• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 10
  • 7
  • 6
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 31
  • 31
  • 10
  • 9
  • 7
  • 7
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Exploring Selectivity and Hysteresis : Kinetic Studies on a Potato Epoxide Hydrolase

Lindberg, Diana January 2010 (has links)
The kinetic mechanism of an α/β hydrolase fold epoxide hydrolase from potato, StEH1, has been studied with the aims of explaining the underlying causes for enantio- and regioselectivity, both being important for product purity. Further effort has been laid upon understanding the causes of a hysteretic behavior discovered in the measurements leading to Paper I. The enantioselectivity was investigated with substrates differing only in substituent size at one carbon of the oxirane ring structure. In catalysis with trans-stilbene oxide and styrene oxide, enantioselectivity is the result of differences in alkylation rates. In pre-steady state measurement with trans-2-methylstyrene oxide (2-MeSO), a rate-limiting step involving slow transitions, referred to as hysteresis, was discovered. With this substrate enantioselectivity is proposed to be a consequence of the catalytic rate of (1R,2R)-enantiomer being more influenced by the hysteretic behavior than was the rate of the other enantiomer. In steady-state measurements with (1R,2R)-2-MeSO, at different temperatures and pH, hysteretic cooperativity was displayed. It can be concluded that this behavior is dependent on the relationship between kcat and the rate of transition between two Michaelis complexes. From the differences in pH dependence of kcat/KM in formation of the two diols resulting from low regioselectivity in catalysis of (1R,2R)-2-MeSO, it is suggested that hysteresis is a result of the substrates placed in different conformational modes within the active site cavity. Regioselectivity is proposed to be the result of specific interactions between the catalytically important Tyr and the substrate, with a link between KM-values and degree of regioselectivity. Furthermore, the hysteretic kinetic model proposed can explain hysteresis, cooperativity and regioselectivity resulting from StEH1 catalyzed hydrolysis of (1R,2R)-2-MeSO.
12

Folding and interaction studies of subunits in protein complexes

Aguilar, Ximena January 2014 (has links)
Proteins function as worker molecules in the cell and their natural environment is crowded. How they fold in a cell-like environment and how they recognize their interacting partners in such conditions, are questions that underlie the work of this thesis. Two distinct subjects were investigated using a combination of biochemical- and biophysical methods. First, the unfolding/dissociation of a heptameric protein (cpn10) in the presence of the crowding agent Ficoll 70. Ficoll 70 was used to mimic the crowded environment in the cell and it has been used previously to study macromolecular crowding effects, or excluded volume effects, in protein folding studies. Second, the conformational changes upon interaction between the Mediator subunit Med25 and the transcription factor Dreb2a from Arabidopsis thaliana. Mediator is a transcriptional co-regulator complex which is conserved from yeast to humans. The molecular mechanisms of its action are however not entirely understood. It has been proposed that the Mediator complex conveys regulatory signals from promoter-bound transcription factors (activators/repressors) to the RNA polymerase II machinery through conformational rearrangements. The results from the folding study showed that cpn10 was stabilized in the presence of Ficoll 70 during thermal- and chemical induced unfolding (GuHCl). The thermal transition midpoint increased by 4°C, and the chemical midpoint by 0.5 M GuHCl as compared to buffer conditions. Also the heptamer-monomer dissociation was affected in the presence of Ficoll 70, the transition midpoint was lower in Ficoll 70 (3.1 μM) compared to in buffer (8.1 μM) thus indicating tighter binding in crowded conditions. The coupled unfolding/dissociation free energy for the heptamer increased by about 36 kJ/mol in Ficoll. Altogether, the results revealed that the stability effect on cpn10 due to macromolecular crowding was larger in the individual monomers (33%) than at the monomer-monomer interfaces (8%). The results from the interaction study indicated conformational changes upon interaction between the A. thaliana Med25 ACtivator Interaction Domain (ACID) and Dreb2a. Structural changes were probed to originate from unstructured Dreb2a and not from the Med25-ACID. Human Med25-ACID was also found to interact with the plant-specific Dreb2a, even though the ACIDs from human and A. thaliana share low sequence homology. Moreover, the human Med25-interacting transcription factor VP16 was found to interact with A. thaliana Med25. Finally, NMR, ITC and pull-down experiments showed that the unrelated transcription factors Dreb2a and VP16 interact with overlapping regions in the ACIDs of A. thaliana and human Med25. The results presented in this thesis contribute to previous reports in two different aspects. Firstly, they lend support to the findings that the intracellular environment affects the biophysical properties of proteins. It will therefore be important to continue comparing results between in vitro and cell-like conditions to measure the magnitude of such effects and to improve the understanding of protein folding and thereby misfolding of proteins in cells. Better knowledge of protein misfolding mechanisms is critical since they are associated to several neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson's. Secondly, our results substantiate the notion that transcription factors are able to bind multiple targets and that they gain structure upon binding. They also show that subunits of the conserved Mediator complex, despite low sequence homologies, retain a conserved structure and function when comparing evolutionary diverged species.
13

Two-state conformational behavior in protein active centers

Lohman, Jeremy R., 1981- 12 1900 (has links)
xiv, 82 p., ill. (some col.) / Cellular processes are carried out by proteins, which often utilize conformational changes for function. In theory, conformational changes can be harnessed to promote, prevent or monitor cellular processes. Such changes in protein active centers require perturbations through interactions with other proteins, small molecules or through energy input into the system, for example light. The work presented incorporates rational design and crystallographic elucidation of two-state conformational changes in two proteins, green fluorescent protein (GFP) and malate synthase (MS). GFP indicators were previously developed to quantitate the thiol/disulfide redox status within cells. Cysteine residues were introduced in close proximity on the surface of GFP and allow the formation of a disulfide bond. The indicators provide a fluorescent readout of the ambient thiol/disulfide equilibrium, however thermodynamic studies showed the resulting thiol/disulfide to be unusually stable (-287 mV) in comparison to the cellular redox buffer glutathione (-240 mV). In order to produce a family of redox indicators suitable for use in less reducing environments, amino acids were inserted near the introduced cysteine pair in order to destabilize the disulfide. The resulting family of redox indicators, termed roGFP-iX, exhibit midpoint potentials in the more desirable range of -229 to -246 mV. Crystallographic analysis indicates that roGFP-iX indicators undergo much larger two-state conformational changes than the original indicators. Surprisingly, a cis-peptide was discovered between the cysteine and the inserted residue which in combination with the conformational changes helps to explain the reduced stability of the disulfide. Malate synthase is an important virulence factor for certain microbes and carries out the Claisen condensation between glyoxylate and acctyl-CoA to produce malate. Crystal structures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Escherichia coli malate synthase isoform G had previously been determined with substrates or products bound. To determine the conformational changes necessary for substrate binding and product release, crystal structures of Escherichia coli malate synthase isoform A were determined in both the apo and acetyl-CoA/inhibitor bound forms. The crystallographic models revealed two-state conformational changes in the part of the active-site loop necessary for substrate binding, which has important implications for drug design. This dissertation includes my unpublished co-authored materials. / Adviser: S. James Remington
14

Estudo de mudanças conformacionais de macromoléculas em solução usando espalhamento de raio-X / Study of conformational changes of macromolecules in solutions using X-ray scattering

