Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Maria Grazia Tozzi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Maria Grazia Tozzi.


Circulation | 1999

Dilated and Failing Cardiomyopathy in Bradykinin B2 Receptor Knockout Mice

Costanza Emanueli; Roberta Maestri; Domenico Corradi; Roberta Marchione; Alessandra Minasi; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Maria Bonaria Salis; Stefania Straino; Maurizio C. Capogrossi; G Olivetti; Paolo Madeddu

BACKGROUND The activation of B(2) receptors by kinins could exert cardioprotective effects in myocardial ischemia and heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS To test whether the absence of bradykinin B(2) receptors may affect cardiac structure and function, we examined the developmental changes in blood pressure (BP), heart rate, and heart morphology of bradykinin B(2) receptor gene knockout (B(2)(-/-)), heterozygous (B(2)(+/-)), and wild-type (B(2)(+/+)) mice. The BP of B(2)(-/-) mice, which was still normal at 50 days of age, gradually increased, reaching a plateau at 6 months (136+/-3 versus 109+/-1 mm Hg in B(2)(+/+), P<0.01). In B(2)(+/-) mice, BP elevation was delayed. At 40 days, the heart rate was higher (P<0.01) in B(2)(-/-) and B(2)(+/-) than in B(2)(+/+) mice, whereas the left ventricular (LV) weight and chamber volume were similar among groups. Thereafter, the LV growth rate of B(2)(-/-) and B(2)(+/-) mice was accelerated, leading at 360 days to a LV weight-to-body weight ratio that was 9% and 17% higher, respectively, than that of B(2)(+/+) mice. In B(2)(-/-) mice, hypertrophy was associated with a marked chamber dilatation (42% larger than that of B(2)(+/+) mice), an elevation in LV end-diastolic pressure (25+/-3 versus 5+/-1 mm Hg in B(2)(+/+) mice, P<0.01), and reparative fibrosis. CONCLUSIONS The disruption of the bradykinin B(2) receptor leads to hypertension, LV remodeling, and functional impairment, implying that kinins are essential for the functional and structural preservation of the heart.


Circulation | 2001

Local delivery of human tissue kallikrein gene accelerates spontaneous angiogenesis in mouse model of hindlimb ischemia

Costanza Emanueli; Alessandra Minasi; Antonella Zacheo; Julie Chao; Lee Chao; Maria Bonaria Salis; Stefania Straino; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Robert S. Smith; Leonardo Gaspa; Giuseppe Bianchini; Francesco Stillo; Maurizio C. Capogrossi; Paolo Madeddu

BackgroundHuman tissue kallikrein (HK) releases kinins from kininogen. We investigated whether adenovirus-mediated HK gene delivery is angiogenic in the context of ischemia. Methods and ResultsHindlimb ischemia, caused by femoral artery excision, increased muscular capillary density (P <0.001) and induced the expression of kinin B1 receptor gene (P <0.05). Pharmacological blockade of B1 receptors blunted ischemia-induced angiogenesis (P <0.01), whereas kinin B2 receptor antagonism was ineffective. Intramuscular delivery of adenovirus containing the HK gene (Ad.CMV-cHK) enhanced the increase in capillary density caused by ischemia (969±32 versus 541±18 capillaries/mm2 for control, P <0.001), accelerated blood flow recovery (P <0.01), and preserved energetic charge of ischemic muscle (P <0.01). Chronic blockade of kinin B1 or B2 receptors prevented HK-induced angiogenesis. ConclusionsHK gene delivery enhances the native angiogenic response to ischemia. Angiogenesis gene therapy with HK might be applicable to peripheral occlusive vascular disease.


