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Dive into the research topics where Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini is active.

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Featured researches published by Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2008

Trafficking and Postsecretory Events Responsible for the Formation of Secreted Human Salivary Peptides A Proteomics Approach

Irene Messana; Tiziana Cabras; Elisabetta Pisano; Maria Teresa Sanna; Alessandra Olianas; Barbara Manconi; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Gaetano Paludetti; Emanuele Scarano; Antonella Fiorita; Stefania Agostino; Contucci Am; Lea Calò; Pasqualina Maria Picciotti; Armando Manni; Anders Bennick; Alberto Vitali; Chiara Fanali; Rosanna Inzitari; Massimo Castagnola

To elucidate the localization of post-translational modifications of different classes of human salivary proteins and peptides (acidic and basic proline-rich proteins (PRPs), Histatins, Statherin, P-B peptide, and “S type” Cystatins) a comparative reversed phase HPLC-ESI-MS analysis on intact proteins of enriched granule preparations from parotid and submandibular glands as well as parotid, submandibular/sublingual (Sm/Sl), and whole saliva was performed. The main results of this study indicate the following. (i) Phosphorylation of all salivary peptides, sulfation of Histatin 1, proteolytic cleavages of acidic and precursor basic PRPs occur before granule storage. (ii) In agreement with previous studies, basic PRPs are secreted by the parotid gland only, whereas all isoforms of acidic PRPs (aPRPs) are secreted by both parotid and Sm/Sl glands. (iii) Phosphorylation levels of aPRPs, Histatin 1, and Statherin are higher in the parotid gland, whereas the extent of cleavage of aPRP is higher in Sm/Sl glands. (iv) O-Sulfation of tyrosines of Histatin 1 is a post-translational modification specific for the submandibular gland. (v) The concentration of Histatin 3, Histatin 5, and Histatin 6, but not Histatin 1, is higher in parotid saliva. (vi) Histatin 3 is submitted to the first proteolytic cleavage (generating Histatins 6 and 5) during granule maturation, and it occurs to the same relative extent in both glands. (vii) The proteolytic cleavages of Histatin 5 and 6, generating a cascade of Histatin 3 fragments, take place after granule secretion and are more extensive in parotid secretion. (viii) Basic PRPs are cleaved in the oral cavity by unknown peptidases, generating various small proline-rich peptides. (ix) C-terminal removal from Statherin is more extensive in parotid saliva. (x) P-B peptide is secreted by both glands, and its relative quantity is higher in submandibular/sublingual secretion. (xi) In agreement with previous studies, S type Cystatins are mainly the product of Sm/Sl glands.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011

The Surprising Composition of the Salivary Proteome of Preterm Human Newborn

Massimo Castagnola; Rosanna Inzitari; Chiara Fanali; Federica Iavarone; Alberto Vitali; Claudia Desiderio; Giovanni Vento; Chiara Tirone; Costantino Romagnoli; Tiziana Cabras; Barbara Manconi; Maria Teresa Sanna; R Boi; Elisabetta Pisano; Alessandra Olianas; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Sonia Nemolato; Claus W. Heizmann; Gavino Faa; Irene Messana

Saliva is a body fluid of a unique composition devoted to protect the mouth cavity and the digestive tract. Our high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-electrospray ionization-MS analysis of the acidic soluble fraction of saliva from preterm human newborn surprisingly revealed more than 40 protein masses often undetected in adult saliva. We were able to identify the following proteins: stefin A and stefin B, S100A7 (two isoforms), S100A8, S100A9 (four isoforms), S100A11, S100A12, small proline-rich protein 3 (two isoforms), lysozyme C, thymosins β4 and β10, antileukoproteinase, histone H1c, and α and γ globins. The average mass value reported in international data banks was often incongruent with our experimental results mostly because of post-translational modifications of the proteins, e.g. acetylation of the N-terminal residue. A quantitative label-free MS analysis showed protein levels altered in relation to the postconceptional age and suggested coordinate and hierarchical functions for these proteins during development. In summary, this study shows for the first time that analysis of these proteins in saliva of preterm newborns might represent a noninvasive way to obtain precious information of the molecular mechanisms of development of human fetal oral structures.


Journal of Comparative Physiology B-biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology | 2005

Tyrosinase activity and hemocyanin in the hemolymph of the slipper lobster Scyllarides latus

Alessandra Olianas; Enrico Sanjust; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Antonio Rescigno

The respiratory protein hemocyanin is present in molluscans and in some species of arthropods, and its dioxygen binding site strongly resembles that of the monophenol-hydroxylating and catechol-quinonising enzyme tyrosinase. Moreover, some hemocyanins show a certain extent of tyrosinase activity, so a common ancestry between the two proteins has been suggested. However, in the case purified hemocyanin of Scyllarides latus any attempts to evoke tyrosinase activity failed. A distinct tyrosinase has been purified to homogeneity from the hemolymph, and kinetically characterised. The purified tyrosinase showed both monophenolase and diphenolase enzyme activity and therefore it could be well defined as a true tyrosinase. This finding suggests that in the case of the studied crustacean the evolutionary functional divergence between dioxygen transport and oxidation of phenolics has already reached its completeness.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

Structural-functional characterization of the cathodic haemoglobin of the conger eel Conger conger: molecular modelling study of an additional phosphate-binding site.

Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Bruno Giardina; Cinzia Verde; Vito Carratore; Alessandra Olianas; Luigi Sollai; Maria Teresa Sanna; Massimo Castagnola; Guido di Prisco

The protein sequence data for the alpha- and beta-chains have been deposited in the SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL protein knowledgebase under the accession numbers P83479 and P83478 respectively. The Conger conger (conger eel) haemoglobin (Hb) system is made of three components, one of which, the so-called cathodic Hb, representing approx. 20% of the total pigment, has been purified and characterized from both a structural and functional point of view. Stripped Hb showed a reverse Bohr effect, high oxygen affinity and slightly low cooperativity in the absence of any effector. Addition of saturating GTP strongly influences the pH dependence of the oxygen affinity, since the reverse Bohr effect, observed under stripped conditions, is converted into a small normal Bohr effect. A further investigation of the GTP effect on oxygen affinity, carried out by fitting its titration curve, demonstrated the presence of two independent binding sites. Therefore, on the basis of the amino acid sequence of the alpha- and beta-chains, which have been determined, a computer modelling study has been performed. The data suggest that C. conger cathodic Hb may bind organic phosphates at two distinct binding sites located along the central cavity of the tetramer by hydrogen bonds and/or electrostatic interactions with amino acid residues of both chains, which have been identified. Among these residues, the two Lys-alpha(G6) (where the letter refers to the haemoglobin helix and the number to the amino acid position in the helix) appear to have a key role in the GTP movement from the external binding region to the internal central cavity of the tetrameric molecule.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

A new beta-chain haemoglobin variant with increased oxygen affinity: Hb Roma [beta115(g17)Ala-->Val].

Barbara Manconi; Maria Cristina De Rosa; Maria Pia Cappabianca; Alessandra Olianas; Cristiana Carelli Alinovi; Fabrizio Mastropietro; Donatella Ponzini; Antonio Amato; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini

BACKGROUND Haemoglobin Roma [beta115(G17)Ala-->Val] is a new adult haemoglobin variant found in a patient presenting a mild hypochromia and microcytosis. We studied this previously uncharacterised variant in order to evaluate the effect on the structural and funcional properties of the Ala-->Val substitution at the alpha1beta1 interface. METHODS AND RESULTS The variant chain was identified by direct DNA sequencing of the beta-globin gene, which revealed a GCC-->GTC mutation in codon 115. This mutation was confirmed by mass spectrometric analysis of the tetramers and peptides. The oxygen-binding properties of the haemoglobin A/haemoglobin Roma mixture, in which the variant makes up 25% of the haemoglobins, showed a significant increase in oxygen affinity with respect to normal haemoglobin A, both in the absence and presence of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate. The role of the betaG17 position, situated at the alpha(1)beta(1) interface, has been examined using computational models of haemoglobin Roma and other known betaG17 variants, in comparison with normal haemoglobin A. CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that the beta115(G17)Ala-->Val substitution at the alpha1beta1 interface is responsible for increased oxygen affinity and mild destabilisation of the haemoglobin Roma. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE An amino acid substitution at the G17 position of the alpha1beta1 interface may result in stabilisation of the high affinity R-state of the haemoglobin molecule.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2003

Whale (Balaenoptera physalus) haemoglobin: primary structure, functional characterisation and computer modelling studies

Marcella Corda; Maurizio Tamburrini; Maria Cristina De Rosa; Maria Teresa Sanna; Antonella Fais; Alessandra Olianas; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Bruno Giardina; Guido di Prisco

The functional properties of haemoglobin from the Mediterranean whale Balaenoptera physalus have been studied as functions of heterotropic effector concentration and temperature. Particular attention has been given to the effect of carbon dioxide and lactate since the animal is specialised for prolonged dives often in cold water. The molecular basis of the functional behaviour and in particular of the weak interaction with 2,3-diphosphoglycerate is discussed in the light of the primary structure and of computer modelling. On these bases, it is suggested that the A2 (Pro-->Ala) substitution observed in the beta chains of whale haemoglobin may be responsible for the displacement of the A helix known to be a key structural feature in haemoglobins that display an altered interaction with 2,3-diphosphoglycerate as compared with human haemoglobin. The functional and structural results, discussed in the light of a previous study on the haemoglobin from the Arctic whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata, give further insights into the regulatory mechanisms of the interactive effects of temperature, carbon dioxide and lactate.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

Adult and fetal haemoglobin J-Sardegna [alpha50(CE8)His-->Asp]: functional and molecular modelling studies.

Marcella Corda; Maria Cristina De Rosa; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Maria Teresa Sanna; Alessandra Olianas; Antonella Fais; Laura Manca; Bruno Lucio Masala; Bruno Zappacosta; Silvana Ficarra; Massimo Castagnola; Bruno Giardina

Haemoglobin (Hb) J-Sardegna [alpha50(CE8)His-->Asp] is a haemoglobin variant characteristic of subjects from the island of Sardinia. Here we report a study of the functional properties of both fetal and adult Hb J-Sardegna. The results indicate that adult Hb J-Sardegna displays an oxygen affinity that is higher than that of adult Hb only in the presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG). On the contrary, at 20 degrees C, the oxygen affinity of fetal Hb J-Sardegna is identical to that of normal fetal haemoglobin, both in the presence and in the absence of 2,3-DPG. A significant difference between these two systems (i.e. a higher oxygen affinity of fetal Hb J-Sardegna) shows up very clearly only when temperature is increased to 37 degrees C. Hence in fetal Hb, the main effect of the amino acid substitution is a decrease in the overall enthalpy change of oxygenation. The results outline the role of the alpha(1)-beta(1) interface in assessing the thermodynamics of oxygen binding. The functional properties of both adult and fetal Hb J-Sardegna have been interpreted at the structural level in light of the results obtained by a computational modelling approach performed in comparison with HbA and Hb Aichi, a variant characterized by a different mutation [alpha50(CE8)His-->Arg] at the same position.


