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Bruno MARESCA

University of Salerno
Dept. of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Head of Div. of Biomedicine
Faculty of Pharmacy
84084 FISCIANO, Salerno, Italy
bmaresca@unisa.it

Books

1998
1994

Journal articles

2010
Amalia Porta, Annamaria Eletto, Zsolt Török, Silvia Franceschelli, Attila Glatz, László Vígh, Bruno Maresca (2010)  Changes in membrane fluid state and heat shock response cause attenuation of virulence.   J Bacteriol 192: 7. 1999-2005 Apr  
Abstract: So far attenuation of pathogens has been mainly obtained by chemical or heat treatment of microbial pathogens. Recently, live attenuated strains have been produced by genetic modification. We have previously demonstrated that in several prokaryotes as well as in yeasts and mammalian cells the heat shock response is controlled by the membrane physical state (MPS). We have also shown that in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 (Salmonella Typhimurium) overexpression of a Delta(12)-desaturase gene alters the MPS, inducing a sharp impairment of transcription of major heat shock genes and failure of the pathogen to grow inside macrophage (MPhi) (A. Porta et al., J. Bacteriol. 192:1988-1998, 2010). Here, we show that overexpression of a homologous Delta(9)-desaturase sequence in the highly virulent G217B strain of the human fungal pathogen Histoplasma capsulatum causes loss of its ability to survive and persist within murine MPhi along with the impairment of the heat shock response. When the attenuated strain of H. capsulatum was injected in a mouse model of infection, it did not cause disease. Further, treated mice were protected when challenged with the virulent fungal parental strain. Attenuation of virulence in MPhi of two evolutionarily distant pathogens was obtained by genetic modification of the MPS, suggesting that this is a new method that may be used to produce attenuation or loss of virulence in both other intracellular prokaryotic and eukaryotic pathogens. This new procedure to generate attenuated forms of pathogens may be used eventually to produce a novel class of vaccines based on the genetic manipulation of a pathogen's membrane fluid state and stress response.
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Amalia Porta, Zsolt Török, Ibolya Horvath, Silvia Franceschelli, László Vígh, Bruno Maresca (2010)  Genetic modification of the Salmonella membrane physical state alters the pattern of heat shock response.   J Bacteriol 192: 7. 1988-1998 Apr  
Abstract: It is now recognized that membranes are not simple physical barriers but represent a complex and dynamic environment that affects membrane protein structures and their functions. Recent data emphasize the role of membranes in sensing temperature changes, and it has been shown that the physical state of the plasma membrane influences the expression of a variety of genes such as heat shock genes. It has been widely shown that minor alterations in lipid membranes are critically involved in the conversion of signals from the environment to the transcriptional activation of heat shock genes. Previously, we have proposed that the composition, molecular arrangement, and physical state of lipid membranes and their organization have crucial roles in cellular responses during stress caused by physical and chemical factors as well as in pathological states. Here, we show that transformation of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 (Salmonella Typhimurium) with a heterologous Delta(12)-desaturase (or with its trans-membrane regions) causes major changes in the pathogen's membrane dynamic. In addition, this pathogen is strongly impaired in the synthesis of major stress proteins (heat shock proteins) under heat shock. These data support the hypothesis that the perception of temperature in Salmonella is strictly controlled by membrane order and by a specific membrane lipid/protein ratio that ultimately causes transcriptional activation of heat shock genes. These results represent a previously unrecognized mode of sensing temperature variation used by this pathogen at the onset of infection.
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2009
Giuseppe La Regina, Taradas Sarkar, Ruoli Bai, Michael C Edler, Roberto Saletti, Antonio Coluccia, Francesco Piscitelli, Lara Minelli, Valerio Gatti, Carmela Mazzoccoli, Vanessa Palermo, Cristina Mazzoni, Claudio Falcone, Anna Ivana Scovassi, Vincenzo Giansanti, Pietro Campiglia, Amalia Porta, Bruno Maresca, Ernest Hamel, Andrea Brancale, Ettore Novellino, Romano Silvestri (2009)  New arylthioindoles and related bioisosteres at the sulfur bridging group. 4. Synthesis, tubulin polymerization, cell growth inhibition, and molecular modeling studies.   J Med Chem 52: 23. 7512-7527 Dec  
Abstract: New arylthioindoles along with the corresponding ketone and methylene compounds were potent tubulin assembly inhibitors. As growth inhibitors of MCF-7 cells, sulfur derivatives were superior or sometimes equivalent to the ketones, while methylene derivatives were substantially less effective. Esters 24, 27-29, 36, 39, and 41 showed approximately 50% of inhibition on human HeLa and HCT116/chr3 cells at 0.5 microM, and these compounds inhibited the growth of HEK, M14, and U937 cells with IC(50)'s in the 78-220 nM range. While murine macrophage J744.1 cell growth was significantly less affected (20% at higher concentrations), four other nontransformed cell lines remained sensitive to these esters. The effect of drug treatment on cell morphology was examined by time-lapse microscopy. In a protocol set up to evaluate toxicity on the Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741 wild type strain, compounds 24 and 54 strongly reduced cell growth, and 29, 36, and 39 also showed significant inhibition.
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2007
László Vigh, Ibolya Horváth, Bruno Maresca, John L Harwood (2007)  Can the stress protein response be controlled by 'membrane-lipid therapy'?   Trends Biochem Sci 32: 8. 357-363 Aug  
Abstract: In addition to high temperature, other stresses and clinical conditions such as cancer and diabetes can lead to the alteration of heat-shock protein (HSP) levels in cells. Moreover, HSPs can associate with either specific lipids or with areas of special membrane topology (such as lipid rafts), and changes in the physical state of cellular membranes can alter hsp gene expression. We propose that membrane microheterogeneity is important for regulating the HSP response. In support of this hypothesis, when particular membrane intercalating compounds are used to alter membrane properties, the simultaneous normalization of dysregulated expression of HSPs causes beneficial responses to disease states. Therefore, these compounds (such as hydroxylamine derivatives) have the potential to become a new class of pharmaceuticals for use in 'membrane-lipid therapy'.
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2006
Jeffrey H Schwartz, Bruno Maresca (2006)  Do Molecular Clocks Run at All? A Critique of Molecular Systematics   Biological Theory 1: 4. 357-371  
Abstract: Although molecular systematists may use the terminology of cladism, claiming that the reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships is based on shared derived states (synapomorphies), the latter is not the case. Rather, molecular systematics is (largely) based on the assumption, first clearly articulated by Zuckerkandl and Pauling (1962), that degree of overall similarity reflects degree of relatedness. This assumption derives from interpreting molecular similarity (or dissimilarity) between taxa in the context of a Darwinian model of continual and gradual change. Review of the history of molecular systematics and its claims in the context of molecular biology reveals that there is no basis for the “molecular assumption.â€
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Bruno Maresca, Jeffrey H Schwartz (2006)  Sudden origins: a general mechanism of evolution based on stress protein concentration and rapid environmental change.   Anat Rec B New Anat 289: 1. 38-46 Jan  
Abstract: A major theme in Darwinian evolutionary theory is that novelty arises through a process in which organisms and their features are gradually transformed. Morgan provided Darwinism and the evolutionary synthesis with the idea that minor mutations produce the minuscule morphological variations on which natural selection then acts, and that, although mutation is random, once a process of gradual genetic modification begins, it becomes directional and leads to morphological, and consequently organismal, transformation. In contrast, studies on the role of cell membrane physical states in regulating the expression of stress proteins in response to environmental shifts indicate the existence of a downstream mechanism that prevents or corrects genetic change (i.e., maintains "DNA homeostasis"). However, episodic spikes in various kinds of environmental stress that exceed an organism's cells' thresholds for expression of proper amounts of stress proteins responsible for protein folding (including stochastically occurring DNA repair) may increase mutation rate and genetic change, which in turn will alter the pattern of gene expression during development. If severe stress disrupts DNA homeostasis during meiosis (gametogenesis), this could allow for the appearance of significant mutational events that would otherwise be corrected or suppressed. In evolutionary terms, extreme spikes in environmental stress make possible the emergence of new genetic and consequent developmental and epigenetic networks, and thus also the emergence of potentially new morphological traits, without invoking geographic or other isolating mechanisms.
