28 research outputs found

    The balance of Polo-like kinase 1 in tumorigenesis

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    Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) belongs to a family of conserved serine/threonine kinases with a polo-box domain, which have similar but non-overlapping functions in the cell cycle progression. Plk1 plays a key role to ensure the normal mitosis. Interestingly, overexpression of Plk1 is associated with tumor development and could serve as a prognostic marker for many cancers. Due to Plk1 overexpression, several Plk1 inhibitors have been developed and tested for the cancer treatment. However, in a recent study, it has been suggested that down-regulation of Plk1 could also induce aneuploidy and tumor formation in vivo. Therefore, a normal level of Plk1 is important for mitosis. And caution should be taken when Plk1 inhibitors are used in the clinical trial and their side effects including tumorigenesis should be carefully evaluated

    Kinetic study of penicillin acylase from Alcaligenes faecalis

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    AbstractPenicillin acylase from Alcaligenes faecalis has a very high affinity for both natural (benzylpenicillin, Km=0.0042 mM) and colorimetric (6-nitro-3-phenylacetamidobenzoic acid, Km=0.0045 mM) substrates as well as the product of their hydrolysis, phenylacetic acid (Ki=0.016 mM). The enzyme is partially inhibited at high benzylpenicillin concentrations but the triple SES complex formed still retains 43% of the maximal catalytic activity; the affinity of benzylpenicillin for the second substrate molecule binding site is much lower (KS′=54 mM) than for the first one. Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride was shown to be a very effective irreversible inhibitor, completely inactivating the penicillin acylase from A. faecalis in a few minutes at micromolar concentrations; this compound was used for enzyme active site titration. The absolute values of the determined kinetic parameters for enzymatic hydrolysis of 6-nitro-3-phenylacetamidobenzoic acid (kcat=95 s−1 and kcat/Km=2.1×10−7 M−1 s−1) and benzylpenicillin (kcat=54 s−1 and kcat/Km=1.3×10−7 M−1 s−1) by penicillin acylase from A. faecalis were shown to be highest of all the enzymes of this family that have so far been studied

    Bifunctional Inhibitors of Influenza Virus Neuraminidase: Molecular Design of a Sulfonamide Linker

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    The growing resistance of the influenza virus to widely used competitive neuraminidase inhibitors occupying the active site of the enzyme requires the development of bifunctional compounds that can simultaneously interact with other regulatory sites on the protein surface. When developing such an inhibitor and combining structural fragments that could be located in the sialic acid cavity of the active site and the adjacent 430-cavity, it is necessary to select a suitable linker not only for connecting the fragments, but also to ensure effective interactions with the unique arginine triad Arg118-Arg292-Arg371 of neuraminidase. Using molecular modeling, we have demonstrated the usefulness of the sulfonamide group in the linker design and the potential advantage of this functional group over other isosteric analogues

    Preparative Biocatalytic Synthesis of α-Ketoglutaramate

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    α-Ketoglutaramate (KGM) is an underexamined metabolite of L-glutamine in the metabolic pathway of glutaminase II of α-ketoglutarate formation. Presumably, KGM may be a biomarker of hepatic encephalopathy and other hyperammonemic diseases. This metabolite is a substrate for the ω-amidase enzyme and is used to determine its activity in the study of the biochemistry of various types of cancer. However, the commercial unavailability of KGM hinders its widespread use. Methods for the preparative synthesis of KGM are known, but they either do not provide the proper yield or proper purity of the target product. In this work, a detailed description of the procedures is given that allows the production of KGM with a purity above 97% and a yield of the target product above 75% using L-amino acid oxidase from C. adamanteus as a catalyst of L-glutamine conversion. KGM can be obtained both in the form of a highly concentrated aqueous solution and in the form of crystals of sodium salt. The developed methods can be used both for scaling up the synthesis of KGM and for creating economical biocatalytic technologies for the production of other highly purified preparations

    Zebra: a web server for bioinformatic analysis of diverse protein families

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    <div><p>During evolution of proteins from a common ancestor, one functional property can be preserved while others can vary leading to functional diversity. A systematic study of the corresponding adaptive mutations provides a key to one of the most challenging problems of modern structural biology – understanding the impact of amino acid substitutions on protein function. The subfamily-specific positions (SSPs) are conserved within functional subfamilies but are different between them and, therefore, seem to be responsible for functional diversity in protein superfamilies. Consequently, a corresponding method to perform the bioinformatic analysis of sequence and structural data has to be implemented in the common laboratory practice to study the structure–function relationship in proteins and develop novel protein engineering strategies. This paper describes Zebra web server – a powerful remote platform that implements a novel bioinformatic analysis algorithm to study diverse protein families. It is the first application that provides specificity determinants at different levels of functional classification, therefore addressing complex functional diversity of large superfamilies. Statistical analysis is implemented to automatically select a set of highly significant SSPs to be used as hotspots for directed evolution or rational design experiments and analyzed studying the structure–function relationship. Zebra results are provided in two ways – (1) as a single all-in-one parsable text file and (2) as PyMol sessions with structural representation of SSPs. Zebra web server is available at <a href="http://biokinet.belozersky.msu.ru/zebra" target="_blank">http://biokinet.belozersky.msu.ru/zebra</a>.</p></div

    Bioinformatic Analysis of the Nicotinamide Binding Site in Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase Family Proteins

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    The PARP family consists of 17 members with diverse functions, including those related to cancer cells’ viability. Several PARP inhibitors are of great interest as innovative anticancer drugs, but they have low selectivity towards distinct PARP family members and exert serious adverse effects. We describe a family-wide study of the nicotinamide (NA) binding site, an important functional region in the PARP structure, using comparative bioinformatic analysis and molecular modeling. Mutations in the NA site and D-loop mobility around the NA site were identified as factors that can guide the design of selective PARP inhibitors. Our findings are of particular importance for the development of novel tankyrase (PARPs 5a and 5b) inhibitors for cancer therapy
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