polypeptide chains
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua A Walker ◽  
Noah Hamlish ◽  
Avery Tytla ◽  
Daniel D Brauer ◽  
Matthew B Francis ◽  
...  

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) are peptide-derived natural products that include the FDA-approved analgesic ziconotide1,2 as well as compounds with potent antibiotic, antiviral, and anticancer properties.3 RiPP enzymes known as cyclodehydratases and dehydrogenases represent an exceptionally well-studied enzyme class.3 These enzymes work together to catalyze intramolecular, interresidue condensation3,4 and aromatization reactions that install oxazoline/oxazole and thiazoline/thiazole heterocycles within ribosomally produced polypeptide chains. Here we show that the previously reported enzymes MicD-F and ArtGox accept backbone-modified monomers, including aramids and beta-amino acids, within leader-free polypeptides, even at positions immediately preceding or following the site of cyclization/dehydrogenation. The products are sequence-defined chemical polymers with multiple, diverse, non-alpha-amino acid subunits. We show further that MicD-F and ArtGox can install heterocyclic backbones within protein loops and linkers without disrupting the native tertiary fold. Calculations reveal the extent to which these heterocycles restrict conformational space; they also eliminate a peptide bond. Both features could improve the stability or add function to linker sequences now commonplace in emerging biotherapeutics. Moreover, as thiazoles and thiazoline heterocycles are replete in natural products,5,6,7 small molecule drugs,8,9 and peptide-mimetic therapeutics,10 their installation in protein-based biotherapeutics could improve or augment performance, activity, stability, and/or selectivity. This work represents a general strategy to expand the chemical diversity of the proteome beyond and in synergy with what can now be accomplished by expanding the genetic code.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-123
Author(s):  
Atteqa Safdar ◽  
Sara Iftikhar ◽  
Ghassan Zahid

Immune system of living organisms ranging from fungi, plants, vertebrates and invertebrates are all aided by polypeptide chains like defensins and cathelicidins. In humans the defensisns are quite fundamental part of innate immune system in combating with day-to-day exposure to unknown pathogens. The defensins are classified as alpha beta and sigma defensins expressed at chromosome 8 at nearly same positions, the sigma defensin is however synthetically developed as reterocyclin, as it has been stopped producing because of evolutionary development of stop codon 7.5 million years ago. The expression of Defensins can be either constitutive or inducible through epithelial cells, Paneth cells or other respective immune cells to regulate the activation of the innate immune responses. These impart their role either by direct microbicidal action, antiviral activity, inactivation or neutralization of microbial products, mobilization or activation of phagocytes and mast cells. Further to this there is lot more to explore about the availability of similar genetic expressions as defensins with unclear functions and in vivo experimental models development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (52) ◽  
pp. e2103015118
Author(s):  
Annika Deckert ◽  
Anaïs M. E. Cassaignau ◽  
Xiaolin Wang ◽  
Tomasz Włodarski ◽  
Sammy H. S. Chan ◽  
...  

In the cell, the conformations of nascent polypeptide chains during translation are modulated by both the ribosome and its associated molecular chaperone, trigger factor. The specific interactions that underlie these modulations, however, are still not known in detail. Here, we combine protein engineering, in-cell and in vitro NMR spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics simulations to explore how proteins interact with the ribosome during their biosynthesis before folding occurs. Our observations of α-synuclein nascent chains in living Escherichia coli cells reveal that ribosome surface interactions dictate the dynamics of emerging disordered polypeptides in the crowded cytosol. We show that specific basic and aromatic motifs drive such interactions and directly compete with trigger factor binding while biasing the direction of the nascent chain during its exit out of the tunnel. These results reveal a structural basis for the functional role of the ribosome as a scaffold with holdase characteristics and explain how handover of the nascent chain to specific auxiliary proteins occurs among a host of other factors in the cytosol.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (24) ◽  
pp. 7590
Author(s):  
Natalia Katina ◽  
Alisa Mikhaylina ◽  
Nelly Ilina ◽  
Irina Eliseeva ◽  
Vitalii Balobanov

