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Featured researches published by Grazia Camarda.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010

Protein Export Marks the Early Phase of Gametocytogenesis of the Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium falciparum

Francesco Silvestrini; Edwin Lasonder; Anna Olivieri; Grazia Camarda; Ben C. L. van Schaijk; Massimo Sanchez; Sumera Younis Younis; Robert W. Sauerwein; Pietro Alano

Despite over a century of study of malaria parasites, parts of the Plasmodium falciparum life cycle remain virtually unknown. One of these is the early gametocyte stage, a round shaped cell morphologically similar to an asexual trophozoite in which major cellular transformations ensure subsequent development of the elongated gametocyte. We developed a protocol to obtain for the first time highly purified preparations of early gametocytes using a transgenic line expressing a green fluorescent protein from the onset of gametocytogenesis. We determined the cellular proteome (1427 proteins) of this parasite stage by high accuracy tandem mass spectrometry and newly determined the proteomes of asexual trophozoites and mature gametocytes, identifying altogether 1090 previously undetected parasite proteins. Quantitative label-free comparative proteomics analysis determined enriched protein clusters for the three parasite developmental stages. Gene set enrichment analysis on the 251 proteins enriched in the early gametocyte proteome revealed that proteins putatively exported and involved in erythrocyte remodeling are the most overrepresented protein set in these stages. One-tenth of the early gametocyte-enriched proteome is constituted of putatively exported proteins, here named PfGEXPs (P. falciparum gametocyte-exported proteins). N-terminal processing and N-acetylation at a conserved leucine residue within the Plasmodium export element pentamotif were detected by mass spectrometry for three such proteins in the early but not in the mature gametocyte sample, further supporting a specific role in protein export in early gametocytogenesis. Previous reports and results of our experiments confirm that the three proteins are indeed exported in the erythrocyte cytoplasm. This work indicates that protein export profoundly marks early sexual differentiation in P. falciparum, probably contributing to host cell remodeling in this phase of the life cycle, and that gametocyte-enriched molecules are recruited to modulate this process in gametocytogenesis.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2012

The Plasmodium falciparum schizont phosphoproteome reveals extensive phosphatidylinositol and cAMP-protein kinase A signaling

Edwin Lasonder; Judith L. Green; Grazia Camarda; Hana Talabani; Anthony A. Holder; Gordon Langsley; Pietro Alano

The asexual blood stages of Plasmodium falciparum cause the most lethal form of human malaria. During growth within an infected red blood cell, parasite multiplication and formation of invasive merozoites is called schizogony. Here, we present a detailed analysis of the phosphoproteome of P. falciparum schizonts revealing 2541 unique phosphorylation sites, including 871 novel sites. Prominent roles for cAMP-dependent protein kinase A- and phosphatidylinositol-signaling were identified following analysis by functional enrichment, phosphoprotein interaction network clustering and phospho-motif identification tools. We observed that most key enzymes in the inositol pathway are phosphorylated, which strongly suggests additional levels of regulation and crosstalk with other protein kinases that coregulate different biological processes. A distinct pattern of phosphorylation of proteins involved in merozoite egress and red blood cell invasion was noted. The analyses also revealed that cAMP-PKA signaling is implicated in a wide variety of processes including motility. We verified this finding experimentally using an in vitro kinase assay and identified three novel PKA substrates associated with the glideosome motor complex: myosin A, GAP45 and CDPK1. Therefore, in addition to an established role for CDPK1 in the motor complex, this study reveals the coinvolvement of PKA, further implicating cAMP as an important regulator of host cell invasion.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2004

A pRb-independent mechanism preserves the postmitotic state in terminally differentiated skeletal muscle cells.

Grazia Camarda; Francesca Siepi; Deborah Pajalunga; Camilla Bernardini; Rossella Rossi; Alessandra Montecucco; Ettore Meccia; Marco Crescenzi

In skeletal muscle differentiation, the retinoblastoma protein (pRb) is absolutely necessary to establish definitive mitotic arrest. It is widely assumed that pRb is equally essential to sustain the postmitotic state, but this contention has never been tested. Here, we show that terminal proliferation arrest is maintained in skeletal muscle cells by a pRb-independent mechanism. Acute Rb excision from conditional knockout myotubes caused reexpression of E2F transcriptional activity, cyclin-E and -A kinase activities, PCNA, DNA ligase I, RPA, and MCM2, but did not induce DNA synthesis, showing that pRb is not indispensable to preserve the postmitotic state of these cells. Muscle-specific gene expression was significantly down-regulated, showing that pRb is constantly required for optimal implementation of the muscle differentiation program. Rb-deleted myotubes were efficiently reactivated by forced expression of cyclin D1 and Cdk4, indicating a functionally significant target other than pRb for these molecules. Finally, Rb removal induced no DNA synthesis even in pocket-protein null cells. Thus, the postmitotic state of myotubes is maintained by at least two mechanisms, one of which is pocket-protein independent.


