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Purification and characterization of two members of the protein tyrosine phosphatase family: dual specificity phosphatase PVP and low molecular weight phosphatase WZBUnknown Date (has links)
by Paula A. Livingston. / Thesis (M.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2009. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2009. Mode of access: World Wide Web. / Two protein tyrosine phosphatases, dual specificity phosphatase PVP and low molecular weight phosphatase WZB were purified and characterized. PVP was expressed as inclusion bodies and a suitable purification and refolding method was devised. Enzyme kinetics revealed that p-nitrophenylphosphate and (Sb(B-naphthyl phosphate were substrates with KM of 4.0mM and 8.1mM respectively. PVP showed no reactivity towards phosphoserine. Kinetic characterization of WZB showed that only pnitrophenylphosphate was a substrate with no affinity for Ç-naphthyl phosphate and phosphoserine. Optimal conditions for activity with PNPP were found at a pH of 5 with a KM of 1.1mM, kcat of 35.4s-1 and kcat/KM of 32.2s-1mM-1. Inhibition studies showed that phosphate, fluoride, and molybdate were competitive inhibitors with Ki of 3.2mM, 71.7mM, and 50.4(So(BM respectively and hydrogen peroxide abolished activity. Active site mutants of WZB Cys9Ser and Asp115Asn showed no activity.
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Reagents for protein analysis and modificationRhonemus, Troy A. January 1998 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this thesis. / Department of Chemistry
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<b>ANALYSIS OF THE SUBSTRATE SPECIFICITY AND BINDING SITE OF THE YEAST ZINC METALLOPROTEASE, STE24</b>Shanica Mariah Brown (18429576) 24 April 2024 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">The yeast zinc metalloprotease, Ste24, is involved in the maturation of the yeast mating pheromone <b>a</b>-factor by performing two distinct cleavages in the same precursor peptide substrate. Firstly, during the CaaX processing, Ste24 cleaves the three terminal residues of <b>a</b>-factor. CaaX processing is a well-studied process that involves the prenylation, proteolysis, and carboxyl-methylation of proteins ending with a cysteine (C), two aliphatic residues (aa), and one of several amino acids (X). The second cleavage step by Ste24 occurs after CaaX processing and involves an upstream cleavage N-terminal to the CaaX site. Another cleavage is performed by the enzyme Axl1 before the precursor peptide is transported from the cell to initiate mating processes. Inhibition of Ste24 typically results in ‘sterile’ cells which is how the term ‘Sterile 24’ was coined. In humans, defects in this metalloprotease or its substrate, Prelamin A, typically result in a range of progeroid disorders. Furthermore, the severity of these diseases has been directly linked to the catalytical activity of the enzyme. Treatments for these diseases are difficult to develop due to the limited knowledge available on the catalysis, substrate recognition, and functions of Ste24 and its homolog.</p><p dir="ltr">As such, these studies aim to define the substrate specificity of Ste24 and elucidate the binding site of Ste24. Identifying the substrate requirements of Ste24 has been an increasingly interesting topic due to the implication of Ste24 in a variety of unrelated functions. Previously, it has only been shown that yeast Ste24 is able to cleave the native substrate, the precursor of <b>a</b>-factor, and the substrate of its human homolog, prelamin A. This is an interesting finding because both substrates have dissimilar sequences at each cleavage site; so, it could be hypothesized that Ste24 may be able to recognize a wider range of sequences than expected. Further research has provided evidence that Ste24 is able to cleave both prenylated and non-prenylated substrates. It is also able to act as a translocon unclogger which may support its function in cleaving toxic islet amyloid polypeptides involved in cell failure in diabetes. Surprisingly, it was shown that this ‘unclogger ability’ was directly correlated to the activity level of Ste24, suggesting that the active site is directly involved in cleaving these peptides. With this information, it is clear that Ste24 has a broader substrate recognition ability than previously believed.