Fabrizio Gangemi
University of Brescia
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Featured researches published by Fabrizio Gangemi.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Fabrizio Gangemi; Giovanna Longhi; Sergio Abbate; Roberto Cordone; Gian Paolo Ghilardi; Sandro L. Fornili
We have performed 75-ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of aqueous solutions of a 26-unit NIPAAm oligomer at two temperatures, 302 and 315 K, below and above the experimentally determined lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of p(NIPAAm). We have been able to show that at 315 K the oligomer assumes a compact form, while it keeps a more extended form at 302 K. A similar behavior has been demonstrated for a similar NIPAAm oligomer, where two units had been substituted by methacryloyl-l-valine (MAVA) comonomers, one of them being charged and one neutral. For another analogous oligomer, where the same units had been substituted by methacryloyl-l-leucine (MALEU) comonomers, no transition from the extended to the more compact conformation has been found within the same simulation time. Statistical analysis of the trajectories indicates that this transition is related to the dynamics of the oligomer backbone, and to the formation of intramolecular hydrogen bonds and water-bridges between distant units of the solute. In the MAVA case, we have also evidenced an important role of the neutral MAVA comonomer in stabilizing the compact coiled structure. In the MALEU case, the corresponding comonomer is not equally efficacious and, possibly, is even hindering the readjustment of the oligomer backbone. Finally the self-diffusion coefficient of water molecules surrounding the oligomers at the two temperatures for selected relevant times is observed to characteristically depend on the distance from the solute molecules.
Chirality | 2009
Sergio Abbate; Ettore Castiglioni; Fabrizio Gangemi; Roberto Gangemi; Giovanna Longhi
The first well documented experiments of Near Infrared Vibrational Circular Dichroism (NIR-VCD) were performed around 1975. We review the thirty year history of NIR-VCD, encompassing both instrumental development and theoretical/computational methods that allow interpretation of experimental spectra, harvesting useful structural information therefrom. We hope to stimulate interest in this still scarcely explored spectroscopy of chiral molecules.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017
Fernando Carmona; Maura Poli; Michela Bertuzzi; Alessandra Gianoncelli; Fabrizio Gangemi; Paolo Arosio
The high stability and strong self-assembly properties made ferritins the most used proteins for nanotechnological applications. Human ferritins are made of 24 subunits of the H- and L-type that coassemble in an almost spherical nanocage 12nm across, delimiting a large cavity. The mechanism and kinetics of ferritin self-assembly and why H/L heteropolymers formation is favored over the homopolymers remain unclarified. In order to study this, we used the Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) tool by binding multiple donor or acceptor Alexa Fluor fluorophores on the outer surface of human H and L ferritins and then denaturing and reassembling them in different proportions and conditions. The FRET efficiency increase from <0.3 of the disassembled to >0.7 in the assembled allowed to study the assembly kinetics. We found that their assembly was complete in about one hour, and that the initial rate of self-assembly of H/L heteropolymers was slightly faster than that of the H/H homopolymers. Then, by adding various proportions of unlabeled H or L-chains to the FRET system we found that the presence of the L-chains displaced the formation of H-H dimers more efficiently than that of the H-chains. This favored formation of H/L heterodimers, which is the initial step in ferritin self-assembly, contributes to explain the preferred formation of H/L heteropolymers over the H or L homopolymers. Moreover, we found that the H-chains arrange at distant positions on the heteropolymeric shell until they reach a number above eight, when they start to co-localize.
FEBS Journal | 2017
Elena Miranda; Ilaria Ferrarotti; Romina Berardelli; Mattia Laffranchi; Marta Cerea; Fabrizio Gangemi; Imran Haq; Stefania Ottaviani; David A. Lomas; James A. Irving; Annamaria Fra
Severe alpha‐1‐antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is most frequently associated with the alpha‐1‐antitrypsin (AAT) Z variant (E342K). ZZ homozygotes exhibit accumulation of AAT as polymers in the endoplasmic reticulum of hepatocytes. This protein deposition can lead to liver disease, with the resulting low circulating levels of AAT predisposing to early‐onset emphysema due to dysregulation of elastinolytic activity in the lungs. An increasing number of rare AAT alleles have been identified in patients with severe AATD, typically in combination with the Z allele. Here we report a new mutation (E75V) in a patient with severe plasma deficiency, which we designate Trento. In contrast to the Z mutant, Trento AAT was secreted efficiently when expressed in cellular models but showed compromised conformational stability. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and ELISA‐based analyses of the secreted protein revealed the presence of oligomeric species with electrophoretic and immunorecognition profiles different from those of Z and S (E264V) AAT polymers, including reduced recognition by conformational monoclonal antibodies 2C1 and 4B12. This altered recognition was not due to direct effects on the epitope of the 2C1 monoclonal antibody which we localized between helices E and F. Structural analyses indicate the likely basis for polymer formation is the loss of a highly conserved stabilizing interaction between helix C and the posthelix I loop. These results highlight this region as important for maintaining native state stability and, when compromised, results in the formation of pathological polymers that are different from those produced by Z and S AAT.
EPL | 2015
Fabrizio Gangemi; A. Carati; Luigi Galgani; Roberto Gangemi; Alberto Maiocchi
The theoretical dispersion curves (refractive index vs. frequency) of ionic crystals in the infrared domain are expressed, within the Green-Kubo theory, in terms of a time correlation function involving the motion of the ions only. The aim of this paper is to investigate how well the experimental data are reproduced by a classical approximation of the theory, in which the time correlation functions are expressed in terms of the ions orbits. We report the results of molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations for the ions motions of a LiF lattice of 4096 ions at room temperature. The theoretical curves thus obtained are in surprisingly good agreement with the experimental data, essentially over the whole infrared domain. This shows that at room temperature the motion of the ions develops essentially in a classical regime.
