Luigia Merone
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Luigia Merone.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008
Mikael Elias; Jérôme Dupuy; Luigia Merone; Luigi Mandrich; Elena Porzio; Sebastien Moniot; Daniel Rochu; Claude Lecomte; Mosè Rossi; Patrick Masson; Giuseppe Manco; Eric Chabriere
Organophosphates are the largest class of known insecticides, several of which are potent nerve agents. Consequently, organophosphate-degrading enzymes are of great scientific interest as bioscavengers and biodecontaminants. Recently, a hyperthermophilic phosphotriesterase (known as SsoPox), from the Archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus, has been isolated and found to possess a very high lactonase activity. Here, we report the three-dimensional structures of SsoPox in the apo form (2.6 A resolution) and in complex with a quorum-sensing lactone mimic at 2.0 A resolution. The structure also reveals an unexpected active site topology, and a unique hydrophobic channel that perfectly accommodates the lactone substrate. Structural and mutagenesis evidence allows us to propose a mechanism for lactone hydrolysis and to refine the catalytic mechanism established for phosphotriesterases. In addition, SsoPox structures permit the correlation of experimental lactonase and phosphotriesterase activities and this strongly suggests lactonase activity as the cognate function of SsoPox. This example demonstrates that promiscuous activities probably constitute a large and efficient reservoir for the creation of novel catalytic activities.
Extremophiles | 2009
Pompea Del Vecchio; Mikael Elias; Luigia Merone; Giuseppe Graziano; Jérôme Dupuy; Luigi Mandrich; Paola Carullo; Bertrand Fournier; Daniel Rochu; Mosè Rossi; Patrick Masson; Eric Chabriere; Giuseppe Manco
Organophosphates (OPs) constitute the largest class of insecticides used worldwide and certain of them are potent nerve agents. Consequently, enzymes degrading OPs are of paramount interest, as they could be used as bioscavengers and biodecontaminants. Looking for a stable OPs catalyst, able to support industrial process constraints, a hyperthermophilic phosphotriesterase (PTE) (SsoPox) was isolated from the archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus and was found to be highly thermostable. The solved 3D structure revealed that SsoPox is a noncovalent dimer, with lactonase activity against “quorum sensing signals”, and therefore could represent also a potential weapon against certain pathogens. The structural basis of the high thermostability of SsoPox has been investigated by performing a careful comparison between its structure and that of two mesophilic PTEs from Pseudomonas diminuta and Agrobacterium radiobacter. In addition, the conformational stability of SsoPox against the denaturing action of temperature and GuHCl has been determined by means of circular dichroism and fluorescence measurements. The data suggest that the two fundamental differences between SsoPox and the mesophilic counterparts are: (a) a larger number of surface salt bridges, also involved in complex networks; (b) a tighter quaternary structure due to an optimization of the interactions at the interface between the two monomers.
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2007
Mikael Elias; Jérôme Dupuy; Luigia Merone; Claude Lecomte; Mosè Rossi; Patrick Masson; Giuseppe Manco; Eric Chabriere
Organophosphates constitute the largest class of insecticides used worldwide and some of them are potent nerve agents. Consequently, organophosphate-degrading enzymes are of paramount interest as they could be used as bioscavengers and biodecontaminants. Phosphotriesterases (PTEs) are capable of hydrolyzing these toxic compounds with high efficiency. A distant and hyperthermophilic representative of the PTE family was cloned from the archeon Sulfolobus solfataricus MT4, overexpressed in Escherichia coli and crystallized; the crystals diffracted to 2.54 A resolution. Owing to its exceptional thermostability, this PTE may be an excellent candidate for obtaining an efficient organophosphate biodecontaminant. Here, the crystallization conditions and data collection for the hyperthermophilic S. solfataricus PTE are reported.
Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2016
Immacolata Del Giudice; Rossella Coppolecchia; Luigia Merone; Elena Porzio; Teresa Maria Carusone; Luigi Mandrich; Franz Worek; Giuseppe Manco
In vitro evolution of enzymes represents a powerful device to evolve new or to improve weak enzymatic functions. In the present work a semi‐rational engineering approach has been used to design an efficient and thermostable organophosphate hydrolase, starting from a lactonase scaffold (SsoPox from Sulfolobus solfataricus). In particular, by in vitro evolution of the SsoPox ancillary promiscuous activity, the triple mutant C258L/I261F/W263A has been obtained which, retaining its inherent stability, showed an enhancement of its hydrolytic activity on paraoxon up to 300‐fold, achieving absolute values of catalytic efficiency up to 105 M−1s−1. The kinetics and structural determinants of this enhanced activity were thoroughly investigated and, in order to evaluate its potential biotechnological applications, the mutant was tested in formulations of different solvents (methanol or ethanol) or detergents (SDS or a commercial soap) for the cleaning of pesticide‐contaminated surfaces. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2016;113: 724–734.