Journal of Comparative Physiology B-biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology | 2011

Striped mullet (Mugil cephalus) hemoglobin system: multiplicity and functional properties

Alessandra Olianas; Claudia Meloni; Irene Messana; Maria Teresa Sanna; Massimo Castagnola; Barbara Manconi; Susanna Salvadori; Bruno Giardina; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini

The most frequent (90%) phenotype of the hemoglobin system of M. cephalus presented two major hemoglobins, the more anodal HbI accounting for approximately 70% of the total. The two hemoglobin components separated by ion-exchange chromatography were analyzed by reverse-phase HPLC and electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry which revealed a more complex pattern: HbI consists in four different globins, two β (named β1 and β3) and two co-eluting α chains (α1 and α2); HbII consists in three globins, one β chain (named β2) and the same α1 and α2 present in HbI. The oxygen-binding properties of both hemoglobin components purified by DEAE cellulose were almost identical to those of the hemolysate: stripped hemoglobin showed a large Bohr effect which was enhanced by chloride ions and, at a larger extent, by organic phosphates which, at acidic pH values gave rise to the Root effect. A series of oxygen-binding experiments at increasing GTP concentrations was carried out in order to compare GTP-binding activities in the absence and presence of physiological amounts of chloride. The results indicated that hemoglobin do have two sites for GTP binding. In the absence of chloride, the two sites cannot be discriminated, whereas in the presence of chloride, a competition between the two anions occurred for both GTP-binding sites. The presence of multiple hemoglobin components with identical properties confirms that hemoglobin heterogeneity that often occurs in fish cannot be only explained as an evolutionary response to the physiological and/or environmental needs of the species.


Biochemical Journal | 2005

Functional and structural characterization of the myoglobin from the polychaete Ophelia bicornis

M.Teresa Sanna; Barbara Manconi; Massimo Castagnola; Bruno Giardina; Daniela Masia; Irene Messana; Alessandra Olianas; Maria Patamia; Raffaele Petruzzelli; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini

The myoglobin of the polychaete annelid Ophelia bicornis was isolated, purified to homogeneity and characterized. The primary structure, obtained from cDNA and protein sequencing, consists of 139 amino acid residues. The alignment with other globin sequences showed that O. bicornis myoglobin misses the pre-A helix and the first six residues of the A helix. The presence of a PheB10-GlnE7 haem distal residue pair is in agreement with the measured oxygen affinity (P50=0.85 mmHg; 1 mmHg=0.133 kPa) and the only slightly higher autoxidation rate constant (0.28 h(-1)) with respect to that of the sperm whale myoglobin mutant E7 His-->Gln (0.21 h(-1)) and to elephant myoglobin (0.1 h(-1)). Oxygen-binding co-operativity was found to be absent under all the examined experimental conditions. The resistance of O. bicornis myoglobin towards autoxidation seems to confirm the important role of part of the A helix in the stability of the globin. The higher pKa of the acid-alkaline ferric transition of O. bicornis with respect to Asian elephant myoglobin, as well as the higher absorbance ratio of its ferric form to the oxy form measured in the Soret region (gammamet/gammaoxy) with respect to that of the African elephant myoglobin, suggested a stronger interaction between the distal glutamine and the water molecule at the sixth co-ordinate position.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1997

A comparative study on the functional properties of the wild European mouflon and domestic sheep hemoglobins.

Marcella Corda; Bruno Giardina; Mariagiuseppina Pellegrini; Laura Manca; Alessandra Olianas; Maria Teresa Sanna; Antonella Fais; Bruno Lucio Masala

The functional properties of Hb B of the wild European mouflon (Ovis gmelini musimon), Hb B of domestic sheep (Ovis aries), and Hb C isolated from anemic mouflon were investigated. Mouflon and sheep Hbs appear to be very similar in their response to organic anions and protons, whereas sheep Hb B displays an oxygen affinity lower than that of mouflon Hb B and sheep Hb A. Mouflon Hb B and Hb C, like sheep Hb A and Hb C, have similar efficiencies in transporting oxygen to the tissues. As in other ruminant Hbs, the effect of temperature on the oxygen affinity is slight. Data suggest that mouflon Hb B is not only structurally, but even functionally, more similar to sheep Hb A than to sheep Hb B.

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Bruno Giardina

The Catholic University of America

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Massimo Castagnola

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Irene Messana

The Catholic University of America

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