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Dive into the research topics where Mauro Chinappi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mauro Chinappi.


Cell | 2011

A Long Noncoding RNA Controls Muscle Differentiation by Functioning as a Competing Endogenous RNA

Marcella Cesana; Davide Cacchiarelli; Ivano Legnini; Tiziana Santini; Olga Sthandier; Mauro Chinappi; Anna Tramontano; Irene Bozzoni

Summary Recently, a new regulatory circuitry has been identified in which RNAs can crosstalk with each other by competing for shared microRNAs. Such competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs) regulate the distribution of miRNA molecules on their targets and thereby impose an additional level of post-transcriptional regulation. Here we identify a muscle-specific long noncoding RNA, linc-MD1, which governs the time of muscle differentiation by acting as a ceRNA in mouse and human myoblasts. Downregulation or overexpression of linc-MD1 correlate with retardation or anticipation of the muscle differentiation program, respectively. We show that linc-MD1 “sponges” miR-133 and miR-135 to regulate the expression of MAML1 and MEF2C, transcription factors that activate muscle-specific gene expression. Finally, we demonstrate that linc-MD1 exerts the same control over differentiation timing in human myoblasts, and that its levels are strongly reduced in Duchenne muscle cells. We conclude that the ceRNA network plays an important role in muscle differentiation.


Langmuir | 2012

Cassie–Baxter and Wenzel States on a Nanostructured Surface: Phase Diagram, Metastabilities, and Transition Mechanism by Atomistic Free Energy Calculations

Alberto Giacomello; Simone Meloni; Mauro Chinappi; Carlo Massimo Casciola

In this work, we study the wetting of a surface decorated with one nanogroove by a bulk Lennard-Jones liquid at various temperatures and densities. We used atomistic simulations aimed at computing the free energy of the stable and metastable states of the system, as well as the intermediate states separating them. We found that the usual description in terms of Cassie-Baxter and Wenzel states is insufficient, as the system presents two states of the Cassie-Baxter type. These states are characterized by different curvatures of the meniscus. The measured free energy barrier separating the Cassie-Baxter from the Wenzel state (and vice versa) largely exceeds the thermal energy, attesting the existence of Cassie-Baxter/Wenzel metastabilities. Finally, we found that the Cassie-Baxter/Wenzel transition follows an asymmetric path, with the formation of a liquid finger on one side of the groove and a vapor bubble on the opposite side.


PLOS ONE | 2010

On the Mechanism of Chloroquine Resistance in Plasmodium falciparum

Mauro Chinappi; Allegra Via; Paolo Marcatili; Anna Tramontano

Resistance to chloroquine of malaria strains is known to be associated with a parasite protein named PfCRT, the mutated form of which is able to reduce chloroquine accumulation in the digestive vacuole of the pathogen. Whether the protein mediates extrusion of the drug acting as a channel or as a carrier and which is the protonation state of its chloroquine substrate is the subject of a scientific debate. We present here an analytical approach that explores which combination of hypotheses on the mechanism of transport and the protonation state of chloroquine are consistent with available equilibrium experimental data. We show that the available experimental data are not, by themselves, sufficient to conclude whether the protein acts as a channel or as a transporter, which explains the origin of their different interpretation by different authors. Interestingly, though, each of the two models is only consistent with a subset of hypotheses on the protonation state of the transported molecule. The combination of these results with a sequence and structure analysis of PfCRT, which strongly suggests that the molecule is a carrier, indicates that the transported species is either or both the mono and di-protonated forms of chloroquine. We believe that our results, besides shedding light on the mechanism of chloroquine resistance in P. falciparum, have implications for the development of novel therapies against resistant malaria strains and demonstrate the usefulness of an approach combining systems biology strategies with structural bioinformatics and experimental data.


