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Dive into the research topics where Isabella Panfoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabella Panfoli.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2009

Evidence for aerobic ATP synthesis in isolated myelin vesicles

Silvia Ravera; Isabella Panfoli; Daniela Calzia; Maria Grazia Aluigi; Paolo Bianchini; Alberto Diaspro; Gianluigi Mancardi; Alessandro Morelli

Even though brain represents only 2-3% of the body weight, it consumes 20% of total body oxygen, and 25% of total body glucose. This sounds surprising, in that mitochondrial density in brain is low, while mitochondria are thought to be the sole site of aerobic energy supply. These data would suggest that structures other than mitochondria are involved in aerobic ATP production. Considering that a sustained aerobic metabolism needs a great surface extension and that the oxygen solubility is higher in neutral lipids, we have focused our attention on myelin sheath, the multilayered membrane produced by oligodendrocytes, hypothesizing it to be an ATP production site. Myelin has long been supposed to augment the speed of conduction, however, there is growing evidence that it exerts an as yet unexplained neuro-trophic role. In this work, by biochemical assays, Western Blot analysis, confocal laser microscopy, we present evidence that isolated myelin vesicles (IMV) are able to consume O(2) and produce ATP through the operation of a proton gradient across their membranes. Living optic nerve sections were exposed to MitoTracker, a classical mitochondrial dye, by a technique that we have developed and it was found that structures closely resembling nerve axons were stained. By immunohistochemistry we show that ATP synthase and myelin basic protein colocalize on both IMV and optic nerves. The complex of data suggests that myelin sheath may be the site of oxygen absorption and aerobic metabolism for the axons.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2009

Evidence for aerobic metabolism in retinal rod outer segment disks.

Isabella Panfoli; Daniela Calzia; Paolo Bianchini; Silvia Ravera; Alberto Diaspro; Giovanni Candiano; Angela Bachi; Massimiliano Monticone; Maria Grazia Aluigi; Stefano Barabino; Giovanni Calabria; Maurizio Rolando; Carlo Tacchetti; Alessandro Morelli; Isidoro M. Pepe

The disks of the vertebrate retinal rod Outer Segment (OS), devoid of mitochondria, are the site of visual transduction, a very energy demanding process. In a previous proteomic study we reported the expression of the respiratory chain complexes I-IV and the oxidative phosphorylation Complex V (F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase) in disks. In the present study, the functional localization of these proteins in disks was investigated by biochemical analyses, oxymetry, membrane potential measurements, and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Disk preparations, isolated by Ficoll flotation, were characterized for purity. An oxygen consumption, stimulated by NADH and Succinate and reverted by rotenone, antimycin A and KCN was measured in disks, either in coupled or uncoupled conditions. Rhodamine-123 fluorescence quenching kinetics showed the existence of a proton potential difference across the disk membranes. Citrate synthase activity was assayed and found enriched in disks with respect to ROS. ATP synthesis by disks (0.7 micromol ATP/min/mg), sensitive to the common mitochondrial ATP synthase inhibitors, would largely account for the rod ATP need in the light. Overall, data indicate that an oxidative phosphorylation occurs in rod OS, which do not contain mitochondria, thank to the presence of ectopically located mitochondrial proteins. These findings may provide important new insight into energy production in outer segments via aerobic metabolism and additional information about protein components in OS disk membranes.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2008

Proteomic analysis of the retinal rod outer segment disks

Isabella Panfoli; Luca Musante; Angela Bachi; Silvia Ravera; Daniela Calzia; Angela Cattaneo; Maurizio Bruschi; Paolo Bianchini; Alberto Diaspro; Alessandro Morelli; Isidoro M. Pepe; Carlo Tacchetti; Giovanni Candiano

The initial events of vision at low light take place in vertebrate retinal rods. The rod outer segment consists of a stack of flattened disks surrounded by the plasma membrane. A list of the proteins that reside in disks has not been achieved yet. We present the first comprehensive proteomic analysis of purified rod disks, obtained by combining the results of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis separation of disk proteins to MALDI-TOF or nLC-ESI-MS/MS mass spectrometry techniques. Intact disks were isolated from bovine retinal rod outer segments by a method that minimizes contamination from inner segment. Out of a total of 187 excised spots, 148 proteins were unambiguously identified. An additional set of 61 proteins (partially overlapping with the previous ones) was generated by one-dimensional (1D) gel nLC-ESI-MS/MS method. Proteins involved in vision as well as in aerobic metabolism were found, among which are the five complexes of oxidative phosphorylation. Results from biochemical, Western blot, and confocal laser scanning microscopy immunochemistry experiments suggest that F 1F o-ATP synthase is located and catalytically active in ROS disk membranes. This study represents a step toward a global physiological characterization of the disk proteome and provides information necessary for future studies on energy supply for phototransduction.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2011

Characterization of Myelin Sheath FoF1-ATP Synthase and its Regulation by IF1

Silvia Ravera; Isabella Panfoli; Maria Grazia Aluigi; Daniela Calzia; Alessandro Morelli

FoF1-ATP synthase is the nanomotor responsible for most of ATP synthesis in the cell. In physiological conditions, it carries out ATP synthesis thanks to a proton gradient generated by the respiratory chain in the inner mitochondrial membrane. We previously reported that isolated myelin vesicles (IMV) contain functional FoF1-ATP synthase and respiratory chain complexes and are able to conduct an aerobic metabolism, to support the axonal energy demand. In this study, by biochemical assay, Western Blot (WB) analysis and immunofluorescence microscopy, we characterized the IMV FoF1-ATP synthase. ATP synthase activity decreased in the presence of the specific inhibitors (olygomicin, DCCD, FCCP, valynomicin/nigericin) and respiratory chain inhibitors (antimycin A, KCN), suggesting a coupling of oxygen consumption and ATP synthesis. ATPase activity was inhibited in low pH conditions. WB and microscopy analyses of both IMV and optic nerves showed that the Inhibitor of F1 (IF1), a small protein that binds the F1 moiety in low pH when of oxygen supply is impaired, is expressed in myelin sheath. Data are discussed in terms of the role of IF1 in the prevention of the reversal of ATP synthase in myelin sheath during central nervous system ischemic events. Overall, data are consistent with an energetic role of myelin sheath, and may shed light on the relationship among demyelination and axonal degeneration.


Expert Review of Proteomics | 2011

Proteomics unravels the exportability of mitochondrial respiratory chains

Isabella Panfoli; Silvia Ravera; Maurizio Bruschi; Giovanni Candiano; Alessandro Morelli

Expression of F1Fo-ATP synthase, which generates the majority of cellular ATP and is believed to be strictly confined to mitochondria, has recently been identified in ectopic locations, together with the four complexes of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) or enzymes from the Krebs cycle. Identification of these proteins has mostly been accomplished by proteomic methods and mass spectrometry – techniques that hold great promise in increasing our understanding of the proteome. The ectopic presence of ATP synthase has variably been attributed to contamination of the sample or to its action as a cell-surface receptor for apparently unrelated ligands, but OXPHOS proteins have sometimes been found to be catalytically active in oxidative phosphorylation, as they were true components of the system under investigation. The present article focuses on how mass spectrometry can increase our understanding of the proteome of subcellular membranes. We review the recent evidence for an extra-mitochondrial expression of OXPHOS by proteomics studies, highlighting what we can learn by combining these data.


Biochimie | 2013

Tricarboxylic acid cycle-sustained oxidative phosphorylation in isolated myelin vesicles.

Silvia Ravera; Martina Bartolucci; Daniela Calzia; Maria Grazia Aluigi; Paola Ramoino; Alessandro Morelli; Isabella Panfoli

The Central Nervous System (CNS) function was shown to be fueled exclusively by oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). This is in line with the sensitivity of brain to hypoxia, but less with the scarcity of the mitochondria in CNS. Consistently with the ectopic expression of FoF1-ATP synthase and the electron transfer chain in myelin, we have reported data demonstrating that isolated myelin vesicles (IMV) conduct OXPHOS. It may suggest that myelin sheath could be a site for the whole aerobic degradation of glucose. In this paper, we assayed the functionality of glycolysis and of TCA cycle enzymes in IMV purified from bovine forebrain. We found the presence and activity of all of the glycolytic and TCA cycle enzymes, comparable to those in mitochondria-enriched fractions, in the same experimental conditions. IMV also contain consistent carbonic anhydrase activity. These data suggest that myelin may be a contributor in energy supply for the axon, performing an extra-mitochondrial aerobic OXPHOS. The vision of myelin as the site of aerobic metabolism may shed a new light on many demyelinating pathologies, that cause an a yet unresolved axonal degeneration and whose clinical onset coincides with myelin development completion.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2011

Hypothesis of an energetic function for myelin.

Alessandro Morelli; Silvia Ravera; Isabella Panfoli

Nervous system is a great oxygen consumer, but the site of oxygen absorption has remained elusive. Four proteomic studies have shown that the respiratory complexes I to V may be expressed in isolated myelin. Myelin is an outgrowth of glial cells, surrounding many axons in multiple spires both in peripheral and central nervous system. Recent quantitative analyses strongly support the daring hypothesis that myelin is functional in aerobic ATP production, to supply the neuron with chemical energy. A vision of myelin sheath as a structure devoted to the oxygen absorbance for glucose combustion in nervous system thank to its enormous surface, would be also supported by an impressive series of characteristics and properties of myelin that do not presently find an explanation, all of which are herein examined.


