Sonia Levi
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University
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Featured researches published by Sonia Levi.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2002
Paolo Arosio; Sonia Levi
Ferritin is one of the major proteins of iron metabolism. It is almost ubiquitous and tightly regulated by the metal. Biochemical and structural properties of the ferritins are largely conserved from bacteria to man, although the role in the regulation of iron trafficking varies in the different organisms. Recent studies have clarified some of the major aspects of the reaction between iron and ferritin, which results in the formation of the iron core and production of hydrogen peroxide. The characterization of cellular models in which ferritin expression is modulated has shown that the ferroxidase catalytic site on the H-chain has a central role in regulating iron availability. In turn, this has secondary effects on a number of cellular activities, which include proliferation and resistance to oxidative damage. Moreover, the response to apoptotic stimuli is affected by H-ferritin expression. Altered ferritin L-chain expression has been found in at least two types of genetic disorders, although its role in the determination of the pathology has not been fully clarified. The recent discovery of a new ferritin specific for the mitochondria, which is functionally similar to the H-ferritin, opens new perspectives in the study of the relationships between iron, oxidative damage and free radicals.
FEBS Letters | 1989
David M. Lawson; Amyra Treffry; Peter J. Artymiuk; Pauline M. Harrison; Stephen J. Yewdall; Alessandra Luzzago; Gianne Cesareni; Sonia Levi; Paolo Arosio
Ferroxidase activity in human H‐chain ferritin has been studied with the aid of site‐directed mutagenesis. A site discovered by X‐ray crystallography has now been identified as the ferroxidase centre. This centre is present only in H‐chains and is located within the four‐helix bundle of the chain fold.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Paolo Arosio; Sonia Levi
BACKGROUND Ferritin structure is designed to maintain large amounts of iron in a compact and bioavailable form in solution. All ferritins induce fast Fe(II) oxidation in a reaction catalyzed by a ferroxidase center that consumes Fe(II) and peroxides, the reagents that produce toxic free radicals in the Fenton reaction, and thus have anti-oxidant effects. Cytosolic ferritins are composed of the H- and L-chains, whose expression are regulated by iron at a post-transcriptional level and by oxidative stress at a transcriptional level. The regulation of mitochondrial ferritin expression is presently unclear. SCOPE OF REVIEW The scope of the review is to update recent progress regarding the role of ferritins in the regulation of cellular iron and in the response to oxidative stress with particular attention paid to the new roles described for cytosolic ferritins, to genetic disorders caused by mutations of the ferritin L-chain, and new findings on mitochondrial ferritin. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS The new data on the adult conditional knockout (KO) mice for the H-chain and on the hereditary ferritinopathies with mutations that reduce ferritin functionality strongly indicate that the major role of ferritins is to protect from the oxidative damage caused by iron deregulation. In addition, the study of mitochondrial ferritin, which is not iron-regulated, indicates that it participates in the protection against oxidative damage, particularly in cells with high oxidative activity. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Ferritins have a central role in the protection against oxidative damage, but they are also involved in non-iron-dependent processes.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1991
Vanessa J. Wade; Sonia Levi; Paolo Arosio; Amyra Treffry; Pauline M. Harrison; Stephen Mann
The structure and crystal chemical properties of iron cores of reconstituted recombinant human ferritins and their site-directed variants have been studied by transmission electron microscopy and electron diffraction. The kinetics of Fe uptake have been compared spectrophotometrically. Recombinant L and H-chain ferritins, and recombinant H-chain variants incorporating modifications in the threefold (Asp131----His or Glu134----Ala) and fourfold (Leu169----Arg) channels, at the partially buried ferroxidase sites (Glu62,His65----Lys,Gly), a putative nucleation site on the inner surface (Glu61,Glu64,Glu67----Ala), and both the ferroxidase and nucleation sites (Glu62,His65----Lys,Gly and Glu61,Glu64,Glu67----Ala), were investigated. An additional H-chain variant, incorporating substitution of the last ten C-terminal residues for those of the L-chain protein, was also studied. Most of the proteins assimilated iron to give discrete electron-dense cores of the Fe(III) hydrated oxide, ferrihydrite (Fe2O3.nH2O). No differences were observed for variants modified in the three- or fourfold channels compared with the unmodified H-chain ferritin. The recombinant L-chain ferritin and H-chain variant depleted of the ferroxidase site, however, showed markedly reduced uptake kinetics and comprised cores of increased diameter and regularity. Depletion of the inner surface Glu residues, whilst maintaining the ferroxidase site, resulted in a partially reduced rate of Fe uptake and iron cores of wider particle size distribution. Modification of both ferroxidase and inner surface Glu residues resulted in complete inhibition of iron uptake and deposition. No cores were observed by electron microscopy although negative staining showed that the protein shell was intact. The general requirement of an appropriate spatial charge density across the cavity surface rather than specific amino acid residues could explain how, in spite of an almost complete lack of identity between the amino acid sequences of bacterioferritin and mammalian ferritins, ferrihydrite is deposited within the cavity of both proteins under similar reconstitution conditions.
Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2007
Paolo Santambrogio; Giorgio Biasiotto; Francesca Sanvito; Stefano Olivieri; Paolo Arosio; Sonia Levi
Mitochondrial ferritin (FtMt) is a novel ferritin type specifically targeted to mitochondria. It is highly expressed in the human testis and in sideroblasts from patients with sideroblastic anemia, but other organs have not been studied. To study its expression in the main organs of the mouse, we first used RT-PCR and then produced recombinant mouse FtMt and specific antibodies. Immunohistochemistry analyses confirmed that FtMt is highly expressed in mouse testis, particularly in spermatocytes and interstitial Leydig cells. The protein was also identified in other organs including heart, brain, spinal cord, kidney, and pancreatic islet of Langerhans but not in liver and splenocytes, which have iron storage function and express high levels of cytosolic ferritins. Results indicate that the primary function of ferritin FtMt is not involved in storing cellular or body iron, but its association with cell types characterized by high metabolic activity and oxygen consumption suggests a role in protecting mitochondria from iron-dependent oxidative damage.
Leukemia | 2006
M G Della Porta; L. Malcovati; R. Invernizzi; Erica Travaglino; Cristiana Pascutto; Margherita Maffioli; Anna Gallì; Sabrina Boggi; Daniela Pietra; Laura Vanelli; Carmela Marseglia; Sonia Levi; Paolo Arosio; Mario Lazzarino; Mario Cazzola
Erythroid dysplasia is the pathologic hallmark of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). To develop a quantitative flow-cytometry approach to its evaluation, we analyzed the expression of CD71, CD105, cytosolic H-ferritin (HF), cytosolic L-ferritin (LF) and mitochondrial ferritin (MtF) in erythroblasts from 104 MDS patients, 69 pathologic control patients and 19 healthy subjects. Six-parameter, 4-color flow cytometry was employed, and data were expressed as mean fluorescence intensity. Compared with pathologic and healthy controls, MDS patients had higher expression of HF (P<0.001) and CD105 (P<0.001), and lower expression of CD71 (P<0.001). MtF was specifically detected in MDS with ringed sideroblasts, and there was a close relationship between its expression and Prussian blue staining (r=0.89, P<0.001). In vitro cultures of myelodysplastic hematopoietic progenitors showed that both HF and MtF were expressed at a very early stage of erythroid differentiation, and that MtF expression is specifically related to mitochondrial iron loading. A classification function based on expression levels of HF, CD71 and CD105 allowed us to correctly classify >95% of MDS patients. This flow-cytometry approach provides an accurate quantitative evaluation of erythroid dysplasia and allows a reliable diagnosis of sideroblastic anemia, and may therefore be a useful tool in the work-up of patients with MDS.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009
Sonia Levi; Ermanna Rovida
BACKGROUND Iron is an essential element for life, as it is a cofactor for enzymes involved in many metabolic processes, but it can also be harmful, since its excess is thought to enhance the production of reactive oxygen species and induce oxidative damage. Iron is transformed into its biologically available form in the mitochondrion by the iron-sulfur (Fe/S) cluster and heme synthesis pathways. During the past decade, substantial progress has been made in the elucidation of iron-linked mechanisms that occur in the mitochondrion, demonstrating the crucial role played by this organelle in maintaining cellular iron homeostasis. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE This review summarizes current knowledge of the mechanisms underlying iron trafficking in mitochondria and how it is handled inside the organelle. Relevant updates with regard to the Fe/S cluster and heme biosynthetic pathways, as well as the relationship between mitochondrial iron homeostasis impairment and related diseases, are also discussed.
British Journal of Haematology | 2002
Mario Cazzola; Laura Cremonesi; Maria Papaioannou; Nadia Soriani; Anna Kioumi; Anastasia Charalambidou; Rita Paroni; Katerina Romtsou; Sonia Levi; Maurizio Ferrari; Paolo Arosio; John Christakis
Summary. Iron overload may predominantly involve parenchymal or reticuloendothelial cells, the prototype of parenchymal iron overload being HFE‐related genetic haemochromatosis. We studied a family with autosomal dominant hyperferritinaemia in whom the proband showed selective iron accumulation in the Kupffer cells on liver biopsy. Analysis of L and H ferritin genes excluded mutations responsible for hereditary hyperferritinaemia/cataract syndrome or similar translational disorders. Sequence analysis of the ferroportin gene (SLC11A3) in four individuals with hyperferritinaemia singled out a three base pair deletion in a region that contains four TTG repeats. This mutation removes a TTG unit from 780 to 791, and predicts the loss of one of three sequential valine residues 160–162. Denaturing high performance liquid chromatography can be used for its detection. SLC11A3 polymorphism analysis indicates that this probably represents a recurrent mutation due to slippage mispairing. Affected individuals may show marginally low serum iron and transferrin saturation, and young women may have marginally low haemoglobin concentration levels. Serum ferritin levels are directly related to age, but are 10–20 times higher than normal. Heterozygosity for the ferroportin Val 162 deletion represents the prototype of selective reticuloendothelial iron overload, and should be taken into account in the differential diagnosis of hereditary or congenital hyperferritinaemias.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1985
Gaetano Cairo; Lidia Bardella; Luisa Schiaffonati; Paolo Arosio; Sonia Levi; Aldo Bernelli-Zazzera
Iron administration to HeLa cells stimulates the accumulation of H-subunit and L-subunit rich isoferritins at similar extent. The increase in both types of isoferritins is accompanied by an increase in the amount of messenger RNAs specific for H and L subunits. The increase in the amount of these messenger RNAs, which occurs in the nucleus as well as in the cytoplasm, is proportionately lower than the increase in the protein. These results, together with analysis of transcription in isolated nuclei indicate the existence of a mechanism of transcriptional control of ferritin synthesis, associated to the translational control described so far.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986
Alessandra Luzzago; Paolo Arosio; Carmelo Iacobello; Giuseppina Ruggeri; Lorenzo Capucci; Emiliana Brocchi; Franco De Simone; Daniela Gamba; Elena Gabri; Sonia Levi; Alberto Albertini
A library of 27 murine monoclonal antibodies was obtained by using human liver and heart ferritins as immunogens. The specificity of the antibodies for the two ferritins and their subunits was studied with five different methods. The antibodies elicited by the liver ferritin bound preferentially the immunogen and were specific for the L subunit. Some antibodies elicited by the heart ferritin had characteristics similar to the anti-liver antibodies, other ones bound preferentially the heart over the liver ferritin and were specific for the H subunit. Only two antibodies were able to bind both ferritins and subunits. Some anti-H and anti-L chain antibodies were used to develop and compare four types of immunoassay to quantitate isoferritins. The results indicate that heart ferritin is immunologically more heterogeneous than liver, the H and L subunits having large immunological differences with few, if any, identical epitopes; and that that the architecture of the immunoassays have a strong influence on the crossreactivity of the antibodies with the two isoferritins, probably because H and L chains are not arranged randomly in the assembled protein.