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Paolo Macchi


macchi@science.unitn.it

Journal articles

2009
Manuel Zeitelhofer, Daniela Karra, John P Vessey, Elmir Jaskic, Paolo Macchi, Sabine Thomas, Julia Riefler, Michael Kiebler, Ralf Dahm (2009)  High-efficiency transfection of short hairpin RNAs-encoding plasmids into primary hippocampal neurons.   J Neurosci Res 87: 1. 289-300 Jan  
Abstract: The transfection of expression constructs encoding a variety of transgenes is a widely used method to study gene function in cultured cells. Especially when the efficiency of the knock-down of target proteins via small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) is to be determined by quantitative Western blotting, large proportions of untransfected cells compromise the analysis. Achieving high transfection efficiencies in postmitotic cells, such as neurons, poses a particular problem in that these cells cannot be selected for the expression of the transgene following transfection. It is therefore important to develop protocols that allow for the highly efficient transfection of these cells. In the present study, we identify three important parameters that prove especially useful for chronically difficult to transfect short hairpin RNA (shRNA)-encoding plasmids: the amount and quality of the plasmid DNA used and the use of new nucleofection programs. Combining those changes increases the rate of transfected cells from less than 5% to up to approximately 80%. Importantly, these high transfection efficiencies can be obtained while maintaining good cell viability and normal cellular development. Taken together, these improvements allow for a detailed biochemical and phenotypical analysis of neurons that have been nucleoporated with a wide variety of shRNAs.
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2008
Manuel Zeitelhofer, Daniela Karra, Paolo Macchi, Marco Tolino, Sabine Thomas, Martina Schwarz, Michael Kiebler, Ralf Dahm (2008)  Dynamic interaction between P-bodies and transport ribonucleoprotein particles in dendrites of mature hippocampal neurons.   J Neurosci 28: 30. 7555-7562 Jul  
Abstract: The dendritic localization of mRNAs and their subsequent translation at stimulated synapses contributes to the experience-dependent remodeling of synapses and thereby to the establishment of long-term memory. Localized mRNAs are transported in a translationally silent manner to distal dendrites in specific ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs), termed transport RNPs. A recent study suggested that processing bodies (P-bodies), which have recently been identified as sites of RNA degradation and translational control in eukaryotic cells, may participate in the translational control of dendritically localized mRNAs in Drosophila neurons. This study raised the interesting question of whether dendritic transport RNPs are distinct from P-bodies or whether those structures share significant overlap in their molecular composition in mammalian neurons. Here, we show that P-body and transport RNP markers do not colocalize and are not transported together in the same particles in dendrites of mammalian neurons. Detailed time-lapse videomicroscopy analyses reveal, however, that both P-bodies and transport RNPs can interact in a dynamic manner via docking. Docking is a frequent event involving as much as 50% of all dendritic P-bodies. Chemically induced neuronal activity results in a 60% decrease in the number of P-bodies in dendrites, suggesting that P-bodies disassemble after synaptic stimulation. Our data lend support to the exciting hypothesis that dendritically localized mRNAs might be stored in P-bodies and be released and possibly translated when synapses become activated.
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Yuriko Kobayashi, Keiichi Suzuki, Hideaki Kobayashi, Sachiyo Ohashi, Katsuya Koike, Paolo Macchi, Michael Kiebler, Kaijiro Anzai (2008)  C9orf10 protein, a novel protein component of Puralpha-containing mRNA-protein particles (Puralpha-mRNPs): characterization of developmental and regional expressions in the mouse brain.   J Histochem Cytochem 56: 8. 723-731 Aug  
Abstract: Puralpha has been implicated in mRNA transport and translation in neurons. We previously reported that Puralpha is a component of mRNA/protein complexes (Puralpha-mRNPs) with several other proteins. Among them, we found the C9orf10 (Homo sapiens chromosome 9 open reading frame 10) protein, which was recently characterized as a component of RNA-containing structures. However, C9orf10 itself remains poorly understood. To characterize C9orf10 expression at the protein level, we raised an antibody against C9orf10 and compared the spatial and developmental expressions of this protein and Puralpha in the mouse brain. C9orf10 was expressed as early as embryo stage 12, whereas Puralpha was expressed from 5 days after birth. In adults, C9orf10 expression was most prominent in the hippocampus, caudate putamen, cerebral cortex, and cerebellum, unlike the uniform distribution of Puralpha. C9orf10-positive cells also showed immunoreactivity to Puralpha. C9orf10 expression was restricted to neurons, judging by the immunoreactivity to neuron-specific nuclear protein or CaM kinase II. These observations suggest an accessory role of C9orf10 for Puralpha in a limited brain region in addition to other possible functions that have not yet been determined.
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Manuel Zeitelhofer, Paolo Macchi, Ralf Dahm (2008)  Perplexing bodies: The putative roles of P-bodies in neurons.   RNA Biol 5: 4. 244-248 Oct/Dec  
Abstract: Processing bodies (P-bodies) have recently come to the fore as important cellular sites of mRNA degradation and translational silencing. Despite these central functions in the control of gene expression, the roles of P-bodies have only been characterized in a limited number of cell types and physiological contexts. Neurons are highly plastic cells that undergo dynamic changes as new connections are made or existing ones modified. This neuronal plasticity relies, in part, on the local synthesis of proteins from localized mRNAs. A strict control of the translation and turnover of these localized mRNAs, both in terms of which proteins are synthesized and when and where they are produced, is a key prerequisite for this process to be synapse-specific. Despite recent advances, the molecular mechanisms mediating this control remain largely elusive. The discovery of P-bodies in neuronal dendrites near synapses and their response to stimuli involved in neuronal plasticity raises the interesting hypothesis that P-bodies might be a component of the cellular machinery that controls neuronal plasticity and thereby processes such as learning and memory.
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John P Vessey, Paolo Macchi, Joel M Stein, Martin Mikl, Kelvin N Hawker, Petra Vogelsang, Krzysztof Wieczorek, Georgia Vendra, Julia Riefler, Fabian Tübing, Samuel A J Aparicio, Ted Abel, Michael A Kiebler (2008)  A loss of function allele for murine Staufen1 leads to impairment of dendritic Staufen1-RNP delivery and dendritic spine morphogenesis.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105: 42. 16374-16379 Oct  
Abstract: The dsRNA-binding protein Staufen was the first RNA-binding protein proven to play a role in RNA localization in Drosophila. A mammalian homolog, Staufen1 (Stau1), has been implicated in dendritic RNA localization in neurons, translational control, and mRNA decay. However, the precise mechanisms by which it fulfills these specific roles are only partially understood. To determine its physiological functions, the murine Stau1 gene was disrupted by homologous recombination. Homozygous stau1(tm1Apa) mutant mice express a truncated Stau1 protein lacking the functional RNA-binding domain 3. The level of the truncated protein is significantly reduced. Cultured hippocampal neurons derived from stau1(tm1Apa) homozygous mice display deficits in dendritic delivery of Stau1-EYFP and beta-actin mRNA-containing ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs). Furthermore, these neurons have a significantly reduced dendritic tree and develop fewer synapses. Homozygous stau1(tm1Apa) mutant mice are viable and show no obvious deficits in development, fertility, health, overall brain morphology, and a variety of behavioral assays, e.g., hippocampus-dependent learning. However, we did detect deficits in locomotor activity. Our data suggest that Stau1 is crucial for synapse development in vitro but not critical for normal behavioral function.
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Ralf Dahm, Manuel Zeitelhofer, Bernhard Götze, Michael A Kiebler, Paolo Macchi (2008)  Visualizing mRNA localization and local protein translation in neurons.   Methods Cell Biol 85: 293-327  
Abstract: Fluorescent proteins (FPs) have been successfully used to study the localization and interactions of proteins in living cells. They have also been instrumental in analyzing the proteins involved in the localization of RNAs in different cell types, including neurons. With the development of methods that also tag RNAs via fluorescent proteins, researchers now have a powerful tool to covisualize RNAs and associated proteins in living neurons. Here, we review the current status of the use of FPs in the study of transport and localization of ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs) in neurons and provide key protocols used to introduce transgenes into cultured neurons, including calcium-phosphate-based transfection and nucleofection. These methods allow the fast and efficient expression of fluorescently tagged fusion proteins in neurons at different stages of differentiation and form the basis for fluorescent protein-based live cell imaging in neuronal cultures. Additional protocols are given that allow the simultaneous visualization of RNP proteins and cargo RNAs in living neurons and aspects of the visualization of fluorescently tagged proteins in neurons, such as colocalization studies, are discussed. Finally, we review approaches to visualize the local synthesis of proteins in distal dendrites and axons.
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2007
Ralf Dahm, Michael Kiebler, Paolo Macchi (2007)  RNA localisation in the nervous system.   Semin Cell Dev Biol 18: 2. 216-223 Apr  
Abstract: The localisation of specific RNAs is a widely employed mechanism to generate asymmetry in various biological systems, e.g. during embryonic development and cellular differentiation. Here, we highlight the importance of RNA localisation in mature neurons. Specific examples of mRNAs localised in neurons are those encoding Arc, beta-actin, CaMKIIalpha and MAP2. Moreover, non-coding RNAs, such as BC1/BC200 and microRNAs (miRNAs), which play important roles in the translational regulation of localised mRNAs, receive increasing attention. The process of RNA localisation, including RNP biogenesis, transport, anchoring and translational control, and the importance of RNA localisation for the function of the nervous system are discussed.
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Ralf Dahm, Paolo Macchi (2007)  Human pathologies associated with defective RNA transport and localization in the nervous system.   Biol Cell 99: 11. 649-661 Nov  
Abstract: RNA localization is emerging as an important process to restrict certain proteins to specific subcellular domains and thus spatially control the expression of genes within cells. It is used, for instance, to compartmentalize the developing embryo during early embryogenesis. The localization of RNA also plays important roles later during development, such as in asymmetric cell divisions, cell migration and the outgrowth and pathfinding of axons and dendrites. In differentiated cells, it serves to subdivide the cell into functionally distinct compartments. For example, in mature neurons it is believed to contribute to the plastic changes of individual synapses underlying learning and memory. In this review, we highlight the importance of subcellular RNA localization for the function of the nervous system and neurological diseases associated with defective RNA localization and translation. These diseases include fragile X mental retardation syndrome, spinocerebellar ataxia and spinal muscular atrophy.
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Yunli Xie, John P Vessey, Anetta Konecna, Ralf Dahm, Paolo Macchi, Michael A Kiebler (2007)  The GTP-binding protein Septin 7 is critical for dendrite branching and dendritic-spine morphology.   Curr Biol 17: 20. 1746-1751 Oct  
Abstract: Septins, a highly conserved family of GTP-binding proteins, were originally identified in a genetic screen for S. cerevisiae mutants defective in cytokinesis [1, 2]. In yeast, septins maintain the compartmentalization of the yeast plasma membrane during cell division by forming rings at the cortex of the bud neck, and these rings establish a lateral diffusion barrier. In contrast, very little is known about the functions of septins in mammalian cells [3, 4] including postmitotic neurons [5-7]. Here, we show that Septin 7 (Sept7) localizes at the bases of filopodia and at branch points in developing hippocampal neurons. Upon downregulation of Sept7, dendritic branching is impaired. In mature neurons, Sept7 is found at the bases of dendritic spines where it associates with the plasma membrane. Mature Sept7-deficient neurons display elongated spines. Furthermore, Sept5 and Sept11 colocalize with and coimmunoprecipitate with Sept7, thereby arguing for the existence of a Septin5/7/11 complex. Taken together, our findings show an important role for Sept7 in regulating dendritic branching and dendritic-spine morphology. Our observations concur with data from yeast, in which downregulation of septins yields elongated buds, suggesting a conserved function for septins from yeast to mammals.
