Publications by authors named "Francesco Francia"

Ionic liquids (ILs) are salts composed of a combination of organic or inorganic cations and anions characterized by a low melting point, often below 100 °C. This property, together with an extremely low vapor pressure, low flammability and high thermal stability, makes them suitable for replacing canonical organic solvents, with a reduction of industrial activities impact on the environment. Although in the last decades the eco-compatibility of ILs has been extensively verified through toxicological tests performed on model organisms, a detailed understanding of the interaction of these compounds with biological membranes is far from being exhaustive.

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Polycythemia vera is a myeloproliferative neoplasm with increased risk of thrombosis and progression to myelofibrosis. However, no disease-specific risk factors have been identified so far. Circulating extracellular vesicles (EVs) are mostly of megakaryocyte (MK-EVs) and platelet (PLT-EVs) origin and, along with phosphatidylethanolamine (PE)-EVs, play a role in cancer and thrombosis.

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The kinetics of flash-induced re-reduction of the Photosystem II (PS II) primary electron donor P was studied in solution and in trehalose glassy matrices at different relative humidity. In solution, and in the re-dissolved glass, kinetics were dominated by two fast components with lifetimes in the range of 2-7 μs, which accounted for >85% of the decay. These components were ascribed to the direct electron transfer from the redox-active tyrosine Y to P.

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A fluorescent derivative of trehalose with two dansyl groups (DAT) has been synthesized. It is characterised by a large Stokes shift, good permeability in human living cells and a well detectable fluorescent signal within the cells. Notably, in intestinal cells DAT is sequestered in vesicles induced by trehalose pre-treatment and colocalizes with lipid droplets.

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Article Synopsis
  • The ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc) enzyme is essential for photosynthesis and respiration in bacteria, consisting of three subunits that aid in processing electrons and protons.
  • Research indicates that both the His291 and Lys329 residues of cyt b are crucial for the electron and proton transfer at the Q site, with specific mutations affecting the enzyme's functionality.
  • The Lys329Arg mutation allowed for normal photosynthesis and enzyme activity, while other mutations severely impaired these functions, suggesting that a positive charge at position 329 is vital for efficient operation of the enzyme.
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Background: In photosynthetic organisms, transketolase (TK) is involved in the Calvin-Benson cycle and participates to the regeneration of ribulose-5-phosphate. Previous studies demonstrated that TK catalysis is strictly dependent on thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) and divalent ions such as Mg.

Methods: TK from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (CrTK) was recombinantly produced and purified to homogeneity.

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The ubiquinol:cytochrome (cyt) c oxidoreductase (or cyt bc) is an important membrane protein complex in photosynthetic and respiratory energy transduction. In bacteria such as Rhodobacter capsulatus it is constituted of three subunits: the iron-sulfur protein, cyt b and cyt c, which form two catalytic domains, the Q (hydroquinone (QH) oxidation) and Q (quinone (Q) reduction) sites. At the Q site, the pathways of bifurcated electron transfers emanating from QH oxidation are known, but the associated proton release routes are not well defined.

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Ionic liquids (ILs) are promising materials exploited as solvents and media in many innovative applications, some already used at the industrial scale. The chemical structure and physicochemical properties of ILs can differ significantly according to the specific applications for which they have been synthesized. As a consequence, their interaction with biological entities and toxicity can vary substantially.

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Conformational protein dynamics is known to be hampered in amorphous matrixes upon dehydration, both in the absence and in the presence of glass forming disaccharides, like trehalose, resulting in enhanced protein thermal stability. To shed light on such matrix effects, we have compared the retardation of protein dynamics in photosynthetic bacterial reaction centers (RC) dehydrated at controlled relative humidity in the absence (RC films) or in the presence of trehalose (RC-trehalose glasses). Small scale RC dynamics, associated with the relaxation from the dark-adapted to the light-adapted conformation, have been probed up to the second time scale by analyzing the kinetics of electron transfer from the photoreduced quinone acceptor (QA(-)) to the photoxidized primary donor (P(+)) as a function of the duration of photoexcitation from 7 ns (laser pulse) to 20 s.

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The photosynthetic reaction center (RC) is a membrane pigment-protein complex that catalyzes the initial charge separation reactions of photosynthesis. Following photoexcitation, the RC undergoes conformational relaxations which stabilize the charge-separated state. Dehydration of the complex inhibits its conformational dynamics, providing a useful tool to gain insights into the relaxational processes.

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The facultative photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus is characterized in its interaction with the toxic oxyanions tellurite (Te(IV)) and selenite (Se(IV)) by a highly variable level of resistance that is dependent on the growth mode making this bacterium an ideal organism for the study of the microbial interaction with chalcogens. As we have reported in the past, while the oxyanion tellurite is taken up by R. capsulatus cells via acetate permease and it is reduced to Te(0) in the cytoplasm in the form of splinter-like black intracellular deposits no clear mechanism was described for Se(0) precipitation.

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Reversible redox post-translational modifications such as oxido-reduction of disulfide bonds, S-nitrosylation, and S-glutathionylation, play a prominent role in the regulation of cell metabolism and signaling in all organisms. These modifications are mainly controlled by members of the thioredoxin and glutaredoxin families. Early studies in photosynthetic organisms have identified the Calvin-Benson cycle, the photosynthetic pathway responsible for carbon assimilation, as a redox regulated process.

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An increasing number of publications report on the efficacy of trehalose in preserving organisms, cells, and macromolecules from adverse environmental conditions such as extreme temperatures and dryness. Although the mechanism by which this disaccharide exerts its protection is still debated, the implementation of trehalose as stabilizer is becoming a praxis in several preparative protocols from the pharmaceutical industry. We tested the ability of trehalose in protecting R-Phycoerythrin (R-PE), a pigment-protein complex widely used as fluorescent marker, from thermal denaturation.

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Following light-induced electron transfer between the primary donor (P) and quinone acceptor (Q(A)) the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (RC) undergoes conformational relaxations which stabilize the primary charge separated state P(+)Q(A)(-). Dehydration of RCs from Rhodobacter sphaeroides hinders these conformational dynamics, leading to acceleration of P(+)Q(A)(-) recombination kinetics [Malferrari et al., J.

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We report on the relationship between electron transfer, conformational dynamics, and hydration in photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The kinetics of electron transfer from the photoreduced quinone acceptor (Q(A)(-)) to the photo-oxidized primary donor (P(+)), a charge recombination process sensitive to the conformational dynamics of the RC, has been analyzed at room temperature in dehydrated RC-detergent films as a function of the residual water content under controlled relative humidity (r). The hydration level was evaluated by FTIR spectroscopy from the area of the combination band of water (5155 cm(-1)).

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The cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex (cyt bc(1)) plays a major role in the electrogenic extrusion of protons across the membrane responsible for the proton motive force to produce ATP. Proton-coupled electron transfer underlying the catalysis of cyt bc(1) is generally accepted, but the molecular basis of coupling and associated proton efflux pathway(s) remains unclear. Herein we studied Zn(2+)-induced inhibition of Rhodobacter capsulatus cyt bc(1) using enzyme kinetics, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and electrochemically induced Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy with the purpose of understanding the Zn(2+) binding mechanism and its inhibitory effect on cyt bc(1) function.

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The coupling between electron transfer (ET) and the conformational dynamics of the cofactor−protein complex in photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides in water/glycerol solutions or embedded in dehydrated poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) films or trehalose glasses is reported. Matrix effects were studied by time-resolved 95 GHz high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at room (290 K) and low (150 K) temperature. ET from the photoreduced quinone acceptor (QA•−) to the photo-oxidized donor (P865•+) is strongly matrix-dependent at room temperature: In the trehalose glasses, the recombination kinetics of P865•+QA•−, probed by EPR and optical spectroscopies, is faster and broadly distributed as compared to that of RCs in solution, reflecting the inhibition of the RC relaxation from the dark- to the light-adapted conformational substate and the hindrance of substate interconversion.

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Transhydrogenase couples hydride transfer between NADH and NADP(+) to proton translocation across a membrane. The binding of Zn(2+) to the enzyme was shown previously to inhibit steps associated with proton transfer. Using Zn K-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS), we report here on the local structure of Zn(2+) bound to Escherichia coli transhydrogenase.

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In the present work a data analysis approach, based on XAFS data, is proposed for the identification of most probable binding motifs of unknown mononuclear zinc sites in metalloproteins. This approach combines multiple-scattering EXAFS analysis performed within the rigid-body refinement scheme, non-muffin-tin ab initio XANES simulations, average structural information on amino acids and metal binding clusters provided by the Protein Data Bank, and Debye-Waller factor calculations based on density functional theory. The efficiency of the method is tested by using three reference zinc proteins for which the local structure around the metal is already known from protein crystallography.

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The coupling between electron transfer and protein dynamics has been investigated in reaction centers (RCs) from the wild type (wt) and the carotenoid-less strain R26 of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Recombination kinetics between the primary photoreduced quinone acceptor (QA-) and photoxidized donor (P+) have been analyzed at room temperature in RCs incorporated into glassy trehalose matrices of different water/sugar ratios. As previously found in R26 RCs, also in the wt RC, upon matrix dehydration, P+QA- recombination accelerates and becomes broadly distributed, reflecting the inhibition of protein relaxation from the dark-adapted to the light-adapted conformation and the hindrance of interconversion between conformational substates.

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Trehalose is a nonreducing disaccharide of glucose found in organisms, which can survive adverse conditions such as extreme drought and high temperatures. Furthermore, isolated structures, as enzymes or liposomes, embedded in trehalose are preserved against stressing conditions [see, e.g.

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We report on the effects of water activity and surrounding viscosity on electron transfer reactions taking place within a membrane protein: the reaction center (RC) from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We measured the kinetics of charge recombination between the primary photoxidized donor (P(+)) and the reduced quinone acceptors. Water activity (aW) and viscosity (eta) have been tuned by changing the concentration of cosolutes (trehalose, sucrose, glucose, and glycerol) and the temperature.

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We report on the x-ray absorption fine structure of the Fe(2+) site in photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Crystallographic studies show that Fe(2+) is ligated with four N(epsilon) atoms from four histidine (His) residues and two O(epsilon) atoms from a Glu residue. By considering multiple scattering contributions to the x-ray absorption fine structure function, we improved the structural resolution of the site: His residues were split into two groups, characterized by different Fe-N(epsilon) distances, and two distinct Fe-O(epsilon) bond lengths resolved.

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The core complex formed by the reaction center and the light harvesting complex 1 (RC-LH1) was purified from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We analyzed the lipid and ubiquinone (UQ) complements copurifying with the RC-LH1 complex and with the peripheral antenna (LH2). In RC-LH1 UQ was almost ten times more concentrated than in the LH2 and in the native membranes from which the complexes were extracted.

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The metal content of bovine NADH-Q oxidoreductase determined by inductively-coupled plasma atomic-emission spectroscopy reveals the presence of about one atom of zinc per molecule of flavin mononucleotide. We applied Zn K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (EXAFS) to investigate the local structure of the bound zinc ion and to identify the nature of the coordinating residues. The EXAFS spectrum is consistent with a structured zinc binding site.

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