958 resultados para Domain structure
Resumo:
Die lösliche Epoxidhydrolase (sEH) gehört zur Familie der Epoxidhydrolase-Enzyme. Die Rolle der sEH besteht klassischerweise in der Detoxifikation, durch Umwandlung potenziell schädlicher Epoxide in deren unschädliche Diol-Form. Hauptsächlich setzt die sEH endogene, der Arachidonsäure verwandte Signalmoleküle, wie beispielsweise die Epoxyeicosatrienoic acid, zu den entsprechenden Diolen um. Daher könnte die sEH als ein Zielenzym in der Therapie von Bluthochdruck und Entzündungen sowie diverser anderer Erkrankungen eingesetzt werden. rnDie sEH ist ein Homodimer, in dem jede Untereinheit aus zwei Domänen aufgebaut ist. Das katalytische Zentrum der Epoxidhydrolaseaktivität befindet sich in der 35 kD großen C-terminalen Domäne. Dieser Bereich der sEH s wurde bereits im Detail untersucht und nahezu alle katalytischen Eigenschaften des Enzyms sowie deren dazugehörige Funktionen sind in Zusammenhang mit dieser Domäne bekannt. Im Gegensatz dazu ist über die 25 kD große N-terminale Domäne wenig bekannt. Die N-terminale Domäne der sEH wird zur Haloacid Dehalogenase (HAD) Superfamilie von Hydrolasen gezählt, jedoch war die Funktion dieses N-terminal Domäne lange ungeklärt. Wir haben in unserer Arbeitsgruppe zum ersten Mal zeigen können, dass die sEH in Säugern ein bifunktionelles Enzym ist, welches zusätzlich zur allgemein bekannten Enzymaktivität im C-terminalen Bereich eine weitere enzymatische Funktion mit Mg2+-abhängiger Phosphataseaktivität in der N-terminalen Domäne aufweist. Aufgrund der Homologie der N-terminalen Domäne mit anderen Enzymen der HAD Familie wird für die Ausübung der Phosphatasefunktion (Dephosphorylierung) eine Reaktion in zwei Schritten angenommen.rnUm den katalytischen Mechanismus der Dephosphorylierung weiter aufzuklären, wurden biochemische Analysen der humanen sEH Phosphatase durch Generierung von Mutationen im aktiven Zentrum mittels ortsspezifischer Mutagenese durchgeführt. Hiermit sollten die an der katalytischen Aktivität beteiligten Aminosäurereste im aktiven Zentrum identifiziert und deren Rolle bei der Dephosphorylierung spezifiziert werden. rnrnAuf Basis der strukturellen und möglichen funktionellen Ähnlichkeiten der sEH und anderen Mitgliedern der HAD Superfamilie wurden Aminosäuren (konservierte und teilweise konservierte Aminosäuren) im aktiven Zentrum der sEH Phosphatase-Domäne als Kandidaten ausgewählt.rnVon den Phosphatase-Domäne bildenden Aminosäuren wurden acht ausgewählt (Asp9 (D9), Asp11 (D11), Thr123 (T123), Asn124 (N124), Lys160 (K160), Asp184 (D184), Asp185 (D185), Asn189 (N189)), die mittels ortsspezifischer Mutagenese durch nicht funktionelle Aminosäuren ausgetauscht werden sollten. Dazu wurde jede der ausgewählten Aminosäuren durch mindestens zwei alternative Aminosäuren ersetzt: entweder durch Alanin oder durch eine Aminosäure ähnlich der im Wildtyp-Enzym. Insgesamt wurden 18 verschiedene rekombinante Klone generiert, die für eine mutante sEH Phosphatase Domäne kodieren, in dem lediglich eine Aminosäure gegenüber dem Wildtyp-Enzym ersetzt wurde. Die 18 Mutanten sowie das Wildtyp (Sequenz der N-terminalen Domäne ohne Mutation) wurden in einem Expressionsvektor in E.coli kloniert und die Nukleotidsequenz durch Restriktionsverdau sowie Sequenzierung bestätigt. Die so generierte N-terminale Domäne der sEH (25kD Untereinheit) wurde dann mittels Metallaffinitätschromatographie erfolgreich aufgereinigt und auf Phosphataseaktivität gegenüber des allgemeinen Substrats 4-Nitophenylphosphat getestet. Diejenigen Mutanten, die Phosphataseaktivität zeigten, wurden anschließend kinetischen Tests unterzogen. Basiered auf den Ergebnissen dieser Untersuchungen wurden kinetische Parameter mittels vier gut etablierter Methoden berechnet und die Ergebnisse mit der „direct linear blot“ Methode interpretiert. rnDie Ergebnisse zeigten, dass die meisten der 18 generierten Mutanten inaktiv waren oder einen Großteil der Enzymaktivität (Vmax) gegenüber dem Wildtyp verloren (WT: Vmax=77.34 nmol-1 mg-1 min). Dieser Verlust an Enzymaktivität ließ sich nicht durch einen Verlust an struktureller Integrität erklären, da der Wildtyp und die mutanten Proteine in der Chromatographie