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Dive into the research topics where Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

IntAct—open source resource for molecular interaction data

Samuel Kerrien; Yasmin Alam-Faruque; Bruno Aranda; I. Bancarz; Alan Bridge; C. Derow; Emily Dimmer; Marc Feuermann; A. Friedrichsen; Rachael P. Huntley; C. Kohler; Jyoti Khadake; Catherine Leroy; A. Liban; C. Lieftink; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Sandra Orchard; Judith E. Risse; Karine Robbe; Bernd Roechert; David Thorneycroft; Y. Zhang; Rolf Apweiler; Henning Hermjakob

IntAct is an open source database and software suite for modeling, storing and analyzing molecular interaction data. The data available in the database originates entirely from published literature and is manually annotated by expert biologists to a high level of detail, including experimental methods, conditions and interacting domains. The database features over 126 000 binary interactions extracted from over 2100 scientific publications and makes extensive use of controlled vocabularies. The web site provides tools allowing users to search, visualize and download data from the repository. IntAct supports and encourages local installations as well as direct data submission and curation collaborations. IntAct source code and data are freely available from .


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

IntAct: an open source molecular interaction database

Henning Hermjakob; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Chris Lewington; Sugath Mudali; Samuel Kerrien; Sandra Orchard; Martin Vingron; Bernd Roechert; Peter Roepstorff; Alfonso Valencia; Hanah Margalit; John Armstrong; Amos Marc Bairoch; Gianni Cesareni; David James Sherman; Rolf Apweiler

IntAct provides an open source database and toolkit for the storage, presentation and analysis of protein interactions. The web interface provides both textual and graphical representations of protein interactions, and allows exploring interaction networks in the context of the GO annotations of the interacting proteins. A web service allows direct computational access to retrieve interaction networks in XML format. IntAct currently contains approximately 2200 binary and complex interactions imported from the literature and curated in collaboration with the Swiss-Prot team, making intensive use of controlled vocabularies to ensure data consistency. All IntAct software, data and controlled vocabularies are available at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/intact.


FEBS Letters | 2002

MINT: a Molecular INTeraction database

Andreas Zanzoni; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Michele Quondam; Gabriele Ausiello; Manuela Helmer-Citterich; Gianni Cesareni

Protein interaction databases represent unique tools to store, in a computer readable form, the protein interaction information disseminated in the scientific literature. Well organized and easily accessible databases permit the easy retrieval and analysis of large interaction data sets. Here we present MINT, a database (http://cbm.bio.uniroma2.it/mint/index.html) designed to store data on functional interactions between proteins. Beyond cataloguing binary complexes, MINT was conceived to store other types of functional interactions, including enzymatic modifications of one of the partners. Release 1.0 of MINT focuses on experimentally verified protein–protein interactions. Both direct and indirect relationships are considered. Furthermore, MINT aims at being exhaustive in the description of the interaction and, whenever available, information about kinetic and binding constants and about the domains participating in the interaction is included in the entry. MINT consists of entries extracted from the scientific literature by expert curators assisted by ‘MINT Assistant’, a software that targets abstracts containing interaction information and presents them to the curator in a user‐friendly format. The interaction data can be easily extracted and viewed graphically through ‘MINT Viewer’. Presently MINT contains 4568 interactions, 782 of which are indirect or genetic interactions.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011

mzML—a Community Standard for Mass Spectrometry Data

Lennart Martens; Matthew C. Chambers; Marc Sturm; Darren Kessner; Fredrik Levander; Jim Shofstahl; Wilfred H. Tang; Andreas Römpp; Steffen Neumann; Angel Pizarro; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Natalie Tasman; Mike Coleman; Florian Reisinger; Puneet Souda; Henning Hermjakob; Pierre-Alain Binz; Eric W. Deutsch

Mass spectrometry is a fundamental tool for discovery and analysis in the life sciences. With the rapid advances in mass spectrometry technology and methods, it has become imperative to provide a standard output format for mass spectrometry data that will facilitate data sharing and analysis. Initially, the efforts to develop a standard format for mass spectrometry data resulted in multiple formats, each designed with a different underlying philosophy. To resolve the issues associated with having multiple formats, vendors, researchers, and software developers convened under the banner of the HUPO PSI to develop a single standard. The new data format incorporated many of the desirable technical attributes from the previous data formats, while adding a number of improvements, including features such as a controlled vocabulary with validation tools to ensure consistent usage of the format, improved support for selected reaction monitoring data, and immediately available implementations to facilitate rapid adoption by the community. The resulting standard data format, mzML, is a well tested open-source format for mass spectrometer output files that can be readily utilized by the community and easily adapted for incremental advances in mass spectrometry technology.