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2006
Catherine Martel, Paolo Macchi, Luc Furic, Michael A Kiebler, Luc Desgroseillers (2006)  Staufen1 is imported into the nucleolus via a bipartite nuclear localization signal and several modulatory determinants.   Biochem J 393: Pt 1. 245-254 Jan  
Abstract: Mammalian Stau1 (Staufen1), a modular protein composed of several dsRBDs (double-stranded RNA-binding domains), is probably involved in mRNA localization. Although Stau1 is mostly described in association with the rough endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes in the cytoplasm, recent studies suggest that it may transit through the nucleus/nucleolus. Using a sensitive yeast import assay, we show that Stau1 is actively imported into the nucleus through a newly identified bipartite nuclear localization signal. As in yeast, the bipartite nuclear localization signal is necessary for Stau1 nuclear import in mammalian cells. It is also required for Stau1 nucleolar trafficking. However, Stau1 nuclear transit seems to be regulated by mechanisms that involve cytoplasmic retention and/or facilitated nuclear export. Cytoplasmic retention is mainly achieved through the action of dsRBD3, with dsRBD2 playing a supporting role in this function. Similarly, dsRBD3, but not its RNA-binding activity, is critical for Stau1 nucleolar trafficking. The function of dsRBD3 is strengthened or stabilized by the presence of dsRBD4 but prevented by the interdomain between dsRBD2 and dsRBD3. Altogether, these results suggest that Stau1 nuclear trafficking is a highly regulated process involving several determinants. The presence of Stau1 in the nucleus/nucleolus suggests that it may be involved in ribonucleoprotein formation in the nucleus and/or in other nuclear functions not necessarily related to mRNA transport.
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Bernhard Goetze, Fabian Tuebing, Yunli Xie, Mario M Dorostkar, Sabine Thomas, Ulrich Pehl, Stefan Boehm, Paolo Macchi, Michael A Kiebler (2006)  The brain-specific double-stranded RNA-binding protein Staufen2 is required for dendritic spine morphogenesis.   J Cell Biol 172: 2. 221-231 Jan  
Abstract: Mammalian Staufen2 (Stau2) is a member of the double-stranded RNA-binding protein family. Its expression is largely restricted to the brain. It is thought to play a role in the delivery of RNA to dendrites of polarized neurons. To investigate the function of Stau2 in mature neurons, we interfered with Stau2 expression by RNA interference (RNAi). Mature neurons lacking Stau2 displayed a significant reduction in the number of dendritic spines and an increase in filopodia-like structures. The number of PSD95-positive synapses and miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents were markedly reduced in Stau2 down-regulated neurons. Akin effects were caused by overexpression of dominant-negative Stau2. The observed phenotype could be rescued by overexpression of two RNAi cleavage-resistant Stau2 isoforms. In situ hybridization revealed reduced expression levels of beta-actin mRNA and fewer dendritic beta-actin mRNPs in Stau2 down-regulated neurons. Thus, our data suggest an important role for Stau2 in the formation and maintenance of dendritic spines of hippocampal neurons.
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John P Vessey, Angelo Vaccani, Yunli Xie, Ralf Dahm, Daniela Karra, Michael A Kiebler, Paolo Macchi (2006)  Dendritic localization of the translational repressor Pumilio 2 and its contribution to dendritic stress granules.   J Neurosci 26: 24. 6496-6508 Jun  
Abstract: Pumilio (Pum) protein acts as a translational inhibitor in several organisms including yeast, Drosophila, Xenopus, and mammals. Two Pumilio genes, Pum1 and Pum2, have been identified in mammals, but their function in neurons has not been identified. In this study, we found that Pum2 mRNA is expressed during neuronal development and that the protein is found in discrete particles in both the cell body and the dendritic compartment of fully polarized neurons. This finding indicates that Pum2 is a novel candidate of dendritically localized ribonucleoparticles (RNPs). During metabolic stress, Pum2 is present in stress granules (SGs), which are subsequently detected in the somatodendritic domain. It remains excluded from processing bodies under all conditions. When overexpressed in neurons and fibroblasts, Pum2 induces the formation of SGs that also contain T-cell intracellular antigen 1 (TIA-1)-related protein, eukaryotic initiation factor 4E, poly(A)-binding protein, TIA-1, and other RNA-binding proteins including Staufen1 and Barentsz. This induction of SGs is dependent on the RNA-binding domain and a glutamine-rich region in the N terminus of Pum2. This glutamine-rich region behaves in a similar manner as TIA-1 and prion protein, two molecules with known roles in protein aggregation. Pum2 downregulation in neurons via RNA interference (RNAi) interferes with the formation of SGs during metabolic stress. Cotransfection with an RNAi-resistant portion of the Pum2 mRNA restores SG formation. These results suggest a role for Pum2 in dendritic RNPs and SG formation in mammalian neurons.
