
Mauro Fasano- MS, Ph.D.
- Professor at University of Insubria
Mauro Fasano
- MS, Ph.D.
- Professor at University of Insubria
About
211
Publications
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Introduction
Protein biomarkers of Parkinson's disease. Cellular models of Parkinson's disease
Current institution
Additional affiliations
January 2012 - December 2015
November 2000 - present
November 2000 - present
Education
October 1989 - November 1992
November 1985 - July 1989
Publications
Publications (211)
Background
Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with a strong genetic component and high heterogeneity. Essential ASD refers to patients who do not have other comorbidities. This study aimed to investigate the genetic basis of essential ASD using whole exome sequencing (WES) and array-comparative genomic hybridization (...
Recent evidence supports an association between amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Parkinson’s disease (PD). Indeed, prospective population-based studies demonstrated that about one-third of ALS patients develop parkinsonian (PK) signs, even though different neuronal circuitries are involved. In this context, proteomics represents a valuable t...
Hemoproteins include several heme-binding proteins with distinct structure and function. The presence of the heme group confers specific reactivity and spectroscopic properties to hemoproteins. In this review, we provide an overview of five families of hemoproteins in terms of dynamics and reactivity. First, we describe how ligands modulate coopera...
Neurodegenerative diseases are multifactorial. This means that several genetic, epigenetic, and environmental factors contribute to their emergence. Therefore, for the future management of these highly prevalent diseases, it is necessary to change perspective. If a holistic viewpoint is assumed, the phenotype (the clinicopathological convergence) e...
Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) is a T-cell lymphoproliferative neoplasm caused by the human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1). Two viral proteins, Tax-1 and HBZ play important roles in HTLV-1 infectivity and in HTLV-1-associated pathologies by altering key pathways of cell homeostasis. However, the molecular mechanisms through which the t...
The 16p13.11 microdeletion, whose prevalence in the general population is about 0.04%, is known in literature as a predisposition factor to neurodevelopmental disorders, being found in about 0.13% of patients with schizophrenia, in 0.5–0.6% of patient with epilepsy, cognitive impairment, autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and aggressiveness. The goal o...
The sudden outbreak and worldwide spread of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic pushed the scientific community to find fast solutions to cope with the health emergency. COVID-19 complexity, in terms of clinical outcomes, severity, and response to therapy suggested the use of multifactorial strategies, characteristic of the network medicine, to approach the st...
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive degeneration of the corticospinal motor neurons, which ultimately leads to death. The repeat expansion in chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 (C9ORF72) represents the most common genetic cause of ALS and it is also involved in the pathogenesis of other ne...
The COVID-19 pandemic has disclosed the fundamental role played by pre-symptomatic and asymptomatic infected individuals in the transmission of the infection. The early detection of those individuals, who unwittingly can transmit the infection to other subjects, remains the key strategy within the context of the containment measures adopted by publ...
"Omics" techniques (e.g., proteomics, genomics, metabolomics), from which huge datasets can nowadays be obtained, require a different way of thinking about data analysis that can be summarized with the idea that, when data are enough, they can speak for themselves. Indeed, managing huge amounts of data imposes the replacement of the classical deduc...
Rationale: Septic patients have typically reduced concentrations of hemoglobin and albumin, the major components of non-carbonic buffer power(β). This could expose patients to high pH variations during acid-base disorders. Objectives: To compare, in-vitro, non-carbonic β of septic patients with that of healthy volunteers, and evaluate its distinct...
Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) is a powerful tool to associate a disease phenotype to a group of genes/proteins. GSEA attributes a specific weight to each gene/protein in the input list that depends on a metric of choice, which is usually represented by quantitative expression data. However, expression data are not always available. Here, GSEA...
The neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) interacts with IgG and albumin at acidic pH within endosomes, thus protecting these plasma proteins from degradation. Recently, we proposed fibrinogen as a new binding partner of FcRn.
This work was aimed at providing a direct demonstration of FcRn-fibrinogen binding at acidic pH by Fluorescence Correlation Spectrosc...
The diagnosis of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection relies on the detection of viral RNA by real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) performed with respiratory specimens, especially nasopharyngeal swabs. However, this procedure requires specialized medical personnel, centralized laborat...
Neurodegenerative proteinopathies are complex diseases that share some pathogenetic processes. One of these is the failure of the proteostasis network (PN), which includes all components involved in the synthesis, folding, and degradation of proteins, thus leading to the aberrant accumulation of toxic protein aggregates in neurons. The single compo...
