Monica Averna
University of Genoa
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Featured researches published by Monica Averna.
FEBS Letters | 1996
M. Michetti; F. Salamino; Ilaria Tedesco; Monica Averna; Roberto Minafra; Edon Melloni; Sandro Pontremoli
The 80 kDa human erythrocyte calpain, when exposed to Ca2+, undergoes autoproteolysis that generates a 75 kDa species, with an increase in Ca2+ affinity. It is demonstrated here that this proteolytic modification proceeds through an initial step producing a 78 kDa form which is rapidly converted to the 75 kDa one. In the presence of the calpain inhibitor E‐64, the 78 kDa form accumulates and only small amounts of the 75 kDa polypeptide are formed. Following loading of erythrocytes with micromolar concentration of Ca2+, in the presence of the ionophore A23187, the native 80 kDa calpain subunit is extensively translocated and retained at the plasma membrane, this process is accompanied by the appearance of only a small amount of the 75 kDa subunit which is released into the soluble fraction of the cells. Following exposure to μM Ca2+, membrane‐bound 80 kDa calpain is converted to the 78 kDa form, this conversion being linearly correlated with the expression of the proteinase activity. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the initial step in calpain activation involves Ca2+‐induced translocation to the inner surface of plasma membranes. In the membrane‐bound form the native inactive 80 kDa subunit is converted through intramolecular autoproteolysis to a locally active 78 kDa form. Further autoproteolytic intermolecular digestion converts the 78 kDa to the 75 kDa form, no longer being retained by the membrane. This process generates two active forms of calpain, with different intracellular localisations.
Biochemical Journal | 2001
Monica Averna; Roberta De Tullio; Mario Passalacqua; Franca Salamino; Sandro Pontremoli; Edon Melloni
We have previously reported that, in neuroblastoma LAN-5 cells, calpastatin is in an aggregated state, close to the cell nucleus [de Tullio, Passalacqua, Averna, Salamino, Melloni and Pontremoli (1999) Biochem. J. 343, 467-472]. In the present paper, we demonstrate that aggregated calpastatin is predominantly in a phosphorylated state. An increase in intracellular free [Ca2+] induces both dephosphorylation of calpastatin, through the action of a phosphoprotein phosphatase, and its redistribution as a soluble inhibitor species. cAMP, but not PMA-induced phosphorylation, reverses calpastatin distribution favouring its aggregation. This intracellular reversible mechanism, regulating the level of cytosolic calpastatin, could be considered a strategy through which calpain can escape calpastatin inhibition, especially during earlier steps of its activation process.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Edon Melloni; Monica Averna; Franca Salamino; Bianca Sparatore; Roberto Minafra; Sandro Pontremoli
Acyl-CoA-binding protein, a 20-kDa homodimer that exerts many physiological functions, promotes activation of the classic calpain forms, most markedly that of the m-isozyme. This protein factor was purified from rat skeletal muscle and was also expressed inEscherichia coli. Both native and recombinant acyl-CoA-binding proteins show the same molecular properties and an identical capacity to decrease the [Ca2+] required for m-calpain activity. The binding of long-chain acyl-CoAs to acyl-CoA-binding protein does not modify the activating effect on calpains. Acyl-CoA-binding protein seems to be involved in the m-calpain regulation process, whereas the previously identified UK114 activator is a specific modulator of μ-calpain. Acyl-CoA-binding protein is proposed as a new component of the Ca2+-dependent proteolytic system. A comparative analysis among levels of classic calpains and their activator proteins is also reported.
FEBS Letters | 1997
F. Salamino; Monica Averna; Ilaria Tedesco; Roberta De Tullio; Edon Melloni; Sandro Pontremoli
Calpains, the thiol proteinases of the calcium‐dependent proteolytic system, are regulated by a natural inhibitor, calpastatin, which is present in brain tissue in two forms. Although both calpastatins are highly active on human erythrocyte calpain, only one form shows a high inhibitory efficiency with both rat brain calpain isozymes. The second calpastatin form is almost completely inactive against homologous proteinases and can be converted into an active one by exposure to a phosphoprotein phosphatase, also isolated from rat brain. Phosphorylation of the active calpastatin by protein kinase C and protein kinase A promotes a decrease in its inhibitory efficiency. The interconversion between the two inhibitor forms seems involved in the adjustment of the level of intracellular calpastatin activity on specific cell requirements.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Edon Melloni; Monica Averna; Roberto Stifanese; Roberta De Tullio; Enrico Defranchi; Franca Salamino; Sandro Pontremoli
It is generally accepted that the Ca2+-dependent interaction of calpain with calpastatin is the most relevant mechanism involved in the regulation of Ca2+-induced proteolysis. We now report that a calpain-calpastatin association can occur also in the absence of Ca2+ or at very low Ca2+ concentrations, reflecting the physiological conditions under which calpain retains its inactive conformational state. The calpastatin binding region is localized in the non-inhibitory L-domain containing the amino acid sequences encoded by exons 4-7. This calpastatin region recognizes a calpain sequence located near the end of the DII-domain. Interaction of calpain with calpastatins lacking these sequences becomes strictly Ca2+-dependent because, under these conditions, the transition to an active state of the protease is an obligatory requirement. The occurrence of the molecular association between Ca2+-free calpain and various recombinant calpastatin forms has been demonstrated by the following experimental results. Addition of calpastatin protected calpain from trypsin digestion. Calpain was coprecipitated when calpastatin was immunoprecipitated. The calpastatin molecular size increased following exposure to calpain. The two proteins comigrated in zymogram analysis. Furthermore, calpain-calpastatin interaction was perturbed by protein kinase C phosphorylation occurring at sites located at the exons involved in the association. At a functional level, calpain-calpastatin interaction at a physiological concentration of Ca2+ represents a novel mechanism for the control of the amount of the active form of the protease potentially generated in response to an intracellular Ca2+ influx.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Monica Averna; Roberta De Tullio; Franca Salamino; Roberto Minafra; Sandro Pontremoli; Edon Melloni
Hypertensive rats from the Milan strain show a significant decrease in calpastatin activity as compared with normotensive control animals. Calpastatin deficiency is age-related and highly relevant in kidney, heart, and erythrocytes and of minor entity in brain tissue. In normotensives the changes during aging in the levels of calpastatin activity and mRNA are consistent with an increase of calpastatin protein. In hypertensive rats such a relationship during aging is not observed, because a progressive accumulation of mRNA is accompanied by a lower amount of calpastatin protein as compared with control rats. Together with the low level of calpastatin in kidney of hypertensive rats, a progressive accumulation of an active 15-kDa calpastatin fragment, previously shown to represent a typical product of calpain-mediated calpastatin degradation, is also observed. Evidence for such intracellular proteolysis by Ca2+-activated calpain is provided by the normalization of the calpastatin level, up to that of control animals, in hypertensive rats treated with drugs known to reduce both blood pressure and intracellular Ca2+ influx. Further evidence is provided by the disappearance, in these conditions, of the 15-kDa calpastatin fragment. These data allow the conclusion that calpastatin degradation is a relevant part of the overall mechanism for regulating calpain activity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Monica Averna; Roberto Stifanese; Roberta De Tullio; Mario Passalacqua; Franca Salamino; Sandro Pontremoli; Edon Melloni
Although several reports have indicated that eNOS is a highly sensitive calpain substrate, the occurrence of a concomitant Ca2+-dependent activation of the synthase and of the protease has never been analyzed in specific direct experiments. In this study, we have explored in vivo how eNOS can undergo Ca2+-dependent translocation and activation, protected against degradation by activated calpain. Here we demonstrate that following a brief exposure to Ca2+-loading, the cytosolic eNOS-HSP90 complex recruits calpain in a form in which the chaperone and the synthase are almost completely resistant to digestion by the protease. Furthermore, in the presence of the HSP90 inhibitor geldanamycin, a significant decrease in NO production and an extensive degradation of eNOS protein occurs, indicating that dissociation from membranes and association with the chaperone is correlated to the protection of the synthase. Experiments with isolated membrane preparations confirm the primary role of HSP90 in dissociation of eNOS from caveolae. Prolonged exposure of cells to Ca2+-loading resulted in an extensive degradation of both eNOS and HSP90, accompanied by a large suppression of NO production. We propose that the protective effect exerted by HSP90 on eNOS degradation mediated by calpain represents a novel and critical mechanism that assures the reversibility of the intracellular trafficking and activation of the synthase.
FEBS Journal | 2007
Monica Averna; Roberto Stifanese; Roberta De Tullio; Franca Salamino; Mara Bertuccio; Sandro Pontremoli; Edon Melloni
Ca2+ loading of Jurkat and bovine aorta endothelium cells induces the degradation of the neuronal and endothelial nitric oxide synthases that are selectively expressed in these cell lines. For neuronal nitric oxide synthase, this process involves a conservative limited proteolysis without appreciable loss of catalytic activity. By contrast, endothelial nitic oxide synthase digestion proceeds through a parallel loss of protein and catalytic activity. The chaperone heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) is present in a large amount in Jurkat cells and at significantly lower levels in bovine aorta endothelium cells. The differing ratios of HSP90/nitric oxide synthase (NOS) occurring in the two cell types are responsible for the conservative or nonconservative digestion of NOS isozymes. Consistently, we demonstrate that, in the absence of Ca2+, HSP90 forms binary complexes with NOS isozymes or with calpain. When Ca2+ is present, a ternary complex containing the three proteins is produced. In this associated state, HSP90 and NOS forms are almost completely resistant to calpain digestion, probably due to a structural hindrance and a reduction in the catalytic efficiency of the protease. Thus, the recruitment of calpain in the HSP90–NOS complexes reduces the extent of the proteolysis of these two proteins. We have also observed that calpastatin competes with HSP90 for the binding of calpain in reconstructed systems. Digestion of the proteins present in the complexes can occur only when free active calpain is present in the system. This process can be visualized as a novel mechanism involving the association of NOS with HSP90 and the concomitant recruitment of active calpain in ternary complexes in which the proteolysis of both NOS isozymes and HSP90 is significantly reduced.
FEBS Letters | 1998
Edon Melloni; Roberta De Tullio; Monica Averna; Ilaria Tedesco; Franca Salamino; Bianca Sparatore; Sandro Pontremoli
Four recombinant calpastatin forms, deduced from rat brain mRNAs and differing in the number of inhibitory repetitive domains from zero to four, were expressed and characterized for their inhibitory efficiency on μ‐ and m‐calpain. Although the most effective one is a truncated calpastatin form composed of the N‐terminal region (domain L) and a single inhibitory domain, all inhibitors are more active against μ‐calpain, but are preferentially degraded and inactivated by m‐calpain. The protein form composed exclusively of a domain L is deprived of any inhibitory activity but prevents inhibition of calpain by the other calpastatin forms, indicating that this calpastatin region could be relevant in the recognition of the proteinase. A calpastatin form having molecular properties similar to those of the recombinant truncated calpastatin, has also been found in rat brain. It does not derive from proteolysis of a higher molecular mass precursor. The expression of multiple calpastatin forms may be relevant for the specific modulation of the different calpain isozymes normally present in a single cell type.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Roberto Stifanese; Monica Averna; Roberta De Tullio; Marco Pedrazzi; Francesco Beccaria; Franca Salamino; Marco Milanese; Giambattista Bonanno; Sandro Pontremoli; Edon Melloni
Persistent dysregulation in Ca2+ homeostasis is a pervasive pathogenic mechanism in most neurodegenerative diseases, and accordingly, calpain activation has been implicated in neuronal cells dysfunction and death. In this study we examined the intracellular functional state of the calpain-calpastatin system in −G93A(+) SOD1 transgenic mice to establish if and how uncontrolled activation of calpain can be prevented in vivo during the course of prolonged [Ca2+]i elevation. The presented data indicate that 1) calpain activation is more extensive in motor cortex, in lumbar, and sacral spinal cord segments compared with the lower or almost undetectable activation of the protease in other brain areas, 2) direct measurements of the variations of Ca2+ levels established that the degree of the protease activation is correlated to the extent of elevation of [Ca2+]i, 3) intracellular activation of calpain is always associated with diffusion of calpastatin from perinuclear aggregated forms into the cytosol and the formation of a calpain-calpastatin complex, and 4) a conservative fragmentation of calpastatin is accompanied by its increased expression and inhibitory capacity in conditions of prolonged increase in [Ca2+]i. Thus, calpastatin diffusion and formation of the calpain-calpastatin complex together with an increased synthesis of the inhibitor protein represent a cellular defense response to conditions of prolonged dysregulation in intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis. Altogether these findings provide a new understanding of the in vivo molecular mechanisms governing calpain activation that can be extended to many neurodegenerative diseases, potentially useful for the development of new therapeutic approaches.