3 research outputs found

    Computational modelling of metal-mediated protein-ligand interactions

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    Although metalloproteins account for nearly half of all proteins in nature, computational modelling of metal-mediated protein-ligand interactions is understudied and molecular mechanics programs and force field parameters compatible to proteins and transition metals are not readily available. Within this thesis, various computational approaches were pursued towards the design of artificial metalloenzymes and the modelling of metal- mediated protein ligand interactions. Four challenges were identified and addressed. The first consisted of the identification of suitable protein scaffolds for the creation of artificial facial-triad motifs. The second part focused on the development of reliable force field parameters for the anchoring of sulfonamide bearing anchors within human carbonic anhydrase 2. In order to reliably predict the geometry of catalytically relevant piano stool artificial cofactors within host proteins, the third part aimed at developing force-field parameters (using the Valbond formalism) for d6 -piano stool complexes. Finally, the fourth step combined the above developments towards the reliable prediction of first and second coordination sphere environments around artificial cofactors/inhibitors

    B1 SOX Coordinate Cell Specification with Patterning and Morphogenesis in the Early Zebrafish Embryo

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    The B1 SOX transcription factors SOX1/2/3/19 have been implicated in various processes of early embryogenesis. However, their regulatory functions in stages from the blastula to early neurula remain largely unknown, primarily because loss-of-function studies have not been informative to date. In our present study, we systematically knocked down the B1 sox genes in zebrafish. Only the quadruple knockdown of the four B1 sox genes sox2/3/19a/19b resulted in very severe developmental abnormalities, confirming that the B1 sox genes are functionally redundant. We characterized the sox2/3/19a/19b quadruple knockdown embryos in detail by examining the changes in gene expression through in situ hybridization, RT–PCR, and microarray analyses. Importantly, these phenotypic analyses revealed that the B1 SOX proteins regulate the following distinct processes: (1) early dorsoventral patterning by controlling bmp2b/7; (2) gastrulation movements via the regulation of pcdh18a/18b and wnt11, a non-canonical Wnt ligand gene; (3) neural differentiation by regulating the Hes-class bHLH gene her3 and the proneural-class bHLH genes neurog1 (positively) and ascl1a (negatively), and regional transcription factor genes, e.g., hesx1, zic1, and rx3; and (4) neural patterning by regulating signaling pathway genes, cyp26a1 in RA signaling, oep in Nodal signaling, shh, and mdkb. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis of the her3, hesx1, neurog1, pcdh18a, and cyp26a1 genes further suggests a direct regulation of these genes by B1 SOX. We also found an interesting overlap between the early phenotypes of the B1 sox quadruple knockdown embryos and the maternal-zygotic spg embryos that are devoid of pou5f1 activity. These findings indicate that the B1 SOX proteins control a wide range of developmental regulators in the early embryo through partnering in part with Pou5f1 and possibly with other factors, and suggest that the B1 sox functions are central to coordinating cell fate specification with patterning and morphogenetic processes occurring in the early embryo

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