5 resultados para SITE OF ESTABLISHMENT
em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center
Resumo:
Cytochromes P450 are a superfamily of heme-thiolate proteins that function in a concert with another protein, cytochrome P450 reductase, as terminal oxidases of an enzymatic system catalyzing the metabolism of a variety of foreign compounds and endogenous substrates. In order to better understand P450s catalytic mechanism and substrate specificity, information about the structure of the active site is necessary. Given the lack of a crystal structure of mammalian P450, other methods have been used to elucidate the substrate recognition and binding site structure in the active center. In this project I utilized the photoaffinity labeling technique and site-directed mutagenesis approach to gain further structural insight into the active site of mammalian cytochrome P4501AI and examine the role of surface residues in the interaction of P4501A1 with the reductase. ^ Four crosslinked peptides were identified by photoaffinity labeling using diazido benzphetamine as a substrate analog. Alignment of the primary structure of cytochrome P4501A1 with that of bacterial cytochrome P450102 (the crystal structure of which is known) revealed that two of the isolated crosslinked peptides can be placed in the vicinity of heme (in the L helix region and β10-β11 sheet region of cytochrome P450102) and could be involved in substrate binding. The other two peptides were located on the surface of the protein with the label bound specifically to Lys residues that were proposed to be involved in reductase-P450 interaction. ^ Alternatively, it has been shown that some of the organic hydroperoxides can support P450 catalyzed reactions in the absence of NADPH, O2 and reductase. By means of photoaffinity labeling the cumene hydroperoxide binding region was identified. Using azidocumene as the photoaffinity label, the tripeptide T501-L502-K503 was shown to be the site where azidocumene covalently binds to P4501A1. The sequence alignment of cytochrome P4501A1 with cytochrome P450102 predicts that this region might correspond to β-sheet structure localized on the distal side of the heme ring near the I helix and the oxygen binding pocket. The role of Thr501 in the cumene hydroperoxide binding was confirmed by mutations of this residue and kinetic analysis of the effects of the mutations. ^ In addition, the role of two lysine residues, Lys271 and Lys279, in the interaction with reductase was examined by means of site-directed mutagenesis. The lysine residues were substituted with isoleucine and enzymatic activity of the wild type and the mutants were compared in reductase- and cumene hydroperoxide-supported systems. The lysine 279 residue has been shown to play a critical role in the P4501A1-reductase interaction. ^
Resumo:
Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchangers (NCX) constitute a major Ca(2+) export system that facilitates the re-establishment of cytosolic Ca(2+) levels in many tissues. Ca(2+) interactions at its Ca(2+) binding domains (CBD1 and CBD2) are essential for the allosteric regulation of Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange activity. The structure of the Ca(2+)-bound form of CBD1, the primary Ca(2+) sensor from canine NCX1, but not the Ca(2+)-free form, has been reported, although the molecular mechanism of Ca(2+) regulation remains unclear. Here, we report crystal structures for three distinct Ca(2+) binding states of CBD1 from CALX, a Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger found in Drosophila sensory neurons. The fully Ca(2+)-bound CALX-CBD1 structure shows that four Ca(2+) atoms bind at identical Ca(2+) binding sites as those found in NCX1 and that the partial Ca(2+) occupancy and apoform structures exhibit progressive conformational transitions, indicating incremental regulation of CALX exchange by successive Ca(2+) binding at CBD1. The structures also predict that the primary Ca(2+) pair plays the main role in triggering functional conformational changes. Confirming this prediction, mutagenesis of Glu(455), which coordinates the primary Ca(2+) pair, produces dramatic reductions of the regulatory Ca(2+) affinity for exchange current, whereas mutagenesis of Glu(520), which coordinates the secondary Ca(2+) pair, has much smaller effects. Furthermore, our structures indicate that Ca(2+) binding only enhances the stability of the Ca(2+) binding site of CBD1 near the hinge region while the overall structure of CBD1 remains largely unaffected, implying that the Ca(2+) regulatory function of CBD1, and possibly that for the entire NCX family, is mediated through domain interactions between CBD1 and the adjacent CBD2 at this hinge.
Resumo:
Gene silencing due to promoter methylation is an alternative to mutations and deletions, which inactivate tumor suppressor genes (TSG) in cancer. We identified RIL by Methylated CpG Island Amplification technique as a novel aberrantly methylated gene. RIL is expressed in normal tissues and maps to the 5q31 region, frequently deleted in leukemias. We found methylation of RIL in 55/80 (69%) cancer cell lines, with highest methylation in leukemia and colon. We also observed methylation in 46/80 (58%) primary tumors, whereas normal tissues showed substantially lower degrees of methylation. RIL expression was lost in 13/16 cancer cell lines and was restored by demethylating agent. Screening of 38 cell lines and 13 primary cancers by SSCP revealed no mutations in RIL, suggesting that methylation and LOH are the primary inactivation mechanisms. Stable transfection of RIL into colorectal cancer cells resulted in reduction in cell growth, clonogenicity, and increased apoptosis upon UVC treatment, suggesting that RIL is a good candidate TSG. ^ In searching for a cause of RIL hypermethylation, we identified a 12-bp polymorphic sequence around the transcription start site of the gene that creates a long allele containing 3CTC repeat. Evolutionary studies suggested that the long allele appeared late in evolution due to insertion. Using bisulfite sequencing, in cancers heterozygous for RIL, we found that the short allele is 4.4-fold more methylated than the long allele (P = 0.003). EMSA results suggested binding of factor(s) to the inserted region of the long allele, but not to the short. EMSA mutagenesis and competition studies, as well as supershifts using nuclear extracts or recombinant Sp1 strongly indicated that those DNA binding proteins are Sp1 and Sp3. Transient transfections of RIL allele-specific expression constructs showed less than 2-fold differences in luciferase activity, suggesting no major effects of the additional Sp1 site on transcription. However, stable transfection resulted in 3-fold lower levels of transcription from the short allele 60 days post-transfection, consistent with the concept that the polymorphic Sp1 site protects against time-dependent silencing. Thus, an insertional polymorphism in the RIL promoter creates an additional Sp1/Sp3 site, which appears to protect it from silencing and methylation in cancer. ^
Resumo:
Protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis requires development and maintenance of granulomatous lesions, a feature considered to be the pathological hallmark of Tuberculosis (TB) disease. Upon encountering Mtb or mycobacterial antigens, specifically trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TDM), a strong local pro-inflammatory response is initiated. Systemic production of anti-inflammatory glucocorticoids (GCs) is also induced. Emergence of these antagonists at the inflammatory foci is counterproductive to development of the granulomatous structure and detrimental to host protection against TB. Therefore, it was hypothesized that local enzymatic regulation of GCs occurs locally at the site of granulomatous inflammation. The experiments described here strongly suggest that 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (11βHSDs) shuttle GCs between active and inert forms during the acute granulomatous response, supporting the net reduction of corticosterone. The patterns of GC and 11βHSD regulation were specific to the lung (the site of inflammation) and were not observed in other tissues. Furthermore, 11βHSD2, which decreases corticosterone concentrations, was not expressed in models of dysregulated granulomatous inflammation. These findings suggest that cellular exposure to local active GC concentrations is restricted via 11βHSDs as a mechanism to initiate and maintain granuloma formation. The information derived from the experiments outlined in this dissertation provides a better understanding of the events required for establishment and maintenance of the protective granulomatous response. As a practical consequence, exploiting 11βHSD2 modulation of GCs at the site of Mtb infection may lead to improvement of Tuberculosis treatment strategies.^
Resumo:
The hypothesis addressed in this project was that novel variants of naturally occurring human glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1) can be created by random mutagenesis of the GSTP1 active site to yield polypeptides with increased enzymatic activity against electrophilic substrates. Specifically, the mutant proteins would metabolize and inactivate selected electrophiles more efficiently than wild-type GSTP1 and confer significant cytoprotection, as measured by reduced apoptosis and increased clonogenic survival. Glutathione S-transferase P1, a major electrophile metabolizing and detoxifying enzyme, is encoded by a polymorphic genetic locus. This locus contains nucleotide transitions in the region encoding the active site of the peptide that yields proteins with significant structural and functional differences. The method of Degenerate Oligonucleotide Mediated Random Mutagenesis (DOMRM) was used to generate cDNAs encoding unique GSTP1 polypeptides with mutations within electrophile binding site (H-site) while leaving the glutathione binding site unaffected. A prokaryotic expression library of the mutant GSTP1 polypeptides was created and screened for increased resistance to cisplatin. This screen resulted in the isolation of 96 clones representing 22 distinct mutant cDNA sequences. To investigate the effects of the changes in the H-site on the biological activity of GSTP1, the cDNA of wild-type GSTP1c and two of the identified mutants were stably transfected into human LNCaP-Pro5 prostate cancer cells that do not endogenously express GSTP1. Wild-type transfectants were resistant to doxorubicin-induced apoptosis and displayed increased clonogenic survival compared to vector controls. However, contrary to the hypothesis, in both assays the mutant transfectants were no more resistant to doxorubicin than the wild-type transfectants. To elucidate the mechanisms underlying GSTP1-mediated survival, an in-vitro assay was developed to determine whether active GSTP1 protein directly metabolizes doxorubicin by conjugation to reduced glutathione (GSH). Although GSH did promote the appearance of a unique doxorubicin conjugate, conjugate formation was not substantially increased by the addition of GSTP1 in a variety of reaction conditions. ^