das gleiche Verhalten zeigten. Alle Aminosäureaustausche Asp9 (D9), Lys160 (K160), Asp184 (D184) und Asn189 (N189) führten zum kompletten Verlust der Phosphataseaktivität, was auf deren katalytische Funktion im N-terminalen Bereich der sEH hindeutet. Bei einem Teil der Aminosäureaustausche die für Asp11 (D11), Thr123 (T123), Asn124 (N124) und Asn185 (D185) durchgeführt wurden, kam es, verglichen mit dem Wildtyp, zu einer starken Reduktion der Phosphataseaktivität, die aber dennoch für die einzelnen Proteinmutanten in unterschiedlichem Ausmaß zu messen war (2 -10% and 40% of the WT enzyme activity). Zudem zeigten die Mutanten dieser Gruppe veränderte kinetische Eigenschaften (Vmax allein oder Vmax und Km). Dabei war die kinetische Analyse des Mutanten Asp11 Asn aufgrund der nur bei dieser Mutanten detektierbaren starken Vmax Reduktion (8.1 nmol-1 mg-1 min) und einer signifikanten Reduktion der Km (Asp11: Km=0.54 mM, WT: Km=1.3 mM), von besonderem Interesse und impliziert eine Rolle von Asp11 (D11) im zweiten Schritt der Hydrolyse des katalytischen Zyklus.rnZusammenfassend zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass alle in dieser Arbeit untersuchten Aminosäuren für die Phosphataseaktivität der sEH nötig sind und das aktive Zentrum der sEH Phosphatase im N-terminalen Bereich des Enzyms bilden. Weiterhin tragen diese Ergebnisse zur Aufklärung der potenziellen Rolle der untersuchten Aminosäuren bei und unterstützen die Hypothese, dass die Dephosphorylierungsreaktion in zwei Schritten abläuft. Somit ist ein kombinierter Reaktionsmechanismus, ähnlich denen anderer Enzyme der HAD Familie, für die Ausübung der Dephosphorylierungsfunktion denkbar. Diese Annahme wird gestützt durch die 3D-Struktur der N-terminalen Domäne, den Ergebnissen dieser Arbeit sowie Resultaten weiterer biochemischer Analysen. Der zweistufige Mechanismus der Dephosphorylierung beinhaltet einen nukleophilen Angriff des Substratphosphors durch das Nukleophil Asp9 (D9) des aktiven Zentrums unter Bildung eines Acylphosphat-Enzym-Zwischenprodukts, gefolgt von der anschließenden Freisetzung des dephosphorylierten Substrats. Im zweiten Schritt erfolgt die Hydrolyse des Enzym-Phosphat-Zwischenprodukts unterstützt durch Asp11 (D11), und die Freisetzung der Phosphatgruppe findet statt. Die anderen untersuchten Aminosäuren sind an der Bindung von Mg 2+ und/oder Substrat beteiligt. rnMit Hilfe dieser Arbeit konnte der katalytischen Mechanismus der sEH Phosphatase weiter aufgeklärt werden und wichtige noch zu untersuchende Fragestellungen, wie die physiologische Rolle der sEH Phosphatase, deren endogene physiologische Substrate und der genaue Funktionsmechanismus als bifunktionelles Enzym (die Kommunikation der zwei katalytischen Einheiten des Enzyms) wurden aufgezeigt und diskutiert.rn
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In chronic myeloid leukemia and Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients resistant to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), BCR-ABL kinase domain mutation status is an essential component of the therapeutic decision algorithm. The recent development of Ultra-Deep Sequencing approach (UDS) has opened the way to a more accurate characterization of the mutant clones surviving TKIs conjugating assay sensitivity and throughput. We decided to set-up and validated an UDS-based for BCR-ABL KD mutation screening in order to i) resolve qualitatively and quantitatively the complexity and the clonal structure of mutated populations surviving TKIs, ii) study the dynamic of expansion of mutated clones in relation to TKIs therapy, iii) assess whether UDS may allow more sensitive detection of emerging clones, harboring critical 2GTKIs-resistant mutations predicting for an impending relapse, earlier than SS. UDS was performed on a Roche GS Junior instrument, according to an amplicon sequencing design and protocol set up and validated in the framework of the IRON-II (Interlaboratory Robustness of Next-Generation Sequencing) International consortium.Samples from CML and Ph+ ALL patients who had developed resistance to one or multiple TKIs and collected at regular time-points during treatment were selected for