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17
result(s) for
"Buson, Alberto"
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Mannitol Enhances Antibiotic Sensitivity of Persister Bacteria in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilms
by
Barraud, Nicolas
,
Jarolimek, Wolfgang
,
Rice, Scott A.
in
Aminoglycoside antibiotics
,
Aminoglycosides
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
2013
The failure of antibiotic therapies to clear Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection, the key mortality factor for cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, is partly attributed to the high tolerance of P. aeruginosa biofilms. Mannitol has previously been found to restore aminoglycoside sensitivity in Escherichia coli by generating a proton-motive force (PMF), suggesting a potential new strategy to improve antibiotic therapy and reduce disease progression in CF. Here, we used the commonly prescribed aminoglycoside tobramycin to select for P. aeruginosa persister cells during biofilm growth. Incubation with mannitol (10-40 mM) increased tobramycin sensitivity of persister cells up to 1,000-fold. Addition of mannitol to pre-grown biofilms was able to revert the persister phenotype and improve the efficacy of tobramycin. This effect was blocked by the addition of a PMF inhibitor or in a P. aeruginosa mutant strain unable to metabolise mannitol. Addition of glucose and NaCl at high osmolarity also improved the efficacy of tobramycin although to a lesser extent compared to mannitol. Therefore, the primary effect of mannitol in reverting biofilm associated persister cells appears to be an active, physiological response, associated with a minor contribution of osmotic stress. Mannitol was tested against clinically relevant strains, showing that biofilms containing a subpopulation of persister cells are better killed in the presence of mannitol, but a clinical strain with a high resistance to tobramycin was not affected by mannitol. Overall, these results suggest that in addition to improvements in lung function by facilitating mucus clearance in CF, mannitol also affects antibiotic sensitivity in biofilms and does so through an active, physiological response.
Journal Article
Inhibition of vascular adhesion protein 1 protects dopamine neurons from the effects of acute inflammation and restores habit learning in the striatum
by
Becchi, Serena
,
Balleine, Bernard W.
,
Buson, Alberto
in
Allyl Compounds - pharmacology
,
Allyl Compounds - therapeutic use
,
Alzheimer's disease
2021
Background
Changes in dopaminergic neural function can be induced by an acute inflammatory state that, by altering the integrity of the neurovasculature, induces neuronal stress, cell death and causes functional deficits. Effectively blocking these effects of inflammation could, therefore, reduce both neuronal and functional decline. To test this hypothesis, we inhibited vascular adhesion protein 1 (VAP-1), a membrane-bound protein expressed on the endothelial cell surface, that mediates leukocyte extravasation and induces oxidative stress.
Method
We induced dopaminergic neuronal loss by infusing lipopolysaccharide (LPS) directly into the substantia nigra (SN) in rats and administered the VAP-1 inhibitor, PXS-4681A, daily.
Results
LPS produced: an acute inflammatory response, the loss of dopaminergic neurons in the SN, reduced the dopaminergic projection to SN target regions, particularly the dorsolateral striatum (DLS), and a deficit in habit learning, a key function of the DLS. In an attempt to protect SN neurons from this inflammatory response we found that VAP-1 inhibition not only reduced neutrophil infiltration in the SN and striatum, but also reduced the associated striatal microglia and astrocyte response. We found VAP-1 inhibition protected dopamine neurons in the SN, their projections to the striatum and promoted the functional recovery of habit learning. Thus, we reversed the loss of habitual actions, a function usually dependent on dopamine release in DLS and sensitive to striatal dysfunction.
Conclusions
We establish, therefore, that VAP-1 inhibition has an anti-inflammatory profile that may be beneficial in the treatment of dopamine neuron dysfunction caused by an acute inflammatory state in the brain.
Journal Article
The lysyl oxidase like 2/3 enzymatic inhibitor, PXS‐5153A, reduces crosslinks and ameliorates fibrosis
by
Yow, Tin T.
