263 research outputs found

    Determination of Fluorescence Polarization and Absorption Anisotropy in Molecular Complexes Having Threefold Rotational Symmetry

    Get PDF
    The current work concerns investigation of the polarization properties of complex molecular ensembles exhibiting threefold (C3) rotational symmetry, particularly with regard to the interplay between their structure and dynamics of internal energy transfer. We assume that the molecules or chromophores in such complexes possess strongly overlapped spectra both for absorption and fluorescence. Such trimeric structures are widely found in biological preparations, as for example the trimer of C-phycocyanin (C-PC). Higher order aggregates, e.g. hex-amers and three-hexamer rods, are also investigated and compared with the trimer case. The theory addresses both steady-state and 8-pulse excitation and establishes some links between them. Monochromophoric, bichro-mophoric and trichromophoric molecular complexes are individually examined. For steady-state excitation, analytical formulas are reported for the degree of fluorescence polarization and absorption anisotropy. It is shown that the polarization is dependent on the chromophore inclination relative to the symmetry axis, the relative efficiencies of absorption and fluorescence by chromophores of different spectral types, and the rates of energy equilibration. To assess the validity of the theory, it has been applied to C-PC aggregates. Here it was found that different C-PC aggregates provide practically identical polarization response. For S-pulse excitation we give analytical formulas for determination of the fluorescence depolarization, and also the depolarization associated with absorption recovery, both for a monochromophoric trimer and some particular cases of bichromophoric trimer. More complicated systems are analyzed by computer modeling. Thus it transpires that the initial polarization anisotropy r(t = 0) takes the value 0.4 for all considered aggregates; the long-time limit r(t →∞) has about the same value as is associated with steady-state excitation. We also show that with steady-state excitation the degree of fluorescence polarization is practically equal for various C3 aggregates of C-PC, and that the major factor determining the polarization is the chromophore orientation relative to the symmetry axis

    A new structural class of serine protease inhibitors revealed by the structure of the hirustasin–kallikrein complex

    Get PDF
    AbstractBackground: Hirustasin belongs to a class of serine protease inhibitors characterized by a well conserved pattern of cysteine residues. Unlike the closely related inhibitors, antistasin/ghilanten and guamerin, which are selective for coagulation factor Xa or neutrophil elastase, hirustasin binds specifically to tissue kallikrein. The conservation of the pattern of cysteine residues and the significant sequence homology suggest that these related inhibitors possess a similar three-dimensional structure to hirustasin.Results: The crystal structure of the complex between tissue kallikrein and hirustasin was analyzed at 2.4 Å resolution. Hirustasin folds into a brick-like structure that is dominated by five disulfide bridges and is sparse in secondary structural elements. The cysteine residues are connected in an abab cdecde pattern that causes the polypeptide chain to fold into two similar motifs. As a hydrophobic core is absent from hirustasin the disulfide bridges maintain the tertiary structure and present the primary binding loop to the active site of the protease. The general structural topography and disulfide connectivity of hirustasin has not previously been described.Conclusions: The crystal structure of the kallikrein–hirustasin complex reveals that hirustasin differs from other serine protease inhibitors in its conformation and its disulfide bond connectivity, making it the prototype for a new class of inhibitor. The disulfide pattern shows that the structure consists of two domains, but only the C-terminal domain interacts with the protease. The disulfide pattern of the N-terminal domain is related to the pattern found in other proteins. Kallikrein recognizes hirustasin by the formation of an antiparallel ÎČ sheet between the protease and the inhibitor. The P1 arginine binds in a deep negatively charged pocket of the enzyme. An additional pocket at the periphery of the active site accommodates the sidechain of the P4 valine

    Mining the Protein Data Bank to Differentiate Error from Structural Variation in Clustered Static Structures: An Examination of HIV Protease

    Get PDF
    The Protein Data Bank (PDB) contains over 71,000 structures. Extensively studied proteins have hundreds of submissions available, including mutations, different complexes, and space groups, allowing for application of data-mining algorithms to analyze an array of static structures and gain insight about a protein’s structural variation and possibly its dynamics. This investigation is a case study of HIV protease (PR) using in-house algorithms for data mining and structure superposition through generalized formulé that account for multiple conformations and fractional occupancies. Temperature factors (B-factors) are compared with spatial displacement from the mean structure over the entire study set and separately over bound and ligand-free structures, to assess the significance of structural deviation in a statistical context. Space group differences are also examined