Mutations in PARK2 gene are the most frequent cause of familial forms of Parkinson’s disease (PD). This gene encodes Parkin, an E3 ubiquitin ligase involved in several cellular mechanisms, including mitophagy. Parkin loss-of-function is responsible for the cellular accumulation of damaged mitochondria, which in turn determines an increment of react...
Aims:
Nitrobindins (Nbs) are evolutionary conserved all-β-barrel heme-proteins displaying a highly solvent-exposed heme-Fe(III) atom. The physiological role(s) of Nbs is almost unknown. Here, the structural and functional properties of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Nb (Mt-Nb(III)) and Homo sapiens Nb (Hs-Nb(III)) have been investigated and compar...
Objectives
This study analyzed salivary samples of COVID-19 patients and compared the results with their clinical and laboratory data.
Methods
Salivary samples of 25 COVID-19 patients were analyzed by rRT-PCR. The following data were collected: age, sex, comorbidities, drugs. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and ultrasensitive reactive C protein (usRCP...
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a multifactorial disorder whose etiology is not completely understood. Strong evidences suggest that mitochondrial impairment and altered mitochondrial disposal play a key role in the development of this pathology. Here we show this association in both genetic and sporadic forms of the disease. Moreover, we describe the...
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most frequent neurodegenerative disease worldwide and the availability of early biomarkers and novel biotargets represents an urgent medical need. The main pathogenetic hallmark of PD is the specific loss of nigral dopaminergic neurons, in which mitochondrial dysfunction plays a crucial role. Mitochondrial pro...
The spread of “-omics” strategies has strongly changed the way of thinking about the scientific method. Indeed, managing huge amounts of data imposes the replacement of the classical deductive approach with a data-driven inductive approach, so to generate mechanistical hypotheses from data. Data reduction is a crucial step in the process of proteom...
Background:
Deinococcus radiodurans R1 (DR) survives conditions of extreme desiccation, irradiation and exposure to genotoxic chemicals, due to efficient DNA breaks repair, also through Mn2+ protection of DNA repair enzymes.
Methods:
Possible annotated domains of the DR1533 locus protein (Shp) were searched by bioinformatic analysis. The gene wa...
Due to the pivotal role of mitochondrial alterations in several diseases, the Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) has promoted in recent years an initiative to characterize the mitochondrial human proteome, the mitochondrial human proteome project (mt-HPP). Here, we generated an updated version of the functional mitochondrial human proteome network,...
The submission deadline is postposed to July 20th 2018. Young investigators: Many oral presentations (15') will be selected from presented abstracts!! G Coffee Breakes Welcome party, lunches and coffee breakes will be served at the Congress venue and included in registration fee as well as abstract book.
Mitochondrial impairment is one of the most important hallmarks of Parkinson's disease (PD) pathogenesis. In this work, we wanted to verify the molecular basis of altered mitochondrial dynamics and disposal in Substantia nigra specimens of sporadic PD patients, by the comparison with two cellular models of PD. Indeed, SH-SY5Y cells were treated wit...
Background:
Fibrinogen is a central player in the blood coagulation cascade and one of the most abundant plasma proteins. This glycoprotein also triggers important events (e.g., cell spreading, the respiratory burst and degranulation) in neutrophil cells via a αMβ2integrin-mediated binding to the cell surface. Yet, little is known about the intera...
Background:
Increasing cannabis consumption among adolescents, studies that link its early use with mental illnesses, and the political debate on cannabis legalization together call for an urgent need to study molecular underpinnings of adolescent brain vulnerability. The emerging role of epigenetic mechanisms in psychiatric diseases led us to hyp...
Background:
Increasing cannabis consumption among adolescents, studies that link its early use with mental illnesses, and the political debate on cannabis legalization together call for an urgent need to study molecular underpinnings of adolescent brain vulnerability. The emerging role of epigenetic mechanisms in psychiatric diseases led us to hyp...
Human serum heme-albumin (HSA-heme-Fe) displays heme-based ligand binding and (pseudo-)enzymatic properties. Here, the effect of the prototypical drug warfarin on kinetics and thermodynamics of NO binding to ferric and ferrous HSA-heme-Fe (HSA-heme-Fe(III) and HSA-heme-Fe(II), respectively) and on the NO-mediated reductive nitrosylation of the heme...
