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aniello francesco


faniello@unina.it

Journal articles

2010
Aldo Donizetti, Marcella Fiengo, Rosanna Del Gaudio, Rossella Di Giaimo, Sergio Minucci, Francesco Aniello (2010)  Characterization and developmental expression pattern of the relaxin receptor rxfp1 gene in zebrafish.   Dev Growth Differ 52: 9. 799-806 Dec  
Abstract: We report the gene characterization, the cDNA cloning and the temporal and spatial expression pattern of the relaxin receptor rxfp1 gene in the zebrafish Danio rerio. The zebrafish rxfp1 gene has the same syntenic genomic organization, and a similar exon-intron structure to the homologue human gene. Furthermore, the deduced Rxfp1 protein sequence shows a high degree of amino acid similarity when compared with the human protein and the conservation of all amino acid identity necessary for the binding with relaxin. Our results show that rxfp1 gene is active either during embryogenesis or in the adult organism, showing a wide expression pattern. Moreover, we provide the first description of rxfp1 spatial expression pattern during embryo development, showing that the transcript is already present at the early developmental stage and is distributed in all of the embryonic cells until somitogenesis. Starting at the pharyngula stage the gene expression becomes mainly restricted in the brain territories. In fact, at the larval stage, the transcript is detectable in the epiphysis, postoptic region, posterior tuberculum, hypothalamus, optic tectum, tegmentum/pons, medulla and also in the structure of a peripheral nervous system, the terminal nerve. The rxfp1 expression pattern in Danio rerio embryos is very similar to that reported in the adult mammalian brain, suggesting a pivotal role of this receptor in the neurophysiology processes already at very early developmental stages.
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Diana Ferrara, Gaia Izzo, Paolo Pariante, Aldo Donizetti, d'Istria Michela, Francesco Aniello, Sergio Minucci (2010)  Expression of prothymosin alpha in meiotic and post-meiotic germ cells during the first wave of rat spermatogenesis.   J Cell Physiol 224: 2. 362-368 Aug  
Abstract: Prothymosin alpha (PTMA) is a highly acidic small polypeptide, that is, widely distributed and conserved among mammals. Its possible involvement in male gametogenesis has been mentioned but not clarified yet; in particular, it has been suggested that, in non-mammalian vertebrates, it could play a role during GC meiosis and differentiation. In the present work we investigated the possible association between PTMA and meiotic and post-meiotic phases of mammalian spermatogenesis. Three different time points during postnatal development of rat testis were analyzed, that is, 27 dpp (completed meiosis), 35 dpp (occurring spermiogenesis), and 60 dpp (first wave of spermatogenesis definitely ended). RT-PCR and Western blot analyses showed that the expression levels of both Ptma mRNA and corresponding protein decrease in total extracts from 27 to 60 dpp. The in situ hybridization localized the transcript in interstitial Leydig cells, peritubular myoid cells and, inside the tubules, in germ cells from pachytene spermatocytes to newly formed haploid spermatids. The immunohistochemistry analysis localized the protein in the same cell types at 27 dpp, while at 35 and 60 dpp the haploid cells remain the only germ cells that still express it. In particular, PTMA specific localization in the heads of spermatids and epididymal spermatozoa, associated with the acrosome system, supports for the first time the hypothesis of a direct function in male germ cells.
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Gaia Izzo, Diana Ferrara, Francesco Napolitano, Alessia Anna Crispo, d'Istria Michela, Francesco Aniello, Sergio Minucci (2010)  Identification of a cDNA encoding for Ghrelin in the testis of the frog Pelophylax esculentus and its involvement in spermatogenesis.   Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol Sep  
Abstract: GHRELIN (GHRL) is an acylated peptide that contains 28-amino acids prevalently expressed in the stomach of several species. Specifically, it contributes to energy balance, but some new evidence highlights its role in the regulation of reproductive functions. In fact, this protein has been detected at testicular level in the tubular and interstitial compartments of several vertebrate species, and previous research has demonstrated that GHRL affects various aspects of spermatogenesis and steroidogenesis. GHRL clearly plays an inhibitory role in mammalian reproduction, in contrast GHRL stimulates reproductive functions in non mammalian vertebrate. We have focused our attention on the comparative aspect of GHRL, thus studying its expression in an amphibian seasonal breeder, Pelophylax esculentus, to verify the presence and localization, of Ghrl transcript variations during the frog reproductive cycle, in order to demonstrate that Pelophylax esculentus may represent a useful animal model to assess the role of GHRL in male fertility.
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2009
Marina Prisco, Aldo Donizetti, Francesco Aniello, Annamaria Locascio, Giuseppina Del Giudice, Marisa Agnese, Francesco Angelini, Piero Andreuccetti (2009)  Expression of Prothymosin alpha during the spermatogenesis of the spotted ray Torpedo marmorata.   Gen Comp Endocrinol 164: 1. 70-76 Oct  
Abstract: In this study, we show that Prothymosin alpha (Ptma), a small, unfolded, negatively charged protein, is present in the cartilaginous fish Torpedo marmorata. The ptma gene is functional and peculiarly controlled during the male spermatogenesis of T. marmorata, as revealed by in situ hybridization and by immunocytochemistry studies. The data show that the ptma transcript is present in stage-specific germ cells, i.e. spermatocytes II and round spermatids. The Ptma protein is detectable in spermatocytes II, in round and elongated spermatids as well as in spermatozoa before their release from cysts, while it is not evident in spermatozoa located in male genital tracts. The ptma transcript and protein are also evident in some Leydig cells, located among maturing cysts containing meiotic and differentiating male cells. No expression for ptma is observed within Sertoli cells. Furthermore, immunolocalization procedures demonstrate that the protein is preferentially localized in the cytoplasm, whereas a nuclear localization is observed in round and elongated spermatids. The possibility that Ptma is involved in testis activity is discussed.
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Aldo Donizetti, Marcella Fiengo, Sergio Minucci, Francesco Aniello (2009)  Duplicated zebrafish relaxin-3 gene shows a different expression pattern from that of the co-orthologue gene.   Dev Growth Differ 51: 8. 715-722 Oct  
Abstract: Relaxin-3 (Rln3) is thought to function as a neurotransmitter mainly produced in the mammalian nucleus incertus and is involved in different neural processes; among them, the stress response and food intake. Here, we report the expression pattern of the duplicated zebrafish rln3b gene and compare it to the previously analyszd spatial expression pattern of the rln3a gene. Both genes, during the embryogenesis and in the adult fish, are active and show relevant differences in their expression patterns. rln3b is diffusely expressed in the brain until the pharyngula period, when, at 48 h postfertilization (hpf), the expression becomes restricted to the periaqueductal gray, where it persists also at later developmental stages. No expression was observed in the nucleus incertus cells that express the rln3a gene from 72 hpf. In the adult, both genes are expressed in brain, but only rln3b transcript is revealed in testis at the similar expression level, whereas in the other analyzed tissues the transcript levels are lower or absent. Both the putative mature protein sequences are highly conserved, this feature and their differential expression patterns might indicate a sub-functionalization during evolution with the consequent retention of the two paralogues genes.
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Diana Ferrara, Gaia Izzo, Lucia Liguori, d'Istria Michela, Francesco Aniello, Sergio Minucci (2009)  Evidence for the involvement of prothymosin alpha in the spermatogenesis of the frog Rana esculenta.   J Exp Zool A Ecol Genet Physiol 311: 1. 1-10 Jan  
Abstract: Prothymosin alpha (PTMA) is a small acidic protein abundantly and ubiquitously expressed in mammals and involved in different biological activities. Until now, its specific function in spermatogenesis has never been properly investigated. Recently, the isolation of a cDNA encoding for PTMA from the testis of the frog Rana esculenta has been reported: ptma transcript is highly expressed throughout the frog reproductive cycle, peaking in September/October, in concomitance with the germ cell maturation; it is specifically localized in the cytoplasm of primary and secondary spermatocytes and, at a lower level, in the interstitial compartment, in Leydig cells.In this article we support the involvement of PTMA in the meiotic phases of frog spermatogenesis. The expression of ptma mRNA increases in the testis of frogs treated with the antiandrogen cyproterone acetate, which blocks the II meiotic division and induces an increase in SPC cysts; on the contrary, it highly decreases in the testis of animals kept at 4 degrees C and treated with human corionic gonadotropin, in concomitance with the induced block of spermatogenesis and the disappearance of meiotic cells in the tubules. Furthermore, for the first time we have also evidenced by immunohistochemistry the expression of PTMA in the nuclei of secondary spermatocytes, spermatids, and spermatozoa, as well as in the cytoplasm of interstitial Leydig cells. Taken together our data suggest for an important role of PTMA in germ cell maturation and/or differentiation during R. esculenta spermatogenesis.
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2008
Aldo Donizetti, Daniela Liccardo, Daniela Esposito, Rosanna Del Gaudio, Annamaria Locascio, Diana Ferrara, Sergio Minucci, Francesco Aniello (2008)  Differential expression of duplicated genes for prothymosin alpha during zebrafish development.   Dev Dyn 237: 4. 1112-1118 Apr  
Abstract: We show that ptma, a single copy gene found in all organisms investigated so far, is duplicated in zebrafish. The two genes, ptmaa and ptmab, are individually controlled as indicated by their different expression patterns during embryonic development. Only the ptmab transcript is observed at 4 and 8 hpf of development in all embryonic cells, whereas both genes are expressed at later stages as revealed by in situ hybridization studies. In most cases, the two genes are expressed in the same territories, but only the ptmaa transcript was found in the trigeminal ganglion and in endodermal pouches. In the eye, at 72 hpf, the ptmaa and ptmab transcripts were found in amacrine cells, whereas only the ptmab transcript appeared in horizontal cells. The existence of two prothymosin genes indicates that their function in cell proliferation and differentiation is more complex in fishes than in mammals.
