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Dive into the research topics where Riccardo Porcari is active.

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Featured researches published by Riccardo Porcari.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Effect of Tetracyclines on the Dynamics of Formation and Destructuration of β2-Microglobulin Amyloid Fibrils

Sofia Giorgetti; Sara Raimondi; Katiuscia Pagano; Annalisa Relini; Monica Bucciantini; Alessandra Corazza; Luca Codutti; Mario Salmona; Palma Mangione; Lino Colombo; Ada De Luigi; Riccardo Porcari; Alessandra Gliozzi; Massimo Stefani; Gennaro Esposito; Vittorio Bellotti; Monica Stoppini

The discovery of methods suitable for the conversion in vitro of native proteins into amyloid fibrils has shed light on the molecular basis of amyloidosis and has provided fundamental tools for drug discovery. We have studied the capacity of a small library of tetracycline analogues to modulate the formation or destructuration of β2-microglobulin fibrils. The inhibition of fibrillogenesis of the wild type protein was first established in the presence of 20% trifluoroethanol and confirmed under a more physiologic environment including heparin and collagen. The latter conditions were also used to study the highly amyloidogenic variant, P32G. The NMR analysis showed that doxycycline inhibits β2-microglobulin self-association and stabilizes the native-like species through fast exchange interactions involving specific regions of the protein. Cell viability assays demonstrated that the drug abolishes the natural cytotoxic activity of soluble β2-microglobulin, further strengthening a possible in vivo therapeutic exploitation of this drug. Doxycycline can disassemble preformed fibrils, but the IC50 is 5-fold higher than that necessary for the inhibition of fibrillogenesis. Fibril destructuration is a dynamic and time-dependent process characterized by the early formation of cytotoxic protein aggregates that, in a few hours, convert into non-toxic insoluble material. The efficacy of doxycycline as a drug against dialysis-related amyloidosis would benefit from the ability of the drug to accumulate just in the skeletal system where amyloid is formed. In these tissues, the doxycycline concentration reaches values several folds higher than those resulting in inhibition of amyloidogenesis and amyloid destructuration in vitro.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Structure, Folding Dynamics, and Amyloidogenesis of D76N β2-Microglobulin ROLES OF SHEAR FLOW, HYDROPHOBIC SURFACES, AND α-CRYSTALLIN

Palma Mangione; Gennaro Esposito; Annalisa Relini; Sara Raimondi; Riccardo Porcari; Sofia Giorgetti; Alessandra Corazza; Amanda Penco; Yuji Goto; Young-Ho Lee; Hisashi Yagi; Ciro Cecconi; Mohsin M. Naqvi; Julian D. Gillmore; Philip N. Hawkins; Fabrizio Chiti; Graham W. Taylor; Mark B. Pepys; Monica Stoppini; Vittorio Bellotti

Background: We recently discovered the first natural human β2-microglobulin variant, D76N, as an amyloidogenic protein. Results: Fluid flow on hydrophobic surfaces triggers its amyloid fibrillogenesis. The α-crystallin chaperone inhibits variant-mediated co-aggregation of wild type β2-microglobulin. Conclusion: These mechanisms likely reflect in vivo amyloidogenesis by globular proteins in general. Significance: Our results elucidate the molecular pathophysiology of amyloid deposition. Systemic amyloidosis is a fatal disease caused by misfolding of native globular proteins, which then aggregate extracellularly as insoluble fibrils, damaging the structure and function of affected organs. The formation of amyloid fibrils in vivo is poorly understood. We recently identified the first naturally occurring structural variant, D76N, of human β2-microglobulin (β2m), the ubiquitous light chain of class I major histocompatibility antigens, as the amyloid fibril protein in a family with a new phenotype of late onset fatal hereditary systemic amyloidosis. Here we show that, uniquely, D76N β2m readily forms amyloid fibrils in vitro under physiological extracellular conditions. The globular native fold transition to the fibrillar state is primed by exposure to a hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface under physiological intensity shear flow. Wild type β2m is recruited by the variant into amyloid fibrils in vitro but is absent from amyloid deposited in vivo. This may be because, as we show here, such recruitment is inhibited by chaperone activity. Our results suggest general mechanistic principles of in vivo amyloid fibrillogenesis by globular proteins, a previously obscure process. Elucidation of this crucial causative event in clinical amyloidosis should also help to explain the hitherto mysterious timing and location of amyloid deposition.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

The H50Q mutation induces a 10-fold decrease in the solubility of α-synuclein

Riccardo Porcari; Christos Proukakis; Christopher A. Waudby; Benedetta Bolognesi; Palma Mangione; Jack F. S. Paton; Stephen Mullin; Lisa D. Cabrita; Amanda Penco; Annalisa Relini; Guglielmo Verona; Michele Vendruscolo; Monica Stoppini; Gian Gaetano Tartaglia; Carlo Camilloni; John Christodoulou; A. H. V. Schapira; Vittorio Bellotti

Background: The basis of the pathogenicity of the H50Q variant α-synuclein is unknown. Results: The critical concentration of α-synuclein is decreased by 10-fold by the H50Q mutation, and its aggregation is modulated by the wild-type isoform. Conclusion: Key effects of the H50Q mutation on the aggregation of α-synuclein can be quantified. Significance: Our data provide insights into the mechanism of Lewy body formation in vivo. The conversion of α-synuclein from its intrinsically disordered monomeric state into the fibrillar cross-β aggregates characteristically present in Lewy bodies is largely unknown. The investigation of α-synuclein variants causative of familial forms of Parkinson disease can provide unique insights into the conditions that promote or inhibit aggregate formation. It has been shown recently that a newly identified pathogenic mutation of α-synuclein, H50Q, aggregates faster than the wild-type. We investigate here its aggregation propensity by using a sequence-based prediction algorithm, NMR chemical shift analysis of secondary structure populations in the monomeric state, and determination of thermodynamic stability of the fibrils. Our data show that the H50Q mutation induces only a small increment in polyproline II structure around the site of the mutation and a slight increase in the overall aggregation propensity. We also find, however, that the H50Q mutation strongly stabilizes α-synuclein fibrils by 5.0 ± 1.0 kJ mol−1, thus increasing the supersaturation of monomeric α-synuclein within the cell, and strongly favors its aggregation process. We further show that wild-type α-synuclein can decelerate the aggregation kinetics of the H50Q variant in a dose-dependent manner when coaggregating with it. These last findings suggest that the precise balance of α-synuclein synthesized from the wild-type and mutant alleles may influence the natural history and heterogeneous clinical phenotype of Parkinson disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Proteolytic cleavage of Ser52Pro variant transthyretin triggers its amyloid fibrillogenesis

Palma Mangione; Riccardo Porcari; Julian D. Gillmore; Piero Pucci; Maria Gaia Monti; Mattia Porcari; Sofia Giorgetti; Loredana Marchese; Sara Raimondi; Louise C. Serpell; Wenjie Chen; Annalisa Relini; Julien Marcoux; Innes R. Clatworthy; Graham W. Taylor; Glenys A. Tennent; Carol V. Robinson; Philip N. Hawkins; Monica Stoppini; S.P. Wood; Mark B. Pepys; Vittorio Bellotti

Significance Transthyretin, a normal circulating plasma protein, is inherently amyloidogenic. It forms abnormal, insoluble, extracellular amyloid fibrils in the elderly, sometimes causing structural and functional damage leading to disease, senile amyloidosis. More than 100 different point mutations in the transthyretin gene cause earlier adult-onset, autosomal-dominant, fatal, hereditary amyloidosis. The transthyretin variant Ser52Pro is responsible for the most aggressive known clinical phenotype. Here we identify the crucial pathogenic role of specific proteolytic cleavage at residue 48 in triggering fibril formation by this variant. Genuine amyloid fibril formation in vitro is much more extensive than previously reported for wild-type transthyretin or any other transthyretin variant. Characterization of the fibrillogenic effect of this cleavage powerfully informs drug design and targeting for transthyretin amyloidosis. The Ser52Pro variant of transthyretin (TTR) produces aggressive, highly penetrant, autosomal-dominant systemic amyloidosis in persons heterozygous for the causative mutation. Together with a minor quantity of full-length wild-type and variant TTR, the main component of the ex vivo fibrils was the residue 49-127 fragment of the TTR variant, the portion of the TTR sequence that previously has been reported to be the principal constituent of type A, cardiac amyloid fibrils formed from wild-type TTR and other TTR variants [Bergstrom J, et al. (2005) J Pathol 206(2):224–232]. This specific truncation of Ser52Pro TTR was generated readily in vitro by limited proteolysis. In physiological conditions and under agitation the residue 49-127 proteolytic fragment rapidly and completely self-aggregates into typical amyloid fibrils. The remarkable susceptibility to such cleavage is likely caused by localized destabilization of the β-turn linking strands C and D caused by loss of the wild-type hydrogen-bonding network between the side chains of residues Ser52, Glu54, Ser50, and a water molecule, as revealed by the high-resolution crystallographic structure of Ser52Pro TTR. We thus provide a structural basis for the recently hypothesized, crucial pathogenic role of proteolytic cleavage in TTR amyloid fibrillogenesis. Binding of the natural ligands thyroxine or retinol-binding protein (RBP) by Ser52Pro variant TTR stabilizes the native tetrameric assembly, but neither protected the variant from proteolysis. However, binding of RBP, but not thyroxine, inhibited subsequent fibrillogenesis.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2016

The polyphenol Oleuropein aglycone hinders the growth of toxic transthyretin amyloid assemblies

Manuela Leri; Daniele Nosi; Antonino Natalello; Riccardo Porcari; Matteo Ramazzotti; Fabrizio Chiti; Vittorio Bellotti; Silvia Maria Doglia; Massimo Stefani; Monica Bucciantini

Transthyretin (TTR) is involved in a subset of familial or sporadic amyloid diseases including senile systemic amyloidosis (SSA), familial amyloid polyneuropathy and cardiomyopathy (FAP/FAC) for which no effective therapy has been found yet. These conditions are characterized by extracellular deposits primarily found in the heart parenchyma and in peripheral nerves whose main component are amyloid fibrils, presently considered the main culprits of cell sufferance. The latter are polymeric assemblies grown from misfolded TTR, either wt or carrying one out of many identified mutations. The recent introduction in the clinical practice of synthetic TTR-stabilizing molecules that reduce protein aggregation provides the rationale to search natural effective molecules able to interfere with TTR amyloid aggregation by hindering the appearance of toxic species or by favoring the growth of harmless aggregates. Here we carried out an in depth biophysical and morphological study on the molecular features of the aggregation of wt- and L55P-TTR involved in SSA or FAP/FAC, respectively, and on the interference with fibril aggregation, stability and toxicity to cardiac HL-1 cells to demonstrate the ability of Oleuropein aglycone (OleA), the main phenolic component of the extra virgin olive oil. We describe the molecular basis of such interference and the resulting reduction of TTR amyloid aggregate cytotoxicity. Our data offer the possibility to validate and optimize the use of OleA or its molecular scaffold to rationally design promising drugs against TTR-related pathologies that could enter a clinical experimental phase.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2015

A novel mechano‐enzymatic cleavage mechanism underlies transthyretin amyloidogenesis

Julien Marcoux; Palma Mangione; Riccardo Porcari; Matteo T. Degiacomi; Guglielmo Verona; Graham W. Taylor; Sofia Giorgetti; Sara Raimondi; Sarah Sanglier-Cianférani; Justin L. P. Benesch; Ciro Cecconi; Mohsin M. Naqvi; Julian D. Gillmore; Philip N. Hawkins; Monica Stoppini; Carol V. Robinson; Mark B. Pepys; Vittorio Bellotti