,
Zhou, Wenbin
,
Findlay, Alison D.
in
Amino Acid Oxidoreductases - antagonists & inhibitors
,
Animals
,
Cancer
2019
Fibrosis is characterized by the excessive deposition of extracellular matrix and crosslinked proteins, in particular collagen and elastin, leading to tissue stiffening and disrupted organ function. Lysyl oxidases are key players during this process, as they initiate collagen crosslinking through the oxidation of the ε‐amino group of lysine or hydroxylysine on collagen side‐chains, which subsequently dimerize to form immature, or trimerize to form mature, collagen crosslinks. The role of LOXL2 in fibrosis and cancer is well documented, however the specific enzymatic function of LOXL2 and LOXL3 during disease is less clear. Herein, we describe the development of PXS‐5153A, a novel mechanism based, fast‐acting, dual LOXL2/LOXL3 inhibitor, which was used to interrogate the role of these enzymes in models of collagen crosslinking and fibrosis. PXS‐5153A dose‐dependently reduced LOXL2‐mediated collagen oxidation and collagen crosslinking in vitro. In two liver fibrosis models, carbon tetrachloride or streptozotocin/high fat diet‐induced, PXS‐5153A reduced disease severity and improved liver function by diminishing collagen content and collagen crosslinks. In myocardial infarction, PXS‐5153A improved cardiac output. Taken together these results demonstrate that, due to their crucial role in collagen crosslinking, inhibition of the enzymatic activities of LOXL2/LOXL3 represents an innovative therapeutic approach for the treatment of fibrosis.
Journal Article
Mannitol Enhances Antibiotic Sensitivity of Persister Bacteria in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilms: e84220
by
Barraud, Nicolas
,
Jarolimek, Wolfgang
,
Rice, Scott A
in
Escherichia coli
,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
2013
The failure of antibiotic therapies to clear Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection, the key mortality factor for cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, is partly attributed to the high tolerance of P. aeruginosa biofilms. Mannitol has previously been found to restore aminoglycoside sensitivity in Escherichia coli by generating a proton-motive force (PMF), suggesting a potential new strategy to improve antibiotic therapy and reduce disease progression in CF. Here, we used the commonly prescribed aminoglycoside tobramycin to select for P. aeruginosa persister cells during biofilm growth. Incubation with mannitol (10-40 mM) increased tobramycin sensitivity of persister cells up to 1,000-fold. Addition of mannitol to pre-grown biofilms was able to revert the persister phenotype and improve the efficacy of tobramycin. This effect was blocked by the addition of a PMF inhibitor or in a P. aeruginosa mutant strain unable to metabolise mannitol. Addition of glucose and NaCl at high osmolarity also improved the efficacy of tobramycin although to a lesser extent compared to mannitol. Therefore, the primary effect of mannitol in reverting biofilm associated persister cells appears to be an active, physiological response, associated with a minor contribution of osmotic stress. Mannitol was tested against clinically relevant strains, showing that biofilms containing a subpopulation of persister cells are better killed in the presence of mannitol, but a clinical strain with a high resistance to tobramycin was not affected by mannitol. Overall, these results suggest that in addition to improvements in lung function by facilitating mucus clearance in CF, mannitol also affects antibiotic sensitivity in biofilms and does so through an active, physiological response.
Journal Article
Stabilization of the open conformation of Insulin-Regulated Aminopeptidase by a novel substrate-selective small molecule inhibitor
2024
Insulin-Regulated Aminopeptidase (IRAP) is an enzyme with important biological functions and the target of several drug-discovery efforts although no clinically useful inhibitors have been reported yet. We combined in silico screening with a medicinal chemistry optimization campaign to discover a nanomolar inhibitor of IRAP based on a pyrazolylpyrimidine scaffold. This compound displays an excellent selectivity profile versus homologous aminopeptidases and kinetic analysis suggests it utilizes an uncompetitive mechanism of action when inhibiting the cleavage of a typical dipeptidic substrate. Surprisingly, the compound is a poor inhibitor of the processing of the physiological cyclic peptide substrate oxytocin and a 10mer antigenic epitope precursor but displays a biphasic inhibition profile for the trimming of a 9mer antigenic peptide and is active in blocking IRAP-dependent cross-presentation of an 8mer epitope. To better understand the mechanism of action and the basis for the unusual substrate selectivity of this inhibitor, we solved the crystal structure of the compound in complex with IRAP. The structure indicated direct zinc(II) engagement by the pyrazolylpyrimidine scaffold and revealed that the compound binds to an open conformation of the enzyme in a pose that should block the conformational transition to the closed conformation previously observed with other low molecular weight inhibitors and hypothesized to be important for catalysis. This compound constitutes the first IRAP inhibitor targeting the active site that utilizes a conformation-specific mechanism of action, provides insight into the intricacies of the IRAP catalytic cycle, and highlights a novel approach to regulating IRAP activity by blocking its conformational rearrangements.
Identification, sequencing and mutagenesis of the gene for a d-carbamoylase from Agrobacterium radiobacter
by
Grassato, Luigi
,
Nuti, Marco P.
,
Basaglia, Marina
in
Agrobacterium radiobacter
,
cauA
,
d-Amino acid
1996
A clone positive for
d-carbamoylase activity (2.7 kb
HindIII-
BamH1 DNA fragment) was obtained by screening a genomic library of
Agrobacterium radiobacter in
Escherichia coli. This DNA fragment contains an open reading frame of 912 bp which is predicted to encode a peptide of 304 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 34247 Da. The
d-carbamoylase gene. named
cauA, was placed under the control of T7 RNA-dependent promoter and expressed in
E. coli BL21 (DE3). After induction with isopropyl-thio-β-
d-galactopyranoside, the synthesis of
d-carbamoylase in
E. coli reached about 40% of the total protein. The expressed protein was shown to possess a molecular mass, on SDS-PAGE, of 36 kDa and showed an enhanced allowed us to establish that a Pro
14→Leu
14 exchange leads to an inactive enzyme species, while a Cys
279→Ser
279 exchange did not impair the functional properties of the enxyme.
Journal Article
Identification, sequencing and mutagenesis of the gene for a d-carbamoylase from Agrobacterium radiobacter
by
Grassato, Luigi
,
Nuti, Marco P.
,
Basaglia, Marina
in
Agrobacterium radiobacter
,
Amidohydrolases - genetics
,
Amidohydrolases - metabolism
1996
Abstract
A clone positive for d-carbamoylase activity (2.7 kb HindIII-BamH1 DNA fragment) was obtained by screening a genomic library of Agrobacterium radiobacter in Escherichia coli. This DNA fragment contains an open reading frame of 912 bp which is predicted to encode a peptide of 304 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 34247 Da. The d-carbamoylase gene. named cauA, was placed under the control of T7 RNA-dependent promoter and expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3). After induction with isopropyl-thio-β-d-galactopyranoside, the synthesis of d-carbamoylase in E. coli reached about 40% of the total protein. The expressed protein was shown to possess a molecular mass, on SDS-PAGE, of 36 kDa and showed an enhanced allowed us to establish that a Pro14→Leu14 exchange leads to an inactive enzyme species, while a Cys279→Ser279 exchange did not impair the functional properties of the enxyme.
Journal Article
De novo transcriptome characterization of Vitis vinifera cv. Corvina unveils varietal diversity
by
Zenoni, Sara
,
Ferrarini, Alberto
,
Zago, Elisa Debora
in
Cultivars
,
de novo assembly
,
Environmental factors
2013
Plants such as grapevine (Vitis spp.) display significant inter-cultivar genetic and phenotypic variation. The genetic components underlying phenotypic diversity in grapevine must be understood in order to disentangle genetic and environmental factors.
