Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Raffaele De Francesco is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Raffaele De Francesco.


Nature | 2005

Challenges and successes in developing new therapies for hepatitis C.

Raffaele De Francesco; Giovanni Migliaccio

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) will continue to be a serious global health threat for many years to come because of the chronic nature of the infection, its high prevalence and the significant morbidity of the resulting disease. Recently, a small number of molecules have produced encouraging results in proof-of-concept clinical trials. At the same time, preclinical evidence is accumulating that development of resistance will eventually limit the efficacy of new drugs. Thus, combinations of multiple agents will be required to treat chronic HCV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2002

Structural Analysis of the Hepatitis C Virus RNA Polymerase in Complex with Ribonucleotides

Stéphane Bressanelli; Licia Tomei; Félix A. Rey; Raffaele De Francesco

ABSTRACT We report here the results of a systematic high-resolution X-ray crystallographic analysis of complexes of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA polymerase with ribonucleoside triphosphates (rNTPs) and divalent metal ions. An unexpected observation revealed by this study is the existence of a specific rGTP binding site in a shallow pocket at the molecular surface of the enzyme, 30 Å away from the catalytic site. This previously unidentified rGTP pocket, which lies at the interface between fingers and thumb, may be an allosteric regulatory site and could play a role in allowing alternative interactions between the two domains during a possible conformational change of the enzyme required for efficient initiation. The electron density map at 1.7-Å resolution clearly shows the mode of binding of the guanosine moiety to the enzyme. In the catalytic site, density corresponding to the triphosphates of nucleotides bound to the catalytic metals was apparent in each complex with nucleotides. Moreover, a network of triphosphate densities was detected; these densities superpose to the corresponding moieties of the nucleotides observed in the initiation complex reported for the polymerase of bacteriophage φ6, strengthening the proposal that the two enzymes initiate replication de novo by similar mechanisms. No equivalent of the protein stacking platform observed for the priming nucleotide in the φ6 enzyme is present in HCV polymerase, however, again suggesting that a change in conformation of the thumb domain takes place upon template binding to allow for efficient de novo initiation of RNA synthesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Inhibition of Hepatitis C Virus RNA Replication by 2′-Modified Nucleoside Analogs

Steven S. Carroll; Joanne E. Tomassini; Michele Bosserman; Krista Getty; Mark Stahlhut; Anne B. Eldrup; Balkrishen Bhat; Dawn L. Hall; Amy L. Simcoe; Robert L. Lafemina; Carrie A. Rutkowski; Bohdan Wolanski; Zhucheng Yang; Giovanni Migliaccio; Raffaele De Francesco; Lawrence C. Kuo; Malcolm Maccoss; David B. Olsen

The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B) of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is essential for the replication of viral RNA and thus constitutes a valid target for the chemotherapeutic intervention of HCV infection. In this report, we describe the identification of 2′-substituted nucleosides as inhibitors of HCV replication. The 5′-triphosphates of 2′-C-methyladenosine and 2′-O-methylcytidine are found to inhibit NS5B-catalyzed RNA synthesis in vitro, in a manner that is competitive with substrate nucleoside triphosphate. NS5B is able to incorporate either nucleotide analog into RNA as determined with gel-based incorporation assays but is impaired in its ability to extend the incorporated analog by addition of the next nucleotide. In a subgenomic replicon cell line, 2-C-methyladenosine and 2′-O-methylcytidine inhibit HCV RNA replication. The 5′-triphosphates of both nucleosides are detected intracellularly following addition of the nucleosides to the media. However, significantly higher concentrations of 2′-C-methyladenosine triphosphate than 2′-O-methylcytidine triphosphate are detected, consistent with the greater potency of 2′-C-methyladenosine in the replicon assay, despite similar inhibition of NS5B by the triphosphates in the in vitroenzyme assays. Thus, the 2′-modifications of natural substrate nucleosides transform these molecules into potent inhibitors of HCV replication.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

The crystal structure of the quorum sensing protein TraR bound to its autoinducer and target DNA

Alessandro Vannini; Cinzia Volpari; Cesare Gargioli; Ester Muraglia; Riccardo Cortese; Raffaele De Francesco; Petra Neddermann; Stefania Di Marco

The quorum sensing system allows bacteria to sense their cell density and initiate an altered pattern of gene expression after a sufficient quorum of cells has accumulated. In Agrobacterium tumefaciens, quorum sensing controls conjugal transfer of the tumour‐ inducing plasmid, responsible for plant crown gall disease. The core components of this system are the transcriptional regulator TraR and its inducing ligand N‐(3‐oxo‐octanoyl)‐L‐homoserine lactone. This complex binds DNA and activates gene expression. We have determined the crystal structure of TraR in complex with its autoinducer and target DNA (PDB code 1h0m). The protein is dimeric, with each monomer composed of an N‐terminal domain, which binds the ligand in an enclosed cavity far from the dimerization region, and a C‐terminal domain, which binds DNA via a helix–turn–helix motif. The structure reveals an asymmetric homodimer, with one monomer longer than the other. The N‐terminal domain resembles GAF/PAS domains, normally fused to catalytic signalling domains. In TraR, the gene fusion is between a GAF/PAS domain and a DNA‐binding domain, resulting in a specific transcriptional regulator involved in quorum sensing.


