81 research outputs found

    Péptidos catiónicos anfipáticos y su aplicación en vectores de transferencia génica

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    Referencia OEPM: P200001806.-- Fecha de solicitud: 20/07/2000.-- Titulares: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Medplant Genetics, S.L. y Jesús Fominaya Gutiérrez.Péptidos catiónicos anfipáticos y su aplicación en vectores de transferencia génica. Estos péptidos comprenden unos restos de aminoácidos básicos, alifáticos y aromáticos, unos restos de aminoácidos básicos en los dos extremos del péptido y, preferentemente, un resto de un aminoácido aromático en la posición 3 de la secuencia del péptido. Estos péptidos tienen simultáneamente la capacidad de unir un polinucleótido y alterar membranas biológicas y son útiles para construir vectores no virales de transferencia génica, con una capacidad de condensación de material genético mejorada, y/o con una citotoxicidad reducida y/o con una eficiencia de transferencia de material genético mejorada. De aplicación en la transferencia génica con fines experimentales y terapéuticos.Peer reviewe

    Binding of sulphonated indigo derivatives to RepA-WH1 inhibits DNA-induced protein amyloidogenesis

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    The quest for inducers and inhibitors of protein amyloidogenesis is of utmost interest, since they are key tools to understand the molecular bases of proteinopathies such as Alzheimer, Parkinson, Huntington and Creutzfeldt–Jakob diseases. It is also expected that such molecules could lead to valid therapeutic agents. In common with the mammalian prion protein (PrP), the N-terminal Winged-Helix (WH1) domain of the pPS10 plasmid replication protein (RepA) assembles in vitro into a variety of amyloid nanostructures upon binding to different specific dsDNA sequences. Here we show that di- (S2) and tetra-sulphonated (S4) derivatives of indigo stain dock at the DNA recognition interface in the RepA-WH1 dimer. They compete binding of RepA to its natural target dsDNA repeats, found at the repA operator and at the origin of replication of the plasmid. Calorimetry points to the existence of a major site, with micromolar affinity, for S4-indigo in RepA-WH1 dimers. As revealed by electron microscopy, in the presence of inducer dsDNA, both S2/S4 stains inhibit the assembly of RepA-WH1 into fibres. These results validate the concept that DNA can promote protein assembly into amyloids and reveal that the binding sites of effector molecules can be targeted to inhibit amyloidogenesis

    Oxidation of Helix-3 Methionines Precedes the Formation of PK Resistant PrPSc

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    While elucidating the peculiar epitope of the α-PrP mAb IPC2, we found that PrPSc exhibits the sulfoxidation of residue M213 as a covalent signature. Subsequent computational analysis predicted that the presence of sulfoxide groups at both Met residues 206 and 213 destabilize the α-fold, suggesting oxidation may facilitate the conversion of PrPC into PrPSc. To further study the effect of oxidation on prion formation, we generated pAbs to linear PrP peptides encompassing the Helix-3 region, as opposed to the non-linear complexed epitope of IPC2. We now show that pAbs, whose epitopes comprise Met residues, readily detected PrPC, but could not recognize most PrPSc bands unless they were vigorously reduced. Next, we showed that the α-Met pAbs did not recognize newly formed PrPSc, as is the case for the PK resistant PrP present in lines of prion infected cells. In addition, these reagents did not detect intermediate forms such as PK sensitive and partially aggregated PrPs present in infected brains. Finally, we show that PrP molecules harboring the pathogenic mutation E200K, which is linked to the most common form of familial CJD, may be spontaneously oxidized. We conclude that the oxidation of methionine residues in Helix-3 represents an early and important event in the conversion of PrPC to PrPSc. We believe that further investigation into the mechanism and role of PrP oxidation will be central in finally elucidating the mechanism by which a normal cell protein converts into a pathogenic entity that causes fatal brain degeneration.This work has been supported by grants from the Israeli Science foundation and The Israeli Ministry of Health (RG) as well as grants BFU2009-07971 from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MG) and PI101209 from the Fundación Cien (MG)

    Metamorphism in TDP-43 prion-like domain determines chaperone recognition

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    The RNA binding protein TDP-43 forms cytoplasmic inclusions via its C-terminal prion-like domain in several neurodegenerative diseases. Aberrant TDP-43 aggregation arises upon phase de-mixing and transitions from liquid to solid states, following still unknown structural conversions which are primed by oxidative stress and chaperone inhibition. Despite the well-established protective roles for molecular chaperones against protein aggregation pathologies, knowledge on the determinants of chaperone recognition in disease-related prions is scarce. Here we show that chaperones and cochaperones primarily recognize the structured elements in TDP-43´s prionlike domain. Significantly, while HSP70 and HSP90 chaperones promote TDP43 phase separation, co-chaperones from the three classes of the large human HSP40 family (namely DNAJA2, DNAJB1, DNAJB4 and DNAJC7) show strikingly different effects on TDP-43 de-mixing. Dismantling of the second helical element in TDP-43 prion-like domain by methionine sulfoxidation impacts phase separation and amyloid formation, abrogates chaperone recognition and alters phosphorylation by casein kinase-1δ. Our results show that metamorphism in the post-translationally modified TDP-43 prion-like domain encodes determinants that command mechanisms with major relevance in diseas