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Giancarlo Candela, Varriale Sergio, Lorenzo Di Libero, Fiorenza Manetta, Marco Giordano, Michele Lanza, Giovanni Scetta, Alessandra Pizza, Valerio Sciascia, Salvatore Napolitano, Francesco D'Aniello, Vincenzo Casaburi, Daniela Esposito, Gerardo Sarno, Luigi Santini (2008)  [Prognostic and therapeutic value of D2 lymphadenectomy in the treatment of gastric cancer: experience of an Italian team].   Chir Ital 60: 5. 675-684 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: Recently, the incidence of gastric cancer and the related percentage of mortality have been decreasing world-wide, especially in the industrialised countries. Surgery has commonly been opted for as primary treatment of this disease. However, the optimal extent of surgical intervention is still debated. Japanese surgeons have been the pioneers of perigastric and celiac tripod lymphadenectomies in an attempt to improve long-term survival and the postoperative disease-free period. In recent years, D2 resection has been compared with D1 resection, which consists in excision of the stomach along with its locoregional nodes. From March 2002 to January 2007, 70 interventions for gastric cancer were performed at the VII Division of General Surgery of the Second University of Naples. All patients underwent excision of the lymph nodes from stations 1 to 6 (D1) combined with excision of stations 7 to 12 (D2). In 32 cases (45.7%) there were no metastatic lymph nodes (NO), in 28 patients (40%) 1 to 6 nodes proved metastatic (N1), and in 10 cases (14.3%) from 7 to 15 nodes were metastasised (N2). The incidence of metastatic lymph nodes was 54.3% and the prevalence 13.6%. Metastatic lymph nodes were found mostly in T3 (15/24) and T4 (14/20) stage tumours rather than in T1 (3/12) and T2 (6/14) neoplasms. Two patients (2.86%) died within 60 days of the intervention. The overall postoperative morbidity and mortality rates were 21.43% and 2.86%, respectively. D2 gastrectomies without pancreatic resections present distinct advantages in terms of long-term survival and are associated with postoperative morbidity and mortality rates which are similar to those obtained after D1 node resection.
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Aldo Donizetti, Mario Grossi, Paolo Pariante, Enrico D'Aniello, Gaia Izzo, Sergio Minucci, Francesco Aniello (2008)  Two neuron clusters in the stem of postembryonic zebrafish brain specifically express relaxin-3 gene: first evidence of nucleus incertus in fish.   Dev Dyn 237: 12. 3864-3869 Dec  
Abstract: We examined the spatial expression of the relaxin-3 gene in the developing zebrafish brain, one of the vertebrate model systems in which this gene has been identified. Until the pharyngula stage, the gene is expressed diffusely in the brain, where, starting at about 40 hpf, the transcripts appear restricted in a midbrain cell cluster of the periaqueductal gray. Later, at 72 hpf, the transcripts are still evident in that cluster and distributed in a larger cell number; at this stage, the gene is also expressed posteriorly, in a smaller cell group that, as we report for the first time, could be homologous to mammalian nucleus incertus. The gene expression persists in both cell clusters at 96 hpf. This pattern indicates both conserved and divergent expression features of the relaxin-3 gene among developing zebrafish and rat brains, where only scattered cells express the gene in the periaqueductal gray.
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2007
Giancarlo Candela, Sergio Varriale, Lorenzo Di Libero, Fiorenza Manetta, Marco Giordano, Antonio Maschio, Fabio Civitillo, Alessandra Pizza, Salvatore Napolitano, Michele Lanza, Giacomo Argenziano, Valerio Sciascia, Vincenzo Casaburi, Francesco D'Aniello, Roberto Varriale, Luigi Santini (2007)  Surgical therapy of goiter plunged in the mediastinum. Considerations regarding our experience with 165 patients.   Chir Ital 59: 6. 843-851 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: Thyroid goiter is called plunged when, starting from the cervical region, it grows in the anterior-superior mediastinum to a depth of more than 2 cm. The highest frequency (48.44%) is evident in the age range from 60 to 70. From February 2002 to August 2005, performed 133 (80.6%) near total thyroidectomies, 26 total thyroidectomies (15.7%), 4 lobectomies (2.4%) and 2 (1.2%) totalisations of recurrences for plunged goiter in the 7th Division of General Surgery of the Second University of Naples. The goiters were classified using Lamke and Ferrante's topographical classification, which distinguishes between prevascular and retrovascular cervico-mediastinal goiters depending on the position assumed by the part plunged in the mediastinum in relation to the vascular layer of the epiaortic trunks. Retrovascular goiters are further subdivided into: pre-tracheal, laterovisceral and retrovisceral goiters depending on the relation to the trachea, oesophagus and epiaortic trunks. Among the patients who underwent near total thyroidectomy, there were 3 cases of permanent hypocalcaemia, 7 (7.2%) of temporary hypocalcaemia and only 1 (0.6%) monolateral temporary recurrent nerve lesion. Among those who underwent total thyroidectomy there was 1 case (0.6%) of temporary hypocalcaemia, and 1 (0.6%) of permanent hypocalcaemia. Postoperatively we also observed 3 cases (1.8%) of haemorrhage and 3 (1.8%) transfers to intensive care for respiratory insufficiency; 1 of these patients died 25 days after the operation. Ligature of the inferior and superior thyroid artery near the thyroid capsule protects the vascularisation of the parathyroid glands as well as the recurrent nerve and its division branches.
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G Pulcrano, R Leonardo, M Piscopo, E Nargi, A Locascio, F Aniello, M Branno, L Fucci (2007)  PLAUF binding to the 3'UTR of the H3.3 histone transcript affects mRNA stability.   Gene 406: 1-2. 124-133 Dec  
Abstract: In P. lividus sea urchin the H3.3 histone variant is coded by an mRNA characterized by a long 3'UTR containing ARE (AU-Rich element) motifs. RNA stability assays performed in rabbit reticulocyte lysate showed that such 3'UTR affects the degradation rate of the transcripts. In fact, chimeric molecules containing the 3'UTR of H3.3 transcript, ligated to the coding region of the rabbit beta-globin transcript, were unstable whereas chimeric molecules containing mainly the coding region of the H3.3 transcript were stable as the wild-type globin mRNA. Three proteins (45kDa, 32kDa and 25kDa) that bind specifically the 3'UTR have been revealed in the whole protein extracts of embryos at different stages of development. PLAUF, a P. lividus RNA-binding protein similar to human and rodent AUF1 proteins, was identified as the 32kDa factor using anti-PLAUF antibody in Western blot and supershift mobility assays. Moreover the recombinant GST-PLAUF protein specifically binds part of the H3.3 3'UTR and in vitro affects the half-life of the transcript. In addition in situ hybridization experiments demonstrated that PLAUF and H3.3 histone mRNAs co-localize in embryos at different stages of development. In conclusion all the reported results suggest that PLAUF can bind in vivo the 3'UTR of the H3.3 histone mRNA and plays some role in the stability of the mRNA.
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2006
Salvatore D'Aniello, Enrico D'Aniello, Annamaria Locascio, Alessandra Memoli, Marcella Corrado, Monia Teresa Russo, Francesco Aniello, Laura Fucci, Euan R Brown, Margherita Branno (2006)  The ascidian homolog of the vertebrate homeobox gene Rx is essential for ocellus development and function.   Differentiation 74: 5. 222-234 Jun  
Abstract: The tadpole larvae prosencephalon of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis contains a single large ventricle, along the inner walls of which lie two sensory organs: the otolith (a gravity-sensing organ) and the ocellus (a photo-sensing organ composed of a single cup-shaped pigment cell, about 20 photoreceptor cells, and three lens cells). Comparison has been drawn between the morphology and physiology of photoreceptor cells in the ascidian ocellus and the vertebrate eye. The development of vertebrate and invertebrate eyes requires the activity of several conserved genes and it is regulated by precise expression patterns and cell fate decisions common to several species. We have isolated a Ciona homeobox gene (Ci-Rx) that belongs to the paired-like class of homeobox genes. Rx genes have been identified from a variety of organisms and have been demonstrated to have a role in vertebrate eye formation. Ci-Rx is expressed in the anterior neural plate in the middle tailbud stage and subsequently in the larval stage in the sensory vesicle around the ocellus. Loss of Ci-Rx function leads to an ocellus-less phenotype that shows a loss of photosensitive swimming behavior, suggesting the important role played by Ci-Rx in basal chordate photoreceptor cell differentiation and ocellus formation. Furthermore, studies on Ci-Rx regulatory elements electroporated into Ciona embryos using LacZ or GFP as reporter genes indicate the presence of Ci-Rx in pigment cells, photoreceptors, and neurons surrounding the sensory vesicle. In Ci-Rx knocked-down larvae, neither basal swimming activity nor shadow responses develop. Thus, Rx has a role not only in pigment cells and photoreceptor formation but also in the correct development of the neuronal circuit that controls larval photosensitivity and swimming behavior. The results suggest that a Ci-Rx "retinal" territory exists, which consists of pigment cells, photoreceptors, and neurons involved in transducing the photoreceptor signals.
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Francesco Aniello, Giuseppe Colella, Gianluca Muscariello, Antonio Lanza, Diana Ferrara, Margherita Branno, Sergio Minucci (2006)  Expression of four histone lysine-methyltransferases in parotid gland tumors.   Anticancer Res 26: 3A. 2063-2067 May/Jun  
Abstract: Methylation of histones is one of the important "epigenetic" mechanisms associated with the transcriptional silencing and/or activating of tumor suppressor genes. To assess whether epigenetic phenomena could be involved in salivary gland carcinogenesis, the expression levels of four histone lysine-methyltransferases (HMT) were investigated, in both pleomorphic adenoma and the adjacent normal tissue of the parotid glands. The expression levels of three HMTs, SETB1, Eu-HMTase and SET08, were higher in tumor tissues. On the contrary, DOTL1 presented a lower expression level in the tumor tissues than in the corresponding normal tissues. These data suggest that the HMTs may be involved in the differentiation of pleomorphic adenoma, probably through chromatin structural changes, and indicates that the study of the epigenetic mechanism which modulates the variation in the methylation profile of histones may be useful to obtain information concerning those genes involved in tumor transformation in human parotid glands.
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Gianluca De Rienzo, Francesco Aniello, Margherita Branno, Gaia Izzo, Sergio Minucci (2006)  The expression level of frog relaxin mRNA (fRLX), in the testis of Rana esculenta, is influenced by testosterone.   J Exp Biol 209: Pt 19. 3806-3811 Oct  
Abstract: Frog relaxin (fRLX) belongs to the relaxin/insulin gene family present in the testis of Rana esculenta and is specifically expressed by Leydig cells. Since the expression of fRLX transcript changes during the reproductive cycle and is more abundant when circulating levels of androgens are relatively high, we investigated the effect(s) of testosterone and its antagonist (cyproterone acetate, CPA) on its expression pattern, in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta. Results from in vivo and in vitro experiments demonstrate that testosterone strongly induces a significant increase of fRLX mRNA expression in frog testes and, this effect is counteracted by CPA, supporting the existence of intratesticular (autocrine/paracrine) mechanisms of action. Interestingly, in both the control and testosterone-treated testes, fRLX mRNA expression was markedly decreased 24 h post-treatment, as compared to that measured at 2 h and 8 h post-treatment, suggesting that factor(s), other than testosterone, may act(s) in controlling its expression. In addition, RT-PCR analysis and in situ hybridization performed on frog testis injected with CPA for 15 days, on alternate days, showed a strong decrease of fRLX expression, suggesting that CPA counteracts the effect of testosterone on fRLX expression. Taken together our results strongly indicate that changes in the production, by the Leydig cells, of both testosterone and fRLX may represent a marker for the study of Leydig cell activity in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta.
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G Izzo, M d'Istria, D Ferrara, I Serino, F Aniello, S Minucci (2006)  Connexin 43 expression in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta.   Zygote 14: 4. 349-357 Nov  
Abstract: Testicular cell-to-cell interactions play a key role in the regulation of spermatogenesis. In the testis, cell contacts are mediated through several mechanisms, including paracrine and direct contacts depending on gap junctional pathways. Gap junctions require connexin (Cx) channels and connexin-43 (Cx43) represent the most abundant Cx found in mammalian testis. Little is known about Cx expression in non-mammalian testis. Here we report the partial cloning of a Cx43 transcript of 381 bp from Rana esculenta testis. We also demonstrate that, in the frog testis, Cx43 transcript and protein show a parallel temporal and spatial pattern of expression throughout the reproductive annual cycle, with higher levels from September to January (when spermatogenesis is at a maximum level). In situ hybridization, carried out on testis collected in October, indicated that Leydig cells (LC) and Sertoli cells express Cx43 transcript, while the hybridization signal was less intense in germ cells. To obtain more information on Cx43 expression in the frog testis, we have used ethane-dimethane sulphonate (EDS), a toxin that specifically destroys LC. RT-PCR analysis shows a progressive decrease in Cx43 expression in EDS-treated testis from day 1 to day 4 after the injection, associated with LC destruction. Moreover, Cx43 expression returns to normal on day 28, when a new population of LC reappear in the interstitium, indicating that Cx43 is mainly expressed by LC. Taken together our data provide evidence that Cx43 is present in the frog testis with an important role in spermatogenesis.
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2005
G Pulcrano, R Leonardo, F Aniello, P Mancini, M Piscopo, M Branno, L Fucci (2005)  PLAUF is a novel P. lividus sea urchin RNA-binding protein.   Gene 347: 1. 99-107 Feb  
Abstract: Preliminary results have shown that various proteins bind long 3'UTR of the transcript for Paracentrotus lividus sea urchin H3.3 histone variant and are probably implicated in mRNA instability. In order to identify these RNA-binding proteins, we screened a lambda-ZAPII cDNA expression library prepared from poly(A) mRNA extracted from sea urchin embryos at blastula stage. We isolated a cDNA that codes for a novel RNA-binding protein homologous to rat and human AUF1 family proteins and we refer to it as PLAUF. Proteins present in the whole lysate of the phages expressing PLAUF bound specifically in vitro the 3'UTR of the H3.3 histone transcript. Northern blot analysis revealed three PLAUF transcripts that are already present in unfertilized eggs; during development their amount increased starting from 4-blastomere embryos and reached the plateau at blastula stage. While the transcription start point was unique, longer 3'UTRs were revealed by 3'RACE approach and further cDNA library screening. Moreover RT-PCR showed the presence of at least one alternative spliced mRNA that codes for a protein with different COOH terminus. The structure of the PLAUF gene was determined by screening a P. lividus sea urchin genomic library with the PLAUF cDNA as probe. Analysis of the positive clones showed that the PLAUF gene is split in 10 exons and 9 introns spanning a distance of about 10 kb. Moreover we demonstrated that the exon 9 was alternative spliced during mRNA processing.
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2004
Monia Teresa Russo, Aldo Donizetti, Annamaria Locascio, Salvatore D'Aniello, Alessandro Amoroso, Francesco Aniello, Laura Fucci, Margherita Branno (2004)  Regulatory elements controlling Ci-msxb tissue-specific expression during Ciona intestinalis embryonic development.   Dev Biol 267: 2. 517-528 Mar  
Abstract: The msh/Msx family is a subclass of homeobox-containing genes suggested to perform a conserved function in the patterning of the early embryo. We had already isolated a member of this gene family (Ci-msxb) in Ciona intestinalis, which has a very complex expression pattern during embryogenesis. To identify the regulatory elements controlling its tissue-specific expression, we have characterized the gene structure and the regulatory upstream region. By electroporation experiments, we demonstrated that a 3.8-kb region located upstream of the gene contains all the regulatory elements able to reproduce its spatial expression pattern. Analyzing progressively truncated fragments of this region, three discrete and separate regions driving LacZ reporter gene expression in the ventral epidermis, primordial pharynx and neural territories have been identified. We further investigated the element(s) necessary for Ci-msxb activation in the nervous system during embryonic development by in vivo and in vitro experiments. Both electroporation and gel-shift assays of overlapping wild type and mutated oligonucleotides demonstrated that a unique sequence of 30 bp is involved in Ci-msxb neural activation from neurula to larva stage. This sequence contains consensus binding sites for various ubiquitous transcription factors such as TCF11 whose possible implication in formation of the regulatory complexes is discussed.
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P Mancini, G Pulcrano, M Piscopo, F Aniello, M Branno, L Fucci (2004)  A new family of "H3L-like" histone genes.   J Mol Evol 59: 4. 458-463 Oct  
Abstract: The H3L histone variant gene in Paracentrotus lividus (sea urchin) shows almost all typical features of the replication-dependent histone genes, but it codes for the H3.3 histone protein with the S.//. A.IG amino acid motif, which is typical of the variants synthesized in a replication-independent manner. "H3L-like" histone genes have been found in several unrelated organisms. These genes are intronless and encode for the typical H3.3 histone proteins. The newly described family of H3L-like variants, nearly ubiquitous within the animal kingdom, could represent the common ancestor of H3 and H3.3 histone genes.
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2003
Antonietta Spagnuolo, Filomena Ristoratore, Anna Di Gregorio, Francesco Aniello, Margherita Branno, Roberto Di Lauro (2003)  Unusual number and genomic organization of Hox genes in the tunicate Ciona intestinalis.   Gene 309: 2. 71-79 May  
Abstract: Hox genes are organized in genomic clusters. In all organisms where their role has been studied, Hox genes determine developmental fate along the antero-posterior axis. Hence, these genes represent an ideal system for the understanding of relationships between the number and expression of genes and body organization. We report in this paper that the ascidian Ciona intestinalis genome appears to contain a single Hox gene complex which shows absence of some of the members found in all chordates investigated up to now. Furthermore, the complex appears to be either unusually long or split in different subunits. We speculate that such an arrangement of Hox genes does not correspond to the chordate primordial cluster but occurred independently in the ascidian lineage.
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Francesco Aniello, Glauco Villano, Marcella Corrado, Annamaria Locascio, Monia T Russo, Salvatore D'Aniello, Maria Francone, Laura Fucci, Margherita Branno (2003)  Structural organization of the sea urchin DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase gene and characterization of five alternative spliced transcripts.   Gene 302: 1-2. 1-9 Jan  
Abstract: Sea urchin DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase (Dnmt1) that is responsible for maintenance of DNA methylation patterns clearly shares similarity with various Dnmt1s identified in vertebrates. In this study, we determined the structure of the sea urchin Dnmt1 gene by screening a genomic library of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus with the complementary DNA (cDNA) as probe. Analysis of the positive clones demonstrated that the Dnmt1 gene consists of 34 exons and 33 introns spanning a distance of 35 kb. All exon-intron junction sequences agree with the GT/AG consensus with the exception of the 3' acceptor site of intron 8 where CT replaces AG consensus. The differences in the total number of exons between sea urchin and mouse genes reside mainly in the N-terminal region of the protein (exons 5-7 of the sea urchin, exons 5-12 of the mouse) where there is very low similarity in the amino acid sequence. By reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction using oligonucleotides spanning different regions of the cDNA we carried out a comprehensive analysis of alternative splicing of the Dnmt1 messenger RNA (mRNA) in sea urchin embryos at different stages of development. We demonstrated the presence of at least five alternative spliced mRNAs that are regulated during development and are translated in truncated or deleted proteins.
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Antimo D'Aniello, Patrizia Spinelli, Antonietta De Simone, Salvatore D'Aniello, Margherita Branno, Francesco Aniello, George H Fisher, Maria M Di Fiore, Rakesh K Rastogi (2003)  Occurrence and neuroendocrine role of D-aspartic acid and N-methyl-D-aspartic acid in Ciona intestinalis.   FEBS Lett 552: 2-3. 193-198 Sep  
Abstract: Probes for the occurrence of endogenous D-aspartic acid (D-Asp) and N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) in the neural complex and gonads of a protochordate, the ascidian Ciona intestinalis, have confirmed the presence of these two excitatory amino acids and their involvement in hormonal activity. A hormonal pathway similar to that which occurs in vertebrates has been discovered. In the cerebral ganglion D-Asp is synthesized from L-Asp by an aspartate racemase. Then, D-Asp is transferred through the blood stream into the neural gland where it gives rise to NMDA by means of an NMDA synthase. NMDA, in turn, passes from the neuronal gland into the gonads where it induces the synthesis and release of a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). The GnRH in turn modulates the release and synthesis of testosterone and progesterone in the gonads, which are implicated in reproduction.
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Annamaria Piscopo, Giovanna Pulcrano, Francesco Aniello, Margherita Branno, Laura Fucci (2003)  Methylation profile of P. lividus sea urchin genes during development.   Ital J Biochem 52: 4. 136-140 Dec  
Abstract: Methylation pattern has been studied in two genes of sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus using sodium bisulfite method to understand the possible role of DNA methylation during invertebrate development. Three regions of the gene for the hatching enzyme have been analyzed and all of them resulted unmethylated in embryos at different stages of development. Four CpG rich regions have been studied in the gene for DNA methyltransferase: upstream, upstream-exon1, intron 1 and exon 20. The upstream-exon 1 region is always unmethylated, while intron 1 and exon 20 are heavy methylated. Only the upstream fragment changed its pattern of methylation during development. For none of the studied regions the reported data show a general direct correlation between gene expression and methylation process during development.
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2002
Francesco Aniello, Margherita Branno, Gianluca De Rienzo, Diana Ferrara, Carmela Palmiero, Sergio Minucci (2002)  First evidence of prothymosin alpha in a non-mammalian vertebrate and its involvement in the spermatogenesis of the frog Rana esculenta.   Mech Dev 110: 1-2. 213-217 Jan  
Abstract: A cDNA clone encoding for a Prothymosin alpha (Prot-alpha) has been isolated and characterized from the testis of the frog Rana esculenta. Frog Prothymosin alpha (fProt-alpha) predicted a 109 amino acid protein with a high homology to the mammalian Prot-alpha. fProt-alpha contains 28 aspartic and 25 glutamic acid residues and presents the typical basic KKQK amino acid sequence in the close carboxyl terminal region. Northern blot analysis revealed that fProt-alpha is highly expressed in the testis. A different expression of fProt-alpha transcript was found during the frog reproductive cycle with a peak in September/October in concomitance with germ cell maturation, strongly suggesting a role for this protein in the testicular activity. In situ hybridization evidenced that the only germ cells expressing fProt-alpha are the primary and secondary spermatocytes; in addition, the hybridization signal was stronger in the October testis. Taken together, our findings indicate that fProt-alpha might contribute to the efficiency of frog spermatogenesis with a role during the meiosis. This study is the first report on the isolation and characterization of a Prot-alpha in a non-mammalian vertebrate. In addition, our results indicate that the testis of the frog R. esculenta may be a useful model to increase the knowledge concerning the physiological role of Prot-alpha in vertebrates.
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Anna Valentina Cioffi, Diana Ferrara, Maria Vittoria Cubellis, Francesco Aniello, Marcella Corrado, Francesca Liguori, Alessandro Amoroso, Laura Fucci, Margherita Branno (2002)  An open reading frame in intron seven of the sea urchin DNA-methyltransferase gene codes for a functional AP1 endonuclease.   Biochem J 365: Pt 3. 833-840 Aug  
Abstract: Analysis of the genome structure of the Paracentrotus lividus (sea urchin) DNA methyltransferase (DNA MTase) gene showed the presence of an open reading frame, named METEX, in intron 7 of the gene. METEX expression is developmentally regulated, showing no correlation with DNA MTase expression. In fact, DNA MTase transcripts are present at high concentrations in the early developmental stages, while METEX is expressed at late stages of development. Two METEX cDNA clones (Met1 and Met2) that are different in the 3' end have been isolated in a cDNA library screening. The putative translated protein from Met2 cDNA clone showed similarity with Escherichia coli endonuclease III on the basis of sequence and predictive three-dimensional structure. The protein, overexpressed in E. coli and purified, had functional properties similar to the endonuclease specific for apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites on the basis of the lyase activity. Therefore the open reading frame, present in intron 7 of the P. lividus DNA MTase gene, codes for a functional AP endonuclease designated SuAP1.
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Antimo D'Aniello, Antonella De Simone, Patrizia Spinelli, Salvatore D'Aniello, Margherita Branno, Francesco Aniello, Jeannette Rios, Mara Tsesarskaja, George Fisher (2002)  A specific enzymatic high-performance liquid chromatography method to determine N-methyl-D-aspartic acid in biological tissues.   Anal Biochem 308: 1. 42-51 Sep  
Abstract: Recently we demonstrated that N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) is present as an endogenous compound in the nervous tissues and endocrine glands of the rat where it plays a role in the regulation of the luteinizing hormone, growth hormone, and prolactin (FASEB J. 14 (2000) 699; Endocrinology 141 (2000) 3861). Based on the prediction that NMDA could have future importance in neuroendocrinology, we have devised an improved method for the specific and routine determination of NMDA in biological tissue. This method is based on the detection by HPLC of methylamine (CH(3)NH(2)) which comes from the oxidation of NMDA by D-aspartate oxidase, an enzyme which specifically oxidizes NMDA, yielding CH(3)NH(2) as one of the oxidative products of the reaction. The sensitivity of the method permits the accurate determination of NMDA in the supernatant of a tissue homogenate at levels of about 5-10 picomol/assay. However, for those tissues in which the concentration of NMDA is less than 1nmol/g, the sample must be further purified by treatment with o-phthaldialdehyde in order to separate the NMDA from the other amino acids and amino compounds and then concentrated and analyzed by HPLC. Using this method we have conducted a comparative study in order to measure the amount of NMDA in neuroendocrine and other tissues of various animal phyla from mollusks to mammals.
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2001
G de Rienzo, F Aniello, M Branno, S Minucci (2001)  Isolation and characterization of a novel member of the relaxin/insulin family from the testis of the frog Rana esculenta.   Endocrinology 142: 7. 3231-3238 Jul  
Abstract: A complementary DNA (cDNA) encoding a frog relaxin/insulin member family (fRLX) from testis cDNA library was isolated and characterized. The fRLX cDNA predicted a 155-amino acid protein with a low homology to mammalian RLF and relaxin. Northern blot analysis revealed a single transcript expressed in the interstitial compartment, RT-PCR, evidenced that fRLX is expressed at low levels in the oviduct and ovary too. The predicted mature fRLX protein, composed of the signal peptide, B, C, and A domains, has conserved amino acid sequences in the characteristic functional domains. A different expression of the transcript was found during the frog reproductive cycle, with a peak in Spring. After administration of ethane dimethane sulfonate, by in situ hybridization, fRLX messenger RNA disappeared from the interstitial compartment and reappeared again at the time of generating of a new population of Leydig cells (LC), strongly indicating that LC are the interstitial cell type expressing fRLX. Preliminary results obtained by in situ hybridization, performed on testis of hypophysectomized frogs evidenced a pituitary control of fRLX expression. This study is the first cloning of a relaxin/insulin family member in a nonmammalian vertebrate. In addition, because fRLX expression changes during the annual cycle suggesting its involvement in spermatogenesis, fRLX may be considered a new marker for the study of spermatogenesis in the Rana esculenta.
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R Di Giaimo, A Locascio, F Aniello, M Branno, R del Gaudio, N Potenza, G Geraci (2001)  DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferase turnover and cellular localization in developing Paracentrotus lividus sea urchin embryo.   Gene 272: 1-2. 199-208 Jul  
Abstract: The turnover and localization of the enzyme DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferase (Dnmt1) were studied during Paracentrotus lividus sea urchin embryo development using antibody preparations against the NH(2) and COOH-terminal regions of the molecule. The antibodies reveal, by Western blots and whole-mount analyses, that the enzyme is differently required during embryonic development. The changeover point is at blastula stage, where a proteolytic mechanism hydrolyses the enzyme present in all embryonic cells by removing a peptide of about 45 kDa from the amino terminal region of the 190 kDa enzyme initially synthesized on maternal transcripts. The resulting 145 kDa enzyme shows modified catalytic properties, different antibody reactivity and is rapidly destroyed in the few hours before gastrulation. At more advanced stages of development the enzyme is newly synthesized but only in particular cell types, among which neurons. The data show that Dnmt1 is removed from embryonic cells before gastrulation to be synthesized again at different levels in different cell types, indicating that the concentration of Dnmt1 is critical for the various differentiated cells of the developing sea urchin embryo.
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