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Featured researches published by Stefano Ceola.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Pulse ENDOR and density functional theory on the peridinin triplet state involved in the photo-protective mechanism in the peridinin–chlorophyll a–protein from Amphidinium carterae

Marilena Di Valentin; Stefano Ceola; Giancarlo Agostini; Giorgio M. Giacometti; Alexander Angerhofer; Orlando Crescenzi; Vincenzo Barone; Donatella Carbonera

The photoexcited triplet state of the carotenoid peridinin in the Peridinin-chlorophyll a-protein of the dinoflagellate Amphidinium carterae has been investigated by pulse EPR and pulse ENDOR spectroscopies at variable temperatures. This is the first time that the ENDOR spectra of a carotenoid triplet in a naturally occurring light-harvesting complex, populated by energy transfer from the chlorophyll a triplet state, have been reported. From the electron spin echo experiments we have obtained the information on the electron spin polarization dynamics and from Mims ENDOR experiments we have derived the triplet state hyperfine couplings of the alpha- and beta-protons of the peridinin conjugated chain. Assignments of beta-protons belonging to two different methyl groups, with aiso=7.0 MHz and aiso=10.6 MHz respectively, have been made by comparison with the values predicted from density functional theory. Calculations provide a complete picture of the triplet spin density on the peridinin molecule, showing that the triplet spins are delocalized over the whole pi-conjugated system with an alternate pattern, which is lost in the central region of the polyene chain. The ENDOR investigation strongly supports the hypothesis of localization of the triplet state on one peridinin in each subcluster of the PCP complex, as proposed in [Di Valentin et al. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1777 (2008) 186-195]. High spin density has been found specifically at the carbon atom at position 12 (see Fig. 1B), which for the peridinin involved in the photo-protective mechanism is in close contact with the water ligand to the chlorophyll a pigment. We suggest that this ligated water molecule, placed at the interface between the chlorophyll-peridinin pair, is functioning as a bridge in the triplet-triplet energy transfer between the two pigments.


Neurotoxicology | 2010

Cuprizone neurotoxicity, copper deficiency and neurodegeneration

Federico Benetti; Marcello Ventura; Benedetta Salmini; Stefano Ceola; Donatella Carbonera; Stefano Mammi; Andrea Zitolo; Paola D'Angelo; Emanuela Urso; Michele Maffia; Benedetto Salvato; Enzo Spisni

Cuprizone is used to obtain demyelination in mice. Cuprizone-treated mice show symptoms similar to several neurodegenerative disorders such as severe status spongiosus. Although it has a simple chemical formula, its neurotoxic mechanism is still unknown. In this work, we examined both physico-chemical properties and biological effects of cuprizone. Our results indicate that cuprizone has very complicated and misunderstood solution chemistry. Moreover, we show here the inability of cuprizone to cross neither the intestinal epithelial barrier nor the neuronal cell membrane, as well its high tolerability by cultured neurons. If added to mice diet, cuprizone does not accumulate in liver or in brain. Therefore, its neurotoxic effect is explainable only in terms of its capability to chelate copper, leading to chronic copper deficiency.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Triplet–triplet energy transfer in the major intrinsic light-harvesting complex of Amphidinium carterae as revealed by ODMR and EPR spectroscopies

Marilena Di Valentin; Enrico Salvadori; Giancarlo Agostini; Federico Biasibetti; Stefano Ceola; Roger G. Hiller; Giorgio M. Giacometti; Donatella Carbonera

We present an optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic study on the quenching of photo-induced chlorophyll triplet states by carotenoids, in the intrinsic light-harvesting complex (LHC) from the dinoflagellate Amphidinium carterae. Two carotenoid triplet states, differing in terms of optical and magnetic spectroscopic properties, have been identified and assigned to peridinins located in different protein environment. The results reveal a parallelism with the triplet-triplet energy transfer (TTET) process involving chlorophyll a and luteins observed in the LHC-II complex of higher plants. Starting from the hypothesis of a conserved alignment of the amino acid sequences at the cores of the LHC and LHC-II proteins, the spin-polarized time-resolved EPR spectra of the carotenoid triplet states of LHC have been calculated by a method which exploits the conservation of the spin momentum during the TTET process. The analysis of the spectra shows that the data are compatible with a structural model of the core of LHC which assigns the photo-protective function to two central carotenoids surrounded by the majority of Chl a molecules present in the protein, as found in LHC-II. However, the lack of structural data, and the uncertainty in the pigment composition of LHC, leaves open the possibility that this complex posses a different arrangement of the pigments with specific centers of Chl triplet quenching.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Triplet-triplet energy transfer in Peridinin-Chlorophyll a-protein reconstituted with Chl a and Chl d as revealed by optically detected magnetic resonance and pulse EPR: comparison with the native PCP complex from Amphidinium carterae.

Marilena Di Valentin; Giancarlo Agostini; Enrico Salvadori; Stefano Ceola; Giorgio M. Giacometti; Roger G. Hiller; Donatella Carbonera

The triplet state of the carotenoid peridinin, populated by triplet-triplet energy transfer from photoexcited chlorophyll triplet state, in the reconstituted Peridinin-Chlorophyll a-protein, has been investigated by ODMR (Optically detected magnetic resonance), and pulse EPR spectroscopies. The properties of peridinins associated with the triplet state formation in complexes reconstituted with Chl a and Chl d have been compared to those of the main-form peridinin-chlorophyll protein (MFPCP) isolated from Amphidinium carterae. In the reconstituted samples no signals due to the presence of chlorophyll triplet states have been detected, during either steady state illumination or laser-pulse excitation. This demonstrates that reconstituted complexes conserve total quenching of chlorophyll triplet states, despite the biochemical treatment and reconstitution with the non-native Chl d pigment. Zero field splitting parameters of the peridinin triplet states are the same in the two reconstituted samples and slightly smaller than in native MFPCP. Analysis of the initial polarization of the photoinduced Electron-Spin-Echo detected spectra and their time evolution, shows that, in the reconstituted complexes, the triplet state is probably localized on the same peridinin as in native MFPCP although, when Chl d replaces Chl a, a local rearrangement of the pigments is likely to occur. Substitution of Chl d for Chl a identifies previously unassigned bands at approximately 620 and approximately 640 nm in the Triplet-minus-Singlet (T-S) spectrum of PCP detected at cryogenic temperature, as belonging to peridinin.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Conservation of spin polarization during triplet-triplet energy transfer in reconstituted peridinin-chlorophyll-protein complexes

Marilena Di Valentin; Claudia E. Tait; Enrico Salvadori; Stefano Ceola; Hugo Scheer; Roger G. Hiller; Donatella Carbonera

Peridinin-chlorophyll-protein (PCP) complexes, where the N-terminal domain of native PCP from Amphidinium carterae has been reconstituted with different chlorophyll (Chl) species, have been investigated by time-resolved EPR in order to elucidate the details of the triplet-triplet energy transfer (TTET) mechanism. This spectroscopic approach exploits the concept of spin conservation during TTET, which leads to recognizable spin-polarization effects in the observed time-resolved EPR spectra. The spin polarization produced at the acceptor site (peridinin) depends on the initial polarization of the donor (chlorophyll) and on the relative geometric arrangement of the donor-acceptor spin axes. A variation of the donor triplet state properties in terms of population probabilities or triplet spin axis directions, as produced by replacement of chlorophyll a (Chl a) with non-native chlorophyll species (ZnChl a and BacterioChl a) in the reconstituted complexes, is unambiguously reflected in the polarization pattern of the carotenoid triplet state. For the first time, in the present investigation spin-polarization conservation has been shown to occur among natural cofactors in protein complexes during the TTET process. Proving the validity of the assumption of spin conservation adopted in the EPR spectral analysis, the results reinforce the hypothesis that in PCP proteins peridinin 614, according to X-ray nomenclature (Hofmann, E.; et al. Science 1996, 272, 1788-1791), is the carotenoid of election in the photoprotection mechanism based on TTET.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 2003

The orientation of the principal axes of the electron dipolar interaction tensor in triplet state C60 monoadducts

Stefano Ceola; Carlo Corvaja; Lorenzo Franco

The time resolved EPR spectra of a fullerene monoadduct triplet state has been studied in nematic phase of E7. The EPR lineshape has been explained with a motionally averaged, preferentially oriented, triplet spectrum. From the knowledge of the order parameters of the C 60 adduct, obtained from the analysis of EPR spectra of a very similar C 60 -nitroxide derivative dissolved in the same nematic solvent, it was possible to determine that the X principal axis of the triplet state dipolar tensor is parallel to the C 2 symmetry axis of the C 60 monoadduct.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2006

Optical spectrum of C60 mono-adducts: assignment of transition bands using time-resolved EPR magneto-photo-selection

Stefano Ceola; Lorenzo Franco; Michele Maggini; Carlo Corvaja

The magneto-photo-selection technique implemented in the time-resolved EPR (TR-EPR) experiment is used for studying the characteristics of the optical spectrum of C(60) mono-adducts, in the 410-690 nm wavelength range. The analysis of the shape of the triplet state TR-EPR spectra of the mono-adducts, recorded after laser light pulses having polarization parallel or perpendicular to the magnetic field direction allows to determine the orientation distribution of the excited molecules; whence the direction of transition moments in the molecular frame is inferred. This information provides the assignment of the vibronic states symmetries.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 2001

Exploration of size effects in cylindrical nematic samples: A numerical simulation and ESR study

Alexandre E. Gomes; Antonino Polimeno; Assis F. Martins; Stefano Ceola; Carlo Corvaja

A numerical treatment is developed and implemented to solve the constitutive equations of nematodynamics according to the Leslie-Ericksen formulation for a cylindrical geometry. Nematic director equations in three dimensions are coupled to a Navier Stokes description of the velocity. This model is used to study the influence of the sample size for an experimental set-up corresponding to an combined electron spin resonance (ESR) rheological experiment in which the nematic sample is subject to a constant rotational velocity and to an aligning magnetic field perpendicular to the axis of rotation. The results of the simulations are employed to interpret experimental findings for a series of measurements of the ESR signal of tempone- 14 N dissolved in capillaries of different sizes containing the nematic liquid crystal ZLI 1083, with diameters ranging from 0.1 to 0.5 mm.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Identification by time-resolved EPR of the peridinins directly involved in chlorophyll triplet quenching in the peridinin-chlorophyll a-protein from Amphidinium carterae.

Marilena Di Valentin; Stefano Ceola; Enrico Salvadori; Giancarlo Agostini; Donatella Carbonera


Chemical Physics Letters | 2006

Synthesis and magnetic properties of N@C60 derivatives

Lorenzo Franco; Stefano Ceola; Carlo Corvaja; S Bolzonella; Wolfgang Harneit; Michele Maggini

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Enrico Salvadori

Queen Mary University of London

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