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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Mancarella is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Mancarella.


Science | 2010

The Calcium Store Sensor, STIM1, Reciprocally Controls Orai and CaV1.2 Channels

Youjun Wang; Xiaoxiang Deng; Salvatore Mancarella; Eunan Hendron; Satoru Eguchi; Jonathan Soboloff; Xiang Dong Tang; Donald L. Gill

Channel STIMulation The STIM1 protein functions as a calcium sensor and regulates entry of calcium into cells across the plasma membrane. When cell surface receptors are stimulated and cause release of calcium from internal stores in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), STIM proteins in the ER membrane interact with the Orai channel pore protein in the plasma membrane to allow calcium entry from the outside of the cell (see the Perspective by Cahalan). Park et al. (p. 101) and Wang et al. (p. 105) now show that STIM also acts to suppress conductance by another calcium channel—the voltage-operated CaV1.2 channel. STIM1 appeared to interact directly with CaV1.2 channels in multiple cell types, including vascular smooth muscle cells, neurons, and cultured cells derived from T lymphocytes. The interaction inhibited opening of the CaV1.2 channels and caused depletion of the channel from the cell surface. The sensor protein that monitors depletion of intracellular calcium regulates two classes of calcium entry channels. Calcium signals, pivotal in controlling cell function, can be generated by calcium entry channels activated by plasma membrane depolarization or depletion of internal calcium stores. We reveal a regulatory link between these two channel subtypes mediated by the ubiquitous calcium-sensing STIM proteins. STIM1 activation by store depletion or mutational modification strongly suppresses voltage-operated calcium (CaV1.2) channels while activating store-operated Orai channels. Both actions are mediated by the short STIM-Orai activating region (SOAR) of STIM1. STIM1 interacts with CaV1.2 channels and localizes within discrete endoplasmic reticulum/plasma membrane junctions containing both CaV1.2 and Orai1 channels. Hence, STIM1 interacts with and reciprocally controls two major calcium channels hitherto thought to operate independently. Such coordinated control of the widely expressed CaV1.2 and Orai channels has major implications for Ca2+ signal generation in excitable and nonexcitable cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Stabilization of cardiac ryanodine receptor prevents intracellular calcium leak and arrhythmias

Stephan E. Lehnart; Cecile Terrenoire; Steven Reiken; Xander H.T. Wehrens; Long-Sheng Song; Erik J. Tillman; Salvatore Mancarella; James Coromilas; W. J. Lederer; Robert S. Kass; Andrew R. Marks

Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia is a form of exercise-induced sudden cardiac death that has been linked to mutations in the cardiac Ca2+ release channel/ryanodine receptor (RyR2) located on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). We have shown that catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia-linked RyR2 mutations significantly decrease the binding affinity for calstabin-2 (FKBP12.6), a subunit that stabilizes the closed state of the channel. We have proposed that RyR2-mediated diastolic SR Ca2+ leak triggers ventricular tachycardia (VT) and sudden cardiac death. In calstabin-2-deficient mice, we have now documented diastolic SR Ca2+ leak, monophasic action potential alternans, and bidirectional VT. Calstabin-deficient cardiomyocytes exhibited SR Ca2+ leak-induced aberrant transient inward currents in diastole consistent with delayed after-depolarizations. The 1,4-benzothiazepine JTV519, which increases the binding affinity of calstabin-2 for RyR2, inhibited the diastolic SR Ca2+ leak, monophasic action potential alternans and triggered arrhythmias. Our data suggest that calstabin-2 deficiency is as a critical mediator of triggers that initiate cardiac arrhythmias.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

STIM protein coupling in the activation of Orai channels

Youjun Wang; Xiaoxiang Deng; Eunan Hendron; Salvatore Mancarella; Michael F. Ritchie; Xiang D. Tang; Yoshihiro Baba; Tomohiro Kurosaki; Yasuo Mori; Jonathan Soboloff; Donald L. Gill

STIM proteins are sensors of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) luminal Ca2+ changes and rapidly translocate into near plasma membrane (PM) junctions to activate Ca2+ entry through the Orai family of highly Ca2+-selective “store-operated” channels (SOCs). Dissecting the STIM–Orai coupling process is restricted by the abstruse nature of the ER–PM junctional domain. To overcome this problem, we studied coupling by using STIM chimera and cytoplasmic C-terminal domains of STIM1 and STIM2 (S1ct and S2ct) and identifying a fundamental action of the powerful SOC modifier, 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2-APB), the mechanism of which has eluded recent scrutiny. We reveal that 2-APB induces profound, rapid, and direct interactions between S1ct or S2ct and Orai1, effecting full Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ (CRAC) current activation. The short 235-505 S1ct coiled-coil region was sufficient for functional Orai1 coupling. YFP-tagged S1ct or S2ct fragments cleared from the cytosol seconds after 2-APB addition, binding avidly to Orai1-CFP with a rapid increase in FRET and transiently increasing CRAC current 200-fold above basal levels. Functional S1ct–Orai1 coupling occurred in STIM1/STIM2−/− DT40 chicken B cells, indicating ct fragments operate independently of native STIM proteins. The 2-APB-induced S1ct–Orai1 and S2-ct–Orai1 complexes undergo rapid reorganization into discrete colocalized PM clusters, which remain stable for >100 s, well beyond CRAC activation and subsequent deactivation. In addition to defining 2-APBs action, the locked STIMct–Orai complex provides a potentially useful probe to structurally examine coupling.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Blockade of NOX2 and STIM1 signaling limits lipopolysaccharide-induced vascular inflammation

Rajesh Kumar Gandhirajan; Shu Meng; Harish C. Chandramoorthy; Karthik Mallilankaraman; Salvatore Mancarella; Hui Gao; Roshanak Razmpour; Xiaofeng Yang; Steven R. Houser; Ju Chen; Walter J. Koch; Hong Wang; Jonathan Soboloff; Donald L. Gill; Muniswamy Madesh

During sepsis, acute lung injury (ALI) results from activation of innate immune cells and endothelial cells by endotoxins, leading to systemic inflammation through proinflammatory cytokine overproduction, oxidative stress, and intracellular Ca2+ overload. Despite considerable investigation, the underlying molecular mechanism(s) leading to LPS-induced ALI remain elusive. To determine whether stromal interaction molecule 1-dependent (STIM1-dependent) signaling drives endothelial dysfunction in response to LPS, we investigated oxidative and STIM1 signaling of EC-specific Stim1-knockout mice. Here we report that LPS-mediated Ca2+ oscillations are ablated in ECs deficient in Nox2, Stim1, and type II inositol triphosphate receptor (Itpr2). LPS-induced nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) nuclear accumulation was abrogated by either antioxidant supplementation or Ca2+ chelation. Moreover, ECs lacking either Nox2 or Stim1 failed to trigger store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCe) and NFAT nuclear accumulation. LPS-induced vascular permeability changes were reduced in EC-specific Stim1-/- mice, despite elevation of systemic cytokine levels. Additionally, inhibition of STIM1 signaling prevented receptor-interacting protein 3-dependent (RIP3-dependent) EC death. Remarkably, BTP2, a small-molecule calcium release-activated calcium (CRAC) channel blocker administered after insult, halted LPS-induced vascular leakage and pulmonary edema. These results indicate that ROS-driven Ca2+ signaling promotes vascular barrier dysfunction and that the SOCe machinery may provide crucial therapeutic targets to limit sepsis-induced ALI.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

The Short N-terminal Domains of STIM1 and STIM2 Control the Activation Kinetics of Orai1 Channels

Salvatore Mancarella; Youjun Wang; Chanyu Yue; Michael F. Ritchie; Donald L. Gill; Jonathan Soboloff

STIM1 and STIM2 are dynamic transmembrane endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ sensors, coupling directly to activate plasma membrane Orai Ca2+ entry channels. Despite extensive sequence homology, the STIM proteins are functionally distinct. We reveal that the short variable N-terminal random coil sequences of STIM1 and STIM2 confer profoundly different activation properties. Using Orai1-expressing HEK293 cells, chimeric replacement of the 43-amino-acid STIM1 N terminus with that of STIM2 attenuates Orai1-mediated Ca2+ entry and drastically slows store-induced Orai1 channel activation. Conversely, the 55-amino-acid STIM2 terminus substituted within STIM1 strikingly enhances both Orai1-mediated Ca2+ entry and constitutive coupling to activate Orai1 channels. Hence, STIM N termini are powerful coupling modifiers, functioning in STIM2 to “brake” the otherwise constitutive activation of Orai1 channels afforded by its high sensitivity to luminal Ca2+.


Nature Communications | 2014

Distinct Orai-coupling domains in STIM1 and STIM2 define the Orai-activating site

Xizhuo Wang; Youjun Wang; Eunan Hendron; Salvatore Mancarella; Mark Andrake; Brad S. Rothberg; Jonathan Soboloff; Donald L. Gill

STIM1 and STIM2 are widely expressed endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca(2+) sensor proteins able to translocate within the ER membrane to physically couple with and gate plasma membrane Orai Ca(2+) channels. Although they are structurally similar, we reveal critical differences in the function of the short STIM-Orai-activating regions (SOAR) of STIM1 and STIM2. We narrow these differences in Orai1 gating to a strategically exposed phenylalanine residue (Phe-394) in SOAR1, which in SOAR2 is substituted by a leucine residue. Remarkably, in full-length STIM1, replacement of Phe-394 with the dimensionally similar but polar histidine head group prevents both Orai1 binding and gating, creating an Orai1 non-agonist. Thus, this residue is critical in tuning the efficacy of Orai activation. While STIM1 is a full Orai1-agonist, leucine-replacement of this crucial residue in STIM2 endows it with partial agonist properties, which may be critical for limiting Orai1 activation stemming from its enhanced sensitivity to store-depletion.


The FASEB Journal | 2013

Targeted STIM deletion impairs calcium homeostasis, NFAT activation, and growth of smooth muscle

Salvatore Mancarella; Santhi Potireddy; Youjun Wang; Hui Gao; Rajesh Kumar Gandhirajan; Michael V. Autieri; Rosario Scalia; Zhongjian Cheng; Hong Wang; Muniswamy Madesh; Steven R. Houser; Donald L. Gill

The Ca2+‐sensing stromal interaction molecule (STIM) proteins are crucial Ca2+ signal coordinators. Cre‐lox technology was used to generate smooth muscle (sm)‐targeted STIM1‐, STIM2‐, and double STIM1/STIM2‐knockout (KO) mouse models, which reveal the essential role of STIM proteins in Ca2+ homeostasis and their crucial role in controlling function, growth, and development of smooth muscle cells (SMCs). Compared to Cre+/– littermates, sm‐STIM1‐KO mice showed high mortality (50% by 30 d) and reduced bodyweight. While sm‐STIM2‐KO was without detectable phenotype, the STIM1/STIM double‐KO was perinatally lethal, revealing an essential role of STIM1 partially rescued by STIM2. Vascular and intestinal smooth muscle tissues from sm‐STIM1‐KO mice developed abnormally with distended, thinned morphology. While depolarization‐induced aortic contraction was unchanged in sm‐STIM1‐KO mice, α1‐adrenergic‐mediated contraction was 26% reduced, and store‐dependent contraction almost eliminated. Neointimal formation induced by carotid artery ligation was suppressed by 54%, and in vitro PDGF‐induced proliferation was greatly reduced (79%) in sm‐STIM1‐KO. Notably, the Ca2+ store‐refilling rate in STIM1‐KO SMCs was substantially reduced, and sustained PDGF‐induced Ca2+ entry was abolished. This defective Ca2+ homeostasis prevents PDGF‐induced NFAT activation in both contractile and proliferating SMCs. We conclude that STIM1‐regulated Ca2+ homeostasis is crucial for NFAT‐mediated transcriptional control required for induction of SMC proliferation, development, and growth responses to injury.—Mancarella, S., Potireddy, S., Wang, Y., Gao, H., Gandhirajan, K., Autieri, M., Scalia, R., Cheng, Z., Wang, H., Madesh, M., Houser, S. R., Gill, D. L. Targeted STIM deletion impairs calcium homeostasis, NFAT activation, and growth of smooth muscle. FASEB J. 27, 893–906 (2013). www.fasebj.org


American Journal of Pathology | 2002

Sugar-Induced Modification of Fibroblast Growth Factor 2 Reduces Its Angiogenic Activity in Vivo

Francesco Facchiano; Alessandro Lentini; Vincenzo Fogliano; Salvatore Mancarella; Cosmo Rossi; Antonio Facchiano; Maurizio C. Capogrossi

Both clinical and animal studies have shown that angiogenesis is impaired in diabetes mellitus; however, the mechanisms responsible for this effect are poorly characterized. The major aims of the present study were to evaluate the effect of hyperglycemia on fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2)-induced angiogenesis in vivo and to determine whether FGF2 non-enzymatic glycation occurs in hyperglycemic mice. New blood vessel formation was examined in reconstituted basement membrane protein (Matrigel) plugs containing FGF2 in control normoglycemic CD1 and in hyperglycemic nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. FGF2-induced angiogenesis in NOD mice was inhibited by 75% versus control mice (P < 0.001). When recombinant FGF2 was mixed with Matrigel and injected in mice, it was found that recombinant FGF2 glycation was significantly enhanced in plugs from NOD versus control mice (P < 0.01). In the Boyden chamber assay, the chemotactic effect of glycated FGF2 toward endothelial cells was lower than that of unmodified FGF2 (P < 0.01). Further, FGF2 glycated in vitro and co-injected with Matrigel in CD1 mice was a weaker angiogenic stimulus than unglycated FGF2 (P < 0.005). These results indicate that FGF2-induced angiogenesis is inhibited in diabetic mice, FGF2 glycation is enhanced in hyperglycemic mice, and glycation markedly reduces FGF2 chemotactic effect in vitro and its angiogenic properties in vivo. Thus, FGF2 glycation may represent a mechanism responsible for the impairment of angiogenesis in diabetes mellitus.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Hypoxia-induced acidosis uncouples the STIM-Orai calcium signaling complex

Salvatore Mancarella; Youjun Wang; Xiaoxiang Deng; Gavin Landesberg; Rosario Scalia; Reynold A. Panettieri; Karthik Mallilankaraman; Xiang D. Tang; Muniswamy Madesh; Donald L. Gill

Background: STIM proteins are calcium sensors controlling Orai calcium entry channels. Results: Hypoxia causes decreased intracellular pH and prevents Orai channel activation in response to calcium store depletion. Conclusion: Hypoxia and intracellular acidification prevent coupling of STIM to Orai channels. Significance: pH-mediated uncoupling of STIM-Orai may protect cells from hypoxia-mediated calcium overload. The endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-sensing STIM proteins mediate Ca2+ entry signals by coupling to activate plasma membrane Orai channels. We reveal that STIM-Orai coupling is rapidly blocked by hypoxia and the ensuing decrease in cytosolic pH. In smooth muscle cells or HEK293 cells coexpressing STIM1 and Orai1, acute hypoxic conditions rapidly blocked store-operated Ca2+ entry and the Orai1-mediated Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ current (ICRAC). Hypoxia-induced blockade of Ca2+ entry and ICRAC was reversed by NH4+-induced cytosolic alkalinization. Hypoxia and acidification both blocked ICRAC induced by the short STIM1 Orai-activating region. Although hypoxia induced STIM1 translocation into junctions, it did not dissociate the STIM1-Orai1 complex. However, both hypoxia and cytosolic acidosis rapidly decreased Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) between STIM1-YFP and Orai1-CFP. Thus, although hypoxia promotes STIM1 junctional accumulation, the ensuing acidification functionally uncouples the STIM1-Orai1 complex providing an important mechanism protecting cells from Ca2+ overload under hypoxic stress conditions.


Laboratory Investigation | 2012

Gene disruption of the calcium channel Orai1 results in inhibition of osteoclast and osteoblast differentiation and impairs skeletal development

Lisa J. Robinson; Salvatore Mancarella; Irina L. Tourkova; John B. Barnett; Donald L. Gill; Jonathan Soboloff; Harry C. Blair

Calcium signaling plays a central role in the regulation of bone cells, although uncertainty remains with regard to the channels involved. In previous studies, we determined that the calcium channel Orai1 was required for the formation of multinucleated osteoclasts in vitro. To define the skeletal functions of calcium release-activated calcium currents, we compared the mice with targeted deletion of the calcium channel Orai1 to wild-type littermate controls, and examined differentiation and function of osteoblast and osteoclast precursors in vitro with and without Orai1 inhibition. Consistent with in vitro findings, Orai1−/− mice lacked multinucleated osteoclasts. Yet, they did not develop osteopetrosis. Mononuclear cells expressing osteoclast products were found in Orai1−/− mice, and in vitro studies showed significantly reduced, but not absent, mineral resorption by the mononuclear osteoclast-like cells that form in culture from peripheral blood monocytic cells when Orai1 is inhibited. More prominent in Orai1−/− mice was a decrease in bone with retention of fetal cartilage. Micro-computed tomography showed reduced cortical ossification and thinned trabeculae in Orai1−/− animals compared with controls; bone deposition was markedly decreased in the knockout mice. This suggested a previously unrecognized role for Orai1 within osteoblasts. Analysis of osteoblasts and precursors in Orai1−/− and control mice showed a significant decrease in alkaline phosphatase-expressing osteoblasts. In vitro studies confirmed that inhibiting Orai1 activity impaired differentiation and function of human osteoblasts, supporting a critical function for Orai1 in osteoblasts, in addition to its role as a regulator of osteoclast formation.

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Donald L. Gill

Pennsylvania State University

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Youjun Wang

Beijing Normal University

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Yongxia Qu

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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