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Dive into the research topics where Lina Ghibelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Lina Ghibelli.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2010

Melatonin: A pleiotropic molecule regulating inflammation

Flavia Radogna; Marc Diederich; Lina Ghibelli

Melatonin is a neurohormone produced by the pineal gland that regulates sleep and circadian functions. Melatonin also regulates inflammatory and immune processes acting as both an activator and inhibitor of these responses. Melatonin demonstrates endocrine, but also paracrine and autocrine effects in the leukocyte compartment: on one side, leukocytes respond to melatonin in a circadian fashion; on the other side, leukocytes are able to synthesize melatonin by themselves. With its endocrine and paracrine effects, melatonin differentially modulates pro-inflammatory enzymes, controls production of inflammatory mediators such as cytokines and leukotrienes and regulates the lifespan of leukocytes by interfering with apoptotic processes. Moreover, its potent antioxidant ability allows scavenging of oxidative stress in the inflamed tissues. The interesting timing of pro- and anti-inflammatory effects, such as those affecting lipoxygenase activity, suggests that melatonin might promote early phases of inflammation on one hand and contribute to its attenuation on the other hand, in order to avoid complications of chronic inflammation. This review aims at giving a comprehensive overview of the various inflammatory pathways regulated by this pleiotropic hormone.


ACS Nano | 2011

Ce3+ Ions Determine Redox-Dependent Anti-apoptotic Effect of Cerium Oxide Nanoparticles

Ivana Celardo; Milena De Nicola; Corrado Mandoli; Jens Z. Pedersen; Enrico Traversa; Lina Ghibelli

Antioxidant therapy is the novel frontier to prevent and treat an impressive series of severe human diseases, and the search for adequate antioxidant drugs is fervent. Cerium oxide nanoparticles (nanoceria) are redox-active owing to the coexistence of Ce(3+) and Ce(4+) oxidation states and to the fact that Ce(3+) defects, and the compensating oxygen vacancies, are more abundant at the surface. Nanoceria particles exert outstanding antioxidant effects in vivo acting as well-tolerated anti-age and anti-inflammatory agents, potentially being innovative therapeutic tools. However, the biological antioxidant mechanisms are still unclear. Here, the analysis on two leukocyte cell lines undergoing apoptosis via redox-dependent or independent mechanisms revealed that the intracellular antioxidant effect is the direct cause of the anti-apoptotic and prosurvival effects of nanoceria. Doping with increasing concentrations of Sm(3+), which progressively decreased Ce(3+) without affecting oxygen vacancies, blunted these effects, demonstrating that Ce(3+)/Ce(4+) redox reactions are responsible for the outstanding biological properties of nanoceria.


International Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

The role of cyclooxygenase-2 in cell proliferation and cell death in human malignancies.

Cyril Sobolewski; Mario Dicato; Lina Ghibelli; Marc Diederich

It is well admitted that the link between chronic inflammation and cancer involves cytokines and mediators of inflammatory pathways, which act during the different steps of tumorigenesis. The cyclooxygenases (COXs) are a family of enzymes, which catalyze the rate-limiting step of prostaglandin biosynthesis. This family contains three members: ubiquitously expressed COX-1, which is involved in homeostasis; the inducible COX-2 isoform, which is upregulated during both inflammation and cancer; and COX-3, expressed in brain and spinal cord, whose functions remain to be elucidated. COX-2 was described to modulate cell proliferation and apoptosis mainly in solid tumors, that is, colorectal, breast, and prostate cancers, and, more recently, in hematological malignancies. These findings prompt us to analyze here the effects of a combination of COX-2 inhibitors together with different clinically used therapeutic strategies in order to further improve the efficiency of future anticancer treatments. COX-2 modulation is a promising field investigated by many research groups.


The FASEB Journal | 2000

H2O2-induced block of glycolysis as an active ADP-ribosylation reaction protecting cells from apoptosis

C. Colussi; Maria Cristina Albertini; S. Coppola; S. Rovidati; Francesco Galli; Lina Ghibelli

ABSTRACT H2O2 treatment on U937 cells leads to the block of glycolytic flux and the inactivation of glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate‐dehydrogenase by a posttranslational modification (possibly ADP‐ribosylation). Glycolysis spontaneously reactivates after 2 h of recovery from oxidative stress; thereafter cells begin to undergo apoptosis. The specific ADP‐ribosylation inhibitor 3‐aminobenzamide inhibits the stress‐induced inactivation of glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate‐dehydrogenase and the block of glycolysis; concomitantly, it anticipates and increases apoptosis. Exogenous block of glycolysis (i.e., by culture in glucose‐free medium or with glucose analogs or after NAD depletion), turns the transient block into a stable one: this results in protection from apoptosis, even when downstream cell metabolism is kept active by the addition of pyruvate. All this evidence indicates that the stress‐induced block of glycolysis is not the result of a passive oxidative damage, but rather an active cell reaction programmed via ADP‐ribosylation for cell self‐defense.—Colussi, C., Albertini, M. C., Coppola, S., Rovidati, S., Galli, F., Ghibelli, L. H2O2‐induced block of glycolysis as an active ADP‐ribosylation reaction protecting cells from apoptosis. FASEB J. 14, 2266‐2276 (2000)