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P Massi, A Vaccani, S Bianchessi, B Costa, P Macchi, D Parolaro (2006)  The non-psychoactive cannabidiol triggers caspase activation and oxidative stress in human glioma cells.   Cell Mol Life Sci 63: 17. 2057-2066 Sep  
Abstract: Recently, we have shown that the non-psychoactive cannabinoid compound cannabidiol (CBD) induces apoptosis of glioma cells in vitro and tumor regression in vivo. The present study investigated a possible involvement of caspase activation and reactive oxygen species (ROS) induction in the apoptotic effect of CBD. CBD produced a gradual, time-dependent activation of caspase-3, which preceded the appearance of apoptotic death. In addiction, release of cytochrome c and caspase-9 and caspase-8 activation were detected. The exposure to CBD caused in glioma cells an early production of ROS, depletion of intracellular glutathione and increase activity of glutathione reductase and glutathione peroxidase enzymes. Under the same experimental condition, CBD did not impair primary glia. Thus, we found a different sensitivity to the anti-proliferative effect of CBD in human glioma cells and non-transformed cells that appears closely related to a selective ability of CBD in inducing ROS production and caspase activation in tumor cells.
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2005
Michael A Kiebler, Ralf-Peter Jansen, Ralf Dahm, Paolo Macchi (2005)  A putative nuclear function for mammalian Staufen.   Trends Biochem Sci 30: 5. 228-231 May  
Abstract: In addition to its role in rRNA processing and ribosome assembly, the nucleolus plays a part in the assembly of non-ribosomal ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs) that are destined for cytoplasmic RNA delivery. Recent evidence indicates that mammalian Staufen2, a brain-specific RNA-binding protein involved in RNA localization, can--at least transiently--enter the nucleolus. Therefore, the assembly of Staufen2 into transport-competent RNPs might occur in the nucleus before their export into the cytoplasm. This could provide new insights into the mechanisms of subcellular RNA localization.
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2004
Paolo Macchi, Amy M Brownawell, Barbara Grunewald, Luc DesGroseillers, Ian G Macara, Michael A Kiebler (2004)  The brain-specific double-stranded RNA-binding protein Staufen2: nucleolar accumulation and isoform-specific exportin-5-dependent export.   J Biol Chem 279: 30. 31440-31444 Jul  
Abstract: The mammalian double-stranded RNA-binding proteins Staufen (Stau1 and Stau2) are involved in RNA localization in polarized neurons. In contrast to the more ubiquitously expressed Stau1, Stau2 is mainly expressed in the nervous system. In Drosophila, the third double-stranded RNA-binding domain (RBD3) of Staufen is essential for RNA interaction. When conserved amino acids within the RBD3 of Stau2 were mutated to render Stau2 defective for RNA binding, the mutant Stau2 proteins accumulate predominantly in the nucleolus. This is in contrast to wild type Stau2 that mostly localizes in the cytosol. The nuclear import is dependent on a nuclear localization signal in close proximity to the RBD3. The nuclear export of Stau2 is not dependent on CRM1 but rather on Exportin-5. We show that Exportin-5 interacts with the RBD3 of wild type Stau2 in an RNA-dependent manner in vitro but not with mutant Stau2. When Exportin-5 is down-regulated by RNA interference, only the largest isoform of Stau2 (Stau2(62)) preferentially accumulates in the nucleolus. It is tempting to speculate that Stau2(62) binds RNA in the nucleus and assembles into ribonucleoparticles, which are then exported via the Exportin-5 pathway to their final destination.
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2003
Paolo Macchi, Indradeo Hemraj, Bernhard Goetze, Barbara Grunewald, Massimo Mallardo, Michael A Kiebler (2003)  A GFP-based system to uncouple mRNA transport from translation in a single living neuron.   Mol Biol Cell 14: 4. 1570-1582 Apr  
Abstract: An inducible fluorescent system based on GFP is presented that allows for the uncoupling of dendritic mRNA transport from subsequent protein synthesis at the single cell level. The iron-responsive element (IRE) derived from ferritin mRNA in the 5'-UTR of the GFP reporter mRNA renders translation of its mRNA dependent on iron. The addition of the full-length 3'-UTR of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II alpha (CaMKIIalpha) after the stop codon of the GFP reading frame targets the reporter mRNA to dendrites of transfected fully polarized hippocampal neurons. As we show by time-lapse videomicroscopy, iron specifically turns on GFP reporter protein synthesis in a single transfected hippocampal neuron. We investigate whether GFP expression is affected--in addition to iron--by synaptic activity. Interestingly, synaptic activity has a clear stimulatory effect. Most importantly, however, this activity-dependent protein synthesis is critically dependent on the presence of the full-length 3'-UTR of CaMKIIalpha confirming that this sequence contains translational activation signals. The IRE-based system represents a new convenient tool to study local protein synthesis in mammalian cells where mRNA localization to a specific intracellular compartment occurs.
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Massimo Mallardo, Anke Deitinghoff, Juliane Müller, Bernhard Goetze, Paolo Macchi, Christopher Peters, Michael A Kiebler (2003)  Isolation and characterization of Staufen-containing ribonucleoprotein particles from rat brain.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100: 4. 2100-2105 Feb  
Abstract: Localized mRNAs are thought to be transported in defined particles to their final destination. These particles represent large protein complexes that may be involved in recognizing, transporting, and anchoring localized messages. Few components of these ribonucleoparticles, however, have been identified yet. We chose the strategy to biochemically enrich native RNA-protein complexes involved in RNA transport to identify the associated RNAs and proteins. Because Staufen proteins were implicated in intracellular RNA transport, we chose mammalian Staufen proteins as markers for the purification of RNA transport particles. Here, we present evidence that Staufen proteins exist in two different complexes: (i) distinct large, ribosome- and endoplasmic reticulum-containing granules preferentially found in the membrane pellets during differential centrifugation and (ii) smaller particles in the S100 from rat brain homogenates. On gel filtration of the S100, we identified soluble 670-kDa Staufen1-containing and 440-kDa Staufen2-containing particles. They do not cofractionate with ribosomes and endoplasmic reticulum but rather coenrich with kinesin heavy chain. Furthermore, the fractions containing the Staufen1 particles show a 15-fold enrichment of mRNAs compared with control fractions. Most importantly, these fractions are highly enriched in BC1, and, to a lesser extent, in the alpha-subunit of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase II, two dendritically localized RNAs. Finally, both RNAs colocalize with Staufen1-hemagglutinin in particles in dendrites of transfected hippocampal neurons. We therefore propose that these Staufen1-containing particles may represent RNA transport intermediates that are in transit to their final destination within neurons.
