Francesca Ghezzo
University of Padua
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Publication
Featured researches published by Francesca Ghezzo.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Antonella Pasquato; Philomena Pullikotil; Marie-Claude Asselin; Manuela Vacatello; Livio Paolillo; Francesca Ghezzo; Federica Basso; Carlo Di Bello; Monica Dettin; Nabil G. Seidah
Herein we designed, synthesized, tested, and validated fluorogenic methylcoumarinamide (MCA) and chloromethylketone-peptides spanning the Lassa virus GPC cleavage site as substrates and inhibitors for the proprotein convertase SKI-1/S1P. The 7-mer MCA (YISRRLL-MCA) and 8-mer MCA (IYISRRLL-MCA) are very efficiently cleaved with respect to both the 6-mer MCA (ISRRLL-MCA) and point mutated fluorogenic analogues, except for the 7-mer mutant Y253F. The importance of the P7 phenylic residue was confirmed by digestions of two 16-mer non-fluorogenic peptidyl substrates that differ by a single point mutation (Y253A). Because NMR analysis of these 16-mer peptides did not reveal significant structural differences at recognition motif RRLL, the P7 Tyr residue is likely important in establishing key interactions within the catalytic pocket of SKI-1. Based on these data, we established through analysis of pro-ATF6 and pro-SREBP-2 cellular processing that decanoylated chloromethylketone 7-mer, 6-mer, and 4-mer peptides containing the core RRLL sequence are irreversible and potent ex vivo SKI-1 inhibitors. Although caution must be exercised in using these inhibitors in in vitro reactions, as they can also inhibit the basic amino acid-specific convertase furin, within cells and when used at concentrations ≤100 μm these inhibitors are relatively specific for inhibition of SKI-1 processing events, as opposed to those performed by furin-like convertases.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2011
Paola Brun; Francesca Ghezzo; Martina Roso; Roberta Danesin; Giorgio Palù; Andrea Bagno; Michele Modesti; Ignazio Castagliuolo; Monica Dettin
Structural, mechanical and biochemical properties have to be considered when searching for suitable extracellular matrix substitutes. Fibrous structures of synthetic or natural polymers have received increasing interest as three-dimensional scaffolds for tissue engineering applications as they can be easily produced by electrospinning with different topographical features by changing the process parameters. On the other hand, the nanobiotechnology approach suggests mimicking molecular architectures in nature through self-assembly. In particular, self-assembling peptide-based biomaterials have been successfully used as scaffolds for cell growth. In order to amalgamate these two strategies nanofibrous electrospun scaffolds of hybrid polymer were designed and obtained by mixing poly(ethylene oxide) and self-assembling peptides in aqueous solution. The results of in vitro osteoblast adhesion and proliferation assays on the electrospun scaffolds obtained using different self-assembling peptide sequences are discussed.
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2009
Monica Dettin; Thushari Herath; Roberta Gambaretto; Giovanna Iucci; Chiara Battocchio; Andrea Bagno; Francesca Ghezzo; Carlo Di Bello; G. Polzonetti; Lucy Di Silvio
Bioactive molecules have been proposed to promote beneficial interactions at bone-implant interfaces for enhancing integration. The main objective of this study was to develop novel methods to functionalize oxidized titanium surfaces by the covalent immobilization of bioactive peptides, through selective reaction involving single functional groups. In the first protocol, an aminoalkylsilane was covalently linked to the Ti oxide layer, followed by covalent binding of glutaric anhydride to the free NH(2) groups. The carboxylic group of glutaric anhydride was used to condense the free N-terminal group of the side-chain protected peptide sequence. Finally, the surface was treated with trifluoroacetic acid to deprotect side-chain groups. In the second protocol, the peptide was directly anchored to the Ti oxide surface via UV activation of an arylazide peptide analogue. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analyses confirmed that modifications induced onto surface composition were in agreement with the reactions performed. The peptide density of each biomimetic surface was determined on the basis of radiolabeling and XPS derived reaction yields. The in vitro cellular response of the biomimetic surfaces was evaluated using a primary human osteoblast cell model. Cell adhesion, proliferation, differentiation, and mineralization were examined at initial-, short-, and long-time periods. In was shown that the biomimetic surface obtained through photoprobe-marked analogue that combines an easily-performed modification provides a favorable surface for an enhanced cellular response.
Bone | 2012
Roberta Danesin; Paola Brun; Martina Roso; Florian Delaunay; Valérie Samouillan; Katya Brunelli; Giovanna Iucci; Francesca Ghezzo; Michele Modesti; Ignazio Castagliuolo; Monica Dettin
Electrospun polycaprolactone (PCL) is able to support the adhesion and growth of h-osteoblasts and to delay their degradation rate to a greater extent with respect to other polyesters. The drawbacks linked to its employment in regenerative medicine arise from its hydrophobic nature and the lack of biochemical signals linked to it. This work reports on the attempt to add five different self-assembling (SA) peptides to PCL solutions before electrospinning. The hybrid scaffolds obtained had regular fibers (SEM analysis) whose diameters were similar to those of the extracellular matrix, more stable hydrophilic (contact angle measurement) surfaces, and an amorphous phase constrained by peptides (DSC analysis). They appeared to have a notable capacity to promote the h-osteoblast adhesion and differentiation process by increasing the gene expression of alkaline phosphatase, bone sialoprotein, and osteopontin. Adding an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) motif to a self-assembling sequence was found to enhance cell adhesion, while the same motif condensed with a scrambled sequence did not, indicating that there is a cooperative effect between RGD and 3D architecture created by the self-assembling peptides. The study demonstrates that self-assembling peptide scaffolds are still able to promote beneficial effects on h-osteoblasts even after they have been included in electrospun polycaprolactone. The possibility of linking biochemical messages to self-assembling peptides could lead the way to a 3D decoration of fibrous scaffolds.
Journal of Peptide Science | 2010
Maria Teresa Conconi; Francesca Ghezzo; Monica Dettin; Luca Urbani; Claudio Grandi; Diego Guidolin; Beatrice Nico; Carlo Di Bello; Domenico Ribatti; Pier Paolo Parnigotto
It is well known that tumor growth is strictly dependent on neo‐vessel formation inside the tumor mass and that cell adhesion is required to allow EC proliferation and migration inside the tumor. In this work, we have evaluated the in vitro and in vivo effects on angiogenesis of some peptides, originally designed to promote cell adhesion on biomaterials, containing RGD motif mediating cell adhesion via integrin receptors [RGD, GRGDSPK, and (GRGDSP)4K] or the heparin‐binding sequence of human vitronectin that interacts with HSPGs [HVP(351–359)]. Cell adhesion, proliferation, migration, and capillary‐like tube formation in Matrigel were determined on HUVECs, whereas the effects on in vivo angiogenesis were evaluated using the CAM assay. (GRGDSP)4K linear sequence inhibited cell adhesion, decreased cell proliferation, migration and morphogenesis in Matrigel, and induced anti‐angiogenic responses on CAM at higher degree than that determined after incubation with RGD or GRGDSPK. Moreover, it counteracted both in vitro and in vivo the pro‐angiogenic effects induced by the Fibroblast growth factor (FGF‐2). On the other hand, HVP was not able to affect cell adhesion and appeared less effective than (GRGDSP)4K. Our data indicate that the activity of RGD‐containing peptides is related to their adhesive properties, and their effects are modulated by the number of cell adhesion motifs and the aminoacidic residues next to these sequences. The anti‐angiogenic properties of (GRGDSP)4K seem to depend on its interaction with integrins, whereas the effects of HVP may be partially due to an impairment of HSPGs/FGF‐2. Copyright
Acta Biomaterialia | 2013
Paola Brun; Michele Scorzeto; Stefano Vassanelli; Ignazio Castagliuolo; Giorgio Palù; Francesca Ghezzo; Grazia M. L. Messina; Giovanna Iucci; Valentina Battaglia; Stefano Sivolella; Andrea Bagno; G. Polzonetti; Giovanni Marletta; Monica Dettin