The FASEB Journal | 2005

Oxidative Bax dimerization promotes its translocation to mitochondria independently of apoptosis

Maria D'alessio; M. De Nicola; Simona Coppola; Giampiero Gualandi; L. Pugliese; Silvia Cristofanon; P. Civitareale; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Antonio Bergamaschi; Andrea Magrini; Lina Ghibelli

Bax is a cytosolic protein, which in response to stressing apoptotic stimuli, is activated and translocates to mitochondria, thus initiating the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. In spite of many studies and the importance of the issue, the molecular mechanisms that trigger Bax translocation are still obscure. We show by computer simulation that the two cysteine residues of Bax may form disulfide bridges, producing conformational changes that favor Bax translocation. Oxidative, nonapoptogenic treatments produce an up‐shift of Bax migration compatible with homodimerization, which is reverted by reducing agents; this is accompanied by translocation to mitochondria. Dimers also appear in pure cytosolic fractions of cell lysates treated with H2O2, showing that Bax dimerization may take place in the cytosol. Bax dimer‐enriched lysates support Bax translocation to isolated mitochondria much more efficiently than untreated lysates, indicating that dimerization may promote Bax translocation. The absence of apoptosis in our system allows the demonstration that Bax moves because of oxidations, even in the absence of apoptosis. This provides the first evidence that Bax dimerization and translocation respond to oxidative stimuli, suggesting a novel role for Bax as a sensor of redox imbalance.


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Antifungal activity of polymer-based copper nanocomposite coatings

Nicola Cioffi; Luisa Torsi; Nicoletta Ditaranto; Luigia Sabbatini; Pier Giorgio Zambonin; Giuseppina Tantillo; Lina Ghibelli; Maria D’Alessio; Teresa Bleve-Zacheo; Enrico Traversa

Eukaryotes, such as fungi, can be harmful pathogen agents, and the control of their bioactivity is critical as humans are eukaryote organisms, too. Here, copper∕polymer nanocomposites are proposed as antifungal spinnable coatings with controlled copper-releasing properties. The tests of the bioactivity show that fungal growth is inhibited on the nanocomposite-coated plates, and the antifungal activity can be modulated by controlling the Cu nanoparticle loading.


Journal of Pineal Research | 2008

Melatonin antagonizes the intrinsic pathway of apoptosis via mitochondrial targeting of Bcl-2

Flavia Radogna; Silvia Cristofanon; Laura Paternoster; Maria D’Alessio; Milena De Nicola; Mario Dicato; Marc Diederich; Lina Ghibelli

Abstract:  We have recently shown that melatonin antagonizes damage‐induced apoptosis by interaction with the MT‐1/MT‐2 plasma membrane receptors. Here, we show that melatonin interferes with the intrinsic pathway of apoptosis at the mitochondrial level. In response to an apoptogenic stimulus, melatonin allows mitochondrial translocation of the pro‐apoptotic protein Bax, but it impairs its activation/dimerization The downstream apoptotic events, i.e. cytochrome c release, caspase 9 and 3 activation and nuclear vesiculation are equally impaired, indicating that melatonin interferes with Bax activation within mitochondria. Interestingly, we found that melatonin induces a strong re‐localization of Bcl‐2, the main Bax antagonist to mitochondria, suggesting that Bax activation may in fact be antagonized by Bcl‐2 at the mitochondrial level. Indeed, we inhibit the melatonin anti‐apoptotic effect (i) by silencing Bcl‐2 with small interfering RNAs, or with small‐molecular inhibitors targeted at the BH3 binding pocket in Bcl‐2 (i.e. the one interacting with Bax); and (ii) by inhibiting melatonin‐induced Bcl‐2 mitochondrial re‐localization with the MT1/MT2 receptor antagonist luzindole. This evidence provides a mechanism that may explain how melatonin through interaction with the MT1/MT2 receptors, elicits a pathway that interferes with the Bcl‐2 family, thus modulating the cell life/death balance.


Cancer Research | 2005

Proapoptotic activity of new glutathione S-transferase inhibitors.

Paola Turella; Giuseppe Filomeni; Angela Bullo; Francesca De Maria; Lina Ghibelli; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Maurizio Cianfriglia; Maurizio Mattei; Giorgio Federici; Giorgio Ricci; Anna Maria Caccuri

Selected 7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole derivatives have been recently found very efficient inhibitors of glutathione S-transferase (GST) P1-1, an enzyme which displays antiapoptotic activity and is also involved in the cellular resistance to anticancer drugs. These new inhibitors are not tripeptide glutathione-peptidomimetic molecules and display lipophylic properties suitable for crossing the plasma membrane. In the present work, we show the strong cytotoxic activity of these compounds in the following four different cell lines: K562 (human myeloid leukemia), HepG2 (human hepatic carcinoma), CCRF-CEM (human T-lymphoblastic leukemia), and GLC-4 (human small cell lung carcinoma). The LC50 values are in the micromolar/submicromolar range and are close to the IC50 values obtained with GSTP1-1, suggesting that the target of these molecules inside the cell is indeed this enzyme. The cytotoxic mechanism of 6-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-ylthio)hexanol, the most effective GSTP1-1 inhibitor, has been carefully investigated in leukemic CCRF-CEM and K562 cell lines. Western blot and immunoprecipitation analyzes have shown that 6-(7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-ylthio)hexanol promotes in both cell lines the dissociation of the GSTP1-1 in a complex with c-jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK). This process triggers a reactive oxygen species (ROS)-independent activation of the JNK-mediated pathway that results in a typical process of apoptosis. Besides this main pathway, in K562 cells, a ROS-mediated apoptosis partially occurs (about 30%) which involves the p38MAPK signal transduction pathway. The low concentration of this new compound needed to trigger cytotoxic effects on tumor cells and the low toxicity on mice indicate that the new 7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole derivatives are promising anticancer agents.


Environmental science. Nano | 2015

Catalytic properties and biomedical applications of cerium oxide nanoparticles

Carl D. Walkey; Soumen Das; Sudipta Seal; Joseph S. Erlichman; Karin L. Heckman; Lina Ghibelli; Enrico Traversa; James F. McGinnis; William T. Self

Cerium oxide nanoparticles (Nanoceria) have shown promise as catalytic antioxidants in the test tube, cell culture models and animal models of disease. However given the reactivity that is well established at the surface of these nanoparticles, the biological utilization of Nanoceria as a therapeutic still poses many challenges. Moreover the form that these particles take in a biological environment, such as the changes that can occur due to a protein corona, are not well established. This review aims to summarize the existing literature on biological use of Nanoceria, and to raise questions about what further study is needed to apply this interesting catalytic material to biomedical applications. These questions include: 1) How does preparation, exposure dose, route and experimental model influence the reported effects of Nanoceria in animal studies? 2) What are the considerations to develop Nanoceria as a therapeutic agent in regards to these parameters? 3) What biological targets of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) are relevant to this targeting, and how do these properties also influence the safety of these nanomaterials?


Mitochondrion | 2010

Multistep and multitask Bax activation

Lina Ghibelli; Marc Diederich

Bax is a pro-apoptotic protein allowing apoptosis to occur through the intrinsic, damage-induced pathway, and amplifying that one occurring via the extrinsic, receptor mediated pathway. Bax is present in viable cells and activated by pro-apoptotic stimuli. Activation implies structural changes, consisting of exposure of the N terminus and hydrophobic domains; changes in localization, consisting in migration from cytosol to mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum membranes; changes in the aggregation status, from monomer to dimer and multimer. Bax has multiple critical domains, namely the N terminus exposed after activation; two hydrophobic stretches exposed for membrane anchorage; two reactive cysteines allowing multimerization; the BH3 domain for interactions with the Bcl-2 family members; alpha helix 1 for t-Bid interaction. Bax has also multiple functions: it releases different mitochondrial factors such as cytochrome c, SMAC/diablo; it regulates mitochondrial fission, the mitochondrial permeability transition pore; it promotes Ca(2+) leakage through ER membrane. Altogether, Bax activation is a complex multi-step phenomenon. Here, we analyze these events as logically separable or alternative steps, attempting to assess their role, timing and reciprocal relation.

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Milena De Nicola

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Antonio Bergamaschi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Andrea Magrini

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Maria D'alessio

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Marc Diederich

Seoul National University

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Enrico Traversa

National Institute for Materials Science

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M. De Nicola

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Simona Coppola

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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