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Paolo Macchi, Sven Kroening, Isabel M Palacios, Simona Baldassa, Barbara Grunewald, Concetta Ambrosino, Bernhard Goetze, Andrei Lupas, Daniel St Johnston, Michael Kiebler (2003)  Barentsz, a new component of the Staufen-containing ribonucleoprotein particles in mammalian cells, interacts with Staufen in an RNA-dependent manner.   J Neurosci 23: 13. 5778-5788 Jul  
Abstract: Staufen1, the mammalian homolog of Drosophila Staufen, assembles into ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs), which are thought to transport and localize RNA into dendrites of mature hippocampal neurons. We therefore investigated whether additional components of the RNA localization complex besides Staufen are conserved. One candidate is the mammalian homolog of Drosophila Barentsz (Btz), which is essential for the localization of oskar mRNA to the posterior pole of the Drosophila oocyte and is a component of the oskar RNA localization complex along with Staufen. In this study, we report the characterization of mammalian Btz, which behaves like a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein. When expressed in the Drosophila egg chamber, mammalian Btz is still able to interact with Drosophila Staufen and reach the posterior pole in the wild-type oocyte, but does not rescue the btz mutant phenotype. Most interestingly, we show by immunoprecipitation assays that Btz interacts with mammalian Staufen in an RNA-dependent manner through a conserved domain, which encompasses the region of homology to the Drosophila Btz protein and contains a novel conserved motif. One candidate for an RNA that mediates this interaction is the dendritically localized brain cytoplasmic 1 transcript. In addition, Btz and Staufen1 colocalize within particles in the cell body and, to a more variable extent, in dendrites of mature hippocampal neurons. Together, our data suggest that the mRNA transport machinery is conserved during evolution, and that mammalian Btz is an additional component of the dendritic RNPs in hippocampal neurons.
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Bernhard Goetze, Barbara Grunewald, Michael A Kiebler, Paolo Macchi (2003)  Coupling the iron-responsive element to GFP--an inducible system to study translation in a single living cell.   Sci STKE 2003: 204. Oct  
Abstract: Local protein synthesis in a cell represents an elegant mechanism to achieve important biological phenomena such as cell migration, body axis formation during embryonic development and establishment of cell polarity. A prerequisite to studying translation in a restricted cellular compartment is the ability to unambiguously discriminate between proteins that arise through local protein synthesis and those that reach the site of interest by diffusion or transport. To tackle this problem, we set up a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-based reporter system that allows one to uncouple the translation of reporter gene mRNA from its subcellular localization. The system is based on the iron-responsive element, which regulates the translation of both endogenous ferritin and transferrin transcripts in response to changes in iron concentration. Translation of the reporter messenger RNA (mRNA) is thus dependent on iron in the medium; both its transcription and localization, however, are unaffected. Known targeting sequences can be used to direct the mRNA transcript to a subcellular compartment of interest. For instance, the full-length 3'-untranslated region of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIalpha mRNA can be added to the construct, after the stop codon of the GFP sequence, to selectively target the transcript into the dendrites of transiently transfected hippocampal neurons. This novel fluorescent assay will allow us to address a number of important biological questions in living mammalian cells.
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2002
Mikael Simons, Eva-Maria Kramer, Paolo Macchi, Silvia Rathke-Hartlieb, Jacqueline Trotter, Klaus-Armin Nave, Jorg B Schulz (2002)  Overexpression of the myelin proteolipid protein leads to accumulation of cholesterol and proteolipid protein in endosomes/lysosomes: implications for Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease.   J Cell Biol 157: 2. 327-336 Apr  
Abstract: Duplications and overexpression of the proteolipid protein (PLP) gene are known to cause the dysmyelinating disorder Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD). To understand the cellular response to overexpressed PLP in PMD, we have overexpressed PLP in BHK cells and primary cultures of oligodendrocytes with the Semliki Forest virus expression system. Overexpressed PLP was routed to late endosomes/lysosomes and caused a sequestration of cholesterol in these compartments. Similar results were seen in transgenic mice overexpressing PLP. With time, the endosomal/lysosomal accumulation of cholesterol and PLP led to an increase in the amount of detergent-insoluble cellular cholesterol and PLP. In addition, two fluorescent sphingolipids, BODIPY-lactosylceramide and -galactosylceramide, which under normal conditions are sorted to the Golgi apparatus, were missorted to perinuclear structures. This was also the case for the lipid raft marker glucosylphosphatidylinositol-yellow fluorescence protein, which under normal steady-state conditions is localized on the plasma membrane and to the Golgi complex. Taken together, we show that overexpression of PLP leads to the formation of endosomal/lysosomal accumulations of cholesterol and PLP, accompanied by the mistrafficking of raft components. We propose that these accumulations perturb the process of myelination and impair the viability of oligodendrocytes.
