Developmental processes in the ascidian Ciona intestinalis depend on a complex interplay of events including, during metamorphosis, a caspase-dependent apoptosis which is regulated by the nitric oxide (NO)-cGMP signaling pathway. Herein we disclose an alternate NO-mediated signaling pathway during Ciona development which appears to be critically dependent on local redox control. Evidence in support of this conclusion includes: (a) inhibitors of NO synthase (NOS) and scavengers of NO-derived nitrating agents markedly decrease the rate of Ciona metamorphosis; (b) an NO donor or peroxynitrite caused an opposite effect; (c) increased protein nitration is observed at larva stage. Integrated proteomic and immunochemical methodologies identified nitrated tyrosine residues in ERK and snail. Overall, these results point to protein nitration as a hitherto overlooked NO-dependent regulatory mechanism in Ciona which is specifically triggered by elevated ROS production during developmental processes.

Protein nitration as footprint of oxidative stress-related nitric oxide signaling pathways in developing Ciona intestinalis / E. Ercolesi, G. Tedeschi, G. Fiore, A. Negri, E. Maffioli, M. D'Ischia, P.A. Palumbo. - In: NITRIC OXIDE. - ISSN 1089-8603. - 27:1(2012), pp. 18-24.

Protein nitration as footprint of oxidative stress-related nitric oxide signaling pathways in developing Ciona intestinalis

G. Tedeschi
Secondo
;
A. Negri;E. Maffioli;
2012

Abstract

Developmental processes in the ascidian Ciona intestinalis depend on a complex interplay of events including, during metamorphosis, a caspase-dependent apoptosis which is regulated by the nitric oxide (NO)-cGMP signaling pathway. Herein we disclose an alternate NO-mediated signaling pathway during Ciona development which appears to be critically dependent on local redox control. Evidence in support of this conclusion includes: (a) inhibitors of NO synthase (NOS) and scavengers of NO-derived nitrating agents markedly decrease the rate of Ciona metamorphosis; (b) an NO donor or peroxynitrite caused an opposite effect; (c) increased protein nitration is observed at larva stage. Integrated proteomic and immunochemical methodologies identified nitrated tyrosine residues in ERK and snail. Overall, these results point to protein nitration as a hitherto overlooked NO-dependent regulatory mechanism in Ciona which is specifically triggered by elevated ROS production during developmental processes.
No
English
Ciona intestinalis; nitric oxide; protein nitration; metamorphosis; MAPK; snail
Settore BIO/10 - Biochimica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2012
Elsevier
27
1
18
24
7
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Protein nitration as footprint of oxidative stress-related nitric oxide signaling pathways in developing Ciona intestinalis / E. Ercolesi, G. Tedeschi, G. Fiore, A. Negri, E. Maffioli, M. D'Ischia, P.A. Palumbo. - In: NITRIC OXIDE. - ISSN 1089-8603. - 27:1(2012), pp. 18-24.
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
7
262
Article (author)
si
E. Ercolesi, G. Tedeschi, G. Fiore, A. Negri, E. Maffioli, M. D'Ischia, P.A. Palumbo
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/180167
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