Silva, Júlio César da 26 February 2007 (has links)
Orientador: Iris Concepcion Kinares de Torriani / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Fisica Gleb Wataghin / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-08T07:14:14Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Silva_JulioCesarda_M.pdf: 3602925 bytes, checksum: ebc541d863211845fb7a5a80d72ed5b5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007 / Resumo: Durante as últimas décadas, o estudo de mudanças conformacionais de macromoléculas biológicas tem se tornado um grande desafio para os cientistas, além de ser um tema de interesse biotecnológico e de engenharia de proteínas. O processo de enovelamento (desenovelamento) de proteínas tem sido intensivamente estudado, pois isso pode contribuir para o conhecimento do processo de síntese de proteínas, além de ajudar a entender o desenvolvimento de algumas doenças associadas ao mau enovelamento ou agregação de certas proteínas. Nesse contexto, o Espalhamento de Raios-X a Baixo Ângulo (SAXS) aparece como uma técnica valiosa para esse estudo, pois ela permite obter informações estruturais da molécula em solução. Além de permitir estudos dinâmicos, as experiências de SAXS possibilitam a observação das moléculas em condições fisiológicas. Neste trabalho, a potencialidade da técnica de SAXS foi evidenciada no estudo de mudanças conformacionais de biomoléculas. O processo de desnaturação da proteína lisozima em solução foi estudado através de experiências em equilíbrio. Mudanças conformacionais foram observadas durante o processo de desnaturação por ação de uréia na solução e por altas temperaturas. Os resultados mostraram que a lisozima é uma proteína com certa resistência para se desenovelar completamente, mesmo em condições extremas de concentração de uréia e de altas temperaturas. A molécula tende a não perder totalmente sua compacidade. Além disso, foram observados somente dois estados conformacionais (enovelado e desenovelado). Um estado intermediário reportado na literatura, mas contestado por vários autores, não foi observado. Isso mostra a alta cooperatividade dessa proteína no processo de desnaturação. Outro processo estudado foi a oligomerização da proteína -Lactoglobulina sob ação de irradiação com radiação gama. A proteína foi estudada na forma sólida, com diferentes atividades de água, e em solução, em diferentes concentrações. As amostras foram irradiadas com radiação gama em diferentes doses e as mudanças foram registradas através de experiências de SAXS. Os dados experimentais foram usados para o cálculo de modelos dos oligômeros formados por ação da radiação. Concluindo, este estudo mostrou que a técnica de SAXS é uma ferramenta versátil e muito útil para o estudo de processos de mudanças nas estruturas terciária e quaternária de proteínas em solução / Abstract: During the last decades, the study of conformational changes in biological macromolecules has been a great challenge for the scientists, and continues to be an important subject of biotechnological interest and protein engineering. The process of folding (unfolding) of protein molecules has been intensively studied, because this investigation can contribute to the knowledge of the process of protein synthesis, thus helping to understand the development of some illnesses associated with misfolding or aggregation processes of certain proteins. In this context, the technique of Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS) appears as a valuable technique, because it provides structural information of the molecules in solution. This technique allows dynamical studies and makes possible the study of the protein in physiological conditions. In this work the potentiality of the SAXS technique was evidenced in the study of conformational changes of biological molecules. The process of denaturation of the protein lysozyme in solution was studied using SAXS measurements in equilibrium conditions. Conformational changes were observed during the process of denaturation by the action of urea in the solution and for high temperatures. The results showed that lysozyme is a protein with certain resistance to unfold completely. Even in extreme conditions of high concentration of urea and high temperatures, this protein does not totally lose its compactness. Moreover, only two conformational states (folded and unfolded) were observed. An intermediate state was not observed. This study showed the high cooperativity of the unfolding process of this protein during its denaturation process. Another process studied was the oligomerization of the protein -Lactoglobulin under the effect of gamma irradiation. The protein was studied in the solid form, in different water activities, and in solution, in different concentrations. The samples were exposed to several doses of -radiation. The SAXS technique was used to obtain dimensional parameters of the proteins and models were calculated from the experimental scattering data. Finally, this study showed that the SAXS technique as a versatile and very useful tool for the study of changes in the tertiary and quaternary structures of proteins in solution / Mestrado / Física / Mestre em Física
15

Étude du mécanisme d’activation de la voie de signalisation canonique de Hedgehog chez la drosophile / Mechanisms leading to the activation of canonical Hedgehog pathway in drosophila melanogaster

