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Dive into the research topics where Stefania Pasqualini is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefania Pasqualini.


Plant Physiology | 2003

Interaction of Cadmium with Glutathione and Photosynthesis in Developing Leaves and Chloroplasts of Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steudel

Fabrizio Pietrini; Maria Adelaide Iannelli; Stefania Pasqualini; Angelo Massacci

We investigated how the presence of cadmium (Cd) at the emergence of Phragmites australis Trin. (Cav.) ex Steudel plants from rhizomes interacted with leaf and chloroplast physiological and biochemical processes. About 8.5 nmol Cd mg–1 chlorophyll was found in leaves, and 0.83 nmol Cd mg–1 chlorophyll was found in chloroplasts of plants treated with 50 μm Cd. As a result, a 30% loss of chlorophyll was measured concomitantly with a comparable percentage reduction in light-saturated photosynthesis. Rubisco content and activity were lowered by 10% and 60%, respectively. Antioxidant activity was stimulated by Cd treatment and was associated with an increase in the glutathione and pyridine pools, and with a larger pool of reduced glutathione. It is suggested that the glutathione pool and its predominance in the reduced state protected the activity of many key photosynthetic enzymes against the thiophilic binding of Cd. Chloroplast ultrastructure was not significantly altered with 50 μm treatment and the efficiency of photosystem II, measured as the fluorescence ratio Fv/Fm, remained high because F0 and Fm were proportionally decreased. In plants treated with 100 μm Cd, all effects were exacerbated, but Fv/Fm remained close to that of control leaves and the glutathione and pyridine nucleotides pools were lowered. The results suggest that glutathione exerted a direct important protective role on photosynthesis in the presence of Cd.


Plant Physiology | 2006

Interaction between Nitric Oxide and Ethylene in the Induction of Alternative Oxidase in Ozone-Treated Tobacco Plants

Luisa Ederli; Roberta Morettini; Andrea Borgogni; Claus Wasternack; Otto Miersch; Lara Reale; Francesco Ferranti; Nicola Tosti; Stefania Pasqualini

The higher plant mitochondrial electron transport chain contains, in addition to the cytochrome chain, an alternative pathway that terminates with a single homodimeric protein, the alternative oxidase (AOX). We recorded temporary inhibition of cytochrome capacity respiration and activation of AOX pathway capacity in tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv BelW3) fumigated with ozone (O3). The AOX1a gene was used as a molecular probe to investigate its regulation by signal molecules such as hydrogen peroxide, nitric oxide (NO), ethylene (ET), salicylic acid, and jasmonic acid (JA), all of them reported to be involved in the O3 response. Fumigation leads to accumulation of hydrogen peroxide in mitochondria and early accumulation of NO in leaf tissues. Although ET accumulation was high in leaf tissues 5 h after the start of O3 fumigation, it declined during the recovery period. There were no differences in the JA and 12-oxo-phytodienoic acid levels of treated and untreated plants. NO, JA, and ET induced AOX1a mRNA accumulation. Using pharmacological inhibition of ET and NO, we demonstrate that both NO- and ET-dependent pathways are required for O3-induced up-regulation of AOX1a. However, only NO is indispensable for the activation of AOX1a gene expression.


Plant Physiology | 2003

Ozone-Induced Cell Death in Tobacco Cultivar Bel W3 Plants. The Role of Programmed Cell Death in Lesion Formation

Stefania Pasqualini; Claudia Piccioni; Lara Reale; Luisa Ederli; Guido Della Torre; Francesco Ferranti

Treatment of the ozone-sensitive tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv Bel W3) with an ozone pulse (150 nL L–1 for 5 h) induced visible injury, which manifested 48 to 72 h from onset of ozone fumigation. The “classical” ozone symptoms in tobacco cv Bel W3 plants occur as sharply defined, dot-like lesions on the adaxial side of the leaf and result from the death of groups of palisade cells. We investigated whether this reaction had the features of a hypersensitive response like that which results from the incompatible plant-pathogen interaction. We detected an oxidative burst, the result of H2O2 accumulation at 12 h from the starting of fumigation. Ozone treatment induced deposition of autofluorescent compounds and callose 24 h from the start of treatment. Total phenolic content was also strongly stimulated at the 10th and 72nd h from starting fumigation, concomitant with an enhancement in phenylalanine ammonia-lyase a and phenylalanine ammonia-lyase b expression, as evaluated by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. There was also a marked, but transient, increase in the mRNA level of pathogenesis-related-1a, a typical hypersensitive response marker. Overall, these results are evidence that ozone triggers a hypersensitive response in tobacco cv Bel W3 plants. We adopted four criteria for detecting programmed cell death in ozonated tobacco cv Bel W3 leaves: (a) early release of cytochrome c from mitochondria; (b) activation of protease; (c) DNA fragmentation by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling of DNA 3′-OH groups; and (d) ultrastructural changes characteristic of programmed cell death, including chromatin condensation and blebbing of plasma membrane. We, therefore, provide evidence that ozone-induced oxidative stress triggers a cell death program in tobacco cv Bel W3.


New Phytologist | 2009

Ozone and nitric oxide induce cGMP‐dependent and ‐independent transcription of defence genes in tobacco

Stefania Pasqualini; Stuart Meier; Chris Gehring; Laura Madeo; Marco Fornaciari; Bruno Romano; Luisa Ederli

Here, we analyse the temporal signatures of ozone (O3)-induced hydrogen peroxide(H2O2) and nitric oxide (NO) and the role of the second messenger guanosine3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) in transcriptional changes of genes diagnostic for biotic and abiotic stress responses. Within 90 min O3 induced H2O2 and NO peaks and we demonstrate that NO donors cause rapid H2O2 accumulation in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaf. Ozone also causes highly significant, late (> 2 h) and sustained cGMP increases, suggesting that the second messenger may not be required in all early (< 2 h) responses to O3,but is essential and sufficient for the induction of some O3-dependent pathways.This hypothesis was tested resolving the time course of O3-induced transcript accumulation of alternative oxidase (AOX1a), glutathione peroxidase (GPX),aminocyclopropancarboxylic acid synthase (ACS2) that is critical for the synthesis of ethylene, phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PALa) and the pathogenesis-related protein PR1a.The data show that early O3 and NO caused transcriptional activation of the scavenger encoding proteins AOX1a, GPX and the induction of ethylene production through ACS2 are cGMP independent. By contrast, the early response of PALa and the late response of PR1a show critical dependence on cGMP.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2009

NO release by nitric oxide donors in vitro and in planta

Luisa Ederli; Lara Reale; Laura Madeo; Francesco Ferranti; Chris Gehring; Marco Fornaciari; Bruno Romano; Stefania Pasqualini

Artificial nitric oxide (NO) donors are widely used as tools to study the role of NO in plants. However, reliable and reproducible characterisation of metabolic responses induced by different NO donors is complicated by the variability of their NO release characteristics. The latter are affected by different physical and biological factors including temperature and light. Here we critically evaluate NO release characteristics of the donors sodium nitroprusside (SNP), S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) and nitric oxide synthase (NOS), both in vitro and in planta (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. BelW3) and assess their effects on NO dependent processes such as the transcriptional regulation of the mitochondrial alternative oxidase gene (AOX1a), accumulation of H(2)O(2) and induction of cell death. We demonstrate that, contrary to NOS and SNP, GSNO is not an efficient NO generator in leaf tissue. Furthermore, spectrophotometric measurement of NO with a haemoglobin assay, rather than diaminofluorescein (DAF-FM) based detection, is best suited for the quantification of tissue NO. In spite of the different NO release signatures by SNP and NOS in tissue, the NO dependent responses examined were similar, suggesting that there is a critical threshold for the NO response.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990

Multiple forms of barley root acid phosphatase: purification and some characteristics of the major cytoplasmic isoenzyme.

Fausto Panara; Stefania Pasqualini; Marisa Antonielli

The major acid phosphatase form (orthophosphoric-monoester phosphohydrolase (acid optimum), EC 3.1.3.2) was purified from the soluble extract of barley roots. The enzyme is homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and moves as a single band of Mr approximately 38,000 in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was Mr 77,600 and 79,000 as determined, respectively, by gel filtration on a Sephadex G-100 column and by density gradient ultracentrifugation. The isoelectric point was about 6.28. The enzyme is competitively inhibited by molybdate (Ki = 9 x 10(-7) M). NaF, Ag(+), Hg(2+), Pb(2+) and Zn(2+) are also inhibitors, while other cations showed no effect. The enzyme hydrolyzes a wide variety of natural and synthetic phosphate esters. In particular, the enzyme seems to be active on ATP, o-phosphotyrosine, o-phosphoserine and glucose 1-phosphate. The pH dependence studies between pH 4-8 using p-nitrophenylphosphate as substrate and diethylpyrocarbonate inactivation indicate the presence of essential histidine residue at the active site.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 1997

Photoinhibition and oxidative stress : effects on xanthophyll cycle, scavenger enzymes and abscisic acid content in tobacco plants

Luisa Ederli; Stefania Pasqualini; P. Batini; Marisa Antonielli

Summary The effects of short-term ozone pollution at high doses (300 ppb for 30 min) on the xanthophyll cycle under photoinhibitory conditions (1800 μmol m − 2 s − 1) were studied. The experiments were conducted on two different tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum L.) cultivars, one O 3 -tolerant (Havana) and the other O 3 -sensi-tive (Bel-W3). Given that the phytotoxicity of O 3 is due to the formation of active oxygen species, the plants were also subjected to direct treatment with H 2 O 2 , · O 2 − , · OH and paraquat, a herbicide that, under certain conditions, produces the above-mentioned toxic forms. Our results show that in both cultivars oxidative stress inhibits the function of the xanthophyll cycle with a consequent decrease of anthera-xanthin and zeaxanthin synthesis, particularly during exposure to the superoxide ion and the · OH radical. In addition, we determined the activities of the scavenger enzymes, i.e. ascorbate peroxidase, dehydroas-corbate reductase, glutathione reductase, and glutathione-S-transferase involved in the ascorbate metabolism, the basic substrate for the de-epoxidation reaction of violaxanthin. The quantity of abscisic acid was also determined after ozone exposure. The results showed a greater presence of this hormone in the leaves of the O 3 -treated plants, a simultaneous degradation of violaxanthin was observed, which was not compensated by the transformation into antheraxanthin + zeaxanthin. It is hypothesized that, under photoinhibitory conditions combined with strong oxidative stress, violaxanthin is used in large part not for the xanthophyll cycle reaction but for the synthesis of growth inhibitory substances such as abscisic acid.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2009

Deciphering cGMP signatures and cGMP-dependent pathways in plant defence.

Stuart Meier; Laura Madeo; Luisa Ederli; Lara Donaldson; Stefania Pasqualini; Chris Gehring

The second messenger, 3’, 5’-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP), is a critical component of many different processes in plants while guanylyl cyclases that catalyse the formation of cGMP from GTP have remained somewhat elusive in higher plants. Consequently, two major aims are the discovery of novel GCs and the identification of cGMP mediated processes. Recently, we have reported temporal signatures of ozone (O3)-induced hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and nitric oxide (NO) generation, their effect on cGMP generation, and consequent transcriptional changes of genes diagnostic for stress responses in tobacco. We demonstrated that O3 and NO induced early transcriptional activation of the scavenger encoding proteins, alternative oxidase (AOX1a), glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and the induction of ethylene production through aminocyclopropancarboxylic acid synthase (ACS2) are cGMP-independent. By contrast, the early response of the phenylalanine ammonia lyase gene (PALa) and the late response of the gene encoding the pathogenesis-related protein (PR1a) show critical dependence on cGMP. Here we show differential cGMP responses to virulent and avirulent Pseudomonas syringae strains and propose that host-pathogen recognition and/or down-stream processes are transduced by complex cGMP signatures. This is in accordance with the identification of a growing number of multi-domain molecules in Arabidopsis that are reported to contain putative functional GC catalytic centres.


Environmental Pollution | 2011

Ozone affects pollen viability and NAD(P)H oxidase release from Ambrosia artemisiifolia pollen

Stefania Pasqualini; Emma Tedeschini; Giuseppe Frenguelli; Nicole Wopfner; Fatima Ferreira; Gennaro D’Amato; Luisa Ederli

Air pollution is frequently proposed as a cause of the increased incidence of allergy in industrialised countries. We investigated the impact of ozone (O3) on reactive oxygen species (ROS) and allergen content of ragweed pollen (Ambrosia artemisiifolia). Pollen was exposed to acute O3 fumigation, with analysis of pollen viability, ROS and nitric oxide (NO) content, activity of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAD[P]H) oxidase, and expression of major allergens. There was decreased pollen viability after O3 fumigation, which indicates damage to the pollen membrane system, although the ROS and NO contents were not changed or were only slightly induced, respectively. Ozone exposure induced a significant enhancement of the ROS-generating enzyme NAD(P)H oxidase. The expression of the allergen Amb a 1 was not affected by O3, determined from the mRNA levels of the major allergens. We conclude that O3 can increase ragweed pollen allergenicity through stimulation of ROS-generating NAD(P)H oxidase.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2009

Morphological and cytological development and starch accumulation in hermaphrodite and staminate flowers of olive (Olea europaea L.)

Lara Reale; Carlo Sgromo; Luisa Ederli; Stefania Pasqualini; Fabio Orlandi; Marco Fornaciari; Francesco Ferranti; Bruno Romano

In olive (Olea europaea L.), the formation of functionally staminate flowers rather than fully functional hermaphrodites is one of the major factors limiting fruit set, as flowers with aborted pistils are incapable of producing fruit. Studies conducted on various angiosperm species have shown a correlation between flower abortion and starch content. Thus, it is important to know if starch content plays a role in regulating pistil development in olive and if so, what mechanism regulates starch distribution. Cyto-histological observations of staminate and hermaphrodite olive flowers show that pistil development in staminate flowers is interrupted after the differentiation of the megaspore mother cell. At that stage, starch grains were only detected in the ovary, style and stigma of the hermaphrodite flowers. No starch was observed in the pistils of the staminate flowers. This finding suggests a tight correlation between starch content and pistil development. The secondary origin of starch within the flower is indicated by low chlorophyll content in the gynoecium, undetectable Rubisco activity in the pistils of these two kinds of flowers and by the ultrastructure of the plastids observed by transmission electron microscope analysis. The plastids have few thylakoid membranes and grana and in the staminate flowers appeared very similar to proplastids. Considering differences in starch content between staminate and hermaphrodite flowers and the secondary origin of the starch, differences in pistil development in the staminate and hermaphrodite flowers could be related to differences in the sink strength of these two types of flowers.

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P. Batini

University of Perugia

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L. Sebastiani

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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A. Francini

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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