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Philippe P Monnier, Ana Sierra, Paolo Macchi, Lutz Deitinghoff, Jens S Andersen, Matthias Mann, Manuela Flad, Martin R Hornberger, Bernd Stahl, Friedrich Bonhoeffer, Bernhard K Mueller (2002)  RGM is a repulsive guidance molecule for retinal axons.   Nature 419: 6905. 392-395 Sep  
Abstract: Axons rely on guidance cues to reach remote targets during nervous system development. A well-studied model system for axon guidance is the retinotectal projection. The retina can be divided into halves; the nasal half, next to the nose, and the temporal half. A subset of retinal axons, those from the temporal half, is guided by repulsive cues expressed in a graded fashion in the optic tectum, part of the midbrain. Here we report the cloning and functional characterization of a membrane-associated glycoprotein, which we call RGM (repulsive guidance molecule). This molecule shares no sequence homology with known guidance cues, and its messenger RNA is distributed in a gradient with increasing concentration from the anterior to posterior pole of the embryonic tectum. Recombinant RGM at low nanomolar concentration induces collapse of temporal but not of nasal growth cones and guides temporal retinal axons in vitro, demonstrating its repulsive and axon-specific guiding activity.
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1998
B K Mueller, D Dütting, A Haase, A Feucht, P Macchi (1998)  Partial respecification of nasotemporal polarity in double-temporal chick and chimeric chick-quail eyes.   Mech Dev 74: 1-2. 15-28 Jun  
Abstract: In chick embryos, naso-temporal polarity of the retina becomes established before Hamburger-Hamilton stage 10. To examine the plasticity of the early eye anlage, double-temporal eyes were made using stage 10-11 (E1.5) chick embryos and stage 8-9 quail embryos. In vivo and in vitro experiments revealed that these double-temporal compound eyes were not completely temporal but nasal in a large peripheral part of the graft. Four hours after transplantation, the nasal-specific fork head transcription factor CBF1 was not expressed in double-temporal eyes but was clearly detectable 24 h later. This suggests that in the peripheral part of the graft, temporal positional values were changed into nasal positional values by a respecification process.
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1997
F Candotti, S A Oakes, J A Johnston, S Giliani, R F Schumacher, P Mella, M Fiorini, A G Ugazio, R Badolato, L D Notarangelo, F Bozzi, P Macchi, D Strina, P Vezzoni, R M Blaese, J J O'Shea, A Villa (1997)  Structural and functional basis for JAK3-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency.   Blood 90: 10. 3996-4003 Nov  
Abstract: Mutations of the Janus family kinase JAK3 have been found to be responsible for autosomal recessive severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) in humans. We report here the analysis of four new unrelated patients affected by JAK3-deficient SCID. The genetic defects were heterogeneous and included a large intragenic deletion as well as different point mutations, leading to missense substitutions, early stop codons, or splicing defects. We performed a series of studies of the biochemical events induced by cytokines on lymphoblastoid B-cell lines obtained from these patients. Abnormalities in tyrosine phosphorylation of JAK3 in response to interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-4 were present in all patients. Accordingly, IL-2-mediated phosphorylation of STAT5 was also absent or barely detectable. On the contrary, in all cases, we could show reduced but clear phosphorylation of STAT6 upon IL-4 stimulation. In one patient carrying a single amino acid change (Glu481Gly) in the JH3 domain of JAK3, we observed partially conserved IL-2 responses resulting in reduced but detectable levels of JAK3 and STAT5 phosphorylation. Interestingly, the patient bearing this mutation developed a substantial number of circulating CD4(+)/CD45RO+ activated T lymphocytes that were functionally impaired. In two cases, patients' cells expressed JAK3 proteins with mutations in the JH2 pseudo-kinase domain. A single cysteine to arginine substitution (Cys759Arg) in this region resulted in high basal levels of constitutive JAK3 tyrosine phosphorylation unresponsive to either downregulation by serum starvation or cytokine-mediated upregulation. The characterization of the genetic defects and biochemical abnormalities in these JAK3-deficient patients will help define the role of JAK3 in the ontogeny of a competent immune system and may lead to a better understanding of the JAK3 functional domains.
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1996
A Villa, M Sironi, P Macchi, C Matteucci, L D Notarangelo, P Vezzoni, A Mantovani (1996)  Monocyte function in a severe combined immunodeficient patient with a donor splice site mutation in the Jak3 gene.   Blood 88: 3. 817-823 Aug  
Abstract: Janus kinase-3 (Jak3) is a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase functionally coupled to cytokine receptors which share a "common" gamma chain (gamma c). Mutations in gamma c and Jak3 genes have been identified in X-linked and autosomal severe combined immuno deficiency (SCID), respectively. Jak3 is expressed and activated in myelomonocytic cells. The present study was designed to define the structural alteration responsible for lack of Jak3 in a patient with autosomal SCID and to characterize monocyte function in the absence of this signal transduction element, as well as to establish the whole exon-intron structure. Polymerase chain reaction analysis, performed with primers designed on exon sequences, identified 20 exons spanning approximately 15 kb. These primers, or others designed on the flanking sequences provided in the present report, can be used to amplify the whole gene, allowing the definition of the molecular defects in all cases, including prenatal diagnosis, in which transcript analysis is not possible. On this basis, the deletion transcript found at the homozygous state in patient CM, with both his consanguineous parents being heterozygous for the deletion, was associated with mutation (T to C) of a splice donor site of intron 16 that was also detected in his mother's DNA. Monocytes from Jak3-SCID showed normal cytokine production in response to interleukin-4 (IL-4) (release of IL-1 receptor antagonist) and IL-2 (release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and IL-8). Lipopolysaccharide-induced cytokine production was also normal and was blocked by IL-4 in Jak3- SCID monocytes. Interferon-gamma induced augmented expression of major histocompatibility class II in Jak3-SCID monocytes. These data indicate that Jak3, expressed and activated in myelomonocytic cells, is dispensable for monocyte differentiation and responsiveness to cytokines that interact with gamma c receptors as well as to other regulatory signals.
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A Villa, D Strina, A Frattini, S Faranda, P Macchi, P Finelli, F Bozzi, L Susani, N Archidiacono, M Rocchi, P Vezzoni (1996)  The ZNF75 zinc finger gene subfamily: isolation and mapping of the four members in humans and great apes.   Genomics 35: 2. 312-320 Jul  
Abstract: We have previously reported (Villa et al. (1993), Genomics 18: 223) the characterization of the human ZNF75 gene located on Xq26, which has only limited homology (less than 65%) to other ZF genes in the databases. Here, we describe three human zinc finger genes with 86 to 95% homology to ZNF75 at the nucleotide level, which represent all the members of the human ZNF75 subfamily. One of these, ZNF75B, is a pseudogene mapped to chromosome 12q13. The other two, ZNF75A and ZNF75C, maintain an ORF in the sequenced region, and at least the latter is expressed in the U937 cell line. They were mapped to chromosomes 16 and 11, respectively. All these genes are conserved in chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. The ZNF75B homologue is a pseudogene in all three great apes, and in chimpanzee it is located on chromosome 10 (phylogenetic XII), at p13 (corresponding to the human 12q13). The chimpanzee homologue of ZNF75 is also located on the Xq26 chromosome, in the same region, as detected by in situ hybridization. As expected, nucleotide changes were clearly more abundant between human and orangutan than between human and chimpanzee or gorilla homologues. Members of the same class were more similar to each other than to the other homologues within the same species. This suggests that the duplication and/or retrotranscription events occurred in a common ancestor long before great ape speciation. This, together with the existence of at least two genes in cows and horses, suggests a relatively high conservation of this gene family.
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M G Sacco, S Benedetti, A Duflot-Dancer, M Mesnil, L Bagnasco, D Strina, V Fasolo, A Villa, P Macchi, S Faranda, P Vezzoni, G Finocchiaro (1996)  Partial regression, yet incomplete eradication of mammary tumors in transgenic mice by retrovirally mediated HSVtk transfer 'in vivo'.   Gene Ther 3: 12. 1151-1156 Dec  
Abstract: Mice transgenic for the activated rat neu oncogene under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat (MMTV-LTR) (neu+ mice), develop breast tumors in 100% of cases. We have previously reported that double transgenic mice obtained from crossing neu+ mice with mice transgenic for the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSVtk) gene can be used as a suitable model to test the 'suicide gene' strategy for mammary tumor gene therapy in vivo. In the present study, we evaluated the efficacy of the HSVtk/ganciclovir (GCV) system in the neu+ mice by inoculating cells producing a retroviral vector bearing the HSVtk gene in the mammary tumors on one side of the animals, and comparing their weight with that of the contralateral tumors, after systemic GCV administration. A statistically significant effect of this therapy was clearly seen (P < 0.001) but complete eradication of the tumors could not be achieved. This was not due to the inefficient delivery of GCV, as no HSVtk expression was detected in the residual tumors, but could be related to the low transduction efficiency (< 10%) and to inability of the 'bystander effect' (probably due to the absence of functional gap-junctions among mammary tumor cells) to kill nontransduced neoplastic cells. These data suggest that results obtained by in vivo models using transplanted tumor cell lines as targets for gene therapy might not be immediately transferable to spontaneously arising tumors in animals or humans.
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1995
P Macchi, A Villa, D Strina, M G Sacco, F Morali, D Brugnoni, S Giliani, E Mantuano, A Fasth, B Andersson (1995)  Characterization of nine novel mutations in the CD40 ligand gene in patients with X-linked hyper IgM syndrome of various ancestry.   Am J Hum Genet 56: 4. 898-906 Apr  
Abstract: X-linked immunodeficiency with hyper-IgM (HIGMX-1) is a rare disorder caused by defective expression of the CD40 ligand (CD40L) by activated T lymphocytes, resulting in inefficient T-B cell cooperation and failure of B cells to undergo immunoglobulin isotype switch. In the present work, we describe nine patients of various ancestry who bear different mutations in the X chromosome-specific CD40L gene. Two of the mutations were nonsense mutations, one each resulting in premature stop codons at amino acid residues 39 and 140. Three patients had single point missense mutations, one each at codons 126, 140, and 144. Another patient had a 4-bp genomic deletion in exon 2, resulting in a frameshift and premature termination. Three patients showed insertions, one each of 1, 2, and 4 nt, probably because of polymerase slippage, resulting in frameshift mutation and premature termination. Overall, these observations confirm the heterogeneity of mutations in HIGMX-1. However, the identification of two patients whose mutation involves codon 140 (previously shown to be altered in two other unrelated subjects) suggests that this may be a hotspot of mutation in HIGMX-1. In two additional patients with clinical and immunological features indistinguishable from canonical HIGMX-1, no mutation was detected in the coding sequence, in the 5' flanking region, or in the 3' UTR.
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P Macchi, L Notarangelo, S Giliani, D Strina, M Repetto, M G Sacco, P Vezzoni, A Villa (1995)  The genomic organization of the human transcription factor 3 (TFE3) gene.   Genomics 28: 3. 491-494 Aug  
Abstract: We have determined the exon-intron structure of the human TFE3 gene located on Xp11.22-23. By designing PCR primers, we were able to amplify various segments of the TFE3 genomic region, thus establishing that this gene is composed of seven exons, the first six of which are small (from 56 to 159 nt). The 5' UT region is contained entirely in the first exon, while the 3' UT region is contained in the seventh exon. The comparison of the genomic and the published cDNA versions revealed that the deduced amino acid sequence of TFE3 in the C-terminus region is 125 amino acids shorter than previously reported. This eliminates most of the putative proline- and arginine-rich domain and makes the human sequence more similar to its mouse homolog. The activation domain at the N-terminus is contained in exon 2, as has been described for the mouse. The basic helix-loop-helix (BHLH) motif is spread over exons 4 to 6, while the leucine zipper (LZ) is almost all contained in the last portion of exon 6. This split BHLH is different from other BHLH-LZ genes whose genomic structures have been determined up to now.
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A Villa, L Notarangelo, P Macchi, E Mantuano, G Cavagni, D Brugnoni, D Strina, M C Patrosso, U Ramenghi, M G Sacco (1995)  X-linked thrombocytopenia and Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome are allelic diseases with mutations in the WASP gene.   Nat Genet 9: 4. 414-417 Apr  
Abstract: X-linked thrombocytopenia (XLT) is a rare recessive hereditary disorder characterized by isolated thrombocytopenia with small-sized platelets. The XLT locus has been located to chromosome Xp11 by linkage analysis, which is also where the recently cloned Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) gene, maps. The relationship between XLT and WAS has long been debated; they might be due to different mutations of the same gene or to mutations in different genes. We now show that mutations in the WAS gene, different from those found in WAS patients, are present in three unrelated male patients with isolated thrombocytopenia and small-sized platelets. Our results demonstrate that XLT and WAS are allelic forms of the same disease, but the causes of the differences need to be further investigated.
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M G Sacco, L Mangiarini, A Villa, P Macchi, O Barbieri, M C Sacchi, E Monteggia, V Fasolo, P Vezzoni, L Clerici (1995)  Local regression of breast tumors following intramammary ganciclovir administration in double transgenic mice expressing neu oncogene and herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase.   Gene Ther 2: 7. 493-497 Sep  
Abstract: Females from a mouse lineage transgenic for the activated rat neu oncogene under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) long terminal repeat (LTR) all develop breast tumors with high reproducibility within the first 2-3 months of life. These animals were crossed with mice from a lineage transgenic for the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene (HSVtk) under the control of its own promoter and polyoma enhancer. Double transgenic mice (for both neu and tk) developed breast neoplasias with the same kinetics as the neu-only mice. Tumor-bearing double transgenic mice, treated intratumorally with the antiviral agent ganciclovir (GCV), showed an inhibiting effect on tumor growth. However, this effect was not seen either on GCV-treated neu-only transgenic mice or on saline-injected controls. This suggests that tk-engineered breast tumors are susceptible to GCV administered locally, and implies that neu-mice could be a useful model for testing the effectiveness of HSVtk-bearing vectors followed by systemic GCV on breast cancer cells.
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P Macchi, A Villa, S Giliani, M G Sacco, A Frattini, F Porta, A G Ugazio, J A Johnston, F Candotti, J J O'Shea (1995)  Mutations of Jak-3 gene in patients with autosomal severe combined immune deficiency (SCID).   Nature 377: 6544. 65-68 Sep  
Abstract: Severe combined immune deficiency (SCID) represents a heterogenous group of hereditary diseases. Mutations in the common gamma-chain (gamma c), which is part of several cytokine receptors including those for interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-9 and IL-15, are responsible for X-linked SCID, which is usually associated with a lack of circulating T cells and the presence of B lymphocytes (T- B+ SCID). The gene(s) responsible for autosomal recessive T- B+ SCID is still unknown. The Jak-3 protein kinase has been found to associate with the gamma c-chain-containing cytokine receptors. Therefore Jak-3 or other STAT proteins with which it interacts are candidate genes for autosomal recessive T- B+ SCID. Here we investigate two unrelated T- B+ SCID patients (both from consanguineous parents) who have homozygous mutations in the gene for Jak-3. One patient carries a mutation (Tyr100-->Cys) in a conserved tyrosine residue in the JH7 domain of Jak-3 which is absent in more than 150 investigated chromosomes. The other patient carries a homozygous 151-base-pair deletion in the kinase-like domain, leading to a frameshift and premature termination. Both mutations resulted in markedly reduced levels of Jak-3. These findings show that abnormalities in the Jak/STAT signalling pathway can account for SCID in humans.
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1994
A Villa, L D Notarangelo, J P Di Santo, P P Macchi, D Strina, A Frattini, F Lucchini, C M Patrosso, S Giliani, E Mantuano (1994)  Organization of the human CD40L gene: implications for molecular defects in X chromosome-linked hyper-IgM syndrome and prenatal diagnosis.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 91: 6. 2110-2114 Mar  
Abstract: Recently, CD40L has been identified as the gene responsible for X chromosome-linked hyper-IgM syndrome (HIGM1). CD40L on activated T cells from HIGM1 patients fails to bind B-cell CD40 molecules, and subsequent analysis of CD40L transcripts by reverse transcription PCR demonstrated coding region mutations in these patients. This approach, however, is of limited use for prenatal diagnosis of HIGM1 in the early-gestation fetus. In this report, we have defined the genomic structure of the CD40L gene, which is composed of five exons and four intervening introns. With this information, we have defined at the genomic level the CD40L gene abnormalities for three previously described HIGM1 patients who demonstrated clustered deletions in the CD40L coding region. These different deletions arose from three distinct mechanisms, including (i) a splice donor mutation with exon skipping, (ii) a splice acceptor mutation with utilization of a cryptic splice site, and (iii) a deletion/insertion event with the creation of a new splice acceptor site. In addition, we have performed prenatal evaluation of an 11-week-old fetus at risk for HIGM1. CD40L genomic clones provide a starting point for further studies of the genetic elements that control CD40L expression. Our knowledge of the CD40L gene structure will prove useful for the identification of additional mutations in HIGM1 and for performing genetic counseling about this disease.
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