2 “To Search for the Solely Rational”: Engineering Tibetan Pulse Diagnosis

2021 ◽  
pp. 70-105
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Egle Maximowitsch ◽  
Tatiana Domratcheva

Photoswitching of phytochrome photoreceptors between red-absorbing (Pr) and far-red absorbing (Pfr) states triggers light adaptation of plants, bacteria and other organisms. Using quantum chemistry, we elucidate the color-tuning mechanism of phytochromes and identify the origin of the Pfr-state red-shifted spectrum. Spectral variations are explained by resonance interactions of the protonated linear tetrapyrrole chromophore. In particular, hydrogen bonding of pyrrole ring D with the strictly conserved aspartate shifts the positive charge towards ring D thereby inducing the red spectral shift. Our MD simulations demonstrate that formation of the ring D–aspartate hydrogen bond depends on interactions between the chromophore binding domain (CBD) and phytochrome specific domain (PHY). Our study guides rational engineering of fluorescent phytochromes with a far-red shifted spectrum.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Zwick ◽  
Max Sosa ◽  
Hans Renata

We functionally characterize a nonheme dioxygenase from GE81112 biosynthesis and identify it as a citrulline hydroxylase. A bioinformatics guided engineering was performed to alter the substrate specificity of the enzyme.


Author(s):  
Qunpo Liu ◽  
Guanghui Liu ◽  
Hongqi Wang ◽  
Xianzhe Liu ◽  
Naohiko Hanajima
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Avital Shushan ◽  
Mickey Kosloff

AbstractThe interactions of the antibiotic proteins colicins/pyocins with immunity proteins is a seminal model system for studying protein–protein interactions and specificity. Yet, a precise and quantitative determination of which structural elements and residues determine their binding affinity and specificity is still lacking. Here, we used comparative structure-based energy calculations to map residues that substantially contribute to interactions across native and engineered complexes of colicins/pyocins and immunity proteins. We show that the immunity protein α1–α2 motif is a unique structurally-dissimilar element that restricts interaction specificity towards all colicins/pyocins, in both engineered and native complexes. This motif combines with a diverse and extensive array of electrostatic/polar interactions that enable the exquisite specificity that characterizes these interactions while achieving ultra-high affinity. Surprisingly, the divergence of these contributing colicin residues is reciprocal to residue conservation in immunity proteins. The structurally-dissimilar immunity protein α1–α2 motif is recognized by divergent colicins similarly, while the conserved immunity protein α3 helix interacts with diverse colicin residues. Electrostatics thus plays a key role in setting interaction specificity across all colicins and immunity proteins. Our analysis and resulting residue-level maps illuminate the molecular basis for these protein–protein interactions, with implications for drug development and rational engineering of these interfaces.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 102210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi He ◽  
En Ren ◽  
Zhenhui Lu ◽  
Haimin Chen ◽  
Zainen Qin ◽  
...  

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