this study. Our results indicate the technical feasibility, accuracy and robustness of our UDS-based BCR-ABL KD mutation screening approach. UDS was found to provide a more accurate picture of BCR-ABL KD mutation status, both in terms of presence/absence of mutations and in terms of clonal complexity and showed that BCR-ABL KD mutations detected by SS are only the “tip of iceberg”. In addition UDS may reliably pick 2GTKIs-resistant mutations earlier than SS in a significantly greater proportion of patients.The enhanced sensitivity as well as the possibility to identify low level mutations point the UDS-based approach as an ideal alternative to conventional sequencing for BCR-ABL KD mutation screening in TKIs-resistant Ph+ leukemia patients
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Polymer brushes have unique properties with a large variety of possible applications ranging from responsive coatings and drug delivery to lubrication and sensing. For further development a detailed understanding of the properties is needed. Established characterization methods, however, only supply information of the surface. Experimental data about the inner “bulk” structure of polymer brushes is still missing.rnScattering methods under grazing incidence supply structural information of surfaces as well as structures beneath it. Nanomechanical cantilevers supply stress data, which is giving information about the forces acting inside the polymer brush film. In this thesis these two techniques are further developed and used to deepen the understanding of polymer brushes. rnThe experimental work is divided into four chapters. Chapter 2 deals with the preparation of polymer brushes on top of nanomechanical cantilever sensors as well as large area sample by using a “grafting-to” technique. The further development of nanomechanical cantilever readout is subject of chapter 3. In order to simplify cantilever sensing, a method is investigated which allows one to perform multiple bending experiments on top of a single cantilever. To do so, a way to correlate different curvatures is introduced as well as a way to conveniently locate differently coated segments. In chapter 4 the change in structure upon solvent treatment of mixed polymer brushes is investigated by using scattering methods and nanomechanical cantilevers amongst others. This allows one to explain the domain memory effect, which is typically found in such systems. Chapter 5 describes the implementation of a phase shifting interferometer - used for readout of nanomechanical cantilevers - into the µ-focused scattering beamline BW4, allowing simultaneous measurements of stress and structure information. The last experimental chapter 6 deals with the roughness correlation in polymer brushes and its dependence on the chain tethered density.rnIn summary, the thesis deals with utilization of new experimental techniques for the investigation of polymer brushes and further development of the techniques themselves.rn
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The thesis deals with numerical algorithms for fluid-structure interaction problems with application in blood flow modelling. It starts with a short introduction on the mathematical description of incompressible viscous flow with non-Newtonian viscosity and a moving linear viscoelastic structure. The mathematical model consists of the generalized Navier-Stokes equation used for the description of fluid flow and the generalized string model for structure movement. The arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian approach is used in order to take into account moving computational domain. A part of the thesis is devoted to the discussion on the non-Newtonian behaviour of shear-thinning fluids, which is in our case blood, and derivation of two non-Newtonian models frequently used in the blood flow modelling. Further we give a brief overview on recent fluid-structure interaction schemes with discussion about the difficulties arising in numerical modelling of blood flow. Our main contribution lies in numerical and experimental study of a new loosely-coupled partitioned scheme called the kinematic splitting fluid-structure interaction algorithm. We present stability analysis for a coupled problem of non-Newtonian shear-dependent fluids in moving domains with viscoelastic boundaries. Here, we assume both, the nonlinearity in convective as well is diffusive term. We analyse the convergence of proposed numerical scheme for a simplified fluid model of the Oseen type. Moreover, we present series of experiments including numerical error analysis, comparison of hemodynamic parameters for the Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids and comparison of several physiologically relevant computational geometries in terms of wall displacement and wall shear stress. Numerical analysis and extensive experimental study for several standard geometries confirm reliability and accuracy of the proposed kinematic splitting scheme in order to approximate fluid-structure interaction problems.
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To observe detailed changes in neurosensory retinal structure after anti-VEGF upload in age-related macular degeneration (AMD), by using spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT).
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The optical properties of a match-like plasmonic nanostructure are numerically investigated using full-wave finite-difference time-domain analysis in conjunction with dispersive material models. This work is mainly motivated by the developed technique enabling reproducible fabrication of nanomatch structures as well as the growing applications that utilize the localized field enhancement in plasmonic nanostructures. Our research revealed that due to the pronounced field enhancement and larger resonance tunabilities, some nanomatch topologies show potentials for various applications in the field of, e.g., sensing as well as a novel scheme for highly reproducible tips in scanning near field optical microscopy, among others. Despite the additional degrees of freedom that are offered by the composite nature of the proposed nanomatch topology, the paper also reflects on a fundamental complication intrinsic to the material interfaces especially in the nanoscale: stoichiometric mixing. We conclude that the specificity in material modeling will become a significant issue in future research on functionalized composite nanostructures.
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It is unclear whether anti-VEGF monotherapy in age-related macular degeneration (AMD) achieves morphologic CNV regression or only stops further CNV growth. In this study, spectral domain-optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) was used to image CNV structure before and after anti-VEGF treatment.
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The glucose transporter IICB of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system (PTS) consists of a polytopic membrane domain (IIC) responsible for substrate transport and a hydrophilic C-terminal domain (IIB) responsible for substrate phosphorylation. We have overexpressed and purified a triple mutant of IIC (mut-IIC), which had recently been shown to be suitable for crystallization purposes. Mut-IIC was homodimeric as determined by blue native-PAGE and gel-filtration, and had an eyeglasses-like structure as shown by negative-stain transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and single particle analysis. Glucose binding and transport by mut-IIC, mut-IICB and wildtype-IICB were compared with scintillation proximity and in vivo transport assays. Binding was reduced and transport was impaired by the triple mutation. The scintillation proximity assay allowed determination of substrate binding, affinity and specificity of wildtype-IICB by a direct method. 2D crystallization of mut-IIC yielded highly-ordered tubular crystals and made possible the calculation of a projection structure at 12Å resolution by negative-stain TEM. Immunogold labeling TEM revealed the sidedness of the tubular crystals, and high-resolution atomic force microscopy the surface structure of mut-IIC. This work presents the structure of a glucose PTS transporter at the highest resolution achieved so far and sets the basis for future structural studies.
