Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marzia Bellei is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marzia Bellei.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2010

Redox properties of heme peroxidases

Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Marzia Bellei; Carlo Augusto Bortolotti; Marco Sola

Peroxidases are heme enzymes found in bacteria, fungi, plants and animals, which exploit the reduction of hydrogen peroxide to catalyze a number of oxidative reactions, involving a wide variety of organic and inorganic substrates. The catalytic cycle of heme peroxidases is based on three consecutive redox steps, involving two high-valent intermediates (Compound I and Compound II), which perform the oxidation of the substrates. Therefore, the thermodynamics and the kinetics of the catalytic cycle are influenced by the reduction potentials of three redox couples, namely Compound I/Fe3+, Compound I/Compound II and Compound II/Fe3+. In particular, the oxidative power of heme peroxidases is controlled by the (high) reduction potential of the latter two couples. Moreover, the rapid H2O2-mediated two-electron oxidation of peroxidases to Compound I requires a stable ferric state in physiological conditions, which depends on the reduction potential of the Fe3+/Fe2+ couple. The understanding of the molecular determinants of the reduction potentials of the above redox couples is crucial for the comprehension of the molecular determinants of the catalytic properties of heme peroxidases. This review provides an overview of the data available on the redox properties of Fe3+/Fe2+, Compound I/Fe3+, Compound I/Compound II and Compound II/Fe3+ couples in native and mutated heme peroxidases. The influence of the electron donor properties of the axial histidine and of the polarity of the heme environment is analyzed and the correlation between the redox properties of the heme group with the catalytic activity of this important class of metallo-enzymes is discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Disruption of the aspartate to heme ester linkage in human myeloperoxidase: impact on ligand binding, redox chemistry, and interconversion of redox intermediates.

Martina Zederbauer; Paul G. Furtmüller; Marzia Bellei; Johanna Stampler; Christa Jakopitsch; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Nicole Moguilevsky; Christian Obinger

In human heme peroxidases the prosthetic group is covalently attached to the protein via two ester linkages between conserved glutamate and aspartate residues and modified methyl groups on pyrrole rings A and C. Here, monomeric recombinant myeloperoxidase (MPO) and the variants D94V and D94N were produced in Chinese hamster ovary cell lines. Disruption of the Asp94 to heme ester bond decreased the one-electron reduction potential E′0 [Fe(III)/Fe(II)] from 1 to –55 mV at pH 7.0 and 25 °C, whereas the kinetics of binding of low spin ligands and of compound I formation was unaffected. By contrast, in both variants rates of compound I reduction by chloride and bromide (but not iodide and thiocyanate) were substantially decreased compared with the wild-type protein. Bimolecular rates of compound II (but not compound I) reduction by ascorbate and tyrosine were slightly diminished in D94V and D94N. The presented biochemical and biophysical data suggest that the Asp94 to heme linkage is no precondition for the autocatalytic formation of the other two covalent links found in MPO. The findings are discussed with respect to the known active site structure of MPO and its complexes with ligands.


Biochimie | 2012

Eukaryotic extracellular catalase–peroxidase from Magnaporthe grisea – Biophysical/chemical characterization of the first representative from a novel phytopathogenic KatG group

Marcel Zámocký; Enrica Droghetti; Marzia Bellei; Bernhard Gasselhuber; Martin Pabst; Paul G. Furtmüller; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Giulietta Smulevich; Christian Obinger

All phytopathogenic fungi have two catalase–peroxidase paralogues located either intracellularly (KatG1) or extracellularly (KatG2). Here, for the first time a secreted bifunctional, homodimeric catalase–peroxidase (KatG2 from the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea) has been produced heterologously with almost 100% heme occupancy and comprehensively investigated by using a broad set of methods including UV–Vis, ECD and resonance Raman spectroscopy (RR), thin-layer spectroelectrochemistry, mass spectrometry, steady-state & presteady-state spectroscopy. RR spectroscopy reveals that MagKatG2 shows a unique mixed-spin state, non-planar heme b, and a proximal histidine with pronounced imidazolate character. At pH 7.0 and 25 °C, the standard reduction potential E°′ of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple for the high-spin native protein was found to fall in the range typical for the KatG family. Binding of cyanide was relatively slow at pH 7.0 and 25 °C and with a Kd value significantly higher than for the intracellular counterpart. Demonstrated by mass spectrometry MagKatG2 has the typical Trp118-Tyr251-Met277 adduct that is essential for its predominantly catalase activity at the unique acidic pH optimum. In addition, MagKatG2 acts as a versatile peroxidase using both one- and two-electron donors. Based on these data, structure–function relationships of extracellular eukaryotic KatGs are discussed with respect to intracellular KatGs and possible role(s) in host–pathogen interaction.


Biochemistry | 2014

Manipulating Conserved Heme Cavity Residues of Chlorite Dismutase: Effect on Structure, Redox Chemistry, and Reactivity

Stefan Hofbauer; Kira Gysel; Marzia Bellei; Andreas Hagmüller; Irene Schaffner; Georg Mlynek; Julius Kostan; Katharina F. Pirker; Holger Daims; Paul G. Furtmüller; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Christian Obinger

Chlorite dismutases (Clds) are heme b containing oxidoreductases that convert chlorite to chloride and molecular oxygen. In order to elucidate the role of conserved heme cavity residues in the catalysis of this reaction comprehensive mutational and biochemical analyses of Cld from “Candidatus Nitrospira defluvii” (NdCld) were performed. Particularly, point mutations of the cavity-forming residues R173, K141, W145, W146, and E210 were performed. The effect of manipulation in 12 single and double mutants was probed by UV–vis spectroscopy, spectroelectrochemistry, pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetics, and X-ray crystallography. Resulting biochemical data are discussed with respect to the known crystal structure of wild-type NdCld and the variants R173A and R173K as well as the structures of R173E, W145V, W145F, and the R173Q/W146Y solved in this work. The findings allow a critical analysis of the role of these heme cavity residues in the reaction mechanism of chlorite degradation that is proposed to involve hypohalous acid as transient intermediate and formation of an O=O bond. The distal R173 is shown to be important (but not fully essential) for the reaction with chlorite, and, upon addition of cyanide, it acts as a proton acceptor in the formation of the resulting low-spin complex. The proximal H-bonding network including K141-E210-H160 keeps the enzyme in its ferric (E°′ = −113 mV) and mainly five-coordinated high-spin state and is very susceptible to perturbation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

A stable bacterial peroxidase with novel halogenating activity and an autocatalytically linked heme prosthetic group

Markus Auer; Clemens Gruber; Marzia Bellei; Katharina F. Pirker; Marcel Zamocky; Daniela Kroiss; Stefan A. Teufer; Stefan Hofbauer; Monika Soudi; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Paul G. Furtmüller; Christian Obinger

Background: First analysis was made of bacterial ancestor of peroxidases from mammalian innate immune system. Results: Highly stable heme enzyme possesses high bromination activity and covalently bound prosthetic group. Conclusion: Post-translational autocatalytic (peroxide-driven) heme modification is found in prokaryotic and eukaryotic halogenating peroxidases. Significance: Peroxidase-mediated production of antimicrobial hypohalous acids was developed early in evolution. Reconstructing the phylogenetic relationships of the main evolutionary lines of the mammalian peroxidases lactoperoxidase and myeloperoxidase revealed the presence of novel bacterial heme peroxidase subfamilies. Here, for the first time, an ancestral bacterial heme peroxidase is shown to possess a very high bromide oxidation activity (besides conventional peroxidase activity). The recombinant protein allowed monitoring of the autocatalytic peroxide-driven formation of covalent heme to protein bonds. Thereby, the high spin ferric rhombic heme spectrum became similar to lactoperoxidase, the standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple shifted to more positive values (−145 ± 10 mV at pH 7), and the conformational and thermal stability of the protein increased significantly. We discuss structure-function relationships of this new peroxidase in relation to its mammalian counterparts and ask for its putative physiological role.