</p><p dir="ltr">To elucidate the substrate specificity of Ste24, short peptide sequences containing varying CaaX sequences were developed and tested for C-terminal activity through a radioactive methyltransferase-coupled diffusion assay. Ste24 was able to recognize several sequences, however, a larger library is necessary to identify the specific requirements necessary for cleavage. Secondly, we tested the necessity of carboxylmethylation for the upstream N-terminal cleavage. The Distefano group designed three 33-mer analogs of <b>a</b>-factor, developed to mimic the C-terminally cleaved peptide. These peptides had either <b>a)</b> a methyl ester terminus representing the native substrate, <b>b)</b> a free carboxyl terminus representing the unmethylated precursor, and <b>c)</b> an amide terminus representing an unnatural end. All three peptides were tested using a FRET-based assay that allowed for the kinetic parameters of each peptide to be evaluated. We demonstrated that carboxylmethylation was not necessary for the upstream N-terminal cleavage; all three peptides presented similar kinetics. Finally, we interrogated the binding site of Ste24 through the use of a radioactive methyltransferase-coupled diffusion assay (C-terminal cleavage), a FRET-based assay (N-terminal cleavage), and photocrosslinking assays (binding). Together, these data presented a clearer image of residues necessary for the cleavage and binding of substrates within Ste24.</p>
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Estudo estrutural e funcional das proteínas PilZ e YaeQ do fitopatógeno Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri / Structural and functional studies of PilZ and YaeQ from Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri proteinsGuzzo, Cristiane Rodrigues 25 February 2010 (has links)
O trabalho aqui desenvolvido teve como objeto o estudo estrutural e funcional de várias proteínas do fitopatógeno Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri (Xac), dentre as quais se destacam as proteínas hipotéticas conservadas YaeQ e SufE, as proteínas RpfC, RpfF e RpfG envolvidas em quorum sensing e proteínas PilZ, FimX e PilB envolvidas na biogênese do pilus tipo IV. Para o desenvolvimento deste trabalho foram utilizadas diferentes técnicas incluindo: clonagem, expressão, purificação, desnaturação térmica, cristalografia, difração de raios-X, RMN, ensaios de 2-híbrido, produção de nocautes, mutação sítio dirigida, Western- e Far- Western, entre outras. Dentre os resultados mais importantes obtidos temos a determinação estrutural das proteínas YaeQ e PilZ pela técnica MAD. Em ambos os casos, as estruturas representaram topologias inéditas. Com base nos dados estruturais, mostramos que YaeQ pertence à família PD-(D/E)XK presente em endonucleases dependentes de magnésio, e a partir de ensaios funcionais obtivemos evidências que sugerem que YaeQ está envolvida em alguma via de reparo de DNA em Xac. A estrutura tridimensional de PilZ revelou uma inesperada variedade estrutural dentro da família PilZ e mostrou de forma clara porque ortólogos não interagem com o segundo mensageiro bacteriano, c-diGMP. A cadeia principal de PilZ foi assinalada por RMN e a estrutura secundária de PilZ em solução é consistente com aquela determinada por cristalografia. Duas proteínas que interagem com PilZ foram identificadas: PilB e FimX. Como PilZ, ambos exercem papéis na biogênese do pilus tipo IV (T4P). Mostramos que PilZ interage especificamente com o domínio EAL de FimX e que resíduos conservados na região do C-terminal de PilZ estão envolvidos na interação com PilB, mas não com FimX. Ensaios de mutação sítio dirigida mostraram que a Y22 de PilZ pode estar envolvida na regulação da interação de PilZ com FimX e com PilB. Apesar de PilZ não interagir com c-diGMP seu parceiro, FimX, interage. PilZ consegue interagir com PilB ao mesmo tempo em que interage com FimX, formando um complexo ternário que é independente da interação de FimX com c-diGMP. Com base em todos estes resultados propusemos possíveis mecanismos de ação de PilZ e FimX no controle da biogênese do T4P. Além dos resultados acima descritos, determinamos a estrutura de SufE e mostramos que esta aumenta a atividade cisteína dessulfarase de seu parceiro, SufS, em torno de 10 vezes, como ocorre com SufE-SufS de E.coli. Clonamos, expressamos, purificamos e fizemos ensaios de cristalização de algumas proteínas envolvidas no controle de quorum sensing em Xac. Tivemos êxito na cristalização do domínio HPT (histidina fosfotransferase) da proteína chave deste sistema, RpfC / The aim of the project was to perform structural and functional studies of different Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri (Xac) proteins including the hypothetical proteins YaeQ and SufE; RpfC, RpfF and RpfG involved in the quorum sensing and PilZ, FimX and PilB that play roles in type IV pilus (T4P) biogenesis. Several experimental techniques were employed including cloning, expression and purification of recombinant proteins, thermal denaturation, protein crystallography, X-ray diffraction, NMR, two-hybrid assays, Western- and Far-Western Blotting assays, site direct mutagenesis, and the production of Xac knockouts strains. The most important results include the determination of