The mitochondrial Human Proteome Project aims at understanding the function of the mitochondrial proteome and its crosstalk with the proteome of other organelles. Being able to choose a suitable and validated enrichment protocol of functional mitochondria, based on the specific needs of the downstream proteomics analysis, would greatly help the res...
Cantharidin, a monoterpene isolated from the insect blister beetle, has long been used as a medicinal agent in the traditional Chinese medicine. Cantharidin inhibits a subgroup of serine/threonine phosphatases, thus inducing cell growth inhibition and cytotoxicity. Cantharidin has anticancer activity in vitro, since it is able of inducing p53-depen...
Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant protein in plasma, displays several functions including heme transfer from high- and low-density lipoproteins to hemopexin; therefore, the HSA-heme complex acquires transiently heme-based (pseudo-)enzymatic properties. In particular, ferric human serum heme-albumin (HSA-heme) and ferrous nitrosylated HSA...
Introduction:
Multifactorial disorders are the result of nonlinear interactions of several factors; therefore, a reductionist approach does not appear to be appropriate. Proteomics is a global approach that can be efficiently used to investigate pathogenetic mechanisms of neurodegenerative diseases.
Areas covered:
Here, we report a general intro...
Mitochondria possess a proteolytic system that contributes to the regulation of mitochondrial dynamics, mitochondrial biogenesis and mitophagy. We aimed at the identification by bottom-up proteomics of altered protein processing due to the activation of mitochondrial proteases in a cellular model of impaired dopamine homeostasis. Moreover, we optim...
The mitochondrial human proteome project (mt-HPP) was initiated by the Italian HPP group as a part of both the chromosome-centric initiative (C-HPP) and the "biology and disease driven" initiative (B/D-HPP). In recent years several reports highlighted how mitochondrial biology and disease are regulated by specific interactions with non-mitochondria...
Parkinson's disease ( PD ) is one of the most prevalent neurodegenerative disorders, characterized by the loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. PD mostly occurs sporadically and its cause remains unknown, nevertheless the discovery of familiar forms of PD , characterized by mutations of genes encoding proteins associat...
Brought to you by the editorial team of Cell Death and Differentiation, Cell Death and Disease is a peer-reviewed author-pays online journal in the field of translational cell death. It seeks to promote diverse and integrated areas of Experimental and Internal Medicine with its specialties, including Cancer, Immunity and Neuroscience.
Retinoids are a class of chemicals derived from vitamin A metabolism, playing important and diverse functions. Vitamin A, also named all-trans-retinol (all-trans-ROL), is coverted into two classes of biologically active retinoids, i.e. 11-cis-retinoids and acidic retinoids. Among acidic retinoids, all-trans-retinoic acid (all-trans-RA) and 9-cis-re...
Human serum albumin (HSA): (i) controls the plasma oncotic pressure, (ii) modulates fluid distribution between the body compartments, (iii) represents the depot and carrier of endogenous and exogenous compounds, (iv) increases the apparent solubility and lifetime of hydrophobic compounds, (v) affects pharmacokinetics of many drugs, (vi) inactivates...
Inductive reasoning has been the corner stone of a large plethora of proteomics investigations, shifting the a priori paradigm of classical cellular and molecular biology to the experimental observation of protein modulation. These studies are now providing better definitions of their application framework.
The hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl esters of hexanoate (NphOHe) and decanoate (NphODe) by human serum albumin (HSA) at Tyr411, located at the FA3-FA4 site, has been investigated between pH 5.8 and 9.5, at 22.0°C. Values of Ks, k+2, and k+2/Ks obtained at [HSA] ≥ 5×[NphOXx] and [NphOXx] ≥ 5×[HSA] (Xx is NphOHe or NphODe) match very well each other; mor...
Human serum albumin (HSA) represents an important determinant of plasma oncotic pressure and a relevant factor that modulates fluid distribution between the body compartments. Moreover, HSA (i) represents the depot and transporter of several compounds, both endogenous and exogenous, (ii) affects the pharmacokinetics of many drugs, (iii) regulates c...
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a complex neurodegenerative disease whose etiology has not been completely characterized. Many cellular processes have been proposed to play a role in the neuronal damage and loss: defects in the proteosomal activity, altered protein processing, increased reactive oxygen species burden. Among them, the involvement of a d...
Amino polystyrene nanospheres shown to be efficient and controllable delivery devices, capable of transporting several bioactive cargoes. Recently, the design of a new device for pro-drug activation, using these nanospheres with palladium encapsulated onto them, has been developed successfully. To study the influence of the cellular uptake of these...