    Methionine Sulfoxides on Prion Protein Helix-3 Switch on the α-Fold Destabilization Required for Conversion

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    BACKGROUND: The conversion of the cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into the infectious form (PrP(Sc)) is the key event in prion induced neurodegenerations. This process is believed to involve a multi-step conformational transition from an alpha-helical (PrP(C)) form to a beta-sheet-rich (PrP(Sc)) state. In addition to the conformational difference, PrP(Sc) exhibits as covalent signature the sulfoxidation of M213. To investigate whether such modification may play a role in the misfolding process we have studied the impact of methionine oxidation on the dynamics and energetics of the HuPrP(125-229) alpha-fold. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using molecular dynamics simulation, essential dynamics, correlated motions and signal propagation analysis, we have found that substitution of the sulfur atom of M213 by a sulfoxide group impacts on the stability of the native state increasing the flexibility of regions preceding the site of the modification and perturbing the network of stabilizing interactions. Together, these changes favor the population of alternative states which maybe essential in the productive pathway of the pathogenic conversion. These changes are also observed when the sulfoxidation is placed at M206 and at both, M206 and M213. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results suggest that the sulfoxidation of Helix-3 methionines might be the switch for triggering the initial alpha-fold destabilization required for the productive pathogenic conversion

    Protein-Protein Interactions in Crystals of the Human Receptor-Type Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase ICA512 Ectodomain

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    ICA512 (or IA-2) is a transmembrane protein-tyrosine phosphatase located in secretory granules of neuroendocrine cells. Initially, it was identified as one of the main antigens of autoimmune diabetes. Later, it was found that during insulin secretion, the cytoplasmic domain of ICA512 is cleaved and relocated to the nucleus, where it stimulates the transcription of the insulin gene. The role of the other parts of the receptor in insulin secretion is yet to be unveiled. The structures of the intracellular pseudocatalytic and mature extracellular domains are known, but the transmembrane domain and several intracellular and extracellular parts of the receptor are poorly characterized. Moreover the overall structure of the receptor remains to be established. We started to address this issue studying by X-ray crystallography the structure of the mature ectodomain of ICA512 (ME ICA512) and variants thereof. The variants and crystallization conditions were chosen with the purpose of exploring putative association interfaces, metal binding sites and all other structural details that might help, in subsequent works, to build a model of the entire receptor. Several structural features were clarified and three main different association modes of ME ICA512 were identified. The results provide essential pieces of information for the design of new experiments aimed to assess the structure in vivo

    Role of an intrasubunit disulfide in the association state of the cytosolic homo-oligomer methionine adenosyltransferase

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    Recombinant rat liver methionine adenosyltransferase has been refolded into fully active tetramers (MAT I) and dimers (MAT III), using as a source chaotrope-solubilized aggregates resulting from specific washes of inclusion bodies. The conditions of refolding, dialysis in the presence of 10 mM dithiothreitol or 10 mM GSH with I mM GSSG, allowed the production of both isoforms, the nature of the redox agent determining the capacity of the final product (MAT I/III) to interconvert. Refolding in the presence of 10 mM dithiothreitol yielded mainly MAT III in a concentration-dependent equilibrium with the homotetramer MAT I. However, refolding in the presence of the redox pair GSH/GSSG resulted in a stable MAT I and III mixture. Blockage of dimer-tetramer interconversion has been found related to the production of a single intramolecular disulfide in methionine adenosyltransferase during the GSH/GSSG folding process. The residues involved in this disulfide have been identified by mass spectrometry and using a set of single cysteine mutants as cysteines 35 and 61. In addition, a kinetic intermediate in the MAT I dissociation to MAT III has been detected. The physiological importance of these results is discussed in light of the structural and regulatory data available.This work was supported by Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria Grant 01/1077 (to M. A. P.), Dirección General de Investigación Científica y Técnica Grant PM 97/0064 (to M. A. P.), Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología Grant BMC 2002-00243 (to M. A. P.), and Neuropharma Grants SA-CSIC (to M. G. and M. A. P.) and BMC2001-3337 (to J. J. C.).Peer Reviewe

    Active-site-mutagenesis study of rat liver betaine-homocysteine S-methyltransferase

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    8 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables.A site-directed-mutagenesis study of putative active-site residues in rat liver betaine–homocysteine S-methyltransferase has been carried out. Identification of these amino acids was based on data derived from a structural model of the enzyme. No alterations in the CD spectra or the gel-filtration chromatography elution pattern were observed with the mutants, thus suggesting no modification in the secondary structure content or in the association state of the proteins. All the mutants obtained showed a reduction of the enzyme activity, the most dramatic effect being that of Glu159, followed by Tyr77 and Asp26. Changes in affinity for either of the substrates, homocysteine or betaine, were detected when substitutions were performed of Glu 21, Asp26, Phe74 and Cys186. Interestingly, Asp26, postulated to be involved in homocysteine binding, has a strong effect on affinity for betaine. The relevance of these results is discussed in the light of very recent structural data obtained for the human enzyme.This work was supported by the Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria (grant no. 01/1077 to M.A. P.) and the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (grant no. BIO2000-1664 to M.G. and BIO2000-1279 to J. S.-A.).Peer reviewe
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