15 research outputs found

    Patogénesis molecular en un modelo experimental de miocarditis

    Get PDF
    En el presente trabajo, se ahondó en el estudio de las diferencias entre las variantes intratípicas CVB1N y CVB1Nm con respecto a sus diferencias genómicas, replicativas ex vivo, in vivo, estructurales y en el uso de los receptores celulares.Facultad de Ciencias Exacta

    Molecular determinants of disease in coxsackievirus B1 murine infection

    Get PDF
    To understand better how different genomic regions may confer pathogenicity for the coxsackievirus B (CVB), two intratypic CVB1 variants and a number of recombinant viruses were studied. Sequencing analysis showed 23 nucleotide changes between the parental non-pathogenic CVB1N and the pathogenic CVB1Nm. Mutations present in CVB1Nm were more conserved than those in CVB1N when compared to other CVB sequences. Inoculation in C3H/HeJ mice showed that the P1 region is critical for pathogenicity in murine pancreas and heart. The molecular determinants of disease for these organs partially overlap. Several P1 region amino acid differences appear to be located in the decay accelerating factor (DAF) footprint CVBs. CVB1N and CVB1Nm interacted with human CAR, but only CVB1N seemed to interact with human DAF, as determined using soluble receptors in a plaque reduction assay. However, the murine homologue Daf-1 did not interact with any virus assessed by haemagglutination. The results of this study suggest that an unknown receptor interaction with the virus play an important role in the pathogenicity of CVB1Nm. Further in vivo studies may clarify this issue.Instituto de Biotecnología y Biología Molecula

    Turning universal O into rare Bombay type blood

    Get PDF
    Red blood cell antigens play critical roles in blood transfusion since donor incompatibilities can be lethal. Recipients with the rare total deficiency in H antigen, the Oh Bombay phenotype, can only be transfused with group Oh blood to avoid serious transfusion reactions. We discover FucOB from the mucin-degrading bacteria Akkermansia muciniphila as an -1,2-fucosidase able to hydrolyze Type I, Type II, Type III and Type V H antigens to obtain the afucosylated Bombay phenotype in vitro. X-ray crystal structures of FucOB show a three-domain architecture, including a GH95 glycoside hydrolase. The structural data together with site-directed mutagenesis, enzymatic activity and computational methods provide molecular insights into substrate specificity and catalysis. Furthermore, using agglutination tests and flow cytometry-based techniques, we demonstrate the ability of FucOB to convert universal O type into rare Bombay type blood, providing exciting possibilities to facilitate transfusion in recipients/patients with Bombay phenotype

    Dissecting the structural and chemical determinants of the "open-to-closed" motion in the mannosyltransferase PimA from Mycobacteria

    Get PDF
    The phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosyltransferase A (PimA) is an essential peripheral membrane glycosyltransferase that initiates the biosynthetic pathway of phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIMs), key structural elements and virulence factors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. PimA undergoes functionally important conformational changes, including (i) α-helix-To-β-strand and β-strand-To-α-helix transitions and (ii) an "open-To-closed"motion between the two Rossmann-fold domains, a conformational change that is necessary to generate a catalytically competent active site. In previous work, we established that GDP-Man and GDP stabilize the enzyme and facilitate the switch to a more compact active state. To determine the structural contribution of the mannose ring in such an activation mechanism, we analyzed a series of chemical derivatives, including mannose phosphate (Man-P) and mannose pyrophosphate-ribose (Man-PP-RIB), and additional GDP derivatives, such as pyrophosphate ribose (PP-RIB) and GMP, by the combined use of X-ray crystallography, limited proteolysis, circular dichroism, isothermal titration calorimetry, and small angle X-ray scattering methods. Although the β-phosphate is present, we found that the mannose ring, covalently attached to neither phosphate (Man-P) nor PP-RIB (Man-PP-RIB), does promote the switch to the active compact form of the enzyme. Therefore, the nucleotide moiety of GDP-Man, and not the sugar ring, facilitates the "open-To-closed"motion, with the β-phosphate group providing the high-Affinity binding to PimA. Altogether, the experimental data contribute to a better understanding of the structural determinants involved in the "open-To-closed"motion not only observed in PimA but also visualized and/or predicted in other glycosyltransfeases. In addition, the experimental data might prove to be useful for the discovery and/or development of PimA and/or glycosyltransferase inhibitors

    Mechanism of antibody-specific deglycosylation and immune evasion by Streptococcal IgG-specific endoglycosidases

    Get PDF
    Bacterial pathogens have evolved intricate mechanisms to evade the human immune system, including the production of immunomodulatory enzymes. Streptococcus pyogenes serotypes secrete two multi-modular endo--N-acetylglucosaminidases, EndoS and EndoS2, that specifically deglycosylate the conserved N-glycan at Asn297 on IgG Fc, disabling antibody-mediated effector functions. Amongst thousands of known carbohydrate-active enzymes, EndoS and EndoS2 represent just a handful of enzymes that are specific to the protein portion of the glycoprotein substrate, not just the glycan component. Here, we present the cryoEM structure of EndoS in complex with the IgG1 Fc fragment. In combination with small-angle X-ray scattering, alanine scanning mutagenesis, hydrolytic activity measurements, enzyme kinetics, nuclear magnetic resonance and molecular dynamics analyses, we establish the mechanisms of recognition and specific deglycosylation of IgG antibodies by EndoS and EndoS2. Our results provide a rational basis from which to engineer novel enzymes with antibody and glycan selectivity for clinical and biotechnological applications

    A native ternary complex trapped in crystal reveals the catalytic mechanism of a retaining glycosyltransferase

    Get PDF
    et al.Glycosyltransferases (GTs) comprise a prominent family of enzymes that play critical roles in a variety of cellular processes including cell signaling, cell development and host-pathogen interactions. Glycosyl transfer can proceed with either ‘inversion’ or ‘retention’ of the anomeric configuration with respect to the reaction substrates and products. The elucidation of the catalytic mechanism of retaining GTs remains a major challenge. We report the first native ternary complex of a GT, that of the retaining glucosyl-3-phosphoglycerate synthase GpgS from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, in the presence of the sugar donor UDP-Glc, the acceptor substrate phosphoglycerate and the divalent cation cofactor, in a productive mode for catalysis. In combination with structural, chemical, enzymatic, molecular dynamics and quantum-mechanics/molecular-mechanics (QM/MM) calculations, we unravel its catalytic mechanism, providing a strong experimental support for a front-side, substrate assisted SNi-type reaction.This work was supported by the EU Contract HEALTH-F3-2011-260872, MINECO Contract BIO2013-49022-C2-2-R, and the Basque Government (to M.E.G.); MINECO Contracts CTQ2011-24292 and CTQ2014-53144-P (to J.M.LL.) and “UAB - Banco Santander Program” (to L.M.); CTQ2013-44367-C2-1-P (to P.M.) and MINECO Contract BIO2013-49022-C2-1-R (to A.P). F.G.-B. and F.M. acknowledge support from the JAE Predoc Program (CSIC) and “Becas de Doctorado en el Extranjero - Becas Chile - CONICYT” Program, respectively.Peer reviewe

    3‑Phosphoglycerate Transhydrogenation Instead of Dehydrogenation Alleviates the Redox State Dependency of Yeast de Novo L‑Serine Synthesis

    No full text
    The enzymatic mechanism of 3-phosphoglycerate to 3-phosphohydroxypyruvate oxidation, which forms the first step of the main conserved de novo serine synthesis pathway, has been revisited recently in certain microorganisms. While this step is classically considered to be catalyzed by an NAD-dependent dehydrogenase (e.g., PHGDH in mammals), evidence has shown that in Pseudomonas, Escherichia coli, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the PHGDH homologues act as transhydrogenases. As such, they use α-ketoglutarate, rather than NAD+, as the final electron acceptor, thereby producing D-2-hydroxyglutarate in addition to 3-phosphohydroxypyruvate during 3-phosphoglycerate oxidation. Here, we provide a detailed biochemical and sequence−structure relationship characterization of the yeast PHGDH homologues, encoded by the paralogous SER3 and SER33 genes, in comparison to the human and other PHGDH enzymes. Using in vitro assays with purified recombinant enzymes as well as in vivo growth phenotyping and metabolome analyses of yeast strains engineered to depend on either Ser3, Ser33, or human PHGDH for serine synthesis, we confirmed that both yeast enzymes act as transhydrogenases, while the human enzyme is a dehydrogenase. In addition, we show that the yeast paralogs differ from the human enzyme in their sensitivity to inhibition by serine as well as hydrated NADH derivatives. Importantly, our in vivo data support the idea that a 3PGA transhydrogenase instead of dehydrogenase activity confers a growth advantage under conditions where the NAD+:NADH ratio is low. The results will help to elucidate why different species evolved different reaction mechanisms to carry out a widely conserved metabolic step in central carbon metabolism
    corecore