the three-dimensional crystal structures of PilZ and YaeQ using the MAD technique. In both cases, the structures reveled new protein topologies. The comparison of the YaeQ structure with others deposited in public databases revealed that YaeQ proteins represent a new variation within the PD-(D/E)XK magnesium dependent endonucleases superfamily. Functional assays suggest that YaeQ may be envolved in DNA repair in Xac. The PilZ three-dimensional structure revealed an unexpected structural variation within the PilZ domain superfamily and showed why PilZ orthologs are not able to bind the important bacterial second messenger, c-diGMP. We assigned the PilZ main chain by NMR and used this information to demonstrate that the PilZ secondary structure in solution is consistent with the PilZ crystal structure. We identified two proteins that interact with PilZ: PilB and FimX. As with PilZ, both PilB and FimX are involved in T4P biogenesis. PilZ binds specifically to the EAL domain of FimX and the conserved residues located in the PilZ unstructured C-terminal region contribute to binding with PilB but not with FimX. Site direct mutagenesis studies showed that PilZ residue Y22 is necessary for its capability to interact with both PilB and FimX. Although PilZ does not bind c-diGMP, her partner, FimX, does. We present evidence that PilZ can bind simultaneously to FimX and PilB, forming a ternary complex that is independent of c-diGMP. These results allow us to propose possible mechanisms by which PilZ and FimX control T4P biogenesis. Other results obtained during this period include the resolution of the crystal structure of the SufE protein from Xac using the molecular replacement technique. We show that SufE induces a 10-fold increase in the cysteine desulfurase activity of SufS, similar to that observed for the SufE-SufS complex from E. coli. Several proteins involved in quorum sensing and c-di-GMP signaling were cloned, expressed and submitted to crystallization trials. Crystals of the HPT (histidine phophotransferase) domain) of the RpfC sensor histidine kinase were obtained
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Proteomic analysis of liver membranes through an alternative shotgun methodologyChick, Joel January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Dept. of Chemistry & Biomolecular Sciences, 2009. / Bibliography: p. 200-212. / Introduction -- Shotgun proteomic analysis of rat liver membrane proteins -- A combination of immobilised pH gradients improve membrane proteomics -- Affects of tumor-induced inflammation on membrane proteins abundance in the mouse liver -- Affects of tumor-induced inflammation on biochemical pathways in the mouse liver -- General discussion -- References. / The aim of this thesis was to develop a proteomics methodology that improves the identification of membrane proteomes from mammalian liver. Shotgun proteomics is a method that allows the analysis of proteins from cells, tissues and organs and provides comprehensive characterisation of proteomes of interest. The method developed in this thesis uses separation of peptides from trypsin digested membrane proteins by immobilised pH gradient isoelectric focusing (IPG-IEF) as the first dimension of two dimensional shotgun proteomics. In this thesis, peptide IPG-IEF was shown to be a highly reproducible, high resolution analytical separation that provided the identification of over 4,000 individual protein identifications from rat liver membrane samples. Furthermore, this shotgun proteomics strategy provided the identification of approximately 1,100 integral membrane proteins from the rat liver. The advantages of using peptide IPG-IEF as a shotgun proteomics separation dimension in conjunction with label-free quantification was applied to a biological question: namely, does the presence of a spatially unrelated benign tumor affect the abundance of mouse liver proteins. IPG-IEF shotgun proteomics provided comprehensive coverage of the mouse liver membrane proteome with 1,569 quantified proteins. In addition, the presence of an Englebreth-Holm-Swarm sarcoma induced changes in abundance of proteins in the mouse liver, including many integral membrane proteins. Changes in the abundance of liver proteins was observed in key liver metabolic processes such as fatty acid metabolism, fatty acid transport, xenobiotic metabolism and clearance. These results provide compelling evidence that the developed shotgun proteomics methodology allows for the comprehensive analysis of mammalian liver membrane proteins and detailed some of the underlying changes in liver metabolism induced by the presence of a tumor. This model may reflect changes that could occur in the livers of cancer patients and has implications for drug treatments. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / 609 p. ill. (some col.)