The use of paramagnetic species to perturb the NMR properties of solutes is described. Usually lanthanide ions or lanthanide complexes with organic ligands are used. Observed effects include chemical shift changes and enhanced spin relaxation. The lanthanide-induced shifts (LIS) can be used to investigate molecular structures or to distinguish enan...
Imatinib, an inhibitor of the Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase, is approximately 95% bound to plasma proteins, α1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) being the primary carrier. However, human serum albumin (HSA) may represent the secondary carrier of imatinib in pathological states characterized by low AGP levels, such as pancreatic cancer, hepatic cirrhosis, hepatitis...
Human serum albumin (HSA) is involved physiologically in heme scavenging; in turn, heme-albumin (HSA-heme-Fe) displays globin-like properties. Here, the allosteric effect of ibuprofen and warfarin on the local atomic structure around the ferric heme-Fe (heme-Fe(III)) atom of HSA-heme-Fe (HSA-heme-Fe(III)) has been probed by Fe-K edge X-ray absorpti...
Altered dopamine homeostasis plays a key role in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. The generation of reactive oxygen species by spontaneous dopamine oxidation impairs mitochondrial function, causing in turn an enhancement of oxidative stress. Recent findings have highlighted the role of mitochondrial outer membrane proteins in the regulation...
Diagnosis of Parkinson's disease, the second most common neurodegenerative disease, is based on the appearance of motor symptoms. A panel of protein biomarkers in the T-lymphocyte proteome was previously proposed as a Parkinson's disease signature. Here, we designed an LC-MS based method to quantitatively evaluate this protein signature by multiple...
Starting from Hippocrates, at the Age of Pericles, the One Health initiative takes inspiration from the Greek father of medicine and is based on his approach which recognizes that human health, animal health and environmental health are part of a whole body. Chiron, the wisest of all centaurs, is the classical mythological representation of an inte...
Impaired dopamine homeostasis is an early event in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. Generation of intracellular reactive oxygen species consequent to dopamine oxidation leads to mitochondrial dysfunction and eventually cell death. Alterations in the mitochondrial proteome due to dopamine exposure were investigated in the SH-SY5Y human neuro...
Human serum heme–albumin (HSA–heme–Fe) displays reactivity and spectroscopic properties similar to those of heme proteins. Here, the nitrite reductase activity of ferrous HSA–heme–Fe [HSA–heme–Fe(II)] is reported. The value of the second-order rate constant for the reduction of \( {\text{NO}}_{2}^{ - } \) to NO and the concomitant formation of nitr...
Isoniazid represents a first-line anti-tuberculosis medication in prevention and treatment. This prodrug is activated by a mycobacterial catalase-peroxidase enzyme called KatG in Mycobacterium tuberculosis), thereby inhibiting the synthesis of mycolic acid, required for the mycobacterial cell wall. Moreover, isoniazid activation by KatG produces so...
Serum albumin, α-fetoprotein, afamin (also named α-albumin and vitamin E binding protein), and vitamin D binding protein are members of the albuminoid superfamily. Albuminoids are plasma proteins characterized by a marked ability for ligand binding and transport. Here, a focused phylogenetic analysis of sequence evolution by maximum likelihood of f...
Mitochondria carry maternally inherited genetic material, called the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA), which can be defined as the 25th human chromosome. The chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project (c-HPP) has initially focused its activities addressing the characterization and quantification of the nuclear encoded proteins. Following the last Intern...
Given the ability of human serum albumin (HSA) to bind hydrophobic ligands, the binding mode of α-tocopherol, the most representative member of the vitamin E family, is reported. α-Tocopherol binds to HSA with K $_{\rm d}^0$ = (7.0 ± 3.0) × 10(-6) M (pH 7.2, 25.0°C). Competitive and allosteric modulation of α-tocopherol binding to full-length and t...
Are protein functions continuous or discretized? Proteomics investigations are starting to address this non-trivial awesome question focusing upon determining the nature of biological molecular relationships. In the following editorial we present a number of experimental studies published in this themed Proteomics Issue demonstrating the developmen...
Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant protein in human plasma, could be considered as a prototypic monomeric allosteric protein, since the ligand-dependent conformational adaptability of HSA spreads beyond the immediate proximity of the binding site(s). As a matter of fact, HSA is a major transport protein in the bloodstream and the regulati...