Chirality | 2011
Sergio Abbate; Giovanna Longhi; Fabrizio Gangemi; Roberto Gangemi; Stefano Superchi; Anna Maria Caporusso; Renzo Ruzziconi
The IR and Near infrared (NIR) vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectra of molecules endowed with noncentral chirality have been investigated. Data for fundamental, first, and second overtone regions of (S)-2,3-pentadiene, exhibiting axial chirality, and methyl-d(3) (R)- and (S)-[2.2]paracyclophane-4-carboxylate, exhibiting planar chirality have been measured and analyzed. The analysis of NIR and IR VCD spectra was based on the local-mode model and the use of density functional theory (DFT), providing mechanical and electrical anharmonic terms for all CH-bonds. The comparison of experimental and calculated spectra is satisfactory and allows one to monitor fine details in the asymmetric charge distribution in the molecules: these details consist in the harmonic frequencies, in the principal anharmonicity constants, in both the atomic polar and axial tensors and in their first and second derivatives with respect to the CH-stretching coordinates.
EPL | 2016
Fabrizio Gangemi; Roberto Gangemi; A. Carati; Alberto Maiocchi; Luigi Galgani
This paper is concerned with theoretical estimates of the refractive-index curves for quartz, obtained by the Kubo formulae in the classical approximation, through MD simulations for the motions of the ions. Two objectives are considered. The first one is to understand the role of nonlinearities in situations where they are very large, as at the structural phase transition. We show that, on the one hand, they do not play an essential role in connection with the form of the spectra in the infrared. On the other hand, they play an essential role in introducing a chaoticity which involves a definite normal mode. This might explain why that mode is Raman active in the α phase, but not in the β phase. The second objective concerns whether it is possible in a microscopic model to obtain normal mode frequencies, or peak frequencies in the optical spectra, that are in good agreement with the experimental data for quartz. Notwithstanding a lot of effort, we were unable to find results agreeing better than about 6%, as apparently also occurs in the whole available literature. We interpret this fact as indicating that some essential qualitative feature is lacking in all models which consider, as the present one, only short-range repulsive potentials and unretarded long-range electric forces.
Regular & Chaotic Dynamics | 2016
A. Carati; Luigi Galgani; Alberto Maiocchi; Fabrizio Gangemi; Roberto Gangemi
A review is given of the studies aimed at extending to the thermodynamic limit stability results of Nekhoroshev type for nearly integrable Hamiltonian systems. The physical relevance of such an extension, i. e., of proving the persistence of regular (or ordered) motions in that limit, is also discussed. This is made in connection both with the old Fermi–Pasta–Ulam problem, which gave origin to such discussions, and with the optical spectral lines, the existence of which was recently proven to be possible in classical models, just in virtue of such a persistence.
bioRxiv | 2018
Mattia Laffranchi; Emma L.K. Elliston; Fabrizio Gangemi; Romina Berardelli; David A. Lomas; James A. Irving; Annamaria Fra
Lung disease in alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) results from dysregulated proteolytic activity, mainly by neutrophil elastase (HNE), in the lung parenchyma. This is the result of a substantial reduction of circulating alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) and the presence in the plasma of inactive polymers of AAT. Moreover, some AAT mutants have reduced intrinsic activity toward HNE, as demonstrated for the common Z mutant, as well as for other rarer variants. Here we report the identification and characterisation of the novel AAT reactive centre loop variant Gly349Arg (p.G373R) present in the ExAC database. This AAT variant is secreted at normal levels in cellular models of AATD but shows a severe reduction in anti-HNE activity. Biochemical and molecular dynamics studies suggest it exhibits unfavourable RCL presentation to cognate proteases and compromised insertion of the RCL into β-sheet A. Identification of a fully dysfunctional AAT mutant that does not show a secretory defect underlines the importance of accurate genotyping of patients with pulmonary AATD manifestations regardless of the presence of normal levels of AAT in the circulation. This subtype of disease is reminiscent of dysfunctional phenotypes in antithrombin and C1-inibitor deficiencies so, accordingly, we classify this variant as the first pure functionally-deficient (type II) AATD mutant.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Chiara Magri; Edoardo Giacopuzzi; Luca La Via; Daniela Bonini; Viola Ravasio; Mohammed E. A. Elhussiny; Flavia Orizio; Fabrizio Gangemi; Paolo Valsecchi; Roberto Bresciani; Alessandro Barbon; Antonio Vita; Massimo Gennarelli
Recently, by whole exome sequencing of schizophrenia (SCZ) patients, we identified a subject that was homozygous for a novel missense substitution (c.391 A > G) in the glutamate acid decarboxylase 1 (GAD1) gene. GAD1 encodes for GAD67 enzyme, catalyzing the production of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) from L-glutamic acid. Here, we studied the impact of this mutation on GAD67 activity, dimerization and subcellular localization. Biochemical assay revealed that c.391 A > G reduces GAD67 enzymatic activity by ~30%, probably due to the impaired homodimerization of homozygous mutants as highlighted by proximity ligation assays. The mutational screening of 120 genes of the “GABAergic system” in a cohort of 4,225 SCZ cases and 5,834 controls (dbGaP: phs000473.v1.p2), did not identify other cases that were homozygous for ultra-rare variants in GAD1, but highlighted an increased frequency of cases that were homozygous for rare variants in genes of the GABA system (SCZ: 0.14% vs. Controls: 0.00%; p-value = 0.0055). In conclusion, this study demonstrates the functional impact of c.391 A > G variant and its biological effect makes it a good candidate as risk variant for SCZ. This study also supports an involvement of ultra-rare variants in GABAergic genes in the etiopathogenesis of SCZ.