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2005
Làszló Vigh, Pablo V Escribá, Alois Sonnleitner, Max Sonnleitner, Stefano Piotto, Bruno Maresca, Ibolya Horváth, John L Harwood (2005)  The significance of lipid composition for membrane activity: new concepts and ways of assessing function.   Prog Lipid Res 44: 5. 303-344 Sep  
Abstract: In the last decade or so, it has been realised that membranes do not just have a lipid-bilayer structure in which proteins are embedded or with which they associate. Structures are dynamic and contain areas of heterogeneity which are vital for their formation. In this review, we discuss some of the ways in which these dynamic and heterogeneous structures have implications during stress and in relation to certain human diseases. A particular stress is that of temperature which may instigate adaptation in poikilotherms or appropriate defensive responses during fever in mammals. Recent data emphasise the role of membranes in sensing temperature changes and in controlling a regulatory loop with chaperone proteins. This loop seems to need the existence of specific membrane microdomains and also includes association of chaperone (heat stress) proteins with the membrane. The role of microdomains is then discussed further in relation to various human pathologies such as cardiovascular disease, cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. The concept of modifying membrane lipids (lipid therapy) as a means for treating such pathologies is then introduced. Examples are given when such methods have been shown to have benefit. In order to study membrane microheterogeneity in detail and to elucidate possible molecular mechanisms that account for alteration in membrane function, new methods are needed. In the second part of the review, we discuss ultra-sensitive and ultra-resolution imaging techniques. These include atomic force microscopy, single particle tracking, single particle tracing and various modern fluorescence methods. Finally, we deal with computing simulation of membrane systems. Such methods include coarse-grain techniques and Monte Carlo which offer further advances into molecular dynamics. As computational methods advance they will have more application by revealing the very subtle interactions that take place between the lipid and protein components of membranes - and which are so essential to their function.
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Marina Luongo, Amalia Porta, Bruno Maresca (2005)  Homology, disruption and phenotypic analysis of CaGS Candida albicans gene induced during macrophage infection.   FEMS Immunol Med Microbiol 45: 3. 471-478 Sep  
Abstract: During macrophage infection Candida albicans expresses differentially several genes whose functions are associated with its survival strategy. Among others, we have isolated CaGS gene, which is homologous to SNF3, a glucose sensor of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To elucidate its potential role during infection, CaGS has been disrupted and the resulting phenotype analyzed on different solid media. The null mutant lost the ability to form hyphae on a medium with low glucose concentration and serum. Furthermore, this mutant does not disrupt macrophage in in vitro infections. We believe that this putative glucose sensor is involved in hyphal development during macrophage infection.
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Kobkul Laoteng, Supapon Cheevadhanarak, Morakot Tanticharoen, Bruno Maresca (2005)  Promoter analysis of Mucor rouxii delta9-desaturase: its implication for transcriptional regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 335: 2. 400-405 Sep  
Abstract: Promoter study was performed to understand the transcriptional control of delta9-desaturase gene of Mucor rouxii. Several putative cis-elements involved in lipid metabolism were mapped by computational analysis. 5' deletion analysis shows the presence of elements with repressing activity, especially in 122 bp located upstream of the transcription start site. Truncation of these repressor domains showed that the promoter of M. rouxii is functional in Saccharomyces cerevisiae without additional components and is insensitive to nutritional depletion. The promoter also drove effectively the expression of a M. rouxii delta12-desaturase gene, and the linoleic acid content increased with the age of the yeast culture in parallel with the promoter activity. This approach provides a genetic tool for programming heterologous protein production in the yeast.
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2004
Sakineh Kazemi-Noureini, Sergio Colonna-Romano, Abed-Ali Ziaee, Mohammad-Ali Malboobi, Mansour Yazdanbod, Parviz Setayeshgar, Bruno Maresca (2004)  Differential gene expression between squamous cell carcinoma of esophageus and its normal epithelium; altered pattern of mal, akr1c2, and rab11a expression.   World J Gastroenterol 10: 12. 1716-1721 Jun  
Abstract: AIM: To identify the altered gene expression patterns in squamous cell carcinoma of esophagus (ESCC) in relation to adjacent normal esophageal epithelium. METHODS: Total RNA was extracted using SV total RNA isolation kit from snap frozen tissues of ESCC samples and normal esophageal epithelium far from the tumor. Radio-labeled cDNA were synthesized from equal quantities of total RNAs of tumor and normal tissues using combinations of 24 arbitrary 13-mer primers and three different anchoring oligo-dT primers and separated on sequencing gels. cDNA with considerable different amounts of signals in tumor and normal tissue were reamplified and cloned. Using southern blot, the clones of each band were controlled for false positive results caused by probable heterogeneity of cDNA population with the same size. Clones that confirmed differential expression by slot blot selected for sequencing and northern analysis. Corresponding full-length gene sequences was predicted using human genome project data, related transcripts were translated and used for various protein/motif searches to speculate their probable functions. RESULTS: The 97 genes showed different levels of cDNA in tumor and normal tissues of esophagus. The expression of mal gene was remarkably down regulated in all 10 surveyed tumor tissues. Akr1c2, a member of the aldo-keto reductase 1C family, which is involved in metabolism of sex hormones and xenobiotics, was up-regulated in 8 out of 10 inspected ESCC samples. Rab11a, RPL7, and RPL28 showed moderate levels of differential expression. Many other cDNAs remained to further studies. CONCLUSION: The mal gene which is switched-off in all ESCC samples can be considered as a tumor suppressor gene that more studies in its regulation may lead to valuable explanations in ESCC development. Akr1c2 which is up-regulated in ESCC probably plays an important role in tumor development of esophagus and may be proposed as a potential molecular target in ESCC treatments. Differential display technique in spite of many disadvantages is still a valuable technique in gene function exploration studies to find new candidates for improved ones like gene chips.
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Odile Prigneau, Amalia Porta, Bruno Maresca (2004)  Candida albicans CTN gene family is induced during macrophage infection: homology, disruption and phenotypic analysis of CTN3 gene.   Fungal Genet Biol 41: 8. 783-793 Aug  
Abstract: We have isolated a Candida albicans gene, coding for a putative peroxisomal carnitine acetyl transferase (CTN) protein, which is up-regulated during macrophage infection. In the present study, we describe the disruption of CTN3 gene (previously called CAT3) to gain insight into its potential role during infection. The ability of disrupted Candida mutants to filament was affected by several solid media. Northern blot analysis revealed that CTN3 gene may be involved not only in conditions of cell starvation but also during the process of germination. In agreement with the putative peroxisomal localization of the corresponding protein, we observed a strong glucose repression of CTN3 gene and, on the contrary, high level of transcription by carbon sources that induce the formation of peroxisomal proteins. Furthermore, we showed the existence of two additional C. albicans CTN encoding sequences, which are also induced during macrophage infection.
