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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe Falini is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Falini.


Photosynthesis Research | 2006

Thioredoxin-dependent regulation of photosynthetic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase: autonomous vs. CP12-dependent mechanisms

Paolo Trost; Simona Fermani; Lucia Marri; Mirko Zaffagnini; Giuseppe Falini; Sandra Scagliarini; Paolo Pupillo; Francesca Sparla

Regulation of the Calvin–Benson cycle under varying light/dark conditions is a common property of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms and photosynthetic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is one of the targets of this complex regulatory system. In cyanobacteria and most algae, photosynthetic GAPDH is a homotetramer of GapA subunits which do not contain regulatory domains. In these organisms, dark-inhibition of the Calvin–Benson cycle involves the formation of a kinetically inhibited supramolecular complex between GAPDH, the regulatory peptide CP12 and phosphoribulokinase. Conditions prevailing in the dark, i.e. oxidation of thioredoxins and low NADP(H)/NAD(H) ratio promote aggregation. Although this regulatory system has been inherited in higher plants, these phototrophs contain in addition a second type of GAPDH subunits (GapB) resulting from the fusion of GapA with the C-terminal half of CP12. Heterotetrameric A2B2-GAPDH constitutes the major photosynthetic GAPDH isoform of higher plants chloroplasts and coexists with CP12 and A4-GAPDH. GapB subunits of A2B2-GAPDH have inherited from CP12 a regulatory domain (CTE for C-terminal extension) which makes the enzyme sensitive to thioredoxins and pyridine nucleotides, resembling the GAPDH/CP12/PRK system. The two systems are similar in other respects: oxidizing conditions and low NADP(H)/NAD(H) ratios promote aggregation of A2B2-GAPDH into strongly inactivated A8B8-GAPDH hexadecamers, and both CP12 and CTE specifically affect the NADPH-dependent activity of GAPDH. The alternative, lower activity with NADH is always unaffected. Based on the crystal structure of spinach A4-GAPDH and the analysis of site-specific mutants, a model of the autonomous (CP12-independent) regulatory mechanism of A2B2-GAPDH is proposed. Both CP12 and CTE seem to regulate different photosynthetic GAPDH isoforms according to a common and ancient molecular mechanism.


Langmuir | 2008

Adsorption and conformational change of myoglobin on biomimetic hydroxyapatite nanocrystals functionalized with alendronate.

Michele Iafisco; Barbara Palazzo; Giuseppe Falini; Michele Di Foggia; Sergio Bonora; Stefania Nicolis; and Luigi Casella; Norberto Roveri

The chemical conjugation of bisphosphonates (BPs), specifically alendronate, to hydroxyapatite could be an effective means to impart to it fine-tuned bioactivity. Horse heart myoglobin (Mb), a well-characterized protein, has been adsorbed onto biomimetic hydroxyapatite nanocrystals (nHA) and onto the nHA/alendronate conjugate powdered samples. The obtained materials have potential use in bone implantation and as prospective drug-delivery devices. The kinetic absorption of Mb onto nHA is dramatically affected by its functionalization with alendronate. The covering of the nHA surface by alendronate inhibits the adsorption of myoglobin. The adsorption mechanisms of the protein were studied by spectroscopic techniques (UV-vis and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy). The results indicate that the protein changes conformation upon adsorption on the inorganic substrate. In particular, the interaction with nHA alters the coordination state of the iron in the heme through the formation of a hexacoordinated low-spin Mb heme, possibly involving the distal histidine. Instead, the covering of the nHA surface by alendronate does not adsorb the protein but preserves the coordination state of the heme moiety. This study could be of significance either in the field of biomaterials science, in particular, to fine tune a bone-specific drug delivery device and to test nHA as a new support for heterogeneous catalysis, improving the understating of enzyme immobilization.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Molecular mechanism of thioredoxin regulation in photosynthetic A2B2-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.

Simona Fermani; Francesca Sparla; Giuseppe Falini; Pier Luigi Martelli; Rita Casadio; Paolo Pupillo; A. Ripamonti; Paolo Trost

Chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is a light-regulated, NAD(P)H-dependent enzyme involved in plant photosynthetic carbon reduction. Unlike lower photosynthetic organisms, which only contain A4–GAPDH, the major GAPDH isoform of land plants is made up of A and B subunits, the latter containing a C-terminal extension (CTE) with fundamental regulatory functions. Light-activation of AB–GAPDH depends on the redox state of a pair of cysteines of the CTE, which can form a disulfide bond under control of thioredoxin f, leading to specific inhibition of the NADPH-dependent activity. The tridimensional structure of A2B2–GAPDH from spinach chloroplasts, crystallized in the oxidized state, shows that each disulfide-containing CTE is docked into a deep cleft between a pair of A and B subunits. The structure of the CTE was derived from crystallographic data and computational modeling and confirmed by site-specific mutagenesis. Structural analysis of oxidized A2B2–GAPDH and chimeric mutant [A+CTE]4–GAPDH revealed that Arg-77, which is essential for coenzyme specificity and high NADPH-dependent activity, fails to interact with NADP in these kinetically inhibited GAPDH tetramers and is attracted instead by negative residues of oxidized CTE. Other subtle changes in catalytic domains and overall conformation of the tetramers were noticed in oxidized A2B2–GAPDH and [A+CTE]4–GAPDH, compared with fully active A4–GAPDH. The CTE is envisioned as a redox-sensitive regulatory domain that can force AB–GAPDH into a kinetically inhibited conformation under oxidizing conditions, which also occur during dark inactivation of the enzyme in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Skeletal Organic Matrix from Mediterranean Coral Balanophyllia europaea Influences Calcium Carbonate Precipitation

Stefano Goffredo; Patrizia Vergni; Michela Reggi; Erik Caroselli; Francesca Sparla; Oren Levy; Zvy Dubinsky; Giuseppe Falini

Scleractinian coral skeletons are made mainly of calcium carbonate in the form of aragonite. The mineral deposition occurs in a biological confined environment, but it is still a theme of discussion to what extent the calcification occurs under biological or environmental control. Hence, the shape, size and organization of skeletal crystals from the cellular level through the colony architecture, were attributed to factors as diverse as mineral supersaturation levels and organic mediation of crystal growth. The skeleton contains an intra-skeletal organic matrix (OM) of which only the water soluble component was chemically and physically characterized. In this work that OM from the skeleton of the Balanophyllia europaea, a solitary scleractinian coral endemic to the Mediterranean Sea, is studied in vitro with the aim of understanding its role in the mineralization of calcium carbonate. Mineralization of calcium carbonate was conducted by overgrowth experiments on coral skeleton and in calcium chloride solutions containing different ratios of water soluble and/or insoluble OM and of magnesium ions. The precipitates were characterized by diffractometric, spectroscopic and microscopic techniques. The results showed that both soluble and insoluble OM components influence calcium carbonate precipitation and that the effect is enhanced by their co-presence. The role of magnesium ions is also affected by the presence of the OM components. Thus, in vitro, OM influences calcium carbonate crystal morphology, aggregation and polymorphism as a function of its composition and of the content of magnesium ions in the precipitation media. This research, although does not resolve the controversy between environmental or biological control on the deposition of calcium carbonate in corals, sheds a light on the role of OM, which appears mediated by the presence of magnesium ions.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2010

Effects of initial supersaturation on spontaneous precipitation of calcium carbonate in the presence of charged poly-L-amino acids.

Branka Njegić-Džakula; Giuseppe Falini; Ljerka Brečević; Željko Skoko; Damir Kralj

Spontaneous precipitation of calcium carbonate was investigated in two precipitation systems: (1) with initial supersaturation lower than that corresponding to the solubility of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC), at which vaterite precipitated, and (2) with initial supersaturation higher than that of ACC solubility, at which a mixture of calcite and vaterite was formed. After the addition of an acidic polypeptide, poly-L-glutamic acid (pGlu) or poly-L-aspartic acid (pAsp), into (1) a significant inhibition of nucleation, expressed as an increase in induction time, and growth of vaterite, perceived as a dead zone, was observed. Extent of inhibition decreased in the order: Inh(pAps)>Inh(pGlu)>>Inh(pLys). The addition of a polypeptide into (2) caused the inhibition of precipitation and changed the morphology and polymorphic composition of the precipitate; only vaterite appeared at approximately c(pAsp)=3 ppm, c(pGlu)=6 ppm, or c(pLys)=7 ppm. This finding is explained as a consequence of kinetic constraints through the inhibition of calcite nucleation and stronger binding of acidic polypeptide by the calcite surfaces than by the vaterite surfaces. Laboratory precipitation studies using conditions that resemble those in living organism should be run at an initial supersaturation corresponding to the solubility of ACC as a limiting condition.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2004

Films of self-assembled purely helical type I collagen molecules

Giuseppe Falini; Simona Fermani; Elisabetta Foresti; B. Parma; Katia Rubini; Maria Chiara Sidoti; Norberto Roveri

The structural, morphological and chemical–physical characterization of films constituted of self-assembled non-helical region free type I collagen molecules has been investigated. The results indicate the presence of information at the molecular level which allow collagen I molecules to self-assemble. In the fiber formation process the collagen molecules re-establish the greater part of the native intermolecular cross-links. The films, obtained by air drying the fiber suspension, are water insoluble and characterized by a high mechanical performance. The mechanical and thermal properties of the films increase strongly as a function of the collagen fiber orientation induced in the films by uniaxial stretching.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2011

The interstitial crystal-nucleating sheet in molluscan Haliotis rufescens shell: a bio-polymeric composite.

Giuseppe Falini; Giorgio Sartor; Daniele Fabbri; Patrizia Vergni; Simona Fermani; Angela M. Belcher; Galen D. Stucky; Daniel E. Morse

The interstitial green sheets in abalone shell nacre are shown to be bifacially differentiated trilaminate polymeric complexes, with glycoprotein layers sandwiching a central core containing chitin. They share some common feature with the organic matrix layers between the aragonite tablets in the nacre and the periostracum, and show similarities to the myostracum. Thus, although the green sheet is reported to be unique to the abalone shell, it represents an interesting model for the study of molluscan shell biomineralization processes. Indeed, during shell formation, prismatic and spherulitic aragonite precedes and follows the deposition of the interstitial green polymeric composite sheets, and there is evidence to suggest that these sheets demark the interruption of nacre synthesis and serve to nucleate the resumption of calcium carbonate crystal growth. The green polymeric interstitial sheet purified from the abalone shell was investigated by spectroscopic and imaging techniques: FTIR, confocal microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and by pyrolysis combined with GC-MS. Structural and compositional differences are observed between the surfaces of the two sides of the interstitial polymeric composite sheets. Moreover, comparative crystallization experiments on the green sheet sides also reveal asymmetry with respect to the nucleation of calcium carbonate. These findings suggest that these bifacially differentiated interstitial composites may play an active role in the mineral assembly processes, with one of the surfaces acting as a crystal nucleator.


Biopolymers | 2009

Keratin-lipid structural organization in the corneous layer of snake.

A. Ripamonti; Lorenzo Alibardi; Giuseppe Falini; Simona Fermani; Massimo Gazzano

The shed epidermis (molt) of snakes comprises four distinct layers. The upper two layers, here considered as β‐layer, contain essentially β‐keratin. The following layer, known as mesos‐layer, is similar to the human stratum corneum, and is formed by thin cells surrounded by intercellular lipids. The latter layer mainly contains α‐keratin. In this study, the molecular assemblies of proteins and lipids contained in these layers have been analyzed in the scale of two species of snakes, the elapid Tiger snake (TS, Notechis scutatus) and the viperid Gabon viper (GV, Bitis gabonica). Scanning X‐ray micro‐diffraction, FTIR and Raman spectroscopies, thermal analysis, and scanning electron microscopy experiments confirm the presence of the three layers in the GV skin scale. Conversely, in the TS molt a typical α‐keratin layer appears to be absent. In the latter, experimental data suggest the presence of two domains similar to those found in the lipid intercellular matrix of stratum corneum. X‐ray diffraction data also allow to determine the relative orientation of keratins and lipids. The keratin fibrils are randomly oriented inside the layers parallel to the surface of scales while the lipids are organized in lamellar structures having aliphatic chains normal to the scale surface. The high ordered lipid organization in the mature mesos layer probably increases its effectiveness in limiting water‐loss.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2008

Helical domain collagen substrates mineralization in simulated body fluid

Giuseppe Falini; Simona Fermani; Barbara Palazzo; Norberto Roveri

Helical domain collagen substrates had been mineralized using simulated body fluid. They had an increasing level of structural organization; being in the form of gel, film, and uniaxial deformed film. The experiments were carried out for different periods of time and the obtained composite materials were characterized in their mineral content. Apatite precipitation was detected. The results show that the helical domain collagen substrates partially inhibit the in vitro apatite precipitation processes, but the amount and the crystallinity of deposited mineral can be controlled by the different assemblies of the helical domain collagen fibers.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2009

Structure/function studies on two type 1 ribosome inactivating proteins: Bouganin and lychnin

Simona Fermani; Giovanna Tosi; Valentina Farini; Letizia Polito; Giuseppe Falini; A. Ripamonti; Luigi Barbieri; Angela Chambery; Andrea Bolognesi

The three-dimensional structures of two type 1 RIPs, bouganin and lychnin, has been solved. Their adenine polynucleotide glycosylase activity was also determined together with other known RIPs: dianthin 30, PAP-R, momordin I, ricin A chain and saporin-S6. Saporin-S6 releases the highest number of adenine molecules from rat ribosomes, and poly(A), while its efficiency is similar to dianthin 30, bouganin and PAP-R on herring sperm DNA. Measures of the protein synthesis inhibitory activity confirmed that saporin-S6 is the most active. The overall structure of bouganin and lychnin is similar to the other considered RIPs and the typical RIP fold is conserved. The superimpositioning of their C(alpha) atoms highlights some differences in the N-terminal and C-terminal domains. A detailed structural analysis indicates that the efficiency of saporin-S6 on various polynucleotides can be ascribed to a negative electrostatic surface potential at the active site and several exposed positively charged residues in the region around that site. These two conditions, not present at the same time in other examined RIPs, could guarantee an efficient interaction with the substrate and an efficient catalysis.

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