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2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanat Ali ◽  
Soja Saghar Soman ◽  
Ranjit Vijayan

AbstractHemoglobin is one of the most widely studied proteins genetically, biochemically, and structurally. It is an oxygen carrying tetrameric protein that imparts the characteristic red color to blood. Each chain of hemoglobin harbors a heme group embedded in a hydrophobic pocket. Several studies have investigated structural variations present in mammalian hemoglobin and their functional implications. However, camel hemoglobin has not been thoroughly explored, especially from a structural perspective. Importantly, very little is known about how the heme group interacts with hemoglobin under varying conditions of osmolarity and temperature. Several experimental studies have indicated that the tense (T) state is more stable than the relaxed (R) state of hemoglobin under normal physiological conditions. Despite the fact that R state is less stable than the T state, no extensive structural dynamics studies have been performed to investigate global quaternary transitions of R state hemoglobin under normal physiological conditions. To evaluate this, several 500 ns all-atom molecular dynamics simulations were performed to get a deeper understanding of how camel hemoglobin behaves under stress, which it is normally exposed to, when compared to human hemoglobin. Notably, camel hemoglobin was more stable under physiological stress when compared to human hemoglobin. Additionally, when compared to camel hemoglobin, cofactor-binding regions of hemoglobin also exhibited more fluctuations in human hemoglobin under the conditions studied. Several differences were observed between the residues of camel and human hemoglobin that interacted with heme. Importantly, distal residues His58 of α hemoglobin and His63 of β hemoglobin formed more sustained interactions, especially at higher temperatures, in camel hemoglobin. These residues are important for oxygen binding to hemoglobin. Thus, this work provides insights into how camel and human hemoglobin differ in their interactions under stress.


Author(s):  
Long Yu ◽  
Qin Liu ◽  
Wanxin Luo ◽  
Junlong Zhao ◽  
Heba F. Alzan ◽  
...  

Glycolytic enzymes play a crucial role in the anaerobic glycolysis of apicomplexan parasites for energy generation. Consequently, they are considered as potential targets for new drug development. Previous studies revealed that lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), a glycolytic enzyme, is a potential drug target in different parasites, such as Plasmodium, Toxoplasma, Cryptosporidium, and Piroplasma. Herein, in order to investigate the structural basis of LDH in Babesia spp., we determined the crystal structure of apo Babesia orientalis (Bo) LDH at 2.67-Å resolution in the space group P1. A five-peptide insertion appears in the active pocket loop of BoLDH to create a larger catalytic pocket, like other protozoa (except for Babesia microti LDH) and unlike its mammalian counterparts, and the absence of this extra insertion inactivates BoLDH. Without ligands, the apo BoLDH takes R-state (relaxed) with the active-site loop open. This feature is obviously different from that of allosteric LDHs in T-state (tense) with the active-site loop open. Compared with allosteric LDHs, the extra salt bridges and hydrogen bonds make the subunit interfaces of BoLDH more stable, and that results in the absence of T-state. Interestingly, BoLDH differs significantly from BmLDH, as it exhibits the ability to adapt quickly to the synthetic co-factor APAD+. In addition, the enzymatic activity of BoLDH was inhibited non-competitively by polyphenolic gossypol with a Ki value of 4.25 μM, indicating that BoLDH is sensitive to the inhibition of gossypol and possibly to its new derivative compounds. The current work provides the structural basis of BoLDH for the first time and suggests further investigation on the LDH structure of other Babesia spp. That knowledge would indeed facilitate the screening and designing of new LDH inhibitors to control the intracellular proliferation of Babesia spp.


Author(s):  
Demetres D. Leonidas ◽  
Spyros E. Zographos ◽  
Katerina E. Tsitsanou ◽  
Vassiliki T. Skamnaki ◽  
George Stravodimos ◽  
...  