Analytical Chemistry | 2011
Ferdinando Febbraio; Luigia Merone; Giovanni Paolo Cetrangolo; Mosè Rossi; Roberto Nucci; Giuseppe Manco
Pesticides are the plague of modern times, although much needed in agriculture, causing damage to the entire ecosystem, including humans. The high operative costs and the requirement of specialized personnel for pesticide detection, incentive to develop alternative solutions such as the set up of cheap, rapid, and simple to use biosensors. In this work, we evaluate the possibility to use the esterase 2 from Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius as a biosensor for the detection of specific organophosphate pesticides. With the recent demonstration of the very high affinity of esterase 2 toward paraoxon, a more complete analysis on the detection methods in water as well as in purposely contaminated fruit juices was carried out. The inhibitory effects of a wide range of other pesticides on esterase 2 were investigated, showing a better selectivity with respect to nonspecific reaction of acethylcholinesterases, the main target of organophosphate pesticides. The applied methodology allowed one to detect 2.75 × 10(-3) ppm of neurotoxic agent, comparable to the efficiency of other acethylcholinesterase-based biosensors. Finally, a raw biosensor, based on EST2 immobilization on a nitrocellulose membrane, was devised and tested for paraoxon detection, showing longtime stability, reproducibility, and sensibility.
Environmental Technology | 2010
Luigi Mandrich; Luigia Merone; Giuseppe Manco
In the last decades the idea to use enzymes for environmental bioremediation has been more and more proposed and, in the light of this, new solutions have been suggested and detailed studies on some classes of enzymes have been performed. In particular, our attention in the last few years has been focused on the enzymes belonging to the amidohydrolase superfamily. Several members of this superfamily are endowed with promiscuous activities. The term ‘catalytic promiscuity’ describes the capability of an enzyme to catalyse different chemical reactions, called secondary activities, at the active site responsible for the main activity. Recently, a new family of microbial lactonases with promiscuous phosphotriesterase activity, dubbed PTE‐Like Lactonase (PLL), has been ascribed to the amidohydrolase superfamily. Among members of this family are enzymes found in the archaea Sulfolobus solfataricus and Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, which show high thermophilicity and thermal resistance. Enzymes showing phosphotriesterase activity are attractive from a biotechnological point of view because they are capable of hydrolysing the organophosphate phosphotriesters (OPs), a class of synthetic compounds employed worldwide both as insecticides and chemical warfare agents. Furthermore, from a basic point of view, studies of catalytic promiscuity offer clues to understand natural evolution of enzymes and to translate this into in vitro adaptation of enzymes to specific human needs. Thermostable enzymes able to hydrolyse OPs are considered good candidates for the set‐up of efficient detoxification tools.
Extremophiles | 2008
Ferdinando Febbraio; Sandro Esposito D’Andrea; Luigi Mandrich; Luigia Merone; Mosè Rossi; Roberto Nucci; Giuseppe Manco
Kinetic studies of irreversible inhibition in recent years have received growing attention owing to their relevance to problems of basic scientific interest as well as to their practical importance. Our studies have been devoted to the characterization of the effects that well-known acetylcholinesterase irreversible inhibitors exert on a carboxylesterase (EST2) from the thermophilic eubacterium Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius. In particular, sulfonyl inhibitors and the organophosphorous insecticide diethyl-p-nitrophenyl phosphate (paraoxon) have been studied. The incubation of EST2 with sulfonyl inhibitors resulted in a time-dependent inactivation according to a pseudo-first-order kinetics. On the other hand, the EST2 inactivation process elicited by paraoxon, being the inhibition reaction completed immediately after the inhibitor addition, cannot be described as a pseudo-first-order kinetics but is better considered as a high affinity inhibition. The values of apparent rate constants for paraoxon inactivation were determined by monitoring the enzyme/substrate reaction in the presence of the inhibitor, and were compared with those of the sulfonyl inhibitors. The protective effect afforded by a competitive inhibitor on the EST2 irreversible inhibition, and the reactivation of a complex enzyme/irreversible-inhibitor by hydroxylamine and 2-PAM, were also investigated. The data have been discussed in the light of the recently described dual substrate binding mode of EST2, considering that the irreversible inhibitors employed were able to discriminate between the two different binding sites.
Protein and Peptide Letters | 2009
Giuseppe Manco; Luigia Merone; Luigi Mandrich
Thermophilic and hyperthermophilic carboxylesterases (EC 3.1.1.1) are excellent model systems for studying structure function relationships as well as in vitro and in vivo evolution and possible biotechnological applications. In this paper we review the main aspect of one of most studied microbial representative of the hormone sensitive lipase family (HSL), namely carboxylesterase 2 (EST2) from Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius.
Extremophiles | 2005
Luigia Merone; Luigi Mandrich; Mosè Rossi; Giuseppe Manco
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005
Luigi Mandrich; Luigia Merone; Margherita Pezzullo; Laura Cipolla; Francesco Nicotra; Mosè Rossi; Giuseppe Manco