Cellular Microbiology | 2009

Egress of Plasmodium berghei gametes from their host erythrocyte is mediated by the MDV-1/PEG3 protein

Marta Ponzi; Inga Siden-Kiamos; Lucia Bertuccini; Chiara Currà; Hans Kroeze; Grazia Camarda; Tomasino Pace; Blandine Franke-Fayard; Eliane C. Laurentino; Christos Louis; Andrew P. Waters; Chris J. Janse; Pietro Alano

Malaria parasites invade erythrocytes of their host both for asexual multiplication and for differentiation to male and female gametocytes – the precursor cells of Plasmodium gametes. For further development the parasite is dependent on efficient release of the asexual daughter cells and of the gametes from the host erythrocyte. How malarial parasites exit their host cells remains largely unknown. We here report the characterization of a Plasmodium berghei protein that is involved in egress of both male and female gametes from the host erythrocyte. Protein MDV‐1/PEG3, like its Plasmodium falciparum orthologue, is present in gametocytes of both sexes, but more abundant in the female, where it is associated with dense granular organelles, the osmiophilic bodies. Δmdv‐1/peg3 parasites in which MDV‐1/PEG3 production was abolished by gene disruption had a strongly reduced capacity to form zygotes resulting from a reduced capability of both the male and female gametes to disrupt the surrounding parasitophorous vacuole and to egress from the host erythrocyte. These data demonstrate that emergence from the host cell of male and female gametes relies on a common, MDV‐1/PEG3‐dependent mechanism that is distinct from mechanisms used by asexual parasites.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

The role of osmiophilic bodies and Pfg377 expression in female gametocyte emergence and mosquito infectivity in the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum

Tania F. de Koning-Ward; Anna Olivieri; Lucia Bertuccini; Andrew Hood; Francesco Silvestrini; Konstantinos Charvalias; Pedro Berzosa Díaz; Grazia Camarda; Terry F. McElwain; Tony Papenfuss; Julie Healer; Lucilla Baldassarri; Brendan S. Crabb; Pietro Alano; Lisa C. Ranford-Cartwright

Osmiophilic bodies are membrane‐bound vesicles, found predominantly in Plasmodium female gametocytes, that become progressively more abundant as the gametocyte reaches full maturity. These vesicles lie beneath the subpellicular membrane of the gametocyte, and the release of their contents into the parasitophorous vacuole has been postulated to aid in the escape of gametocytes from the erythrocyte after ingestion by the mosquito. Currently, the only protein known to be associated with osmiophilic bodies in Plasmodium falciparum is Pfg377, a gametocyte‐specific protein expressed at the onset of osmiophilic body development. Here we show by targeted gene disruption that Pfg377 plays a fundamental role in the formation of these organelles, and that female gametocytes lacking the full complement of osmiophilic bodies are significantly less efficient both in vitro and in vivo in their emergence from the erythrocytes upon induction of gametogenesis, a process whose timing is critical for fertilization with the short‐lived male gamete. This reduced efficiency of emergence explains the significant defect in oocyst formation in mosquitoes fed blood meals containing Pfg377‐negative gametocytes, resulting in an almost complete blockade of infection.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Multicolor bioluminescence boosts malaria research: quantitative dual-color assay and single-cell imaging in Plasmodium falciparum parasites.

Luca Cevenini; Grazia Camarda; Elisa Michelini; Giulia Siciliano; Maria Maddalena Calabretta; Roberta Bona; T. R. Santha Kumar; Andrea Cara; Bruce R. Branchini; David A. Fidock; Aldo Roda; Pietro Alano

New reliable and cost-effective antimalarial drug screening assays are urgently needed to identify drugs acting on different stages of the parasite Plasmodium falciparum, and particularly those responsible for human-to-mosquito transmission, that is, the P. falciparum gametocytes. Low Z′ factors, narrow dynamic ranges, and/or extended assay times are commonly reported in current gametocyte assays measuring gametocyte-expressed fluorescent or luciferase reporters, endogenous ATP levels, activity of gametocyte enzymes, or redox-dependent dye fluorescence. We hereby report on a dual-luciferase gametocyte assay with immature and mature P. falciparum gametocyte stages expressing red and green-emitting luciferases from Pyrophorus plagiophthalamus under the control of the parasite sexual stage-specific pfs16 gene promoter. The assay was validated with reference antimalarial drugs and allowed to quantitatively and simultaneously measure stage-specific drug effects on parasites at different developmental stages. The optimized assay, requiring only 48 h incubation with drugs and using a cost-effective luminogenic substrate, significantly reduces assay cost and time in comparison to state-of-the-art analogous assays. The assay had a Z′ factor of 0.71 ± 0.03, and it is suitable for implementation in 96- and 384-well microplate formats. Moreover, the use of a nonlysing d-luciferin substrate significantly improved the reliability of the assay and allowed one to perform, for the first time, P. falciparum bioluminescence imaging at single-cell level.


