68 research outputs found

    Synthesis of Stable NAD+ Mimics as Inhibitors for the Legionella pneumophila Phosphoribosyl Ubiquitylating Enzyme SdeC

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    Stable NAD+ analogues carrying single atom substitutions in either the furanose ring or the nicotinamide part have proven their value as inhibitors for NAD+‐consuming enzymes. To investigate the potential of such compounds to inhibit the adenosine diphosphate ribosyl (ADPr) transferase activity of the Legionella SdeC enzyme, we prepared three NAD+ analogues, namely carbanicotinamide adenosine dinucleotide (c‐NAD+), thionicotinamide adenosine dinucleotide (S‐NAD+) and benzamide adenosine dinucleotide (BAD). We optimized the chemical synthesis of thionicotinamide riboside and for the first time used an enzymatic approach to convert all three ribosides into the corresponding NAD+ mimics. We thus expanded the known scope of substrates for the NRK1/NMNAT1 enzyme combination by turning all three modified ribosides into NAD+ analogues in a scalable manner. We then compared the three NAD+ mimics side‐by‐side in a single assay for enzyme inhibition on Legionella effector enzyme SdeC. The class of SidE enzymes to which SdeC belongs was recently identified to be important in bacterial virulence, and we found SdeC to be inhibited by S‐NAD+ and BAD with IC50 values of 28 and 39 ΌM, respectively.Bio-organic Synthesi

    Noncanonical and reversible cysteine ubiquitination prevents the overubiquitination of PEX5 at the peroxisomal membrane

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    PEX5, the peroxisomal protein shuttling receptor, binds newly synthesized proteins in the cytosol and transports them to the organelle. During its stay at the peroxisomal protein translocon, PEX5 is monoubiquitinated at its cysteine 11 residue, a mandatory modification for its subsequent ATP-dependent extraction back into the cytosol. The reason why a cysteine and not a lysine residue is the ubiquitin acceptor is unknown. Using an established rat liver-based cell-free in vitro system, we found that, in contrast to wild-type PEX5, a PEX5 protein possessing a lysine at position 11 is polyubiquitinated at the peroxisomal membrane, a modification that negatively interferes with the extraction process. Wild-type PEX5 cannot retain a polyubiquitin chain because ubiquitination at cysteine 11 is a reversible reaction, with the E2-mediated deubiquitination step presenting faster kinetics than PEX5 polyubiquitination. We propose that the reversible nonconventional ubiquitination of PEX5 ensures that neither the peroxisomal protein translocon becomes obstructed with polyubiquitinated PEX5 nor is PEX5 targeted for proteasomal degradation

    Development of ADPribosyl ubiquitin analogues to study enzymes involved in Legionella infection

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    Legionnaires’ disease is caused by infection with the intracellularly replicating Gram‐negative bacterium Legionella pneumophila. This pathogen uses an unconventional way of ubiquitinating host proteins by generating a phosphoribosyl linkage between substrate proteins and ubiquitin by making use of an ADPribosylated ubiquitin (UbADPr) intermediate. The family of SidE effector enzymes that catalyze this reaction is counteracted by Legionella hydrolases, which are called Dups. This unusual ubiquitination process is important for Legionella proliferation and understanding these processes on a molecular level might prove invaluable in finding new treatments. Herein, a modular approach is used for the synthesis of triazole‐linked UbADPr, and analogues thereof, and their affinity towards the hydrolase DupA is determined and hydrolysis rates are compared to natively linked UbADPr. The inhibitory effects of modified Ub on the canonical eukaryotic E1‐enzyme Uba1 are investigated and rationalized in the context of a high‐resolution crystal structure reported herein. Finally, it is shown that synthetic UbADPr analogues can be used to effectively pull‐down overexpressed DupA from cell lysate.Macromolecular Biochemistr

    Nedd8 hydrolysis by UCH proteases in Plasmodium parasites

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    Plasmodium parasites are the causative agents of malaria, a disease with wide public health repercussions. Increasing drug resistance and the absence of a vaccine make finding new chemotherapeutic strategies imperative. Components of the ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like pathways have garnered increased attention as novel targets given their necessity to parasite survival. Understanding how these pathways are regulated in Plasmodium and identifying differences to the host is paramount to selectively interfering with parasites. Here, we focus on Nedd8 modification in Plasmodium falciparum, given its central role to cell division and DNA repair, processes critical to Plasmodium parasites given their unusual cell cycle and requirement for refined repair mechanisms. By applying a functional chemical approach, we show that deNeddylation is controlled by a different set of enzymes in the parasite versus the human host. We elucidate the molecular determinants of the unusual dual ubiquitin/Nedd8 recognition by the essential PfUCH37 enzyme and, through parasite transgenics and drug assays, determine that only its ubiquitin activity is critical to parasite survival. Our experiments reveal interesting evolutionary differences in how neddylation is controlled in higher versus lower eukaryotes, and highlight the Nedd8 pathway as worthy of further exploration for therapeutic targeting in antimalarial drug design.Includes Wellcome and BBSRC

    Neutron-encoded diubiquitins to profile linkage selectivity of deubiquitinating enzymes

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    Deubiquitinating enzymes are key regulators in the ubiquitin system and an emerging class of drug targets. These proteases disassemble polyubiquitin chains and many deubiquitinases show selectivity for specific polyubiquitin linkages. However, most biochemical insights originate from studies of single diubiquitin linkages in isolation, whereas in cells all linkages coexist. To better mimick this diubiquitin substrate competition, we develop a multiplexed mass spectrometry-based deubiquitinase assay that can probe all ubiquitin linkage types simultaneously to quantify deubiquitinase activity in the presence of all potential diubiquitin substrates. For this, all eight native diubiquitins are generated and each linkage type is designed with a distinct molecular weight by incorporating neutron-encoded amino acids. Overall, 22 deubiquitinases are profiled, providing a three-dimensional overview of deubiquitinase linkage selectivity over time and enzyme concentration.</p

    Chemical glycosylations for the synthesis of building units of post-translational modifications

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    In chemical glycosylation reactions, a glycosyl donor couples with a glycosyl acceptor through glycosidic linkage. Most of the products end up with a mixture due to the formation of a stereogenic center at the anomeric carbon. Activation with a suitable Lewis acid and introduction of the non‐participating protecting group on donor and acceptor results in a selective product. Herein, we used a suitably protected donor and acceptor which produced an orthogonally protected building block with α‐selectivity. We used also a donor for the synthesis of modified phosphoribosylated amino acid. The formation of glycoside products can be used to synthesize complex biologically important organic molecules

    Synthetic methodology for the preparation of nucleic acid containing peptides

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    Dit proefschrift beschrijft de ontwikkeling van nieuwe methoden voor de synthese van hybride biomoleculen die samengesteld zijn uit een peptide- en een nucle_nezuurfragment. Zulke hybride moleculen komen in de natuur voor en hebben belangrijke functies. In dit proefschrift wordt aandacht besteed aan twee klassen van hybride biopolymeren; de klasse van nucleoproteinen, die een belangrijke rol speelt in virale replicatie processen en de klasse van ADP-geribosyleerde eiwitten, die het resultaat zijn van een post-translationeel modificatie proces
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