5 research outputs found

    Expression screening, protein purification and NMR analysis of human protein domains for structural genomics

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    Structural genomics, the determination of protein structures on a genome-wide scale, is still in its infancy for eukaryotes due to the number and size of their genes. Low protein expression and solubility of eukaryotic geneproducts are the major bottlenecks in high-throughput (HTP) recombinant protein production with the E. coli expression systems. To circumvent this problem we decided to focus on separate protein domains. We describe here a fast microtiterplate based, expression and solubility screening procedure, using a combination of in vitro and in vivo expression, and purification with nickel-NTA magnetic beads. All steps are optimized for automatic HTP processing using a liquid handling station. Furthermore, large-scale expression and protein purification conditions are optimized, permitting the purification of 24 protein samples per week. We further show that results obtained from the expression screening can be extrapolated to the production of protein samples for NMR. Starting with 81 cloned human protein domains, in vivo expression was detected in 54 cases, and from 28 of those milligrams of protein were purified. An informative HSQC spectrum was recorded for 18 proteins (22%), half of which were indicative of a folded protein. The success rate and quality of the HSQC spectra suggest that the domain approach holds promise for human proteins

    NMR structural studies on a DNA four-way junction: Stacking preference and localization of the metal-ion binding site

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    Item does not contain fulltext11th Conversation in Biomolecular Stereodynamics, ALBANY, NEW YORK, 15 juni 199

    Cationic Geminoid Peptide Amphiphiles Inhibit DENV2 Protease, Furin, and Viral Replication

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    Dengue is an important arboviral infectious disease for which there is currently no specific cure. We report gemini-like (geminoid) alkylated amphiphilic peptides containing lysines in combination with glycines or alanines (C(15)H(31)C(O)-Lys-(Gly or Ala)(n)Lys-NHC(16)H(33), shorthand notation C(16)-KX(n)K-C(16) with X = A or G, and n = 0–2). The representatives with 1 or 2 Ala inhibit dengue protease and human furin, two serine proteases involved in dengue virus infection that have peptides with cationic amino acids as their preferred substrates, with IC(50) values in the lower µM range. The geminoid C(16)-KAK-C(16) combined inhibition of DENV2 protease (IC(50) 2.3 µM) with efficacy against replication of wildtype DENV2 in LLC-MK2 cells (EC(50) 4.1 µM) and an absence of toxicity. We conclude that the lysine-based geminoids have activity against dengue virus infection, which is based on their inhibition of the proteases involved in viral replication and are therefore promising leads to further developing antiviral therapeutics, not limited to dengue

    Prediction of molecular alignment of nucleic acids in aligned media

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    Contains fulltext : 35529.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We demonstrate - using the data base of all deposited DNA and RNA structures aligned in Pf1-medium and RDC refined - that for nucleic acids in a Pf1-medium the electrostatic alignment tensor can be predicted reliably and accurately via a simple and fast calculation based on the gyration tensor spanned out by the phosphodiester atoms. The rhombicity is well predicted over its full range from 0 to 0.66, while the alignment tensor orientation is predicted correctly for rhombicities up to ca. 0.4, for larger rhombicities it appears to deviate somewhat more than expected based on structural noise and measurement error. This simple analytical approach is based on the Debye-Huckel approximation for the electrostatic interaction potential, valid at distances sufficiently far away from a poly-ionic charged surface, a condition naturally enforced when the charge of alignment medium and solute are of equal sign, as for nucleic acids in a Pf1-phage medium. For the usual salt strengths and nucleic acid sizes, the Debye-Huckel screening length is smaller than the nucleic acid size, but large enough for the collective of Debye-Huckel spheres to encompass the whole molecule. The molecular alignment is then purely electrostatic, but it's functional form is under these conditions similar to that for steric alignment. The proposed analytical expression allows for very fast calculation of the alignment tensor and hence RDCs from the conformation of the nucleic acid molecule. This information provides opportunities for improved structure determination of nucleic acids, including better assessment of dynamics in (multi-domain) nucleic acids and the possibility to incorporate alignment tensor prediction from shape directly into the structure calculation process. The procedures are incorporated into MATLAB scripts, which are available on request
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