112 research outputs found

    An unexplored role of the CrOx shell in an elaborated Rh/CrOx core–shell cocatalyst for photocatalytic water splitting: a selective electron transport pathway from semiconductors to core metals, boosting charge separation and H₂ evolution

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    A core–shell structured Rh/CrOx cocatalyst has endowed various semiconductors with high efficiency in water-splitting photocatalysis, where thin CrOx layers on Rh have been assumed to be physical blockers of O₂ to the metal surface to suppress unfavorable reverse reactions (e.g., catalytic H₂O formation from H₂ and O₂). Herein, we propose another unexplored but favorable function of CrOx layers: a selective electron transport pathway from photocatalysts to the Rh core boosting charge separation and H₂ production. The subsequent loading of CrOx layers onto Rh increased the rate of visible light H₂ evolution of a Bi₄NbO₈Cl photocatalyst, even in a half reaction with a hole scavenger where O₂ does not evolve. Transient absorption spectroscopy revealed that the CrOx layer increases the electron path from Bi₄NbO₈Cl to Rh. Importantly, the highest H₂-evolution activity was obtained by simultaneous photodeposition using CrIII and RhIII precursors, which had not yet been examined. In this sample, Rh nanoparticles were enclosed by an amorphous CrOx shell, where Rh particles were less directly attached to the semiconductor. Therein, CrOx inserted between Bi₄NbO₈Cl and Rh effectively suppresses undesirable hole transfer from Bi₄NbO₈Cl to Rh, while such hole transfer partially occurs when they are in direct contact. These results indicated that CrOx functions as a selective electron transport pathway and improves the H₂ evolution activity. Although the development strategy of cocatalysts has so far focused on surface redox reactions, this study offers a new approach for the design of highly efficient cocatalysts based on the carrier transfer process, especially at semiconductor–cocatalyst interfaces

    Analysis of Adaptive Mutations in HIV-1 Env-gp120

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    HIV-1 Env protein functions in the entry process and is the target of neutralizing antibodies. Its intrinsically high mutation rate is certainly one of driving forces for persistence/survival in hosts. For optimal replication in various environments, HIV-1 Env must continue to adapt and evolve through balancing sometimes incompatible function, replication fitness, and neutralization sensitivity. We have previously reported that adapted viruses emerge in repeated and prolonged cultures of cells originally infected with a macaque-tropic HIV-1NL4-3 derivative. We have also shown that the adapted viral clones exhibit enhanced growth potentials both in macaque PBMCs and individuals, and that three single-amino acid mutations are present in their Env V1/C2/C4 domains. In this study, we investigated how lab-adapted and highly neutralization-sensitive HIV-1NL4-3 adapts its Env to macaque cells with strongly replication-restrictive nature for HIV-1. While a single and two mutations gave a significantly enhanced replication phenotype in a macaque cell line and also in human cell lines that stably express either human CD4 or macaque CD4, the virus simultaneously carrying the three adaptive mutations always grew best. Entry kinetics of parental and triple mutant viruses were similar, whereas the mutant was significantly more readily inhibited for its infectivity by soluble CD4 than parental virus. Furthermore, molecular dynamics simulations of the Env ectodomain (gp120 and gp41 ectodomain) bound with CD4 suggest that the three mutations increase binding affinity of Env for CD4 in solution. Thus, it is quite likely that the affinity for CD4 of the mutant Env is enhanced relative to the parental Env. Neutralization sensitivity of the triple mutant to CD4 binding site antibodies was not significantly different from that of parental virus, whereas the mutant exhibited a considerably higher resistance against neutralization by a CD4-induced epitope antibody and Env trimer-targeting V1/V2 antibodies. These results suggest that the three adaptive mutations cooperatively promote viral growth via increased CD4 affinity, and also that they enhance viral resistance to several neutralization antibodies by changing the Env-trimer conformation. In total, we have verified here an HIV-1 adaptation pathway in host cells and individuals involving Env derived from a lab-adapted and highly neutralization-sensitive clone

