3 resultados para enzymatic properties

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Copper is essential for human health and copper imbalance is a key factor in the aetiology and pathology of several neurodegenerative diseases. The copper-transporting P-type ATPases, ATP7A and ATP7B are key molecules required for the regulation and maintenance of mammalian copper homeostasis. Their absence or malfunction leads to the genetically inherited disorders, Menkes and Wilson diseases, respectively. These proteins have a dual role in cells, namely to provide copper to essential cuproenzymes and to mediate the excretion of excess intracellular copper. A unique feature of ATP7A and ATP7B that is integral to these functions is their ability to sense and respond to intracellular copper levels, the latter manifested through their copper-regulated trafficking from the transGolgi network to the appropriate cellular membrane domain (basolateral or apical, respectively) to eliminate excess copper from the cell. Research over the last decade has yielded significant insight into the enzymatic properties and cell biology of the copper-ATPases. With recent advances in elucidating their localization and trafficking in human and animal tissues in response to physiological stimuli, we are progressing rapidly towards an integrated understanding of their physiological significance at the level of the whole animal. This knowledge in turn is helping to clarify the biochemical and cellular basis not only for the phenotypes conferred by individual Menkes and Wilson disease patient mutations, but also for the clinical variability of phenotypes associated with each of these diseases. Importantly, this information is also providing a rational basis for the applicability and appropriateness of certain diagnostic markers and therapeutic regimes. This overview will provide an update on the current state of our understanding of the localization and trafficking properties of the copper-ATPases in cells and tissues, the molecular signals and posttranslational interactions that govern their trafficking activities, and the cellular basis for the clinical phenotypes associated with disease-causing mutations.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Silk fibroin films are promising materials for a range of biomedical applications. To understand the effects of casting solvents on film properties, we used water (W), formic acid (FA), and trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) as solvents. We characterized molecular weight, secondary structure, mechanical properties, and degradation behavior of cast films. Significant degradation of fibroin was observed for TFA-based film compared to W and TA-based films when analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Fibroin degradation resulted in a significant reduction in tensile strength and modulus of TFA-based films. Compared to water, TFA-based films demonstrated lower water solubility (19.6% vs. 62.5% in 12 h) despite having only a marginal increase in their ß-sheet content (26.9% vs. 23.7%). On the other hand, FA-based films with 34.3% ß-sheet were virtually water insoluble. Following solubility treatment, ß-sheet content in FA-based films increased to 50.9%. On exposure to protease XIV, water-annealed FA-based films lost 74% mass in 22 days compared to only 30% mass loss by ethanol annealed FA films. This study demonstrated that a small variation in the ß-sheet percentage and random coil conformations resulted in a significant change in the rates of enzymatic degradation without alteration to their tensile properties. The film surface roughness changed with the extent of enzymatic hydrolysis.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Lubricin (LUB) is a glycoprotein of the synovial cavity of human articular joints, where it serves as an antiadhesive, boundary lubricant, and regulating factor for the cartilage surface. It has been proposed that these properties are related to the presence of a long, extended, heavily glycosylated and highly hydrated mucinous domain in the central part of the LUB molecule. In this work, we show that LUB has a contour length of 220 ± 30 nm and a persistence length of ≤10 nm. LUB molecules aggregate in oligomers where the protein extremities are linked by disulfide bonds. We have studied the effect of proteolytic digestion by chymotrypsin and removal of the disulfide bonds, both of which mainly affect the N− and C− terminals of the protein, on the adsorption, normal forces, friction (lubrication) forces, and wear of LUB layers adsorbed on smooth, negatively charged mica surfaces, where the protein naturally forms lubricating polymer brush-like layers. After in situ digestion, the surface coverage was drastically reduced, the normal forces were altered, and both the coefficient of friction and the wear were dramatically increased (the COF increased to μ = 1.1−1.9), indicating that the mucinous domain was removed from the surface. Removal of disulfide bonds did not change the surface coverage or the overall features of the normal forces; however, we find an increase in the friction coefficient from μ = 0.02−0.04 to μ = 0.13−1.17 in the pressure regime below 6 atm, which we attribute to a higher affinity of the protein terminals for the surface. The necessary condition for LUB to be a good lubricant is that the protein be adsorbed to the surface via its terminals, leaving the central mucin domain free to form a low-friction, surface-protecting layer. Our results suggest that this “end-anchoring” has to be strong enough to impart the layer a sufficient resistance to shear, but without excessively restricting the conformational freedom of the adsorbed proteins.