    Proteolytic Processing of Interleukin-1 Family Cytokines: Variations on a Common Theme

    Get PDF
    Members of the extended interleukin-1 (IL-1) cytokine family, such as IL-1, IL-18, IL-33, and IL-36, play a pivotal role in the initiation and amplification of immune responses. However, deregulated production and/or activation of these cytokines can lead to the development of multiple inflammatory disorders. IL-1 family members share a broadly similar domain organization and receptor signaling pathways. Another striking similarity between IL-1 family members is the requirement for proteolytic processing in order to unlock their full biological potential. Although much emphasis has been put on the role of caspase-1, another emerging theme is the involvement of neutrophil- and mast cell-derived proteases in IL-1 family cytokine processing. Elucidating the regulation of IL-1 family members by proteolytic processing is of great interest for understanding inflammation and immunity. Here, we review the identity of the proteases involved in the proteolytic processing of IL-1 family cytokines and the therapeutic implications in inflammatory disease

    3-D clustering: a tool for high throughput docking

    No full text
    This report describes a computer program for clustering docking poses based on their 3-dimensional (3D) coordinates as well as on their chemical structures. This is chiefly intended for reducing a set of hits coming from high throughput docking, since the capacity to prepare and biologically test such molecules is generally far more limited than the capacity to generate such hits. The advantage of clustering molecules based on 3D, rather than 2D, criteria is that small variations on a scaffold may bring about different binding modes for molecules that would not be predicted by 2D similarity alone. The program does a pose-by-pose/atom-by-atom comparison of a set of docking hits (poses), scoring both spatial and chemical similarity. Using these pair-wise similarities, the whole set is clustered based on a user-supplied similarity threshold. An output coordinate file is created that mirrors the input coordinate file, but contains two new properties: a cluster number and similarity to the cluster center. Poses in this output file can easily be sorted by cluster and displayed together for visual inspection with any standard molecular viewing program, and decisions made about which molecule should be selected for biological testing as the best representative of this group of similar molecules with similar binding modes

    How to Computationally Stack the Deck for Hit-to-Lead Generation: In Silico Molecular Interaction Energy Profiling for De Novo siRNA Guide Strand Surrogate Selection

    No full text
    The Argonaute-2 protein is part of the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) and anchors the guide strand of the small interfering RNA (siRNA). The 3' end of the RNA contains two unpaired nucleotides (3'-overhang) that interact with the PAZ (PIWI-Argonaute-Zwille) domain of the protein. Theoretical and experimental evidence points towards a direct connection between the PAZ/3'-overhang binding affinity and siRNA's potency and specificity. Among the challenges to overcome when deploying siRNA molecules as therapeutics are their ready degradation under physiological conditions, and off-target effects. It has been demonstrated that nuclease resistance can be improved via replacement of the dinucleotide overhang by small molecules which retain the interactions of the RNA guide strand with the PAZ domain. Most commonly, nucleotide analogues are used to substitute the siRNA overhang. However, in this study we adopt a de novo approach to its modification. The X-ray structure of human Argonaute-2 PAZ domain served to perform virtual screening and molecular interaction energy profiling (i.e., decomposition of the force field calculated protein-ligand interaction energies) of tailored-to-purpose fragment libraries. The binding of fragments to the PAZ domain was validated experimentally by NMR spectroscopy. The in silico guided protocol led to the efficient discovery of a number of PAZ domain ligands with affinities comparable to that of a reference dinucleotide (UpU, Kd = 33 ”M). Originally starting from a generic fragment library, hits progress from 930 ”M down to 14 ”M within 3 iterations for the fragments selected via in silico molecular interaction energy profiling from a bespoke library. These dinucleotide siRNA guide strand surrogates represent potential new siRNA-based therapeutics (when attached to siRNA to form bioconjugates) featuring improved efficacy, specificity, stability and cellular uptake. This project yielded a portfolio of 7 patent applications, two of which have been granted to date
    • 

    corecore