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Dive into the research topics where Maria Fittipaldi is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Fittipaldi.


ACS Nano | 2014

A Smart Platform for Hyperthermia Application in Cancer Treatment: Cobalt-Doped Ferrite Nanoparticles Mineralized in Human Ferritin Cages

Elvira Fantechi; Claudia Innocenti; Matteo Zanardelli; Maria Fittipaldi; Elisabetta Falvo; Miriam Carbo; Valbona Shullani; Lorenzo Di Cesare Mannelli; Carla Ghelardini; Anna Maria Ferretti; Alessandro Ponti; Claudio Sangregorio; Pierpaolo Ceci

Magnetic nanoparticles, MNPs, mineralized within a human ferritin protein cage, HFt, can represent an appealing platform to realize smart therapeutic agents for cancer treatment by drug delivery and magnetic fluid hyperthermia, MFH. However, the constraint imposed by the inner diameter of the protein shell (ca. 8 nm) prevents its use as heat mediator in MFH when the MNPs comprise pure iron oxide. In this contribution, we demonstrate how this limitation can be overcome through the controlled doping of the core with small amount of Co(II). Highly monodisperse doped iron oxide NPs with average size of 7 nm are mineralized inside a genetically modified variant of HFt, carrying several copies of α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone peptide, which has already been demonstrated to have excellent targeting properties toward melanoma cells. HFt is also conjugated to poly(ethylene glycol) molecules to increase its in vivo stability. The investigation of hyperthermic properties of HFt-NPs shows that a Co doping of 5% is enough to strongly enhance the magnetic anisotropy and thus the hyperthermic efficiency with respect to the undoped sample. In vitro tests performed on B16 melanoma cell line demonstrate a strong reduction of the cell viability after treatment with Co doped HFt-NPs and exposure to the alternating magnetic field. Clear indications of an advanced stage of apoptotic process is also observed from immunocytochemistry analysis. The obtained data suggest this system represents a promising candidate for the development of a protein-based theranostic nanoplatform.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Ibuprofen Induces an Allosteric Conformational Transition in the Heme Complex of Human Serum Albumin with Significant Effects on Heme Ligation

Francesco P. Nicoletti; Barry D. Howes; Maria Fittipaldi; Gabriella Fanali; Mauro Fasano; Paolo Ascenzi; Giulietta Smulevich

Human serum albumin (HSA), the most prominent protein in blood plasma, is able to bind a wide range of endogenous and exogenous compounds. Among the endogenous ligands, HSA is a significant transporter of heme, the heme-HSA complex being present in blood plasma. Drug binding to heme-HSA affects allosterically the heme affinity for HSA and vice versa. Heme-HSA, heme, and their complexes with ibuprofen have been characterized by electronic absorption, resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Comparison of the results for the heme and heme-HSA systems has provided insight into the structural consequences on the heme pocket of ibuprofen binding. The pentacoordinate tyrosine-bound heme coordination of heme-HSA, observed in the absence of ibuprofen, becomes hexacoordinate low spin upon ibuprofen binding, and heme dissociates at increasing drug levels. The electronic absorption spectrum and nu(Fe-CO)/nu(CO) vibrational frequencies of the CO-heme-HSA-ibuprofen complex, together with the observation of a Fe-His Raman mode at 218 cm(-1) upon photolysis of the CO complex and the low spin EPR g values indicate that a His residue is one of the low spin axial ligands, the sixth ligand probably being Tyr161. The only His residue in the vicinity of the heme Fe atom is His146, 9 A distant in the absence of the drug. This indicates that drug binding to heme-HSA results in a significant rearrangement of the heme pocket, implying that the conformational adaptability of HSA involves more than the immediate vicinity of the drug binding site. As a whole, the present spectroscopic investigation supports the notion that HSA could be considered as the prototype of monomeric allosteric proteins.


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Exploring the No-Man’s Land between Molecular Nanomagnets and Magnetic Nanoparticles

Dante Gatteschi; Maria Fittipaldi; Claudio Sangregorio; Lorenzo Sorace

The comparison of the structural and magnetic properties of molecular nanomagnets (MNM) and magnetic nanoparticles (MNP) can be instructive to get a deeper understanding of the magnetic behavior on the intermediate scale between molecular and bulk objects. In this respect iron oxo based clusters are particularly interesting, since they provide an increasing number of molecular systems with sizes close to that of iron oxide MNP. In this Minireview we report a survey of literature data aimed at improving our understanding of the emergence of MNP properties from MNM ones.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2000

Dielectric properties of materials using whispering gallery dielectric resonators: Experiments and perspectives of ultra-wideband characterization

G. Annino; D. Bertolini; M. Cassettari; Maria Fittipaldi; I. Longo; M. Martinelli

Measurements for the determination of the complex permittivity of liquid and solid materials based on the use of whispering gallery (WG) dielectric resonators are presented. The procedure implies the measurement of the electromagnetic parameters of the involved resonator interacting with the material under study. The field distribution in the different WG resonant modes was obtained by an analytical calculation under the mode matching method approximation. The results of this calculation, combined with the experimental data, well account for the values of the complex permittivity of materials of interest. Due to the peculiar properties of WG resonators, the method shares the advantages of the wideband systems with the sensitivity and accuracy of the resonator systems in dielectric measurements. Dielectric permittivity of alumina (Al2O3) and of cyclohexane is measured in the frequency range 18–26 GHz. The overall accuracy of the measurements is discussed and the different sources of errors analyzed. Specif...


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

A multi-frequency pulse EPR and ENDOR approach to study strongly coupled nuclei in frozen solutions of high-spin ferric heme proteins.

Maria Fittipaldi; Inés García-Rubio; Igor Gromov; A. Schweiger; A. Bouwen; S. Van Doorslaer

In spite of the tremendous progress in the field of pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) in recent years, these techniques have been scarcely used to investigate high-spin (HS) ferric heme proteins. Several technical and spin-system-specific reasons can be identified for this. Additional problems arise when no single crystals of the heme protein are available. In this work, we use the example of a frozen solution of aquometmyoglobin (metMb) to show how a multi-frequency pulse EPR approach can overcome these problems. In particular, the performance of the following pulse EPR techniques are tested: Davies electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), hyperfine correlated ENDOR (HYEND), electron-electron double resonance (ELDOR)-detected NMR, and several variants of hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopy including matched and SMART HYSCORE. The pulse EPR experiments are performed at X-, Q- and W-band microwave frequencies. The advantages and drawbacks of the different methods are discussed in relation to the nuclear interaction that they intend to reveal. The analysis of the spectra is supported by several simulation procedures, which are discussed. This work focuses on the analysis of the hyperfine and nuclear-quadrupole tensors of the strongly coupled nuclei of the first coordination sphere, namely, the directly coordinating heme and histidine nitrogens and the 17O nucleus of the distal water ligand. For the latter, 17O-isotope labeling was used. The accuracy of our results and the spectral resolution are compared in detail to an earlier single-crystal continuous-wave ENDOR study on metMb, and it will be shown how additional information can be obtained from the multi-frequency approach. The current work is therefore prone to become a template for future EPR/ENDOR investigations of HS ferric heme proteins for which no single crystals are available.


Biochemistry | 2003

Reconstitution of the type-1 active site of the H145G/A variants of nitrite reductase by ligand insertion

Hein J. Wijma; Martin J. Boulanger; Annamaria Molon; Maria Fittipaldi; Martina Huber; Michael E. P. Murphy; Martin Ph. Verbeet; Gerard W. Canters

Variants of the copper-containing nitrite reductase (NiR) of Alcaligenes faecalis S6 were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, by which the C-terminal histidine ligand (His145) of the Cu in the type-1 site was replaced by an alanine or a glycine. The type-1 sites in the NiR variants as isolated, are in the reduced form, but can be oxidized in the presence of external ligands, like (substituted) imidazoles and chloride. The reduction potential of the type-1 site of NiR-H145A reconstituted with imidazole amounts to 505 mV vs NHE (20 degrees C, pH 7, 10 mM imidazole), while for the native type-1 site it amounts to 260 mV. XRD data on crystals of the reduced and oxidized NiR-H145A variant show that in the reduced type-1 site the metal is 3-coordinated, but in the oxidized form takes up a ligand from the solution. With the fourth (exogenous) ligand in place the type-1 site is able to accept electrons at about the same rate as the wt NiR, but it is unable to pass the electron onto the type-2 site, leading to loss of enzymatic activity. It is argued that the uptake of an electron by the mutated type-1 site is accompanied by a loss of the exogenous ligand and a concomitant rise of the redox potential. This rise effectively traps the electron in the type-1 site.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Structural Characterization of a High Affinity Mononuclear Site in the Copper(II)-α-Synuclein Complex

Marco Bortolus; Marco Bisaglia; Alfonso Zoleo; Maria Fittipaldi; M. Benfatto; Luigi Bubacco; Anna Lisa Maniero

Human α-Synuclein (aS), a 140 amino acid protein, is the main constituent of Lewy bodies, the cytoplasmatic deposits found in the brains of Parkinsons disease patients, where it is present in an aggregated, fibrillar form. Recent studies have shown that aS is a metal binding protein. Moreover, heavy metal ions, in particular divalent copper, accelerate the aggregation process of the protein. In this work, we investigated the high affinity binding mode of truncated aS (1-99) (aS99) with Cu(II), in a stoichiometric ratio, to elucidate the residues involved in the binding site and the role of copper ions in the protein oligomerization. We used Electron Paramagnetic Resonance spectroscopy on the Cu(II)-aS99 complex at pH 6.5, performing both multifrequency continuous wave experiments and pulsed experiments at X-band. The comparison of 9.5 and 95 GHz data showed that at this pH only one binding mode is present. To identify the nature of the ligands, we performed Electron Spin Echo Envelope Modulation, Hyperfine Sublevel Correlation Spectroscopy, and pulsed Davies Electron-Nuclear Double Resonance (Davies-ENDOR) experiments. We determined that the EPR parameters are typical of a type-II copper complex, in a slightly distorted square planar geometry. Combining the results from the different pulsed techniques, we obtained that the equatorial coordination is {N(Im), N(-), H(2)O, O}, where N(im) is the imino nitrogen of His50, N(-) a deprotonated amido backbone nitrogen that we attribute to His50, H(2)O an exchangeable water molecule, and O an unidentified oxygen ligand. Moreover, we propose that the free amino terminus (Met1) participates in the complex as an axial ligand. The MXAN analysis of the XAS k-edge absorption data allowed us to independently validate the structural features proposed on the basis of the magnetic parameters of the Cu(II)-aS99 complex and then to further refine the quality of the proposed structural model.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Synthesis of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles in Listeria innocua Dps (DNA‐Binding Protein from Starved Cells): A Study with the Wild‐Type Protein and a Catalytic Centre Mutant