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2003
Odile Prigneau, Amalia Porta, Jacques A Poudrier, Sergio Colonna-Romano, Thierry Noël, Bruno Maresca (2003)  Genes involved in beta-oxidation, energy metabolism and glyoxylate cycle are induced by Candida albicans during macrophage infection.   Yeast 20: 8. 723-730 Jun  
Abstract: The ability of intracellular pathogens to cause infection is related to their capacity to survive and grow inside macrophages or in other cell types. Candida albicans latent virulence is likely to be related to a similar mechanism of avoiding killing by specialized cells and to the resulting ability to grow in such hostile environments. Using a differential display reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction technique, we have identified seven genes induced in C. albicans during macrophage phagocytosis. Sequence analyses and database searches revealed that these cDNAs coded for proteins homologous to yeast metabolic proteins. Interestingly, four of them are putative peroxisomal proteins, and two are involved in environmental signal sensing and transduction. Among the seven genes induced by C. albicans, six represent new information that were not described in other infection models.
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Zsolt Török, Nelly M Tsvetkova, Gábor Balogh, Ibolya Horváth, Enikö Nagy, Zoltán Pénzes, Judit Hargitai, Olivier Bensaude, Péter Csermely, John H Crowe, Bruno Maresca, László Vigh (2003)  Heat shock protein coinducers with no effect on protein denaturation specifically modulate the membrane lipid phase.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100: 6. 3131-3136 Mar  
Abstract: The hydroxylamine derivative bimoclomol (BM) has been shown to activate natural cytoprotective homeostatic responses by enhancing the capability of cells to cope with various pathophysiological conditions. It exerts its effect in synergy with low levels of stress to induce the synthesis of members of major stress protein families. We show here that the presence of BM does not influence protein denaturation in the cells. BM and its derivatives selectively interact with acidic lipids and modulate their thermal and dynamic properties. BM acts as a membrane fluidizer at normal temperature, but it is a highly efficient membrane stabilizer, inhibiting the bilayer-nonbilayer phase transitions during severe heat shock. We suggest that BM and the related compounds modify those domains of membrane lipids where the thermally or chemically induced perturbation of lipid phase is sensed and transduced into a cellular signal, leading to enhanced activation of heat shock genes. BM may be a prototype for clinically safe membrane-interacting drug candidates that rebalance the level and composition of heat shock proteins.
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2000
A Porta, B Maresca (2000)  Host response and Histoplasma capsulatum/macrophage molecular interactions.   Med Mycol 38: 6. 399-406 Dec  
Abstract: Histoplasma capsulatum is the etiological agent of histoplasmosis, a chronic respiratory infection that is generally asymptomatic in healthy individuals, but severe or fatal in patients who are immunosuppressed or otherwise debilitated. H. capsulatum is found as a mould in soil and becomes a pathogenic yeast in the mammalian host. The first line of defense that H. capsulatum faces during host invasion is the attack of polymorphonuclear neutrophils and resident macrophages. In animal models, once phagocytosed, H. capsulatum is not killed by fusion of the phago-lysosomes, instead it multiplies within non-activated macrophages and destroys them. Upon induction of cell-mediated immunity, cytokines activate macrophages and destroy the yeast cells. Some aspects of the fungus-macrophage interaction have been elucidated, and it is clear that some of the mechanisms by which H. capsulatum escapes the lethal effects of this very hostile environment, involve the regulation of specific genes. Recently, using the differential display reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction technique, a number of H. capsulatum genes that are induced after the yeasts are ingested by macrophages have been identified. However, the mechanisms that underlie the capacity of H. capsulatum to adapt to the new environmental conditions present in macrophages remain to be clarified.
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1999
A Porta, S Colonna-Romano, I Callebaut, A Franco, L Marzullo, G S Kobayashi, B Maresca (1999)  An homologue of the human 100-kDa protein (p100) is differentially expressed by Histoplasma capsulatum during infection of murine macrophages.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 254: 3. 605-613 Jan  
Abstract: Using differential display reverse transcription-PCR (DDRT-PCR) we have identified several sequences that are specifically expressed by Histoplasma capsulatum during infection of murine macrophages (MPhi). Here, we report the characterization of a clone, pHc12, identified as a differentially expressed gene 1 hour after infection of MPhi. Screening of a cDNA library of H. capsulatum allowed us to isolate a clone, pHc12-E, that contains the complete coding sequence. We show that after infection the level of transcription of this gene increases about 5 fold. Analysis of its sequence revealed the presence of an open reading frame of 890 aa (ORF890) that shares respectively 30 and 33% identity with human and Caenorhabditis elegans p100 kD and rat p105 kD co-activator proteins. Using the two-dimensional Hydrophobic Cluster Analysis (HCA) method, we showed that H. capsulatum ORF890 and p100 kD co-activator proteins are clearly related. The H. capsulatum protein consists of a four-fold repeated module (domains I to IV) like the p100 kD co-activator proteins, whose three-dimensional (3D) structure is related to staphylococcal thermonuclease, followed by a modified fifth "hybrid" domain which partially resembles the structure of the tudor domain found in multiple copies in the Drosophila melanogaster tudor protein. These data strongly suggest that ORF890 is homologous to human p100 kD and that this protein, named Hcp100, may play an essential role during infection by co-activating the expression of specific genes.
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A Storlazzi, B Maresca, S Gargano (1999)  CAMP is involved in transcriptional regulation of delta9-desaturase during Histoplasma capsulatum morphogenesis.   Mol Cell Biol Res Commun 2: 3. 172-177 Sep/Dec  
Abstract: We have characterized the promoter region of the delta9-desaturase gene from two different strains of the dimorphic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum. Desaturase transcription is regulated in the two phases of growth: it is transcribed in the yeast phase at 37 degrees C, while it is inactive in the mycelial phase at 25 degrees C. Phase transition can be induced by shifting the temperature from 25 to 37 degrees C or by adding cAMP to the growth medium. We have identified a stress-responsive cis element (STRE) responsive to cyclic AMP (cAMP)-signaling pathway and demonstrated that this element acts in H. capsulatum. We have also identified an element, hereafter called DRE (Desaturase Regulatory Element), present in the promoters of the H. capsulatum and S. cerevisiae delta9-desaturase gene. We show that this element is necessary but not sufficient to regulate transcription of the H. capsulatum delta9-desaturase gene.
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K Laoteng, C Anjard, S Rachadawong, M Tanticharoen, B Maresca, S Cheevadhanarak (1999)  Mucor rouxii delta9-desaturase gene is transcriptionally regulated during cell growth and by low temperature.   Mol Cell Biol Res Commun 1: 1. 36-43 Apr  
Abstract: Unsaturated fatty acids are essential lipid components of Mucor rouxii. Gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) is synthesized via the desaturase enzymes: delta9-desaturase catalyzes mono-unsaturated fatty acids that are utilized as substrate for GLA biosynthesis. We cloned and characterized a M. rouxii gene highly homologous to delta9-desaturase genes. This sequence encodes for a protein of 452 amino acids and contains two introns of 60 and 61 nucleotides. Delta9-desaturase of M. rouxii is expressed during cell growth when cells are subjected to temperature shifts. At 30 degrees C, the mRNA level of late log phase is about 6.4-fold higher than that of early log phase. A shift from 30 to 15 degrees C induced transcription of delta9-desaturase gene in both early and late log phases. However, the pattern of increased transcription by cold induction varied depending on growth conditions: transcription of late log phase is higher than that of early log phase. These results indicate that cell growth and low temperature influence the expression of delta9-desaturase gene and fatty acid composition of M. rouxii.
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1998
R C Matthews, B Maresca, J P Burnie, A Cardona, L Carratu, S Conti, G S Deepe, A M Florez, S Franceschelli, E Garcia, L S Gargano, G S Kobayashi, J G McEwen, B L Ortiz, A M Oviedo, L Polonelli, J Ponton, A Restrepos, A Storlazzi (1998)  Stress proteins in fungal diseases.   Med Mycol 36 Suppl 1: 45-51  
Abstract: Heat shock proteins (hsps) are ubiquitous families of proteins, found in all organisms studied so far. They are highly conserved across the species barrier and serve fundamental functions in cell physiology. The term 'heat shock' was adopted because of the early observation of the heat-inducible nature of these proteins, although, as it is now realized that they can be induced by a variety of stressful stimuli, it is probably more appropriate to call them 'stress proteins'. The nomenclature of many hsps, for example hsp90, hsp70 and hsp60, reflects the approximate molecular mass of hsps within each of these families. For many bacterial and parasitic infections, hsps were first recognized as immunodominant antigens on immunoblots of extracts from the organism probed with immune sera, or in T-cell proliferation assays. They have now been identified in a range of fungal pathogens, again often linked to an immune response. In this symposium, we review the association of hsps with humoral immunity to candidosis and aspergillosis, cellular immunity to histoplasmosis, and the identification of hsp70 in another dimorphic fungus, Paracoccidioides brasiliensis. Finally, the crucial role of the membrane in setting the temperature of the heat shock response in yeasts is discussed.
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S Colonna-Romano, A Porta, A Franco, G S Kobayashi, B Maresca (1998)  Identification and isolation by DDRT-PCR of genes differentially expressed by Histoplasma capsulatum during macrophages infection.   Microb Pathog 25: 2. 55-66 Aug  
Abstract: Establishment of infection and disease implies modifications in the genetic programmes of the cell systems that are involved and the differential expression of genes in both parasite and host. In order to identify and isolate relevant genes of the fungus, Histoplasma capsulatum, in which expression is specifically induced during its interaction with murine macrophages (Mphi), we performed a comparative analysis of the pattern of gene expression of the fungus before and after exposure to, and internalization into Mphi by using differential display reverse transcriptase-PCR (DDRT-PCR). Using a limited set of primer combinations, six cDNA fragments of H. capsulatum were identified and isolated; five representing fungal genes in which expressions were enhanced during Mphi infection, whereas one mRNA fragment was down-regulated. Slot blots followed by Northern blot analyses confirmed that the transcripts detected with cDNA clones were over expressed after 1 h of Mphi infection, whereas no transcripts were detected with mRNA purified from H. capsulatum before infection. Sequence analyses and database searches revealed no significant homology to any known sequence for five of these clones. One of the clones showed homology to the rat p105 kD protein, and to the p100 kD co-activator proteins of human and Caenorhabditis elegans. To our knowledge, this is the first experimental evidence that specific genes are differentially expressed by a fungal pathogen when it is exposed to, and phagocytosed by Mphi. Furthermore, these results show that the DDRT-PCR procedure has adequate sensitivity to detect fungal genes induced during parasite-host interaction to identify potential new targets that can be used to develop new antifungal drugs.
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L Vigh, B Maresca, J L Harwood (1998)  Does the membrane's physical state control the expression of heat shock and other genes?   Trends Biochem Sci 23: 10. 369-374 Oct  
Abstract: Membranes provide the structural framework that divides cells from their environment and that, in eukaryotic cells, permits compartmentation. They are not simply passive barriers that are liable to be damaged during environmental challenge or pathological states, but are involved in cellular responses and in modulating intracellular signalling. Recent data show that the expression of several genes, particularly those that respond to changes in temperature, ageing or disease, is influenced and/or controlled by the membrane's physical state.
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1997
A Tosco, S Gargano, G S Kobayashi, B Maresca (1997)  An AP1 element is involved in transcriptional regulation of delta9-desaturase gene of Histoplasma capsulatum.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 230: 2. 457-461 Jan  
Abstract: We have characterized a region of the promoter of a cloned delta9-desaturase gene (Ole1) of Histoplasma capsulatum, a dimorphic pathogenic fungus of humans. The product of the delta9-desaturase gene is involved in regulating membrane fluid state in animal cells and microorganisms. To identify sequences critical for Ole1 expression in both the saprobic mycelial and parasitic yeast phases of this organism, we performed a deletion analysis. Evidence is presented that a 240 nt region of the proximal promoter is involved in a phase-specific binding in vitro. By sequence analysis we have identified one likely regulatory element that coincides with an AP1 binding site (TGACTAA) that is located at -740 nt of 5'-upstream from the ATG. Using gel mobility shift assays, we show that this cis-acting element binds nuclear proteins extracted from the yeast and mycelial phases of H. capsulatum that may participate in control of expression of the delta9-desaturase gene.
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Z Györfy, S Benkö, E Kusz, B Maresca, L Vígh, E Duda (1997)  Highly increased TNF sensitivity of tumor cells expressing the yeast delta 9-desaturase gene.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 241: 2. 465-470 Dec  
Abstract: L929 and WEHI tumor cell lines were genetically modified to constitutively express the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Ole 1 gene, coding for the delta 9-desaturase enzyme. These cells exhibit an increased ratio of monounsaturated fatty acids in their membrane phospholipids paralleled by an overall decrease in the membrane molecular order and a highly increased tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) sensitivity. The TNF-alpha signaling cascade involves events, like receptor clustering and cleavage of membrane constituent lipid molecules by phospholipases, which are influenced by the physical state of cellular membranes. We discuss the possible involvement of non-bilayer forming lipids in the control of signaling mechanisms leading to TNF cytotoxicity.
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Z Gyorfy, I Horváth, G Balogh, A Domonkos, E Duda, B Maresca, L Vígh (1997)  Modulation of lipid unsaturation and membrane fluid state in mammalian cells by stable transformation with the delta9-desaturase gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 237: 2. 362-366 Aug  
Abstract: The composition and physical state of membrane lipids determine the dynamic nature of membranes, which in turn, could directly be linked to the activity of various membrane-associated cellular functions. To better understand the molecular basis of different membrane-related phenomena we established a novel strategy to alter unsaturation of mammalian cell membranes with an identical genetic background. We transfected L929 mouse fibroblastoid cells with DNA constructs containing the Delta9-fatty acid desaturase gene (Ole1) of S. cerevisiae under the control of desaturase promoters derived either from wild type or mutant strains of the dimorphic fungus H. capsulatum.
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B S Polla, M J Richard, D R Robinson, B Maresca (1997)  Effects of membrane fatty acids on thermal and oxidative injury in the human premonocytic line U937.   Biochem Pharmacol 54: 7. 773-780 Oct  
Abstract: Heat shock (HS) proteins (HSP) function as molecular chaperones and protect cells from thermal and oxidative injury. The signals leading to HSP synthesis, i.e. the "cellular thermometer(s)," are still a matter of debate. In the human premonocytic line U937, we investigated the effects of specific modification of membrane fatty acid (FA) composition by incubation with various saturated and unsaturated fatty acids (UFA) on the HS response and on hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-induced cell death. FA readily incorporated into U937 cell membranes. UFA did not modulate the HS response but potentiated H2O2-mediated damage, while pre-exposure to HS protected the UFA-treated cells from this increased H2O2 toxicity.
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L Vígh, P N Literáti, I Horváth, Z Török, G Balogh, A Glatz, E Kovács, I Boros, P Ferdinándy, B Farkas, L Jaszlits, A Jednákovits, L Korányi, B Maresca (1997)  Bimoclomol: a nontoxic, hydroxylamine derivative with stress protein-inducing activity and cytoprotective effects.   Nat Med 3: 10. 1150-1154 Oct  
Abstract: Preservation of the chemical architecture of a cell or of an organism under changing and perhaps stressful conditions is termed homeostasis. An integral feature of homeostasis is the rapid expression of genes whose products are specifically dedicated to protect cellular functions against stress. One of the best known mechanisms protecting cells from various stresses is the heat-shock response which results in the induction of the synthesis of heat-shock proteins (HSPs or stress proteins). A large body of information supports that stress proteins--many of them molecular chaperones--are crucial for the maintenance of cell integrity during normal growth as well as during pathophysiological conditions, and thus can be considered "homeostatic proteins." Recently emphasis is being placed on the potential use of these proteins in preventing and/or treating diseases. Therefore, it would be of great therapeutic benefit to discover compounds that are clinically safe yet able to induce the accumulation of HSPs in patients with chronic disorders such as diabetes mellitus, heart disease or kidney failure. Here we show that a novel cytoprotective hydroxylamine derivative, [2-hydroxy-3-(1-piperidinyl) propoxy]-3-pyridinecarboximidoil-chloride maleate, Bimoclomol, facilitates the formation of chaperone molecules in eukaryotic cells by inducing or amplifying expression of heat-shock genes. The cytoprotective effects observed under several experimental conditions, including a murine model of ischemia and wound healing in the diabetic rat, are likely mediated by the coordinate expression of all major HSPs. This nontoxic drug, which is under Phase II clinical trials, has enormous potential therapeutic applications.
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1996
R Allendoerfer, B Maresca, G S Deepe (1996)  Cellular immune responses to recombinant heat shock protein 70 from Histoplasma capsulatum.   Infect Immun 64: 10. 4123-4128 Oct  
Abstract: Heat shock protein (hsp) 70 from several microbes is antigenic in mammals. In this study we sequenced and expressed the gene encoding this protein from Histoplasma capsulatum to study its immunological activity. The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene demonstrated 71 and 76% identity to hsp7O from humans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, respectively. A cDNA was synthesized by reverse transcription-PCR and was expressed in Escherichia coli. Recombinant protein reacted with a mouse monoclonal antibody raised against human hsp7O. Splenocytes from C57BL/6 mice immunized with recombinant hsp7O emulsified in adjuvant, but not yeast cells, reacted in vitro to the antigen. Recombinant hsp7O elicited a cutaneous delayed-type hypersensitivity response in mice immunized with protein or with viable yeast cells. Mice were injected with recombinant hsp7O and challenged intranasally with a sublethal inoculum of yeast cells. Vaccination did not confer protection in this model. Thus, recombinant hsp7O can induce a cell-mediated immune response but does not induce a protective response.
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L Carratù, S Franceschelli, C L Pardini, G S Kobayashi, I Horvath, L Vigh, B Maresca (1996)  Membrane lipid perturbation modifies the set point of the temperature of heat shock response in yeast.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 93: 9. 3870-3875 Apr  
Abstract: Addition of a saturated fatty acid (SFA) induced a strong increase in heat shock (HS) mRNA transcription when cells were heat-shocked at 37 degrees C, whereas treatment with an unsaturated fatty acid (UFA) reduced or eliminated the level of HS gene transcription at 37 degrees C. Transcription of the delta 9-desaturase gene (Ole1) of Histoplasma capsulatum, whose gene product is responsible for the synthesis of UFA, is up-regulated in a temperature-sensitive strain. We show that when the L8-14C mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which has a disrupted Ole1 gene, is complemented with its own Ole1 coding region under control of its own promoter or Ole1 promoters of H. capsulatum, the level of HS gene transcription depends on the activity of the promoters. Fluorescence anisotropy of mitochondrial membranes of completed strains corresponded to the different activity of the Ole1 promoter used. We propose that the SFA/UFA ratio and perturbation of membrane lipoprotein complexes are involved in the perception of rapid temperature changes and under HS conditions disturbance of the preexisting membrane physical state causes transduction of a signal that induces transcription of HS genes.
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1995
S Gargano, G Di Lallo, G S Kobayashi, B Maresca (1995)  A temperature-sensitive strain of Histoplasma capsulatum has an altered delta 9-fatty acid desaturase gene.   Lipids 30: 10. 899-906 Oct  
Abstract: We have isolated and characterized the delta 9-desaturase gene (Ole1), which codes for a key enzyme involved in regulating membrane fluidity in animal cells and microorganisms, from two strains of Histoplasma capsulatum, one that is temperature-tolerant (G217B) and the other temperature-susceptible (Downs). These pathogenic fungi are dimorphic in that they undergo a morphologic transition from the mycelial to yeast-like form when the temperature of incubation is switched from 25 to 37 degrees C or when they infect a susceptible host. The coding sequences of the two genes, both containing an intron of 93 nucleotides, are virtually identical and analogous to the delta 9-desaturase gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and those of the rat, mouse and human. Ole1 transcription of the thermotolerant G217B and thermosensitive Downs strains is similar in yeast phase cells and during the temperature shift down from 34, 37, or 40 to 25 degrees C (yeast-to-mycelia transition). Nevertheless, the delta 9-desaturase gene is transcriptionally inactive in mycelia of G217B at 25 degrees C while it is actively transcribed in the Downs strain at the same temperature. These results are in agreement with the finding that membranes of the Downs strain have a higher level of oleic acid. The differential expression of delta 9-desaturase genes is discussed in relationship to differences in thermosensitivity in the fungal isolates and in regulating the level of expression of heat shock genes.
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B Maresca (1995)  Unraveling the secrets of Histoplasma capsulatum. A model to study morphogenic adaptation during parasite host/host interaction.   Verh K Acad Geneeskd Belg 57: 2. 133-156  
Abstract: Early in the developmental period of microbiology, Pasteur first observed the phenomenon of dimorphism in fungi when he noticed that the bread mold Mucor grew as a filamentous mold aerobically on the surface of broth cultures but at the bottom of the flask where the environment was anaerobic it reproduced as budding yeast cells. Several infectious fungal pathogens of humans, namely Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis, Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, Sporothrix schenkii, and Coccidioides immitis change from a multicellular filamentous form to an unicellular morphology when they invade tissues. The ability of pathogenic fungi to assume a different shape is referred to as dimorphism. This phenomenon has intrigued clinicians, and medical mycologists since its discovery at the turn of the century. The ability of pathogens to initiate infection, invade host tissues and survive in mammalian hosts is critically linked to the induction of specific gene products. In dimorphic fungi, developmentally regulated gene expression is particularly important, since they may exist in phylogenetically distinct hosts with different body temperatures. Using Histoplasma capsulatum as a model to study parasite-host interactions at the biochemical and molecular level, my laboratory has attempted to relate the clinical spectrum of disease to natural variations in the characteristics of this organism and to adaptations it must make as a saprobe and a parasite. Histoplasma capsulatum is the etiologic agent of histoplasmosis, a respiratory infection that is world-wide in distribution. As a saprobe in soil it is mycelial, but it becomes a budding yeast as a parasite in susceptible hosts. These morphological phases can be reversibly reproduced in vitro by shifting the temperature from 25 degrees C, at which it is mycelial, to 37 degrees C, when it becomes a budding yeast. The process of mycelial-to-yeast conversion is of particular interest since it is triggered by an increase in temperature and conversion to virulence. Viable mycelial fragments and conidia become airborne and enter the pulmonary tract by inhalation after which the fungus rapidly disseminates to other organs. Progressive disseminated histoplasmosis along with candidiasis, cryptococcosis, and invasive aspergillosis are opportunistic fungal infections in patients who are immunosuppressed or otherwise debilitated. Importantly, they are diagnostic hallmarks of acquired immunodeficiency disease syndrome (AIDS). The clinical features of these infections and the genetic characteristics of the etiologic agents present unique parasite-host interactions that make them valuable research models to study. In the infected host, Histoplasma capsulatum encounters various environmental stresses to which it adapts by regulating the expression of specific genes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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1994
G Di Lallo, S Gargano, B Maresca (1994)  The Histoplasma capsulatum cdc2 gene is transcriptionally regulated during the morphologic transition.   Gene 140: 1. 51-57 Mar  
Abstract: To understand the molecular mechanisms that control the reversible morphologic transition from mycelia to yeast in dimorphic fungi, we have isolated and characterized a cdc2 gene from Histoplasma capsulatum. This organism is a dimorphic pathogenic fungus that grows as a filamentous saprobic mold in soil and as a unicellular pathogenic yeast in human tissue. The cloned gene, whose protein product has a high degree of homology with other members of the cdc2 family, is split into four exons and three introns of 95, 52 and 85 nucleotides. Analyses of cDNA clones confirm the presence of the eukaryotic splice donor (GT) and acceptor (AG) sites. The spliced gene codes for a protein of 324 amino acids (aa) with a predicted molecular mass of 36.9 kDa. The H. capsulatum cdc2 product has 71% aa identity with Saccharomyces cerevisiae and 70% with Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The deduced protein contains the sequence, PSTAIRE, that is normally found in most p34cdc2 proteins. H. capsulatum cdc2 is transcriptionally regulated during the morphologic mycelium<==>yeast transitions and is more actively transcribed in the yeast than in the mycelial phase.
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B Maresca, L Carratù, G S Kobayashi (1994)  Morphological transition in the human fungal pathogen Histoplasma capsulatum.   Trends Microbiol 2: 4. 110-114 Apr  
Abstract: Considerable information has accumulated recently about specific genes of Histoplasma capsulatum that are expressed during the process of adaptation when the organism undergoes morphological transition at the onset of infection. The study of these genes is crucial to identify targets for the development of novel antifungal agents.
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B Maresca, G S Kobayashi (1994)  Hsp70 in parasites: as an inducible protective protein and as an antigen.   Experientia 50: 11-12. 1067-1074 Nov  
Abstract: The heat shock (HS) response is a general homeostatic mechanism that protects cells and the entire organism from the deleterious effects of environmental stresses. It has been demonstrated that heat shock proteins (HSP) play major roles in many cellular processes, and have a unique role in several areas of cell biology, from chronic degenerative diseases to immunology, from cancer research to interaction between host and parasites. This review deals with the hsp70 gene family and with its protein product, hsp70, as an antigen when pathogens infect humans. Members of HSP have been shown to be major antigens of many pathogenic organisms when they experience a major temperature shift upwards at the onset of infection and become targets for host B and T cells.
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1993
B Maresca, G Kobayashi (1993)  Changes in membrane fluidity modulate heat shock gene expression and produced attenuated strains in the dimorphic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum.   Arch Med Res 24: 3. 247-249  
Abstract: In the dimorphic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum the expression of heat shock genes is modulated by addition of fatty acids. Addition at 25 degrees C of saturated fatty acid (palmitic acid) to mycelia of H. capsulatum induced a significant increase in heat shock mRNAs transcription when cells were heat shocked. Conversely, treatments with unsaturated fatty acid (oleic acid) drastically reduced the level of heat shock gene transcription at 37 degrees C, and no detectable levels were measurable with 2 mM. Addition of saturated fatty acid induced a thermotolerant state and mitochondria retained ATPase activity coupled to electron transport under severe heat shock conditions and shortened the time required for mycelium-to-yeast phase transition. Conversely, addition of unsaturated fatty acids uncoupled mitochondrial electron transport and prolonged considerably the time required for phase transition at the same temperatures. A virulent strain, if treated with unsaturated fatty acid under condition in which no heat shock was detectable, lost its virulence probably as a consequence of decreased ability to adapt to the new living condition present in the host.
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1992
E J Patriarca, G S Kobayashi, B Maresca (1992)  Mitochondrial activity and heat-shock response during morphogenesis in the pathogenic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum.   Biochem Cell Biol 70: 3-4. 207-214 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: Changes in temperature and a variety of other stimuli coordinately induce transcription of a specific set of heat-shock genes in all organisms. In the human fungal pathogen Histoplasma capsulatum, a temperature shift from 25 to 37 degrees C acts not only as a signal that causes transcription of heat-shock genes, but also triggers a morphological mycelium- to yeast-phase transition. The temperature-induced morphological transition may be viewed as a heat-shock response followed by cellular adaptation to a higher temperature. We have found that by inducing thermotolerance, i.e., an initial incubation at 34 degrees C, the thermosensitive attenuated Downs strain of H. capsulatum can be made to resemble those of the more temperature-tolerant G222B strain with respect to mitochondrial ATPase activity and electron transport efficiency at elevated temperatures. Furthermore, if the heat-shock response is first elicited by preincubation at milder temperatures or stress, transcription of heat-shock mRNA in mycelial cells of Downs strain that shifted to 37 degrees C proceeds at rates comparable to those of the virulent strains.
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B Maresca, L Carratù (1992)  The biology of the heat shock response in parasites.   Parasitol Today 8: 8. 260-266 Aug  
Abstract: The heat shock response is a general homeostatic mechanism that protects cells and the entire organism from the deleterious effects of environmental stress. It has been shown that heat shock proteins play major roles in many cellular processes and have a unique role in several areas of cell biology, from chronic degenerative diseases to immunology and from cancer research to interactions between host and parasite. In this review, Bruno Maresca and Luisella Carratu deal with some of the unique characteristics of the heat shock response in parasitic organisms.
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G Minchiotti, S Gargano, B Maresca (1992)  Molecular cloning and expression of hsp82 gene of the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1131: 1. 103-107 May  
Abstract: We have cloned a nucleotide sequence from Histoplasma capsulatum G222B corresponding to a heat inducible hsp82 gene, and determined its entire sequence and the flanking regions. During the temperature-controlled mycelium-to-yeast phase transition the gene is more actively transcribed at 37 degrees C in the temperature tolerant and mouse-virulent G222B strain, while 34 degrees C is the optimum for transcription in the temperature sensitive and mouse-avirulent Downs strain.
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1991
G Minchiotti, S Gargano, B Maresca (1991)  The intron-containing hsp82 gene of the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum is properly spliced in severe heat shock conditions.   Mol Cell Biol 11: 11. 5624-5630 Nov  
Abstract: We have isolated and characterized a heat-inducible gene, hsp82, from the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum, which is a filamentous mold at 25 degrees C and a unicellular yeast at 37 degrees C. This gene, which has a high degree of homology with other members of the hsp82 gene family, is split into three exons and two introns of 122 and 86 nucleotides, respectively. Contrary to what has been demonstrated in Drosophila melanogaster, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and other organisms, hsp82 mRNA in H. capsulatum is properly spliced during the severe heat conditions of 37 to 40 degrees C in the temperature-sensitive Downs strain. Splicing accuracy was also observed at 42 degrees C in the temperature-tolerant G222B strain, which showed no evidence of accumulation of primary transcripts. Furthermore, the intron containing the beta-tubulin gene is also properly spliced at the upper temperature range, suggesting that the lack of a block in splicing may be a general phenomenon in this organism.
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1990
E J Patriarca, B Maresca (1990)  Acquired thermotolerance following heat shock protein synthesis prevents impairment of mitochondrial ATPase activity at elevated temperatures in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.   Exp Cell Res 190: 1. 57-64 Sep  
Abstract: The complex molecular response of cells to sudden temperature changes is a well-characterized phenomenon. Although it is clear that the induction of heat shock proteins provides protection from heat in all of the organisms so far tested, very little is known about the role that this set of proteins plays in cellular homeostasis. Recently, putative roles for hsp60 and hsp70-like proteins have been proposed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. hsp70-like proteins have been shown to be necessary for translocation of precursor polypeptides into mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum, while hsp60 is required for the assembly of precursor polypeptides into oligomeric complexes following incorporation into the mitochondrial matrix. In this paper, we report that a brief temperature shock (44 degrees C) impairs coupling of oxidative phosphorylation in S. cerevisiae as measured indirectly by the Cl-CCP/oligomycin assay. Furthermore, at high temperature oligomycin stimulates rather than inhibits oxygen uptake under nonthermotolerant conditions. Pretreatment of cells for a short period of time at 37 degrees C, prior to exposure to higher temperatures rescues the capacity to maintain coupling between oxidative phosphorylation and electron transport. Inhibition of cytoplasmic RNA or protein synthesis during heat shock prevents the protection of this mitochondrial activity. We propose that one of the roles of the induction of heat shock proteins (or related activities) is to protect mitochondrial ATPase activity under conditions of further increase in temperature.
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1989
B Maresca, G S Kobayashi (1989)  Dimorphism in Histoplasma capsulatum: a model for the study of cell differentiation in pathogenic fungi.   Microbiol Rev 53: 2. 186-209 Jun  
Abstract: Several fungi can assume either a filamentous or a unicellular morphology in response to changes in environmental conditions. This process, known as dimorphism, is a characteristic of several pathogenic fungi, e.g., Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis, and Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, and appears to be directly related to adaptation from a saprobic to a parasitic existence. H. capsulatum is the most extensively studied of the dimorphic fungi, with a parasitic phase consisting of yeast cells and a saprobic mycelial phase. In culture, the transition of H. capsulatum from one phase to the other can be triggered reversibly by shifting the temperature of incubation between 25 degrees C (mycelia) and 37 degrees C (yeast phase). Mycelia are found in soil and never in infected tissue, in contrast to the yeast phase, which is the only form present in patients. The temperature-induced phase transition and the events in establishment of the disease state are very likely to be intimately related. Furthermore, the temperature-induced phase transition implies that each growth phase is an adaptation to two critically different environments. A fundamental question concerning dimorphism is the nature of the signal(s) that responds to temperature shifts. So far, both the responding cell component(s) and the mechanism(s) remain unclear. This review describes the work done in the last several years at the biochemical and molecular levels on the mechanisms involved in the mycelium to yeast phase transition and speculates on possible models of regulation of morphogenesis in dimorphic pathogenic fungi.
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1988
B V Kumar, B Maresca (1988)  Purification of membranes and identification of phase-specific proteins of the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum.   Arch Biochem Biophys 261: 1. 212-221 Feb  
Abstract: Plasma membrane vesicles from the yeast and mycelial phases of Histoplasma capsulatum have been purified and characterized. The method of purification involved differential centrifugation of ballistically fractured cells followed by sedimentation through discontinuous sucrose density gradient and equilibrium centrifugation. Purity of the preparation was assessed by electron microscopy. The protein composition of the membrane preparations from the yeast and mycelial phases of the fungus was analyzed by polyacrylamide gels. A comparison of the two morphologic phases revealed quantitative and qualitative differences in the expressions of several membrane-specific proteins. Physical differences in the appearance of the membranes were also observed by electron micrography of membrane preparations. Alteration in membrane fluidity may be one of the many causes for differences in the appearance of membrane vesicles in the two phases.
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1987
M Caruso, M Sacco, G Medoff, B Maresca (1987)  Heat shock 70 gene is differentially expressed in Histoplasma capsulatum strains with different levels of thermotolerance and pathogenicity.   Mol Microbiol 1: 2. 151-158 Sep  
Abstract: The response to heat shock has been examined in two strains of the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum, which differ considerably in thermotolerance and pathogenicity. The gene for the 70 kD heat shock protein (hsp70) was isolated using a Drosophila hsp70 gene to screen a cosmid library of the DNA from the temperature-sensitive Downs strain (low level of thermotolerance for mice). Using the cloned gene as a probe, we have measured the transcription of the endogenous hsp70 gene at 25 degrees C and in response to temperature shift to 34 degrees, 37 degrees and 40 degrees C, temperatures that trigger the mycelial to yeast phase transition in this fungus. The gene is constitutively transcribed at low levels, both in the yeast and the mycelial stages. Synthesis of hsp70 mRNA was transiently increased 1 to 3 h after the temperature shifts. By Northern analysis, peak levels of transcription were shown to occur at 34 degrees C in the Downs strain and at 37 degrees C in the more pathogenic G222B strain. Our results are consistent with reports in which it has been shown that heat shock gene expression is part of temperature adaptation and probably developmental processes. The low levels of transcription of the hsp70 gene in the Downs strain at 37 degrees C correlate with its greater temperature sensitivity and low level of virulence.
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B Maresca, A I Ali, G S Kobayashi, M Sacco (1987)  Incidence of histoplasmin skin test reactivity in Somalia: an epidemiological study.   Mycopathologia 98: 2. 77-81 May  
Abstract: Histoplasmosis is an important systemic mycotic infection with a wide geographic distribution. Its occurrence has been mostly studied in the US (6) and in Central America (6), but very little is known about its distribution in Africa, where a specific variant exists. Skin test surveys in the Democratic Republic of Somali indicate that Histoplasma capsulatum or a closely related agent has a focus in this east African country.
