependent on its redox state. Only its oxidized form, in fact, does it bind poly(dA)·poly(dT). The hypothesis can be made that through the intervention of ERp60, the redox state of the nucleus influences the formation or the stability of some selected nuclear matrix–DNA interactions. J. Cell. Biochem. 72:528–539, 1999.

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Margherita Eufemi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Carlo Turano

Sapienza University of Rome

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Anna Ferraro

Sapienza University of Rome

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Caterina Grillo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Laura Cervoni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Elisa Gaucci

Sapienza University of Rome

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Sabina Coppari

Sapienza University of Rome

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Rossana Cocchiola

Sapienza University of Rome

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Anna Giartosio

Sapienza University of Rome

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