Pierpaolo Ceci; Emilia Chiancone; Oksana Kasyutich; Giuliano Bellapadrona; Lisa Castelli; Maria Fittipaldi; Dante Gatteschi; Claudia Innocenti; Claudio Sangregorio

A comparative analysis of the magnetic properties of iron oxide nanoparticles grown in the cavity of the DNA-binding protein from starved cells of the bacterium Listeria innocua, LiDps, and of its triple-mutant lacking the catalytic ferroxidase centre, LiDps-tm, is presented. TEM images and static and dynamic magnetic and electron magnetic resonance (EMR) measurements reveal that, under the applied preparation conditions, namely alkaline pH, high temperature (65 degrees C), exclusion of oxygen, and the presence of hydrogen peroxide, maghemite and/or magnetite nanoparticles with an average diameter of about 3 nm are mineralised inside the cavities of both LiDps and LiDps-tm. The magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) thus formed show similar magnetic properties, with superparamagnetic behaviour above 4.5 K and a large magnetic anisotropy. Interestingly, in the EMR spectra an absorption at half-field is observed, which can be considered as a manifestation of the quantum behaviour of the MNPs. These results indicate that Dps proteins can be advantageously used for the production of nanomagnets at the interface between molecular clusters and traditional MNPs and that the presence of the ferroxidase centre, though increasing the efficiency of nanoparticle formation, does not affect the nature and fine structure of the MNPs. Importantly, the self-organisation of MNP-containing Dps on HRTEM grids suggests that Dps-enclosed MNPs can be deposited on surfaces in an ordered fashion.


Applied Magnetic Resonance | 2000

Whispering gallery mode dielectric resonators in EMR spectroscopy above 150 GHz: Problems and perspectives

G. Annino; M. Cassettari; Maria Fittipaldi; L. Lenci; I. Longo; M. Martinelli; C.A Massa; L.A Pardi

At frequencies above 150 GHz conventional microwave techniques become unsuitable for electron magnetic resonance (EMR) spectroscopy applications. Quasi-optical techniques are the general frame into which the different approaches to high-field high-frequency EMR (HF2-EMR) have been developed. Beyond the single-pass approach the existing HF2-EMR spectrometers make use of Fabry-Perot resonators. In this paper the use of an alternative resonating structure on the basis of the use of whispering gallery mode dielectric resonators is shown. The physics of these resonators and their implementation in a HF2-EMR probe head are described. Their use in HF2-EMR experiments performed on standard samples is described and the results of these experiments critically discussed in order to have insight into the open problems of the employed spectrometer; the more promising solutions to these problems, actually under development, are briefly outlined.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

The peculiar heme pocket of the 2/2 hemoglobin of cold-adapted Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis TAC125

Barry D. Howes; Daniela Giordano; Leonardo Boechi; Roberta Russo; Simona Mucciacciaro; Chiara Ciaccio; Federica Sinibaldi; Maria Fittipaldi; Marcelo A. Martí; Darío A. Estrin; Guido di Prisco; Massimo Coletta; Cinzia Verde; Giulietta Smulevich

The genome of the cold-adapted bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis TAC125 contains multiple genes encoding three distinct monomeric hemoglobins exhibiting a 2/2 α-helical fold. In the present work, one of these hemoglobins is studied by resonance Raman, electronic absorption and electronic paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies, kinetic measurements, and different bioinformatic approaches. It is the first cold-adapted bacterial hemoglobin to be characterized. The results indicate that this protein belongs to the 2/2 hemoglobin family, Group II, characterized by the presence of a tryptophanyl residue on the bottom of the heme distal pocket in position G8 and two tyrosyl residues (TyrCD1 and TyrB10). However, unlike other bacterial hemoglobins, the ferric state, in addition to the aquo hexacoordinated high-spin form, shows multiple hexacoordinated low-spin forms, where either TyrCD1 or TyrB10 can likely coordinate the iron. This is the first example in which both TyrCD1 and TyrB10 are proposed to be the residues that are alternatively involved in heme hexacoordination by endogenous ligands.

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G. Spina

University of Florence

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Pierpaolo Ceci

Sapienza University of Rome

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