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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Zanotti.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1987

Crystal structure of the trigonal form of bovine beta-lactoglobulin and of its complex with retinol at 2.5 A resolution.

Hugo L. Monaco; Giuseppe Zanotti; Paola Spadon; Martino Bolognesi; Lindsay Sawyer; Elias Eliopoulos

The structure of the trigonal crystal form of bovine beta-lactoglobulin has been determined by X-ray diffraction methods. An electron density map, calculated with phases obtained by the multiple isomorphous replacement method, served as a starting point for alternate cycles of model building and restrained least-squares refinement. The model of the molecule fitted to the initial Fourier map was the one built for the orthorhombic crystal form of beta-lactoglobulin, solved at 2.8 A resolution (1 A = 0.1 nm). The final R factor for 1456 atoms (1276 non-hydrogen protein atoms and 180 solvent atoms) is 0.22, including 5245 reflections from 6.0 to 2.5 A. The molecule shows significant differences in the two crystal forms mentioned, mainly due to different packing. In the trigonal form, the species crystallized does not appear to be dimeric, but a linear polymer with tight intermolecular contacts. A difference electron density map between the complex of beta-lactoglobulin with retinol and the native protein shows no significant peaks in the cavity which, in the similar retinol-binding protein, binds the chromophore. Instead, differences are found at a surface pocket, which is limited almost completely by hydrophobic residues.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2002

Toward the rational design of protein kinase casein kinase-2 inhibitors.

Stefania Sarno; Stefano Moro; Flavio Meggio; Giuseppe Zagotto; Diego Dal Ben; Paola Ghisellini; Roberto Battistutta; Giuseppe Zanotti; Lorenzo A. Pinna

Casein kinase-2 (CK2) probably is the most pleiotropic member of the protein kinase family, with more than 200 substrates known to date. Unlike the great majority of protein kinases, which are tightly regulated enzymes, CK2 is endowed with high constitutive activity, a feature that is suspected to underlie its oncogenic potential and possible implication in viral infections. This makes CK2 an attractive target for anti-neoplastic and antiviral drugs. Here, we present an overview of our present knowledge about CK2 inhibitors, with special reference to the information drawn from two recently solved crystal structures of CK2alpha in complex with emodin and with 4,5,6,7-tetrabromo-2-azabenzimidazole (TBB), this latter being the most specific CK2 inhibitor known to date. A comparison with a series of anthraquinone and xanthenone derivatives highlights the crucial relevance of the hydroxyl group at position 3 for inhibition by emodin, and discloses the possibility of increasing the inhibitory potency by placing an electron withdrawing group at position 5. We also present mutational data corroborating the relevance of two hydrophobic residues unique to CK2, Val66 and Ile174, for the interactions with emodin and TBB, but not with the flavonoid inhibitors quercetin and fisetin. In particular, the CK2alpha mutant V66A displays 27- and 11-fold higher IC(50) values with emodin and TBB, respectively, as compared with the wild-type, while the IC(50) value with quercetin is unchanged. The data presented pave the road toward the rational design of more potent and selective inhibitors of CK2 and the generation of CK2 mutants refractory to inhibition, useful to probe the implication of CK2 in specific cellular functions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

The Replacement of ATP by the Competitive Inhibitor Emodin Induces Conformational Modifications in the Catalytic Site of Protein Kinase CK2

Roberto Battistutta; Stefania Sarno; E De Moliner; Elena Papinutto; Giuseppe Zanotti; Lorenzo A. Pinna

The structure of a complex between the catalytic subunit of Zea mays CK2 and the nucleotide binding site-directed inhibitor emodin (3-methyl-1,6,8-trihydroxyanthraquinone) was solved at 2.6-Å resolution. Emodin enters the nucleotide binding site of the enzyme, filling a hydrophobic pocket between the N-terminal and the C-terminal lobes, in the proximity of the site occupied by the base rings of the natural co-substrates. The interactions between the inhibitor and CK2α are mainly hydrophobic. Although the C-terminal domain of the enzyme is essentially identical to the ATP-bound form, the β-sheet in the N-terminal domain is altered by the presence of emodin. The structural data presented here highlight the flexibility of the kinase domain structure and provide information for the design of selective ATP competitive inhibitors of protein kinase CK2.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Structure of the Neutrophil-activating Protein from Helicobacter pylori

Giuseppe Zanotti; Elena Papinutto; William G. Dundon; Roberto Battistutta; Michela Seveso; Giuseppe Del Giudice; Rino Rappuoli; Cesare Montecucco

Helicobacter pylori is a major human pathogen associated with severe gastroduodenal diseases, including ulcers and cancers. An H.pylori protein that is highly immunogenic in humans and mice has been identified recently. This protein has been termed HP-NAP, due to its ability of activating neutrophils. In order to achieve a molecular understanding of its unique immunogenic and pro-inflammatory properties, we have determined its three-dimensional structure. Its quaternary structure is similar to that of the dodecameric bacterial ferritins (Dps-like family), but it has a different surface potential charge distribution. This is due to the presence of a large number of positively charged residues, which could well account for its unique ability in activating human leukocytes.


Protein Science | 2008

Structural features underlying selective inhibition of protein kinase CK2 by ATP site-directed tetrabromo-2-benzotriazole

Roberto Battistutta; Erika De Moliner; Stefania Sarno; Giuseppe Zanotti; Lorenzo A. Pinna

Two novel crystal structures of Zea mays protein kinase CK2α catalytic subunit, one in complex with the specific inhibitor 4,5,6,7‐tetrabromobenzotriazole (TBB) and another in the apo‐form, were solved at 2.2 Å resolution. These structures were compared with those of the enzyme in presence of ATP and GTP (the natural cosubstrates) and the inhibitor emodin. Interaction of TBB with the active site of CK2α is mainly due to van der Waals contacts, with the ligand fitting almost perfectly the cavity. One nitrogen of the five‐membered ring interacts with two charged residues, Glu 81 and Lys 68, in the depth of the cavity, through two water molecules. These are buried in the active site and are also generally found in the structures of CK2α enzyme analyzed so far, with the exception of the complex with emodin. In the N‐terminal lobe, the position of helix αC is particularly well preserved in all the structures examined; the Gly‐rich loop is displaced from the intermediate position it has in the apo‐form and in the presence of the natural cosubstrates (ATP/GTP) to either an upper (with TBB) or a lower position (with emodin). The selectivity of TBB for CK2 appears to be mainly dictated by the reduced size of the active site which in most other protein kinases is too large for making stable interactions with this inhibitor.


Vitamins and Hormones Series | 2004

Plasma retinol-binding protein: Structure and interactions with retinol, retinoids, and transthyretin

Giuseppe Zanotti

Retinol-binding protein (RBP) is the retinol-specific transport protein present in plasma. The available crystal structures of different forms of RBP have provided details of the interactions of this binding protein with retinol, retinoids, and transthyretin (TTR, one of the plasma carriers of thyroid hormones). The core of RBP is a beta-barrel, the cavity of which accommodates retinol, establishing with its buried portions apolar contacts. Instead, the retinol hydroxyl is near the protein surface, in the region of the entrance loops surrounding the opening of the binding cavity, and participates in polar interactions. The stability of the retinol-RBP complex appears to be further enhanced when holo-RBP is bound to TTR. Accordingly, the region of the entrance loops represents the contact area of RBP interacting with the TTR counterpart, such that the hydroxyl of the RBP-bound vitamin becomes fully buried in the holo-RBP-TTR complex. Limited protein conformational changes affecting the entrance loops, which lead to a decrease or loss of the binding affinity of RBP for TTR, have been demonstrated for apo-RBP and RBP in complex with retinoids modified in the area of the retinol hydroxyl. A relatively small number of amino acid residues of RBP, essentially confined to the region of the entrance loops, and of TTR appear to play a critical role in the formation of the RBP-TTR complex, as established by crystallographic studies, mutational analysis, and amino acid sequence analysis of phylogenetically distant RBPs and TTRs. Overall, the available evidence indicates the existence of a high degree of complementarity between RBP and TTR, the contact areas of which are highly sensitive to conformational changes and amino acid replacements.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Structure of Two Iron-binding Proteins from Bacillus anthracis*

Elena Papinutto; William G. Dundon; N Pitulis; Roberto Battistutta; Cesare Montecucco; Giuseppe Zanotti

Bacillus anthracis is currently under intense investigation due to its primary importance as a human pathogen. Particularly important is the development of novel anti-anthrax vaccines, devoid of the current side effects. A novel class of immunogenic bacterial proteins consists of dodecamers homologous to the DNA-binding protein of Escherichia coli(Dps). Two Dps homologous genes are present in the B. anthracis genome. The crystal structures of these two proteins (Dlp-1 and Dlp-2) have been determined and are presented here. They are sphere-like proteins with an internal cavity. We also show that they act as ferritins and are thus involved in iron uptake and regulation, a fundamental function during bacterial growth.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

Borrelia burgdorferi NapA-driven Th17 cell inflammation in lyme arthritis.

Gaia Codolo; Amedeo Amedei; Allen C. Steere; Elena Papinutto; Andrea Cappon; Alessandra Polenghi; Marisa Benagiano; Silvia Rossi Paccani; Vittorio Sambri; Gianfranco Del Prete; Cosima T. Baldari; Giuseppe Zanotti; Cesare Montecucco; Mario M. D'Elios; Marina de Bernard

OBJECTIVE Human Lyme arthritis caused by Borrelia burgdorferi is characterized by an inflammatory infiltrate that consists mainly of neutrophils and T cells. This study was undertaken to evaluate the role of the innate and acquired immune responses elicited by the neutrophil-activating protein A (NapA) of B burgdorferi in patients with Lyme arthritis. METHODS Serum anti-NapA antibodies were measured in 27 patients with Lyme arthritis and 30 healthy control subjects. The cytokine profile of synovial fluid T cells specific for NapA was investigated in 5 patients with Lyme arthritis. The cytokine profile induced by NapA in neutrophils and monocytes was also investigated. RESULTS Serum anti-NapA antibodies were found in 48% of the patients with Lyme arthritis but were undetectable in the healthy controls. T cells from the synovial fluid of patients with Lyme arthritis produced interleukin-17 (IL-17) in response to NapA. Moreover, NapA was able to induce the expression of IL-23 in neutrophils and monocytes, as well as the expression of IL-6, IL-1beta, and transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta) in monocytes, via Toll-like receptor 2. CONCLUSION These findings indicate that NapA of B burgdorferi is able to drive the expression of IL-6, IL-1beta, IL-23, and TGFbeta by cells of the innate immune system and to elicit a synovial fluid Th17 cell response that might play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of Lyme arthritis.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Bicyclic peptide inhibitor reveals large contact interface with a protease target

Alessandro Angelini; Laura Cendron; Shiyu Chen; Jeremy Touati; Greg Winter; Giuseppe Zanotti; Christian Heinis

From a large combinatorial library of chemically constrained bicyclic peptides we isolated a selective and potent (K(i) = 53 nM) inhibitor of human urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and crystallized the complex. This revealed an extended structure of the peptide with both peptide loops engaging the target to form a large interaction surface of 701 Å(2) with multiple hydrogen bonds and complementary charge interactions, explaining the high affinity and specificity of the inhibitor. The interface resembles that between two proteins and suggests that these constrained peptides have the potential to act as small protein mimics.


EMBO Reports | 2003

Crystal structure of the PsbQ protein of photosystem II from higher plants

Vito Calderone; Michela Trabucco; Andreja Vujičić; Roberto Battistutta; Giorgio M. Giacometti; Flora Andreucci; Roberto Barbato; Giuseppe Zanotti

The smallest extrinsic polypeptide of the water‐oxidizing complex (PsbQ) was extracted and purified from spinach (Spinacia oleracea) photosystem II (PSII) membranes. It was then crystallized in the presence of Zn2+ and its structure was determined by X‐ray diffraction at 1.95‐Å resolution using the multi‐wavelength anomalous diffraction method, with the zinc as the anomalous scatterer. The crystal structure shows that the core of the protein is a four‐helix bundle, whereas the amino‐terminal portion, which possibly interacts with the photosystem core, is not visible in the crystal. The distribution of positive and negative charges on the protein surface might explain the ability of PsbQ to increase the binding of Cl− and Ca2+ and make them available to PSII.

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