Valerio Marino
University of Verona
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Valerio Marino.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014
Stefan Sulmann; Daniele Dell'Orco; Valerio Marino; Petra Behnen; Karl-Wilhelm Koch
Fundamental components of signaling pathways are switch modes in key proteins that control start, duration, and ending of diverse signal transduction events. A large group of switch proteins are Ca(2+) sensors, which undergo conformational changes in response to oscillating intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations. Here we use dynamic light scattering and a recently developed approach based on surface plasmon resonance to compare the protein dynamics of a diverse set of prototypical Ca(2+)-binding proteins including calmodulin, troponin C, recoverin, and guanylate cyclase-activating protein. Surface plasmon resonance biosensor technology allows monitoring conformational changes under molecular crowding conditions, yielding for each Ca(2+)-sensor protein a fingerprint profile that reflects different hydrodynamic properties under changing Ca(2+) conditions and is extremely sensitive to even fine alterations induced by point mutations. We see, for example, a correlation between surface plasmon resonance, dynamic light scattering, and size-exclusion chromatography data. Thus, changes in protein conformation correlate not only with the hydrodynamic size, but also with a rearrangement of the protein hydration shell and a change of the dielectric constant of water or of the protein-water interface. Our study provides insight into how rather small signaling proteins that have very similar three-dimensional folding patterns differ in their Ca(2+)-occupied functional state under crowding conditions.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
Valerio Marino; Stefan Sulmann; Karl-Wilhelm Koch; Daniele Dell'Orco
The effects of physiological concentration of magnesium on the switch states of the neuronal calcium sensor proteins recoverin, GCAP1 and GCAP2 were investigated. Isothermal titration calorimetry was applied for binding studies. Circular dichroism spectroscopy was used to characterize protein thermal stability, secondary and tertiary structure in conditions of high and low [Ca²⁺], mimicking respectively the dark-adapted and light-exposed photoreceptor states during the phototransduction cascade. Further, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were run to investigate the dynamical structural properties of GCAP1 in its activator, inhibitor and putative transitory states. Our results confirmed that Mg²⁺ is unable to trigger the typical Ca²⁺-induced conformational change of recoverin (myristoyl switch) while it decreases its thermal stability. Interestingly, Mg²⁺ seems to affect the conformation of GCAP2 both at high and low [Ca²⁺], however the variations are more substantial for myristoylated GCAP2 in the absence of Ca²⁺. GCAP1 is responsive to Mg²⁺ only in its low [Ca²⁺] state and Mg²⁺-GCAP1 tertiary structure slightly differs from both apo and Ca²⁺-bound states. Finally, MD simulations suggest that the GCAP1 state harboring one Mg²⁺ ion bound to EF2 acquires structural characteristics that are thought to be relevant for the activation of the guanylate cyclase. Moreover, all the putative Mg²⁺-bound states of myristoylated GCAP1 are structurally less flexible than Ca²⁺-bound states. GCAP1 acquires a more compact tertiary structure that is less accessible to the solvent, thereby inducing a different conformation to the myristoyl moiety, which might be crucial for the activation of the guanylate cyclase. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 13th European Symposium on Calcium.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Alessandra Astegno; Valentina La Verde; Valerio Marino; Daniele Dell'Orco; Paola Dominici
In plants, transient elevation of intracellular Ca(2+) concentration in response to abiotic stress is responsible for glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) activation via association with calmodulin (CaM), an EF-hand protein consisting of two homologous domains (N and C). An unusual 1:2 binding mode of CaM to CaM-binding domains of GAD has long been known, however the contribution of the two CaM domains in target recognition and activation remains to be clarified. Here, we explored the coupling between physicochemical properties of Arabidopsis CaM1 (AtCaM1) and Arabidopsis GAD1 activation, focusing on each AtCaM1 lobe. We found that the four EF-loops of AtCaM1 differently contribute to the ~20 μM apparent affinity for Ca(2+) and the C-lobe shows a ~6-fold higher affinity than N-lobe (Kd(app) 5.6 μM and 32 μM for C- and N-lobes, respectively). AtCaM1 responds structurally to Ca(2+) in a manner similar to vertebrate CaM based on comparison of Ca(2+)-induced changes in hydrophobicity exposure, secondary structure, and hydrodynamic behavior. Molecular dynamics simulations of AtCaM1 apo and Ca(2+)-bound reveal that the latter state is significantly less flexible, although regions of the N-lobe remain quite flexible; this suggests the importance of N-lobe for completing the transition to the extended structure of holoprotein, consistent with data from ANS fluorescence, CD spectroscopy, and SEC analysis. Moreover, enzymatic analysis reveal that mutations in the two lobes affect GAD1 activation in similar ways and only intact AtCaM1 can fully activate GAD1. Taken together, our data provide new insights into the CaM lobes role in interactions between CaM and plant GAD.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2014
Daniele Dell’Orco; Stefan Sulmann; Patrick Zägel; Valerio Marino; Karl-Wilhelm Koch
Cone dystrophy-related mutations in guanylate cyclase-activating protein 1 (GCAP1) are known to cause severe disturbance of their Ca2+-sensing properties affecting also their regulatory modes. However, crucial biochemical properties of mutant GCAP1 forms have not been fully elucidated and regulatory parameters of GCAP1 mutants have not been considered within the context of a comprehensive description of the phototransduction cascade kinetics. We investigated therefore the structure–function relationships of four dystrophy-relevant point mutations in GCAP1 harboring the following amino acid substitutions: E89K, D100E, L151F, and G159V. All mutations decrease the catalytic efficiency in regulating the target guanylate cyclase and decrease the affinity of Ca2+-binding in at least one, but in most cases two EF-hand Ca2+-binding sites. Although the wild type and mutants of GCAP1 displayed large differences in Ca2+-binding and regulation, circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy revealed that all proteins preserved an intact secondary and tertiary structure with a significant rearrangement of the aromatic residues upon binding of Ca2+. To gain insight into the dynamic changes of cyclic GMP levels in a photoreceptor cell, we incorporated parameters describing the regulation of target guanylate cyclase by GCAP1 mutants into a comprehensive kinetic model of phototransduction. Modeling led us to conclude that the contribution of GCAP1 to the dynamic synthesis of cyclic GMP in rod cells would depend on the expression level of the wild-type form. Although the synthesis rate controlled by GCAP1 remains at a constant level, in the case of high expression levels of cone-dystrophy GCAP1 mutants it would not contribute at all to shaping the cGMP rate, which becomes dynamically regulated solely by the other present Ca2+-sensor GCAP2.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2015
Valerio Marino; Alexander Scholten; Karl-Wilhelm Koch; Daniele Dell'Orco
Two recently identified missense mutations (p. L84F and p. I107T) in GUCA1A, the gene coding for guanylate cyclase (GC)-activating protein 1 (GCAP1), lead to a phenotype ascribable to cone, cone-rod and macular dystrophies. Here, we present a thorough biochemical and biophysical characterization of the mutant proteins and their distinct molecular features. I107T-GCAP1 has nearly wild-type-like protein secondary and tertiary structures, and binds Ca(2+) with a >10-fold lower affinity than the wild-type. On the contrary, L84F-GCAP1 displays altered tertiary structure in both GC-activating and inhibiting states, and a wild type-like apparent affinity for Ca(2+). The latter mutant also shows a significantly high affinity for Mg(2+), which might be important for stabilizing the GC-activating state and inducing a cooperative mechanism for the binding of Ca(2+), so far not been observed in other GCAP1 variants. Moreover, the thermal stability of L84F-GCAP1 is particularly high in the Ca(2+)-bound, GC-inhibiting state. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest that such enhanced stability arises from a deeper burial of the myristoyl moiety within the EF1-EF2 domain. The simulations also support an allosteric mechanism connecting the myristoyl moiety to the highest-affinity Ca(2+) binding site EF3. In spite of their remarkably distinct molecular features, both mutants cause constitutive activation of the target GC at physiological Ca(2+). We conclude that the similar aberrant regulation of the target enzyme results from a similar perturbation of the GCAP1-GC interaction, which may eventually cause dysregulation of both Ca(2+) and cyclic GMP homeostasis and result in retinal degeneration.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2015
Jörg Robin; Jens Brauer; Stefan Sulmann; Valerio Marino; Daniele Dell’Orco; Christoph Lienau; Karl-Wilhelm Koch
Shaping the temporal response of photoreceptors is facilitated by a well-balanced second messenger cascade, in which two neuronal Ca(2+)-sensor proteins operate in a sequential relay mechanism. Although they share structurally similar sensing units, they differentially activate the same target protein. Here, as a prototypical case in Ca(2+)-mediated signal processing, we investigate differential cellular responsiveness in protein conformational dynamics on a nanosecond time scale. For this, we have site-specifically labeled cysteine residues in guanylate cyclase-activating protein GCAP1 by the fluorescent dye Alexa647 and probed its local environment via time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Fluorescence lifetime and rotational anisotropy measurements reveal a distinct structural movement of the polypeptide chain around position 106 upon release of Ca(2+). This is supported by analyzing the diffusional dye motion in a wobbling-in-a-cone model and by molecular dynamics simulations. We conclude that GCAP1 and its cellular cognate GCAP2 operate by distinctly different switching mechanisms despite their high structural homology.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2016
Farina Vocke; Nicole Weisschuh; Valerio Marino; Silvia Malfatti; Samuel G. Jacobson; Charlotte M. Reiff; Daniele Dell’Orco; Karl-Wilhelm Koch
Macular dystrophy leads to progressive loss of central vision and shows symptoms similar to age-related macular degeneration. Genetic screening of patients diagnosed with macular dystrophy disclosed a novel mutation in the GUCA1A gene, namely a c.526C > T substitution leading to the amino acid substitution p.L176F in the guanylate cyclase-activating protein 1 (GCAP1). The same variant was found in three families showing an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance. For a full functional characterization of the L176F mutant we expressed and purified the mutant protein and measured key parameters of its activating properties, its Ca2+/Mg2+-binding, and its Ca2+-induced conformational changes in comparison to the wildtype protein. The mutant was less sensitive to changes in free Ca2+, resulting in a constitutively active form under physiological Ca2+-concentration, showed significantly higher activation rates than the wildtype (90-fold versus 20-fold) and interacted with an higher apparent affinity with its target guanylate cyclase. However, direct Ca2+-binding of the mutant was nearly similar to the wildtype; binding of Mg2+ occurred with higher affinity. We performed molecular dynamics simulations for comparing the Ca2+-saturated inhibiting state of GCAP1 with the Mg2+-bound activating states. The L176F mutant exhibited significantly lower flexibility, when three Ca2+ or two Mg2+ were bound forming probably the structural basis for the modified GCAP1 function.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Valerio Marino; Daniele Dell’Orco
GCAP1 is a neuronal calcium sensor protein that regulates the phototransduction cascade in vertebrates by switching between activator and inhibitor of the target guanylate cyclase (GC) in a Ca2+-dependent manner. We carried out exhaustive molecular dynamics simulations of GCAP1 and determined the intramolecular communication pathways involved in the specific GC activator/inhibitor switch. The switch was found to depend on the Mg2+/Ca2+ loading states of the three EF hands and on the way the information is transferred from each EF hand to specific residues at the GCAP1/GC interface. Post-translational myristoylation is fundamental to mediate long range allosteric interactions including the EF2-EF4 coupling and the communication between EF4 and the GC binding interface. Some hubs in the identified protein network are the target of retinal dystrophy mutations, suggesting that the lack of complete inhibition of GC observed in many cases is likely due to the perturbation of intra/intermolecular communication routes.
Biochemical Journal | 2016
Elena Butturini; Giovanni Gotte; Daniele Dell'Orco; Giulia Chiavegato; Valerio Marino; Diana Canetti; Flora Cozzolino; Maria Gaia Monti; Piero Pucci; Sofia Mariotto
Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) is a transcription factor activated by the phosphorylation of tyrosine 705 in response to many cytokines and growth factors. Recently, the roles for unphosphorylated STAT3 (U-STAT3) have been described in response to cytokine stimulation, in cancers, and in the maintenance of heterochromatin stability. It has been reported that U-STAT3 dimerizes, shuttles between the cytoplasm and nucleus, and binds to DNA, thereby driving genes transcription. Although many reports describe the active role of U-STAT3 in oncogenesis in addition to phosphorylated STAT3, the U-STAT3 functional pathway remains elusive.In this report, we describe the molecular mechanism of U-STAT3 dimerization, and we identify the presence of two intermolecular disulfide bridges between Cys367 and Cys542 and Cys418 and Cys426, respectively. Recently, we reported that the same cysteines contribute to the redox regulation of STAT3 signaling pathway both in vitro and in vivo The presence of these disulfides is here demonstrated to largely contribute to the structure and the stability of U-STAT3 dimer as the dimeric form rapidly dissociates upon reduction in the S-S bonds. In particular, the Cys367-Cys542 disulfide bridge is shown to be critical for U-STAT3 DNA-binding activity. Mutation of the two Cys residues completely abolishes the DNA-binding capability of U-STAT3. Spectroscopic investigations confirm that the noncovalent interactions are sufficient for proper folding and dimer formation, but that the interchain disulfide bonds are crucial to preserve the functional dimer. Finally, we propose a reaction scheme of U-STAT3 dimerization with a first common step followed by stabilization through the formation of interchain disulfide bonds.
Nanoscale | 2014
Valerio Marino; Alessandra Astegno; Marco Pedroni; Fabio Piccinelli; Daniele Dell'Orco