FEBS Journal | 2006

Pentose phosphates in nucleoside interconversion and catabolism

Maria Grazia Tozzi; Marcella Camici; Laura Mascia; Francesco Sgarrella; Piero Luigi Ipata

Ribose phosphates are either synthesized through the oxidative branch of the pentose phosphate pathway, or are supplied by nucleoside phosphorylases. The two main pentose phosphates, ribose‐5‐phosphate and ribose‐1‐phosphate, are readily interconverted by the action of phosphopentomutase. Ribose‐5‐phosphate is the direct precursor of 5‐phosphoribosyl‐1‐pyrophosphate, for both de novo and ‘salvage’ synthesis of nucleotides. Phosphorolysis of deoxyribonucleosides is the main source of deoxyribose phosphates, which are interconvertible, through the action of phosphopentomutase. The pentose moiety of all nucleosides can serve as a carbon and energy source. During the past decade, extensive advances have been made in elucidating the pathways by which the pentose phosphates, arising from nucleoside phosphorolysis, are either recycled, without opening of their furanosidic ring, or catabolized as a carbon and energy source. We review herein the experimental knowledge on the molecular mechanisms by which (a) ribose‐1‐phosphate, produced by purine nucleoside phosphorylase acting catabolically, is either anabolized for pyrimidine salvage and 5‐fluorouracil activation, with uridine phosphorylase acting anabolically, or recycled for nucleoside and base interconversion; (b) the nucleosides can be regarded, both in bacteria and in eukaryotic cells, as carriers of sugars, that are made available though the action of nucleoside phosphorylases. In bacteria, catabolism of nucleosides, when suitable carbon and energy sources are not available, is accomplished by a battery of nucleoside transporters and of inducible catabolic enzymes for purine and pyrimidine nucleosides and for pentose phosphates. In eukaryotic cells, the modulation of pentose phosphate production by nucleoside catabolism seems to be affected by developmental and physiological factors on enzyme levels.


Neuroreport | 2000

Cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase hyperactivity in erythrocytes of Lesch–nyhan syndrome patients

Rossana Pesi; Vanna Micheli; Gabriella Jacomelli; Luana Peruzzi; Marcella Camici; Mercedes Garcia-Gil; Simone Allegrini; Maria Grazia Tozzi

Lesch–Nyhan syndrome is a metabolic–neurological syndrome caused by the X-linked deficiency of the purine salvage enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT). Metabolic consequences of HGPRT deficiency have been clarified, but the connection with the neurological manifestations is still unknown. Much effort has been directed to finding other alterations in purine nucleotides in different cells of Lesch–Nyhan patients. A peculiar finding was the measure of appreciable amount of Z-nucleotides in red cells. We found significantly higher IMP-GMP-specific 5′-nucleotidase activity in the erythrocytes of seven patients with Lesch–Nyhan syndrome than in healthy controls. The same alteration was found in one individual with partial HGPRT deficiency displaying a severe neurological syndrome, and in two slightly hyperuricemic patients with a psychomotor delay. Since ZMP was a good substrate of 5′-nucleotidase producing Z-riboside, we incubated murine and human cultured neuronal cells with this nucleoside and found that it is toxic for our models, promoting apoptosis. This finding suggests an involvement of the toxicity of the Z-riboside in the pathogenesis of neurological disorders in Lesch–Nyhan syndrome and possibly in other pediatric neurological syndromes of uncertain origin.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Neurological Disorders of Purine and Pyrimidine Metabolism

Vanna Micheli; Marcella Camici; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Piero Luigi Ipata; S. Sestini; Matteo Bertelli; Giuseppe Pompucci

Purines and pyrimidines, regarded for a long time only as building blocks for nucleic acid synthesis and intermediates in the transfer of metabolic energy, gained increasing attention since genetically determined aberrations in their metabolism were associated clinically with various degrees of mental retardation and/or unexpected and often devastating neurological dysfunction. In most instances the molecular mechanisms underlying neurological symptoms remain undefined. This suggests that nucleotides and nucleosides play fundamental but still unknown roles in the development and function of several organs, in particular central nervous system. Alterations of purine and pyrimidine metabolism affecting brain function are spread along both synthesis (PRPS, ADSL, ATIC, HPRT, UMPS, dGK, TK), and breakdown pathways (5NT, ADA, PNP, GCH, DPD, DHPA, TP, UP), sometimes also involving pyridine metabolism. Explanations for the pathogenesis of disorders may include both cellular and mitochondrial damage: e.g. deficiency of the purine salvage enzymes hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and deoxyguanosine kinase are associated to the most severe pathologies, the former due to an unexplained adverse effect exerted on the development and/or differentiation of dopaminergic neurons, the latter due to impairment of mitochondrial functions. This review gathers the presently known inborn errors of purine and pyrimidine metabolism that manifest neurological syndromes, reporting and commenting on the available hypothesis on the possible link between specific enzymatic alterations and brain damage. Such connection is often not obvious, and though investigated for many years, the molecular basis of most dysfunctions of central nervous system associated to purine and pyrimidine metabolism disorders are still unexplained.


Neurochemistry International | 2007

Purine and pyrimidine nucleosides preserve human astrocytoma cell adenylate energy charge under ischemic conditions.

Francesco Balestri; Michela Giannecchini; Francesco Sgarrella; Maria Caterina Carta; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Marcella Camici

The brain depends on both glycolysis and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation for maintenance of ATP pools. Astrocytes play an integral role in brain functions providing trophic supports and energy substrates for neurons. In this paper, we report that human astrocytoma cells (ADF) undergoing ischemic conditions may use both purine and pyrimidine nucleosides as energy source to slow down cellular damage. The cells are subjected to metabolic stress conditions by exclusion of glucose and incubation with oligomycin (an inhibitor of oxidative phosphorylation). This treatment brings about a depletion of the ATP pool, with a concomitant increase in the AMP levels, which results in a significant decrease of the adenylate energy charge. The presence of purine nucleosides in the culture medium preserves the adenylate energy charge, and improves cell viability. Besides purine nucleosides, also pyrimidine nucleosides, such as uridine and, to a lesser extent, cytidine, are able to preserve the ATP pool. The determination of lactate in the incubation medium indicates that nucleosides can preserve the ATP pool through anaerobic glycolysis, thus pointing to a relevant role of the phosphorolytic cleavage of the N-glycosidic bond of nucleosides which generates, without energy expense, the phosphorylated pentose, which through the pentose phosphate pathway and glycolysis can be converted to energetic intermediates also in the absence of oxygen. In fact, ADF cells possess both purine nucleoside phosphorylase and uridine phosphorylase activities.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Purine and Pyrimidine Salvage in Whole Rat Brain UTILIZATION OF ATP-DERIVED RIBOSE-1-PHOSPHATE AND 5-PHOSPHORIBOSYL-1-PYROPHOSPHATE GENERATED IN EXPERIMENTS WITH DIALYZED CELL-FREE EXTRACTS

Catia Barsotti; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Piero Luigi Ipata

The object of this work stems from our previous studies on the mechanisms responsible of ribose-1-phosphate- and 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate-mediated nucleobase salvage and 5-fluorouracil activation in rat brain (Mascia, L., Cappiello M., Cherri, S., and Ipata, P. L. (2000) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1474, 70–74; Mascia, L., Cotrufo, T., Cappiello, M., and Ipata, P. L. (1999) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1472, 93–98). Here we show that when ATP at “physiological concentration” is added to dialyzed extracts of rat brain in the presence of natural nucleobases or 5-fluorouracil, adenine-, hypoxanthine-, guanine-, uracil-, and 5-fluorouracil-ribonucleotides are synthesized. The molecular mechanism of this peculiar nucleotide synthesis relies on the capacity of rat brain to salvage purine and pyrimidine bases by deriving ribose-1-phosphate and 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate from ATP even in the absence of added pentose or pentose phosphates. The levels of the two sugar phosphates formed are compatible with those of synthesized nucleotides. We propose that the ATP-mediated 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate synthesis occurs through the action of purine nucleoside phosphorylase, phosphopentomutase, and 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate synthetase. Furthering our previous observations on the effect of ATP in the 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate-mediated 5-fluorouracil activation in rat liver (Mascia, L., and Ipata, P. L. (2001)Biochem. Pharmacol. 62, 213–218), we now show that the ratio [5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate]/[ATP] plays a major role in modulating adenine salvage in rat brain. On the basis of ourin vitro results, we suggest that massive ATP degradation, as it occurs in brain during ischemia, might lead to an increase of the intracellular 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate and ribose-1-phosphate pools, to be utilized for nucleotide resynthesis during reperfusion.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1990

Bovine lens aldose reductase: tight binding of the pyridine coenzyme

Antonella Del Corso; Daniela Barsacchi; Maggiorana Giannessi; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Marcella Camici; Julien L. Houben; Maurizio Zandomeneghi; Umberto Mura

Analysis by HPLC of the protein-free supernatant obtained after denaturation of aldose reductase shows that the native form of the enzyme (ARb) contains a tightly bound NADP+, which is absent in the oxidatively modified form (ARa). The absorption, fluorescence, and circular dichroism spectra of ARb and ARa are consistent with the presence of the cofactor only in the native form of aldose reductase. On the other hand, the modified enzyme, in appropriate thiol reducing conditions, can tightly bind NADP+. This indicates a potential reversibility of the modification of aldose reductase, at least in terms of retention of the cofactor.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1997

Channelling of deoxyribose moiety of exogenous DNA into carbohydrate metabolism: role of deoxyriboaldolase

Francesco Sgarrella; Fausto Pier'Angelo Poddie; Maria Antonia Meloni; Luigi Sciola; Proto Pippia; Maria Grazia Tozzi

In bacteria, the addition of (deoxy)nucleosides or (deoxy)ribose to the growth medium causes induction of enzymes involved in their catabolism, leading to the utilisation of the pentose moiety as carbon and energy source. In this respect, deoxyriboaldolase appears the key enzyme, allowing the utilisation of deoxyribose 5-P through glycolysis. We observed that not only deoxynucleosides, but also DNA added to the growth medium of Bacillus cereus induced deoxyriboaldolase; furthermore, the switch of the culture from aerobic to anaerobic conditions caused a further increase in enzyme activity, leading to a more efficient channelling of deoxyribose 5-P into glycolysis, probably as a response to the low energy yield of the sugar fermentation. In eukaryotes, the catabolism of (deoxy)nucleosides is well known. However, the research in this field has been mainly devoted to the salvage of the bases formed by the action of nucleoside phosphorylases, whereas the metabolic fate of the sugar moiety has been largely neglected. Our results indicate that the deoxyriboaldolase activity is present in the liver of several vertebrates and in a number of cell lines. We discuss our observations looking at the nucleic acids not only as informational molecules, but also as a not negligible source of readily usable phosphorylated sugar.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

By Releasing ADP, Acanthamoeba castellanii Causes an Increase in the Cytosolic Free Calcium Concentration and Apoptosis in Wish Cells

Antonella Mattana; Maria Grazia Tozzi; Maria Luisa Costa; Giuseppe Delogu; Pier Luigi Fiori; Pietro Antonio Cappuccinelli

ABSTRACT The role played by soluble molecules that may participate in acanthamoebal cytopathogenicity has yet to be fully characterized. We demonstrate here that Acanthamoeba castellanii trophozoites constitutively release ADP in the medium. Cell-free supernatants prepared from A. castellanii, by interaction with specific P2y2 purinoceptors expressed on the Wish cell membrane, caused a biphasic rise in [Ca2+]i, extensive cell membrane blebbing, cytoskeletal disorganization, and the breakdown of nuclei. Cell damage induced by amoebic supernatants was blocked by the P2y2 inhibitor Suramin. The same results were found in Wish cells exposed to purified ADP. These findings suggest that pathogenic free-living A. castellanii may have a cytopathic effect on human epithelial cells through ADP release, by a process that begins with a rise of cytosolic free-calcium concentration, and culminates in apoptosis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Maria Grazia Tozzi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge