Sandra Pucciarelli
University of Camerino
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sandra Pucciarelli.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2014
Eleni Gentekaki; Martin Kolisko; Vittorio Boscaro; Kelley J. Bright; Fernando Dini; G. Di Giuseppe; Yingchun Gong; Cristina Miceli; Letizia Modeo; Robert Molestina; Giulio Petroni; Sandra Pucciarelli; Andrew J. Roger; Suzanne L. Strom; Denis H. Lynn
The Ciliophora is one of the most studied protist lineages because of its important ecological role in the microbial loop. While there is an abundance of molecular data for many ciliate groups, it is commonly limited to the 18S ribosomal RNA locus. There is a paucity of data when it comes to availability of protein-coding genes especially for taxa that do not belong to the class Oligohymenophorea. To address this gap, we have sequenced EST libraries for 11 ciliate species. A supermatrix was constructed for phylogenomic analysis based on 158 genes and 42,158 characters and included 16 ciliates, four dinoflagellates and nine apicomplexans. This is the first multigene-based analysis focusing on the phylum Ciliophora. Our analyses reveal two robust superclades within the Intramacronucleata; one composed of the classes Spirotrichea, Armophorea and Litostomatea (SAL) and another with Colpodea and Oligohymenophorea. Furthermore, we provide corroborative evidence for removing the ambiguous taxon Protocruzia from the class Spirotrichea and placing it as incertae sedis in the phylum Ciliophora.
Cytoskeleton | 1997
Sandra Pucciarelli; Patrizia Ballarini; Cristina Miceli
In cold poikilotherm organisms, microtubule assembly is promoted at temperatures below 4 degrees C and cold-induced depolymerization is prevented. On the basis of the results of investigations on cold-adapted fishes, the property of cold adaptation is ascribed to intrinsic characteristics of the tubulins. To fully understand cold adaptation, we studied the tubulins of Euplotes focardii, an Antarctic ciliated protozoan adapted to temperatures ranging from -2 to +4 degrees C. In this organism, we had previously sequenced one beta-tubulin gene and, then identified three other genes (denoted as beta-T1, beta-T2, beta-T3 and beta-T4). Here we report that the amino acid sequence of the carboxy-terminal domain predicted from the beta-T3 gene (apparently the most expressed of the gene family) contains six modifications (five substitutions and one insertion) of conserved residues, unique with respect to all the other known beta-tubulin sequences. These modifications can change the structural conformation of the carboxy-terminal domain. Furthermore, in the variable terminal end of that domain, a consensus sequence for a phosphorylation site is present, and the residue Glu-438, the most frequent site for polyglutamylation in beta-tubulin, is substituted by Asp. Starting from these observations, we showed that in E. focardii only alpha-tubulin is polyglutamylated, while beta-tubulin undergoes phosphorylation. Polyglutamylated microtubules appear to colocalize with cilia and microtubular bundles, all structures in which microtubules undergo a sliding process. This finding supports the idea that alpha-tubulin polyglutamylation is involved in the interaction between tubulin and motor microtubule-associated proteins. Phosphorylation, usually a rare posttranslational modification of beta-tubulin, which is found extensively distributed in the beta-tubulin of this cold-adapted organism, may play a determinant role in the dynamic of polymerization and depolymerization at low temperatures.
Extremophiles | 2002
Sandra Pucciarelli; Cristina Miceli
Abstract. Tubulin dimers of psychrophilic organisms can polymerize into microtubules at temperatures below 4°C, at which non-cold-adapted microtubules disassemble. This capacity requires specificities in the structure and/or in the posttranslational modifications of the tubulin subunits. A contribution to the knowledge of these specificities was provided by the finding that the amino acid sequence of the α-tubulin of the Antarctic ciliate Euplotes focardii contains substitutions that, in addition to conferring an increased hydrophobicity to the molecule, modify sites that are involved in α-/α-tubulin lateral contacts between protofilaments. At the level of the coding sequence, the α-tubulin gene of E. focardii revealed an A+T content appreciably higher than in its homologs in ciliates of temperate waters. This was interpreted as an adaptation to favor DNA strand separation in an environment which is energetically adverse.
Extremophiles | 2006
Sandra Pucciarelli; Sandra K. Parker; H. William Detrich; Ronald Melki
The cytoplasmic chaperonin containing TCP-1 (CCT) plays a critically important role in the folding and biogenesis of many cytoskeletal proteins, including tubulin and actin. For marine ectotherms, the chronically cold Southern Ocean (−2 to +2°C) poses energetic challenges to protein folding, both at the level of substrate proteins and with respect to the chaperonin/chaperone folding system. Here we report the partial functional and structural characterization of CCT from an Antarctic notothenioid fish, Notothenia coriiceps. We find that the mechanism of folding by the Antarctic fish CCT differed from that of mammalian CCT: (1) the former complex was able to bind denatured β-tubulin but (2) when reconstituted with rabbit Cofactor A, failed to release the protein to yield the tubulin/cofactor intermediate. Moreover, the amino acid sequences of the N. coriiceps CCT β and θ chains contained residue substitutions in the equatorial, apical, and intermediate domains that would be expected to increase the flexibility of the subunits, thus facilitating function of the chaperonin in an energy poor environment. Our work contributes to the growing realization that protein function in cold-adapted organisms reflects a delicate balance between the necessity of structural flexibility for catalytic activity and the concomitant hazard of cold-induced denaturation.
Protist | 2015
Diana Ferro; Rigers Bakiu; Cristiano De Pittà; Francesco Boldrin; Franco Cattalini; Sandra Pucciarelli; Cristina Miceli; Gianfranco Santovito
In the present study, we describe the molecular and functional characterization of two Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) genes, named tt-sod1a and tt-sod1b from Tetrahymena thermophila, a free-living ciliated protozoan widely used as model organism in biological research. The cDNAs and the putative amino acid sequences were compared with Cu,Zn SODs from other Alveolata. The primary sequences of T. thermophila Cu,Zn SODs are unusually long if compared to orthologous proteins, but the catalytically important residues are almost fully conserved. Both phylogenetic and preliminary homology modeling analyses provide some indications about the evolutionary relationships between the Cu,Zn SODs of Tetrahymena and the Alveolata orthologous enzymes. Copper-dependent regulation of Cu,Zn SODs expression was investigated by measuring mRNA accumulation and enzyme activity in response to chronic exposure to non-toxic doses of the metal. Our in silico analyses of the tt-sod1a and tt-sod1b promoter regions revealed putative consensus sequences similar to half Antioxidant Responsive Elements (hARE), suggesting that the transcription of these genes directly depends on ROS formation. These data emphasize the importance of complex metal regulation of tt-sod1a and tt-sod1b activation, as components of an efficient detoxification pathway allowing the survival of T. thermophila in continued, elevated presence of metals in the environment.
Proteins | 2012
Federica Chiappori; Sandra Pucciarelli; Ivan Merelli; Patrizia Ballarini; Cristina Miceli; Luciano Milanesi
Tubulin dimers of psychrophilic eukaryotes can polymerize into microtubules at 4°C, a temperature at which microtubules from mesophiles disassemble. This unique capability requires changes in the primary structure and/or in post‐translational modifications of the tubulin subunits. To contribute to the understanding of mechanisms responsible for microtubule cold stability, here we present a computational structural analysis based on molecular dynamics (MD) and experimental data of three β‐tubulin isotypes, named EFBT2, EFBT3, and EFBT4, from the Antarctic protozoon Euplotes focardii that optimal temperature for growth and reproduction is 4°C. In comparison to the β‐tubulin from E. crassus, a mesophilic Euplotes species, EFBT2, EFBT3, and EFBT4 possess unique amino acid substitutions that confer different flexible properties of the polypeptide, as well as an increased hydrophobicity of the regions involved in microtubule interdimeric contacts that may overcome the microtubule destabilizing effect of cold temperatures. The structural analysis based on MD indicated that all isotypes display different flexibility properties in the regions involved in the formation of longitudinal and lateral contacts during microtubule polymerization. We also investigated the role of E. focardii β‐tubulin isotypes during the process of cilia formation. The unique characteristics of the primary and tertiary structures of psychrophilic β‐tubulin isotypes seem responsible for the formation of microtubules with distinct dynamic and functional properties. Proteins 2012;.
FEBS Journal | 2008
Francesca Marziale; Sandra Pucciarelli; Patrizia Ballarini; Ronald Melki; Alper Uzun; Valentin A. Ilyin; H. W. Detrich; Cristina Miceli
γ‐Tubulin belongs to the tubulin superfamily and plays an essential role in the nucleation of cellular microtubules. In the present study, we report the characterization of γ‐tubulin from the psychrophilic Antarctic ciliate Euplotes focardii. In this organism, γ‐tubulin is encoded by two genes, γ‐T1 and γ‐T2, that produce distinct isotypes. Comparison of the γ‐T1 and γ‐T2 primary sequences to a Euplotesγ‐tubulin consensus, derived from mesophilic (i.e. temperate) congeneric species, revealed the presence of numerous unique amino acid substitutions, particularly in γ‐T2. Structural models of γ‐T1 and γ‐T2, obtained using the 3D structure of human γ‐tubulin as a template, suggest that these substitutions are responsible for conformational and/or polarity differences located: (a) in the regions involved in longitudinal ‘plus end’ contacts; (b) in the T3 loop that participates in binding GTP; and (c) in the M loop that forms lateral interactions. Relative to γ‐T1, the γ‐T2 gene is amplified by approximately 18‐fold in the macronuclear genome and is very strongly transcribed. Using confocal immunofluorescence microscopy, we found that the γ‐tubulins of E. focardii associate throughout the cell cycle with basal bodies of the non‐motile dorsal cilia and of all of the cirri of the ventral surface (i.e. adoral membranelles, paraoral membrane, and frontoventral transverse, caudal and marginal cirri). By contrast, only γ‐T2 interacts with the centrosomes of the spindle during micronuclear mitosis. We also established that the γ‐T1 isotype associates only with basal bodies. Our results suggest that γ‐T1 and γ‐T2 perform different functions in the organization of the microtubule cytoskeleton of this protist and are consistent with the hypothesis that γ‐T1 and γ‐T2 have evolved sequence‐based structural alterations that facilitate template nucleation of microtubules by the γ‐tubulin ring complex at cold temperatures.
Eukaryotic Cell | 2008
Sabrina Barchetta; Antonietta La Terza; Patrizia Ballarini; Sandra Pucciarelli; Cristina Miceli
ABSTRACT The induction of heat shock genes (HSPs) is thought to be primarily regulated by heat shock transcription factors (HSFs), which bind target sequences on HSP promoters, called heat shock elements (HSEs). In this study, we investigated the 5′ untranslated regions of the Tetrahymena thermophila HSP70-1 gene, and we found, in addition to the canonical and divergent HSEs, multiple sets of GATA elements that have not been reported previously in protozoa. By means of in vivo analysis of a green fluorescent protein reporter transgene driven by the HSP70-1 promoter, we demonstrate that HSEs do not represent the minimal regulatory elements for heat shock induction, since the HSP70-1 is tightly regulated by both HSE and GATA elements. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay also showed that HSFs are constitutively bound to the HSEs, whereas GATA elements are engaged only after heat shock. This is the first demonstration by in vivo analysis of functional HSE and GATA elements in protozoa. Furthermore, we provide evidence of a functional link between HSE and GATA elements in the activation of the heat shock response.
FEBS Journal | 2017
Marco Mangiagalli; Maya Bar-Dolev; Pietro Tedesco; Antonino Natalello; Aleksei Kaleda; Stefania Brocca; Donatella de Pascale; Sandra Pucciarelli; Cristina Miceli; Ido Braslavsky; Marina Lotti
Cold environments are populated by organisms able to contravene deleterious effects of low temperature by diverse adaptive strategies, including the production of ice binding proteins (IBPs) that inhibit the growth of ice crystals inside and outside cells. We describe the properties of such a protein (EfcIBP) identified in the metagenome of an Antarctic biological consortium composed of the ciliate Euplotes focardii and psychrophilic non‐cultured bacteria. Recombinant EfcIBP can resist freezing without any conformational damage and is moderately heat stable, with a midpoint temperature of 66.4 °C. Tested for its effects on ice, EfcIBP shows an unusual combination of properties not reported in other bacterial IBPs. First, it is one of the best‐performing IBPs described to date in the inhibition of ice recrystallization, with effective concentrations in the nanomolar range. Moreover, EfcIBP has thermal hysteresis activity (0.53 °C at 50 μm) and it can stop a crystal from growing when held at a constant temperature within the thermal hysteresis gap. EfcIBP protects purified proteins and bacterial cells from freezing damage when exposed to challenging temperatures. EfcIBP also possesses a potential N‐terminal signal sequence for protein transport and a DUF3494 domain that is common to secreted IBPs. These features lead us to hypothesize that the protein is either anchored at the outer cell surface or concentrated around cells to provide survival advantage to the whole cell consortium.
Biochimie | 2013
Guang Yang; Concetta De Santi; Donatella de Pascale; Sandra Pucciarelli; Stefania Pucciarelli; Cristina Miceli
The ciliated protozoon Euplotes focardii, originally isolated from the coastal seawaters of Terra Nova Bay in Antarctica, shows a strictly psychrophilic phenotype, including optimal survival and multiplication rates at 4-5 °C. This characteristic makes E. focardii an ideal model species for identifying the molecular bases of cold adaptation in psychrophilic organisms, as well as a suitable source of novel cold-active enzymes for industrial applications. In the current study, we characterized the patatin-like phospholipase from E. focardii (EfPLP), and its enzymatic activity was compared to that of the homologous protein from the mesophilic congeneric species Euplotes crassus (EcPLP). Both EfPLP and EcPLP have consensus motifs conserved in other patatin-like phospholipases. By analyzing both esterase and phospholipase A2 activity, we determined the thermostability and the optimal pH, temperature dependence and substrates of these enzymes. We demonstrated that EfPLP shows the characteristics of a psychrophilic phospholipase. Furthermore, we analyzed the enzymatic activity of three engineered versions of the EfPLP, in which unique residues of EfPLP, Gly80, Ala201 and Val204, were substituted through site-directed mutagenesis with residues found in the E. crassus homolog (Glu, Pro and Ile, respectively). Additionally, three corresponding mutants of EcPLP were also generated and characterized. These analyses showed that the substitution of amino acids with rigid and bulky charged/hydrophobic side chain in the psychrophilic EfPLP confers enzymatic properties similar to those of the mesophilic patatin-like phospholipase, and vice versa. This is the first report on the isolation and characterization of a cold-adapted patatin-like phospholipase from eukaryotes. The results reported in this paper support the idea that enzyme thermal-adaptation is based mainly on some amino acid residues that influence the structural flexibility of polypeptides and that EfPLP is an attractive biocatalyst for industrial processes at low temperatures.