Manuela Maffei
University of Pavia
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Featured researches published by Manuela Maffei.
Cell Reports | 2014
Silvia Carnio; Francesca LoVerso; Martin A. Baraibar; Emanuela Longa; Muzamil Majid Khan; Manuela Maffei; Markus Reischl; Monica Canepari; Stefan Loefler; Helmut Kern; Bert Blaauw; Bertrand Friguet; Roberto Bottinelli; Rüdiger Rudolf; Marco Sandri
Summary The cellular basis of age-related tissue deterioration remains largely obscure. The ability to activate compensatory mechanisms in response to environmental stress is an important factor for survival and maintenance of cellular functions. Autophagy is activated both under short and prolonged stress and is required to clear the cell of dysfunctional organelles and altered proteins. We report that specific autophagy inhibition in muscle has a major impact on neuromuscular synaptic function and, consequently, on muscle strength, ultimately affecting the lifespan of animals. Inhibition of autophagy also exacerbates aging phenotypes in muscle, such as mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and profound weakness. Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress directly affect acto-myosin interaction and force generation but show a limited effect on stability of neuromuscular synapses. These results demonstrate that age-related deterioration of synaptic structure and function is exacerbated by defective autophagy.
Nature Methods | 2012
Marco Capitanio; Monica Canepari; Manuela Maffei; Diego Beneventi; Carina Monico; Francesco Vanzi; Roberto Bottinelli; Francesco S. Pavone
We describe a dual-trap force-clamp configuration that applies constant loads between a binding protein and an intermittently interacting biological polymer. The method has a measurement delay of only ∼10 μs, allows detection of interactions as brief as ∼100 μs and probes sub-nanometer conformational changes with a time resolution of tens of microseconds. We tested our method on molecular motors and DNA-binding proteins. We could apply constant loads to a single motor domain of myosin before its working stroke was initiated (0.2–1 ms), thus directly measuring its load dependence. We found that, depending on the applied load, myosin weakly interacted (<1 ms) with actin without production of movement, fully developed its working stroke or prematurely detached (<5 ms), thus reducing the working stroke size with load. Our technique extends single-molecule force-clamp spectroscopy and opens new avenues for investigating the effects of forces on biological processes.
Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 2006
Francesco Vanzi; Marco Capitanio; Leonardo Sacconi; C. Stringari; Riccardo Cicchi; Monica Canepari; Manuela Maffei; Corrado Poggesi; V. Nucciotti; Marco Linari; Gabriella Piazzesi; Chiara Tesi; Renzo Antolini; Vincenzo Lombardi; Roberto Bottinelli; Francesco S. Pavone
This review proposes a brief summary of two applications of lasers to muscle research. The first application (laser tweezers), is now a well-established technique in the field, adopted by several laboratories in the world and producing a constant stream of original data, fundamental for our improved understanding of muscle contraction at the level of detail that only single molecule measurements can provide. As an example of the power of this technique, here we focus on some recent results, revealing the performance of the working stroke in at least two distinct steps also in skeletal muscle myosin. A second laser-based technique described here is second-harmonic generation; the application of this technique to muscle research is very recent. We describe the main results obtained thus far in this area and the potentially remarkable impact that this technology may have in muscle research.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2014
Janine Lossie; Clemens Köhncke; Shokoufeh Mahmoodzadeh; Walter Steffen; Monica Canepari; Manuela Maffei; Martin Taube; Oriane Larchevêque; Philipp Baumert; Hannelore Haase; Roberto Bottinelli; Vera Regitz-Zagrosek; Ingo Morano
The essential myosin light chain (ELC) is involved in modulation of force generation of myosin motors and cardiac contraction, while its mechanism of action remains elusive. We hypothesized that ELC could modulate myosin stiffness which subsequently determines its force production and cardiac contraction. Therefore, we generated heterologous transgenic mouse (TgM) strains with cardiomyocyte-specific expression of ELC with human ventricular ELC (hVLC-1; TgM(hVLC-1)) or E56G-mutated hVLC-1 (hVLC-1(E56G); TgM(E56G)). hVLC-1 or hVLC-1(E56G) expression in TgM was around 39% and 41%, respectively of total VLC-1. Laser trap and in vitro motility assays showed that stiffness and actin sliding velocity of myosin with hVLC-1 prepared from TgM(hVLC-1) (1.67 pN/nm and 2.3 μm/s, respectively) were significantly higher than myosin with hVLC-1(E56G) prepared from TgM(E56G) (1.25 pN/nm and 1.7 μm/s, respectively) or myosin with mouse VLC-1 (mVLC-1) prepared from C57/BL6 (1.41 pN/nm and 1.5 μm/s, respectively). Maximal left ventricular pressure development of isolated perfused hearts in vitro prepared from TgM(hVLC-1) (80.0 mmHg) were significantly higher than hearts from TgM(E56G) (66.2 mmHg) or C57/BL6 (59.3±3.9 mmHg). These findings show that ELCs decreased myosin stiffness, in vitro motility, and thereby cardiac functions in the order hVLC-1>hVLC-1(E56G)≈mVLC-1. They also suggest a molecular pathomechanism of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy caused by hVLC-1 mutations.
Experimental Physiology | 2012
Monica Canepari; Manuela Maffei; Emanuela Longa; Michael A. Geeves; Roberto Bottinelli
An in vitro motility assay approach was used to investigate the mechanisms of the functional differences between myosin isoforms, by studying the effect of MgATP and MgADP on actin sliding velocity (Vf) of pure slow and fast rat skeletal myosin at different temperatures. The value of Vf depended on [MgATP] according to Michaelis–Menten kinetics, with an apparent constant (Km) of 54.2, 64.4 and 200 μm for the fast isoform and 18.6, 36.5 and 45.5 μm for the slow isoform at 20, 25 and 35°C, respectively. The presence of 2 mm MgADP decreased Vf and yielded an inhibition constant (Ki) of 377, 463 and 533 μm for the fast isoform at 20, 25 and 35°C, respectively, and 120 and 355 μm for the slow isoform at 25 and 35°C, respectively. The analysis of Km and Ki suggested that slow and fast isoforms differ in the kinetics limiting Vf. Moreover, the higher sensitivity of the fast myosin isoform to a drop in [MgATP] is consistent with the higher fatigability of fast fibres than slow fibres. From the Michaelis–Menten relation in the absence of MgADP, we calculated the rate of actomyosin dissociation by MgATP (k+ATP) and the rate of MgADP release (k‐ADP). We found values of k+ATP of 4.8 × 106, 6.5 × 106 and 6.6 × 106m−1 s−1 for the fast isoform and 3.3 × 106, 2.9 × 106 and 6.7 × 106m−1 s−1 for the slow isoform and values of k‐ADP of 263, 420 and 1320 s−1 for the fast isoform and 62, 107 and 306 s−1 for the slow isoform at 20, 25 and 35°C, respectively. The results suggest that k‐ADP could be the major determinant of functional differences between the fast and slow myosin isoforms at physiological temperatures.
Muscle & Nerve | 2009
Monica Canepari; Rosetta Rossi; Orietta Pansarasa; Manuela Maffei; Roberto Bottinelli
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a genetic disease characterized by skeletal muscle wasting and atrophy. Recent evidence suggests that the impaired skeletal muscle performance in DMD is not solely dependent on a loss of contractile muscle mass. In this study the myosin motor function of mdx and control (wildtype, WT) mice was compared using pure myosin isoforms in an “in vitro motility assay” (IVMA). Actin sliding velocity (Vf) on myosin 2B extracted from single muscle fibers of gastrocnemius muscles was significantly lower in mdx mice (3.48 ± 0.13 μm/s, n = 18) than in WT mice (4.02 ± 0.19 μm/s, n = 10). No difference in Vf was found between myosin 1 extracted from soleus muscles of mdx (0.84 ± 0.04 μm/s, n = 13) and of WT (0.89 ± 0.04 μm/s, n = 10). The results suggest that the dystrophic process alters myosin molecular function, and this contributes to the functional impairment in dystrophic muscles. Muscle Nerve 40: 249–256, 2009
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Marco Capitanio; Monica Canepari; P. Cacciafesta; Vincenzo Lombardi; Riccardo Cicchi; Manuela Maffei; Francesco S. Pavone; Roberto Bottinelli
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2005
Rosetta Rossi; Manuela Maffei; Roberto Bottinelli; Monica Canepari
European Biophysics Journal | 2017
Manuela Maffei; Emanuela Longa; Antonio Sabatini; Alberto Vacca; Stefano Iotti
Biophysical Journal | 2010
Monica Canepari; Manuela Maffei; Emanuela Longa; Antonio Sabatini; Alberto Vacca; Roberto Bottinelli; Stefano Iotti