Biochemistry | 2012

Redox thermodynamics of high-spin and low-spin forms of chlorite dismutases with diverse subunit and oligomeric structures.

Stefan Hofbauer; Marzia Bellei; Axel Sündermann; Katharina F. Pirker; Andreas Hagmüller; Georg Mlynek; Julius Kostan; Holger Daims; Paul G. Furtmüller; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Chris Oostenbrink; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Christian Obinger

Chlorite dismutases (Clds) are heme b-containing oxidoreductases that convert chlorite to chloride and dioxygen. In this work, the thermodynamics of the one-electron reduction of the ferric high-spin forms and of the six-coordinate low-spin cyanide adducts of the enzymes from Nitrobacter winogradskyi (NwCld) and Candidatus “Nitrospira defluvii” (NdCld) were determined through spectroelectrochemical experiments. These proteins belong to two phylogenetically separated lineages that differ in subunit (21.5 and 26 kDa, respectively) and oligomeric (dimeric and pentameric, respectively) structure but exhibit similar chlorite degradation activity. The E°′ values for free and cyanide-bound proteins were determined to be −119 and −397 mV for NwCld and −113 and −404 mV for NdCld, respectively (pH 7.0, 25 °C). Variable-temperature spectroelectrochemical experiments revealed that the oxidized state of both proteins is enthalpically stabilized. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest that changes in the protein structure are negligible, whereas solvent reorganization is mainly responsible for the increase in entropy during the redox reaction. Obtained data are discussed with respect to the known structures of the two Clds and the proposed reaction mechanism.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Pre-steady-state Kinetics Reveal the Substrate Specificity and Mechanism of Halide Oxidation of Truncated Human Peroxidasin 1

Martina Paumann-Page; Romy-Sophie Katz; Marzia Bellei; Irene Schwartz; Eva Edenhofer; Benjamin Sevcnikar; Monika Soudi; Stefan Hofbauer; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Christian Obinger

Human peroxidasin 1 is a homotrimeric multidomain peroxidase that is secreted to the extracellular matrix. The heme enzyme was shown to release hypobromous acid that mediates the formation of specific covalent sulfilimine bonds to reinforce collagen IV in basement membranes. Maturation by proteolytic cleavage is known to activate the enzyme. Here, we present the first multimixing stopped-flow study on a fully functional truncated variant of human peroxidasin 1 comprising four immunoglobulin-like domains and the catalytically active peroxidase domain. The kinetic data unravel the so far unknown substrate specificity and mechanism of halide oxidation of human peroxidasin 1. The heme enzyme is shown to follow the halogenation cycle that is induced by the rapid H2O2-mediated oxidation of the ferric enzyme to the redox intermediate compound I. We demonstrate that chloride cannot act as a two-electron donor of compound I, whereas thiocyanate, iodide, and bromide efficiently restore the ferric resting state. We present all relevant apparent bimolecular rate constants, the spectral signatures of the redox intermediates, and the standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple, and we demonstrate that the prosthetic heme group is post-translationally modified and cross-linked with the protein. These structural features provide the basis of human peroxidasin 1 to act as an effective generator of hypobromous acid, which mediates the formation of covalent cross-links in collagen IV.


Inorganica Chimica Acta | 2003

Redox thermodynamics of cytochrome c in mixed water–organic solvent solutions

Marco Borsari; Marzia Bellei; Claudio Tavagnacco; Silvia Peressini; D. Millo; G. Costa

Abstract Bovine heart cytochrome c was studied through cyclic voltammetry in mixed water–organic solvent solutions under different conditions of temperature and the thermodynamic properties Δ S ° rc and Δ H ° rc calculated by the dependence of E ° by temperature. The effect of the organic fraction of the solvent on the E ° values of the native cyt c was found to be determined mainly by the decrease in dielectric constant of the medium. Specific interactions on the protein surface do not seem to play a remarkable role. The thermodynamic properties changes induced by the organic fraction have been interpreted tentatively in terms of solvation properties of cytochrome c and structural features of the protein environment.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Multidomain Human Peroxidasin 1 Is a Highly Glycosylated and Stable Homotrimeric High Spin Ferric Peroxidase

Monika Soudi; Martina Paumann-Page; Cédric Delporte; Katharina Kf Pirker; Marzia Bellei; Eva Edenhofer; Gerhard Stadlmayr; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Karim Zouaoui Boudjeltia; Paul G. Furtmüller; Pierre Van Antwerpen; Christian Obinger

Background: Human peroxidasin 1 (hsPxd01) mediates the formation of sulfilimine cross-links within the collagen IV scaffold of basement membranes. Results: Overexpressed hsPxd01 contains covalently linked heme catalytically active for production of hypobromous acid. Conclusion: hsPxd01 has peroxidase-like active site structure but restricted substrate accessibility. Significance: Architecture of hsPxd01 facilitates product release and its interactions with the physiological substrate collagen IV. Human peroxidasin 1 (hsPxd01) is a multidomain heme peroxidase that uses bromide as a cofactor for the formation of sulfilimine cross-links. The latter confers critical structural reinforcement to collagen IV scaffolds. Here, hsPxd01 and various truncated variants lacking nonenzymatic domains were recombinantly expressed in HEK cell lines. The N-glycosylation site occupancy and disulfide pattern, the oligomeric structure, and unfolding pathway are reported. The homotrimeric iron protein contains a covalently bound ferric high spin heme per subunit with a standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of −233 ± 5 mV at pH 7.0. Despite sequence homology at the active site and biophysical properties similar to human peroxidases, the catalytic efficiency of bromide oxidation (kcat/KMapp) of full-length hsPxd01 is rather low but increased upon truncation. This is discussed with respect to its structure and proposed biosynthetic function in collagen IV cross-linking.


Molecular Microbiology | 2015

Dimeric chlorite dismutase from the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp. PCC7425

Irene Schaffner; Stefan Hofbauer; Michael Krutzler; Katharina F. Pirker; Marzia Bellei; Gerhard Stadlmayr; Georg Mlynek; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Paul G. Furtmüller; Holger Daims; Christian Obinger

It is demonstrated that cyanobacteria (both azotrophic and non‐azotrophic) contain heme b oxidoreductases that can convert chlorite to chloride and molecular oxygen (incorrectly denominated chlorite ‘dismutase’, Cld). Beside the water‐splitting manganese complex of photosystem II, this metalloenzyme is the second known enzyme that catalyses the formation of a covalent oxygen–oxygen bond. All cyanobacterial Clds have a truncated N‐terminus and are dimeric (i.e. clade 2) proteins. As model protein, Cld from Cyanothece sp. PCC7425 (CCld) was recombinantly produced in Escherichia coli and shown to efficiently degrade chlorite with an activity optimum at pH 5.0 [kcat 1144 ± 23.8 s−1, KM 162 ± 10.0 μM, catalytic efficiency (7.1 ± 0.6) × 106 M−1 s−1]. The resting ferric high‐spin axially symmetric heme enzyme has a standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of −126 ± 1.9 mV at pH 7.0. Cyanide mediates the formation of a low‐spin complex with kon = (1.6 ± 0.1) × 105 M−1 s−1 and koff = 1.4 ± 2.9 s−1 (KD ∼ 8.6 μM). Both, thermal and chemical unfolding follows a non‐two‐state unfolding pathway with the first transition being related to the release of the prosthetic group. The obtained data are discussed with respect to known structure–function relationships of Clds. We ask for the physiological substrate and putative function of these O2‐producing proteins in (nitrogen‐fixing) cyanobacteria.

Collaboration


Dive into the Marzia Bellei's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gianantonio Battistuzzi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marco Sola

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stefan Hofbauer

Max F. Perutz Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Georg Mlynek

Max F. Perutz Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marco Borsari

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katharina F. Pirker

Austrian Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Ranieri

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carlo Augusto Bortolotti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giulia Di Rocco

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge