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Dive into the research topics where Maria Mastrodonato is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Mastrodonato.


Biology of the Cell | 2005

Ultrastructural zonal heterogeneity of hepatocytes and mitochondria within the hepatic acinus during liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy.

Domenico Ferri; Loredana Moro; Maria Mastrodonato; Ferdinando Capuano; Ersilia Marra; Giuseppa Esterina Liquori; Margherita Greco

Background information. Partial hepatectomy (70%) induces cell proliferation until the original mass of the liver is restored. In the first 24 h after partial hepatectomy, drastic changes in the metabolism of the remaining liver have been shown to occur. To evaluate changes in hepatocyte ultrastructure within the hepatic acinus during the liver regenerative process, we investigated, by light and electron microscopy observations on specimens taken 0 h, 24 h and 96 h after partial hepatectomy, the hepatocyte structure and ultrastructure in the periportal and pericentral area of the hepatic acinus, with a particular emphasis on mitochondria ultrastructure. Moreover, some biochemical events that could affect the mitochondria ultrastructure and function were investigated.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Liver Glycerol Permeability and Aquaporin-9 Are Dysregulated in a Murine Model of Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Patrizia Gena; Maria Mastrodonato; Piero Portincasa; Elena Fanelli; Donatella Mentino; Amaia Rodríguez; Raúl A. Marinelli; Catherine Brenner; Gema Frühbeck; Maria Svelto; Giuseppe Calamita

One form of liver steatosis, namely Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD), is a worrisome health problem worldwide characterized by intrahepatic triacylglycerol (TG) overaccumulation. NAFLD is a common feature of metabolic syndrome being often associated with obesity, dyslipidemia and diabetes and mostly closely linked to insulin resistance. The mechanism of NAFLD pathogenesis is object of intense investigation especially regarding complex systems ultimately resulting in excessive TG deposition in hepatocytes. However, scarce is the attention about the relevance of hepatic import of glycerol, the other primary source (as glycerol-3-phosphate) of increased TG in hepatocytes. Obese leptin-deficient (ob/ob) mice, an animal model of NAFLD, were used to evaluate the functional involvement of Aquaporin-9 (AQP9), the major pathway of liver glycerol entry, in hepatosteatosis. By RT-PCR and qPCR, the level of Aqp9 mRNA in the liver of starved obese mice was comparable with the corresponding control lean littermates. By immunoblotting, the AQP9 protein at the hepatocyte sinusoidal plasma membrane of obese mice was markedly lower (33%) than lean mice, a finding fully confirmed by immunohistochemistry. By stopped-flow light scattering, the liver glycerol permeability of ob/ob mice was significantly lower (53%) than lean mice, a finding consistent with both the observed down-regulation of AQP9 protein and increased level of plasma glycerol characterizing obese mice. In summary, our results suggest implication of AQP9 in liver steatosis. The reduction of hepatocyte AQP9 and, consequently, glycerol permeability might be a defensive mechanism to counteract further fat infiltration in liver parenchyma.


Journal of Molecular Histology | 2007

Glycoconjugate histochemistry of the digestive tract of Triturus carnifex (Amphibia, Caudata)