The mechanisms underlying transthyretin‐related amyloidosis in vivo remain unclear. The abundance of the 49–127 transthyretin fragment in ex vivo deposits suggests that a proteolytic cleavage has a crucial role in destabilizing the tetramer and releasing the highly amyloidogenic 49–127 truncated protomer. Here, we investigate the mechanism of cleavage and release of the 49–127 fragment from the prototypic S52P variant, and we show that the proteolysis/fibrillogenesis pathway is common to several amyloidogenic variants of transthyretin and requires the action of biomechanical forces provided by the shear stress of physiological fluid flow. Crucially, the non‐amyloidogenic and protective T119M variant is neither cleaved nor generates fibrils under these conditions. We propose that a mechano‐enzymatic mechanism mediates transthyretin amyloid fibrillogenesis in vivo. This may be particularly important in the heart where shear stress is greatest; indeed, the 49–127 transthyretin fragment is particularly abundant in cardiac amyloid. Finally, we show that existing transthyretin stabilizers, including tafamidis, inhibit proteolysis‐mediated transthyretin fibrillogenesis with different efficiency in different variants; however, inhibition is complete only when both binding sites are occupied.


Nature Communications | 2016

D25V apolipoprotein C-III variant causes dominant hereditary systemic amyloidosis and confers cardiovascular protective lipoprotein profile

Sophie Valleix; Guglielmo Verona; Noémie Jourde-Chiche; Brigitte Nedelec; Palma Mangione; Frank Bridoux; Alain Mangé; Ahmet Dogan; Jean Michel Goujon; Marie Lhomme; Carolane Dauteuille; Michèle Chabert; Riccardo Porcari; Christopher A. Waudby; Annalisa Relini; Philippa J. Talmud; Oleg Kovrov; Monica Stoppini; John Christodoulou; Philip N. Hawkins; Gilles Grateau; Marc Delpech; Anatol Kontush; Julian D. Gillmore; Athina Kalopissis; Vittorio Bellotti

Apolipoprotein C-III deficiency provides cardiovascular protection, but apolipoprotein C-III is not known to be associated with human amyloidosis. Here we report a form of amyloidosis characterized by renal insufficiency caused by a new apolipoprotein C-III variant, D25V. Despite their uremic state, the D25V-carriers exhibit low triglyceride (TG) and apolipoprotein C-III levels, and low very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL)/high high-density lipoprotein (HDL) profile. Amyloid fibrils comprise the D25V-variant only, showing that wild-type apolipoprotein C-III does not contribute to amyloid deposition in vivo. The mutation profoundly impacts helical structure stability of D25V-variant, which is remarkably fibrillogenic under physiological conditions in vitro producing typical amyloid fibrils in its lipid-free form. D25V apolipoprotein C-III is a new human amyloidogenic protein and the first conferring cardioprotection even in the unfavourable context of renal failure, extending the evidence for an important cardiovascular protective role of apolipoprotein C-III deficiency. Thus, fibrate therapy, which reduces hepatic APOC3 transcription, may delay amyloid deposition in affected patients.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Rational design of mutations that change the aggregation rate of a protein while maintaining its native structure and stability

Carlo Camilloni; Benedetta Maria Sala; Pietro Sormanni; Riccardo Porcari; Alessandra Corazza; Matteo de Rosa; Stefano Zanini; Alberto Barbiroli; Gennaro Esposito; Martino Bolognesi; Vittorio Bellotti; Michele Vendruscolo; Stefano Ricagno