The formation of amyloid fibrils is one of the variants of the self-organization of polypeptide chains. For the amyloid aggregation, the solution must be oversaturated with proteins. The interface of the liquid (solution) and solid (vessel walls) phases can trigger the adsorption of protein molecules, and the resulting oversaturation can initiate conformational transitions in them. In any laboratory experiment, we cannot exclude the presence of surfaces such as the walls of vessels, cuvettes, etc. However, in many works devoted to the study of amyloid formation, this feature is not considered. In our work, we investigated the behavior of the Aβ 1-40 peptide at the water–glass, water–quartz, and water–plastic interface. We carried out a series of simple experiments and showed that the Aβ 1-40 peptide is actively adsorbed on these surfaces, which leads to a significant interaction and aggregation of peptides. This means that the interface can be the place where the first amyloid nucleus appears. We suggest that this effect may also be one of the reasons for the difficulty of reproducing kinetic data when studying the aggregation of the amyloid of the Aβ 1-40 peptide and other amyloidogenic proteins


2021 ◽  
Vol 924 (1) ◽  
pp. 012036
Author(s):  
L Isnaini ◽  
T Estiasih ◽  
S H Suseno ◽  
L A Lestari

Abstract The critical aspect in forming emulsion is the selection of the right emulsifier. Emulsifiers are facilitating emulsion formation and promoting emulsion stability. Protein is the emulsifier that is often found in the food industry, because it has an active surface containing a mixture of hydrophilic and hydrophobic amino acids along the polypeptide chains. Protein have emulsification properties due to their amphipathic properties (having hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups) are the properties of proteins as emulsification because these proteins are able to form a layer at the oil-water interface. However, protein-stabilized emulsions are sensitive to charge changes, and proteins tend to diffuse slowly towards the interface compared to emulsifiers with smaller molecular weight. The purpose of this literature review is to determine the ability of vegetable proteins to stabilize emulsions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junki Uchiyama ◽  
Rohini Roy ◽  
Dan Ohtan Wang ◽  
Chiaki Yoshino ◽  
Yuichiro Mishima ◽  
...  

SummaryCellular global translation is often measured using ribosome profiling or quantitative mass spectrometry, but these methods do not provide direct information at the level of elongating nascent polypeptide chains (NPCs) and associated co-translational events. Here we describe pSNAP, a method for proteome-wide profiling of NPCs by affinity enrichment of puromycin- and stable isotope-labeled polypeptides. pSNAP does not require ribosome purification and/or chemical reaction, and captures bona fide NPCs that characteristically exhibit protein N-terminus-biased positions. We applied pSNAP to evaluate the effect of silmitasertib, a potential molecular therapy for cancer and COVID-19 patients, and revealed acute translational repression through casein kinase II and mTOR pathways. We also characterized modifications on NPCs and demonstrated that the combination of different types of modifications, such as acetylation and phosphorylation in the N-terminal region of histone H1.5, can modulate interactions with ribosome-associated factors. Thus, pSNAP provides a framework for dissecting co-translational regulations on a proteome-wide scale.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (17) ◽  
pp. 9653
Author(s):  
Jiacheng Li ◽  
Chengyu Hou ◽  
Xiaoliang Ma ◽  
Shuai Guo ◽  
Hongchi Zhang ◽  
...  

Exploring the protein-folding problem has been a longstanding challenge in molecular biology and biophysics. Intramolecular hydrogen (H)-bonds play an extremely important role in stabilizing protein structures. To form these intramolecular H-bonds, nascent unfolded polypeptide chains need to escape from hydrogen bonding with surrounding polar water molecules under the solution conditions that require entropy-enthalpy compensations, according to the Gibbs free energy equation and the change in enthalpy. Here, by analyzing the spatial layout of the side-chains of amino acid residues in experimentally determined protein structures, we reveal a protein-folding mechanism based on the entropy-enthalpy compensations that initially driven by laterally hydrophobic collapse among the side-chains of adjacent residues in the sequences of unfolded protein chains. This hydrophobic collapse promotes the formation of the H-bonds within the polypeptide backbone structures through the entropy-enthalpy compensation mechanism, enabling secondary structures and tertiary structures to fold reproducibly following explicit physical folding codes and forces. The temperature dependence of protein folding is thus attributed to the environment dependence of the conformational Gibbs free energy equation. The folding codes and forces in the amino acid sequence that dictate the formation of β-strands and α-helices can be deciphered with great accuracy through evaluation of the hydrophobic interactions among neighboring side-chains of an unfolded polypeptide from a β-strand-like thermodynamic metastable state. The folding of protein quaternary structures is found to be guided by the entropy-enthalpy compensations in between the docking sites of protein subunits according to the Gibbs free energy equation that is verified by bioinformatics analyses of a dozen structures of dimers. Protein folding is therefore guided by multistage entropy-enthalpy compensations of the system of polypeptide chains and water molecules under the solution conditions.


Toxins ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 574
Author(s):  
Drusilla L. Burns

Production and secretion of pertussis toxin (PT) is essential for the virulence of Bordetella pertussis. Due to the large oligomeric structure of PT, transport of the toxin across bacterial membrane barriers represents a significant hurdle that the bacteria must overcome in order to maintain pathogenicity. During the secretion process, PT undergoes a two-step transport process. The first step involves transport of the individual polypeptide chains of PT across the inner membrane utilizing a generalized secretion pathway, most likely the bacterial Sec system. The second step involves the use of a specialized apparatus to transport the toxin across the outer membrane of the bacterial cell. This apparatus, which has been termed the Ptl transporter and which is unique to the PT secretion pathway, is a member of the type IV family of bacterial transporters. Here, the current understanding of the PT secretion process is reviewed including a description of the Ptl proteins that assemble to form the transporter, the general structure of type IV transporters, the known similarities and differences between canonical type IV substrate transport and Ptl-mediated transport of PT, as well as the known sequence of events in the assembly and secretion of PT.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Eibauer ◽  
Miriam S. Weber ◽  
Yagmur Turgay ◽  
Suganya Sivagurunathan ◽  
Robert D. Goldman ◽  
...  

Intermediate filaments are integral components of the cytoskeleton in metazoan cells. Due to their specific viscoelastic properties they are principal contributors to flexibility and tear strength of cells and tissues. Vimentin, an intermediate filament protein expressed in fibroblasts and endothelial cells, assembles into ~11 nm thick biopolymers, that are involved in a wide variety of cellular functions in health and disease. Here, we reveal the structure of in-situ polymerized vimentin filaments to a subnanometer resolution by applying cryo-electron tomography to mouse embryonic fibroblasts grown on electron microscopy grids. We show that vimentin filaments are tube-like assemblies with a well-defined helical symmetry. Their structure is comprised of five octameric, spring-like protofibrils harboring 40 vimentin polypeptide chains in cross-section. The protofibrils are connected by the intrinsically disordered head and helix 1A domains of vimentin. Individual filaments display two polymerization states characterized by either the presence or absence of a luminal density along the helical axis. The structure of vimentin filaments unveils the generic building plan of the intermediate filament superfamily in molecular details.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Schoenfelder ◽  
Peter Benedikt Pfeiffer ◽  
Tejaswini Pradhan ◽  
Johan Bijzet ◽  
Bouke P.C. Hazenberg ◽  
...  

Several studies recently showed that ex vivo fibrils from patient or animal tissue were structurally different from in vitro formed fibrils from the same polypeptide chain. Analysis of serum amyloid A (SAA) and Aβ-derived amyloid fibrils additionally revealed that ex vivo fibrils were more protease stable than in vitro fibrils. These observations gave rise to the proteolytic selection hypothesis that suggested that disease-associated amyloid fibrils were selected inside the body by their ability to resist endogenous clearance mechanisms. We here show, for more than twenty different fibril samples, that ex vivo fibrils are more protease stable than in vitro fibrils. These data support the idea of a proteolytic selection of pathogenic amyloid fibril morphologies and help to explain why only few amino acid sequences lead to amyloid diseases, although many, if not all, polypeptide chains can form amyloid fibrils in vitro.


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