(panel A) Kinetic progress curve of CO binding ([CO] = 4.0×10-5 ) to 5.0×10-6 M HSA-heme-Fe(II) at pH 7.0 and 25°C in 1.0×10-1 M phosphate buffer. Continuous line: non-linear least-squares fitting of experimental data according to eq. (2) employing i = 3. Dashed line: non-linear least-squares fitting of experimental data according to eq. (2) employ...
Supplementary materials.
(DOC)
CHRNA5 gene expression variation may play a role in individual susceptibility to lung cancer. Analysis of CHRNA5 transcripts expressed in normal lung tissue detected the full-length transcript (isoform-1) and four splicing transcripts (isoforms-2 to -5), derived from the recognition of other splice sites in exon five. Isoforms-2, -3, and -4 were fo...
The diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) is currently based on the clinical evaluation of extrapyramidal signs with a considerable error rate. The identification of specific markers might allow PD diagnosis before the onset of classical motor symptoms. By two-dimensional electrophoresis we identified proteome alterations in T-lymphocytes of 17 con...
Supplemental material
The diagnosis of dementing disorders is severely hampered by the absence of reliable biomarkers that can be measured in body fluids such as blood, urine and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Searching for biomarkers is made difficult by the huge genetic diversity and variability between individuals, laboratories and techniques. Biomarkers obtained from li...
Dopamine receptor agonists and L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) counteract dopamine loss in the striatum and are therefore used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD). T-Lymphocytes express some features of the dopaminergic system, and their function or activation might be regulated by dopaminergic treatments. Two-dimensional electrophoresis...
Human serum albumin (HSA) displays several metal binding sites, participating to essential and toxic metal ions disposal and transport. The major Zn(II) binding site, called Site A, is located at the I/II domain interface, with residues His67, Asn99, His247, and Asp249 contributing with five donor atoms to the metal ion coordination. Additionally,...
Human serum albumin (HSA) displays esterase activity reflecting multiple irreversible chemical modifications rather than turnover. Here, kinetics of the pseudo-enzymatic hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate (NphOAc) are reported. Under conditions where [HSA]≥ 5×[NphOAc] and [NphOAc]≥ 5×[HSA], the HSA-catalyzed hydrolysis of NphOAc is a first-order p...
Most of the esterase properties of human serum albumin (HSA) are the result of multiple irreversible chemical modifications rather than turnover. The HSA-catalyzed hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl myristate (NphOMy) is consistent with the minimum three-step mechanism involving the acyl-enzyme intermediate HSA-OMy: Under all the experimental conditions,...
A graphical abstract is available for this content
Serum albumin (SA) is a circulating protein providing a depot and carrier for many endogenous and exogenous compounds. At least seven major binding sites have been identified by structural and functional investigations mainly in human SA. SA is conserved in vertebrates, with at least 49 entries in protein sequence databases. The multiple sequence a...
Cellular models are instrumental in dissecting a complex pathological process into simpler molecular events. Parkinson's disease is multifactorial and clinically heterogeneous; the aetiology of the sporadic (and most common) form is still unclear and only a few molecular mechanisms have been clarified so far in the neurodegenerative cascade. In suc...
Parkinson's disease is the most common neurodegenerative movement disorder. Although it is mostly a sporadic disorder, 15-30% of all cases are linked to a genetic background. On this ground, several cellular and animal models have been developed to investigate disease etiology and pathogenetic mechanisms. Nevertheless, several clinical issues canno...
Biomarkers for Parkinson’s disease are essential both to achieve an early/differential diagnosis and to find disease-modifying treatments. This chapter will focus on the different biomarkers suggested up to now, divided in three main categories: clinical, functional and molecular. In particular, the cost and specificity of each proposed biomarker a...
Human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant protein in plasma, is a monomeric multi-domain macromolecule, representing the main determinant of plasma oncotic pressure and the main modulator of fluid distribution between body compartments. HSA displays an extraordinary ligand binding capacity, providing a depot and carrier for many endogenous and e...
Human serum albumin (HSA), the most prominent protein in plasma, is best known for its exceptional ligand binding capacity. HSA participates in heme scavenging by binding the macrocycle at fatty acid site 1. In turn, heme endows HSA with globin-like reactivity and spectroscopic properties. A detailed pH-dependent kinetic and spectroscopic investiga...
Parkinson's disease is the most common neurodegenerative movement disorder, affecting about 6 million people worldwide with a slow progression of the symptoms. Its prevalence is expected to double in the most populated areas within the next two decades, according to increasing aged population. Consequently, Parkinson's disease is a socio-economic t...