    V3 Tip-Dependent Species Specificity of HIV-1 Env

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    Molecular interactions of the variable envelope gp120 subunit of HIV-1 with two cellular receptors are the first step of viral infection, thereby playing pivotal roles in determining viral infectivity and cell tropism. However, the underlying regulatory mechanisms for interactions under gp120 spontaneous variations largely remain unknown. Here, we show an allosteric mechanism in which a single gp120 mutation remotely controls the ternary interactions between gp120 and its receptors for the switch of viral cell tropism. Virological analyses showed that a G310R substitution at the tip of the gp120 V3 loop selectively abolished the viral replication ability in human cells, despite evoking enhancement of viral replication in macaque cells. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations predicted that the G310R substitution at a site away from the CD4 interaction site selectively impeded the binding ability of gp120 to human CD4. Consistently, virions with the G310R substitution exhibited a reduced binding ability to human lymphocyte cells. Furthermore, the G310R substitution influenced the gp120-CCR5 interaction in a CCR5-type dependent manner as assessed by MD simulations and an infectivity assay using exogenously expressed CCR5s. Interestingly, an I198M mutation in human CCR5 restored the infectivity of the G310R virus in human cells. Finally, MD simulation predicted amino acid interplays that physically connect the V3 loop and gp120 elements for the CD4 and CCR5 interactions. Collectively, these results suggest that the V3 loop tip is a cis-allosteric regulator that remotely controls intra- and intermolecular interactions of HIV-1 gp120 for balancing ternary interactions with CD4 and CCR5

    Concomitant Enhancement of HIV-1 Replication Potential and Neutralization-Resistance in Concert With Three Adaptive Mutations in Env V1/C2/C4 Domains

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    HIV-1 Env protein functions in the entry process and is the target of neutralizing antibodies. Its intrinsically high mutation rate is certainly one of driving forces for persistence/survival in hosts. For optimal replication in various environments, HIV-1 Env must continue to adapt and evolve through balancing sometimes incompatible function, replication fitness, and neutralization sensitivity. We have previously reported that adapted viruses emerge in repeated and prolonged cultures of cells originally infected with a macaque-tropic HIV-1NL4-3 derivative. We have also shown that the adapted viral clones exhibit enhanced growth potentials both in macaque PBMCs and individuals, and that three single-amino acid mutations are present in their Env V1/C2/C4 domains. In this study, we investigated how lab-adapted and highly neutralization-sensitive HIV-1NL4-3 adapts its Env to macaque cells with strongly replication-restrictive nature for HIV-1. While a single and two mutations gave a significantly enhanced replication phenotype in a macaque cell line and also in human cell lines that stably express either human CD4 or macaque CD4, the virus simultaneously carrying the three adaptive mutations always grew best. Entry kinetics of parental and triple mutant viruses were similar, whereas the mutant was significantly more readily inhibited for its infectivity by soluble CD4 than parental virus. Furthermore, molecular dynamics simulations of the Env ectodomain (gp120 and gp41 ectodomain) bound with CD4 suggest that the three mutations increase binding affinity of Env for CD4 in solution. Thus, it is quite likely that the affinity for CD4 of the mutant Env is enhanced relative to the parental Env. Neutralization sensitivity of the triple mutant to CD4 binding site antibodies was not significantly different from that of parental virus, whereas the mutant exhibited a considerably higher resistance against neutralization by a CD4-induced epitope antibody and Env trimer-targeting V1/V2 antibodies. These results suggest that the three adaptive mutations cooperatively promote viral growth via increased CD4 affinity, and also that they enhance viral resistance to several neutralization antibodies by changing the Env-trimer conformation. In total, we have verified here an HIV-1 adaptation pathway in host cells and individuals involving Env derived from a lab-adapted and highly neutralization-sensitive clone

    Unique Mode of Antiviral Action of a Marine Alkaloid against Ebola Virus and SARS-CoV-2.

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    Lamellarin α 20-sulfate is a cell-impenetrable marine alkaloid that can suppress infection that is mediated by the envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. We explored the antiviral action and mechanisms of this alkaloid against emerging enveloped RNA viruses that use endocytosis for infection. The alkaloid inhibited the infection of retroviral vectors that had been pseudotyped with the envelope glycoprotein of Ebola virus and SARS-CoV-2. The antiviral effects of lamellarin were independent of the retrovirus Gag-Pol proteins. Interestingly, although heparin and dextran sulfate suppressed the cell attachment of vector particles, lamellarin did not. In silico structural analyses of the trimeric glycoprotein of the Ebola virus disclosed that the principal lamellarin-binding site is confined to a previously unappreciated cavity near the NPC1-binding site and fusion loop, whereas those for heparin and dextran sulfate were dispersed across the attachment and fusion subunits of the glycoproteins. Notably, lamellarin binding to this cavity was augmented under conditions where the pH was 5.0. These results suggest that the final action of the alkaloid against Ebola virus is specific to events following endocytosis, possibly during conformational glycoprotein changes in the acidic environment of endosomes. Our findings highlight the unique biological and physicochemical features of lamellarin α 20-sulfate and should lead to the further use of broadly reactive antivirals to explore the structural mechanisms of virus replication

    Unique Mode of Antiviral Action of a Marine Alkaloid against Ebola Virus and SARS-CoV-2

    Get PDF
    Lamellarin α20-sulfate is a cell-impenetrable marine alkaloid that can suppress infection that is mediated by the envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. We explored the antiviral action and mechanisms of this alkaloid against emerging enveloped RNA viruses that use endocytosis for infection. The alkaloid inhibited the infection of retroviral vectors that had been pseudotyped with the envelope glycoprotein of Ebola virus and SARS-CoV-2. The antiviral effects of lamellarin were independent of the retrovirus Gag-Pol proteins. Interestingly, although heparin and dextran sulfate suppressed the cell attachment of vector particles, lamellarin did not. In silico structural analyses of the trimeric glycoprotein of the Ebola virus disclosed that the principal lamellarin-binding site is confined to a previously unappreciated cavity near the NPC1-binding site and fusion loop, whereas those for heparin and dextran sulfate were dispersed across the attachment and fusion subunits of the glycoproteins. Notably, lamellarin binding to this cavity was augmented under conditions where the pH was 5.0. These results suggest that the final action of the alkaloid against Ebola virus is specific to events following endocytosis, possibly during conformational glycoprotein changes in the acidic environment of endosomes. Our findings highlight the unique biological and physicochemical features of lamellarin α20-sulfate and should lead to the further use of broadly reactive antivirals to explore the structural mechanisms of virus replication

    Thioredoxin-interacting protein suppresses bladder carcinogenesis.

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    Thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP), which has a tumor-suppressive function, is underexpressed in some human cancers. The function of TXNIP in vivo in carcinogenesis is not fully understood. Here, we show TXNIP to be downregulated in human bladder cancer according to grade and stage and also that loss of TXNIP expression facilitates bladder carcinogenesis using a mouse bladder cancer model. N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl) nitrosamine (BBN)-induced bladder cancer was found in 100% of Txnip knockout (KO) mice at week 8 of 0.025% BBN administration but in only 22% of wild-type (WT) mice at the same point. Among growth stimulators, phospho-extracellular signal-regulated kinase (pERK) expression was stronger during bladder carcinogenesis in Txnip-KO mice than in WT mice. We then evaluated TXNIP's effects on ERK activation through various growth stimulators and their receptors. Overexpression of TXNIP in human bladder cancer cells attenuated pERK expression upon stimulation with stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) but not with epidermal growth factor or insulin-like growth factor-1. In Txnip-KO mice, immunohistochemical analysis showed enhanced expression of C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4 (CXCR4), the receptor of SDF-1, and of pERK in urothelial cells during BBN-induced bladder carcinogenesis. Finally, subcutaneous injection of CXCR4 antagonist, TF14016, attenuated pERK in urothelial cells and suppressed bladder carcinogenesis. These data indicate that TXNIP negatively regulates bladder carcinogenesis by attenuating SDF-1-CXCR4-induced ERK activation. This signal transduction pathway can be a potent target in preventing or treating bladder cancer
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