The crystal structures of free T-state and R-state glycogen phosphorylase (GP) and of R-state GP in complex with the allosteric activators IMP and AMP are reported at improved resolution. GP is a validated pharmaceutical target for the development of antihyperglycaemic agents, and the reported structures may have a significant impact on structure-based drug-design efforts. Comparisons with previously reported structures at lower resolution reveal the detailed conformation of important structural features in the allosteric transition of GP from the T-state to the R-state. The conformation of the N-terminal segment (residues 7–17), the position of which was not located in previous T-state structures, was revealed to form an α-helix (now termed α0). The conformation of this segment (which contains Ser14, phosphorylation of which leads to the activation of GP) is significantly different between the T-state and the R-state, pointing in opposite directions. In the T-state it is packed between helices α4 and α16 (residues 104–115 and 497–508, respectively), while in the R-state it is packed against helix α1 (residues 22′–38′) and towards the loop connecting helices α4′ and α5′ of the neighbouring subunit. The allosteric binding site where AMP and IMP bind is formed by the ordering of a loop (residues 313–326) which is disordered in the free structure, and adopts a conformation dictated mainly by the type of nucleotide that binds at this site.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 4800
Author(s):  
Przemysław Duda ◽  
Bartosz Budziak ◽  
Dariusz Rakus

Fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase 2 (Fbp2) is a gluconeogenic enzyme and multifunctional protein modulating mitochondrial function and synaptic plasticity via protein-protein interactions. The ability of Fbp2 to bind to its cellular partners depends on a quaternary arrangement of the protein. NAD+ and AMP stabilize an inactive T-state of Fbp2 and thus, affect these interactions. However, more subtle structural changes evoked by the binding of catalytic cations may also change the affinity of Fbp2 to its cellular partners. In this report, we demonstrate that Fbp2 interacts with Co2+, a cation which in excessive concentrations, causes pathologies of the central nervous system and which has been shown to provoke the octal-like events in hippocampal slices. We describe for the first time the kinetics of Fbp2 in the presence of Co2+, and we provide a line of evidence that Co2+ blocks the AMP-induced transition of Fbp2 to the canonical T-state triggering instead of a new, non-canonical T-state. In such a state, Fbp2 is still partially active and may interact with its binding partners e.g., Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase 2α (Camk2α). The Fbp2-Camk2α complex seems to be restricted to mitochondria membrane and it facilitates the Camk2α autoactivation and thus, synaptic plasticity.


Author(s):  
V.V. Ovchinnikov ◽  
A.M. Drits ◽  
I.V. Solov’eva

The mechanical and corrosive properties of welded joints of sheets with 6 mm thickness made of the 1151 alloy of the Al—Cu—Mg system in the T state (hardening and natural ageing) obtained by friction stir welding by single, double welding and bobbin tool welding is studied. It is shown that the change in the friction stir welding scheme does not result in noticeable change in the tensile strength of the welded joint and the weld metal. The grain size in the weld increased from 4.8 µm (single welding) to 10.5 µm when bobbin tool welding. The intercrystall line corrosion resistance of all welding zones (except the base metal) increases by about 1.4 to 2 times depending on the structural area due to the higher cooling speed of single friction stir welding compared to the bobbin tool welding,


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-77
Author(s):  
Karen Yokley ◽  
◽  
Nicholas Luke ◽  

In summer 2020, North Carolina A&T State University and Elon University were poised to debut their Research Experiences for Undergraduates program in mathematical biology funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The directors decided to hold the program virtually so that students would have the opportunity. Although the directors did not have experience running a virtual program, they learned from the experience and have recommendations for program directors in similar situations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (44) ◽  
pp. 27245-27254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen Scheie ◽  
Jonas Kindervater ◽  
Shu Zhang ◽  
Hitesh J. Changlani ◽  
Gabriele Sala ◽  
...  

We use neutron scattering to show that ferromagnetism and antiferromagnetism coexist in the low T state of the pyrochlore quantum magnetYb2Ti2O7. While magnetic Bragg peaks evidence long-range static ferromagnetic order, inelastic scattering shows that short-range correlated antiferromagnetism is also present. Small-angle neutron scattering provides direct evidence for mesoscale magnetic structure that we associate with metastable antiferromagnetism. Classical Monte Carlo simulations based on exchange interactions inferred from⟨111⟩-oriented high-field spin wave measurements confirm that antiferromagnetism is metastable within the otherwise ferromagnetic ground state. The apparent lack of coherent spin wave excitations and strong sensitivity to quenched disorder characterizingYb2Ti2O7is a consequence of this multiphase magnetism.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dhananjay Kumar ◽  
Devdas Pai ◽  
Kwadwo Mensah-Darkwa ◽  
Robin Liles ◽  
Mainul Faruque ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Placid Ferreira ◽  
Martha Atwater ◽  
Kenneth Roberts ◽  
Jagannathan Sankar ◽  
Deborah Bartz ◽  
...  

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