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Dive into the research topics where Luciana Hannibal is active.

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Featured researches published by Luciana Hannibal.


Human Mutation | 2010

Positive newborn screen for methylmalonic aciduria identifies the first mutation in TCblR/CD320, the gene for cellular uptake of transcobalamin‐bound vitamin B12

Edward V. Quadros; Shao Chiang Lai; Yasumi Nakayama; Jeffrey M. Sequeira; Luciana Hannibal; Sihe Wang; Donald W. Jacobsen; Sergey N. Fedosov; Erica Wright; Renata C. Gallagher; Natascia Anastasio; David Watkins; David S. Rosenblatt

Elevated methylmalonic acid in five asymptomatic newborns whose fibroblasts showed decreased uptake of transcobalamin‐bound cobalamin (holo‐TC), suggested a defect in the cellular uptake of cobalamin. Analysis of TCblR/CD320, the gene for the receptor for cellular uptake of holo‐TC, identified a homozygous single codon deletion, c.262_264GAG (p.E88del), resulting in the loss of a glutamic acid residue in the low‐density lipoprotein receptor type A‐like domain. Inserting the codon by site‐directed mutagenesis fully restored TCblR function. Hum Mutat 31:1–6, 2010.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Surface Charges and Regulation of FMN to Heme Electron Transfer in Nitric-oxide Synthase

Jesús Tejero; Luciana Hannibal; Anthony T. Mustovich; Dennis J. Stuehr

The nitric-oxide synthases (NOS, EC 1.14.13.39) are modular enzymes containing attached flavoprotein and heme (NOSoxy) domains. To generate nitric oxide (NO), the NOS FMN subdomain must interact with the NOSoxy domain to deliver electrons to the heme for O2 activation during catalysis. The molecular basis and how the interaction is regulated is unclear. We explored the role of eight positively charged residues that create an electropositive patch on NOSoxy in enabling the electron transfer by incorporating mutations that neutralized or reversed their individual charges. Stopped-flow and steady-state experiments revealed that individual charges at Lys423, Lys620, and Lys660 were the most important in enabling heme reduction in nNOS. Charge reversal was more disruptive than neutralization in all cases, and the effects on heme reduction were not due to a weakening in the thermodynamic driving force for heme reduction. Mutant NO synthesis activities displayed a complex pattern that could be simulated by a global model for NOS catalysis. This analysis revealed that the mutations impact the NO synthesis activity only through their effects on heme reduction rates. We conclude that heme reduction and NO synthesis in nNOS is enabled by electrostatic interactions involving Lys423, Lys620, and Lys660, which form a triad of positive charges on the NOSoxy surface. A simulated docking study reveals how electrostatic interactions of this triad can enable an FMN-NOSoxy interaction that is productive for electron transfer.


Biochemistry | 2016

Alternative Conformations of Cytochrome c: Structure, Function, and Detection

Luciana Hannibal; Florencia Tomasina; Daiana A. Capdevila; Verónica Demicheli; Verónica Tórtora; Damián Alvarez-Paggi; Ronald Jemmerson; Daniel H. Murgida; Rafael Radi

Cytochrome c (cyt c) is a cationic hemoprotein of ∼100 amino acid residues that exhibits exceptional functional versatility. While its primary function is electron transfer in the respiratory chain, cyt c is also recognized as a key component of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway, the mitochondrial oxidative protein folding machinery, and presumably as a redox sensor in the cytosol, along with other reported functions. Transition to alternative conformations and gain-of-peroxidase activity are thought to further enable the multiple functions of cyt c and its translocation across cellular compartments. In vitro, direct interactions of cyt c with cardiolipin, post-translational modifications such as tyrosine nitration, phosphorylation, methionine sulfoxidation, mutations, and even fine changes in electrical fields lead to a variety of conformational states that may be of biological relevance. The identification of these alternative conformations and the elucidation of their functions in vivo continue to be a major challenge. Here, we unify the knowledge of the structural flexibility of cyt c that supports functional moonlighting and review biochemical and immunochemical evidence confirming that cyt c undergoes conformational changes during normal and altered cellular homeostasis.


Biochemistry | 2012

Heme binding properties of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.