Ferrous human serum heme-albumin (HSA-heme-Fe(II)) displays globin-like properties. Here, the effect of ibuprofen and warfarin on kinetics of HSA-heme-Fe(II) nitrosylation is reported. Values of the second-order rate constant for HSA-heme-Fe(II) nitrosylation (k(on)) decrease from 6.3 × 10(6)M(-1)s(-1) in the absence of drugs, to 4.1 × 10(5)M(-1)s(...
Cannabis is the most commonly used illicit drug worldwide. Cannabis users also appear to use other psychoactive drugs more frequently than noncannabis users. Here, Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and diazepam binding to human serum albumin (HSA) and HSA-heme is reported. THC binds to two different binding sites of HSA (K(d1) ≤ 10(-7) M and K(d2) = 10...
A graphical abstract is available for this content
The ibuprofen primary binding site FA3-FA4 is located in domain III of human serum albumin (HSA), the secondary clefts FA2 and FA6 being sited in domains I and II. Here, the thermodynamics of ibuprofen binding to recombinant Asp1-Glu382 truncated HSA (tHSA)-heme-Fe(III) and nitrosylated tHSA-heme-Fe(II), encompassing domains I and II only, is repor...
Human serum heme-albumin (HSA-heme-Fe) displays globin-like properties. Here, kinetics of O(2)-mediated oxidation of ferrous nitrosylated HSA-heme-Fe (HSA-heme-Fe(II)-NO) is reported. Values of the first-order rate constants for O(2)-mediated oxidation of HSA-heme-Fe(II)-NO (i.e., for ferric HSA-heme-Fe formation) and for NO dissociation from HSA-h...
T-cells are circulating dopamine-sensitive cells and may mirror, at the peripheral level, biochemical modifications occurring in dopaminergic neurons. The human CD4+ T leukemic Jurkat cell line has been thoroughly used and characterized as a suitable cell model to investigate T-cell signaling and apoptosis. Here, we describe their characterization...
Human serum heme–albumin (HSA-heme) displays globin-like properties. Here, the allosteric inhibition of ferric heme [heme-Fe(III)] binding to human serum albumin (HSA) and of ferric HSA–heme [HSA-heme-Fe(III)]-mediated peroxynitrite isomerization by isoniazid and rifampicin is reported. Moreover, the allosteric inhibition of isoniazid and rifampici...
Altered dopamine homeostasis is an accepted mechanism in the pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease. α-Synuclein overexpression and impaired disposal contribute to this mechanism. However, biochemical alterations associated with the interplay of cytosolic dopamine and increased α-synuclein are still unclear. Catecholaminergic SH-SY5Y human neuroblasto...
Heme endows human serum albumin (HSA) with globin-like reactivity and spectroscopic properties. Here, the effect of chlorpropamide, digitoxin, furosemide, indomethacin, phenylbutazone, sulfisoxazole, tolbutamide, and warfarin on peroxynitrite isomerization to NO(3) (-) by ferric HSA-heme (HSA-heme-Fe(III)) is reported. Drugs binding to Sudlow's sit...
DJ-1 is a mitochondrial protein linked to Parkinson's disease. DJ-1 has been suggested to have several possible functions, although it has been mainly associated to oxidative stress defence. Changes in the two-dimensional electrophoresis pattern have been thoroughly described as a consequence of oxidative modification of the Cys106 residue. There i...
Intracellular generation of oxidizing species was determined using the fluorogenic probe 2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (DCDHF-DA). Following 24 h treatment in the absence and in the presence of 0.1 mM dopamine (700 U/mL catalase), cells were incubated with DCDHF-DA (10 μM, in the dark at 37 °C) for 20 min, detached, washed, resuspended...
Dietary flavonoid may have beneficial effects in the prevention of chronic diseases. However, flavonoid bioavailability is often poor probably due to their interaction with plasma proteins. Here, the affinity of daidzein and daidzein metabolites as well as of genistein, naringenin, and quercetin for human serum albumin (HSA) has been assessed in th...
Heme endows human serum albumin (HSA) with heme-protein-like reactivity and spectroscopic properties. Here, the kinetics and thermodynamics of reductive nitrosylation of ferric human serum heme-albumin [HSA-heme-Fe(III)] are reported. All data were obtained at 20 degrees C. At pH 5.5, HSA-heme-Fe(III) binds nitrogen monoxide (NO) reversibly, leadin...