native conformation
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

195
(FIVE YEARS 34)

H-INDEX

33
(FIVE YEARS 2)

IUCrJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashraya Ravikumar ◽  
Mrugsen Nagsen Gopnarayan ◽  
Sriram Subramaniam ◽  
Narayanaswamy Srinivasan

An evaluation of systematic differences in local structure and conformation in the interior of protein tertiary structures determined by crystallography and by cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) is reported. The expectation is that any consistent differences between the derived atomic models could provide insights into variations in side-chain packing that result from differences in specimens prepared for analysis between these two methods. By computing an atomic packing score, which provides a quantitative measure of clustering of side-chain atoms in the core of the tertiary structures, it is found that, in general, for structures determined by cryo-EM, side chains are more dispersed than in structures determined by X-ray crystallography over a similar resolution range. This trend is also observed in the packing comparison at subunit interfaces. Similar trends were observed in the packing comparison at the core of tertiary structures of the same proteins determined by both X-ray and cryo-EM methods. It is proposed here that the reduced dispersion of side chains in protein crystals could be due to some level of dehydration in 3D crystals prepared for X-ray crystallography and also because the higher rate of freezing of protein samples for cryo-EM may enable preservation of a more native conformation.


Author(s):  
Joseph Ayariga ◽  
Logan Gildea ◽  
Robert Villafane

In antimicrobial-peptide/protein engineering, understanding the peptide/protein’s adaptability to harsh environmental conditions such as urea, proteases, fluctuating temperatures, high salts provide enormous insight into the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the engineered peptide/protein and its ability to survive the harsh internal environment of the human body such as the gut or the harsh external environment to which they are applied. A previous work in our laboratory demonstrated that our cloned Eɛ34 TSP showed potent antimicrobial activity against Salmonella newington, and more so, could prevent biofilm formation on decellularized tissue. In this work, the effects of urea-acid on the Eɛ34 stability is studied, and the results demonstrates that at lower pHs of 3 and 4 with urea the protein was denatured into monomeric species. However, the protein withstood urea denaturation above pH of 5 and thus remained as trimeric protein. The mechanism of denaturation of Eɛ34 TSP seems to show that urea denatures proteins by depleting hydrophobic core of the protein by directly binding to the amide units via hydrogen bonds. The results of our in-silico investigation determined that urea binds with Eɛ34 TSP with relative free energies range of -3.4 to -2.9 kcal/mol at the putative globular head binding domain of the protein. The urea molecules interacts with with the protein’s predicted hydrophobic core, thus, disrupting and exposing the shielded hydrophobic moieties of Eɛ34 TSP to the solvent. We further showed that after the unfolding of Eɛ34 TSP via urea-acid, renaturation of the protein to its native conformation was possible within few hours. This unique characteristic of refolding of Eɛ34 TSP which is similar to that of the P22 phage tailspike protein is of special interest to protein scientists and can also be exploited in antimicrobial-protein engineering.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farzin Sohraby ◽  
Hassan Aryapour

AbstractRetroviruses are a growing concern for the health of human beings, and one of the dangerous members of this family is the Human T-cell Leukemia Virus 1 (HTLV-1) virus. It has affected more than 20 million people so far, and since there are no registered treatments against it yet, urgent treatment solutions are needed. One of the most promising drug targets to fight this virus is the protease enzyme of the virus’s protein machinery. In this study, by utilizing a computational method called Unaggregated Unbiased Molecular Dynamics (UUMD), we reconstructed the binding pathway of a HTLV-1 protease inhibitor, Indinavir, to find the details of the binding pathway, the influential residues, and also the stable states of the binding pathway. We achieved the native conformation of the inhibitor in 6 rounds, 360 replicas by performing over 4 micro-seconds of UMD simulations. We found 3 Intermediate states between the solvated state and the native conformation state in the binding pathway. We also discovered that aromatic residues such as Trp98 and Trp98′, catalytic residues Asp32 and Asp32′, and the flap region’s residues have the most influential roles in the binding pathway and also have the most contribution to the total interaction energies. We believe that the details found in this study would be a great guide for developing new treatment solutions against the HTLV-1 virus by inhibiting the HTLV-1 protease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorenzo, M.M. ◽  
Rafael Blasco ◽  
Julio Coll

