5 research outputs found

    Biophysical Studies of Bacterial Topoisomerases Substantiate Their Binding Modes to an Inhibitor

    Get PDF
    AbstractBacterial DNA topoisomerases are essential for bacterial growth and are attractive, important targets for developing antibacterial drugs. Consequently, different potent inhibitors that target bacterial topoisomerases have been developed. However, the development of potent broad-spectrum inhibitors against both Gram-positive (G+) and Gram-negative (G−) bacteria has proven challenging. In this study, we carried out biophysical studies to better understand the molecular interactions between a potent bis-pyridylurea inhibitor and the active domains of the E-subunits of topoisomerase IV (ParE) from a G+ strain (Streptococcus pneumoniae (sParE)) and a G− strain (Pseudomonas aeruginosa (pParE)). NMR results demonstrated that the inhibitor forms a tight complex with ParEs and the resulting complexes adopt structural conformations similar to those observed for free ParEs in solution. Further chemical-shift perturbation experiments and NOE analyses indicated that there are four regions in ParE that are important for inhibitor binding, namely, α2, the loop between β2 and α3, and the β2 and β6 strands. Surface plasmon resonance showed that this inhibitor binds to sParE with a higher KD than pParE. Point mutations in α2 of ParE, such as A52S (sParE), affected its binding affinity with the inhibitor. Taken together, these results provide a better understanding of the development of broad-spectrum antibacterial agents

    Neuromatch Academy: a 3-week, online summer school in computational neuroscience

    Get PDF
    Neuromatch Academy (https://academy.neuromatch.io; (van Viegen et al., 2021)) was designed as an online summer school to cover the basics of computational neuroscience in three weeks. The materials cover dominant and emerging computational neuroscience tools, how they complement one another, and specifically focus on how they can help us to better understand how the brain functions. An original component of the materials is its focus on modeling choices, i.e. how do we choose the right approach, how do we build models, and how can we evaluate models to determine if they provide real (meaningful) insight. This meta-modeling component of the instructional materials asks what questions can be answered by different techniques, and how to apply them meaningfully to get insight about brain function

    Neuromatch Academy: a 3-week, online summer school in computational neuroscience

    Get PDF

    Characterization of Dengue virus NS4A and NS4B protein interaction

    No full text
    Flavivirus replication is mediated by a membrane-associated replication complex where viral membrane proteins NS2A, NS2B, NS4A, and NS4B serve as the scaffold for the replication complex formation. Here, we used dengue virus serotype 2 (DENV-2) as a model to characterize viral NS4A-NS4B interaction. NS4A interacts with NS4B in virus-infected cells and in cells transiently expressing NS4A and NS4B in the absence of other viral proteins. Recombinant NS4A and NS4B proteins directly bind to each other with an estimated Kd (dissociation constant) of 50 nM. Amino acids 40 to 76 (spanning the first transmembrane domain, consisting of amino acids 50 to 73) of NS4A and amino acids 84 to 146 (also spanning the first transmembrane domain, consisting of amino acids 101 to 129) of NS4B are the determinants for NS4A-NS4B interaction. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis suggests that NS4A residues 17 to 80 form two amphipathic helices (helix α1, comprised of residues 17 to 32, and helix α2, comprised of residues 40 to 47) that associate with the cytosolic side of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane and helix α3 (residues 52 to 75) that transverses the ER membrane. In addition, NMR analysis identified NS4A residues that may participate in the NS4A-NS4B interaction. Amino acid substitution of these NS4A residues exhibited distinct effects on viral replication. Three of the four NS4A mutations (L48A, T54A, and L60A) that affected the NS4A-NS4B interaction abolished or severely reduced viral replication; in contrast, two NS4A mutations (F71A and G75A) that did not affect NS4A-NS4B interaction had marginal effects on viral replication, demonstrating the biological relevance of the NS4A-NS4B interaction to DENV-2 replication. Taken together, the study has provided experimental evidence to argue that blocking the NS4A-NS4B interaction could be a potential antiviral approach
    corecore