8 research outputs found
The protofilament architecture of a de novo designed coiled coil-based amyloidogenic peptide
International audienceAmyloid fibrils are polymers formed by proteins under specific conditions and in many cases they are related to pathogenesis, such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases. Their hallmark is the presence of a β-sheet structure. High resolution structural data on these systems as well as information gathered from multiple complementary analytical techniques is needed, from both a fundamental and a pharmaceutical perspective. Here, a previously reported de novo designed, pH-switchable coiled coil-based peptide that undergoes structural transitions resulting in fibril formation under physiological conditions has been exhaustively characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), cryo-TEM, atomic force microscopy (AFM), wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) and solid-state NMR (ssNMR). Overall, a unique 2-dimensional carpet-like assembly composed of large coexisiting ribbon-like, tubular and funnel-like structures with a clearly resolved protofilament substructure is observed. Whereas electron microscopy and scattering data point somewhat more to a hairpin model of β-fibrils, ssNMR data obtained from samples with selectively labelled peptides are in agreement with both, hairpin structures and linear arrangements
Enzymatic Sialylation of Synthetic Multivalent Scaffolds: From 3′-Sialyllactose Glycomacromolecules to Novel Neoglycosides
Sialoglycans play a key role in many biological recognition processes and sialylated conjugates of various types have successfully been applied, e.g., as antivirals or in antitumor therapy. A key feature for high affinity binding of such conjugates is the multivalent presentation of sialoglycans which often possess synthetic challenges. Here, the combination is described of solid phase polymer synthesis and enzymatic sialylation yielding 3′-sialyllactose-presenting precision glycomacromolecules. CMP-Neu5Ac synthetase from Neisseria meningitidis (NmCSS) and sialyltransferase from Pasteurella multocida (PmST1) are combined in a one-pot reaction giving access to sequence-defined sialylated macromolecules. Surprisingly, when employing Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris) as a buffer, formation of significant amounts of α-linked Tris-sialoside is observed as a side reaction. Further exploring and exploiting this unusual sialylation reaction, different neoglycosidic structures are synthesized showing that PmST1 can be used to derive both, sialylation on natural carbohydrates as well as on synthetic hydroxylated scaffolds
Discovery and Investigation of Natural Editing Function against Artificial Amino Acids in Protein Translation
[Image: see text] Fluorine being not substantially present in the chemistry of living beings is an attractive element in tailoring novel chemical, biophysical, and pharmacokinetic properties of peptides and proteins. The hallmark of ribosome-mediated artificial amino acid incorporation into peptides and proteins is a broad substrate tolerance, which is assumed to rely on the absence of evolutionary pressure for efficient editing of artificial amino acids. We used the well-characterized editing proficient isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase (IleRS) from Escherichia coli to investigate the crosstalk of aminoacylation and editing activities against fluorinated amino acids. We show that translation of trifluoroethylglycine (TfeGly) into proteins is prevented by hydrolysis of TfeGly-tRNA(Ile) in the IleRS post-transfer editing domain. The remarkable observation is that dissociation of TfeGly-tRNA(Ile) from IleRS is significantly slowed down. This finding is in sharp contrast to natural editing reactions by tRNA synthetases wherein fast editing rates for the noncognate substrates are essential to outcompete fast aa-tRNA dissociation rates. Using a post-transfer editing deficient mutant of IleRS (IleRSAla10), we were able to achieve ribosomal incorporation of TfeGly in vivo. Our work expands the knowledge of ribosome-mediated artificial amino acid translation with detailed analysis of natural editing function against an artificial amino acid providing an impulse for further systematic investigations and engineering of the translation and editing of unusual amino acids
Exploiting Oligo(amido amine) Backbones for the Multivalent Presentation of Coiled-Coil Peptides
The
investigation of coiled coil formation for one mono- and two
divalent peptide–polymer conjugates is presented. Through the
assembly of the full conjugates on solid support, monodisperse sequence-defined
conjugates are obtained with defined positions and distances between
the peptide side chains along the polymeric backbone. A heteromeric
peptide design was chosen, where peptide K is attached to the polymer
backbone, and coiled-coil formation is only expected through complexation
with the complementary peptide E. Indeed, the monovalent peptide K-polymer
conjugate displays rapid coiled-coil formation when mixed with the
complementary peptide E sequence. The divalent systems show intramolecular
homomeric coiled-coil formation on the polymer backbone despite the
peptide design. Interestingly, this intramolecular assembly undergoes
a conformational rearrangement by the addition of the complementary
peptide E leading to the formation of heteromeric coiled coil–polymer
aggregates. The polymer backbone acts as a template bringing the covalently
bound peptide strands in close proximity to each other, increasing
the local concentration and inducing the otherwise nonfavorable formation
of intramolecular helical assemblies
Inhibition of NGLY1 inactivates the transcription factor Nrf1 and potentiates proteasome inhibitor cytotoxicity
We discovered that the proteostasis modulating transcription factor Nrf1 requires cytosolic de-N-glycosylation by the N-glycanase NGly1 as part of its activation mechanism. Through a covalent small molecule library screen, we discovered an inhibitor of NGly1 that blocks Nrf1 activation in cells and potentiates the activity of proteasome inhibitor cancer drugs. The requirement of NGly1 for Nrf1 activity likely underlies several pathologies associated with a rare hereditary deficiency in NGly1
Inhibition of NGLY1 Inactivates the Transcription Factor Nrf1 and Potentiates Proteasome Inhibitor Cytotoxicity
Proteasome inhibitors
are used to treat blood cancers such as multiple
myeloma (MM) and mantle cell lymphoma. The efficacy of these drugs
is frequently undermined by acquired resistance. One mechanism of
proteasome inhibitor resistance may involve the transcription factor
Nuclear Factor, Erythroid 2 Like 1 (NFE2L1, also referred to as Nrf1),
which responds to proteasome insufficiency or pharmacological inhibition
by upregulating proteasome subunit gene expression. This “bounce-back”
response is achieved through a unique mechanism. Nrf1 is constitutively
translocated into the ER lumen, N-glycosylated, and then targeted
for proteasomal degradation via the ER-associated degradation (ERAD)
pathway. Proteasome inhibition leads to accumulation of cytosolic
Nrf1, which is then processed to form the active transcription factor.
Here we show that the cytosolic enzyme N-glycanase 1 (NGLY1, the human
PNGase) is essential for Nrf1 activation in response to proteasome
inhibition. Chemical or genetic disruption of NGLY1 activity results
in the accumulation of misprocessed Nrf1 that is largely excluded
from the nucleus. Under these conditions, Nrf1 is inactive in regulating
proteasome subunit gene expression in response to proteasome inhibition.
Through a small molecule screen, we identified a cell-active NGLY1
inhibitor that disrupts the processing and function of Nrf1. The compound
potentiates the cytotoxicity of carfilzomib, a clinically used proteasome
inhibitor, against MM and T cell-derived acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(T-ALL) cell lines. Thus, NGLY1 inhibition prevents Nrf1 activation
and represents a new therapeutic approach for cancers that depend
on proteasome homeostasis