Giuseppa Esterina Liquori; Maria Mastrodonato; Sara Zizza; Domenico Ferri

SummaryIn this study, the variety of sugar residues in the gut glycoconjugates of Triturus carnifex (Amphibia, Caudata) are investigated by carbohydrate conventional histochemistry and lectin histochemistry. The oesophageal surface mucous cells contained acidic glycoconjugates, with residues of GalNAc, Gal β1,3 GalNAc and (GlcNAc β1,4)n oligomers. The gastric surface cells mainly produced neutral glycoproteins with residues of fucose, Gal β1-3 GalNAc, Gal-αGal, and (GlcNAc β1,4)n oligomers in N- and O-linked glycans, as the glandular mucous neck cells, with residues of mannose/glucose, GalNAc, Gal β1,3 GalNAc, (GlcNAc β1,4)noligomers and fucose linked α1,6 or terminal α1,3 or α1,4 in O-linked glycans. The oxynticopeptic tubulo-vesicular system contained neutral glycoproteins with N- and O-linked glycans with residues of Gal-αGal, Gal β1-3 GalNAc and (GlcNAc β1,4)noligomers; Fuc linked α1,2 to Gal, α1,3 to GlcNAc in (poly)lactosamine chains and α1,6 to GlcNAc in N-linked glycans. Most of these glycoproteins probably corresponds to the H+K+-ATPase β-subunit. The intestinal goblet cells contained acidic glycoconjugates, with residues of GalNAc, mannose/ glucose, (GlcNAc β1,4)noligomers and fucose linked α1,2 to Gal in O-linked oligosaccharides. The different composition of the mucus in the digestive tracts may be correlated with its different functions. In fact the presence of abundant sulphation of glycoconjugates, mainly in the oesophagus and intestine, probably confers resistance to bacterial enzymatic degradation of the mucus barrier.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Altered distribution of caveolin-1 in early liver steatosis

Maria Mastrodonato; Giuseppe Calamita; Roberta Rossi; Donatella Mentino; Leonilde Bonfrate; Piero Portincasa; Domenico Ferri; Giuseppa Esterina Liquori

Eur J Clin Invest 2011; 41 (6): 642–651


Histochemical Journal | 2002

Histochemical Investigations on the Secretory Cells in the Oesophagogastric Tract of the Eurasian Green Toad, Bufo viridis

Giuseppa Esterina Liquori; Giovanni Scillitani; Maria Mastrodonato; Domenico Ferri

The secretory cells of the oesophagogastric tract of the Eurasian toad, Bufo viridis, were examined using standard histochemical methods and lectin histochemistry. Two goblet cell types were found in the oesophageal epithelium, differing in their morphology and the histochemical features of the secretory granules. These contained mainly acidic glycoconjugates, both sulphated and carboxylated, and a small amount of pepsinogen. Type I goblet cells contained stable class-III mucosubstances, which were absent in Type II. No pluricellular oesophageal glands were found. The oesophagogastric junction had a superficial epithelium similar to that of the oesophageal epithelium, with alveolar pluricellular glands, secreting stable class-III mucins, and few oxynticopeptic cells. The gastric mucosa presented secretory cells both in the surface epithelium and in the gastric glands. Superficial and foveolar cells produced neutral mucins with Galβ1,3GalNAc residues. Neck cells, oxynticopeptic cells and endocrine cells were found in the gastric glands. Neck cells produced stable class-III mucosubstances. A functional gradient was observed in the oxynticopeptic cells from the oral to the aboral fundus, with a decrease in pepsinogen secretion towards the aboral fundus and a possible increase in HCl secretion. In the pyloric mucosa, the oxynticopeptic cells disappeared and the glands produced only neutral mucins, without stable class-III mucosubstances.


Acta Histochemica | 2012

In situ characterization of O-linked glycans of Muc2 in mouse colon.

Giuseppa Esterina Liquori; Maria Mastrodonato; Donatella Mentino; Giovanni Scillitani; Salvatore Desantis; Piero Portincasa; Domenico Ferri

The characterization of mucus O-linked glycans in the proximal and distal mouse colon was performed by conventional histochemical methods and by lectin histochemistry in combination with enzymatic treatment (PNGase, α1,2 fucosidase, sialidase digestion), with and without prior desulfation. We demonstrated the presence of sialo- and sulfomucins in both the proximal and distal colon of the mouse. In the distal colon the sulfomucins were clearly prevalent, although there were always sialomucins with sialyl residues linked α2,6 to the subterminal galactose. Sialic acid was poorly O-acetylated, especially in the distal colon. The lectin binding pattern indicates a massive presence of fucose α1,2 linked to galactose in O-glycans and smaller quantities of fucose linked α1,6 to N-acetylglucosamine in the core of N-linked glycans. Lectin histochemistry also demonstrated the presence of glycosidic residues of N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylgalactosamine, and galactose in oligosaccharide chains of highly sulfated mucins.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Mitochondria isolated in nearly isotonic KCl buffer: focus on cardiolipin and organelle morphology.

Angela Corcelli; Matilde Sublimi Saponetti; Patrizia Zaccagnino; Patrizia Lopalco; Maria Mastrodonato; Giuseppa Esterina Liquori; Michele Lorusso

Rat liver mitochondria were isolated in parallel in two different isolation buffers: a standard buffer containing mannitol/sucrose and a nearly physiological KCl based solution. The two different organelle preparations were comparatively characterized by respiratory activity, heme content, microsomal and Golgi contamination, electron microscopy and lipid analyses. The substitution of saccharides with KCl in the isolation buffer does not induce the formation of mitoplasts or disruption of mitochondria. Mitochondria isolated in KCl buffer are coupled and able to maintain a stable transmembrane charge separation. A number of biochemical and functional differences between the two organelle preparations are described; in particular KCl mitochondria exhibit lower cardiolipin content and smaller intracristal compartments in comparison with the standard mitochondrial preparation.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2013

Augmenter of liver regeneration, a protective factor against ROS-induced oxidative damage in muscle tissue of mitochondrial myopathy affected patients

Lorenzo Polimeno; Roberta Rossi; Maria Mastrodonato; Monica Montagnani; Domenico Piscitelli; Barbara Pesetti; Leonarda De Benedictis; Bruna Girardi; Leonardo Resta; Anna Napoli; Antonio Francavilla

Mitochondria-related myopathies (MM) are a group of different diseases defined by a varying degree of dysfunctions of the mitochondrial respiratory chain which leads to reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation followed by oxidative stress and cellular damage. In mitochondrial myopathy muscle tissue an overexpression of antioxidant enzymes has been documented probably as an attempt to counteract the free radical generation. We previously documented, in human non-pathological muscle fibres, the expression of the augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR), a sulfhydryl oxidase enzyme, whose presence is related to the mitochondria; indeed it has been demonstrated that ALR mainly localizes in the mitochondrial inter-membrane space. Furthermore we reported, in different experimental models, in vivo and in vitro, the anti-apoptotic and anti-oxidative capacities of ALR, achieved by up-regulating Bcl-2 anti-apoptotic family factors and the anti-apoptotic/anti-oxidative secretory isoform of clusterin (sClu). With the present study we aimed to determine ALR, Bcl-2 protein, clusterin and ROS expression in muscle tissue biopsies from MM-affected patients. Non-pathological muscle tissue was used as control. Enzymatic, histochemical, immunohistochemical and immune electron microscopy techniques were performed. The data obtained revealed in MM-derived muscle tissue, compared to non-pathological tissue, the over-expression of ROS, ALR and Bcl-2 and the induction of the nuclear, pro-apoptotic, isoform of clusterin (nCLU).


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2013

A silybin-phospholipids complex counteracts rat fatty liver degeneration and mitochondrial oxidative changes

Ignazio Grattagliano; Cátia V. Diogo; Maria Mastrodonato; de Bari O; Michele Persichella; David Q.-H. Wang; Liquori A; Domenico Ferri; Maria Rosaria Carratù; Paulo J. Oliveira; Piero Portincasa