<p>Fusion to host cells and infection caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (SARS)-CoV2 was inhibited <i>in vitro</i> by PP mutations stabilizing prefusion states of their spike (S) protein native conformation, as reported by several authors. However, the possible stabilization of S by binding-ligands, rather than by mutations, have not been explored, nor it is yet known if it would be possible. In this work, the so called “spring-loaded switch-folding” (SLSF) expanding S amino acid residues 960-1010 was computationally targeted because SLSF surrounded the previously described PP mutations. The SLSF trimeric prefusion conformation consisted in 3x3 α-helices that require a transition to 3 longer α-helices before viral/host membrane fusion, similarly to what occurs in other enveloped viruses. Results of a double computational screening among hundred of thousands of natural compounds for binding to the wild-type isolated SLSF conformer predicted more leads for its trimers than for monomers. Further ranked by the number of SLSF-conformers bound, some of the predicted top-leads may deserve experimental validation. Additional screening among thousands of drugs identified Tinosorb, an star-shaped molecule, as the lowest binding-score lead to SLSF in the low nM range. However, despite its lower binding-score, 3-fold molecular symmetry and fitting the inner part of the SLSF α-helices, we were unable to experimentally show any specific inhibition of S-mediated membrane fusion using an VSV-pseudotyped infectivity assay, nor any virtual binding to S-SLSF using docking to whole native S trimers. Further exploring the star-shaped features may provide new molecular alternatives to cross-bind the α-helices of S-SLSF to hypothetically inhibit coronavirus fusion.<b></b></p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sébastien Lyonnais ◽  
Mathilde Hénaut ◽  
Aymeric Neyret ◽  
Peggy Merida ◽  
Chantal Cazevieille ◽  
...  

AbstractSARS-CoV-2 is an enveloped virus responsible for the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Here, single viruses were analyzed by atomic force microscopy (AFM) operating directly in a level 3 biosafety (BSL3) facility, which appeared as a fast and powerful method to assess at the nanoscale level and in 3D infectious virus morphology in its native conformation, or upon inactivation treatments. AFM imaging reveals structurally intact infectious and inactivated SARS-CoV-2 upon low concentration of formaldehyde treatment. This protocol combining AFM and plaque assays allows the preparation of intact inactivated SARS-CoV-2 particles for safe use of samples out of level 3 laboratory to accelerate researches against the COVID-19 pandemic. Overall, we illustrate how adapted BSL3-AFM is a remarkable toolbox for rapid and direct virus analysis based on nanoscale morphology.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Margherita Passariello ◽  
Chiara Gentile ◽  
Veronica Ferrucci ◽  
Emanuele Sasso ◽  
Cinzia Vetrei ◽  
...  

AbstractAmong the therapies against the pandemic SARS-CoV-2 virus, monoclonal Antibodies (mAbs) targeting the Spike glycoprotein represent good candidates to interfere in the Spike/ACE2 interaction, preventing virus cell entry. Since anti-spike mAbs, used individually, might be unable to block the virus entry in the case of resistant mutations, we designed an innovative strategy for the isolation of multiple novel human scFvs specific for the binding domain (RBD) of Spike. By panning a large phage display antibody library on immobilized RBD, we obtained specific binders by eluting with ACE2 in order to identify those scFvs recognizing the epitope of Spike interacting with its receptor. We converted the novel scFvs into full size IgG4, differently from the previously isolated IgG1 mAbs, to avoid unwanted potential side effects of IgG1 potent effector functions on immune system. The novel antibodies specifically bind to RBD in a nanomolar range and interfere in the interaction of Spike with ACE2 receptor, either used as purified protein or when expressed on cells in its native conformation. Furthermore, some of them have neutralizing activity for virus infection in cell cultures by using two different SARS-CoV-2 isolates including the highly contagious VOC 202012/01 variant and could become useful therapeutic tools to fight against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.


Biomedicines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 523
Author(s):  
Julia Peñas-Martínez ◽  
Ginés Luengo-Gil ◽  
Salvador Espín ◽  
Nataliya Bohdan ◽  
Carmen Ortega-Sabater ◽  
...  