Bioelectromagnetics | 2010

Sinusoidal ELF magnetic fields affect acetylcholinesterase activity in cerebellum synaptosomal membranes.

Silvia Ravera; Bruno Bianco; Carlo Cugnoli; Isabella Panfoli; Daniela Calzia; Alessandro Morelli; Isidoro M. Pepe

The effects of extremely low frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MF) on acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity of synaptosomal membranes were investigated. Sinusoidal fields with 50 Hz frequency and different amplitudes caused AChE activity to decrease about 27% with a threshold of about 0.74 mT. The decrease in enzymatic activity was independent of the time of permanence in the field and was completely reversible. Identical results were obtained with exposure to static MF of the same amplitudes. Moreover, the inhibitory effects on enzymatic activity are spread over frequency windows with different maximal values at 60, 200, 350, and 475 Hz. When synaptosomal membranes were solubilized with Triton, ELF-MF did not affect AChE activity, suggesting the crucial role of the membrane, as well as the lipid linkage of the enzyme, in determining the conditions for inactivation. The results are discussed in order to give an interpretation at molecular level of the macroscopic effects produced by ELF-MF on biological systems, in particular the alterations of embryo development in many organisms due to acetylcholine accumulation.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2003

Ligand-Independent Tyrosine Kinase Signalling in RTH 149 Trout Hepatoma Cells: Comparison Among Heavy Metals and Pro-Oxidants

Bruno Burlando; Valeria Magnelli; Isabella Panfoli; Elena Berti; Aldo Viarengo

Tyrosine phosphorylation depends on the activity of receptor and non-receptor tyrosine kinases and promote cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Different stressors are known to stimulate tyrosine kinase activities and this could explain a wide spectrum of effects that these agents produce on different organisms. We studied the effects of heavy metals and pro-oxidants on tyrosine kinase signalling in trout hepatoma cells (RTH 149) by Western immunoblotting. Use of antiphosphotyrosine showed that Hg<sup>2+</sup> and Cu<sup>2+</sup>in the µM range, and H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> in the mM range, induced tyrosine phosphorylation. The effect of Cu<sup>2+</sup>was prevented by pre-incubation with genistein, while those of Hg<sup>2+</sup>and H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> were only decreased, probably due to tyrosine kinase stimulation coupled to phosphatase inhibition. Phosphospecific antibodies against the three types of MAPKs showed that ERK is activated by heavy metals only, while p38 and SAPK/JNK are activated by H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, Hg<sup>2+</sup>, and Cu<sup>2+</sup> plus low H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>. Cell pre-incubation with p38 inhibitors indicated that ERK activation by H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> is prevented by concomitant activation of p38. Phosphospecific STAT antibodies revealed activation by H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> only. In conclusion, fish cell exposure to heavy metals and pro-oxidants produce specific tyrosine kinase responses, involving cross talk and redox modulatory effects.


Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology | 2011

Evidence for Ectopic Aerobic ATP Production on C6 Glioma Cell Plasma Membrane

Silvia Ravera; Maria Grazia Aluigi; Daniela Calzia; Paola Ramoino; Alessandro Morelli; Isabella Panfoli

Extracellular ATP plays a pivotal role as a signaling molecule in physiological and pathological conditions in the CNS. In several glioma cell lines, ATP is a positive factor for one or more characteristics important for the abnormal growth and survival of these cells. This work presents immunofluorescence and biochemical analyses suggesting that an aerobic metabolism, besides mitochondria, is located also on the plasma membrane of C6 glioma cells. An ATP synthesis coupled to oxygen consumption was measured in plasma membrane isolated from C6 cells, sensitive to common inhibitors of respiratory chain complexes, suggesting the involvement of a putative surface ATP synthase complex. Immunofluorescence imaging showed that Cytochrome c oxydase colocalized with WGA, a typical plasma membrane protein, on the plasma membrane of glioma cells. Cytochrome c oxydase staining pattern appeared punctuate, suggesting the intriguing possibility that the redox chains may be expressed in discrete sites on C6 glioma cell membrane. Data suggest that the whole respiratory chain is localized on C6 glioma cell surface. Moreover, when resveratrol, an ATP synthase inhibitor, was added to culture medium, a cytostatic effect was observed, suggesting a correlation among the ectopic ATP synthesis and the tumor growth. So, a potential direction for the design of new targets for future therapies may arise.

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Alberto Diaspro

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Paolo Bianchini

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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