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Dive into the research topics where Mario Comporti is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario Comporti.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1980

Identification of 4-hydroxynonenal as a cytotoxic product originating from the peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids.

Angelo Benedetti; Mario Comporti; Hermann Esterbauer

During the NADPH-Fe induced peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids, products are formed which show various cytopathological effects including inhibition of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase. The major cytotoxic substance has been isolated and identified as 4-hydroxy-2,3-trans-nonenal. The structure was ascertained by means of ultraviolet, infrared and mass spectrometry and high-pressure liquid chromatographic analysis. Moreover, 4-hydroxynonenal, prepared by chemical synthesis, was found to reproduce the biological effects brought about by the biogenic aldehyde. Preliminary investigations suggest that as compared to 4-hydroxynonenal very low amounts of other 4-hydroxyalkenals, namely 4-hydroxyoctenal, 4-hydroxydecenal and 4-hydroxyundecenal are also formed by actively peroxidizing liver microsomes. In the absence of NADPH-Fe liver microsomes produced only minute amounts of 4-hydroxyalkenals. The biochemical and biological effects of synthetic 4-hydroxyalkenals have been studied in great detail in the past. The results of these investigations together with the finding that 4-hydroxyalkenals, in particular 4-hydroxynonenal, are formed during NADPH-Fe stimulated peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids, may help to elucidate the mechanism by which lipid peroxidation causes deleterious effects on cells and cell constituents.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 1989

Three models of free radical-induced cell injury

Mario Comporti

Three models of free radical-induced cell injury are presented in this review. Each model is described by the mechanism of action of few prototype toxic molecules. Carbon tetrachloride and monobromotrichloromethane were selected as model molecules for alkylating agents that do not induce GSH depletion. Bromobenzene and allyl alcohol were selected as prototypes of GSH depleting agents. Paraquat and menadione were presented as prototypes of redox cycling compounds. All these groups of toxins are converted, during their intracellular metabolism, to active species which can be radical species or electrophilic intermediates. In most cases the activation is catalyzed by the microsomal mixed function oxidase system, while in other cases (e.g. allyl alcohol) cytosolic enzymes are responsible for the activation. Radical species can bind covalently to cellular macromolecules and can promote lipid peroxidation in cellular membranes. Of course both phenomena produce cell damage as in the case of CCl4 or BrCCl3 intoxication. However, the covalent binding is likely to produce damage at the molecular site where it occurs; lipid peroxidation, on the other hand, besides causing loss of membrane structure, also gives rise to toxic products such as 4-hydroxyalkenals and other aldehydes which in principle can move from the site of origin and produce effects at distant sites. Electrophilic intermediates readily reacts with cellular nucleophiles, primarily with GSH. The result is a severe GSH depletion as in the case of bromobenzene or allyl alcohol intoxication. When the depletion reaches some threshold values lipid peroxidation develops abruptly and in an extensive way. This event is accompanied by cellular death. The reason for which lipid peroxidation develops in a cell severely depleted of GSH remains to be clarified. Probably the loss of the defense systems against a constitutive oxidative stress is not compatible with cellular life. Some free radicals generated by one-electron reduction can react with oxygen to give superoxide anions which can be converted to other more dangerous reactive oxygen species. This is the case of paraquat and menadione. Damage to cellular macromolecules is due to the direct action of these oxygen radicals and, at least in the menadione-induced cytotoxicity, lipid peroxidation is not involved. All these initial events affect the protein sulfhydryl groups in the membranes. Since some protein thiols are essential components of the molecular arrangement responsible for the Ca2+ transport across cellular membranes, loss of such thiols can affect the calcium sequestration activity of subcellular compartments, that is the capacity of mitochondria and microsomes to regulate the cytosolic calcium level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


FEBS Letters | 1997

Protection against oxidative damage of erythrocyte membrane by the flavonoid quercetin and its relation to iron chelating activity

Marco Ferrali; Cinzia Signorini; Barbara Caciotti; Lidia Sugherini; Lucia Ciccoli; D Giachetti; Mario Comporti

