Frederico Marianetti Soriani
University of São Paulo
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Frederico Marianetti Soriani.
Molecular Microbiology | 2008
Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Iran Malavazi; Márcia Eliana da Silva Ferreira; Marcela Savoldi; Marcia Regina von Zeska Kress; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Omar Loss; Elaine Bignell; Gustavo H. Goldman
The protein phosphatase calcineurin is an important mediator connecting calcium‐dependent signalling to various cellular responses in multiple organisms. In fungi calcineurin acts largely through regulating Crz1p‐like transcription factors. Here we characterize an Aspergillus fumigatus CRZ1 homologue, CrzA and demonstrate its mediation of cellular tolerance to increased concentrations of calcium and manganese. In addition to acute sensitivitiy to these ions, and decreased conidiation, the crzA null mutant suffers altered expression of calcium transporter mRNAs under high concentrations of calcium, and loss of virulence when compared with the corresponding complemented and wild‐type strains. We use multiple expression analyses to probe the transcriptional basis of A. fumigatus calcium tolerance identifying several genes having calA and/or crzA dependent mRNA accumulation patterns. We also demonstrate that contrary to previous findings, the gene encoding the Aspergillus nidulans calcineurin subunit homologue, cnaA, is not essential and that the cnaA deletion mutant shares the morphological phenotypes observed in the corresponding A. fumigatus mutant, ΔcalA. Exploiting the A. nidulans model system, we have linked calcineurin activity with asexual developmental induction, finding that CrzA supports appropriate developmental induction in a calcineurin and brlA‐dependent manner in both species.
Molecular Microbiology | 2008
Marcela Savoldi; Iran Malavazi; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; José Luiz Capellaro; Katsuhiko Kitamoto; Márcia Eliana da Silva Ferreira; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Gustavo H. Goldman
Farnesol (FOH) is a non‐sterol isoprenoid produced by dephosphorylation of farnesyl pyrophosphate, a catabolite of the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway. These isoprenoids inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis. It has been shown previously that FOH triggers morphological features characteristic of apoptosis in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Here, we investigate which pathways are influenced through FOH by examining the transcriptional profile of A. nidulans exposed to this isoprenoid. We observed decreased mRNA abundance of several genes involved in RNA processing and modification, transcription, translation, ribosomal structure and biogenesis, amino acid transport and metabolism, and ergosterol biosynthesis. We also observed increased mRNA expression of genes encoding a number of mitochondrial proteins and characterized in detail one of them, the aifA, encoding the Apoptosis‐Inducing Factor (AIF)‐like mitochondrial oxidoreductase. The ΔaifA mutant is more sensitive to FOH (about 8.0% and 0% survival when exposed to 10 and 100 μM FOH respectively) than the wild type (about 97% and 3% survival when exposed to 10 and 100 μM FOH respectively). These results suggest that AifA is possibly important for decreasing the effects of FOH and reactive oxygen species. Furthermore, we showed an involvement of autophagy and protein kinase C in A. nidulans FOH‐induced apoptosis.
Eukaryotic Cell | 2011
Vicente de Paulo Martins; Taísa Magnani Dinamarco; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Valéria G. Tudella; Sergio C. Oliveira; Gustavo H. Goldman; Carlos Curti; Sérgio A. Uyemura
ABSTRACT Paracoccidioides brasiliensis is a thermodimorphic human pathogenic fungus that causes paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM), which is the most prevalent systemic mycosis in Latin America. Differentiation from the mycelial to the yeast form (M-to-Y) is an essential step for the establishment of PCM. We evaluated the involvement of mitochondria and intracellular oxidative stress in M-to-Y differentiation. M-to-Y transition was delayed by the inhibition of mitochondrial complexes III and IV or alternative oxidase (AOX) and was blocked by the association of AOX with complex III or IV inhibitors. The expression of P. brasiliensis aox (Pbaox) was developmentally regulated through M-to-Y differentiation, wherein the highest levels were achieved in the first 24 h and during the yeast exponential growth phase; Pbaox was upregulated by oxidative stress. Pbaox was cloned, and its heterologous expression conferred cyanide-resistant respiration in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli and reduced oxidative stress in S. cerevisiae cells. These results reinforce the role of PbAOX in intracellular redox balancing and demonstrate its involvement, as well as that of other components of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes, in the early stages of the M-to-Y differentiation of P. brasiliensis.
Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2008
Taisa Magnani; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Vicente de Paulo Martins; Anna Carolina de Freitas Policarpo; Carlos A. Sorgi; Lúcia Helena Faccioli; Carlos Curti; Sérgio A. Uyemura
We previously demonstrated that conidia from Aspergillus fumigatus incubated with menadione and paraquat increases activity and expression of cyanide-insensitive alternative oxidase (AOX). Here, we employed the RNA silencing technique in A. fumigatus using the vector pALB1/aoxAf in order to down-regulate the aox gene. Positive transformants for aox gene silencing of A. fumigatus were more susceptible both to an imposed in vitro oxidative stress condition and to macrophages killing, suggesting that AOX is required for the A. fumigatus pathogenicity, mainly for the survival of the fungus conidia during host infection and resistance to reactive oxygen species generated by macrophages.