We have shown that cDNA sequencing by RNA-seq is a robust approach for the characterization of varietal diversity between a local grapevine cultivar (Corvina) and the PN40024 reference genome. We detected 15,161 known genes including 9463 with novel splice isoforms, and identified 2321 potentially novel protein-coding genes in non-annotated or unassembled regions of the reference genome. We also discovered 180 apparent private genes in the Corvina genome which were missing from the reference genome.
The de novo assembly approach allowed a substantial amount of the Corvina transcriptome to be reconstructed, improving known gene annotations by robustly defining gene structures, annotating splice isoforms and detecting genes without annotations. The private genes we discovered are likely to be nonessential but could influence certain cultivar-specific characteristics. Therefore, the application of de novo transcriptome assembly should not be restricted to species lacking a reference genome because it can also improve existing reference genome annotations and identify novel, cultivar-specific genes.
Journal Article
A streamlined workflow for single-cells genome-wide copy-number profiling by low-pass sequencing of LM-PCR whole-genome amplification products
by
Flohr, Penny
,
Ferrarini, Alberto
,
de Bono, Johann
in
Adenocarcinoma - genetics
,
Adenocarcinoma of Lung
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2018
Chromosomal instability and associated chromosomal aberrations are hallmarks of cancer and play a critical role in disease progression and development of resistance to drugs. Single-cell genome analysis has gained interest in latest years as a source of biomarkers for targeted-therapy selection and drug resistance, and several methods have been developed to amplify the genomic DNA and to produce libraries suitable for Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS). However, most protocols require several enzymatic and cleanup steps, thus increasing the complexity and length of protocols, while robustness and speed are key factors for clinical applications. To tackle this issue, we developed a single-tube, single-step, streamlined protocol, exploiting ligation mediated PCR (LM-PCR) Whole Genome Amplification (WGA) method, for low-pass genome sequencing with the Ion Torrent™ platform and copy number alterations (CNAs) calling from single cells. The method was evaluated on single cells isolated from 6 aberrant cell lines of the NCI-H series. In addition, to demonstrate the feasibility of the workflow on clinical samples, we analyzed single circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and white blood cells (WBCs) isolated from the blood of patients affected by prostate cancer or lung adenocarcinoma. The results obtained show that the developed workflow generates data accurately representing whole genome absolute copy number profiles of single cell and allows alterations calling at resolutions down to 100 Kbp with as few as 200,000 reads. The presented data demonstrate the feasibility of the Ampli1™ WGA-based low-pass workflow for detection of CNAs in single tumor cells which would be of particular interest for genome-driven targeted therapy selection and for monitoring of disease progression.
Journal Article
The High Polyphenol Content of Grapevine Cultivar Tannat Berries Is Conferred Primarily by Genes That Are Not Shared with the Reference Genome
by
Carrau, Francisco
,
Ferrarini, Alberto
,
Da Silva, Cecilia
in
antioxidant activity
,
Antioxidants - metabolism
,
Berries
2013
The grapevine (Vitis vinifera) cultivar Tannat is cultivated mainly in Uruguay for the production of high-quality red wines. Tannat berries have unusually high levels of polyphenolic compounds, producing wines with an intense purple color and remarkable antioxidant properties. We investigated the genetic basis of these important characteristics by sequencing the genome of the Uruguayan Tannat clone UY11 using Illumina technology, followed by a mixture of de novo assembly and iterative mapping onto the PN40024 reference genome. RNA sequencing data for genome reannotation were processed using a combination of reference-guided annotation and de novo transcript assembly, allowing 5901 previously unannotated or unassembled genes to be defined and resulting in the discovery of 1873 genes that were not shared with PN40024. Expression analysis showed that these cultivar-specific genes contributed substantially (up to 81.24%) to the overall expression of enzymes involved in the synthesis of phenolic and polyphenolic compounds that contribute to the unique characteristics of the Tannat berries. The characterization of the Tannat genome therefore indicated that the grapevine reference genome lacks many genes that appear to be relevant for the varietal phenotype.
Journal Article