Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Isidoro M. Pepe is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Isidoro M. Pepe.


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.


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.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Effect of light and calcium on cyclic GMP synthesis in rod outer segments of toad retina

Isidoro M. Pepe; Anna Boero; Laura Vergani; Isabella Panfoli; Carlo Cugnoli

The rod outer segments of toad retina contain a guanylate cyclase activity of about 3 +/- 1 nmol of cGMP formed/min per mg protein. In darkness this value is largely independent of the Ca2+ concentration, although it is enhanced by light upon lowering the Ca2+ concentration from 10(-5) to 10(-8) M. The activating effect of light on cyclase at low Ca2+ concentrations is enlarged upon increasing the light intensity. With a flash of light bleaching 7 X 10(-2) percent of rhodopsin, cyclase activity increased by a factor of 30 when Ca2+ levels dropped from 10(-5) to 10(-8) M. In view of recent observations that shortly after a flash of light the calcium activity inside the photoreceptor cell decreases, it seems likely that Ca2+ plays a regulatory role on cGMP metabolism in visual excitation.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1996

LANGMUIR-BLODGETT FILMS OF PHOTOSENSITIVE PROTEINS

Isidoro M. Pepe; Claudio Nicolini

The striking properties of monolayers and multilayers of photosensitive proteins obtained by using the Langmuir-Blodgett technique are described. The close packing of the protein molecules, which preserve most of the properties found in solution, seems to be the main cause for their thermal stability, which in some cases reached a temperature of 200 degrees C without the loss of the protein secondary structure. The review is focused on three of the most intensively studied photosensitive proteins, namely photosynthetic reaction centres, bacteriorhodopsin and bovine rhodopsin, and on their possible applications as molecular optical devices.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1992

Retinal photoisomerase: role in invertebrate visual cells.

Isidoro M. Pepe; Carlo Cugnoli

In invertebrate visual cells, the rhodopsin content is maintained at a high level by the fast process of photoregeneration during daylight. Rhodopsin is converted by photoabsorption to metarhodopsin, which is reconverted to rhodopsin by light. In addition, rhodopsin is regenerated by a slow process of renewal which takes days to complete and involves the biosynthesis of opsin. It is well known that rhodopsin can be formed from opsin only when 11-cis-retinal is present; this requires the existence of an isomerizing enzyme which is capable of transforming all-trans-retinal, released from the degradation of metarhodopsin, into the 11-cis-retinal isomer. In some invertebrate visual systems, experiments on rhodopsin regeneration have been interpreted by assuming that the isomerization reaction is a light-dependent process involving a retinal-protein complex. Two retinal photoisomerases which have been well characterized, i.e. bee photoisomerase and cephalopod retinochrome, are reviewed here. Their properties are compared in order to determine their physiological role, which is likely to be in the renewal of visual pigment rhodopsin. To conclude, a visual pigment cycle is proposed in which rhodopsin regeneration follows two light-dependent pathways. This greatly simplifies the rhodopsin regeneration scheme for invertebrate visual systems.


Biology of Reproduction | 2006

First cell cycles of sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus are dramatically impaired by exposure to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic field.

Silvia Ravera; Carla Falugi; Daniela Calzia; Isidoro M. Pepe; Isabella Panfoli; Alessandro Morelli

Abstract Exposure of fertilized eggs of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus to an electromagnetic field of 75-Hz frequency and low amplitudes (from 0.75 to 2.20 mT of magnetic component) leads to a dramatic loss of synchronization of the first cell cycle, with formation of anomalous embryos linked to irregular separation of chromatids during the mitotic events. Because acetylcholinesterase (ACHE) is thought to regulate the embryonic first developmental events of the sea urchin, its enzymatic activity was assayed in embryo homogenates and decreased by 48% when the homogenates were exposed to the same pulsed field. This enzymatic inactivation had a threshold of about 0.75 ± 0.01 mT. The same field threshold was found for the effect on the formation of anomalous embryos of P. lividus. Moreover, ACHE inhibitors seem to induce the same teratological effects as those caused by the field, while blockers of acetylcholine (ACh) receptors are able to antagonize those effects. We conclude that one of the main causes of these dramatic effects on the early development of the sea urchin by field exposure could be the accumulation of ACh due to ACHE inactivation. The crucial role of the membrane in determining the conditions for enzyme inactivation is discussed.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Adenylate kinase activity in rod outer segments of bovine retina

Luigi Notari; Isidoro M. Pepe; Carlo Cugnoli; Alessandro Morelli

The rod outer segments of bovine retina contain two different adenylate kinases: a soluble activity, which is not sensitive to calcium ion, and an activity bound to disk membranes, which is dependent on the calcium levels. In fact, the maximal activity associated to the disks is reached at Ca(2+) concentrations between 10(-6) and 10(-7) M, which is the range of calcium level actually present in the rod cell. The Michaelis-Menten kinetics of the enzyme activity on disk membranes was determined and the actual concentrations of ATP, AMP and ADP were measured in the photoreceptor outer segment. Therefore, the physiological relevance of the adenylate kinase activity was discussed considering the above results. The formation of ATP catalyzed by the enzyme seems appropriate to supply at least some of the reactions necessary for phototransduction, indicating that ATP could be regenerated from ADP directly on the disk membranes where the photoreception events take place.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2003

Studies on adenylate kinase isoform bound to disk membranes of the rod outer segment of bovine retina

Luigi Notari; Alessandro Morelli; Isidoro M. Pepe

An adenylate kinase (AK) activity modulated by calcium ion concentration has been found associated to the disk membranes of the rod outer segment of bovine retina. A maximum activity of about 80 nmol ATP produced per min per mg protein was found at physiological calcium concentrations. Preliminary experiments suggest that the membrane binding is presumably promoted by fatty acylation of the protein. In fact, a protein with a molecular weight corresponding to the disk adenylate kinase was recognized by a polyclonal antiserum against the first 15 N-terminal amino acids of AK1beta, a membrane-associated isoform of adenylate kinase, which belongs to the N-terminus myristoylated protein family. The adenylate kinase activity was also measured directly on the protein band transferred to nitrocellulose by Western blot.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1987

Structure of a protein catalyzing the formation of 11 cis-retinal in the visual cycle of invertebrate eyes

Isidoro M. Pepe; C. Cugnoli; M. Peluso; Laura Vergani; A. Boero

A pigment made up of a protein able to bind retinal as well as retinol is described. The molecule consists of a dimer with a molecular weight of 50,000 which binds one molecule of retinal. The binding site for retinal is a Schiff base buried in the interior of the protein. Retinol is probably bound to the protein in the same site as for retinal, although not covalently, as suggested by the absorbance spectra. The protein, extracted from honeybee retina, is involved in visual pigment metabolism (1), and its structure may elucidate the mechanism of the stereospecific photoisomerization of alltrans-retinal to 11-cis-retinal.

Collaboration


Dive into the Isidoro M. Pepe's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alberto Diaspro

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Angela Bachi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge