318 results match your criteria: "Universita' di Roma[Affiliation]"
Langmuir
July 2007
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185 - Rome, Italy.
We present an extensive set of radio wave dielectric relaxation spectroscopy measurements of aqueous suspensions of different size unilamellar L-alpha-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) vesicles, in a temperature range between 15 and 55 C, where the lipidic bilayer experiences structural transitions from the gel to the rippled phase (at the pretransition temperature) and from the rippled to the liquid phase (at the main transition temperature). The dielectric spectra have been analyzed in the light of the Cole-Cole relaxation function, and the main dielectric parameters-the dielectric increment Deltaepsilon and the mean relaxation frequency omega(0)--have been evaluated as a function of temperature. These parameters display a very complex phenomenology, depending on the structural arrangement of the lipid-water interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
October 2007
Dipartimento di Fisiologia Umana e Farmacologia, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Roma, Italy.
Purpose: GABAA receptors from the brain of patients afflicted with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) become less efficient (run-down) when repetitively activated by GABA. Experiments were designed to investigate whether the antiepileptic drug, levetiracetam (LEV), which is used as an adjunctive treatment for medically intractable MTLE, counteracts the GABAA receptor run-down.
Methods: GABAA receptors were microtransplanted from the brains of patients afflicted with MTLE into Xenopus oocytes.
Ann N Y Acad Sci
March 2007
Dipartimento di Biologia, Universita' di Roma Tor Vergata, via Ricerca Scientifica, 1, 00133 Roma (I), Italy.
Many studies suggest that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ pool rather than cytosolic Ca2+ may play a crucial role in triggering apoptosis. In this study, we performed an image analysis of cells loaded with the fluorescent dye chlortetracycline (CTC) to in situ analyze Ca2+ changes within the ER in apoptosing promonocytic U937 cells. The results, validated through the use of thapsigargin (THG) as ER Ca2+ depletor, confirm the findings that apoptotic cells have a Ca2+-depleted ER, in contrast with treated but still viable cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
March 2007
Dipartimento di Biologia, Universita' di Roma Tor Vergata, via Ricerca Scientifica, 1, 00133 Roma (I), Italy.
Thapsigargin (THG), a selective inhibitor of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-ATPases, causes the rapid emptying of ER Ca2+; in some cell types, this is accompanied by apoptosis, whereas other cells maintain viability. In order to understand the molecular determinants of such a different behavior, we explored the role of oxygen versus nitrogen radicals, by analyzing the apoptogenic ability of THG in the presence of inhibitors of glutathione or nitric oxide (NO) synthesis, respectively. We observed that oxygen radicals play a sensitizing role whereas nitrogen radicals prevent THG-dependent apoptosis, showing that the apoptogenic effect of THG is redox sensitive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Neurosci
March 2007
INFM, Dip di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
In a recent experiment, functional magnetic resonance imaging blood oxygen level-dependent (fMRI BOLD) signals were compared in different cortical areas (primary-visual and associative), when subjects were required covertly to name images in two protocols: sequences of images, with and without intervening delays. The amplitude of the BOLD signal in protocols with delay was found to be closer to that without delays in associative areas than in primary areas. The present study provides an exploratory proposal for the identification of the neural activity substrate of the BOLD signal in quasi-realistic networks of spiking neurons, in networks sustaining selective delay activity (associative) and in networks responsive to stimuli, but whose unique stationary state is one of spontaneous activity (primary).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
May 2007
Dipartimento di Biotecnologie Cellulari ed Ematologia, Universita' di Roma, Italy.
Phosphorylation assay is a widespread technique usually necessary for the identification of a specific kinase substrate and/or for the measurement of kinase activity. As an example of the technique, here we describe an assay aimed to test the phosphorylation of the myelin basic protein (MBP) by protein kinase C (PKC), which is overexpressed and purified from Neurospora. The kinase is immunopurified from Neurospora using the expression vector pMYX2 and the FLAG epitope.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
May 2007
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 2, I-00185 Rome, Italy.
In this note, we present a set of dielectric loss relaxation measurements of aqueous charged liposome suspensions during the whole aggregation process induced by oppositely charged adsorbing polyions. The system experiences two concomitant effects known as "reentrant condensation" and "charge inversion," resulting in the formation of liposome aggregates whose average size reaches a maximum in the vicinity of the electroneutrality condition, accompanied to a progressive reduction of their overall electrical charge. Far from the neutrality, from both sides, polyion-coated liposomes exist with a charge of opposite sign.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Gastroenterol
July 2001
Department of Internal Medicine, Universita' di Roma Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy.
Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis are caused by an excessive immune-inflammatory reaction in the intestinal wall. Analysis of the types of immune response ongoing in the inflamed intestine has revealed that in Crohn disease there is predominantly a T helper cell type 1 response, with exaggerated production of interleukin (IL)-12 and interferon-gamma, whereas in ulcerative colitis the lesion seems to be more of an antibody-mediated hypersensitivity reaction. Despite these differences, downstream inflammatory events are probably similar in both conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
September 2006
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185 Rome, Italy.
We present a set of electrical conductivity measurements of a mesoscopic equilibrium cluster phase in the aggregation process of charged particles induced by oppositely charged polyions. These measurements supply strong experimental evidence that correlated adsorption of polyions is driven by the counterion release. This phenomenon, known to occur in DNA-liposome mixtures in lamellar phase, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
December 2006
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185 Rome, Italy.
In this note, we present a set of electrical conductivity measurements of polyion-induced liposome aggregate aqueous suspensions that supports evidence for the existence of a cluster phase in low-density colloidal systems. Heavily NaCl-loaded liposomes, dispersed in a low-conductivity aqueous solution, are forced by electrostatic interactions with oppositely charged polyions to build up into individual aggregates, where the single vesicles maintain their integrity and, upon an external force, are able to release their ionic content. The conductivity data, within the effective medium approximation theory for heterogeneous systems, are in agreement with the picture of a suspension built up by clusters of vesicles which are able to preserve their content from the external medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
August 2006
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185, Rome, Italy.
In this note, we present a set of radiowave dielectric spectroscopy measurements of two dilute, differently-charged polyelectrolyte solutions, under different solvent conditions. We have found that both the dielectric strength, Delta epsilon, and the relaxation time, tau(ion), of the dielectric relaxation process associated with the counterion polarization along a length scale of the order of the correlation length obey the scaling laws with the polyion concentration, according to the Ito model. This is verified with good accuracy independently of the quality of the solvent, which has been varied from poor to good solvent conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Pharmacol
November 2006
Dipartimento di Biologia, Universita' di Roma Tor Vergata, via Ricerca Scientifica, 100133 Rome, Italy.
U937 monocytic cells show two main apoptotic nuclear morphologies, budding and cleavage, that are the result of two independent morphological routes, since they never interconvert one into the other, and are differently modulated by stressing or physiological apoptogenic agents [Exp Cell Res 1996; 223:340-347]. With the aim of understanding which biochemical alterations are at the basis of these alternative apoptotic morphologies, we performed an in situ analysis that showed that in U937 cells intracellular glutathione (GSH) is lost in cells undergoing apoptosis by cleavage, whereas it is maintained in apoptotic budding cells. Lymphoma cells BL41 lose GSH in apoptosis, and show the cleavage nuclear morphology; the same cells latently infected with Epstein Barr Virus (E2r line) undergo apoptosis without GSH depletion and show the budding nuclear morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
August 2005
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185 Rome, Italy.
The interaction of the three main components of the mitochondrial membrane, namely cardiolipin, phosphatidylcholine, and phosphatidylethanolamine, has been studied investigating mixed cardiolipin-phosphatidylcholine and cardiolipin-phosphatidylethanolamine monolayers at different cardiolipin molar fractions. The thermodynamic behavior of the mixed monolayers was investigated by means of surface pressure and surface potential measurements, and atomic force microscopy was employed to characterize the morphology of the monolayers. Langmuir isotherms and surface potential curves show a regular behavior with a progressive transition toward the isotherm of the pure component.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGastroenterology
March 2006
Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Patologia, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
Background & Aims: Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE) is an autosomal recessive disease clinically defined by gastrointestinal dysmotility, cachexia, ptosis, ophthalmoparesis, peripheral neuropathy, white-matter changes in brain magnetic resonance imaging, and mitochondrial abnormalities. Loss-of-function mutations in thymidine phosphorylase gene induce pathologic accumulations of thymidine and deoxyuridine that in turn cause mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) defects (depletion, multiple deletions, and point mutations). Our study is aimed to define the molecular basis of gastrointestinal dysmotility in a case of MNGIE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFApoptosis
March 2006
Dipartimento di Biologia, Universita' di Roma Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy.
NMR technology has dramatically contributed to the revolution of image diagnostic. NMR apparatuses use combinations of microwaves over a homogeneous strong (1 Tesla) static magnetic field. We had previously shown that low intensity (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
February 2006
Istituto Pasteur-Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti, Dipartimento di Fisiologia Umana e Farmacologia, Centro di Eccellenza BEMM, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, I00185 Rome, Italy.
Cyclothiazide (CTZ), a positive allosteric modulator of ionotropic alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid (AMPA)-type glutamate receptors, is used frequently to block the desensitization of both native and heterologously expressed AMPA receptors. Specifically, CTZ is known to produce a fast inhibition of AMPA receptor desensitization and a much slower potentiation of the AMPA current. By using patch-clamp techniques, the effects of CTZ were studied in HEK 293 cells stably transfected with the rat flip GluR1 subunit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytochemistry
March 2006
Dipartimento di Biologia Vegetale, Universita' di Roma "La Sapienza", Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Roma, Italy.
Polygalacturonase-inhibiting proteins are plant extracellular leucine-rich repeat proteins that specifically bind and inhibit fungal polygalacturonases. The interaction with PGIP limits the destructive potential of polygalacturonases and might trigger the plant defence responses induced by oligogalacturonides. A high degree of polymorphism is found both in PGs and PGIPs, accounting for the specificity of different plant inhibitors for PGs from different fungi.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys Chem
April 2006
Dipartimento di Fisica, Research Center SOFT-INFM-CNR and CNISM Universita' di Roma "La Sapienza" Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185- Rome, Italy.
The radiowave dielectric dispersions of DNA in different water-organic co-solvent mixtures have been measured in the frequency range from 100 kHz to 100 MHz, where the polarization mechanism is generally attributed to the confinement of counterions within some specific lengths, either along tangential or perpendicular to the polyion chain. The dielectric dispersions have been analyzed on the basis of two partially different dielectric models, a continuum counterion fluctuation model proposed by Mandel and a discrete charged site model, proposed by Minakata. The influence of the quality of the solvent on the dielectric parameters has been investigated in water-methanol and water-glycerol mixtures at different composition, by varying the permittivity (m) and the viscosity eta of the solvent phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
September 2005
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185, Rome, Italy.
The dielectric properties of polyelectrolytes in solvent of different quality have been measured in an extended frequency range and the dielectric parameters associated with the polarization induced by counterion fluctuation over some peculiar polyion lengths have been evaluated. Following the scaling theory of polyelectrolyte solutions and the recent models developed by Dobrynin and Rubinstein that explicitly take into account the quality of the solvent on the polyion chain conformation, we have reviewed and summarized a set of scaling laws that describe the dielectric behavior of these systems in the dilute and semidilute regime. Moreover, for poorer solvents, where theory of hydrophobic polyelectrolytes predicts, and computer simulation confirms, a particular chain structure consisting of partially collapsed monomers (beads) connected by monomer strings, we derived a scaling law.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Sci
September 2005
Istituto di Biologia e Patologia Molecolari CNR, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, P. le A. Moro, 5, 00185 Roma, Italy.
Here, we show that the subcellular localization of alpha-like RNA polymerase II core subunit 3 (RPB3) is regulated during muscle differentiation. We have recently demonstrated that the expression of RPB3 is regulated during muscle differentiation and that, inside RNA polymerase II (RNAP II), it is directly involved in contacting regulatory proteins such as the myogenic transcription factor Myogenin and activating transcription factor ATF4. We show for the first time, that RPB3, in addition to its presence and role inside the RNAP II core enzyme, accumulates in the cytoplasm of cycling myogenic cells and migrates to the nucleus upon induction of the differentiation program.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
June 2005
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma "La Sapienza," Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185 Rome, Italy.
We present a set of low-frequency electrical conductivity measurements of solutions of differently charged, salt-free polyelectrolytes in poor- and in good-solvent conditions, in the semidilute concentration regime. The data have been analyzed and discussed in light of the necklace model for hydrophobic polyelectrolytes recently proposed by Dobrynin et al. [Macromolecules 29, 2974 (1996)] that predicts the chains to collapse into spheroidal cores connected by narrow strings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
August 2005
Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale A. Moro 5, I-00185-Rome, Italy.
We investigated the formation of complexes between cationic liposomes built up by DOTAP and three linear anionic polyions, with different charge density and flexibility, such as a single-stranded ssDNA, a double-stranded dsDNA and the polyacrylate sodium salt [NaPAA] of three different molecular weights. Our aim is to gain further insight into the formation mechanism of polyion-liposome aggregates of different sizes (lipoplexes), by comparing the behavior of DNA with a model polyelectrolyte, such as NaPAA, with approximately the same charge density but with a higher flexibility. We employed dynamic light scattering (DLS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements, in order to explore both the hydrodynamic and structural properties of the aggregates resulting from polyion-liposome interaction and to present a comprehensive picture of the complexation process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Neurosci
June 2005
Dipartimento di Fisiologia Umana and Dottorato di ricerca in Neurofisiologia, Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
We have used simulations to study the learning dynamics of an autonomous, biologically realistic recurrent network of spiking neurons connected via plastic synapses, subjected to a stream of stimulus-delay trials, in which one of a set of stimuli is presented followed by a delay. Long-term plasticity, produced by the neural activity experienced during training, structures the network and endows it with active (working) memory, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFASEB J
September 2005
Dipartimento di Biología, Universita' di Roma, Tor Vergata, Roma, Italy.
Bax is a cytosolic protein, which in response to stressing apoptotic stimuli, is activated and translocates to mitochondria, thus initiating the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. In spite of many studies and the importance of the issue, the molecular mechanisms that trigger Bax translocation are still obscure. We show by computer simulation that the two cysteine residues of Bax may form disulfide bridges, producing conformational changes that favor Bax translocation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Imaging
February 2005
Istituto Nazionale Fisica della Materia, Centro di Ricerca e Sviluppo SOFT (INFM CRS-SOFT) c/o Universita' di Roma La Sapienza, I-00185 Roma, Italy.
The development of NMR diffusion imaging and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) has offered the possibility of studying the porous structures beyond anatomical imaging. In fact, random molecular motions, within tissue components, probe tissue microstructures. Up to now, the DTI method was mainly used to investigate cerebral morphology and study white matter diseases.
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