Nature Biotechnology | 2007

The minimum information required for reporting a molecular interaction experiment (MIMIx)

Sandra Orchard; Lukasz Salwinski; Samuel Kerrien; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Matthias Oesterheld; Volker Stümpflen; Arnaud Ceol; Andrew Chatr-aryamontri; John Armstrong; Peter Woollard; John J. Salama; Susan Moore; Jérôme Wojcik; Gary D. Bader; Marc Vidal; Michael E. Cusick; Mark Gerstein; Anne-Claude Gavin; Giulio Superti-Furga; Jack Greenblatt; Joel S. Bader; Peter Uetz; Mike Tyers; Pierre Legrain; Stan Fields; Nicola Mulder; Michael K. Gilson; Michael Niepmann; Lyle D Burgoon; Javier De Las Rivas

A wealth of molecular interaction data is available in the literature, ranging from large-scale datasets to a single interaction confirmed by several different techniques. These data are all too often reported either as free text or in tables of variable format, and are often missing key pieces of information essential for a full understanding of the experiment. Here we propose MIMIx, the minimum information required for reporting a molecular interaction experiment. Adherence to these reporting guidelines will result in publications of increased clarity and usefulness to the scientific community and will support the rapid, systematic capture of molecular interaction data in public databases, thereby improving access to valuable interaction data.


BMC Biology | 2007

Broadening the horizon – level 2.5 of the HUPO-PSI format for molecular interactions

Samuel Kerrien; Sandra Orchard; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Bruno Aranda; Antony F. Quinn; Nisha Vinod; Gary D. Bader; Ioannis Xenarios; Jérôme Wojcik; David James Sherman; Mike Tyers; John J. Salama; Susan Moore; Arnaud Ceol; Andrew Chatr-aryamontri; Matthias Oesterheld; Volker Stümpflen; Lukasz Salwinski; Jason Nerothin; Ethan Cerami; Michael E. Cusick; Marc Vidal; Michael K. Gilson; John Armstrong; Peter Woollard; Christopher W. V. Hogue; David Eisenberg; Gianni Cesareni; Rolf Apweiler; Henning Hermjakob

BackgroundMolecular interaction Information is a key resource in modern biomedical research. Publicly available data have previously been provided in a broad array of diverse formats, making access to this very difficult. The publication and wide implementation of the Human Proteome Organisation Proteomics Standards Initiative Molecular Interactions (HUPO PSI-MI) format in 2004 was a major step towards the establishment of a single, unified format by which molecular interactions should be presented, but focused purely on protein-protein interactions.ResultsThe HUPO-PSI has further developed the PSI-MI XML schema to enable the description of interactions between a wider range of molecular types, for example nucleic acids, chemical entities, and molecular complexes. Extensive details about each supported molecular interaction can now be captured, including the biological role of each molecule within that interaction, detailed description of interacting domains, and the kinetic parameters of the interaction. The format is supported by data management and analysis tools and has been adopted by major interaction data providers. Additionally, a simpler, tab-delimited format MITAB2.5 has been developed for the benefit of users who require only minimal information in an easy to access configuration.ConclusionThe PSI-MI XML2.5 and MITAB2.5 formats have been jointly developed by interaction data producers and providers from both the academic and commercial sector, and are already widely implemented and well supported by an active development community. PSI-MI XML2.5 enables the description of highly detailed molecular interaction data and facilitates data exchange between databases and users without loss of information. MITAB2.5 is a simpler format appropriate for fast Perl parsing or loading into Microsoft Excel.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Mutation of plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPase isoform 3 in a family with X-linked congenital cerebellar ataxia impairs Ca2+ homeostasis

Ginevra Zanni; Tito Calì; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Denis Ottolini; Sabina Barresi; Nicolas Lebrun; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Hao Hu; Jamel Chelly; Enrico Bertini; Marisa Brini; Ernesto Carafoli

Ca2+ in neurons is vital to processes such as neurotransmission, neurotoxicity, synaptic development, and gene expression. Disruption of Ca2+ homeostasis occurs in brain aging and in neurodegenerative disorders. Membrane transporters, among them the calmodulin (CaM)-activated plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPases (PMCAs) that extrude Ca2+ from the cell, play a key role in neuronal Ca2+ homeostasis. Using X-exome sequencing we have identified a missense mutation (G1107D) in the CaM-binding domain of isoform 3 of the PMCAs in a family with X-linked congenital cerebellar ataxia. PMCA3 is highly expressed in the cerebellum, particularly in the presynaptic terminals of parallel fibers–Purkinje neurons. To study the effects of the mutation on Ca2+ extrusion by the pump, model cells (HeLa) were cotransfected with expression plasmids encoding its mutant or wild-type (wt) variants and with the Ca2+-sensing probe aequorin. The mutation reduced the ability of the PMCA3 pump to control the cellular homeostasis of Ca2+. It significantly slowed the return to baseline of the Ca2+ transient induced by an inositol-trisphosphate (InsP3)-linked plasma membrane agonist. It also compromised the ability of the pump to oppose the influx of Ca2+ through the plasma membrane capacitative channels.


FEBS Letters | 2004

Selectivity and promiscuity in the interaction network mediated by protein recognition modules

Luisa Castagnoli; Anna Costantini; Claudia Dall'Armi; Stefania Gonfloni; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Simona Panni; Serena Paoluzi; Elena Santonico; Gianni Cesareni

A substantial fraction of protein interactions in the cell is mediated by families of protein modules binding to relatively short linear peptides. Many of these interactions have a high dissociation constant and are therefore suitable for supporting the formation of dynamic complexes that are assembled and disassembled during signal transduction. Extensive work in the past decade has shown that, although member domains within a family have some degree of intrinsic peptide recognition specificity, the derived interaction networks display substantial promiscuity. We review here recent advances in the methods for deriving the portion of the protein network mediated by these domain families and discuss how specific biological outputs could emerge in vivo despite the observed promiscuity in peptide recognition in vitro.


Proteomics | 2009

The PSI semantic validator: a framework to check MIAPE compliance of proteomics data

Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; Samuel Kerrien; Florian Reisinger; Bruno Aranda; Andrew R. Jones; Lennart Martens; Henning Hermjakob

The Human Proteome Organizations Proteomics Standards Initiative (PSI) promotes the development of exchange standards to improve data integration and interoperability. PSI specifies the suitable level of detail required when reporting a proteomics experiment (via the Minimum Information About a Proteomics Experiment), and provides extensible markup language (XML) exchange formats and dedicated controlled vocabularies (CVs) that must be combined to generate a standard compliant document. The framework presented here tackles the issue of checking that experimental data reported using a specific format, CVs and public bio‐ontologies (e.g. Gene Ontology, NCBI taxonomy) are compliant with the Minimum Information About a Proteomics Experiment recommendations. The semantic validator not only checks the XML syntax but it also enforces rules regarding the use of an ontology class or CV terms by checking that the terms exist in the resource and that they are used in the correct location of a document. Moreover, this framework is extremely fast, even on sizable data files, and flexible, as it can be adapted to any standard by customizing the parameters it requires: an XML Schema Definition, one or more CVs or ontologies, and a mapping file describing in a formal way how the semantic resources and the format are interrelated. As such, the validator provides a general solution to the common problem in data exchange: how to validate the correct usage of a data standard beyond simple XML Schema Definition validation. The framework source code and its various applications can be found at http://psidev.info/validator.


Database | 2013

The HUPO proteomics standards initiative-mass spectrometry controlled vocabulary

Gerhard Mayer; Luisa Montecchi-Palazzi; David Ovelleiro; Andrew R. Jones; Pierre-Alain Binz; Eric W. Deutsch; Matthew C. Chambers; Marius Kallhardt; Fredrik Levander; James Shofstahl; Sandra Orchard; Juan Antonio Vizcaíno; Henning Hermjakob; Christian Stephan; Helmut E. Meyer; Martin Eisenacher

Controlled vocabularies (CVs), i.e. a collection of predefined terms describing a modeling domain, used for the semantic annotation of data, and ontologies are used in structured data formats and databases to avoid inconsistencies in annotation, to have a unique (and preferably short) accession number and to give researchers and computer algorithms the possibility for more expressive semantic annotation of data. The Human Proteome Organization (HUPO)–Proteomics Standards Initiative (PSI) makes extensive use of ontologies/CVs in their data formats. The PSI-Mass Spectrometry (MS) CV contains all the terms used in the PSI MS–related data standards. The CV contains a logical hierarchical structure to ensure ease of maintenance and the development of software that makes use of complex semantics. The CV contains terms required for a complete description of an MS analysis pipeline used in proteomics, including sample labeling, digestion enzymes, instrumentation parts and parameters, software used for identification and quantification of peptides/proteins and the parameters and scores used to determine their significance. Owing to the range of topics covered by the CV, collaborative development across several PSI working groups, including proteomics research groups, instrument manufacturers and software vendors, was necessary. In this article, we describe the overall structure of the CV, the process by which it has been developed and is maintained and the dependencies on other ontologies. Database URL: http://psidev.cvs.sourceforge.net/viewvc/psidev/psi/psi-ms/mzML/controlledVocabulary/psi-ms.obo

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Sandra Orchard

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Samuel Kerrien

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Gianni Cesareni

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Rolf Apweiler

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Pierre-Alain Binz

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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