A wide range of human diseases is associated with mutations that, destabilizing proteins native state, promote their aggregation. However, the mechanisms leading from folded to aggregated states are still incompletely understood. To investigate these mechanisms, we used a combination of NMR spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations to compare the native state dynamics of Beta-2 microglobulin (β2m), whose aggregation is associated with dialysis-related amyloidosis, and its aggregation-resistant mutant W60G. Our results indicate that W60G low aggregation propensity can be explained, beyond its higher stability, by an increased average protection of the aggregation-prone residues at its surface. To validate these findings, we designed β2m variants that alter the aggregation-prone exposed surface of wild-type and W60G β2m modifying their aggregation propensity. These results allowed us to pinpoint the role of dynamics in β2m aggregation and to provide a new strategy to tune protein aggregation by modulating the exposure of aggregation-prone residues.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Co-fibrillogenesis of Wild-type and D76N β2-Microglobulin THE CRUCIAL ROLE OF FIBRILLAR SEEDS

Antonino Natalello; Palma Mangione; Sofia Giorgetti; Riccardo Porcari; Loredana Marchese; Irene Zorzoli; Annalisa Relini; Diletta Ami; Giulia Faravelli; Maurizia Valli; Monica Stoppini; Silvia Maria Doglia; Vittorio Bellotti; Sara Raimondi

The amyloidogenic variant of β2-microglobulin, D76N, can readily convert into genuine fibrils under physiological conditions and primes in vitro the fibrillogenesis of the wild-type β2-microglobulin. By Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy, we have demonstrated that the amyloid transformation of wild-type β2-microglobulin can be induced by the variant only after its complete fibrillar conversion. Our current findings are consistent with preliminary data in which we have shown a seeding effect of fibrils formed from D76N or the natural truncated form of β2-microglobulin lacking the first six N-terminal residues. Interestingly, the hybrid wild-type/variant fibrillar material acquired a thermodynamic stability similar to that of homogenous D76N β2-microglobulin fibrils and significantly higher than the wild-type homogeneous fibrils prepared at neutral pH in the presence of 20% trifluoroethanol. These results suggest that the surface of D76N β2-microglobulin fibrils can favor the transition of the wild-type protein into an amyloid conformation leading to a rapid integration into fibrils. The chaperone crystallin, which is a mild modulator of the lag phase of the variant fibrillogenesis, potently inhibits fibril elongation of the wild-type even once it is absorbed on D76N β2-microglobulin fibrils.


Amyloid | 2013

Benefit of doxycycline treatment on articular disability caused by dialysis related amyloidosis

Giovanni Montagna; Benedetta Cazzulani; Laura Obici; Carla Uggetti; Sofia Giorgetti; Riccardo Porcari; Rubina Ruggiero; Palma Mangione; Moreno Brambilla; Jacopo Lucchetti; Giovanna Guiso; Marco Gobbi; Giampaolo Merlini; Mario Salmona; Monica Stoppini; Giuseppe Villa; Vittorio Bellotti

Abstract Doxycycline inhibits amyloid formation in vitro and its therapeutic efficacy is under evaluation in clinical trials for different protein conformational diseases, including prion diseases, Alzheimer’s disease and transthyretin amyloidosis. In patients on chronic hemodialysis, a persistently high concentration of β2-microglobulin causes a form of amyloidosis (dialysis-related amyloidosis, DRA) localized in bones and ligaments. Since doxycycline inhibits β2-microglobulin fibrillogenesis in vitro and accumulates in bones, DRA represents an ideal form of amyloidosis where doxycycline may reach a therapeutic concentration at the site of amyloid deposition. Three patients on long-term dialysis with severe articular impairment and uncontrollable pain due to DRA were treated with 100 mg of doxycycline daily. Pharmacokinetics and safety of treatment were conducted. Plasmatic levels of the drug reached a plateau after one week (1.1–2.3 µg/ml). Treatment was well tolerated in two patients for a year, while one was suspended after 5 months due to mild esophagitis. Treatment was associated with a significant reduction in articular pain and with a significant and measurable improvement in passive and active movements in all cases, despite the persistence of unchanged amyloid deposits measured by magnetic resonance imaging.

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Palma Mangione

University College London

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