AIM To investigate the effectiveness of antioxidant compounds in modulating mitochondrial oxidative alterations and lipids accumulation in fatty hepatocytes. METHODS Silybin-phospholipid complex containing vitamin E (Realsil(®)) was daily administered by gavage (one pouch diluted in 3 mL of water and containing 15 mg vitamin E and 47 mg silybin complexed with phospholipids) to rats fed a choline-deprived (CD) or a high fat diet [20% fat, containing 71% total calories as fat, 11% as carbohydrate, and 18% as protein, high fat diet (HFD)] for 30 d and 60 d, respectively. The control group was fed a normal semi-purified diet containing adequate levels of choline (35% total calories as fat, 47% as carbohydrate, and 18% as protein). Circulating and hepatic redox active and nitrogen regulating molecules (thioredoxin, glutathione, glutathione peroxidase), NO metabolites (nitrosothiols, nitrotyrosine), lipid peroxides [malondialdehyde-thiobarbituric (MDA-TBA)], and pro-inflammatory keratins (K-18) were measured on days 0, 7, 14, 30, and 60. Mitochondrial respiratory chain proteins and the extent of hepatic fatty infiltration were evaluated. RESULTS Both diet regimens produced liver steatosis (50% and 25% of liver slices with CD and HFD, respectively) with no signs of necro-inflammation: fat infiltration ranged from large droplets at day 14 to disseminated and confluent vacuoles resulting in microvesicular steatosis at day 30 (CD) and day 60 (HFD). In plasma, thioredoxin and nitrosothiols were not significantly changed, while MDA-TBA, nitrotyrosine (from 6 ± 1 nmol/L to 14 ± 3 nmol/L day 30 CD, P < 0.001, and 12 ± 2 nmol/L day 60 HFD, P < 0.001), and K-18 (from 198 ± 20 to 289 ± 21 U/L day 30 CD, P < 0.001, and 242 ± 23 U/L day 60 HFD, P < 0.001) levels increased significantly with ongoing steatosis. In the liver, glutathione was decreased (from 34.0 ± 1.3 to 25.3 ± 1.2 nmol/mg prot day 30 CD, P < 0.001, and 22.4 ± 2.4 nmol/mg prot day 60 HFD, P < 0.001), while thioredoxin and glutathione peroxidase were initially increased and then decreased. Nitrosothiols were constantly increased. MDA-TBA levels were five-fold increased from 9.1 ± 1.2 nmol/g to 75.6 ± 5.4 nmol/g on day 30, P < 0.001 (CD) and doubled with HFD on day 60. Realsil administration significantly lowered the extent of fat infiltration, maintained liver glutathione levels during the first half period, and halved its decrease during the second half. Also, Realsil modulated thioredoxin changes and the production of NO derivatives and significantly lowered MDA-TBA levels both in liver (from 73.6 ± 5.4 to 57.2 ± 6.3 nmol/g day 30 CD, P < 0.01 and from 27.3 ± 2.1 nmol/g to 20.5 ± 2.2 nmol/g day 60 HFD, P < 0.01) and in plasma. Changes in mitochondrial respiratory complexes were also attenuated by Realsil in HFD rats with a major protective effect on Complex II subunit CII-30. CONCLUSION Realsil administration effectively contrasts hepatocyte fat deposition, NO derivatives formation, and mitochondrial alterations, allowing the liver to maintain a better glutathione and thioredoxin antioxidant activity.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2009

Expression of H+,K+-ATPase and Glycopattern Analysis in the Gastric Glands of Rana esculenta

Maria Mastrodonato; Giuseppe Calamita; Roberta Rossi; Giovanni Scillitani; Giuseppa Esterina Liquori; Domenico Ferri

A multidisciplinary study involving lectin histochemistry, IHC, immuno-lectin blotting, and immunogold was carried out to determine the distribution of sugar residues in the glycoproteins of Rana esculenta oxynticopeptic cells. We considered animals in two experimental conditions, fasting and fed. It is known that, in mammals, the tubulovesicular membranes are rich in proteins with several functions. The proton pump H+,K+-ATPase, a heterodimeric complex with a catalytic α-subunit and a heavily glycosylated β-subunit, responsible for acid secretion, is the most abundant. No data have been published regarding the localization and the structures of H+,K+-ATPase in amphibians. In the water frog, the luminal membrane and tubulovesicular system of oxynticopeptic cells, which differ in morphology according to their functional stage, reacted with the primary gold-conjugated antibody against the H+,K+-ATPase α-subunit. By lectin histochemistry and immunoblotting, in the oxynticopeptic cells of R. esculenta we detected the presence of N-linked glycans having fucosylated (poly)lactosamine chains, which could correspond to the oligosaccharide chains of the β subunit. The latter are somewhat different from those described in mammals, and this is probably because of an adaptation to the different microenvironmental conditions in which the oxynticopeptic cells find themselves, in terms of their different habits and phylogeny.

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