Francesco Chemello
University of Padua
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Featured researches published by Francesco Chemello.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Ricardo José Soares; Stefano Cagnin; Francesco Chemello; Matteo Silvestrin; Antonio Musarò; Cristiano De Pittà; Gerolamo Lanfranchi; Marco Sandri
Background: MicroRNAs are important modulators of gene expression but their role in the atrophy program and in muscle loss is unknown. Results: miRNA-206 and miRNA-21 are critical for regulation of the atrophy program after denervation. Conclusion: miRNAs are important for the fine-tuning of the atrophy program. Significance: Modulating miRNA expression is a novel potential therapeutic approach for counteracting muscle loss and weakness in catabolic conditions. Loss of muscle proteins and the consequent weakness has important clinical consequences in diseases such as cancer, diabetes, chronic heart failure, and in aging. In fact, excessive proteolysis causes cachexia, accelerates disease progression, and worsens life expectancy. Muscle atrophy involves a common pattern of transcriptional changes in a small subset of genes named atrophy-related genes or atrogenes. Whether microRNAs play a role in the atrophy program and muscle loss is debated. To understand the involvement of miRNAs in atrophy we performed miRNA expression profiling of mouse muscles under wasting conditions such as fasting, denervation, diabetes, and cancer cachexia. We found that the miRNA signature is peculiar of each catabolic condition. We then focused on denervation and we revealed that changes in transcripts and microRNAs expression did not occur simultaneously but were shifted. Indeed, whereas transcriptional control of the atrophy-related genes peaks at 3 days, changes of miRNA expression maximized at 7 days after denervation. Among the different miRNAs, microRNA-206 and -21 were the most induced in denervated muscles. We characterized their pattern of expression and defined their role in muscle homeostasis. Indeed, in vivo gain and loss of function experiments revealed that miRNA-206 and miRNA-21 were sufficient and required for atrophy program. In silico and in vivo approaches identified transcription factor YY1 and the translational initiator factor eIF4E3 as downstream targets of these miRNAs. Thus miRNAs are important for fine-tuning the atrophy program and their modulation can be a novel potential therapeutic approach to counteract muscle loss and weakness in catabolic conditions.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Francesco Chemello; Camilla Bean; Pasqua Cancellara; Paolo Laveder; Carlo Reggiani; Gerolamo Lanfranchi
Background Skeletal muscle is a complex, versatile tissue composed of a variety of functionally diverse fiber types. Although the biochemical, structural and functional properties of myofibers have been the subject of intense investigation for the last decades, understanding molecular processes regulating fiber type diversity is still complicated by the heterogeneity of cell types present in the whole muscle organ. Methodology/Principal Findings We have produced a first catalogue of genes expressed in mouse slow-oxidative (type 1) and fast-glycolytic (type 2B) fibers through transcriptome analysis at the single fiber level (microgenomics). Individual fibers were obtained from murine soleus and EDL muscles and initially classified by myosin heavy chain isoform content. Gene expression profiling on high density DNA oligonucleotide microarrays showed that both qualitative and quantitative improvements were achieved, compared to results with standard muscle homogenate. First, myofiber profiles were virtually free from non-muscle transcriptional activity. Second, thousands of muscle-specific genes were identified, leading to a better definition of gene signatures in the two fiber types as well as the detection of metabolic and signaling pathways that are differentially activated in specific fiber types. Several regulatory proteins showed preferential expression in slow myofibers. Discriminant analysis revealed novel genes that could be useful for fiber type functional classification. Conclusions/Significance As gene expression analyses at the single fiber level significantly increased the resolution power, this innovative approach would allow a better understanding of the adaptive transcriptomic transitions occurring in myofibers under physiological and pathological conditions.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Paolo Martini; Gabriele Sales; Mattia Brugiolo; Alessandro Gandaglia; Filippo Naso; Cristiano De Pittà; Michele Spina; Gino Gerosa; Francesco Chemello; Chiara Romualdi; Stefano Cagnin; Gerolamo Lanfranchi
Background Despite the economic and medical importance of the pig, knowledge about its genome organization, gene expression regulation, and molecular mechanisms involved in physiological processes is far from that achieved for mouse and rat, the two most used model organisms in biomedical research. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a wide class of molecules that exert a recognized role in gene expression modulation, but only 280 miRNAs in pig have been characterized to date. Results We applied a novel computational approach to predict species-specific and conserved miRNAs in the pig genome, which were then subjected to experimental validation. We experimentally identified candidate miRNAs sequences grouped in high-confidence (424) and medium-confidence (353) miRNAs according to RNA-seq results. A group of miRNAs was also validated by PCR experiments. We established the subtle variability in expression of isomiRs and miRNA-miRNA star couples supporting a biological function for these molecules. Finally, miRNA and mRNA expression profiles produced from the same sample of 20 different tissue of the animal were combined, using a correlation threshold to filter miRNA-target predictions, to identify tissue-specific regulatory networks. Conclusions Our data represent a significant progress in the current understanding of miRNAome in pig. The identification of miRNAs, their target mRNAs, and the construction of regulatory circuits will provide new insights into the complex biological networks in several tissues of this important animal model.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Miriam Frangini; Elisa Franzolin; Francesco Chemello; Paolo Laveder; Chiara Romualdi; Vera Bianchi; Chiara Rampazzo
Background: In developing muscle, stimulation of mitochondrial biogenesis and mtDNA expansion occur with down-regulation of deoxynucleotide synthesis. Results: siRNA silencing of mitochondrial thymidine or deoxyguanosine kinase impacts myotube differentiation causing depletion of mtDNA and of all four deoxynucleotides. Conclusion: Shortage of even a single deoxynucleotide may upset the regulation of all DNA precursors. Significance: Deoxynucleotide analysis in myotubes unveils unexpected outcomes of synthetic enzyme deficiencies. During myogenesis, myoblasts fuse into multinucleated myotubes that acquire the contractile fibrils and accessory structures typical of striated skeletal muscle fibers. To support the high energy requirements of muscle contraction, myogenesis entails an increase in mitochondrial (mt) mass with stimulation of mtDNA synthesis and consumption of DNA precursors (dNTPs). Myotubes are quiescent cells and as such down-regulate dNTP production despite a high demand for dNTPs. Although myogenesis has been studied extensively, changes in dNTP metabolism have not been examined specifically. In differentiating cultures of C2C12 myoblasts and purified myotubes, we analyzed expression and activities of enzymes of dNTP biosynthesis, dNTP pools, and the expansion of mtDNA. Myotubes exibited pronounced post-mitotic modifications of dNTP synthesis with a particularly marked down-regulation of de novo thymidylate synthesis. Expression profiling revealed the same pattern of enzyme down-regulation in adult murine muscles. The mtDNA increased steadily after myoblast fusion, turning over rapidly, as revealed after treatment with ethidium bromide. We individually down-regulated p53R2 ribonucleotide reductase, thymidine kinase 2, and deoxyguanosine kinase by siRNA transfection to examine how a further reduction of these synthetic enzymes impacted myotube development. Silencing of p53R2 had little effect, but silencing of either mt kinase caused 50% mtDNA depletion and an unexpected decrease of all four dNTP pools independently of the kinase specificity. We suggest that during development of myotubes the shortage of even a single dNTP may affect all four pools through dysregulation of ribonucleotide reduction and/or dissipation of the non-limiting dNTPs during unproductive elongation of new DNA chains.
Genomics data | 2015
Francesco Chemello; Cristina Mammucari; Gaia Gherardi; Rosario Rizzuto; Gerolamo Lanfranchi; Stefano Cagnin
The mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) gene codifies for the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) channel responsible for mitochondrial Ca2 + uptake. Cytosolic Ca2 + transients are involved in sarcomere contraction through cycles of release and storage in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In addition cytosolic Ca2 + regulates various signaling cascades that eventually lead to gene expression reprogramming. Mitochondria are strategically placed in close contact with the ER/SR, thus cytosolic Ca2 + transients elicit large increases in the [Ca2 +] of the mitochondrial matrix ([Ca2 +]mt). Mitochondrial Ca2 + uptake regulates energy production and cell survival. In addition, we recently showed that MCU-dependent mitochondrial Ca2 + uptake controls skeletal muscle trophism. In the same report, we dissected the effects of MCU-dependent mitochondrial Ca2 + uptake on gene expression through microarray gene expression analysis upon modulation of MCU expression by in vivo AAV infection. Analyses were performed on single skeletal muscle fibers at two time points (7 and 14 days post-AAV injection). Raw and normalized data are available on the GEO database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) (GSE60931).
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Matteo Pagliari; Fabio Munari; Marta Toffoletto; Silvia Lonardi; Francesco Chemello; Gaia Codolo; Caterina Millino; Chiara Della Bella; Beniamina Pacchioni; William Vermi; Matteo Fassan; Marina de Bernard; Stefano Cagnin
Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is a Gram-negative bacterium that infects the human gastric mucosa, leading to chronic inflammation. If not eradicated with antibiotic treatment, the bacterium persists in the human stomach for decades increasing the risk to develop chronic gastritis, gastroduodenal ulcer, and gastric adenocarcinoma. The lifelong persistence of Hp in the human stomach suggests that the host response fails to clear the infection. It has been recently shown that during Hp infection phagocytic cells promote high Hp loads rather than contributing to bacterial clearance. Within these cells Hp survives in “megasomes,” large structures arising from homotypic fusion of phagosomes, but the mechanism that Hp employs to avoid phagocytic killing is not completely understood. Here, we show that Hp infection induces the downregulation of specific microRNAs involved in the regulation of transcripts codifying for inflammatory proteins. miR-4270 targets the most upregulated gene: the immune receptor CD300E, whose expression is strictly dependent on Hp infection. CD300E engagement enhances the pro-inflammatory potential of macrophages, but in parallel it affects their ability to express and expose MHC class II molecules on the plasma membrane, without altering phagocytosis. This effect compromises the possibility for effector T cells to recognize and activate the killing potential of macrophages, which, in turn would become a survival niche for the bacterium. Taken together, our data add another piece to the complicate puzzle represented by the long-life coexistence between Hp and the human host and contribute with new insights toward understanding the regulation and function of the immune receptor CD300E.
bioRxiv | 2018
Francesco Chemello; Francesca Grespi; Alessandra Zulian; Pasqua Cancellara; Etienne Hebert-Chatelain; Paolo Martini; Camilla Bean; Enrico Alessio; Riggero Ferrazza; Paolo Laveder; Graziano Guella; Carlo Reggiani; Chiara Romualdi; Paolo Bernardi; Luca Scorrano; Stefano Cagnin; Gerolamo Lanfranchi
Skeletal muscle is composed by different myofiber types that can preferentially use glycolysis or lipids for ATP production. How fuel preference is specified in these post-mitotic cells is unknown. Here we show that miRNAs are important players in defining the myofiber metabolic profile. mRNA and miRNA signatures of all myofiber types obtained at single cell level unveiled fiber-specific regulatory networks and identified two master miRNAs that coordinately control myofiber fuel preference and mitochondrial morphology. Our work provides a complete and integrated myofiber type-specific catalogue of genes and miRNAs expressed and establishes miR-27a-3p and miR-142-3p as key regulators of lipid utilization in skeletal muscle. HIGHLIGHTS Transcriptional networking in single cells distinguished myofibers based on glycolytic or oxidative metabolism, regulated by specific miRNAs miR-27a-3p and −142-3p influence mitochondrial morphology miR-27a-3p improves lipid utilization and increases glycogen storage both in vitro and in vivo miR-142-3p reduces lipid utilization both in vitro and in vivo
Molecular Neurobiology | 2018
Caterina Peggion; Roberto Stella; Francesco Chemello; Maria Lina Massimino; Giorgio Arrigoni; Stefano Cagnin; Giancarlo Biancotto; Cinzia Franchin; Maria Catia Sorgato; Alessandro Bertoli
The cellular prion protein (PrPC), whose misfolded conformers are implicated in prion diseases, localizes to both the presynaptic membrane and postsynaptic density. To explore possible molecular contributions of PrPC to synaptic transmission, we utilized a mass spectrometry approach to quantify the release of glutamate from primary cerebellar granule neurons (CGN) expressing, or deprived of (PrP-KO), PrPC, following a depolarizing stimulus. Under the same conditions, we also tracked recycling of synaptic vesicles (SVs) in the two neuronal populations. We found that in PrP-KO CGN these processes decreased by 40 and 60%, respectively, compared to PrPC-expressing neurons. Unbiased quantitative mass spectrometry was then employed to compare the whole proteome of CGN with the two PrP genotypes. This approach allowed us to assess that, relative to the PrPC-expressing counterpart, the absence of PrPC modified the protein expression profile, including diminution of some components of SV recycling and fusion machinery. Subsequent quantitative RT-PCR closely reproduced proteomic data, indicating that PrPC is committed to ensuring optimal synaptic transmission by regulating genes involved in SV dynamics and neurotransmitter release. These novel molecular and cellular aspects of PrPC add insight into the underlying mechanisms for synaptic dysfunctions occurring in neurodegenerative disorders in which a compromised PrPC is likely to intervene.
Frontiers in Physiology | 2017
Marcelo G. Pereira; Kenneth A. Dyar; Leonardo Nogara; Francesca Solagna; Manuela Marabita; Martina Baraldo; Francesco Chemello; Elena Germinario; Vanina Romanello; Hendrik Nolte; Bert Blaauw
Skeletal muscle mass is a result of the balance between protein breakdown and protein synthesis. It has been shown that multiple conditions of muscle atrophy are characterized by the common regulation of a specific set of genes, termed atrogenes. It is not known whether various models of muscle hypertrophy are similarly regulated by a common transcriptional program. Here, we characterized gene expression changes in three different conditions of muscle growth, examining each condition during acute and chronic phases. Specifically, we compared the transcriptome of Extensor Digitorum Longus (EDL) muscles collected (1) during the rapid phase of postnatal growth at 2 and 4 weeks of age, (2) 24 h or 3 weeks after constitutive activation of AKT, and (3) 24 h or 3 weeks after overload hypertrophy caused by tenotomy of the Tibialis Anterior muscle. We observed an important overlap between significantly regulated genes when comparing each single condition at the two different timepoints. Furthermore, examining the transcriptional changes occurring 24 h after a hypertrophic stimulus, we identify an important role for genes linked to a stress response, despite the absence of muscle damage in the AKT model. However, when we compared all different growth conditions, we did not find a common transcriptional fingerprint. On the other hand, all conditions showed a marked increase in mTORC1 signaling and increased ribosome biogenesis, suggesting that muscle growth is characterized more by translational, than transcriptional regulation.
Cell Reports | 2015
Cristina Mammucari; Gaia Gherardi; Ilaria Zamparo; Anna Raffaello; Simona Boncompagni; Francesco Chemello; Stefano Cagnin; Alessandra Braga; Sofia Zanin; Giorgia Pallafacchina; Lorena Zentilin; Marco Sandri; Diego De Stefani; Feliciano Protasi; Gerolamo Lanfranchi; Rosario Rizzuto