6 resultados para HEWL
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Dissertation for the Master Degree in Structural and Functional Biochemistry
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Vários complexos metálicos têm sido explorados visando uma melhoria de atuais tratamentos das mais variadas doenças. Os compostos de vanádio apresentam uma capacidade de mimetizar a ação da insulina, insurgindo-se assim como uma aposta no tratamento da doença Diabetes mellitus. O monóxido de carbono (CO), outrora visto como apenas um agente tóxico, atualmente é explorado pelas suas capacidades anti-inflamatórias, tendo-se desenvolvido moléculas libertadoras de CO, os CORMs, de modo a tirar partido dos seus efeitos biológicos. Com vista a determinar a formação de aductos entre os complexos organometálicos de vanádio e diferentes proteínas e caracterizar o tipo de interação estabelecida recorreu-se à Cristalografia de raios-X. A estrutura cristalográfica do aducto VOIV(picolinato)2–tripsina bovina foi obtida a 1,09 Å de resolução, mostrando o complexo VOIV(pic)2 no centro ativo da enzima, coordenado à cadeia lateral da serina catalítica (Ser195), numa geometria octaédrica. Ensaios cinéticos preliminares realizados com o complexo VO(pic)2 foram efetuados para determinar potenciais efeitos inibitórios na atividade das enzimas lisozima da clara do ovo (HEWL) e tripsina. O potencial terapêutico dos CORMs associado à Nanotecnologia foi explorado para o [Ru(CO)3Cl(glicinato)] (CORM-3), visando desenvolver nanopartículas de ouro (AuNPs) funcionalizadas com o composto e diferentes proteínas. A toxicidade celular direta do CORM-3, bem como alguns potenciais efeitos biológicos de CORM-3–albumina de soro humano (BSA) e CORM-3–HEWL foram também avaliados, recorrendo a ensaios de viabilidade celular , riscados celulares, e RT-qPCR em várias linhas celulares tumorais e linha primária de fibroblastos humanos. Foi possível iniciar o desenvolvimento de nanosistemas de AuNPs@PEG@BSA e AuNPs@PEG@HEWL, seguindo-se futuramente a conjugação com o CORM-3. Não foi possível determinar o efeito anti-inflamatório do CORM-3 e seus conjugados através da análise dos genes de resposta por RT-qPCR em tempo real, no entanto determinou-se que o composto CORM-3 não possui toxicidade em linhas celulares tumorais, e que aparenta fomentar a regeneração celular em fibroblastos e células tumorais NINA, sendo este efeito potenciado aquando conjugação com BSA.
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COSY proton nuclear magnetic resonance was used to measure the exchange rates of amide protons of hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) in the pressure-assisted cold-denatured state and in the heat-denatured state. After dissolving lysozyme in deuterium oxide buffer, labile protons exchange for deuterons in such a way that exposed protons are substituted rapidly, whereas "protected" protons within structured parts of the protein are substituted slowly. The exchange rates k obs were determined for HEWL under heat treatment (80ºC) and under high pressure conditions at low temperature (3.75 kbar, -13ºC). Moreover, the influence of co-solvents (sorbitol, urea) on the exchange rate was examined under pressure-assisted cold denaturation conditions, and the corresponding protection factors, P, were determined. The exchange kinetics upon heat treatment was found to be a two-step process with initial slow exchange followed by a fast one, showing residual protection in the slow-exchange state and P-factors in the random-coil-like range for the final temperature-denatured state. Addition of sorbitol (500 mM) led to an increase of P-factors for the pressure-assisted cold denatured state, but not for the heat-denatured state. The presence of 2 M urea resulted in a drastic decrease of the P-factors of the pressure-assisted cold denatured state. For both types of co-solvents, the effect they exert appears to be cooperative, i.e., no particular regions within the protein can be identified with significantly diverse changes of P-factors.
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We have investigated the effect of sample hydration on the wide-angle X-ray scattering patterns of amyloid fibrils from two different sources, hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) and an 11-residue peptide taken from the sequence of transthyretin (TTR105-115). Both samples show an inter-strand reflection at 4.7 Å and an inter-sheet reflection which occurs at 8.8 and 10 Å for TTR105-115 and HEWL fibrils, respectively. The positions, widths, and relative intensities of these reflections are conserved in patterns obtained from dried stalks and hydrated samples over a range of fibril concentrations. In 2D scattering patterns obtained from flow-aligned hydrated samples, the inter-strand and inter-sheet reflections showed, respectively, axial and equatorial alignment relative to the fibril axis, characteristic of the cross-β structure. Our results show that the cross-β structure of the fibrils is not a product of the dehydrating conditions typically employed to produce aligned samples, but is conserved in individual fibrils in hydrated samples under dilute conditions comparable to those associated with other biophysical and spectroscopic techniques. This suggests a structure consisting of a stack of two or more sheets whose interfaces are inaccessible to bulk water.
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We report the use of molecular combing as an alignment method to obtain macroscopically oriented amyloid fibrils on planar surfaces. The aligned fibrils are studied by polarized infrared spectroscopy. This gives structural information that cannot be definitively obtained from standard infrared experiments on isotropic samples, for example, confirmation of the characteristic cross-beta amyloid core structure, the side-chain orientation from specific amino acids, and the arrangement of the strands within the fibrils, as we demonstrate here. We employed amyloid fibrils from hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) and from a model octapeptide. Our results demonstrate molecular combing as a straightforward method to align amyloid fibrils, producing highly anisotropic infrared linear dichroism (IRLD) spectra.
Resumo:
Structures of digestive lysozymes 1 and 2 from housefly (MdL1 and MdL2) show that S106-T107 delimit a polar pocket around E32 (catalytic acid/base) and N46 contributes to the positioning of 050 (catalytic nucleophile), whereas those residues are replaced by V109-A110 and D48 in the non-digestive lysozyme from hen egg-white (HEWL). Further analyses revealed that MdL1 and MdL2 surfaces are less positively charged than HEWL surface. To verify the relevance of these differences to the acidic pH optimum of digestive lysozymes it was determined that pKas of the catalytic residues of the triple mutant MdL2 (N46D-S106V-T107A) are similar to HEWL pKas and higher than those for MdL2. In agreement, triple mutant MdL2 and HEWL exhibits the same pH optimum upon methylumbelliferylchitotrioside. In addition to that, the introduction of six basic residues on MdL1 surface increased by 1 unit the pH optimum for the activity upon bacterial walls. Thus, the acidic pH optimum for MdL2 and MdL1 activities upon methylumbelliferylchitotrioside is determined by the presence of N46, S106 and T107 in the environment of their catalytic residues, which favors pKas reduction. Conversely, acidic pH optimum upon bacterial walls is determined by a low concentration of positive charges on the MdL2 and MdL1 surfaces. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.