Giordano, Cécile 14 December 2017 (has links)
Hedgehog (Hh) est un morphogène secrété qui contrôle la croissance et la différentiation cellulaire chez les métazoaires. La dérégulation de son activité entraine des maladies développementales et de nombreux cancers chez l’adulte. Chez la drosophile, la transduction du signal Hh est initiée par la fixation de Hh sur son récepteur Patched (Ptc), conduisant à la stabilisation de la protéine membranaire Smoothened (Smo) et à l’activation du complexe de transduction composé de 5 protéines : les kinases Fused (Fu), PKA, GprK2, la kinésine Costal 2 (Cos2), et le facteur de transcription Cubitus Interruptus (Ci). Ma thèse a porté sur l’étude de la régulation et des interactions moléculaires entre les composants du complexe de transduction. Par des approches complémentaires, j’ai montré qu’en absence d’Hh, les protéines PKA et Fu interagissent du côté C-terminal de Ci, alors que la présence d’Hh induit leur relocalisation vers le domaine N-terminal de Ci. J’ai pu prouver que l’élément déclencheur de ce remaniement protéique est Smo. En présence d’Hh, Smo s’incorpore dans le complexe de transduction, conduisant à l’activation et au déplacement de Fu vers la région N-terminale de Ci. Ce remaniement entraine la phosphorylation et l’activation de Ci. Ma thèse révèle l’importance des changements de conformation au sein du complexe de transduction de la voie Hh. Le mécanisme de transduction étant conservé entre invertébrés et invertébrés, mon doctorat apporte des éléments de recherche pour mieux comprendre le fonctionnement normal et pathologique des cellules. / Hedgehog (Hh) is a secreted morphogen that controls growth and differentiation in both vertebrates and invertebrates. The dysregulation of its activity leads to severe developmental defects, and the onset of cancer in adults. In Drosophila, the Hh signal transduction is initiated by the binding of Hh to its receptor Patched (Ptc). This induces the stabilization of the transmembrane protein Smoothened (Smo) and the subsenquent activation of a transduction complex consisting of 5 proteins: the kinases Fused (Fu), PKA and Gprk2, the kinesin Costal2 (Cos2), and the transcription factor of the pathway Cubitus Interruptus (Ci). The aim of my thesis was to study the regulation and molecular interactions between the different components of the transduction complex. Thanks to complementary techniques, I have shown that in absence of Hh the proteins Fu and PKA interact in C-terminal part of Ci, whereas on the presence of Hh induces their relocalization toward the N-terminal domain of Ci. I have proved that the trigger element of this moving is Smo. In presence of Hh, Smo goes into transduction complex, allowing the activation and the moving of Fu toward N-terminal domain of Ci. This relocalization is responsible of Ci phosphorylation and activation. My thesis reveals the importance of conformational changes inside the transduction complex of Hh pathway. As the mechanism of transduction is conserved between species, my PhD provides research elements in order to better understand the normal and abnormal functioning of cells.
16

Bis-pyrene probes of foldamer conformation in solution and in phospholipid bilayers

Lister, F.G.A., Eccles, N., Pike, Sarah J., Brown, R.A., Whitehead, G.F.S., Raftery, J., Webb, S.J., Clayden, J. 20 February 2020 (has links)
Yes / Exploring the detailed structural features of synthetic molecules in the membrane phase requires sensitive probes of conformation. Here we describe the design, synthesis and characterization of bis(pyrene) probes that report conformational changes in membrane-active dynamic foldamers. The probes were designed to distinguish between left-handed (M) and right-handed (P) screw-sense conformers of 310-helical α-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) peptide foldamers, both in solution and in bilayer membranes. Several different bis(pyrene) probes were synthesized and ligated to the C-terminus of Aib tetramers that had different chiral residues at the N-terminus, residues that favored either an M or a P screw-sense in the 310-helix. The readily synthesized and conveniently incorporated N-acetyl-1,2-bis(pyren-1′-yl)ethylenediamine probe proved to have the best properties. In solution, changes in foldamer screw-sense induced substantial changes in the ratio of excimer/monomer fluorescence emission (E/M) for this reporter of conformation, with X-ray crystallography revealing that opposite screw-senses produce very different interpyrene distances in the reporter. In bilayers, this convenient and sensitive fluorescent reporter allowed, for the first time, an investigation of how the chirality of natural phospholipids affects foldamer conformation. / European Research Council (Advanced Grant ROCOCO), the BBSRC (DTP studentship and grant BB/I007962) and the EPRSC (grants EP/N009134/1 and EP/ K039547).
17

