22 research outputs found

    Proinsulin C-peptide elicits disaggregation of insulin resulting in enhanced physiological insulin effects

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    Using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), proinsulin C-peptide was found to influence insulin-insulin interactions. In SPR with chip-bound insulin, C-peptide mixed with analyte insulin increased the binding, while alone C-peptide did not. A control peptide with the same residues in random sequence had little effect. In ESI-MS, C-peptide lowered the presence of insulin hexamer. The data suggest that C-peptide promotes insulin disaggregation. Insulin/insulin oligomer μM dissociation constants were determined. Compatible with these findings, type 1 diabetic patients receiving insulin and C-peptide developed 66% more stimulation of glucose metabolism than when given insulin alone. A role of C-peptide in promoting insulin disaggregation may be important physiologically during exocytosis of pancreatic β-cell secretory granulae and pharmacologically at insulin injection sites. It is compatible with the normal co-release of C-peptide and insulin and may contribute to the beneficial effect of C-peptide and insulin replacement in type 1 diabetics

    Accurate Mass Measurement by Electrospray Ionization Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry:  Detection of Variants Differing by <6 Da from Normal in Human Hemoglobin Heterozygotes

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    Detection of Variants Differing by <6 Da from Normal in Human Hemoglobin Heterozygotes Dilip K. Rai,* William J. Griffiths, Britta Landin, Barbara J. Wild, Gunvor Alvelius, and Brian N. Green Division of Clinical Chemistry, Department of Medical Laboratory Sciences and Technology, Huddinge University Hospital C1 74, Karolinska Institutet, SE-141 86 Stockholm, Sweden, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden, Department of Haematological Medicine, King's College Hospital, Denmark Hill, London SE5 9RS, U.K., and Micromass UK Limited, 3 Tudor Road, Altrincham, Cheshire, WA14 5RZ, U.K. Received for review October 11, 2002. Accepted March 6, 2003. Abstract: Mass spectrometry has a basic limitation when human hemoglobin variants are analyzed, because it cannot resolve two globin chains that differ in mass by <6 Da. Several common -chain variants differ by 1 Da from normal and, hence, when present in heterozygotes, are not resolved from the normal -chain. Normal and variant chains appear together in the spectrum as a single entity, whose mass is the abundance weighted mean of the two chains. Here we show that such heterozygotes can be detected in 500-fold diluted blood by accurately measuring the mass of the -chain using an electrospray ionization quadrupole instrument and the -chain for internal mass calibration. A statistical analysis of the normal -chain mass (n = 86) showed that the standard deviation (SD) of the mean was <�0.05 Da (<�3.2 ppm). Hence, at the 95% confidence level (�2 SD), an abnormal - or -chain differing by 1 Da from normal should be detectable in a heterozygote provided its abundance is >10% of total - or -chains, respectively. Variants whose masses lay between 1 and 4 Da from normal were detected in 19 heterozygotes. Moreover, the proportion of each variant estimated from the mass change correlated with the proportion determined by cation-exchange HPLC. Variants were assigned to the - or -chain by combining the sign of the mass change with the polarity change inferred from electrophoretic data. This procedure could be used for screening clinically significant hemoglobin variants

    Characterization of the phosphocholine-substituted oligosaccharide in lipopolysaccharides of type b Haemophilus influenzae

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    Haemophilus influenzae expresses heterogeneous populations of short-chain lipopolysaccharide (LPS) which exhibit extensive antigenic diversity among multiple oligosaccharide epitopes. These LPS oligosaccharide epitopes can carry phosphocholine (PCho) substituents, the expression of which is subject to high frequency phase variation mediated by genes in the lic1 genetic locus. The location and site of attachment of PCho substituents were determined by structural analysis of LPS from two type b H. influenzae strains, Eagan and RM7004. The lic2 locus is involved in phase variation of oligosaccharide expression. LPS obtained from the parent strains, from mutants generated by insertion of antibiotic resistance cassettes in the lic2 genetic locus, and from phase-variants showing high levels of PCho expression was characterized by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) and 1H NMR spectroscopy of derived O-deacylated samples. ESI-MS of O-deacylated LPS from wild-type strains revealed mixtures of related glycoform structures differing in the number of hexose residues. Analysis of LPS from PCho-expressing phase-variants revealed similar mixtures of glycoforms, each containing a single PCho substituent. O-Deacylated LPS preparations from the lic2 mutants were much less complex than their respective parent strains, consisting only of Hex3 and/or Hex2 glycoforms, were examined in detail by high-field NMR techniques. It was found that the LPS samples contain the phosphoethanolamine (PEtn) substituted inner-core element, L-alpha-D-Hepp-(1-->2)-[PEtn-->6]-L-alpha-D-Hepp-(1--> 3)-L-alpha-D-He pp-(1-->5)-alpha-Kdo in which the major glycoforms carry a beta-D-Glcp or beta-D-Glcp-(1-->4)-beta-D-Glcp at the O-4 position of the 3-substituted heptose (HepI) and a beta-D-Galp at the O-2 position of the terminal heptose (HepIII). LPS from the lic2 mutants of both type b strains were found to carry PCho groups at the O-6 position of the terminal beta-D-Galp residue attached to HepIII. In the parent strains, the central heptose (HepII) of the LPS inner-core element is also substituted by hexose containing oligosaccharides. The expression of the galabiose epitope in LPS of H. influenzae type b strains has previously been linked to genes comprising the lic2 locus. The present study provides definitive evidence for the role of lic2 genes in initiating chain extension from HepII. From the analysis of core oligosaccharide samples, LPS from the lic2 mutant strain of RM7004 was also found to carry O-acetyl substituents. Mono-, di-, and tri-O-acetylated LPS oligosaccharides were identified. The major O-acetylated glycoforms were found to be substituted at the O-3 position of HepIII. A di-O-acetylated species was characterized which was also substituted at the O-6 postion of the terminal beta-D-Glc in the Hex3 glycoform. This is the first report pointing to the occurrence of O-acetyl groups in the inner-core region of H. influenzae LPS. We have previously shown that in H. influenzae strain Rd, a capsule-deficient type d strain, PCho groups are expressed in a different molecular environment, being attached at the O-6 position of a beta-D-Glcp, which is in turn attached to HepIPeer reviewed: YesNRC publication: Ye

    Novel long-chain neurotoxins from Bungarus candidus distinguish the two binding sites in muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

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    αδ-Bungarotoxins, a novel group of long-chain α-neurotoxins, manifest different affinity to two agonist/competitive antagonist binding sites of muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, being more active at the interface of α-δ-subunits. Three isoforms (αδ-BgTx-1-3) were identified in Malayan Krait ( Bungarus candidus ) from Thailand by genomic DNA analysis; two of them (αδ-BgTx-1 and 2) were isolated from its venom. The toxins comprise 73 amino acid residues and 5 disulfide bridges, being homologous to α-bungarotoxin (α-BgTx), a classical blocker of muscle-type and neuronal α7, α8, and α9α10 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. The toxicity of αδ-BgTx-1 (LD50 0.17-0.28 μg/g mouse, i.p. injection) is essentially as high as that of α-BgTx. In the chick biventer cervicis nerve-muscle preparation, αδ-BgTx-1 completely abolished acetylcholine response, but in contrast to the block by α-BgTx, acetylcholine response was fully reversible by washing. αδ-BgTxs, similar to α-BgTx, bind with high affinity to α7 and muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. However, the major difference of αδ-BgTxs from α-BgTx and other naturally-occurring α-neurotoxins is that αδ-BgTxs discriminate the two binding sites in the Torpedo californica and mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptors showing up to two orders of magnitude higher affinity for the α-δ site as compared to α-ε or α-γ binding site interfaces. Molecular modeling and analysis of the literature provided possible explanations for these differences in binding mode; one of the probable reasons being the lower content of positively charged residues in αδ-BgTxs. Thus, αδ-BgTxs are new tools for studies on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

    Novel long-chain neurotoxins from Bungarus candidus distinguish the two binding sites in muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

    No full text
    αδ-Bungarotoxins, a novel group of long-chain α-neurotoxins, manifest different affinity to two agonist/competitive antagonist binding sites of muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, being more active at the interface of α-δ-subunits. Three isoforms (αδ-BgTx-1-3) were identified in Malayan Krait ( Bungarus candidus ) from Thailand by genomic DNA analysis; two of them (αδ-BgTx-1 and 2) were isolated from its venom. The toxins comprise 73 amino acid residues and 5 disulfide bridges, being homologous to α-bungarotoxin (α-BgTx), a classical blocker of muscle-type and neuronal α7, α8, and α9α10 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. The toxicity of αδ-BgTx-1 (LD50 0.17-0.28 μg/g mouse, i.p. injection) is essentially as high as that of α-BgTx. In the chick biventer cervicis nerve-muscle preparation, αδ-BgTx-1 completely abolished acetylcholine response, but in contrast to the block by α-BgTx, acetylcholine response was fully reversible by washing. αδ-BgTxs, similar to α-BgTx, bind with high affinity to α7 and muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. However, the major difference of αδ-BgTxs from α-BgTx and other naturally-occurring α-neurotoxins is that αδ-BgTxs discriminate the two binding sites in the Torpedo californica and mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptors showing up to two orders of magnitude higher affinity for the α-δ site as compared to α-ε or α-γ binding site interfaces. Molecular modeling and analysis of the literature provided possible explanations for these differences in binding mode; one of the probable reasons being the lower content of positively charged residues in αδ-BgTxs. Thus, αδ-BgTxs are new tools for studies on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
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