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Numerous bacterial pathogens subvert cellular functions of eukaryotic host cells by the injection of effector proteins via dedicated secretion systems. The type IV secretion system (T4SS) effector protein BepA from Bartonella henselae is composed of an N-terminal Fic domain and a C-terminal Bartonella intracellular delivery domain, the latter being responsible for T4SS-mediated translocation into host cells. A proteolysis resistant fragment (residues 10-302) that includes the Fic domain shows autoadenylylation activity and adenylyl transfer onto Hela cell extract proteins as demonstrated by autoradiography on incubation with α-[(32)P]-ATP. Its crystal structure, determined to 2.9-Å resolution by the SeMet-SAD method, exhibits the canonical Fic fold including the HPFxxGNGRxxR signature motif with several elaborations in loop regions and an additional β-rich domain at the C-terminus. On crystal soaking with ATP/Mg(2+), additional electron density indicated the presence of a PP(i) /Mg(2+) moiety, the side product of the adenylylation reaction, in the anion binding nest of the signature motif. On the basis of this information and that of the recent structure of IbpA(Fic2) in complex with the eukaryotic target protein Cdc42, we present a detailed model for the ternary complex of Fic with the two substrates, ATP/Mg(2+) and target tyrosine. The model is consistent with an in-line nucleophilic attack of the deprotonated side-chain hydroxyl group onto the α-phosphorus of the nucleotide to accomplish AMP transfer. Furthermore, a general, sequence-independent mechanism of target positioning through antiparallel β-strand interactions between enzyme and target is suggested.
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Human leishmaniasis is a major public health problem in many countries, but chemotherapy is in an unsatisfactory state. Leishmania major phosphodiesterases (LmjPDEs) have been shown to play important roles in cell proliferation and apoptosis of the parasite. Thus LmjPDE inhibitors may potentially represent a novel class of drugs for the treatment of leishmaniasis. Reported here are the kinetic characterization of the LmjPDEB1 catalytic domain and its crystal structure as a complex with 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) at 1.55 A resolution. The structure of LmjPDEB1 is similar to that of human PDEs. IBMX stacks against the conserved phenylalanine and forms a hydrogen bond with the invariant glutamine, in a pattern common to most inhibitors bound to human PDEs. However, an extensive structural comparison reveals subtle, but significant differences between the active sites of LmjPDEB1 and human PDEs. In addition, a pocket next to the inhibitor binding site is found to be unique to LmjPDEB1. This pocket is isolated by two gating residues in human PDE families, but constitutes a natural expansion of the inhibitor binding pocket in LmjPDEB1. The structure particularity might be useful for the development of parasite-selective inhibitors for the treatment of leishmaniasis.
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This technical report discusses the application of Lattice Boltzmann Method (LBM) in the fluid flow simulation through porous filter-wall of disordered media. The diesel particulate filter (DPF) is an example of disordered media. DPF is developed as a cutting edge technology to reduce harmful particulate matter in the engine exhaust. Porous filter-wall of DPF traps these soot particles in the after-treatment of the exhaust gas. To examine the phenomena inside the DPF, researchers are looking forward to use the Lattice Boltzmann Method as a promising alternative simulation tool. The lattice Boltzmann method is comparatively a newer numerical scheme and can be used to simulate fluid flow for single-component single-phase, single-component multi-phase. It is also an excellent method for modelling flow through disordered media. The current work focuses on a single-phase fluid flow simulation inside the porous micro-structure using LBM. Firstly, the theory concerning the development of LBM is discussed. LBM evolution is always related to Lattice gas Cellular Automata (LGCA), but it is also shown that this method is a special discretized form of the continuous Boltzmann equation. Since all the simulations are conducted in two-dimensions, the equations developed are in reference with D2Q9 (two-dimensional 9-velocity) model. The artificially created porous micro-structure is used in this study. The flow simulations are conducted by considering air and CO2 gas as fluids. The numerical model used in this study is explained with a flowchart and the coding steps. The numerical code is constructed in MATLAB. Different types of boundary conditions and their importance is discussed separately. Also the equations specific to boundary conditions are derived. The pressure and velocity contours over the porous domain are studied and recorded. The results are compared with the published work. The permeability values obtained in this study can be fitted to the relation proposed by Nabovati [8], and the results are in excellent agreement within porosity range of 0.4 to 0.8.
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Wood formation is an economically and environmentally important process and has played a significant role in the evolution of terrestrial plants. Despite its significance, the molecular underpinnings of the process are still poorly understood. We have previously shown that four Lateral Boundary Domain (LBD) transcription factors have important roles in the regulation of wood formation with two (LBD1 and LBD4) involved in secondary phloem and ray cell development and two (LBD15 and LBD18) in secondary xylem formation. Here, we used comparative phylogenetic analyses to test potential roles of the four LBD genes in the evolution of woodiness. We studied the copy number and variation in DNA and amino acid sequences of the four LBDs in a wide range of woody and herbaceous plant taxa with fully sequenced and annotated genomes. LBD1 showed the highest gene copy number across the studied species, and LBD1 gene copy number was strongly and significantly correlated with the level of ray seriation. The lianas, cucumber and grape, with multiseriate ray cells showed the highest gene copy number (12 and 11, respectively). Because lianas’ growth habit requires significant twisting and bending, the less lignified ray parenchyma cells likely facilitate stem flexibility and maintenance of xylem conductivity. We further demonstrate conservation of amino acids in the LBD18 protein sequences that are specific to woody taxa. Neutrality tests showed evidence for strong purifying selection on these gene regions across various orders, indicating adaptive convergent evolution of LBD18. Structural modeling demonstrates that the conserved amino acids have a significant impact on the tertiary protein structure and thus are likely of significant functional importance.
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Aggretin is a C-type lectin purified from Calloselasma rhodostoma snake venom. It is a potent activator of platelets, resulting in a collagen-like response by binding and clustering platelet receptor CLEC-2. We present here the crystal structure of aggretin at 1.7 A which reveals a unique tetrameric quaternary structure. The two alphabeta heterodimers are arranged through 2-fold rotational symmetry, resulting in an antiparallel side-by-side arrangement. Aggretin thus presents two ligand binding sites on one surface and can therefore cluster ligands in a manner reminiscent of convulxin and flavocetin. To examine the molecular basis of the interaction with CLEC-2, we used a molecular modeling approach of docking the aggretin alphabeta structure with the CLEC-2 N-terminal domain (CLEC-2N). This model positions the CLEC-2N structure face down in the "saddle"-shaped binding site which lies between the aggretin alpha and beta lectin-like domains. A 2-fold rotation of this complex to generate the aggretin tetramer reveals dimer contacts for CLEC-2N which bring the N- and C-termini into the proximity of each other, and a series of contacts involving two interlocking beta-strands close to the N-terminus are described. A comparison with homologous lectin-like domains from the immunoreceptor family reveals a similar but not identical dimerization mode, suggesting this structure may represent the clustered form of CLEC-2 capable of signaling across the platelet membrane.
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Translation initiation factors eIF4A and eIF4G form, together with the cap-binding factor eIF4E, the eIF4F complex, which is crucial for recruiting the small ribosomal subunit to the mRNA 5' end and for subsequent scanning and searching for the start codon. eIF4A is an ATP-dependent RNA helicase whose activity is stimulated by binding to eIF4G. We report here the structure of the complex formed by yeast eIF4G's middle domain and full-length eIF4A at 2.6-A resolution. eIF4A shows an extended conformation where eIF4G holds its crucial DEAD-box sequence motifs in a productive conformation, thus explaining the stimulation of eIF4A's activity. A hitherto undescribed interaction involves the amino acid Trp-579 of eIF4G. Mutation to alanine results in decreased binding to eIF4A and a temperature-sensitive phenotype of yeast cells that carry a Trp579Ala mutation as its sole source for eIF4G. Conformational changes between eIF4A's closed and open state provide a model for its RNA-helicase activity.