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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.
171

Comparative X-ray structure analyses of multidentate transition metal complexes : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Chemistry at the University of Canterbury /

Flood, Kelly-Jayne. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--University of Canterbury, 2006. / Typescript (photocopy). "July 2006." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 69-72). Also available via the World Wide Web.
172

A structural view of beta-galactosidase in action /

Juers, Douglas H., January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2000. / Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-211). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
173

X-ray interfacial crystallography of water on calcite /

Geissbühler, Marc Phillip, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 166-172).
174

Rare Sidechain Conformations in Proteins and DNA

Hintze, Bradley Joel January 2015 (has links)
<p>Medical advances often come as a result of understanding the underlying mechanisms of life. Life, in this sense, happens at various scales. A very complex and interesting one is the molecular scale. Understanding life’s mechanistic details at this level will provide the most promising therapies to modern ailments. Because of structure and function’s close relationship, knowledge of macromolecular structure provides invaluable insight into molecular mechanism.</p><p>A major tool used to get structural information at the molecular scale is X-ray crystallography. Such experiments result in an electron density map from which a model is built. Building such a model is a difficult task, especially at low resolu- tion where detailed features in the electron density deteriorate making it difficult to interpret. However, many advances in the field have greatly eased the model build- ing task, in fact, at high resolutions it has become automated. However, human inspection is still required to get a correct solution.</p><p>The largest boon to model building has been the application of structural knowl- edge. A prominent example is bond and dihedral angles. We often know what is absolutely not allowed and often convince ourselves we know everything that is al- lowed. This work focuses on the fuzzy border between allowed and disallowed. The hypothesis is that rare structural conformations exist but one needs to take great care in modeling them.</p><p>This work has two major components – rotamers (protein sidechain conformation)</p><p>and Hoogsteen base pairing in DNA. I first describe methods used to gain empirical knowledge about rotamers and how that knowledge is used in model validation. Part of this knowledge is rotamer-dependent bond angle deviations. I describe how the observation and quantitation of these deviations is used in a novel set of restraints in protein structure refinement. To provide structural context to rare rotamers, I describe where and why some occur.</p><p>My DNA work has focused on Hoogsteen base pairing. I describe a collaborative survey of existing Hoogsteen base pairs in the PDB. Lessons learned during the survey led to the other DNA topic, the detection and correction of mismodeled purines. I identified Hoogsteens in the PDB mismodeled as Watson-Crick base pairs. This work underscores that Hoogsteens are extremely rare but nonetheless do occur.</p><p>The fuzzy borderland between allowed and disallowed is a strange place filled with the most interesting structural features. My work here has focused on this area, bringing into view many rare conformations. Going forward we need to ensure that conformational frequency is taken into account during model building, refinement, and validation.</p> / Dissertation
175

Identification and analysis of ligand binding sites by computational mapping

Ngan, Chi Ho January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / Ligand binding sites in proteins generally include "hot spots" that contribute a large fraction of the binding free energy and, therefore, are of prime interest in drug design. To find hot spots on the protein surface, a protein can be screened against libraries of small organic molecules to identify interaction sites using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy or the X-ray crystallographic technique Multiple Solvent Crystal Structures (MSCS). Small organic molecules can bind at several locations on the surface of a protein, but many different molecules congregate only in "consensus sites" identifying the hot spots. The mapping algorithm FTMAP is a computational analogue of experimental fragment screening methods. The principles of computational mapping were used for the development and testing of the binding site identification algorithm FTSITE, implemented as a web-based server. Finding ligand binding sites in silico is a classical challenge, and the success rate of identifying the ligand binding site as the first predicted site has increased to 83% during the last decade. FfSITE, based on biophysical modeling of protein-ligand interactions, increased the success rate to 94% on the same established test sets. Critical to the success of FfSITE is the use of multiple small molecules as probes; screening by X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy had demonstrated a tendency of ligand binding sites to bind small organic compounds ranging 1n shapes, sizes, and polarities. Further, FfSITE does not use surrogate measures of ligand binding propensity such as site geometries and dimensions. It was shown that FTSITE can also successfully identify allosteric ligand binding sites that can serve as candidates for drug design. Furthermore, the hot spot information provided by FfMAP was shown to guide the development of core fragments, found by experimental fragment screening , into optimal ligands for a number of drug target proteins. Computational mapping can also be used for fragment-based drug design by finding fragments with preference for some regions of the binding site. To facilitate this analysis , a server enabling the fast generation of force field parameters for user-specified small molecules or fragments was developed. / 2031-01-02
176

Structural and Functional Interrogation of Single Amino Acid Residues in Fluorescent Proteins

January 2012 (has links)
abstract: Acquisition of fluorescence via autocatalytic processes is unique to few proteins in the natural world. Fluorescent proteins (FPs) have been integral to live-cell imaging techniques for decades; however, mechanistic information is still emerging fifty years after the discovery of the original green fluorescent protein (GFP). Modification of the fluorescence properties of the proteins derived from GFP allows increased complexity of experiments and consequently, information content of the data acquired. The importance of arginine-96 in GFP has been widely discussed. It has been established as vital to the kinetics of chromophore maturation and to the overall fold of GFP before post-translational self-modification. Its value during chromophore maturation has been demonstrated by mutational studies and a hypothesis proposed for its catalytic function. A strategy is described herein to determine its pKa value via NMR to determine whether Arg96 possesses the chemical capacity to function as a general base during GFP chromophore biosynthesis. Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) techniques commonly employ Enhanced Cyan Fluorescent Proteins (ECFPs) and their derivatives as donor fluorophores useful in real-time, live-cell imaging. These proteins have a tryptophan-derived chromophore that emits light in the blue region of the visible spectrum. Most ECFPs suffer from fluorescence instability, which, coupled with their low quantum yield, makes data analysis unreliable. The structural heterogeneity of these proteins also results in undesirable photophysical characteristics. Recently, mCerulean3, a ten amino acid mutant of ECFP, was introduced as an optimized FRET-donor protein (1). The amino acids changed include a mobile residue, Asp148, which has been mutated to a glycine in the new construct, and Thr65 near the chromophore has been mutated to a serine, the wild-type residue at this location. I have solved the x-ray crystal structure of mCerulean3 at low pH and find that the pH-dependent isomerization has been eliminated. The chromophore is in the trans-conformation previously observed in Cerulean at pH 8. The mutations that increase the quantum yield and improve fluorescence brightness result in a stable, bright donor fluorophore well-suited for use in quantitative microscopic imaging. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Chemistry 2012
177

Crystallographic and Modeling Studies Suggest that the SKICH Domains from Different Protein Families Share a Common Ig-like Fold but harbor substantial Structural Variations

Yang, Yang 01 December 2014 (has links)
TAX1BP1 is a pleiotropic multi-domain protein involved in many important biological processes such as signal transduction, cell growth and apoptosis, transcriptional coactivation, membrane trafficking, neurotransmission and autophagy. The N-terminus of TAX1BP1 contains a SKICH domain implicated in autophagy. SKICH domains are also present in four other proteins including NDP52, CALCOCO1, SKIP and PIPP. The SKICH domains of SKIP and PIPP mediate plasma membrane localization. The functions of the SKICH domains of NDP52 and CALCOCO1 are not known. We solved the crystal structure of the TAX1BP1 SKICH domain, which has an Ig-like fold similar to the NDP52 SKICH domain. Extensive pairwise and clustered aromatic π-stacking interactions are present in the TAX1BP1 SKICH domain. The aromatic residues mediating these interactions can be classified into four groups with varying degrees of conservation among different protein families. The interactions mediated by highly conserved residues are found in the interior and one outward face of the Ig-like β-barrel, representing common structural features of the SKICH domains. Three TAX1BP1-specific pairwise interactions locate in the loop regions, each augmented by a proline-aromatic interaction. The three proline-aromatic clusters are linked together by more generic hydrophobic interactions, forming a unique hydrophobic surface at one end of the TAX1BP1 SKICH domain. The structures and homologous models of SKICH domains from different proteins reveal substantial differences in electrostatic surface properties of the domains. Together with existing biochemical data, results from the structural study suggest that an intact SKICH domain is required for the autophagy function of TAX1BP1.
178

A structural view of beta-galactosidase in action

Juers, Douglas H., 1965- January 2000 (has links)
Adviser: Brian W. Matthews. xii, 211 p. ; ill. (some col.) A print copy of this title is available through the UO Libraries under the call number: SCIENCE QP609.G3 J84 2000 / An atomic-level description of the presumed catalytic action of β-galactosidase is described. This large enzyme, from E. coli , carries out two reactions which allow the bacterium to live on the disaccharide lactose. First, it breaks down lactose to the two monosaccharides galactose and glucose. Second, it converts lactose into another disaccharide, allolactose, which is the inducer for the lac operon, and thus is the signal to the bacterium to produce more β-galactosidase. The work is based on high resolution x-ray crystallography and enzyme kinetics. A crystal form of β-galactosidase was isolated that permits data collection up to 1.5 à resolution. Using this crystal form, the structures of several ligands bound to the enzyme were determined. These ligands were chosen to mimic various points in the reaction: binding of substrate, covalent intermediates, transition states, and products. Together these complexes suggest a reaction coordinate for β-galactosidase which clarifies and enhances previous ideas about the reaction mechanism. The reaction includes a conformational change triggered by the progression of the substrate towards the transition state. Additional investigation suggests that this conformational change is involved in determining whether the enzyme carries out its hydrolysis or isomerization reaction. Considerations of the structure in the context of other related enzymes suggest an evolutionary path for β-galactosidase. It is suggested that a progenitor enzyme which catalyzed the hydrolysis of long polysaccharide substrates recruited additional domains which permit β-galactosidase to act on smaller substrates and produce the inducer, allolactose. This dissertation includes both my previously published and co-authored material.
179

Carrageenan desulfation and depolymerization by the marine isolate Pseudoalteromonas sp. PS47

Hettle, John Andrew 24 December 2018 (has links)
Carrageenans are sulfated polysaccharides found in the cell walls of red algae with 20 – 30 % of the dry weight coming from sulfate esters. The understanding of how heterotrophic bacteria desulfate and depolymerize carrageenan has become a rather arduous endeavor as there are 15 different classes of carrageenan distinguished by the degree of sulfation and the presence or absence of a unique galactose derivative, the 3,6-anhydro-D-galactose. The depolymerization of carrageenan requires the removal of the sulfate substituents, a role fulfilled by sulfatases, which hydrolyze sulfate esters playing a key role in the regulation of sulfation states that determine the function of sulfated biomolecules. Through structural, mechanistic, and sequence-based studies a highly conserved sulfate-binding motif has been identified among sulfatases; however, the molecular determinants for substrate specificity remain largely speculative. Additionally, the largest sulfatase family S1, requires a unique catalytic residue resulting from a post-translationally modified cysteine in order to be functional thus making them difficult to study in vitro. Using a strain of Pseudoalteromonas sp. PS47 isolated in the Boraston Lab I show that the depolymerization of carrageenan is dependent on the degree of sulfation and that recognition of the leaving group is the driving force behind S1 specificity. With little information on the recognition of sulfated biomolecules, the X-ray crystal structures of the three sulfatases from PS47; PsS1_19A, PsS1_19B, and PsS1_NC in complex with their biological substrates provides a deeper understanding of how carbohydrate specific sulfatases recognize their cognate substrate and how this recognition of the leaving group can be extended to other S1 sulfatase families. Furthermore, I show that an exo-acting glycoside hydrolase (PsGH42) requires desulfation of carrageenan oligosaccharides before it can hydrolyze the β-glycosidic linkage, a new specificity of family 42. This research demonstrates how carrageenan depolymerization is entirely dependent on the functionality and specificity of the sulfatases found within the carrageenan utilization locus. / Graduate / 2019-12-07
180

Molecular mechanisms of Hedgehog signal transduction by the G-protein coupled receptor smoothened

Byrne, Eamon January 2017 (has links)
The Hedgehog signalling pathway is an essential developmental pathway present in all bilaterians that is involved in embryogenesis, body patterning and stem cell homeostasis. Dysregulation of the Hh pathway leads to various kinds of cancer, such as basal cell carcinoma and medulloblastoma. Smoothened (SMO), a Frizzled-type G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR), is the essential transmembrane signal transducer within the Hh pathway, conveying the signal from the upstream transmembrane protein, Patched1 (Ptc1), to the downstream intracellular proteins. The mechanisms by which SMO transmits the Hh signal from the extracellular environment, through the plasma membrane and to the intracellular proteins are not known. In this thesis, I present my work into the structural and functional characterisation of the extracellular and transmembrane domains (TMD) of human SMO in order to better understand the molecular mechanisms of its signal transduction. The extracellular region of SMO contains a highly conserved cysteine-rich domain (CRD) and a linker domain (LD). I present the first crystal structure of the CRD, LD and TMD of SMO, which is also the first crystal structure of a GPCR with a large functional extracellular domain. This structure revealed a domain architecture for SMO that enables regulation of its transmembrane domain by its extracellular domains. It also revealed a cholesterol molecule bound to the CRD, which we subsequently determined to be a new endogenous small-molecule agonist for SMO. I present five further structures of SMO bound to different small molecule agonists and antagonists. Together, these structures demonstrate that the position of the CRD relative to the TMD reflects the activation state of SMO. We also generated nanobodies against the extracellular region of SMO in order to stabilise its conformation. These studies not only improve our understanding of the workings of a key transmembrane protein within a fundamental signalling pathway but will also aid efforts to develop better therapeutics for an important cancer target.

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