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Estudo estrutural e funcional das proteínas PilZ e YaeQ do fitopatógeno Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri / Structural and functional studies of PilZ and YaeQ from Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri proteinsCristiane Rodrigues Guzzo 25 February 2010 (has links)
O trabalho aqui desenvolvido teve como objeto o estudo estrutural e funcional de várias proteínas do fitopatógeno Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri (Xac), dentre as quais se destacam as proteínas hipotéticas conservadas YaeQ e SufE, as proteínas RpfC, RpfF e RpfG envolvidas em quorum sensing e proteínas PilZ, FimX e PilB envolvidas na biogênese do pilus tipo IV. Para o desenvolvimento deste trabalho foram utilizadas diferentes técnicas incluindo: clonagem, expressão, purificação, desnaturação térmica, cristalografia, difração de raios-X, RMN, ensaios de 2-híbrido, produção de nocautes, mutação sítio dirigida, Western- e Far- Western, entre outras. Dentre os resultados mais importantes obtidos temos a determinação estrutural das proteínas YaeQ e PilZ pela técnica MAD. Em ambos os casos, as estruturas representaram topologias inéditas. Com base nos dados estruturais, mostramos que YaeQ pertence à família PD-(D/E)XK presente em endonucleases dependentes de magnésio, e a partir de ensaios funcionais obtivemos evidências que sugerem que YaeQ está envolvida em alguma via de reparo de DNA em Xac. A estrutura tridimensional de PilZ revelou uma inesperada variedade estrutural dentro da família PilZ e mostrou de forma clara porque ortólogos não interagem com o segundo mensageiro bacteriano, c-diGMP. A cadeia principal de PilZ foi assinalada por RMN e a estrutura secundária de PilZ em solução é consistente com aquela determinada por cristalografia. Duas proteínas que interagem com PilZ foram identificadas: PilB e FimX. Como PilZ, ambos exercem papéis na biogênese do pilus tipo IV (T4P). Mostramos que PilZ interage especificamente com o domínio EAL de FimX e que resíduos conservados na região do C-terminal de PilZ estão envolvidos na interação com PilB, mas não com FimX. Ensaios de mutação sítio dirigida mostraram que a Y22 de PilZ pode estar envolvida na regulação da interação de PilZ com FimX e com PilB. Apesar de PilZ não interagir com c-diGMP seu parceiro, FimX, interage. PilZ consegue interagir com PilB ao mesmo tempo em que interage com FimX, formando um complexo ternário que é independente da interação de FimX com c-diGMP. Com base em todos estes resultados propusemos possíveis mecanismos de ação de PilZ e FimX no controle da biogênese do T4P. Além dos resultados acima descritos, determinamos a estrutura de SufE e mostramos que esta aumenta a atividade cisteína dessulfarase de seu parceiro, SufS, em torno de 10 vezes, como ocorre com SufE-SufS de E.coli. Clonamos, expressamos, purificamos e fizemos ensaios de cristalização de algumas proteínas envolvidas no controle de quorum sensing em Xac. Tivemos êxito na cristalização do domínio HPT (histidina fosfotransferase) da proteína chave deste sistema, RpfC / The aim of the project was to perform structural and functional studies of different Xanthomonas axonopodis pv citri (Xac) proteins including the hypothetical proteins YaeQ and SufE; RpfC, RpfF and RpfG involved in the quorum sensing and PilZ, FimX and PilB that play roles in type IV pilus (T4P) biogenesis. Several experimental techniques were employed including cloning, expression and purification of recombinant proteins, thermal denaturation, protein crystallography, X-ray diffraction, NMR, two-hybrid assays, Western- and Far-Western Blotting assays, site direct mutagenesis, and the production of Xac knockouts strains. The most important results include the determination of the three-dimensional crystal structures of PilZ and YaeQ using the MAD technique. In both cases, the structures reveled new protein topologies. The comparison of the YaeQ structure with others deposited in public databases revealed that YaeQ proteins represent a new variation within the PD-(D/E)XK magnesium dependent endonucleases superfamily. Functional assays suggest that YaeQ may be envolved in DNA repair in Xac. The PilZ three-dimensional structure revealed an unexpected structural variation within the PilZ domain superfamily and showed why PilZ orthologs are not able to bind the important bacterial second messenger, c-diGMP. We assigned the PilZ main chain by NMR and used this information to demonstrate that the PilZ secondary structure in solution is consistent with the PilZ crystal structure. We identified two proteins that interact with PilZ: PilB and FimX. As with PilZ, both PilB and FimX are involved in T4P biogenesis. PilZ binds specifically to the EAL domain of FimX and the conserved residues located in the PilZ unstructured C-terminal region contribute to binding with PilB but not with FimX. Site direct mutagenesis studies showed that PilZ residue Y22 is necessary for its capability to interact with both PilB and FimX. Although PilZ does not bind c-diGMP, her partner, FimX, does. We present evidence that PilZ can bind simultaneously to FimX and PilB, forming a ternary complex that is independent of c-diGMP. These results allow us to propose possible mechanisms by which PilZ and FimX control T4P biogenesis. Other results obtained during this period include the resolution of the crystal structure of the SufE protein from Xac using the molecular replacement technique. We show that SufE induces a 10-fold increase in the cysteine desulfurase activity of SufS, similar to that observed for the SufE-SufS complex from E. coli. Several proteins involved in quorum sensing and c-di-GMP signaling were cloned, expressed and submitted to crystallization trials. Crystals of the HPT (histidine phophotransferase) domain) of the RpfC sensor histidine kinase were obtained
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