Physics of Fluids | 2010

Intrinsic slip on hydrophobic self-assembled monolayer coatings

Mauro Chinappi; Carlo Massimo Casciola

The slippage of liquids over solid surfaces is receiving a growing interest for its potential applications to microfluidic devices. Hydrophobic coatings of smooth surfaces have been reported able to induce a significant slip length. A considerable debate is found in the literature, and a substantial scatter in the measured slip lengths, ranging from zero to few microns, exists. Here we discuss a detailed molecular dynamics simulation of liquid water flowing over a self-assembled-monolayer of octadecyltrichlorosilane. The data provide a value of the slip length in the range of 0.2–0.6 nm, smaller than the most recent value of 20 nm obtained by means of an accurately controlled experiment with the surface force apparatus. The discrepancy between experiments and simulations is discussed, commenting on the possible effect of surface imperfections.


Langmuir | 2013

Geometry as a Catalyst: How Vapor Cavities Nucleate from Defects

Alberto Giacomello; Mauro Chinappi; Simone Meloni; Carlo Massimo Casciola

The onset of cavitation is strongly enhanced by the presence of rough surfaces or impurities in the liquid. Despite decades of research, the way the geometry of these defects promote the nucleation of bubbles and its effect on the kinetics of the process remains largely unclear. We present here a comprehensive explanation of the catalytic action that roughness elements exert on the nucleation process for both pure vapor cavities and gas ones. This approach highlights that nucleation may follow nontrivial paths connected with a sharp decrease of the free energy barriers as compared to flat surfaces. Furthermore, we demonstrate the existence of intermediate metastable states that break the nucleation process in multiple steps; these states correspond to what is commonly known as cavitation nuclei. A single dimensionless parameter, the nucleation number, is found to control this rich phenomenology. The devised theory allows one to quantify the effect of the geometry and hydrophobicity of surface asperities on nucleation. Within the same framework, it is possible to treat both vapor cavitation, which is relevant, e.g., for organic liquids, and gas-promoted cavitation, which is commonly encountered in water. The theory is shown to be valid from the nano- to the macroscale.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Electroosmotic Trap Against the Electrophoretic Force Near a Protein Nanopore Reveals Peptide Dynamics During Capture and Translocation

Alina Asandei; Irina Schiopu; Mauro Chinappi; Chang Ho Seo; Yoonkyung Park; Tudor Luchian

We report on the ability to control the dynamics of a single peptide capture and passage across a voltage-biased, α-hemolysin nanopore (α-HL), under conditions that the electroosmotic force exerted on the analyte dominates the electrophoretic transport. We demonstrate that by extending outside the nanopore, the electroosmotic force is able to capture a peptide at either the lumen or vestibule entry of the nanopore, and transiently traps it inside the nanopore, against the electrophoretic force. Statistical analysis of the resolvable dwell-times of a metastable trapped peptide, as it occupies either the β-barrel or vestibule domain of the α-HL nanopore, reveals rich kinetic details regarding the direction and rates of stochastic movement of a peptide inside the nanopore. The presented approach demonstrates the ability to shuttle and study molecules along the passage pathway inside the nanopore, allows to identify the mesoscopic trajectory of a peptide exiting the nanopore through either the vestibule or β-barrel moiety, thus providing convincing proof of a molecule translocating the pore. The kinetic analysis of a peptide fluctuating between various microstates inside the nanopore, enabled a detailed picture of the free energy description of its interaction with the α-HL nanopore. When studied at the limit of vanishingly low transmembrane potentials, this provided a thermodynamic description of peptide reversible binding to and within the α-HL nanopore, under equilibrium conditions devoid of electric and electroosmotic contributions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Multistep Current Signal in Protein Translocation through Graphene Nanopores

Emma Letizia Bonome; Rosalba Lepore; Domenico Raimondo; Fabio Cecconi; Anna Tramontano; Mauro Chinappi

In nanopore sensing experiments, the properties of molecules are probed by the variation of ionic currents flowing through the nanopore. In this context, the electronic properties and the single-layer thickness of graphene constitute a major advantage for molecule characterization. Here we analyze the translocation pathway of the thioredoxin protein across a graphene nanopore, and the related ionic currents, by integrating two nonequilibrium molecular dynamics methods with a bioinformatic structural analysis. To obtain a qualitative picture of the translocation process and to identify salient features we performed unsupervised structural clustering on translocation conformations. This allowed us to identify some specific and robust translocation intermediates, characterized by significantly different ionic current flows. We found that the ion current strictly anticorrelates with the amount of pore occupancy by thioredoxin residues, providing a putative explanation of the multilevel current scenario observed in recently published translocation experiments.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Placement of oppositely charged aminoacids at a polypeptide termini determines the voltage-controlled braking of polymer transport through nanometer-scale pores.

Alina Asandei; Mauro Chinappi; Jong-Kook Lee; Chang Ho Seo; Loredana Mereuta; Yoonkyung Park; Tudor Luchian

Protein and solid-state nanometer-scale pores are being developed for the detection, analysis, and manipulation of single molecules. In the simplest embodiment, the entry of a molecule into a nanopore causes a reduction in the latter’s ionic conductance. The ionic current blockade depth and residence time have been shown to provide detailed information on the size, adsorbed charge, and other properties of molecules. Here we describe the use of the nanopore formed by Staphylococcus aureus α-hemolysin and polypeptides with oppositely charged segments at the N- and C-termini to increase both the polypeptide capture rate and mean residence time of them in the pore, regardless of the polarity of the applied electrostatic potential. The technique provides the means to improve the signal to noise of single molecule nanopore-based measurements.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Role of denaturation in maltose binding protein translocation dynamics.

Marco Bacci; Mauro Chinappi; Carlo Massimo Casciola; Fabio Cecconi

We present a computational study on the driven transport of the Maltose Binding Protein (MBP) across nanochannels in the framework of coarse-grained modeling. The work is motivated by recent experiments on voltage-driven transport of MBP across nanopores exploring the influence of denaturation on translocation pathways. Our simplified approach allows a statistical mechanical interpretation of the process which may be convenient also to the experiments. Specifically, we identify and characterize short and long channel blockades, associated to the translocation of denaturated and folded MBP conformations, respectively. We show that long blockades are related to long stall events where MBP undergoes specific and reproducible structural rearrangements. To clarify the origin of the stalls, the stick-and-slip translocation is compared to mechanical unfolding pathways obtained via steered molecular dynamics. This comparison clearly shows the translocation pathway to significantly differ from free-space unfolding dynamics and strongly suggests that stalling events are preferentially determined by the MBP regions with higher density of long-range native interactions. This result might constitute a possible criterion to predict a priori some statistical features of protein translocation from the structural analysis.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Acidity-Mediated, Electrostatic Tuning of Asymmetrically Charged Peptides Interactions with Protein Nanopores

Alina Asandei; Mauro Chinappi; Hee-Kyoung Kang; Chang Ho Seo; Loredana Mereuta; Yoonkyung Park; Tudor Luchian

Despite success in probing chemical reactions and dynamics of macromolecules on submillisecond time and nanometer length scales, a major impasse faced by nanopore technology is the need to cheaply and controllably modulate macromolecule capture and trafficking across the nanopore. We demonstrate herein that tunable charge separation engineered at the both ends of a macromolecule very efficiently modulates the dynamics of macromolecules capture and traffic through a nanometer-size pore. In the proof-of-principle approach, we employed a 36 amino acids long peptide containing at the N- and C-termini uniform patches of glutamic acids and arginines, flanking a central segment of asparagines, and we studied its capture by the α-hemolysin (α-HL) and the mean residence time inside the pore in the presence of a pH gradient across the protein. We propose a solution to effectively control the dynamics of peptide interaction with the nanopore, with both association and dissociation reaction rates of peptide-α-HL interactions spanning orders of magnitude depending upon solution acidity on the peptide addition side and the transmembrane electric potential, while preserving the amplitude of the blockade current signature.

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Fabio Cecconi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Alberto Giacomello

Sapienza University of Rome

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Anna Tramontano

Sapienza University of Rome

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D. Gentili

Sapienza University of Rome

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Daniela Pimponi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Paolo Gualtieri

Sapienza University of Rome

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Simone Meloni

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Alina Asandei

Alexandru Ioan Cuza University

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