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Dive into the research topics where Morena Casartelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Morena Casartelli.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2007

Programmed cell death and stem cell differentiation are responsible for midgut replacement in Heliothis virescens during prepupal instar

Gianluca Tettamanti; Annalisa Grimaldi; Morena Casartelli; Elena Ambrosetti; Benedetta Ponti; Terenzio Congiu; Roberto Ferrarese; Maria Luisa Rivas-Pena; Francesco Pennacchio; Magda de Eguileor

We have analyzed midgut development during the fifth larval instar in the tobacco budworm Heliothis virescens. In prepupae, the midgut formed during larval instars undergoes a complete renewal process. This drastic remodeling of the alimentary canal involves the destruction of the old cells by programmed cell-death mechanisms (autophagy and apoptosis). Massive proliferation and differentiation of regenerative stem cells take place at the end of the fifth instar and give rise to a new fully functioning epithelium that is capable of digesting and absorbing nutrients and that is maintained throughout the subsequent pupal stage. Midgut replacement in H. virescens is achieved by a balance between this active proliferation process and cell-death mechanisms and is different from similar processes characterized in other insects.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 1998

K+-neutral amino acid symport of Bombyx mori larval midgut: a system operative in extreme conditions

Barbara Giordana; M. G. Leonardi; Morena Casartelli; P. Consonni; P. Parenti

The K+-dependent symporter for leucine and other neutral amino acids expressed along the midgut of the silkworm Bombyx mori operates with best efficiency in the presence of a steep pH gradient across the brush-border membrane, with external alkaline pH values up to 11, and an electrical potential difference (Δψ) of ∼200 mV. Careful determinations of leucine kinetics as a function of external amino acid concentrations between 50 and 1,000 μM, performed with brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) obtained from the middle and posterior midgut regions, revealed that the kinetic parameter affected by the presence of a ΔpH was the maximal rate of transport. The addition of Δψ caused a further marked increase of the translocation rate. At nonsaturating leucine concentrations in the solution bathing the external side of the brush-border membrane, leucine accumulation within BBMV and midgut cells was not only driven by the gradient of the driver cation K+ and Δψ but occurred also in the absence of K+. The ability of the symporter to translocate the substrate in its binary form allows the intracellular accumulation of leucine in the absence of K+, provided that a pH gradient, with alkaline outside, is present. The mechanisms involved in this accumulation are discussed.The K(+)-dependent symporter for leucine and other neutral amino acids expressed along the midgut of the silkworm Bombyx mori operates with best efficiency in the presence of a steep pH gradient across the brush-border membrane, with external alkaline pH values up to 11, and an electrical potential difference (delta psi) of approximately 200 mV. Careful determinations of leucine kinetics as a function of external amino acid concentrations between 50 and 1,000 microM, performed with brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) obtained from the middle and posterior midgut regions, revealed that the kinetic parameter affected by the presence of a delta pH was the maximal rate of transport. The addition of delta psi caused a further marked increase of the translocation rate. At nonsaturating leucine concentrations in the solution bathing the external side of the brush-border membrane, leucine accumulation within BBMV and midgut cells was not only driven by the gradient of the driver cation K+ and delta psi but occurred also in the absence of K+. The ability of the symporter to translocate the substrate in its binary form allows the intracellular accumulation of leucine in the absence of K+, provided that a pH gradient, with alkaline outside, is present. The mechanisms involved in this accumulation are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Midgut microbiota and host immunocompetence underlie Bacillus thuringiensis killing mechanism

Silvia Caccia; Ilaria Di Lelio; Antonietta La Storia; Adriana Marinelli; Paola Varricchio; Eleonora Franzetti; Núria Banyuls; Gianluca Tettamanti; Morena Casartelli; Barbara Giordana; Juan Ferré; Silvia Gigliotti; Danilo Ercolini; Francesco Pennacchio

Significance Bacillus thuringiensis and its toxins are widely used for insect control. Notwithstanding the remarkable importance of this insect pathogen, its killing mechanism has yet to be fully elucidated. Here we show that the microbiota resident in the host midgut triggers a lethal septicemia. The infection process is enhanced by reducing the host immune response and its control on replication of midgut bacteria invading the body cavity through toxin-induced epithelial lesions. The experimental approach used, leaving the midgut microbiota unaltered, allows identification of the bacterial species switching from resident symbionts to pathogens and sets the stage for developing new insect biocontrol technologies based on host immunosuppression as a strategy to enhance the impact of natural antagonists. Bacillus thuringiensis is a widely used bacterial entomopathogen producing insecticidal toxins, some of which are expressed in insect-resistant transgenic crops. Surprisingly, the killing mechanism of B. thuringiensis remains controversial. In particular, the importance of the septicemia induced by the host midgut microbiota is still debated as a result of the lack of experimental evidence obtained without drastic manipulation of the midgut and its content. Here this key issue is addressed by RNAi-mediated silencing of an immune gene in a lepidopteran host Spodoptera littoralis, leaving the midgut microbiota unaltered. The resulting cellular immunosuppression was characterized by a reduced nodulation response, which was associated with a significant enhancement of host larvae mortality triggered by B. thuringiensis and a Cry toxin. This was determined by an uncontrolled proliferation of midgut bacteria, after entering the body cavity through toxin-induced epithelial lesions. Consequently, the hemolymphatic microbiota dramatically changed upon treatment with Cry1Ca toxin, showing a remarkable predominance of Serratia and Clostridium species, which switched from asymptomatic gut symbionts to hemocoelic pathogens. These experimental results demonstrate the important contribution of host enteric flora in B. thuringiensis-killing activity and provide a sound foundation for developing new insect control strategies aimed at enhancing the impact of biocontrol agents by reducing the immunocompetence of the host.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

A megalin-like receptor is involved in protein endocytosis in the midgut of an insect (Bombyx mori, Lepidoptera)

Morena Casartelli; Gaia Cermenati; Simona Rodighiero; Francesco Pennacchio; Barbara Giordana

The mechanism responsible for fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-albumin internalization by columnar cells in culture obtained from the midgut of Bombyx mori larvae was examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy. Protein uptake changed over time, and it appeared to be energy dependent, since it was strongly reduced by both low temperatures and metabolic inhibitors. Labeled albumin uptake as a function of increasing protein concentration showed a saturation kinetics with a Michaelis constant value of 2.0 +/- 0.6 microM. These data are compatible with the occurrence of receptor-mediated endocytosis. RT-PCR analysis and colocalization experiments with an anti-megalin primary antibody indicated that the receptor involved was a putative homolog of megalin, the multiligand endocytic receptor belonging to the low-density lipoprotein receptor family, responsible for the uptake of various molecules, albumin included, in many epithelial cells of mammals. This insect receptor, like the mammalian counterpart, required Ca(2+) for albumin internalization and was inhibited by gentamicin. FITC-albumin internalization was clathrin mediated, since two inhibitors of this process caused a significant reduction of the uptake, and clathrin and albumin colocalized in the intermicrovillar areas of the apical plasma membrane. The integrity of actin and microtubule organization was essential for the correct functioning of the endocytic machinery.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2014

Functional analysis of an immune gene of Spodoptera littoralis by RNAi

Ilaria Di Lelio; Paola Varricchio; Gennaro Di Prisco; Adriana Marinelli; Valentina Lasco; Silvia Caccia; Morena Casartelli; Barbara Giordana; Rosa Rao; Silvia Gigliotti; Francesco Pennacchio

Insect immune defences rely on cellular and humoral responses targeting both microbial pathogens and metazoan parasites. Accumulating evidence indicates functional cross-talk between these two branches of insect immunity, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are still largely unknown. We recently described, in the tobacco budworm Heliothis virescens, the presence of amyloid fibers associated with melanogenesis in immune capsules formed by hemocytes, and identified a protein (P102) involved in their assembly. Non-self objects coated by antibodies directed against this protein escaped hemocyte encapsulation, suggesting that P102 might coordinate humoral and cellular defence responses at the surface of foreign invaders. Here we report the identification of a cDNA coding for a protein highly similar to P102 in a related Lepidoptera species, Spodoptera littoralis. Its transcript was abundant in the hemocytes and the protein accumulated in large cytoplasmic compartments, closely resembling the localization pattern of P102 in H. virescens. RNAi-mediated gene silencing provided direct evidence for the role played by this protein in the immune response. Oral delivery of dsRNA molecules directed against the gene strongly suppressed the encapsulation and melanization response, while hemocoelic injections did not result in evident phenotypic alterations. Shortly after their administration, dsRNA molecules were found in midgut cells, en route to the hemocytes where the target gene was significantly down-regulated. Taken together, our data demonstrate that P102 is a functionally conserved protein with a key role in insect immunity. Moreover, the ability to target this gene by dsRNA oral delivery may be exploited to develop novel technologies of pest control, based on immunosuppression as a strategy for enhancing the impact of natural antagonists.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 1998

Evidence for a low-affinity, high-capacity uniport for amino acids in Bombyx mori larval midgut

M. G. Leonardi; Morena Casartelli; P. Parenti; Barbara Giordana

We investigated the kinetics of leucine influx as a function of external substrate concentration between 0.03 and 16 mM in brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) prepared from the middle region of Bombyx mori larval midgut. A detailed kinetic analysis of leucine uptake led to the identification, in parallel with the K(+)-dependent symporter for neutral amino acids, of a K(+)-independent, low-affinity, high-capacity system. The parameter values of the Michaelis constant (7.12 mM) and maximal rate of transport (4.48 nmol.7 s-1.mg protein-1) were not influenced by an external alkaline pH nor by a transmembrane electrical potential difference. The uniporter is poorly specific, as it displayed the following rank of preference: Leu, His, Val, Ile, Phe, Ser > Lys, Arg, Gln > Pro, 2-amino-2-norbornane-carboxylic acid, Ala, Gly. The kinetic analysis performed in BBMV prepared from the posterior midgut portion indicates that the low-affinity, high-capacity uniporter is present along the entire length of the silkworm larval midgut with similar expression and functional properties.We investigated the kinetics of leucine influx as a funtion of external substrate concentration between 0.03 and 16 mM in brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) prepared from the middle region of Bombyx mori larval midgut. A detailed kinetic analysis of leucine uptake led to the identification, in parallel with the K+-dependent symporter for neutral amino acids, of a K+-independent, low-affinity, high-capacity system. The parameter values of the Michaelis constant (7.12 mM) and maximal rate of transport (4.48 nmol ⋅ 7 s-1 ⋅ mg protein-1) were not influenced by an external alkaline pH nor by a transmembrane electrical potential difference. The uniporter is poorly specific, as it displayed the following rank of preference: Leu, His, Val, Ile, Phe, Ser > Lys, Arg, Gln > Pro, 2-amino-2-norbornane-carboxylic acid, Ala, Gly. The kinetic analysis performed in BBMV prepared from the posterior midgut portion indicates that the low-affinity, high-capacity uniporter is present along the entire length of the silkworm larval midgut with similar expression and functional properties.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Densovirus Crosses the Insect Midgut by Transcytosis and Disturbs the Epithelial Barrier Function

Y. Wang; A. S. Gosselin Grenet; Ilaria Castelli; G. Cermenati; M. Ravallec; L. Fiandra; S. Debaisieux; Cecilia Multeau; N. Lautredou; Thierry Dupressoir; Yi Li; Morena Casartelli; Mylène Ogliastro

ABSTRACT Densoviruses are parvoviruses that can be lethal for insects of different orders at larval stages. Although the horizontal transmission mechanisms are poorly known, densoviral pathogenesis usually starts with the ingestion of contaminated food by the host. Depending on the virus, this leads to replication restricted to the midgut or excluding it. In both cases the success of infection depends on the virus capacity to enter the intestinal epithelium. Using the Junonia coenia densovirus (JcDNV) as the prototype virus and the lepidopteran host Spodoptera frugiperda as an interaction model, we focused on the early mechanisms of infection during which JcDNV crosses the intestinal epithelium to reach and replicate in underlying target tissues. We studied the kinetics of interaction of JcDNV with the midgut epithelium and the transport mechanisms involved. Using several approaches, in vivo, ex vivo, and in vitro, at molecular and cellular levels, we show that JcDNV is specifically internalized by endocytosis in absorptive cells and then crosses the epithelium by transcytosis. As a consequence, viral entry disturbs the midgut function. Finally, we showed that four mutations on the capsid of JcDNV affect specific recognition by the epithelial cells but not their binding.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2009

The intestinal barrier in lepidopteran larvae : Permeability of the peritrophic membrane and of the midgut epithelium to two biologically active peptides

Luisa Fiandra; Morena Casartelli; Gaia Cermenati; Nedda Burlini; Barbara Giordana

Endogenous peptide regulators of insect physiology and development are presently being considered as potential biopesticides, but their efficacy by oral delivery cannot be easily anticipated because of the limited information on how the insect gut barrier handles these kind of molecules. We investigated, in Bombyx mori larvae, the permeability properties of the two components of the intestinal barrier, the peritrophic membrane (PM) and the midgut epithelium, separately isolated and perfused in conventional Ussing chambers. The PM discriminated compounds of different dimensions but was easily crossed by two small peptides recently proposed as bioinsecticides, the neuropeptide proctolin and Aedes aegypti Trypsin Modulating Oostatic Factor (Aea-TMOF), although their flux values indicated that the permeability was highly affected by their steric conformation. To date, there is very little functional data available on how peptides cross the insect intestinal epithelium, but it has been speculated that peptides could reach the haemocoel through the paracellular pathway. We characterized the permeability properties of this route to a number of organic molecules, showing that B. mori septate junction was highly selective to both the dimension and the charge of the permeant compound. Confocal images of whole-mount midguts incubated with rhodamine(rh)-proctolin or fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-Aea-TMOF added to the mucosal side of the epithelium, revealed that rh-proctolin did not enter the cell and crossed the midgut only by the paracellular pathway, while FITC-Aea-TMOF did cross the cell apical membrane, permeating also through the transcellular route.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2001

Multiple transport pathways for dibasic amino acids in the larval midgut of the silkworm Bombyx mori

Morena Casartelli; Maria Giovanna Leonardi; Luisa Fiandra; Paolo Parenti; Barbara Giordana

The transport pathways for dibasic amino acids were investigated in brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) from the anterior-middle (AM) and posterior (P) regions of Bombyx mori midgut. In the absence of K(+), a low-affinity saturable transport of arginine in both AM- and P-BBMV (K(m) 1.01 mM, V(max) 4.07 nmol/7s/mg protein and K(m) 1.38 mM, V(max) 2.26 nmol/7s/mg protein, respectively) was detected. Arginine influx was dependent on the membrane electrical potential (Deltapsi) and increased raising the alkalinity of the external medium from pH 7.2 to 10.6. Competition experiments indicated the following order of substrate affinity: arginine, homoarginine, N(G)-monomethylarginine, N(G)-nitroarginine>lysine>>ornithine>cysteine>methionine. Leucine, valine and BCH (2-amino-2-norbornanecarboxylic acid) did not inhibit arginine influx. In the presence of external K(+), the influx of arginine as a function of arginine concentration fitted to a complex saturation kinetics compatible with both a low-affinity and a high-affinity component. The latter (K(m) 0.035 mM, V(max) 2.54 nmol/7s/mg protein) was fully characterized. The influx rate had an optimum at pH 8.8, was strongly affected by Deltapsi and was homogeneous along the midgut. The substrate affinity rank was: homoarginine>arginine, N(G)-monomethylarginine>>cysteine, lysine>>N(G)-nitroarginine>ornithine>methionine. Leucine and amino acids with a hydrophobic side chain were not accepted. This system is also operative in the absence of potassium, with the same order of specificity but a very low activity. Lysine influx is mediated by two more transport systems, the leucine uniport and the K(+)/leucine symport specific for amino acids with a hydrophobic side chain that recognizes lysine at extravesicular pH values (pH(out)) exceeding 9. Both the uniport and the symport differ from the cationic transport systems so far identified in mammals because they are unaffected by N-ethylmaleimide, have no significant affinity for neutral amino acids in the presence of the cation and show a striking difference in their optimum pH.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2000

Substrate specificity of the brush border K+-leucine symport of Bombyx mori larval midgut.

Paolo Parenti; Matilde Forcella; A. Pugliese; Morena Casartelli; Barbara Giordana; Maria Giovanna Leonardi; G.M. Hanozet

L-leucine uptake into membrane vesicles from Bombyx mori larval midgut was tested for inhibition by 55 compounds, which included sugars, N-methylated, alpha-, beta-, gamma-, delta-, epsilon-amino acids, primary amines, alpha-amino alcohols, monocarboxylic organic acids and alpha-ketoacids. Based on cis-inhibition experiments performed at the high pH (10.8) characteristic of the midgut luminal content in vivo, we find that the carrier binding site interacts with molecules which possess a well-defined set of structural features. Amino acids are preferentially accepted as anions and the ideal inhibitor must have an hydrophobic region and a polar head constituted by a chiral carbon atom bearing two hydrophilic groups, a deprotonated amino-group and a dissociated carboxylic group. Binding is reduced if one of the two hydrophilic groups is removed. Lowering the pH to less alkaline value (8.8) only affects the affinity of delta- and epsilon-amino acids, which are excluded from binding because of their positively charged side-chain. Modifications of the potassium electrochemical gradient increased the affinity constant values of the molecules, but have little effect on the rank of specificity. Physiological implications of the data reported are discussed.

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Francesco Pennacchio

University of Naples Federico II

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