Antithrombin, the main physiological inhibitor of the coagulation cascade, exerts anti-tumor effects on glioblastoma multiforme cells. Antithrombin has different conformations: native, heparin-activated, prelatent, latent, and cleaved. The prelatent form has an intermediate affinity between latent and native antithrombin, although it is the most antiangiogenic form. Herein, we investigate the effect of this conformation on the tumorigenic processes of glioblastoma multiforme cells. Antithrombin forms were purified by chromatography. Chromogenic/fluorogenic assays were carried out to evaluate enteropeptidase and hepsin inhibition, two serine proteases involved in these processes. Wound healing, Matrigel invasion and BrdU incorporation assays were performed to study migration, invasion and proliferation. E-cadherin, Vimentin, VEGFA, pAKT, STAT3, pSTAT3, and pERK1/2 expression was assessed by Western blot and/or qRT-PCR. Prelatent antithrombin inhibited both enteropeptidase and hepsin, although it was less efficient than the native conformation. Exposure to prelatent antithrombin significantly reduced migration and invasion but not proliferation of U-87 MG, being the conformation most efficient on migration. Prelatent antithrombin down-regulated VEGFA, pSTAT3, and pERK1/2 expression in U-87 MG cells. Our work elucidates that prelatent antithrombin has surprisingly versatile anti-tumor properties in U-87 MG glioblastoma multiforme cells. This associates with resistance pathway activation, the decreased expression of tumorigenic proteins, and increased angiogenesis, postulating the existence of a new, formerly unknown receptor with potential therapeutic implications.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew G McKee ◽  
Charles P Kuntz ◽  
Joseph T Ortega ◽  
Hope Woods ◽  
Francis J Roushar ◽  
...  

Membrane protein variants with diminished conformational stability often exhibit enhanced cellular expression at reduced growth temperatures. The expression of temperature-sensitive variants is also typically sensitive to corrector molecules that bind and stabilize the native conformation. In this work, we employ deep mutational scanning to compare the effects of reduced growth temperature and an investigational corrector (9-cis-retinal) on the plasma membrane expression of 700 rhodopsin variants in HEK293T cells. We find that the change in expression at reduced growth temperatures is correlated with the response to retinal among variants bearing mutations within a hydrophobic transmembrane domain (TM2). The most sensitive variants within this helix appear to disrupt a network of hydrogen bonds that stabilizes a native helical kink. By comparison, mutants that alter a polar transmembrane domain (TM7) exhibit weaker responses to temperature and retinal that are poorly correlated. Statistical analyses suggest this insensitivity primarily arises from an abundance of mutations that enhance its membrane integration, stabilize its native conformation, and/ or perturb the retinal binding pocket. Finally, we show that the characteristics of purified temperature- and retinal-sensitive variants suggest that the proteostatic effects of retinal may be manifested during translation and cotranslational folding. Together, our findings elucidate various factors that mediate the sensitivity of genetic variants to temperature and to small molecule correctors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (11) ◽  
pp. e2018127118
Author(s):  
Jonathan J. Knowlton ◽  
Daniel Gestaut ◽  
Boxue Ma ◽  
Gwen Taylor ◽  
Alpay Burak Seven ◽  
...  

Intracellular protein homeostasis is maintained by a network of chaperones that function to fold proteins into their native conformation. The eukaryotic TRiC chaperonin (TCP1-ring complex, also called CCT for cytosolic chaperonin containing TCP1) facilitates folding of a subset of proteins with folding constraints such as complex topologies. To better understand the mechanism of TRiC folding, we investigated the biogenesis of an obligate TRiC substrate, the reovirus σ3 capsid protein. We discovered that the σ3 protein interacts with a network of chaperones, including TRiC and prefoldin. Using a combination of cryoelectron microscopy, cross-linking mass spectrometry, and biochemical approaches, we establish functions for TRiC and prefoldin in folding σ3 and promoting its assembly into higher-order oligomers. These studies illuminate the molecular dynamics of σ3 folding and establish a biological function for TRiC in virus assembly. In addition, our findings provide structural and functional insight into the mechanism by which TRiC and prefoldin participate in the assembly of protein complexes.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 879
Author(s):  
Shunsuke Okada ◽  
Motonori Matsusaki ◽  
Masaki Okumura ◽  
Takahiro Muraoka

Oxidative protein folding is a biological process to obtain a native conformation of a protein through disulfide-bond formation between cysteine residues. In a cell, disulfide-catalysts such as protein disulfide isomerase promote the oxidative protein folding. Inspired by the active sites of the disulfide-catalysts, synthetic redox-active thiol compounds have been developed, which have shown significant promotion of the folding processes. In our previous study, coupling effects of a thiol group and guanidyl unit on the folding promotion were reported. Herein, we investigated the influences of a spacer between the thiol group and guanidyl unit. A conjugate between thiol and guanidyl units with a diethylene glycol spacer (GdnDEG-SH) showed lower folding promotion effect compared to the thiol–guanidyl conjugate without the spacer (GdnSH). Lower acidity and a more reductive property of the thiol group of GdnDEG-SH compared to those of GdnSH likely resulted in the reduced efficiency of the folding promotion. Thus, the spacer between the thiol and guanidyl groups is critical for the promotion of oxidative protein folding.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document