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1986
G Medoff, M Sacco, B Maresca, D Schlessinger, A Painter, G S Kobayashi, L Carratu (1986)  Irreversible block of the mycelial-to-yeast phase transition of Histoplasma capsulatum.   Science 231: 4737. 476-479 Jan  
Abstract: p-Chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid (PCMS), a sulfhydryl inhibitor, prevented the mycelial-to-yeast transition of the dimorphic fungal pathogen, Histoplasma capsulatum. The effect of PCMS was specific for the mycelial-to-yeast transformation; it had no effect on growth of either the yeast or mycelial forms or on the yeast-to-mycelial transition. The failure of PCMS-treated mycelia to transform to yeast was permanent and irreversible. PCMS-treated mycelia could not infect mice but could stimulate resistance to infection by a pathogenic strain of Histoplasma capsulatum. These results suggest a new general strategy for vaccine development in diseases caused by dimorphic pathogens.
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G Medoff, B Maresca, A M Lambowitz, G Kobayashi, A Painter, M Sacco, L Carratu (1986)  Correlation between pathogenicity and temperature sensitivity in different strains of Histoplasma capsulatum.   J Clin Invest 78: 6. 1638-1647 Dec  
Abstract: We compared the mycelial to yeast transitions of the Downs strain of Histoplasma capsulatum (low level of virulence) with those of G184A and G222B, two more virulent strains having different levels of pathogenicity for mice. When the morphological transitions are initiated by a temperature shift from 25 degrees to 37 degrees C, all three strains undergo similar physiological changes, but these are less severe in G184A and G222B than in the Downs strain. The transitions from mycelial to yeast morphology in both of the more virulent strains are also one-third more rapid than in Downs. We also find that the differences in temperature sensitivity of the three strains can be correlated with the temperature required for complete uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. The differences in sensitivity to elevated temperatures extend to the growth of yeast cells of all three strains. Considered together, our results suggest that sensitivity to elevated temperatures may be a key factor accounting for differences in virulence and that uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation may be the primary event in the morphological transition in all three strains.
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1983
V Kumar, B Maresca, M Sacco, R Goewert, G S Kobayashi, G Medoff (1983)  Purification and characterization of a cysteine dioxygenase from the yeast phase of Histoplasma capsulatum.   Biochemistry 22: 4. 762-768 Feb  
Abstract: A cysteine dioxygenase, cysteine oxidase (EC 1.13.11.20), has been purified from the cytosolic fraction of yeast phase cells of the dimorphic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum. The cysteine oxidase is an iron-containing dioxygenase with a molecular weight of 10500 (+/- 1500) and is present only in the yeast phase of the fungus. The enzyme is highly specific for L-cysteine, with a Km of 2 X 10(-5) M in vitro. The product of cysteine oxidation is cysteinesulfinic acid, as analyzed by thin-layer chromatography and mass spectroscopy. To our knowledge, this is the first cysteine oxidase isolated from a fungus, and it probably plays an important role in the mycelial to yeast phase transition of H. capsulatum during which redox potential and cysteine levels are crucial factors.
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1981
M Sacco, B Maresca, B V Kumar, G S Kobayashi, G Medoff (1981)  Temperature- and cyclic nucleotide-induced phase transitions of Histoplasma capsulatum.   J Bacteriol 146: 1. 117-120 Apr  
Abstract: The transition from yeast to mycelia of Histoplasma capsulatum could be accomplished by shifting the temperature of incubation from 37 to 25 degrees C. It was accompanied by many changes in cellular metabolism, including changes in respiration, intracellular cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) levels, and activities of two enzymes specific for the yeast phase, cystine reductase (EC 1.6.4.1) and cysteine oxidase (EC 1.13.11.20). Even at 37 degrees C, the yeast to mycelial transition could be induced by cAMP and agents which raise the intracellular levels of cAMP (theophylline, acetylsalicylic acid, prostaglandin E1, and nerve growth factor). During this morphogenesis the same pattern of changes occurred as in the temperature-induced transition. Therefore, these changes were not simply dependent on a shift in temperature, but rather were part of the process of the phase transition.
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B Maresca, A M Lambowitz, V B Kumar, G A Grant, G S Kobayashi, G Medoff (1981)  Role of cysteine in regulating morphogenesis and mitochondrial activity in the dimorphic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 78: 7. 4596-4600 Jul  
Abstract: Three stages can be distinguished in the temperature-induced mycelial-to-yeast phase transition of Histoplasma capsulatum. Stage one is characterized by a progressive decrease in the respiration rate and in the intracellular concentrations of cysteine and other amino acids. By stage two, respiration has ceased completely and free cysteine has fallen to low levels. Exogenous cysteine is required during the second stage for activation of mitochondrial respiration (stage three) and completion of the morphological transition. Mitochondria isolated from cells in the second stage show no respiration with NADH, succinate, or other substrates unless they are first incubated with cysteine. In addition, a novel, cytosolic cysteine oxidase appears during the latter part of the second stage. In stage three, the respiration rate rises, intracellular concentrations of free cysteine and other amino acids increase to levels characteristic of yeast, and the morphological transition is completed. The results support the idea that alterations in cysteine metabolism play a key role in this differentiation process.
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1980
1979
B Maresca, A M Lambowitz, G S Kobayashi, G Medoff (1979)  Respiration in the yeast and mycelial phases of Histoplasma capsulatum.   J Bacteriol 138: 2. 647-649 May  
Abstract: Respiration in the yeast and mycelial phases of Histoplasma capsulatum proceeds via a cytochrome system and an alternate oxidase, both present constitutively. The mycelial cytochrome system is distinguished by an additional partial shunt around the antimycin-sensitive site.
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1978
B Maresca, E Jacobson, G Medoff, G Kobayashi (1978)  Cystine reductase in the dimorphic fungus Histoplasma capsulatum.   J Bacteriol 135: 3. 987-992 Sep  
Abstract: Organo-sulfur compounds favor the transition of mycelia of Histoplasma capsulatum to the yeast form (6, 8). Investigation of the role of cystine in the transition revealed that the two phases concentrated this amino acid at comparable rates and that mutants defective in the uptake of cystine were still able to undergo the transition normally. Uptake of cystine is therefore probably not a requirement for transition to or maintenance of the yeast phase. Both phases contained a reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent glutathione reductase; but a reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent cystine reductase was detectable only in the yeast phase. The cystine reductase appeared early in the transition of mycelium to yeast. Treatment of mycelia with p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid, which prevented the transition to yeast, had no effect on cystine uptake but strongly inhibited the cystine reductase. These results suggest that cystine reductase may provide reduced sulfhydryl groups involved in the transition of mycelium to yeast.
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1977
1976
Bruno Maresca, Monica Modigh, Luigi Servillo, Bruno Tota (1976)  Different temperature dependences of oxidative phosphorylation in the inner and outer layers of tuna heart ventricle   Journal of Comparative Physiology B: Biochemical, Systemic, and Environmental Physiology 105: 2. 167-172 01  
Abstract: 1.The oxidative phosphorylation and the temperature dependence of mitochondria prepared from the outer compact layer and the inner spongy layer of adult tuna heart ventricle have been examined.2.Mitochondria of the inner layer show higher succinoxidase and NADH-oxidase activities as compared with those of the outer layer.3.Arrhenius plots for succinate oxidation by phosphorylating mitochondria show that the temperature dependence of the inner layer is higher than that of the outer layer.4.Experiments performed with disrupted non-phosphorylating mitochondria demonstrate that this difference in temperature dependence of the two cardiac compartments depends on the integrity of the mitochondrial membranes.5.These findings are discussed in relation to the physiology of the fish.
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1985
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