Novel Redox and DNA-Dependent Conformational Changes in Human Ku, a DNA-Double Strand Break Repair Protein

Lehman, Jason Alexander 26 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
18

Intramolecular hydrogen-bonding studies by NMR spectroscopy

Cantalapiedra, Nuria Aboitiz January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
19

Étude du rôle des régions variables 4 et 5 dans les changements de conformation de la gp120 du VIH-1

Coutu, Mathieu 02 1900 (has links)
Le VIH infecte les cellules par fusion de sa membrane avec la membrane de la cellule cible. Cette fusion est effectuée par les glycoprotéines de l'enveloppe (Env) qui sont synthétisées en tant que précurseur, gp160, qui est ensuite clivé en gp120 et gp41. La protéine gp41 est la partie transmembranaire du complexe de l'enveloppe et l’ancre à la particule virale alors que la gp120 assure la liaison au récepteur cellulaire CD4 et corécepteur CCR5 ou CXCR4. Ces interactions successives induisent des changements de conformation d’Env qui alimentent le processus d'entrée du virus conduisant finalement à l'insertion du peptide de fusion de la gp41 dans la membrane de la cellule cible. La sous-unité extérieure gp120 contient cinq régions variables (V1 à V5), dont trois (V1, V2 et V3) étant capables d’empêcher l’adoption spontanée de la conformation liée à CD4. Cependant, le rôle de régions variables V4 et V5 vis-à-vis de ces changements de conformation reste inconnu. Pour étudier leur effet, des mutants de l'isolat primaire de clade B YU2, comprenant une délétion de la V5 ou une mutation au niveau de tous les sites potentiels de N-glycosylation de la V4 (PNGS), ont été générés. L'effet des mutations sur la conformation des glycoprotéines d'enveloppe a été analysé par immunoprécipitation et résonance de plasmon de surface avec des anticorps dont la liaison dépend de la conformation adopté par la gp120. Ni le retrait des PNGS de la V4 ni la délétion de V5 n’a affecté les changements conformationnels d’Env tels que mesurés par ces techniques, ce qui suggère que les régions variables V1, V2 et V3 sont les principaux acteurs dans la prévention de l’adoption de la conformation lié de CD4 d’Env. / HIV infects cells by fusing its membrane with the membrane of the target cell. This fusion is performed by the envelope glycoproteins (Env) which are synthesized as a precursor, gp160, which is later cleaved into gp120 and gp41. The transmembrane protein gp41 anchors the envelope complex to the viral particle whereas the gp120 ensures the binding to the cell receptor CD4 and coreceptor CCR5 or CXCR4. These sequential interactions trigger conformational changes on Env that fuel the viral entry process ultimately leading to the insertion of the gp41-derived-fusion peptide into the target cell membrane. The exterior subunit gp120 contains five variable regions (V1 to V5), of which three (V1, V2 and V3) have been shown to restrain the spontaneous sampling of the CD4-bound conformation by gp120. However, the role of variable regions V4 and V5 in these conformational changes remains unknown. To investigate their effect, mutants of the clade B YU2 primary isolate, comprising a deletion of the V5 or mutating all V4 potential N-linked glycosylation sites (PNGS), have been generated. The effect of mutations on the conformation of the envelope glycoproteins was analyzed by immunoprecipitation with conformation-dependent antibodies and surface plasmon resonance. Neither the removal of the V4 PNGS nor the removal of V5 affected Env conformational changes as measured by these techniques. Thus, suggesting that variable regions V1, V2 and V3 are the major players in preventing Env from spontaneously snapping into the CD4-bound conformation.
20

Conformational Changes in Ligand Binding Processes

Voß, Béla 30 January 2015 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.1401 seconds