26 research outputs found

    Update on the biochemistry of chlorophyll breakdown

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    In land plants, chlorophyll is broken down to colorless linear tetrapyrroles in a highly conserved multi-step pathway. The pathway is termed the 'PAO pathway', because the opening of the chlorine macrocycle present in chlorophyll catalyzed by pheophorbide a oxygenase (PAO), the key enzyme of the pathway, provides the characteristic structural basis found in all further downstream chlorophyll breakdown products. To date, most of the biochemical steps of the PAO pathway have been elucidated and genes encoding many of the chlorophyll catabolic enzymes been identified. This review summarizes the current knowledge on the biochemistry of the PAO pathway and provides insight into recent progress made in the field that indicates that the pathway is more complex than thought in the past

    The chameleon of neuroinflammation:magnetic resonance imaging characteristics of natalizumab-associated progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy

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    <p>Natalizumab is a monoclonal antibody against 4-integrin approved for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) due to a positive effect on clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) outcome measures. However, one relatively rare but serious side effect of this drug is a higher risk of developing progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). Since the FDA approval, more than 300 natalizumab-associated PML cases have been documented among more than 100,000 treated MS patients. MRI is a crucial tool in the surveillance of patients treated with natalizumab in order to detect possible signs of PML in the asymptomatic stage. Although classical imaging characteristics of PML are well established, MRI findings in natalizumab-associated PML, particularly in early disease stages, show rather new and heterogeneous imaging findings including different patterns of inflammation with contrast enhancement. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the heterogeneous imaging findings in natalizumab-associated PML in the context of the underlying pathophysiology, histopathology, and the diagnostic procedure. We describe the MRI patterns of PML lesion evolution and complications including immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS). Finally, we present guidelines to differentiate MRI findings in PML from inflammatory demyelinating lesions, to facilitate the early diagnosis of PML in patients treated with natalizumab.</p>

    Role of hydration in determining the structure and vibrational spectra of L-alanine and N-acetyl L-alanine N'-methylamide in aqueous solution: a combined theoretical and experimental approach

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    In this work we have utilised recent density functional theory Born-oppenheimer molecular dynamics simulations to determine the first principles locations of the water molecules in the first solvation shell which are responsible for stabilizing the zwitterionic structure of L-alanine. Previous works have used chemical intuition or classical molecular dynamics simulations to position the water molecules. In addition, a complete shell of water molecules was not previously used, only the water molecules which were thought to be strongly interacting (H-bonded) with the zwitterionic species. In a previous work by Tajkhorshid et al. (J Phys Chem B 102:5899) the l-alanine zwitterion was stabilized by 4 water molecules, and a subsequent work by Frimand et al. (Chem Phys 255:165) the number was increased to 9 water molecules. Here we found that 20 water molecules are necessary to fully encapsulate the zwitterionic species when the molecule is embedded within a droplet of water, while 11watermolecules are necessary to encapsulate the polar region with themethyl group exposed to the surface, where it migrates during the MD simulation. Here we present our vibrational absorption, vibrational circular dichroism and Raman and Raman optical activity simulations, which we compare to the previous simulations and experimental results. In addition, we report new VA, VCD, Raman and ROA measurements for l-alanine in aqueous solution with the latest commercially available FTIR VA/VCD instrument (Biotools, Jupiter, FL, USA) and Raman/ROA instrument (Biotools). The signal to noise of the spectra of l-alanine measured with these new instruments is significantly better than the previously reported spectra. Finally we reinvestigate the causes for the stability of the Pp structure of the alanine dipeptide, also called N-acetyl-l-alanine N-methylamide, in aqueous solution. Previously we utilized the B3LYP/6-31G* + Onsager continuum level of theory to investigate the stability of the ALANMA4WC Han et al. (J Phys Chem B 102:2587) Here we use the B3PW91 and B3LYP hybrid exchange correlation functionals, the aug-cc-pVDZ basis set and the PCMand CPCM (COSMO) continuum solvent models, in addition to the Onsager and no continuum solvent model. Here by the comparison of the VA, VCD, Raman and ROA spectra we can confirm the stability of the NALANMA4WC due to the strong hydrogen bonding between the fourwatermolecules and the peptide polar groups. Hence we advocate the use of explicit water molecules and continuum solvent treatment for all future spectral simulations of amino acids, peptides and proteins in aqueous solution, as even the structure (conformer) present cannot always be found without this level of theory
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