BMC Microbiology | 2010
Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Iran Malavazi; Marcela Savoldi; Eduardo A. Espeso; Taísa Magnani Dinamarco; Luciano As Bernardes; Márcia Es Ferreira; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Gustavo H. Goldman
BackgroundCalcineurin, a serine/threonine-specific protein phosphatase, plays an important role in the control of cell morphology and virulence in fungi. Calcineurin regulates localization and activity of a transcription factor called CRZ1. Recently, we characterize Aspergillus fumigatus CRZ1 homologue, AfCrzA. Here, we investigate which pathways are influenced by A. fumigatus AfCrzA during a short pulse of calcium by comparatively determining the transcriptional profile of A. fumigatus wild type and ΔAfcrzA mutant strains.ResultsWe were able to observe 3,622 genes modulated in at least one timepoint in the mutant when compared to the wild type strain (3,211 and 411 at 10 and 30 minutes, respectively). Decreased mRNA abundance in the ΔcrzA was seen for genes encoding calcium transporters, transcription factors and genes that could be directly or indirectly involved in calcium metabolism. Increased mRNA accumulation was observed for some genes encoding proteins involved in stress response. AfCrzA overexpression in A. fumigatus increases the expression of several of these genes. The deleted strain of one of these genes, AfRcnA, belonging to a class of endogenous calcineurin regulators, calcipressins, had more calcineurin activity after exposure to calcium and was less sensitive to menadione 30 μM, hydrogen peroxide 2.5 mM, EGTA 25 mM, and MnCl2 25 mM. We constructed deletion, overexpression, and GFP fusion protein for the closely related A. nidulans AnRcnA. GFP::RcnA was mostly detected along the germling, did not accumulate in the nuclei and its location is not affected by the cellular response to calcium chloride.ConclusionWe have performed a transcriptional profiling analysis of the A. fumigatus ΔAfcrzA mutant strain exposed to calcium stress. This provided an excellent opportunity to identify genes and pathways that are under the influence of AfCrzA. AfRcnA, one of these selected genes, encodes a modulator of calcineurin activity. Concomitantly with A. fumigatus AfrcnA molecular analysis, we decided to exploit the conserved features of A. nidulans calcineurin system and investigated the A. nidulans AnRcnA homologue. A. nidulans AnRcnA mutation is suppressing CnaA mutation and it is responsible for modulating the calcineurin activity and mRNA accumulation of genes encoding calcium transporters.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2010
Taísa Magnani Dinamarco; Bárbara de Castro Figueiredo Pimentel; Marcela Savoldi; Iran Malavazi; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Sérgio A. Uyemura; Paula Ludovico; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Gustavo H. Goldman
Farnesol (FOH) is a nonsterol isoprenoid produced by dephosphorylation of farnesyl pyrophosphate, a catabolite of the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway. These isoprenoids inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis. Here, we show that Aspergillus nidulans AifA encoding the apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF)-like mitochondrial oxidoreductase plays a role in the function of the mitochondrial Complex I. Additionally, we demonstrated that ndeA-B and ndiA encode external and internal alternative NADH dehydrogenases, respectively, that have a function in FOH resistance. When exposed to FOH, the ΔaifA and ΔndeA strains have increased ROS production while ΔndeB, ΔndeA ΔndeB, and ΔndiA mutant strains showed the same ROS accumulation than in the absence of FOH. We observed several compensatory mechanisms affecting the differential survival of these mutants to FOH.
Molecular Microbiology | 2009
Kap Hoon Han; Yoon Hee Chun; Bárbara de Castro Pimentel Figueiredo; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Marcela Savoldi; Agostinho J. Almeida; Fernando Rodrigues; Charlie Timothy Cairns; Elaine Bignell; Jaqueline Moisés Tobal; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Jong Hwan Kim; Yong Sun Bahn; Gustavo H. Goldman; Márcia Eliana da Silva Ferreira
Carbon dioxide (CO2) and its hydration product bicarbonate (HCO3‐) are essential molecules in various physiological processes of all living organisms. The reversible interconversion between CO2 and HCO3‐ is in equilibrium. This reaction is slow without catalyst, but can be rapidly facilitated by Zn2+‐metalloenzymes named carbonic anhydrases (CAs). To gain an insight into the function of multiple clades of fungal CA, we chose to investigate the filamentous fungi Aspergillus fumigatus and A. nidulans. We identified four and two CAs in A. fumigatus and A. nidulans, respectively, named cafA‐D and canA‐B. The cafA and cafB genes are constitutively, strongly expressed whereas cafC and cafD genes are weakly expressed but CO2‐inducible. Heterologous expression of the A. fumigatus cafB, and A. nidulans canA and canB genes completely rescued the high CO2‐requiring phenotype of a Saccharomyces cerevisiaeΔnce103 mutant. Only the ΔcafAΔcafB and ΔcanB deletion mutants were unable to grow at 0.033% CO2, of which growth defects can be restored by high CO2. Defects in the CAs can affect Aspergilli conidiation. Furthermore, A. fumigatusΔcafA, ΔcafB, ΔcafC, ΔcafD and ΔcafAΔcafB mutant strains are fully virulent in a low‐dose murine infection.
Molecular Microbiology | 2007
Iran Malavazi; Marcela Savoldi; Márcia Eliana da Silva Ferreira; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Pierina Sueli Bonato; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Gustavo H. Goldman
ATM is a phosphatidyl‐3‐kinase‐related protein kinase that functions as a central regulator of DNA damage response in eukaryotes. In humans, mutations in ATM cause the devastating neurodegenerative disease Ataxia‐Telangiectasia. Previously, we characterized the homologue of ATM (AtmA) in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. In addition to its expected role in the DNA damage response, we found that AtmA is also required for polarized hyphal growth. Our results suggested that AtmA probably regulates the function and/or localization of landmark proteins required for the formation of a polarity axis. Here, we extended these studies by investigating which pathways are influenced by AtmA during proliferation and polar growth by comparatively determining the transcriptional profile of A. nidulans wild‐type and ΔatmA mutant strains in different growth conditions. Our results indicate an important role of the pentose phosphate pathway in the fungal proliferation during endogenous DNA damage and polar growth monitored by the AtmA kinase. Furthermore, we identified several genes that have decreased mRNA expression in the ΔatmA mutant that are involved in the formation of a polarized hyphae and control of polar growth; in the synthesis of phosphatidic acid (e.g. phospholipase D); in the ergosterol biosynthesis (plasma membrane microdomains, lipid rafts); and in intracellular trafficking.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2008
Paula Fagundes de Gouvêa; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Iran Malavazi; Marcela Savoldi; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Omar Loss; Elaine Bignell; Márcia Eliana da Silva Ferreira; Gustavo H. Goldman
Phosphate is an ion that is essential for fungal growth. The systems for inorganic phosphate (P(i)) acquisition in eukaryotic cells (PHO) have been characterized as a low-affinity (that assures a supply of P(i) at normal or high external P(i) concentrations) and a high-affinity (activated in response to P(i) starvation). Here, as an initial step to understand the PHO pathway in Aspergillus fumigatus, we characterized the PHO80 homologue, PhoB(PHO80). We show that the DeltaphoB(PHO80) mutant has a polar growth defect (i.e., a delayed germ tube emergence) and, by phenotypic and phosphate uptake analyses, establish a link between PhoB(PHO80), calcineurin and calcium metabolism. Microarray hybridizations carried out with RNA obtained from wild-type and DeltaphoB(PHO80) mutant cells identify Afu4g03610 (phoD(PHO84)), Afu7g06350 (phoE(PHO89)), Afu4g06020 (phoC(PHO81)), and Afu2g09040 (vacuolar transporter Vtc4) as more expressed both in the DeltaphoB(PHO80) mutant background and under phosphate-limiting conditions of 0.1mM P(i). Epifluorescence microscopy revealed accumulation of poly-phosphate in DeltaphoB(PHO80) vacuoles, which was independent of extracellular phosphate concentration. Surprisingly, a phoD(PHO84) deletion mutant is indistinguishable phenotypically from the corresponding wild-type strain. mRNA analyses suggest that protein kinase A absence supports the expression of PHO genes in A. fumigatus. Furthermore, DeltaphoB(PHO80) and DeltaphoD(PHO84) mutant are fully virulent in a murine low dose model for invasive aspergillosis.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2009
Iran Malavazi; Márcia Eliana da Silva Ferreira; Frederico Marianetti Soriani; Taísa Magnani Dinamarco; Marcela Savoldi; Sérgio A. Uyemura; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Gustavo H. Goldman
Calcineurin plays an important role in the control of cell morphology and virulence in fungi. Calcineurin is a serine/threonine-specific protein phosphatase heterodimer consisting of a catalytic subunit A and a regulatory subunit B. A mutant of Aspergillus fumigatus lacking the calcineurin A (calA) catalytic subunit exhibited defective hyphal morphology related to apical extension and branching growth, which resulted in drastically decreased filamentation. Here, we investigated which pathways are influenced by A. fumigatus calcineurin during proliferation by comparatively determining the transcriptional profile of A. fumigatus wild type and DeltacalA mutant strains. Our results showed that the mitochondrial copy number is reduced in the DeltacalA mutant strain, and the mutant has increased alternative oxidase (aoxA) mRNA accumulation and activity. Furthermore, we identified four genes that encode transcription factors that have increased mRNA expression in the DeltacalA mutant. Deletion mutants for these transcription factors had reduced susceptibility to itraconazole, caspofungin, and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS).