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  • 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.
1

Modulation of the host cell signaling pathways and protein synthesis by hepatitis C virus nonstructural 5A protein /

He, Yupeng. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 207-251).
2

Rocking Response of Slender Freestanding Building Contents in Fixed-Base and Base-Isolated Buildings

Linde, Scott A. 18 November 2016 (has links)
The primary seismic response mode of freestanding slender building contents is rocking. Rocking is one of the most damaging response modes due to large accelerations at impact and the possibility of toppling. This study investigates the rocking response of contents within fixed-base and base-isolated buildings so that better-informed decisions can be made, either at the design stage for new structures or during the performance evaluation for existing structures, to mitigate the effects of the destructive rocking behaviour and consequently minimize injury, economic loss, and downtime. A 3D model of a hospital building was created in OpenSees and analyzed to obtain floor accelerations for a suite of 20 broadband ground motions. These motions were then used as input to compute the rocking responses of many building contents. The rocking responses were compared and contrasted to determine the effect of the block’s size, slenderness, floor level, and placement within a level. The rocking response of contents in buildings isolated with lead plug and triple friction pendulum bearings were compared to the fixed-base building to determine the effectiveness of isolation as a means to control rocking. Fragility curves were also created for the fixed-base and isolated buildings. The vertical component of the floor accelerations had little effect on the rocking response of contents. The significance of this is that the location of an object on a given story does not affect its rocking response. However, higher vertical accelerations did increase the likelihood of the object lifting off the floor. The rocking response of stocky contents increased from one story to the next, but as the slenderness increased this transition became less evident. Base isolation was found to be effective at reducing both the likelihood to uplift and overturn. The longer period systems provided superior protection despite the long period pulse like motion while the damping of the systems had little effect on the rocking response. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc) / During an earthquake slender building contents respond by rocking about their edges. Rocking causes damage to sensitive and brittle objects as well as safety hazards if it results in the overturning of heavy objects. One goal of this study was to define the rocking response of rigid contents in a conventional braced frame hospital. In general, larger and stockier objects were less likely to overturn. Also, overturning was more prevalent higher up in the building while the location of an object within a given story had little effect. Another objective was to determine the effectiveness of base isolation, a technique that decouples the motion of the building from the ground using flexible bearings, as a strategy to protect contents that are vulnerable to rocking during an earthquake. This was found to be quite effective at reducing both the occurrence of uplift (the initiation of rocking) as well as toppling.
3

Topology and membrane rearrangements of the hepatitis C virus protein NS4B /

Lundin, Marika, January 2006 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2006. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
4

Analysis of transactivation of the capsid gene promoter of MVM by the NS1 protein /

Pearson, James L. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri--Columbia, 1999. / "December 1999." Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 98-104). Also available on the Internet.
5

Studies On The Structural And Biological Properties Of Rotavirus Enterotoxigenic Non-structural Protein 4 (NSP4)

Palla, Narayan Sastri 06 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Rotavirus is the major cause of infantile gastroenteritis. Each year more than 600,000 young children are estimated to die in developing countries throughout the world. Rotavirus infection can be either symptomatic or asymptomatic. But the genetic or molecular basis for rotavirus virulence is not yet clearly understood. NSP4, encoded by genome segment 10, is a multifunctional protein. It is identified as the first viral enterotoxin and is essential for virus morphogenesis and pathogenesis. Analysis of NSP4 from more than 175 strains failed to reveal any sequence motif or amino acid that segregated with the virulence phenotype of the virus. Further, a few studies indicated a lack of consistent correlation between virus virulence and diarrhea inducing ability of the cognate NSP4. To understand the basis for the inconsistency in the enterotoxigenic activity of a few NSP4s reported in a limited number of studies, comparative analysis of the biophysical, biochemical, and biological properties of NSP4ΔN72, which from SA11 and Hg18 was earlier shown to be highly diarrheagenic, from 17 different symptomatic and asymptomatic strains was carried out. To study structure-function relationship we used Thioflavin T fluorescence assay, gel filtration, CD spectroscopy, trypsin susceptibility and enterotoxin assay in newborn mice for all the proteins. Detailed comparative analysis of biochemical and biophysical properties and diarrheagenic activity of the recombinant ΔN72 peptides under identical conditions revealed wide differences among themselves in their resistance to trypsin cleavage, thoflavin T binding, multimerization and conformation without any correlation with their diarrhea inducing abilities. Since earlier studies showed that a secreted peptide (ΔN112) of SA11-NSP4 also induced diarrhea in newborn mice pups, we have generated NSP4ΔN112 deletions from six different strains and tested for their diarrhea inducing ability. The patterns of DD50 values of the ΔN112 peptides was similar to that for ΔN72 peptides, but were 1000-1200-fold less efficient than that of SA11ΔN72. NSP4 exists in multiple forms in the infected cells- as oligomers, higher molecular weight complexes and ER- and cytoplasmic membrane anchored forms. Previous studies suggest that the N-terminal boundary of the oligomerization domain could lie downstream to residue 94 from the N-terminus. A peptide from residue 112-175, secreted from rotavirus infected cells, was reported to induce dose-dependent diarrhea in suckling mice, suggesting that the N-terminal boundary of the enterotoxin activity could lie around residue 112. However, the precise N-terminal boundaries in NSP4 for oligomerization and diarrhea induction have not been identified. To address this question, a large number of deletion mutants C-terminal to residue 94 were generated and tested for their ability to induce diarrhea in newborn mouse pups. Our data suggest that while the deletions ∆N121 to ∆N131 failed to induce diarrhea, ΔN118 was diarrheagenic suggesting that the N-terminal boundary of the minimal diarrhea inducing domain lies between aa 118 and 121. Size exclusion chromatography revealed that residues 95 to 98 are critical and sufficient for oligomerization. Studies on oligomerization further revealed that NSP4ΔN94 exists in pentamers, tetramers and dimers, while deletion mutants C-terminal to aa 94 exist only as dimers. Our studies demonstrate for the first time that not only tetramers but pentamers as well as dimers possess enterotoxigenic properties. Most human rotavirus infections are caused by group A rotaviruses. Within this group, rotaviruses are further classified into subgroups based on the antigenic specificity associated with the protein product of the sixth gene, VP6. Previous studies have mapped SG I specificity to aa position 305 and the region between 296 and 299, and SG II specificity to residue 315 on VP6. However, the subgroup specific determinants on NSP4 have not been identified till date. In this study, we generated several amino acid substitution mutants in the SG I-specific SA11 NSP4∆N72 protein as in previous studies ∆N72 was found to efficiently bind DLPs. Using an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay method, the effect of the mutations in the C-terminal and N-terminal regions in ∆N72 on their binding ability to SG I and SG II DLPs was assayed. Residues at positions 85, 169, 174 and 175 and in the ISVD appear to collectively determine the specificity of binding to DLPs. While the conserved proline and glycines at positions 165, 168 and 162, respectively, are important for maintaining the required conformation for general recognition of DLP. The present study provides important insights towards understanding the determinants in NSP4 for SG-specific DLP interaction.
6

The role of the NS segment of Influenza A virus in setting host range and pathogenicity

Turnbull, Matthew Luke January 2017 (has links)
Influenza A virus (IAV) circulates in waterfowl, causing mostly asymptomatic infections. IAV can undergo host adaptation and evolve to cause significant disease and mortality in domestic poultry and mammals, applying an enormous socio-economic burden on society. Sporadically, IAV causes global pandemics in man due to its zoonotic nature, and this can result in millions of deaths worldwide during a single outbreak. Host adaptation of IAV is an incompletely understood phenomenon, but is known to involve both host and viral determinants. It is essential to improve the understanding of the factors governing host range and pathogenicity of avian IAV, especially given the absence of a universal influenza vaccine and a limited weaponry of effective antiviral compounds. This study set out to improve the understanding of host adaptation of avian IAV, focussing on segment 8 (NS segment) of the virus genome. The NS segment of non-chiropteran IAV circulates as two phylogenetically distinct clades – the ‘A-’ and ‘B-alleles’. The A-allele is found in avian and mammalian viruses, but the B-allele is considered to be almost exclusively avian. This might result from one or both of the major NS gene products (NS1 and NEP) being non-functional in mammalian host cells, or from an inability of segment 8 RNA to package into mammalian-adapted strains. To investigate this, the NS segments from a panel of avian A- and B-allele strains were introduced into human H1N1 and H3N2 viruses by reverse genetics. A- and B-allele reassortant viruses replicated equally well in a variety of mammalian cell types in vitro. Surprisingly, the consensus B-allele segment 8 out-competed an A-allele counterpart when reassortant H1N1 viruses were co-infected, with the parental WT segment 8 being most fit in this system. A- and B-allele NS1 proteins were equally efficient at blocking the mammalian IFN response both in the context of viral infection and in transfection-based reporter assays. Consensus A- and B-allele H1N1 viruses also caused disease in mice and replicated to high virus titre in the lung. Interestingly, the B-allele virus induced more weight-loss than the A-allele, although the parental WT virus was most pathogenic in vivo. To re-address the hypothesis that B-allele NS genes really are avian-restricted, the relative rates of independent Aves to Mammalia incursion events of A- and B-allele lineage IAV strains was estimated and compared using phylogenetic analyses of all publically available segment 8 sequences. 32 A-allele introduction events were estimated compared to 6 B-allele incursions, however the total number of avian Aallele sequences outnumbered B-allele sequences by over 3.5 to 1, and the relative rates of introduction were not significantly different across the two lineages suggesting no bias against avian B-allele NS segments entering mammalian hosts in nature. Therefore, this study provides evidence that avian B-allele NS genes are not attenuating in mammalian hosts and are able to cause severe disease. Thus, this lineage of IAV genes, previously assumed to be avian-restricted, should be considered when assessing zoonotic potential and pandemic risk of circulating avian IAVs.
7

The Role of Non-Structural Protein NS2A in Flavivirus Assembly and Secretion

Jason Leung Unknown Date (has links)
Flaviviruses are a group of medically relevant pathogens, known to cause serious disease in animals and humans. The previously defined roles of the flavivirus non-structural protein 2A (NS2A) in RNA replication, and modulation of the host antiviral response, has recently been extended to include virus assembly and secretion. In West Nile virus subtype Kunjin (KUN), an Isoleucine (I)-to-Asparagine (N) substitution at position 59 of the NS2A protein blocked the production of secreted virus particles in cells electroporated with viral RNA carrying this mutation. In this study, prolonged incubation of mutant KUN NS2A-I59N replicon RNA, in an inducible BHK-derived packaging cell line (expressing KUN structural proteins C, prM, and E), generated escape mutants that rescued the secretion of infectious virus-like particles. Sequencing identified three groups of revertants that included (i) reversions to wild-type, hydrophobic Ile, (ii) pseudorevertants to more hydrophobic residues (Ser, Thr, and Tyr) at codon 59, and (iii) pseudorevertants retaining Asn at NS2A codon 59, but containing a compensatory mutation (Thr-to-Pro) at NS2A codon 149. Engineering hydrophobic residues at NS2A position 59, or the compensatory T149P mutation into NS2A-I59N replicon RNA, restored the assembly of secreted virus-like particles in packaging cells. T149P mutation also rescued virus production when introduced into the full-length KUN RNA containing an NS2A-I59N mutation. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy analyses of NS2A-I59N replicon-expressing cells showed a distinct lack of virus-induced membranes normally present in cells expressing wild-type replicon RNA. The compensatory mutation NS2A-T149P restored the induction of membrane structures to a level similar to those observed during wild-type replication. These results further confirm the role of NS2A in virus assembly, demonstrate the importance of hydrophobic residues at codon 59 in this process, implicate the involvement of NS2A in the biogenesis of virus-induced membranes, and suggest a vital role for these induced membranes in virus assembly. To further our understanding of how mutations within NS2A are able to affect the induction of virus-induced membranes, leading to a block in virus assembly, the membrane topology of KUN NS2A was investigated. Using a plasmid encoding NS1 and NS2A proteins with C-terminal c-myc and FLAG epitopes, NS2A proteins containing N-linked acceptor sites and C-terminal truncations were generated. Assays were performed to identify the subcellular localization of specific sequences within NS2A by Western blot and immunofluorescence analyses. While the membrane topology could not be determined experimentally, the findings of this study support the assertion that cleavage at the NS1/NS2A junction requires the majority, if not all of the NS2A protein for proper processing to occur, and suggests that the interaction between hydrophilic loops and -helical transmembrane segments plays an important role in the formation and stability of the flavivirus NS2A protein topology. Based on the knowledge of polyprotein processing events, and utilizing a range of software packages, a topology model of NS2A was predicted. The likelihood of additional sequences within NS2A affecting the ability to induce virus-specific membranes, and facilitate virion assembly, has led to the development of an invasive bacterial screening system, as a delivery vehicle to screen libraries of mutated KUN replicon clones. Using these invasive bacteria to deliver mutated KUN replicons into BHK-derived packaging cells, mutations causing a deficiency in either RNA replication or encapsidation can be identified by performing -gal assays on cells maintained in the presence, or absence of Doxycycline (suppressing the expression of structural proteins), respectively. Furthermore, this system was adapted for use in a 96-well plate format, allowing for high-throughput screening. Thus, KUN replicon clones capable of RNA replication, but unable to assemble and secrete virus-like particles can be identified and further analyzed, in the hope of mapping amino acid residues and motifs involved in encapsidation of flavivirus RNA. Finally, a range of hypotheses are discussed, explaining the possible mechanisms by which NS2A is involved in flavivirus assembly. A number of future directions and applications are also presented.
8

Studies On Phosphorylation And Oligomerization Of Rotavirus Nonstructural Protein 5 (NSP5) And Cellular Pathways That Regulate Virus Replication

Namsa, Nima Dondu 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Rotavirus is one of the leading etiological agents of gastroenteritis in young of many species including humans worldwide and is responsible for about 600,000 infant deaths per annum. Rotavirus belongs to the Reoviridae family, and its genome is composed of 11 double-stranded RNA segments that encode six structural proteins and six nonstructural proteins. Rotavirus replication is fully cytoplasmic and occurs within highly specialized regions called viroplasms. NSP2 and NSP5 have been shown to be essential for viroplasm formation and, when co-expressed in uninfected cells, to form viroplasm¬like structures. A recent study suggest a key role for NSP5 in architectural assembly of viroplasms and in recruitment of viroplasmic proteins, containing four structural (VP1, VP2, VP3 and VP6) and two nonstructural (NSP2 and NSP5) proteins. NSP5, the translation product of gene segment 11 has a predicted molecular eight of 21 kDa. NSP5 has been reported to exist in multiple isoforms ranging in size from 28-and 32-35 kDa from a 26-kDa precursor has been attributed to O-glycosylation and hyperphosphorylation. To study different properties of the protein, recombinant NSP5 containing an N-terminal hisidine tag was expressed in bacteria and purified by affinity chromatography. A significant observation was the similarity in phosphorylation property of the bacterially expressed and that expressed in mammalian cells. While the untagged recombinant protein failed to undergo phosphorylation in vitro, addition of His tag or deletions at the N-terminus promoted phosphorylation of the protein in vitro, which is very similar to the reported properties exhibited by the corresponding proteins expressed in mammalian cells. Phosphorylation of NSP5 in vitro is independent of the cell type from which the extract is derived suggesting that the kinases that phosphorylate NSP5 are distributed in all cell types. Among the C-terminal deletion mutants studied, NH-∆C5 and NH-∆C10 were phosphorylated better than full-length NSP5, but NH-∆C25 and NH¬∆C35 showed substantial reduction in the level of phosphorylation compared to full-length NSP5. These results indicate that the C-terminal 30 residues spanning the predicted α-helical domain of NSP5 are critical for its phosphorylation in vitro which is in correspondence with previous findings that C-terminal 21 amino acids of NSP5 direct its insolubility, hyperphosphorylation, and VLS formation. The results revealed that though the tagged full-length and some of the mutants could be phosphorylated in vitro, they are not suitable substrates for hyperphosphorylation unlike the similar proteins expressed in mammalian cells or infected cells. Analysis by western blot and mass spectrometry revealed that the bacterially expressed NH-NSP5 is indeed phosphorylated. It appears that prior phosphorylation in bacteria renders the protein conformationally not amendable for hyperphosphorylation by cellular kinases in vitro. Mutation of the highly conserved proline marginally enhanced its phosphorylation in vitro but the stability of protein is affected. Notably, mutation of S67A, identified as a critical residue for the putative caesin kinase-I and-II pathways of NSP5 phosphorylation, affected neither the phosphorylation nor the ATPase activity of NSP5. These results suggest that bacterially expressed NSP5 by itself has undectable auto-kinase activity and it is hypophosphorylated. Purified recombinant NSP5 has been reported to possess an Mg¬ 2+-dependent ATP-specific triphosphatase activity. The results indicated that deletion of either C-terminal 48 amino acids or N-terminal 33 residues severely affected the ATPase activity of recombinant NSP5, underlying the importance of both N-and C-terminal domains for NSP5 ATP hydrolysis function. NSP5 expressed in rotavirus infected cells exists as inter-molecular disulfide-linked dimeric forms and it appears that the 46 kDa isoforms, that are phosphorylated, corresponds to dimer as revealed by western blotting. Analytical gel filtration analysis of NH-NSP5, NH-ΔN43 and NH-ΔN33-ΔC25 showed most of the proteins in void volume, but an additional peak corresponding to the mass of dimeric species further supports that NSP5 is basically a dimer that undergoes oligomerization. Analysis by sucrose-gradient fractionation revealed that NH-NSP5 and NH-ΔN43 proteins were mainly distributed in the lower fraction of the gradient suggesting the existence of high molecular weight complexes or higher oligomers. The multimeric nature of NSP5 and its mutants was further confirmed by dynamic light scattering which suggests that high molecular weight complexes are of homogenous species. The correlation curves showed a low polydispersity distribution and a globular nature of recombinant NH-NSP5 proteins. The present results clearly demonstrate that dimer is the basic structural unit of NSP5 which undergoes oligomerization to form a complex consisting of about 20-21 dimers. The nonstructural protein 5 is hyperphosphorylated in infected cells and cellular kinases have been implicated to be involved in its phosphorylation. NSP5 contains multiple consensus sites for phosphorylation by several kinases, but the cellular kinases that specifically phosphorylate NSP5 in infected cells are yet to be identified. Previous studies from our laboratory using signaling pathway inhibitors revealed that recombinant NH¬NSP5 and its deletion mutants can be phosphorylated in vitro by purified cellular kinases and by mammalian cell extracts. These studies also showed the involvement of PI3K-Akt and MAPK signaling pathways in NSP5 phosphorylation and a negative role for GSK3β in the phosphorylation of bacterially expressed recombinant NSP5 in vitro. In the present work, using phospho-specific anti-Ser9 GSK3β antibody, we observed that GSK3β is inactivated in a rotavirus infected MA104 cells in a strain-independent manner. GSK3β¬specific small interfering RNA (siRNA-GSK3β) reduced GSK3β levels leading to increased level of synthesis of the structural rotavirus protein VP6 and NSP5 hyperphosphorylation compared to control siRNA. The pharmacological kinase inhibitors (LY294002, Genistein, PD98059, and Rapamycin) studies at the concentrations tested did not significantly affect rotavirus infection as seen from the number foci, while U0126 severely affected rotavirus replication. The results clearly demonstrated the importance of the MEK1/2 signaling pathway in the successful replication of rotavirus and NSP5 hyperphosphorylation in rotavirus-infected cells. In contrast inhibition of GSK3β activity by LiCl, increased in general, the number of foci by greater than 2-fold for all viral strains studied. These results suggest that MEK1/2 pathway majorly contributes to GSK3β inactivation in rotavirus infected cells. Thus, our results reveal that rotavirus activates both the PI3K/Akt and FAK/ERK1/2 MAPK pathways and appears to utilize them as a strategy to activate mTOR, and inhibit GSK3β through phosphorylation on serine 9, the negative regulator of rotavirus NSP5 phosphorylation, and thus facilitate translational competence of rotaviral mRNAs during virus replication cycle. It was shown previously in the laboratory by co-immunoprecipitation assay that Hsp70 interacts with rotaviral proteins VP1 and VP4 in rotavirus-infected mammalian cells. In this study, the interactions between Hsp70 with VP1 and VP4 were further evaluated in vitro by GST-pull down assay. It was observed that the N-terminal ATPase and C-terminal peptide-binding domain of Hsp70 is necessary for its direct interaction with VP1 and VP4. The presence of Hsp70 in purified double-and triple-layered virus particles further supported the observed interactions of rotaviral proteins VP1 and VP4 with Hsp70. However, the specific interaction observed between Hsp70 and rotaviral capsid proteins, VP1 and VP4 in viral particles suggests that Hsp70 has an important role during rotavirus assembly which requires further investigation.
9

Structural and Biophysical Studies of Pathological Determinants in Cancer and Infectious Diseases

January 2020 (has links)
abstract: This work advances structural and biophysical studies of three proteins important in disease. First protein of interest is the Francisella tularensis outer membrane protein A (FopA), which is a virulence determinant of tularemia. This work describes recombinant expression in Escherichia coli and successful purification of membrane translocated FopA. The purified protein was dimeric as shown by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) analysis, with an abundance of β-strands based on circular dichroism spectroscopy. SAXS data supports the presence of a pore. Furthermore, protein crystals of membrane translocated FopA were obtained with preliminary X-ray diffraction data. The identified crystallization condition provides the means towards FopA structure determination; a valuable tool for structure-based design of anti-tularemia therapeutics. Next, the nonstructural protein μNS of avian reoviruses was investigated using in vivo crystallization and serial femtosecond X-ray crystallography. Avian reoviruses infect poultry flocks causing significant economic losses. μNS is crucial in viral factory formation facilitating viral replication within host cells. Thus, structure-based targeting of μNS has the potential to disrupt intracellular viral propagation. Towards this goal, crystals of EGFP-tagged μNS (EGFP-μNS (448-605)) were produced in insect cells. The crystals diffracted to 4.5 Å at X-ray free electron lasers using viscous jets as crystal delivery methods and initial electron density maps were obtained. The resolution reported here is the highest described to date for μNS, which lays the foundation towards its structure determination. Finally, structural, and functional studies of human Threonine aspartase 1 (Taspase1) were performed. Taspase1 is overexpressed in many liquid and solid malignancies. In the present study, using strategic circular permutations and X-ray crystallography, structure of catalytically active Taspase1 was resolved. The structure reveals the conformation of a 50 residues long fragment preceding the active side residue (Thr234), which has not been structurally characterized previously. This fragment adopted a straight helical conformation in contrast to previous predictions. Functional studies revealed that the long helix is essential for proteolytic activity in addition to the active site nucleophilic residue (Thr234) mediated proteolysis. Together, these findings enable a new approach for designing anti-cancer drugs by targeting the long helical fragment. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Biochemistry 2020
10

Molecular studies of the hepatitis C virus : the role of IRES activity for therapy response, and the impact of the non-structural protein NS4B on the viral proliferation /

Lindström, Hannah Kim, January 2006 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2006. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.

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