Luciana Hannibal; Daniel P. Collins; Julie Brassard; Ritu Chakravarti; Rajesh Vempati; Pierre Dorlet; Jeŕo ̂me Santolini; John H. Dawson; Dennis J. Stuehr

Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is a glycolytic enzyme that also functions in transcriptional regulation, oxidative stress, vesicular trafficking, and apoptosis. Because GAPDH is required for the insertion of cellular heme into inducible nitric oxide synthase [Chakravarti, R., et al. (2010) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 107, 18004-18009], we extensively characterized the heme binding properties of GAPDH. Substoichiometric amounts of ferric heme bound to GAPDH (one heme per GAPDH tetramer) to form a low-spin complex with UV-visible maxima at 362, 418, and 537 nm and when reduced to ferrous gave maxima at 424, 527, and 559 nm. Ferric heme association and dissociation rate constants at 10 °C were as follows: k(on) = 17800 M(-1) s(-1), k(off1) = 7.0 × 10(-3) s(-1), and k(off2) = 3.3 × 10(-4) s(-1) (giving approximate affinities of 19-390 nM). Ferrous heme bound more poorly to GAPDH and dissociated with a k(off) of 4.2 × 10(-3) s(-1). Magnetic circular dichroism, resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic data on the ferric, ferrous, and ferrous-CO complexes of GAPDH showed that the heme is bis-ligated with His as the proximal ligand. The distal ligand in the ferric complex was not displaced by CN(-) or N(3)(-) but in the ferrous complex could be displaced by CO at a rate of 1.75 s(-1) (for >0.2 mM CO). Studies with heme analogues revealed selectivity toward the coordinating metal and porphyrin ring structure. The GAPDH-heme complex was isolated from bacteria induced to express rabbit GAPDH in the presence of δ-aminolevulinic acid. Our finding of heme binding to GAPDH expands the proteins potential roles. The strength, selectivity, reversibility, and redox sensitivity of heme binding to GAPDH are consistent with it performing heme sensing or heme chaperone-like functions in cells.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Mechanistic studies on the reaction between R2N-NONOates and aquacobalamin: evidence for direct transfer of a nitroxyl group from R2N-NONOates to cobalt(III) centers.

Hanaa A. Hassanin; Luciana Hannibal; Donald W. Jacobsen; M.F. El-Shahat; Mohamed S. A. Hamza; Nicola E. Brasch

The gaseous radical nitric oxide (•NO, NO) is a signaling molecule that plays a vital role in biology. It facilitates vasodilation and inhibits platelet aggregation in the cardio-vascular system, initiates the pro-inflammatory immune response, and regulates neurotransmission.[1,2] Impaired NO bioavailability is associated with a wide variety of vascular pathologies, including endothelial cell dysfunction.[3] Conse-quently, there is considerable interest in NO donor molecules, such as 1-(N,N-dialkylamino)diazen-1-ium-1,2-diolates (R2N-NONOates; Figure 1), which spontaneously decompose by first-order acid-catalyzed processes to release up to two NO molecules and the corresponding amine.[4–6] R2N-NONOates are widely used as NO precursors in studies of NO-dependent biological processes[5,7] and as NO prodrugs with applications in NO-releasing biomaterials, wound healing, organ protection, and chemotherapy.[5,8] R2N-NONOates can also be combined with anti-inflammatory drugs[9] and incorporated into dendrimers, nanoparticles, or microspheres to optimize their delivery.[10–12] These species are typically synthesized by reacting amines with NO(g) at high pressures.[6,13,14] O2-alkylated R2N-NONOate conjugates with considerably enhanced stability have also been developed.[15–17]


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2011

THE MMACHC PROTEOME: HALLMARKS OF FUNCTIONAL COBALAMIN DEFICIENCY IN HUMANS

Luciana Hannibal; Patricia M. DiBello; Michelle Yu; Abby Miller; Sihe Wang; Belinda Willard; David S. Rosenblatt; Donald W. Jacobsen

Cobalamin (Cbl, B(12)) is an essential micronutrient required to fulfill the enzymatic reactions of cytosolic methylcobalamin-dependent methionine synthase and mitochondrial adenosylcobalamin-dependent methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Mutations in the MMACHC gene (cblC complementation group) disrupt processing of the upper-axial ligand of newly internalized cobalamins, leading to functional deficiency of the vitamin. Patients with cblC disease present with both hyperhomocysteinemia and methylmalonic acidemia, cognitive dysfunction, and megaloblastic anemia. In the present study we show that cultured skin fibroblasts from cblC patients export increased levels of both homocysteine and methylmalonic acid compared to control skin fibroblasts, and that they also have decreased levels of total intracellular folates. This is consistent with the clinical phenotype of functional cobalamin deficiency in vivo. The protein changes that accompany human functional Cbl deficiency are unknown. The proteome of control and cblC fibroblasts was quantitatively examined by two dimensional difference in-gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) and liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (LC/ESI/MS). Major changes were observed in the expression levels of proteins involved in cytoskeleton organization and assembly, the neurological system and cell signaling. Pathway analysis of the differentially expressed proteins demonstrated strong associations with neurological disorders, muscular and skeletal disorders, and cardiovascular diseases in the cblC mutant cell lines. Supplementation of the cell cultures with hydroxocobalamin did not restore the cblC proteome to the patterns of expression observed in control cells. These results concur with the observed phenotype of patients with the cblC disorder and their sometimes poor response to treatment with hydroxocobalamin. Our findings could be valuable for designing alternative therapies to alleviate the clinical manifestation of the cblC disorder, as some of the protein changes detected in our study are common hallmarks of known pathologies such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons diseases as well as muscular dystrophies.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

The X-ray crystal structure of glutathionylcobalamin revealed.

Luciana Hannibal; Donald W. Jacobsen

The first evidence of a complex between glutathione and cobalamin, glutathionylcobalamin (GSCbl), was presented by Wagner and Bernhauer more than 40 years ago (Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1964, 112, 580). More recently, NMR and EXAFS solution studies by Brown et al. (Biochemistry 1993, 32, 8421) and Scheuring et al. (Biochemistry 1994, 33, 6310), respectively, provided evidence that the glutathionyl moiety in GSCbl is bound to the cobalt center via a Co-S bond. Despite continued efforts, the structural analysis of glutathionylcobalamin in the solid state has remained elusive. Here, we report the first atomic resolution crystal structure of GSCbl, refined to a crystallographic R factor of 0.0683. The glutathione moiety is bound to the cobalt center through the sulfur atom as expected, with a Co-S bond distance of 2.295(1) Å. This distance agrees with the distance obtained from the EXAFS analysis of GSCbl (2.280(5) Å). However, the bond to the axial α-5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole base (DMB), 2.074(3) Å, is significantly shorter than that determined from the EXAFS measurements (Co-N3B = 2.15(3) Å). The corrin fold angle is 24.7°, the highest ever reported for a cobalamin structure, and points in the direction of the β face of the corrin, toward the glutathione (GS(-)). The GS(-) ligand has been modeled in two conformations, each featuring distinct hydrogen bonding interactions. In both conformations, the α-carboxylate group of the GS(-) ligand interacts with the generally rigid side chain a of the cobalamin molecule, resulting in two distinct conformations. A comparison with the structure of other thiolatocobalamins revealed high similarity in the positions of the atoms in the cysteinyl moiety, the fold of the corrin rings, and the Co-S bond distances.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Influence of heme-thiolate in shaping the catalytic properties of a bacterial nitric oxide synthase

Luciana Hannibal; Ramasamy Somasundaram; Jesús Tejero; Adjélé Wilson; Dennis J. Stuehr

Background: NOSs possess a highly conserved tryptophan residue, proximal to the heme-thiolate bond. Results: Replacement of this Trp by His or Phe in Bacillus subtilis NOS altered both thermodynamic and kinetic parameters and NO synthesis. Conclusion: B. subtilis NOS control catalysis by tuning the electron density of its heme-thiolate bond. Significance: This is the first study to investigate these relationships in a bacterial NOS. Nitric-oxide synthases (NOS) are heme-thiolate enzymes that generate nitric oxide (NO) from l-arginine. Mammalian and bacterial NOSs contain a conserved tryptophan (Trp) that hydrogen bonds with the heme-thiolate ligand. We mutated Trp66 to His and Phe (W66H, W66F) in B. subtilis NOS to investigate how heme-thiolate electronic properties control enzyme catalysis. The mutations had opposite effects on heme midpoint potential (−302, −361, and −427 mV for W66H, wild-type (WT), and W66F, respectively). These changes were associated with rank order (W66H < WT < W66F) changes in the rates of oxygen activation and product formation in Arg hydroxylation and N-hydroxyarginine (NOHA) oxidation single turnover reactions, and in the O2 reactivity of the ferrous heme-NO product complex. However, enzyme ferrous heme-O2 autoxidation showed an opposite rank order. Tetrahydrofolate supported NO synthesis by WT and the mutant NOS. All three proteins showed similar extents of product formation (l-Arg → NOHA or NOHA → citrulline) in single turnover studies, but the W66F mutant showed a 2.5 times lower activity when the reactions were supported by flavoproteins and NADPH. We conclude that Trp66 controls several catalytic parameters by tuning the electron density of the heme-thiolate bond. A greater electron density (as in W66F) improves oxygen activation and reactivity toward substrate, but decreases heme-dioxy stability and lowers the driving force for heme reduction. In the WT enzyme the Trp66 residue balances these opposing effects for optimal catalysis.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 2013

Proteomics of vitamin B12 processing

Luciana Hannibal; Patricia M. DiBello; Donald W. Jacobsen

Abstract The causes of cobalamin (B12, Cbl) deficiency are multifactorial. Whether nutritional due to poor dietary intake, or functional due to impairments in absorption or intracellular processing and trafficking events, the major symptoms of Cbl deficiency include megaloblastic anemia, neurological deterioration and in extreme cases, failure to thrive and death. The common biomarkers of Cbl deficiency (hyperhomocysteinemia and methylmalonic acidemia) are extremely valuable diagnostic indicators of the condition, but little is known about the changes that occur at the protein level. A mechanistic explanation bridging the physiological changes associated with functional B12 deficiency with its intracellular processers and carriers is lacking. In this article, we will cover the effects of B12 deficiency in a cblC-disrupted background (also referred to as MMACHC) as a model of functional Cbl deficiency. As will be shown, major protein changes involve the cytoskeleton, the neurological system as well as signaling and detoxification pathways. Supplementation of cultured MMACHC-mutant cells with hydroxocobalamin (HOCbl) failed to restore these variants to the normal phenotype, suggesting that a defective Cbl processing pathway produces irreversible changes at the protein level.


Chemical Reviews | 2017

Multifunctional Cytochrome c: Learning New Tricks from an Old Dog

Damián Alvarez-Paggi; Luciana Hannibal; María A. Castro; Santiago Oviedo-Rouco; Verónica Demicheli; Verónica Tórtora; Florencia Tomasina; Rafael Radi; Daniel H. Murgida

Cytochrome c (cyt c) is a small soluble heme protein characterized by a relatively flexible structure, particularly in the ferric form, such that it is able to sample a broad conformational space. Depending on the specific conditions, interactions, and cellular localization, different conformations may be stabilized, which differ in structure, redox properties, binding affinities, and enzymatic activity. The primary function is electron shuttling in oxidative phosphorylation, and is exerted by the so-called native cyt c in the intermembrane mitochondrial space of healthy cells. Under pro-apoptotic conditions, however, cyt c gains cardiolipin peroxidase activity, translocates into the cytosol to engage in the intrinsic apoptotic pathway, and enters the nucleus where it impedes nucleosome assembly. Other reported functions include cytosolic redox sensing and involvement in the mitochondrial oxidative folding machinery. Moreover, post-translational modifications such as nitration, phosphorylation, and sulfoxidation of specific amino acids induce alternative conformations with differential properties, at least in vitro. Similar structural and functional alterations are elicited by biologically significant electric fields and by naturally occurring mutations of human cyt c that, along with mutations at the level of the maturation system, are associated with specific diseases. Here, we summarize current knowledge and recent advances in understanding the different structural, dynamic, and thermodynamic factors that regulate the primary electron transfer function, as well as alternative functions and conformations of cyt c. Finally, we present recent technological applications of this moonlighting protein.

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Rafael Radi

University of São Paulo

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Damián Alvarez-Paggi

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Daniel H. Murgida

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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