The features of implant devices and the reactions of bone-derived cells to foreign surfaces determine implant success during osseointegration. In an attempt to better understand the mechanisms underlying osteoblasts attachment and spreading, in this study adhesive peptides containing the fibronectin sequence motif for integrin binding (Arg-Gly-Asp, RGD) or mapping the human vitronectin protein (HVP) were grafted on glass and titanium surfaces with or without chemically induced controlled immobilization. As shown by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, human osteoblasts develop adhesion patches only on specifically immobilized peptides. Indeed, cells quickly develop focal adhesions on RGD-grafted surfaces, while HVP peptide promotes filopodia, structures involved in cellular spreading. As indicated by immunocytochemistry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction, focal adhesions kinase activation is delayed on HVP peptides with respect to RGD while an osteogenic phenotypic response appears within 24h on osteoblasts cultured on both peptides. Cellular pathways underlying osteoblasts attachment are, however, different. As demonstrated by adhesion blocking assays, integrins are mainly involved in osteoblast adhesion to RGD peptide, while HVP selects osteoblasts for attachment through proteoglycan-mediated interactions. Thus an interfacial layer of an endosseous device grafted with specifically immobilized HVP peptide not only selects the attachment and supports differentiation of osteoblasts but also promotes cellular migration.
Cellular Immunology | 2011
Monica Dettin; Francesca Ghezzo; Maria Teresa Conconi; Luca Urbani; Gabriella D’Auria; Lucia Falcigno; Diego Guidolin; Beatrice Nico; Domenico Ribatti; Carlo Di Bello; Pier Paolo Parnigotto
Thymosin-β4 (Tβ4) is a G-actin sequestering peptide involved in regeneration and remodeling of injured tissues. In this work, we have designed and synthesized three peptide sequences containing the N-terminus (TYB4-n), the central part (TYB4-i) or the C-terminus (TYB4-c) of Tβ4. All fragments are overlapping on the main central binding actin site. After a structural characterization, we have evaluated in vitro and in vivo their pro-angiogenic effects. The results of this study have shown that: (i) each fragment reproduces the native conformation; (ii) Tβ4-derived peptides exert both in vitro and in vivo pro-angiogenic effects; (iii) their in vitro effect seem to be related to the activation of several signaling pathways and is positively modulated by the N-terminus of Tβ4.
V INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TIMES OF POLYMERS (TOP) AND COMPOSITES | 2010
G. Iucci; G. Polzonetti; Francesca Ghezzo; Michele Modesti; Martina Roso; Monica Dettin
The immobilization of an oligopeptide, mimicking the adhesion sequence of fibronectin, on the surface of polymer films prepared by electrospinning was investigated by XPS spectroscopy. Films of polycaprolactone (PCL) and poly(l‐lactide‐caprolactone) [P(LLA‐CL)] were prepared by electrospinning onto aluminium substrates. A modified adhesion peptide containing a photoreactive group was immobilized on the surface of the polymer nanofibers by incubation in peptide solution and subsequent UV irradiation. XPS analysis yield evidence of successful peptide immobilization on the polymer surface; the amount of immobilized peptide increases with the concentration of the mother solution.
Solid State Sciences | 2010
G. Iucci; Chiara Battocchio; Monica Dettin; Francesca Ghezzo; G. Polzonetti
Tissue Engineering Part A | 2012
Alessandro Gandaglia; Rocio Huerta-Cantillo; Marina Comisso; Roberta Danesin; Francesca Ghezzo; Filippo Naso; Alessandra Gastaldello; Eleonora Schittullo; Edward Buratto; Michele Spina; Gino Gerosa; Monica Dettin