Publications by authors named "Mariagioia Zampagni"

Oxidative stress has a prominent role in life-span regulation of living organisms. One of the endogenous free radical scavenger systems is associated with glutathione (GSH), the most abundant nonprotein thiol in mammalian cells, acting as a major reducing agent and in antioxidant defense by maintaining a tight control over redox status. We have recently designed a series of novel S-acyl-GSH derivatives capable of preventing amyloid oxidative stress and cholinergic dysfunction in Alzheimer disease models, upon an increase in GSH intake.

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Increasing evidence indicates that interaction of amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) with the cell membrane is a primary step in Alzheimer's disease (AD) neurotoxicity. In particular, it has been demonstrated that lipid rafts are key sites of Aβ production, aggregation, and interaction with the cell membrane. In this study we show that Aβ42 oligomers are recruited to lipid rafts, leading to plasma membrane perturbation and Ca2+ dyshomeostasis in primary fibroblasts from familial AD patients bearing APPVal717Ile, PS-1Leu392Val, or PS-1Met146Leu gene mutations.

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Several lines of evidence suggest that the initial events of amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) oligomerization and deposition in Alzheimer's disease (AD) involve the interaction of soluble oligomers with neuronal membranes. In this study, we show that Aβ42 oligomers are recruited to lipid rafts, which are ordered membrane microdomains rich in cholesterol and gangliosides, resulting in lipid peroxidation, Ca(2+) dyshomeostasis and membrane permeabilization in primary fibroblasts from familial AD patients (FAD) bearing APPVal717Ile, PS-1Leu392Val or PS-1Met146Leu gene mutations. Moreover, the presence of significantly higher levels of lipid peroxidation correlated with greater structural modification in detergent resistant domains (DRMs) isolated from APP and PS-1 fibroblasts, compared to WT fibroblasts from healthy subjects.

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UV-induced toxicity is characterized by marked oxidative stress, accompanied by the depletion of key cellular antioxidants, particularly glutathione (GSH). Replenishing cellular GSH may represent a means of counteracting UV-induced toxicity: however, treatment with free GSH is not therapeutically effective due to its unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties. In this study, we show that S-acyl-glutathione (acyl-SG) derivatives, which consist of an acyl chain (of variable length and saturation) linked via a thioester bond to GSH, increase intracellular levels of reduced GSH in primary skin fibroblasts, adenocarcinoma HeLa and neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells.

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Chaperones are the primary regulators of the proteostasis network and are known to facilitate protein folding, inhibit protein aggregation, and promote disaggregation and clearance of misfolded aggregates inside cells. We have tested the effects of five chaperones on the toxicity of misfolded oligomers preformed from three different proteins added extracellularly to cultured cells. All the chaperones were found to decrease oligomer toxicity significantly, even at very low chaperone/protein molar ratios, provided that they were added extracellularly rather than being overexpressed in the cytosol.

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Oxidative stress-mediated neuronal death may be initiated by a decrease in glutathione (GSH), whose levels are reduced in mitochondrial and synaptosomal fractions of specific CNS regions in Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. Currently, the use of GSH as a therapeutic agent is limited by its unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties. In this study, we designed the synthesis of new S-acyl glutathione (acyl-SG) thioesters of fatty acids via N-acyl benzotriazole-intermediate production and investigated their potential for targeted delivery of the parent GSH and free fatty acid to amyloid-exposed fibroblasts from familial AD patients and human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells.

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A group of diverse human pathologies is associated with proteins unable to retain their native state and convert into prefibrillar and fibrillar amyloid aggregates that are then deposited in the extracellular space. Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) have been found to physically associate with these deposits and also to promote their formation in vitro. However, the effect of GAGs on the toxicity of these aggregates has been investigated in only one protein system, the amyloid β peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease.

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Cell therapy is a promising approach for the treatment of neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. However, the presence of toxic aggregates in tissue raises the question of whether grafted stem cells are susceptible to amyloid toxicity before they differentiate into mature neurons. To address this question, we investigated the relative vulnerability of human mesenchymal stromal cells and their neuronally differentiated counterparts to Aβ(42) oligomers and whether susceptibility correlates with membrane GM1 content, a key player in oligomer toxicity.

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The assembly of soluble proteins into ordered fibrillar aggregates with cross-β structure is an essential event of many human diseases. The polypeptides undergoing aggregation are generally small in size. To explore if the small size is a primary determinant for the formation of amyloids under pathological conditions we have created two databases of proteins, forming amyloid-related and non-amyloid deposits in human diseases, respectively.

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Peptides and proteins can convert from their soluble forms into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, giving rise to pathological conditions ranging from neurodegenerative disorders to systemic amyloidoses. It is increasingly recognized that protein oligomers forming early in the process of fibril aggregation represent the pathogenic species in protein deposition diseases. The N-terminal domain of the HypF protein from Escherichia coli (HypF-N) has previously been shown to form, under distinct conditions, two types of HypF-N oligomers with indistinguishable morphologies but distinct structural features at the molecular level.

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Increasing evidence indicates that cell surfaces are early interaction sites for Abeta-derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs) and neurons in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. Our previous data showed significant oxidative damage at the plasma membrane in fibroblasts from familial AD patients with enhanced Abeta production. Here, we report that lipid rafts, ordered membrane microdomains, are chronic mediators of Abeta-induced lipid peroxidation in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells overexpressing amyloid precursor protein (APPwt) and APPV717G genes and in fibroblasts bearing the APPV717I gene mutation.

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The aberrant assembly of peptides and proteins into fibrillar aggregates proceeds through oligomeric intermediates that are thought to be the primary pathogenic species in many protein deposition diseases. We describe two types of oligomers formed by the HypF-N protein that are morphologically and tinctorially similar, as detected with atomic force microscopy and thioflavin T assays, though one is benign when added to cell cultures whereas the other is toxic. Structural investigation at a residue-specific level using site-directed labeling with pyrene indicated differences in the packing of the hydrophobic interactions between adjacent protein molecules in the oligomers.

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Increasing evidence supports the idea that the initial events of Abeta oligomerization and cytotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease involve the interaction of amyloid Abeta-derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs) with the cell membrane. This also indicates lipid rafts, ordered membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol, sphingolipids and gangliosides, as likely primary interaction sites of ADDLs. To shed further light on the relation between ADDL-cell membrane interaction and oligomer cytotoxicity, we investigated the dependence of ADDLs binding to lipid rafts on membrane cholesterol content in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells.

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A growing body of evidence implicates low membrane cholesterol in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here we show that Aβ42 soluble oligomers accumulate more slowly and in reduced amount at the plasma membranes of PS-1L392V and APPV717I fibroblasts from familial AD (FAD) patients enriched in cholesterol content than at the counterpart membranes. The Aβ42-induced production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the increase in membrane lipoperoxidation were also prevented by high membrane cholesterol, thus resulting in a higher resistance to amyloid toxicity with respect to control fibroblasts.

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A substantial lack of information is recognized on the features underlying the variable susceptibility to amyloid aggregate toxicity of cells with different phenotypes. Recently, we showed that different cell types are variously affected by early aggregates of a prokaryotic hydrogenase domain (HypF-N). In the present study we investigated whether differentiation affects cell susceptibility to amyloid injury using a human neurotypic SH-SY5Y cell differentiation model.

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Recent data support the role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease (AD). In particular, glutathione (GSH) metabolism is altered and its levels are decreased in affected brain regions and peripheral cells from AD patients and in experimental models of AD. In the past decade, interest in the protective effects of various antioxidants aimed at increasing intracellular GSH content has been growing.

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