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Dive into the research topics where Manuele Martinelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuele Martinelli.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

MIA40 is an oxidoreductase that catalyzes oxidative protein folding in mitochondria

Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Chiara Cefaro; Simone Ciofi-Baffoni; Angelo Gallo; Manuele Martinelli; Dionisia P. Sideris; Nitsa Katrakili; Kostas Tokatlidis

MIA40 has a key role in oxidative protein folding in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. We present the solution structure of human MIA40 and its mechanism as a catalyst of oxidative folding. MIA40 has a 66-residue folded domain made of an α-helical hairpin core stabilized by two structural disulfides and a rigid N-terminal lid, with a characteristic CPC motif that can donate its disulfide bond to substrates. The CPC active site is solvent-accessible and sits adjacent to a hydrophobic cleft. Its second cysteine (Cys55) is essential in vivo and is crucial for mixed disulfide formation with the substrate. The hydrophobic cleft functions as a substrate binding domain, and mutations of this domain are lethal in vivo and abrogate binding in vitro. MIA40 represents a thioredoxin-unrelated, minimal oxidoreductase, with a facile CPC redox active site that ensures its catalytic function in oxidative folding in mitochondria.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Metal-free superoxide dismutase forms soluble oligomers under physiological conditions: A possible general mechanism for familial ALS

Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Armando Durazo; Stefania Girotto; Edith Butler Gralla; Manuele Martinelli; Joan Selverstone Valentine; Miguela Vieru; Julian P. Whitelegge

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder selectively affecting motor neurons; 90% of the total cases are sporadic, but 2% are associated with mutations in the gene coding for the antioxidant enzyme copper–zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1). The causes of motor neuron death in ALS are poorly understood in general, but for SOD1-linked familial ALS, aberrant oligomerization of SOD1 mutant proteins has been strongly implicated. In this work, we show that wild-type human SOD1, when lacking both its metal ions, forms large, stable, soluble protein oligomers with an average molecular mass of ≈650 kDa under physiological conditions, i.e., 37°C, pH 7.0, and 100 μM protein concentration. It further is shown here that intermolecular disulfide bonds are formed during oligomerization and that Cys-6 and Cys-111 are implicated in this bonding. The formation of the soluble oligomers was monitored by their ability to enhance the fluorescence of thioflavin T, a benzothiazole dye that increases in fluorescence intensity upon binding to amyloid fibers, and by disruption of this binding upon addition of the chaotropic agent guanidine hydrochloride. Our results suggest a general, unifying picture of SOD1 aggregation that could operate when wild-type or mutant SOD1 proteins lack their metal ions. Although we cannot exclude other mechanisms in SOD1-linked familial ALS, the one proposed here has the strength of explaining how a large and diverse set of SOD1 mutant proteins all could lead to disease through the same mechanism.


PLOS ONE | 2008

SOD1 and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: Mutations and Oligomerization

Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Mirela Boca; Stefania Girotto; Manuele Martinelli; Joan Selverstone Valentine; Miguela Vieru

There are about 100 single point mutations of copper, zinc superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) which are reported (http://alsod.iop.kcl.ac.uk/Als/index.aspx) to be related to the familial form (fALS) of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). These mutations are spread all over the protein. It is well documented that fALS produces protein aggregates in the motor neurons of fALS patients, which have been found to be associated to mitochondria. We selected eleven SOD1 mutants, most of them reported as pathological, and characterized them investigating their propensity to aggregation using different techniques, from circular dichroism spectra to ThT-binding fluorescence, size-exclusion chromatography and light scattering spectroscopy. We show here that these eleven SOD1 mutants, only when they are in the metal-free form, undergo the same general mechanism of oligomerization as found for the WT metal-free protein. The rates of oligomerization are different but eventually they give rise to the same type of soluble oligomeric species. These oligomers are formed through oxidation of the two free cysteines of SOD1 (6 and 111) and stabilized by hydrogen bonds, between beta strands, thus forming amyloid-like structures. SOD1 enters the mitochondria as demetallated and mitochondria are loci where oxidative stress may easily occur. The soluble oligomeric species, formed by the apo form of both WT SOD1 and its mutants through an oxidative process, might represent the precursor toxic species, whose existence would also suggest a common mechanism for ALS and fALS. The mechanism here proposed for SOD1 mutant oligomerization is absolutely general and it provides a common unique picture for the behaviors of the many SOD1 mutants, of different nature and distributed all over the protein.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Mitochondrial copper(I) transfer from Cox17 to Sco1 is coupled to electron transfer

Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Simone Ciofi-Baffoni; Theodoros Hadjiloi; Manuele Martinelli; Peep Palumaa

The human protein Cox17 contains three pairs of cysteines. In the mitochondrial intermembrane space (IMS) it exists in a partially oxidized form with two S–S bonds and two reduced cysteines (HCox172S-S). HCox172S-S is involved in copper transfer to the human cochaperones Sco1 and Cox11, which are implicated in the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase. We show here that Cu(I)HCox172S-S, i.e., the copper-loaded form of the protein, can transfer simultaneously copper(I) and two electrons to the human cochaperone Sco1 (HSco1) in the oxidized state, i.e., with its metal-binding cysteines forming a disulfide bond. The result is Cu(I)HSco1 and the fully oxidized apoHCox173S-S, which can be then reduced by glutathione to apoHCox172S-S. The HSco1/HCox172S-S redox reaction is thermodynamically driven by copper transfer. These reactions may occur in vivo because HSco1 can be found in the partially oxidized state within the IMS, consistent with the variable redox properties of the latter compartment. The electron transfer-coupled metallation of HSco1 can be a mechanism within the IMS for an efficient specific transfer of the metal to proteins, where metal-binding thiols are oxidized. The same reaction of copper–electron-coupled transfer does not occur with the human homolog of Sco1, HSco2, for kinetic reasons that may be ascribed to the lack of a specific metal-bridged protein–protein complex, which is instead observed in the Cu(I)HCox172S-S/HSco1 interaction.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

A Structural-Dynamical Characterization of Human Cox17

Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Simone Ciofi-Baffoni; Anna Janicka; Manuele Martinelli; Henryk Kozlowski; Peep Palumaa

Human Cox17 is a key mitochondrial copper chaperone responsible for supplying copper ions, through the assistance of Sco1, Sco2, and Cox11, to cytochrome c oxidase, the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial energy transducing respiratory chain. A structural and dynamical characterization of human Cox17 in its various functional metallated and redox states is presented here. The NMR solution structure of the partially oxidized Cox17 (Cox172S-S) consists of a coiled coil-helix-coiled coil-helix domain stabilized by two disulfide bonds involving Cys25-Cys54 and Cys35-Cys44, preceded by a flexible and completely unstructured N-terminal tail. In human Cu(I)Cox172S-S the copper(I) ion is coordinated by the sulfurs of Cys22 and Cys23, and this is the first example of a Cys-Cys binding motif in copper proteins. Copper(I) binding as well as the formation of a third disulfide involving Cys22 and Cys23 cause structural and dynamical changes only restricted to the metal-binding region. Redox properties of the disulfides of human Cox17, here investigated, strongly support the current hypothesis that the unstructured fully reduced Cox17 protein is present in the cytoplasm and enters the intermembrane space (IMS) where is then oxidized by Mia40 to Cox172S-S, thus becoming partially structured and trapped into the IMS. Cox172S-S is the functional species in the IMS, it can bind only one copper(I) ion and is then ready to enter the pathway of copper delivery to cytochrome c oxidase. The copper(I) form of Cox172S-S has features specific for copper chaperones.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Human Sco1 functional studies and pathological implications of the P174L mutant.

Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Simone Ciofi-Baffoni; Iliana Leontari; Manuele Martinelli; Peep Palumaa; Rannar Sillard; Shenlin Wang

The pathogenic mutant (P174L) of human Sco1 produces respiratory chain deficiency associated with cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) assembly defects. The solution structure of the mutant in its Cu(I) form shows that Leu-174 prevents the formation of a well packed hydrophobic region around the metal-binding site and causes a reduction of the affinity of copper(I) for the protein. KD values for Cu(I)WT-HSco1 and Cu(I)P174L-HSco1 are ≈10−17 and ≈10−13, respectively. The reduction potentials of the two apo proteins are similar, but slower reduction/oxidation rates are found for the mutant with respect to the WT. The mitochondrial metallochaperone in the partially oxidized Cu1(I)Cox172S-S form, at variance with the fully reduced Cu4(I)Cox17, interacts transiently with both WT-HSco1 and the mutant, forming the Cox17/Cu(I)/HSco1 complex, but copper is efficiently transferred only in the case of WT protein. Cu1(I)Cox172S-S indeed has an affinity for copper(I) (KD ≈ 10−15) higher than that of the P174L-HSco1 mutant but lower than that of WT-HSco1. We propose that HSco1 mutation, altering the structure around the metal-binding site, affects both copper(I) binding and redox properties of the protein, thus impairing the efficiency of copper transfer to CcO. The pathogenic mutation therefore could (i) lessen the Sco1 affinity for copper(I) and hence copper supply for CcO or (ii) decrease the efficiency of reduction of CcO thiols involved in copper binding, or both effects could be produced by the mutation.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Protective Efficacy Induced by Recombinant Clostridium difficile Toxin Fragments

Rosanna Leuzzi; Janice Spencer; Anthony M. Buckley; Cecilia Brettoni; Manuele Martinelli; Lorenza Tulli; Sara Marchi; Enrico Luzzi; June J. Irvine; Denise Candlish; Daniele Veggi; Werner Pansegrau; Luigi Fiaschi; Silvana Savino; Erwin Swennen; Osman S. Cakici; Ernesto Oviedo-Orta; Monica Giraldi; Barbara Baudner; Nunzia D'Urzo; Domenico Maione; Marco Soriani; Rino Rappuoli; Mariagrazia Pizza; Gillian Douce; Maria Scarselli

ABSTRACT Clostridium difficile is a spore-forming bacterium that can reside in animals and humans. C. difficile infection causes a variety of clinical symptoms, ranging from diarrhea to fulminant colitis. Disease is mediated by TcdA and TcdB, two large enterotoxins released by C. difficile during colonization of the gut. In this study, we evaluated the ability of recombinant toxin fragments to induce neutralizing antibodies in mice. The protective efficacies of the most promising candidates were then evaluated in a hamster model of disease. While limited protection was observed with some combinations, coadministration of a cell binding domain fragment of TcdA (TcdA-B1) and the glucosyltransferase moiety of TcdB (TcdB-GT) induced systemic IgGs which neutralized both toxins and protected vaccinated animals from death following challenge with two strains of C. difficile. Further characterization revealed that despite high concentrations of toxin in the gut lumens of vaccinated animals during the acute phase of the disease, pathological damage was minimized. Assessment of gut contents revealed the presence of TcdA and TcdB antibodies, suggesting that systemic vaccination with this pair of recombinant polypeptides can limit the disease caused by toxin production during C. difficile infection.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

Acidic pH Strongly Enhances In Vitro Biofilm Formation by a Subset of Hypervirulent ST-17 Streptococcus agalactiae Strains

Nunzia D'Urzo; Manuele Martinelli; Alfredo Pezzicoli; Virginia De Cesare; Vittoria Pinto; Immaculada Margarit; John L. Telford; Domenico Maione

ABSTRACT Streptococcus agalactiae, also known as group B Streptococcus (GBS), is a primary colonizer of the anogenital mucosa of up to 40% of healthy women and an important cause of invasive neonatal infections worldwide. Among the 10 known capsular serotypes, GBS type III accounts for 30 to 76% of the cases of neonatal meningitis. In recent years, the ability of GBS to form biofilm attracted attention for its possible role in fitness and virulence. Here, a new in vitro biofilm formation protocol was developed to guarantee more stringent conditions, to better discriminate between strong-, low-, and non-biofilm-forming strains, and to facilitate interpretation of data. This protocol was used to screen the biofilm-forming abilities of 366 GBS clinical isolates from pregnant women and from neonatal infections of different serotypes in relation to medium composition and pH. The results identified a subset of isolates of serotypes III and V that formed strong biofilms under acidic conditions. Importantly, the best biofilm formers belonged to serotype III hypervirulent clone ST-17. Moreover, the abilities of proteinase K to strongly inhibit biofilm formation and to disaggregate mature biofilms suggested that proteins play an essential role in promoting GBS biofilm initiation and contribute to biofilm structural stability.


FEBS Journal | 2012

The structure of Clostridium difficile toxin A glucosyltransferase domain bound to Mn2+ and UDP provides insights into glucosyltransferase activity and product release.

Nunzia D’Urzo; Enrico Malito; Marco Biancucci; Matthew J. Bottomley; Domenico Maione; Maria Scarselli; Manuele Martinelli

Clostridium difficile toxin A (TcdA) is a member of the large clostridial toxin family, and is responsible, together with C. difficile toxin B (TcdB), for many clinical symptoms during human infections. Like other large clostridial toxins, TcdA catalyzes the glucosylation of GTPases, and is able to inactivate small GTPases within the host cell. Here, we report the crystal structures of the TcdA glucosyltransferase domain (TcdA‐GT) in the apo form and in the presence of Mn2+ and hydrolyzed UDP‐glucose. These structures, together with the recently reported crystal structure of TcdA‐GT bound to UDP‐glucose, provide a detailed understanding of the conformational changes of TcdA that occur during the catalytic cycle. Indeed, we present a new intermediate conformation of a so‐called ‘lid’ loop (residues 510–522 in TcdA), concomitant with the absence of glucose in the catalytic domain. The recombinant TcdA was expressed in Brevibacillus in the inactive apo form. High thermal stability of wild‐type TcdA was observed only after the addition of both Mn2+ and UDP‐glucose. The glucosylhydrolase activity, which is readily restored after reconstitution with both these cofactors, was similar to that reported for TcdB. Interestingly, we found that ammonium, like K+, is able to activate the UDP‐glucose hydrolase activities of TcdA. Consequently, the presence of ammonium in the crystallization buffer enabled us to obtain the first crystal structure of TcdA‐GT bound to the hydrolysis product UDP.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2013

High-level intracellular expression of heterologous proteins in Brevibacillus choshinensis SP3 under the control of a xylose inducible promoter.

Nunzia D’Urzo; Manuele Martinelli; Chiara Nenci; Cecilia Brettoni; John L. Telford; Domenico Maione

BackgroundIn past years research has focused on the development of alternative Gram positive bacterial expression systems to produce industrially relevant proteins. Brevibacillus choshinensis is an easy to handle non-sporulating bacterium, lacking extracellular proteases, that has been already shown to provide a high level of recombinant protein expression. One major drawback, limiting the applicability of the Brevibacillus expression system, is the absence of expression vectors based on inducible promoters. Here we used the PxylA inducible promoter, commonly employed in other Bacillae expression systems, in Brevibacillus.ResultsUsing GFP, α-amylase and TcdA-GT as model proteins, high level of intracellular protein expression (up to 250 mg/L for the GFP) was achieved in Brevibacillus, using the pHis1522 vector carrying the B. megaterium xylose-inducible promoter (PxylA). The GFP expression yields were more than 25 fold higher than those reported for B. megaterium carrying the same vector. All the tested proteins show significant increment in their expression levels (2-10 folds) than those obtained using the available plasmids based on the P2 constitutive promoter.ConclusionCombining the components of two different commercially available Gram positive expression systems, such as Brevibacillus (from Takara Bio) and B. megaterium (from Mobitec), we demonstrate that vectors based on the B. megaterium PxylA xylose inducible promoter can be successfully used to induce high level of intracellular expression of heterologous proteins in Brevibacillus.

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Lucia Banci

University of Florence

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Peep Palumaa

Tallinn University of Technology

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