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Dive into the research topics where Teresa Anna Giancaspero is active.

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Featured researches published by Teresa Anna Giancaspero.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Riboflavin Uptake and FAD Synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mitochondria INVOLVEMENT OF THE Flx1p CARRIER IN FAD EXPORT

Valeria Bafunno; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Carmen Brizio; Daniela Bufano; Salvatore Passarella; Eckhard Boles; Maria Barile

We have studied the functional steps by which Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria can synthesize FAD from cytosolic riboflavin (Rf). Riboflavin uptake into mitochondria took place via a mechanism that is consistent with the existence of (at least two) carrier systems. FAD was synthesized inside mitochondria by a mitochondrial FAD synthetase (EC 2.7.7.2), and it was exported into the cytosol via an export system that was inhibited by lumiflavin, and which was different from the riboflavin uptake system. To understand the role of the putative mitochondrial FAD carrier, Flx1p, in this pathway, an flx1Δ mutant strain was constructed. Coupled mitochondria isolated from flx1Δ mutant cells were compared with wild-type mitochondria with respect to the capability to take up Rf, to synthesize FAD from it, and to export FAD into the extramitochondrial phase. Mitochondria isolated from flx1Δ mutant cells specifically lost the ability to export FAD, but did not lose the ability to take up Rf, FAD, or FMN and to synthesize FAD from Rf. Hence, Flx1p is proposed to be the mitochondrial FAD export carrier. Moreover, deletion of the FLX1 gene resulted in a specific reduction of the activities of mitochondrial lipoamide dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase, which are FAD-binding enzymes. For the flavoprotein subunit of succinate dehydrogenase we could demonstrate that this was not due to a changed level of mitochondrial FAD or to a change in the degree of flavinylation of the protein. Instead, the amount of the flavoprotein subunit of succinate dehydrogenase was strongly reduced, indicating an additional regulatory role for Flx1p in protein synthesis or degradation.


Mitochondrion | 2010

Mitochondrial localization of human FAD synthetase isoform 1

Enza Maria Torchetti; Carmen Brizio; Matilde Colella; Michele Galluccio; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Cesare Indiveri; Marina Roberti; Maria Barile

FAD synthetase or ATP:FMN adenylyl transferase (FADS or FMNAT, EC 2.7.7.2) is a key enzyme in the metabolic pathway that converts riboflavin into the redox cofactor FAD. We face here the still controversial sub-cellular localization of FADS in eukaryotes. First, by western blotting experiments, we confirm the existence in rat liver of different FADS isoforms which are distinct for molecular mass and sub-cellular localization. A cross-reactive band with an apparent molecular mass of 60 kDa on SDS-PAGE is localized in the internal compartments of freshly isolated purified rat liver mitochondria. Recently we have identified two isoforms of FADS in humans, that differ for an extra-sequence of 97 amino acids at the N-terminus, present only in isoform 1 (hFADS1). The first 17 residues of hFADS1 represent a cleavable mitochondrial targeting sequence (by Target-P prediction). The recombinant hFADS1 produced in Escherichia coli showed apparent K(m) and V(max) values for FMN equal to 1.3+/-0.7 microM and 4.4+/-1.3 nmol x min(-1) x mg protein(-1), respectively, and was inhibited by FMN at concentration higher than 1.5 microM. The in vitro synthesized hFADS1, but not hFADS2, is imported into rat liver mitochondria and processed into a lower molecular mass protein product. Immunofluorescence confocal microscopy performed on BHK-21 and Caco-2 cell lines transiently expressing the two human isoforms, definitively confirmed that hFADS1, but not hFADS2, localizes in mitochondria.


FEBS Journal | 2009

The occurrence of riboflavin kinase and FAD synthetase ensures FAD synthesis in tobacco mitochondria and maintenance of cellular redox status.

Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Vittoria Locato; Maria Concetta de Pinto; Laura De Gara; Maria Barile

Intact mitochondria isolated from Nicotiana tabacum cv. Bright Yellow 2 (TBY‐2) cells can take up riboflavin via carrier‐mediated systems that operate at different concentration ranges and have different uptake efficiencies. Once inside mitochondria, riboflavin is converted into catalytically active cofactors, FMN and FAD, due to the existence of a mitochondrial riboflavin kinase (EC 2.7.1.26) and an FAD synthetase (EC 2.7.7.2). Newly synthesized FAD can be exported from intact mitochondria via a putative FAD exporter. The dependence of FMN synthesis rate on riboflavin concentration shows saturation kinetics with a sigmoidal shape (S0.5, Vmax and Hill coefficient values 0.32 ± 0.12 μm, 1.4 nmol·min−1·mg−1 protein and 3.1, respectively). The FAD‐forming enzymes are both activated by MgCl2, and reside in two distinct monofunctional enzymes, which can be physically separated in mitochondrial soluble and membrane‐enriched fractions, respectively.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013

Biosynthesis of Flavin Cofactors in Man: Implications in Health and Disease

Maria Barile; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Carmen Brizio; Concetta Panebianco; Cesare Indiveri; Michele Galluccio; Lodovica Vergani; Ivano Eberini; Elisabetta Gianazza

The primary role of the water-soluble vitamin B2, i.e. riboflavin, in cell biology is connected with its conversion into FMN and FAD, the cofactors of a large number of dehydrogenases, reductases and oxidases involved in energetic metabolism, redox homeostasis and protein folding as well as in diverse regulatory events. Deficiency of riboflavin in men and experimental animal models has been linked to several diseases, including neuromuscular and neurological disorders and cancer. Riboflavin at pharmacological doses has been shown to play unexpected and incompletely understood regulatory roles. Besides a summary on riboflavin uptake and a survey on riboflavin-related diseases, the main focus of this review is on discovery and characterization of FAD synthase (EC 2.7.7.2) and other components of the cellular networks that ensure flavin cofactor homeostasis.Special attention is devoted to the problem of sub-cellular compartmentalization of cofactor synthesis in eukaryotes, made possible by the existence of different FAD synthase isoforms and specific molecular components involved in flavin trafficking across sub-cellular membranes.Another point addressed in this review is the mechanism of cofactor delivery to nascent apo-proteins, especially those localized into mitochondria, where they integrate FAD in a process that involves additional mitochondrial protein(s) still to be identified. Further efforts are necessary to elucidate the role of riboflavin/FAD network in human pathologies and to exploit the structural differences between human and microbial/fungal FAD synthase as the rational basis for developing novel antibiotic/antimycotic drugs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

FAD Synthesis and Degradation in the Nucleus Create a Local Flavin Cofactor Pool

Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Giovanni Busco; Concetta Panebianco; Claudia Carmone; Angelica Miccolis; Grazia Maria Liuzzi; Matilde Colella; Maria Barile

Background: FAD synthase is known to catalyze the biosynthesis of FAD in cytosol and mitochondria. Results: The existence of a nuclear FAD synthase and a FAD-hydrolyzing activity is demonstrated. Conclusion: A dynamic pool of FAD exists in the nucleus. Significance: Nuclear, mitochondrial, and cytosolic FAD synthase pools constitute a flavin network involved in the regulation of cellular metabolism and epigenetic events. FAD is a redox cofactor ensuring the activity of many flavoenzymes mainly located in mitochondria but also relevant for nuclear redox activities. The last enzyme in the metabolic pathway producing FAD is FAD synthase (EC 2.7.7.2), a protein known to be localized both in cytosol and in mitochondria. FAD degradation to riboflavin occurs via still poorly characterized enzymes, possibly belonging to the NUDIX hydrolase family. By confocal microscopy and immunoblotting experiments, we demonstrate here the existence of FAD synthase in the nucleus of different experimental rat models. HPLC experiments demonstrated that isolated rat liver nuclei contain ∼300 pmol of FAD·mg−1 protein, which was mainly protein-bound FAD. A mean FAD synthesis rate of 18.1 pmol·min−1·mg−1 protein was estimated by both HPLC and continuous coupled enzymatic spectrophotometric assays. Rat liver nuclei were also shown to be endowed with a FAD pyrophosphatase that hydrolyzes FAD with an optimum at alkaline pH and is significantly inhibited by adenylate-containing nucleotides. The coordinate activity of these FAD forming and degrading enzymes provides a potential mechanism by which a dynamic pool of flavin cofactor is created in the nucleus. These data, which significantly add to the biochemical comprehension of flavin metabolism and its subcellular compartmentation, may also provide the basis for a more detailed comprehension of the role of flavin homeostasis in biologically and clinically relevant epigenetic events.


FEBS Journal | 2011

Human FAD synthase (isoform 2): a component of the machinery that delivers FAD to apo-flavoproteins

Enza Maria Torchetti; Francesco Bonomi; Michele Galluccio; Elisabetta Gianazza; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Stefania Iametti; Cesare Indiveri; Maria Barile

A soluble form of human FAD synthase (isoform 2; hFADS2) was produced and purified to homogeneity as a recombinant His‐tagged protein. The enzyme binds 1 mole of the FAD product very tightly, although noncovalently. Complete release of FAD from the ‘as isolated’ protein requires extensive denaturation. A 75 : 25 mixture of apo/holoprotein could be prepared by treatment with mild chaotropes, allowing estimatation of the contribution made by bound FAD to the protein stability and evaluatation of whether structural rearrangements may be required for FAD release. Under turnover conditions, the enzyme catalyzes FAD assembly from ATP and FMN and, at a much lower rate, the pyrophosphorolytic hydrolysis of FAD. Several mechanistic features of both reactions were investigated in detail, along with their dependence on environmental conditions (pH, temperature, dependence on metals). Our data indicate that FAD release may represent the rate‐limiting step of the whole catalytic cycle and that the process leading to FAD synthesis, and delivery to client apoproteins may be tightly controlled.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Riboflavin-Responsive and -Non-responsive Mutations in FAD Synthase Cause Multiple Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase and Combined Respiratory-Chain Deficiency

Rikke K.J. Olsen; Eliška Koňaříková; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Signe Mosegaard; Veronika Boczonadi; Lavinija Mataković; Alice Veauville-Merllié; Caterina Terrile; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Tobias B. Haack; Mari Auranen; Piero Leone; Michele Galluccio; Apolline Imbard; Purificacion Gutierrez-Rios; Johan Palmfeldt; Elisabeth Graf; Christine Vianey-Saban; Marcus Oppenheim; Manuel Schiff; Samia Pichard; Odile Rigal; Angela Pyle; Patrick F. Chinnery; Vassiliki Konstantopoulou; Dorothea Möslinger; René G. Feichtinger; Beril Talim; Haluk Topaloglu; Turgay Coskun

Multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiencies (MADDs) are a heterogeneous group of metabolic disorders with combined respiratory-chain deficiency and a neuromuscular phenotype. Despite recent advances in understanding the genetic basis of MADD, a number of cases remain unexplained. Here, we report clinically relevant variants in FLAD1, which encodes FAD synthase (FADS), as the cause of MADD and respiratory-chain dysfunction in nine individuals recruited from metabolic centers in six countries. In most individuals, we identified biallelic frameshift variants in the molybdopterin binding (MPTb) domain, located upstream of the FADS domain. Inasmuch as FADS is essential for cellular supply of FAD cofactors, the finding of biallelic frameshift variants was unexpected. Using RNA sequencing analysis combined with protein mass spectrometry, we discovered FLAD1 isoforms, which only encode the FADS domain. The existence of these isoforms might explain why affected individuals with biallelic FLAD1 frameshift variants still harbor substantial FADS activity. Another group of individuals with a milder phenotype responsive to riboflavin were shown to have single amino acid changes in the FADS domain. When produced in E. coli, these mutant FADS proteins resulted in impaired but detectable FADS activity; for one of the variant proteins, the addition of FAD significantly improved protein stability, arguing for a chaperone-like action similar to what has been reported in other riboflavin-responsive inborn errors of metabolism. In conclusion, our studies identify FLAD1 variants as a cause of potentially treatable inborn errors of metabolism manifesting with MADD and shed light on the mechanisms by which FADS ensures cellular FAD homeostasis.


FEBS Journal | 2008

Succinate dehydrogenase flavoprotein subunit expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae– involvement of the mitochondrial FAD transporter, Flx1p

Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Robin Wait; Eckhard Boles; Maria Barile

The mitochondrial FAD transporter, Flx1p, is a member of the mitochondrial carrier family responsible for FAD transport in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It has also been suggested that it has a role in maintaining the normal activity of mitochondrial FAD‐binding enzymes, including lipoamide dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase flavoprotein subunit Sdh1p. A decrease in the amount of Sdh1p in the flx1Δ mutant strain has been determined here to be due to a post‐transcriptional control that involves regulatory sequences located upstream of the SDH1 coding sequence. The SDH1 coding sequence and the regulatory sequences located downstream of the SDH1 coding region, as well as protein import and cofactor attachment, seem to be not involved in the decrease in the amount of protein.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2016

Riboflavin transport and metabolism in humans

Maria Barile; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Piero Leone; Michele Galluccio; Cesare Indiveri

Recent studies elucidated how riboflavin transporters and FAD forming enzymes work in humans and create a coordinated flavin network ensuring the maintenance of cellular flavoproteome. Alteration of this network may be causative of severe metabolic disorders such as multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD) or Brown-Vialetto-van Laere syndrome. A crucial step in the maintenance of FAD homeostasis is riboflavin uptake by plasma and mitochondrial membranes. Therefore, studies on recently identified human plasma membrane riboflavin transporters are presented, together with those in which still unidentified mitochondrial riboflavin transporter(s) have been described. A main goal of future research is to fill the gaps still existing as for some transcriptional, functional and structural details of human FAD synthases (FADS) encoded by FLAD1 gene, a novel “redox sensing” enzyme. In the frame of the hypothesis that FADS, acting as a “FAD chaperone”, could play a crucial role in the biogenesis of mitochondrial flavo-proteome, several basic functional aspects of flavin cofactor delivery to cognate apo-flavoenzyme are also briefly dealt with. The establishment of model organisms performing altered FAD homeostasis will improve the molecular description of human pathologies. The molecular and functional studies of transporters and enzymes herereported, provide guidelines for improving therapies which may have beneficial effects on the altered metabolism.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Silencing of FAD synthase gene in Caenorhabditis elegans upsets protein homeostasis and impacts on complex behavioral patterns

Vania Cosma Liuzzi; Teresa Anna Giancaspero; Elisabetta Gianazza; Cristina Banfi; Maria Barile; Carla De Giorgi

BACKGROUND FAD synthase is a ubiquitous enzyme that catalyses the last step of FAD biosynthesis, allowing for the biogenesis of several flavoproteins. In humans different isoforms are generated by alternative splicing, isoform 1 being localized in mitochondria. Homology searching in Caenorabditis elegans leads to the identification of two human FAD synthase homologues, coded by the single copy gene R53.1. METHODS The C. elegans R53.1 gene was silenced by feeding. The expression level of transcripts was established by semi-quantitative RT-PCR. Overall protein composition was evaluated by two-dimensional electrophoresis. Enzymatic activities were measured by spectrophotometry and oxygen consumption by polarography on isolated mitochondria. RESULTS From R53.1 two transcripts are generated by trans-splicing. Reducing by 50% the transcription efficiency of R53.1 by RNAi results in a 50% reduction in total flavin with decrease in ATP content and increase in ROS level. Significant phenotypical changes are noticed in knock-down nematodes. Among them, a significant impairment in locomotion behaviour possibly due to altered cholinergic transmission. At biochemical level, impairment of flavoenzyme activities and of some KCN-insensitive oxygen-consuming enzymes is detected. At proteomic level, at least 15 abundant proteins are affected by R53.1 gene silencing, among which superoxide dismutases. CONCLUSION AND GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE For the first time we addressed the existence of different isoforms of FAD-metabolizing enzymes in nematodes. A correlation between FAD synthase silencing and flavoenzyme derangement, energy shortage and redox balance impairment is apparent. In this aspect R53.1-interfered nematodes could provide an animal model system for studying human pathologies with alteration in flavin homeostasis/flavoenzyme biogenesis.

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Eckhard Boles

Goethe University Frankfurt

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