Molecular Microbiology | 2009

The Plasmodium falciparum protein Pfg27 is dispensable for gametocyte and gamete production, but contributes to cell integrity during gametocytogenesis.

Anna Olivieri; Grazia Camarda; Lucia Bertuccini; Marga van de Vegte-Bolmer; Adrian J. F. Luty; Robert W. Sauerwein; Pietro Alano

In the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, gametocyte maturation is a process remarkably longer than in other malaria species, accompanied by expression of 2–300 sexual stage‐specific proteins. Disruption of several of their encoding genes so far showed that only the abundant protein Pfg27, produced at the onset of sexual differentiation, is essential for gametocyte production. In contrast with what has been previously described, here we show that P. falciparum pfg27 disruptant lines are able to undergo all stages of gametocyte maturation, and are able to mature into gametes. A fraction of Pfg27‐defective gametocytes show, however, distinct abnormalities in intra‐ and extra‐cellular membranous compartments, such as accumulation of parasitophorous vacuole‐derived vesicles in the erythrocyte cytoplasm, large intracellular vacuoles and discontinuities in their trilaminar cell membrane. This work revises current knowledge on the role of Pfg27, indicating that the protein is not required for parasite entry into sexual differentiation, and suggesting that it is instead involved in maintaining cell integrity in the uniquely long gametocytogenesis of P. falciparum.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2010

Regulated oligomerisation and molecular interactions of the early gametocyte protein Pfg27 in Plasmodium falciparum sexual differentiation.

Grazia Camarda; Lucia Bertuccini; Saurabh Kumar Singh; Anna Maria Salzano; Alessandra Lanfrancotti; Anna Olivieri; Andrea Scaloni; Amit Sharma; Pietro Alano

Gametocytes of the protozoan Plasmodium falciparum ensure malaria parasite transmission from humans to the insect vectors. In their development, they produce the abundant specific protein Pfg27, the function and in vivo molecular interactions of which are unknown. Here we reveal a previously unreported localisation of Pfg27 in the gametocyte nucleus by immunoelectron microscopy and studies with HaloTag and Green Fluorescent Protein fusions, and identify a network of interactions established by the protein during gametocyte development. We report the ability of endogenous Pfg27 to form oligomeric complexes that are affected by phosphorylation of the protein, possibly through the identified phosphorylation sites, Ser32 and Thr208. We show that Pfg27 binds RNA molecules through specific residues and that the protein interacts with parasite RNA-binding proteins such as EF1alpha and PfH45. We propose a structural model for Pfg27 oligomerisation, based on the sequence and structural conservation here recognised between Pfg27 and sterile alpha motif. This study provides a molecular basis for Pfg27 to establish an interaction network with RNA and RNA-binding proteins and to govern its dynamic oligomerisation in developing gametocytes.


Archive | 2006

pRb in the Differentiation of Normal and Neoplastic Cells

Deborah Pajalunga; Grazia Camarda; Marco Crescenzi

This chapter deals with the role played by the retinoblastoma protein (pRb) in a variety of differentiation processes. After broadly reviewing the current knowledge on this issue, it points at two common themes. The first is the exclusive involvement of pRb in the final maturation stages of each lineage, so that the functional ablation of the protein produces relatively subtle differentiation defects. The second is that, at least in the cell types more thoroughly investigated, pRb exerts its pro-differentiation potential by enhancing the activities of transcription factors that are key regulators of tissue-specific differentiation.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2016

A chemical susceptibility profile of the Plasmodium falciparum transmission stages by complementary cell-based gametocyte assays

Sarah D'Alessandro; Grazia Camarda; Yolanda Corbett; Giulia Siciliano; Silvia Parapini; Luca Cevenini; Elisa Michelini; Aldo Roda; Didier Leroy; Donatella Taramelli; Pietro Alano

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Pietro Alano

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Anna Olivieri

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Lucia Bertuccini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Francesco Silvestrini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Edwin Lasonder

Plymouth State University

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Aldo Roda

University of Bologna

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Deborah Pajalunga

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Giulia Siciliano

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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