Incubation of glutathione (GSH) depleted mouse erythrocytes with the oxidants phenylhydrazine, acrolein, divicine and isouramil resulted in the release of free iron and in lipid peroxidation and hemolysis. The addition of the flavonoid quercetin, which chelates iron and penetrates erythrocytes, resulted in remarkable protection against lipid peroxidation and hemolysis. The protection seems to be due to intracellular chelation of iron, since a semi‐stoichiometric ratio between released iron and the amount of quercetin necessary to prevent lipid peroxidation and hemolysis was found. Incubation of GSH depleted human erythrocytes with divicine and isouramil did not induce lipid peroxidation and hemolysis in spite of a substantial release of iron. However, divicine and isouramil produced alterations of membrane proteins, such as spectrin and band 3, as well as formation of senescent cell antigen. The addition of quercetin prevented these alterations.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2002

Iron release, oxidative stress and erythrocyte ageing

Mario Comporti; Cinzia Signorini; Giuseppe Buonocore; Lucia Ciccoli

Iron, to be redox cycling active, has to be released from its macromolecular complexes (ferritin, transferrin, hemoproteins, etc.). Iron is released from hemoglobin or its derivatives in a nonprotein-bound, desferrioxamine-chelatable form (DCI) in a number of conditions in which the erythrocytes are subjected to oxidative stress. Such conditions can be related to toxicological events (haemolytic drugs) or to physiological situations (erythrocyte ageing, reproduced in a model of prolonged aerobic incubation), but can also result from more subtle circumstances in which a state of ischemia-reperfusion is imposed on erythrocytes (e.g., childbirth). The released iron could play a central role in oxidation of membrane proteins and senescent cell antigen (SCA) formation, one of the major pathways for erythrocyte removal. Iron chelators able to enter cells (such as ferrozine, quercetin, and fluor-benzoil-pyridoxal hydrazone) prevent both membrane protein oxidation and SCA formation. The increased release of iron observed in beta-thalassemia patients and newborns (particularly premature babies) suggests that fetal hemoglobin is more prone to release iron than adult hemoglobin. In newborns the release of iron in erythrocytes is correlated with plasma nonprotein-bound iron and may contribute to its appearance.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Studies on the mechanism of formation of 4-hydroxynonenal during microsomal lipid peroxidation

Hermann Esterbauer; Angelo Benedetti; Johanna Lang; Rosella Fulceri; Günther Fauler; Mario Comporti

The mechanism of the formation of 4-hydroxynonenal through the NADPH-linked microsomal lipid peroxidation was investigated. The results were as follows: 4-hydroxynonenal arises exclusively from arachidonic acid contained in the polar phospholipids, neither arachidonic acid of the neutral lipids nor linoleic acid of the polar or neutral lipids are substrates for 4-hydroxynonenal generation. This finding results from the estimation of the specific radioactivity of 4-hydroxynonenal produced by microsomes prelabelled in vivo with [U-14C]arachidonic acid. Phospholipid-bound 15-hydroperoxyarachidonic acid would have the structural requirements needed for 4-hydroxynonenal (CH3-(CH2)4-CH(OH)-CH=CH-CHO). Microsomes supplemented with 15-hydroperoxyarachidonic acid and NADPH, ADP/iron converted only minimal amounts (0.6 mol%) of 15-hydroperoxyarachidonic acid into 4-hydroxynonenal; similarly, 15-hydroperoxyarachidonic acid incubated at pH 7.4 in the presence of ascorbate/iron yielded only small amounts of 4-hydroxynonenal with a rate orders of magnitude below that observed with microsomes. Phospholipid-bound 15-hydroperoxyarachidonic acid is therefore not a likely intermediate in the reaction pathway leading to 4-hydroxynonenal. The rate of 4-hydroxynonenal formation is highest during the very initial phase of its formation and the onset does not show a lag phase, suggesting a transient intermediate predominantly formed during the early phase of microsomal lipid peroxidation. After 60 min of incubation, 204 nmol polyunsaturated fatty acids (20 nmol 18:2, 143 nmol 20:4, 41 nmol 22:6) were lost per mg microsomal protein and the incubation mixture contained 206 nmol lipid peroxides, 71.6 nmol malonic dialdehyde and 4.6 nmol 4-hydroxynonenal per mg protein. Under artificial conditions (pH 1.0, ascorbate/iron, 20 h of incubation) not comparable to the microsomal peroxidation system, 15-hydroperoxyarachidonic acid can be decomposed in good yields (15 mol%) into 4-hydroxynonenal. Autoxidation of arachidonic acid in the presence of ascorbate/iron gave after 25 h of incubation 2.8 mol% (pH 7.4) and 1.5 mol% (pH 1.0) 4-hydroxynonenal. The most remarkable difference between the non-enzymic system and the enzymic microsomal system is that the latter forms 4-hydroxynonenal at a much higher rate.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 1987

Glutathione depleting agents and lipid peroxidation

Mario Comporti

The mechanisms by which glutathione (GSH) depleting agents produce cellular injury, particularly liver cell injury have been reviewed. Among the model molecules most thoroughly investigated are bromobenzene and acetaminophen. The metabolism of these compounds leads to the formation of electrophilic reactants that easily conjugate with GSH. After substantial depletion of GSH, covalent binding of reactive metabolites to cellular macromolecules occurs. When the hepatic GSH depletion reaches a threshold level, lipid peroxidation develops and severe cellular damage is produced. According to experimental evidence, the cell death seems to be more strictly related to lipid peroxidation rather than to covalent binding. Loss of protein sulfhydryl groups may be an important factor in the disturbance of calcium homeostasis which, according to several authors, leads to irreversible cell injury. In the bromobenzene-induced liver injury loss of protein thiols as well as impairment of mitochondrial and microsomal Ca2+ sequestration activities are related to lipid peroxidation. However, some redox active compounds such as menadione and t-butylhydroperoxide produce direct oxidation of protein thiols.


The FASEB Journal | 1999

Hydrogen peroxide produced during gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity is involved in prevention of apoptosis and maintainance of proliferation in U937 cells.

Barbara Del Bello; Aldo Paolicchi; Mario Comporti; Alfonso Pompella; Emilia Maellaro

It has been reported in several cell lines that exposure to low levels of reactive oxygen species can exert a stimulatory effect on their proliferation. We have previously shown that mild oxidative conditions can also counteract apoptotic stimuli. A constitutive cellular production of low levels of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide originates from various sources; among these, γ‐glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), the plasma membrane‐bound activity in charge of metabolizing extracellular reduced glutathione, has recently been included. Since the inhibition of GGT is a sufficient stimulus for the induction of apoptosis in selected cell lines, we investigated whether this effect might result from the suppression of the mentioned GGT‐dependent prooxidant reactions, on the theory that the latter may represent a basal antiapoptotic and proliferative signal for the cell. Experiments showed that: 1) GGT activity in U937 monoblastoid cells is associated with the production of low levels of hydrogen peroxide, and two independent GGT inhibitors cause a dose‐dependent decrease of such GGT‐dependent production of H2O2; 2) GGT inhibition with acivicin results in cell growth arrest, and induces cell death and DNA fragmentation with the ladder appearance of apoptosis; 3) treatment of cells with catalase—and even more with Trolox C—is able to decrease their proliferative rate; 4) GGT inhibition (with suppression of H2O2 production) results in a down‐regulation of poly(ADP‐ribose) polimerase (PARP) activity, which precedes the proteolytic cleavage of PARP molecule, such as that typically induced by caspases. The reported data suggest that the low H2O2 levels originating as a by‐product during GGT activity are able to act as sort of a ‘life signal’ in U937 cells, insofar as they can maintain cell proliferation and protect against apoptosis, possibly through an up‐regulation of PARP activity. —Del Bello, B., Paolicchi, A., Comporti, M., Pompella, A., Maellaro, E. Hydrogen peroxide produced during γ‐glutamyl transpeptidase activity is involved in prevention of apoptosis andmaintainance of proliferation in U937 cells. FASEB J. 13, 69–79 (1999)


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1999

Redox modulation of cell surface protein thiols in U937 lymphoma cells: the role of γ-glutamyl transpeptidase-dependent H2O2 production and S-thiolation

Silvia Dominici; Melissa Valentini; Emilia Maellaro; Barbara Del Bello; Aldo Paolicchi; Evelina Lorenzini; Roberto Tongiani; Mario Comporti; Alfonso Pompella

The expression of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), a plasma membrane ectoenzyme involved in the metabolism of extracellular reduced glutathione (GSH), is a marker of neoplastic progression in several experimental models, and occurs in a number of human malignant neoplasms and their metastases. Because it favors the supply of precursors for the synthesis of GSH, GGT expression has been interpreted as a member in cellular antioxidant defense systems. However, thiol metabolites generated at the cell surface during GGT activity can induce prooxidant reactions, leading to production of free radical oxidant species. The present study was designed to characterize the prooxidant reactions occurring during GGT ectoactivity, and their possible effects on the thiol redox status of proteins of the cell surface. Results indicate that: (i) in U937 cells, expressing significant amounts of membrane-bound GGT, GGT-mediated metabolism of GSH is coupled with the extracellular production of hydrogen peroxide; (ii) GGT activity also results in decreased levels of protein thiols at the cell surface; (iii) GGT-dependent decrease in protein thiols is due to sulfhydryl oxidation and protein S-thiolation reactions; and (iv) GGT irreversible inhibition by acivicin is sufficient to produce an increase of protein thiols at the cell surface. Membrane receptors and transcription factors have been shown to possess critical thiols involved in the transduction of proliferative signals. Furthermore, it was suggested that S-thiolation of cellular proteins may represent a mechanism for protection of vulnerable thiols against irreversible damage by prooxidant agents. Thus, the findings reported here provide additional explanations for the envisaged role played by membrane-bound GGT activity in the proliferative attitude of malignant cells and their resistance to prooxidant drugs and radiation therapy.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1984

Cytotoxic aldehydes originating from the peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids. Identification of 4,5-dihydroxydecenal.

Angelo Benedetti; Mario Comporti; Rosella Fulceri; Hermann Esterbauer

During the NADPH-Fe-induced peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids products are formed which are provided with cytopathological activities. In a previous study one of the major products was identified as an aldehyde of the 4-hydroxyalkenal class, namely 4-hydroxynonenal. In the present study another cytotoxic product has been isolated and identified as 4,5-dihydroxy-2,3-decenal. The isolation was performed by means of thin-layer chromatography and high-pressure liquid chromatography and the structure was ascertained mainly by means of mass spectroscopy of the free aldehyde and of its derivatives. In the absence of NADPH-Fe liver microsomes produced no 4,5-dihydroxydecenal. The inhibitory activity of 4,5-dihydroxydecenal on microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase is somewhat lower than that exhibited by 4-hydroxynonenal. This lower inhibitory activity correlates with the lower capacity to bind to the microsomal protein of 4,5-dihydroxydecenal as compared to 4-hydroxynonenal. The reactivities of the two aldehydes with cysteine were comparable. The production of toxic aldehydes may represent a mechanism by which lipid peroxidation causes deleterious effects on cellular functions.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1990

Lipid peroxidation and antioxidant systems in the liver injury produced by glutathione depleting agents

Emilia Maellaro; Alessandro F. Casini; Barbara Del Bello; Mario Comporti

The mechanisms of the liver damage produced by three glutathione (GSH) depleting agents, bromobenzene, allyl alcohol and diethylmaleate, was investigated. The change in the antioxidant systems represented by alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) and ascorbic acid were studied under conditions of severe GSH depletion. With each toxin liver necrosis was accompanied by lipid peroxidation that developed only after severe depletion of GSH. The hepatic level of vitamin E was decreased whenever extensive lipid peroxidation developed. In the case of bromobenzene intoxication, vitamin E decreased before the onset of lipid peroxidation. Changes in levels of the ascorbic and dehydroascorbic acid indicated a redox cycling of vitamin C with the oxidative stress induced by all the three agents. Such a change of the redox state of vitamin C (increase of the oxidized over the reduced form) may be an index of oxidative stress preceding lipid peroxidation in the case of bromobenzene. In the other cases, such a change is likely to be a consequence of lipid peroxidation. Experiments carried out with vitamin E deficient or supplemented diets indicated that the pathological phenomena occurring as a consequence of GSH depletion depend on hepatic levels of vitamin E. In vitamin E deficient animals, lipid peroxidation and liver necrosis appeared earlier than in animals fed the control diet. Animals fed a vitamin E supplemented diet had an hepatic vitamin E level double that obtained with a commercial pellet diet. In such animals, bromobenzene and allyl alcohol had only limited toxicity and diethylmaleate none in spite of comparable hepatic GSH depletion. Thus, vitamin E may largely modulate the expression of the toxicity by GSH depleting agents.

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