Antiviral Research | 2003

Approaching a new era for hepatitis C virus therapy: inhibitors of the NS3-4A serine protease and the NS5B RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.

Raffaele De Francesco; Licia Tomei; Sergio Altamura; Vincenzo Summa; Giovanni Migliaccio

The treatment of chronic disease caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an unmet clinical need, since current therapy is only partially effective and limited by undesirable side effects. The viral serine protease and the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase are the best-studied targets for the development of novel therapeutic agents. These enzymes have been extensively characterized at the biochemical and structural level and thus used to set up screening assays for the identification of selective inhibitors. These efforts lead to the discovery of several classes of compounds with potential antiviral activity. The hepatitis C virus does not replicate in the laboratory. The formidable challenge posed by the difficulty of developing cell-based assays and preclinical animal systems has been partially overcome with several alternative approaches. The development of new assays permitted the optimization of enzyme inhibitors leading eventually to molecules with the desired drug-like properties, the most advanced of which are being considered for clinical trials.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Structural and Functional Analysis of the Human HDAC4 Catalytic Domain Reveals a Regulatory Structural Zinc-binding Domain

Matthew J. Bottomley; Paola Lo Surdo; Paolo Di Giovine; Agostino Cirillo; Rita Scarpelli; Federica Ferrigno; Philip Jones; Petra Neddermann; Raffaele De Francesco; Christian Steinkühler; Paola Gallinari; Andrea Carfi

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) regulate chromatin status and gene expression, and their inhibition is of significant therapeutic interest. To date, no biological substrate for class IIa HDACs has been identified, and only low activity on acetylated lysines has been demonstrated. Here, we describe inhibitor-bound and inhibitor-free structures of the histone deacetylase-4 catalytic domain (HDAC4cd) and of an HDAC4cd active site mutant with enhanced enzymatic activity toward acetylated lysines. The structures presented, coupled with activity data, provide the molecular basis for the intrinsically low enzymatic activity of class IIa HDACs toward acetylated lysines and reveal active site features that may guide the design of class-specific inhibitors. In addition, these structures reveal a conformationally flexible structural zinc-binding domain conserved in all class IIa enzymes. Importantly, either the mutation of residues coordinating the structural zinc ion or the binding of a class IIa selective inhibitor prevented the association of HDAC4 with the N-CoR·HDAC3 repressor complex. Together, these data suggest a key role of the structural zinc-binding domain in the regulation of class IIa HDAC functions.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Mechanism of Action and Antiviral Activity of Benzimidazole-Based Allosteric Inhibitors of the Hepatitis C Virus RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase

Licia Tomei; Sergio Altamura; Linda Bartholomew; Antonino Biroccio; Alessandra Ceccacci; Laura Pacini; Frank Narjes; Nadia Gennari; Monica Bisbocci; Ilario Incitti; Laura Orsatti; Steven Harper; Ian Stansfield; Michael Rowley; Raffaele De Francesco; Giovanni Migliaccio

ABSTRACT The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the catalytic subunit of the viral RNA amplification machinery and is an appealing target for the development of new therapeutic agents against HCV infection. Nonnucleoside inhibitors based on a benzimidazole scaffold have been recently reported. Compounds of this class are efficient inhibitors of HCV RNA replication in cell culture, thus providing attractive candidates for further development. Here we report the detailed analysis of the mechanism of action of selected benzimidazole inhibitors. Kinetic data and binding experiments indicated that these compounds act as allosteric inhibitors that block the activity of the polymerase prior to the elongation step. Escape mutations that confer resistance to these compounds map to proline 495, a residue located on the surface of the polymerase thumb domain and away from the active site. Substitution of this residue is sufficient to make the HCV enzyme and replicons resistant to the inhibitors. Interestingly, proline 495 lies in a recently identified noncatalytic GTP-binding site, thus validating it as a potential allosteric site that can be targeted by small-molecule inhibitors of HCV polymerase.


EMBO Reports | 2007

Substrate binding to histone deacetylases as shown by the crystal structure of the HDAC8-substrate complex.

Alessandro Vannini; Cinzia Volpari; Paola Gallinari; Philip Jones; Marco Mattu; Andrea Carfi; Raffaele De Francesco; Christian Steinkühler; Stefania Di Marco

Histone deacetylases (HDACs)—an enzyme family that deacetylates histones and non‐histone proteins—are implicated in human diseases such as cancer, and the first‐generation of HDAC inhibitors are now in clinical trials. Here, we report the 2.0 Å resolution crystal structure of a catalytically inactive HDAC8 active‐site mutant, Tyr306Phe, bound to an acetylated peptidic substrate. The structure clarifies the role of active‐site residues in the deacetylation reaction and substrate recognition. Notably, the structure shows the unexpected role of a conserved residue at the active‐site rim, Asp 101, in positioning the substrate by directly interacting with the peptidic backbone and imposing a constrained cis‐conformation. A similar interaction is observed in a new hydroxamate inhibitor–HDAC8 structure that we also solved. The crucial role of Asp 101 in substrate and inhibitor recognition was confirmed by activity and binding assays of wild‐type HDAC8 and Asp101Ala, Tyr306Phe and Asp101Ala/Tyr306Phe mutants.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Effects of pH and Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL) on PCSK9-dependent LDL Receptor Regulation

Timothy S. Fisher; Paola Lo Surdo; Shilpa Pandit; Marco Mattu; Joseph C. Santoro; Doug Wisniewski; Richard T. Cummings; Alessandra Calzetta; Rose M. Cubbon; Paul Fischer; Anil Tarachandani; Raffaele De Francesco; Samuel D. Wright; Carl P. Sparrow; Andrea Carfi; Ayesha Sitlani

Mutations within PCSK9 (proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9) are associated with dominant forms of familial hyper- and hypocholesterolemia. Although PCSK9 controls low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor (LDLR) levels post-transcriptionally, several questions concerning its mode of action remain unanswered. We show that purified PCSK9 protein added to the medium of human endothelial kidney 293, HepG2, and Chinese hamster ovary cell lines decreases cellular LDL uptake in a dose-dependent manner. Using this cell-based assay of PCSK9 activity, we found that the relative potencies of several PCSK9 missense mutants (S127R and D374Y, associated with hypercholesterolemia, and R46L, associated with hypocholesterolemia) correlate with LDL cholesterol levels in humans carrying such mutations. Notably, we found that in vitro wild-type PCSK9 binds LDLR with an ∼150-fold higher affinity at an acidic endosomal pH (KD = 4.19 nm) compared with a neutral pH (KD = 628 nm). We also demonstrate that wild-type PCSK9 and mutants S127R and R46L are internalized by cells to similar levels, whereas D374Y is more efficiently internalized, consistent with their affinities for LDLR at neutral pH. Finally, we show that LDL diminishes PCSK9 binding to LDLR in vitro and partially inhibits the effects of secreted PCSK9 on LDLR degradation in cell culture. Together, the results of our biochemical and cell-based experiments suggest a model in which secreted PCSK9 binds to LDLR and directs the trafficking of LDLR to the lysosomes for degradation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Interdomain Communication in Hepatitis C Virus Polymerase Abolished by Small-Molecule Inhibitors Bound to a Novel Allosteric Site

Stefania Di Marco; Cinzia Volpari; Licia Tomei; Sergio Altamura; Steven Harper; Frank Narjes; Uwe Koch; Michael Rowley; Raffaele De Francesco; Giovanni Migliaccio; Andrea Carfi

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) polymerase is required for replication of the viral genome and is a key target for therapeutic intervention against HCV. We have determined the crystal structures of the HCV polymerase complexed with two indole-based allosteric inhibitors at 2.3- and 2.4-Å resolution. The structures show that these inhibitors bind to a site on the surface of the thumb domain. A cyclohexyl and phenyl ring substituents, bridged by an indole moiety, fill two closely spaced pockets, whereas a carboxylate substituent forms a salt bridge with an exposed arginine side chain. Interestingly, in the apoenzyme, the inhibitor binding site is occupied by a small α-helix at the tip of the N-terminal loop that connects the fingers and thumb domains. Thus, these molecules inhibit the enzyme by preventing formation of intramolecular contacts between these two domains and consequently precluding their coordinated movements during RNA synthesis. Our structures identify a novel mechanism by which a new class of allosteric inhibitors inhibits the HCV polymerase and open the way to the development of novel antiviral agents against this clinically relevant human pathogen.

Collaboration


Dive into the Raffaele De Francesco's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cristina Cheroni

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge