• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 6
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 10
  • 10
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 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

Biochemical characterization of catalytic mechanism and substrate recognition by the atypical SPOUT tRNA methyltransferase, Trm10

Krishnamohan, Aiswarya Lakshmi January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
2

SUBSTRATE SPECIFIC CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE PROTEIN SUBUNIT OF E.COLI RNASE P TO SUBSTRATE RECOGNITION AND CATALYSIS

SUN, LEI January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
3

STRUCTURAL BASIS OF SUBSTRATE RECOGNITION IN THIMET OLIGOPEPTIDASE AND DEVELOPMENT OF NANOPARTICLES FOR THERAPEUTIC ENZYME DELIVERY

Wagner, Jonathan Mark 01 January 2012 (has links)
Neuropeptidases are responsible for degradation of signaling peptides in the central nervous system and periphery. Some neuropeptidases have also been shown to play a role as part of the cell’s hydrolytic machinery responsible for breaking down proteins and peptides into amino acids, and these enzymes therefore influence small peptide availability for antigen presentation. A better understanding of how neuropeptidases recognize their substrates could lead to therapeutics that modulate the activity of these important enzymes. Alternatively, re-engineering these enzymes to selectively hydrolyze undesirable peptides could make them attractive as therapeutics themselves. A key question in understanding the activity of these enzymes is how they are able to recognize a variety of seemingly unrelated amino acid sequences as cleavage sites. We are investigating the basis for this general substrate recognition in neuropeptidases using thimet oligopeptidase (TOP) as a model. Crystal structures of TOP in complex with a variety of substrates and inhibitors shed light on the mechanisms underlying substrate recognition and pave the way for re-targeting substrate recognition in these enzymes. Nano test tube particles have been proposed as a means of delivering therapeutics such as enzymes. However, the template synthesis method for nano test tube production does not produce therapeutic quantities. In order to take full advantage of re-engineered neuropeptidases a new method for nano test tube synthesis has been developed. We show that a non-destructive template synthesis methodology can be applied to produce nano test tube particles in quantities useful for therapeutic enzyme immobilization.
4

Atomistic Insights into Binding Pocket Dynamics and Regulation in the Interleukin-2 T-Cell Kinase SH2 Domain

Momin, Mohamed 08 August 2017 (has links)
Although the regulation of proteins functions by allosteric interactions has been identified in many subcellular processes, long-range conformational changes in proteins are also known to be induced by molecular switches. A molecular switch based on the cis-trans isomerization of a peptidyl-prolyl bond is capable of inducing a conformational change directly to the protein backbone, which is then propagated throughout the system. However, these switches are elusive and difficult to identify due to their intrinsic dynamics in the biomolecules where they are found. Herein, we explore the conformational dynamics and free energy landscape of the SH2 domain of Interleukin-2-inducible T-Cell Kinase (ITK) to fully understand the conformational coupling between the distal cis-trans molecular switch, and its phosphotyrosine binding pocket. Using multiple microsecond-long all-atom molecular dynamics simulations in explicit water for over a total of 60 μs, we show that the cis-trans isomerization of the Asn286-Pro287 peptidyl-prolyl bond is directly correlated to the dynamics of the phosphotyrosine binding pocket, in agreement with previous NMR studies. While the cis state is localized to a single free energy basin and less dynamic, the trans state samples two distinct conformations of its binding pocket – one that recognizes the phosphotyrosine motif, and another that is similar the cis state. These results provide an atomic-level description of a less-well understood allosteric regulation by a peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans molecular switch that could aid in the understanding of normal and aberrant sub-cellular process and the identification of these elusive molecular switches in other proteins.
5

Molecular Basis of Lipid Acyl Chain Selection by the Integral Outer Membrane Phospholipid:Lipid A Palmitoyltransferase PagP from Escherichia Coli

Adil Khan, Mohammed 01 1900 (has links)
The role of membrane-intrinsic enzymes of lipid metabolism in complex biological processes is being realized through comprehensive structure function studies. Detailed analysis of substrate-enzyme interactions occurring within the restrictive membrane environment has proved to be exceedingly challenging. Using detergent micelles, we describe a detailed model for substrate recognition and binding by the outer-membrane intrinsic enzyme PagP from Escherichia coli. PagP is an 8-stranded antiparallel β-barrel that transfers a palmitoyl group from a phospholipid molecule to lipid A, the endotoxin component of lipopolysaccharide. This simple modification provides bacterial resistance to host antimicrobial peptides and attenuates the inflammatory response signalled through the host toll-like receptor 4 pathway. We describe a molecular embrasure and a crenel, which display weakened transmembrane β-strand hydrogen bonding, to provide site-specific routes for lateral entry of substrates into the PagP active site. A Tyr147 localized to the L4 loop gates the entry of the phospholipid substrate through the crenel, while lipid A enters via the embrasure. The side chains of the catalytic residues that are located in the extracellular loops point towards the central axis of the enzyme, directly above the active site. An acyl-chain binding pocket known as the hydrocarbon ruler is buried within the transmembrane β-barrel structure, and is optimized to accommodate a 16-carbon saturated palmitate chain. The hydrocarbon ruler, therefore, accounts for PagP's stringent selectivity for a palmitate chain. Substituting Gly88 lining the floor of the hydrocarbon ruler with residues possessing linear, unbranched, aliphatic side chains changes the selectivity of PagP to utilize shorter acyl chains. The serendipitous discovery of an exciton interaction between Trp66 and Tyr26 at the floor of the hydrocarbon ruler provides an intrinsic spectroscopic probe to monitor the methylene unit acyl-chain resolution of PagP. A compromised acyl chain resolution of the Gly88Cys mutant is attributed to an unexpected decrease of the Cys sulfhydryl group pKa within the β-barrel interior, resulting in a burying of a charged thiolate within the PagP core. The structural perturbation associated with the Cys thiolate extinguishes the exciton and expands the acyl-chain selectivity. These molecular details of lateral lipid diffusion and acyl-chain selection provide the first such example for any membrane-intrinsic enzyme of lipid metabolism. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
6

Quantum Chemical Studies of Enzymatic Reaction Mechanisms

Manta, Bianca January 2017 (has links)
Computer modeling of enzymes is a valuable complement to experiments. Quantum chemical studies of enzymatic reactions can provide a detailed description of the reaction mechanism and elucidate the roles of various residues in the active site. Different reaction pathways can be analyzed, and their feasibility be established based on calculated energy barriers. In the present thesis, density functional theory has been used to study the active sites and reaction mechanisms of three different enzymes, cytosine deaminase (CDA) from Escherichia coli, ω-transaminase from Chromobacterium violaceum (Cv-ωTA) and dinitrogenase reductase-activating glycohydrolase (DraG) from Rhodospirillum rubrum. The cluster approach has been employed to design models of the active sites based on available crystal structures. The geometries and energies of transition states and intermediates along various reaction pathways have been calculated, and used to construct the energy graphs of the reactions. In the study of CDA (Paper I), two different tautomers of a histidine residue were considered. The obtained reaction mechanism was found to support the main features of the previously proposed mechanism. The sequence of the events was established, and the residues needed for the proton transfer steps were elucidated. In the study of Cv-ωTA (Paper II and Paper III), two active site models were employed to study the conversion of two different substrates, a hydrophobic amine and an amino acid. Differences and similarities in the reaction mechanisms of the two substrates were established, and the role of an arginine residue in the dual substrate recognition was confirmed. In the study of DraG (Paper IV), two different substrate-binding modes and two different protonation states of an aspartate residue were considered. The coordination of the first-shell ligands and the substrate to the two manganese ions in the active site was characterized, and a possible proton donor in the first step of the proposed reaction mechanism was identified. / <p>At the time of the doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 4: Manuscript.</p>
7

Caractérisation moléculaire des signaux de sécrétion des protéines sécrétées par le système de sécrétion de type II de la bactérie phytopathogène Dickeya dadantii / Molecular characterization of secretion signals of proteins secreted by the type II secretion system of the phytopathogenic bacterium Dickeya dadantii

Guschinskaya, Natalia 03 June 2014 (has links)
Le système de sécrétion de type II (T2SS) assure le transport de protéines sous une forme repliée du périplasme dans le milieu extracellulaire. Ce système est largement exploité par les bactéries à Gram négatif pathogènes des plantes, des animaux et de l'homme où il permet la sécrétion de facteurs de virulence (des toxines et des enzymes lytiques). La bactérie phytopathogène Dickeya dadantii utilise le T2SS appelé Out, pour sécréter une douzaine de pectinases qui dégradent les parois des cellules végétales. Les protéines sécrétées par le T2SS n'ont pas de motif de sécrétion apparent et leur sécrétion implique plusieurs interactions transitoires avec les composants du système. La nature moléculaire de ces interactions n'est pas connue. Afin de capter ces interactions transitoires lors du processus de sécrétion, j'ai utilisé le pontage dirigé in vivo. Cette technique repose sur l'incorporation d'un analogue photoréactif d'un acide aminé (le para-benzoyl Lphénylalanine, pBpa) à la place des résidus soupçonnés de faire partie d'un site d'interaction. Le pontage est ensuite activé par une courte exposition des cellules aux UV ce qui permet la formation des complexes protéiques. Tout d'abord, cette technique a été utilisée pour introduire le pBpa dans plusieurs régions exposées à la surface d'une exoprotéine, PelI. Cette stratégie a permis de mettre en évidence qu'un élément structural, la boucle 3 du domaine Fn3 de PelI, est impliquée dans l'interaction avec la sécrétine OutD, le composant du T2SS situé dans la membrane externe, et avec le domaine PDZ d'OutC, un composant de la membrane interne. Ces résultats suggèrent que la boucle 3 fait partie d'un motif de sécrétion. Deux autres régions ont été identifiées au sein de PelI : le linker entre les deux domaines de PelI qui est impliqué dans l'interaction avec OutD et une région exposée du domaine catalytique qui interagit avec la protéine OutC. La même approche a été utilisée pour introduire le pBpa dans les deux composants du T2SS, OutC et OutD. Ces expériences ont suggéré que le domaine PDZ d'OutC interagit avec une autre exoprotéine, PelB. Cette étude, de façon complémentaire à d'autres approches, nous a permis de démontrer certains détails moléculaires essentiels de la sécrétion par le T2SS / The type II secretion system (T2SS) transports folded proteins from the periplasm through the outer membrane into the milieu. In many pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria, the T2SS secretes various virulence factors in host tissue and is directly involved in pathogenesis. The phytopathogen Dickeya dadantii secretes a dozen of pectinases through a T2SS named Out. The secreted proteins are lacking an obvious common signal and secretion is thought to involve multiple transient interactions of folded exoproteins with several T2SS components. Molecular nature of these interactions remains unknown. To address this question we used an in vivo sitespecific photo-crosslinking approach to capture such transient interactions within the functional T2SS of D. dadantii. In this technique, the photo-crosslinker para-benzoyl-L-phenylalanine, pBpa, is introduced in vivo in place of a residue of interest and UV-irradiation of living cells provokes the formation of complexes between the protein of interest and its partners. First, in a systematic approach, pBpa was introduced at several surface-exposed sites of the secreted protein PelI. This strategy permitted us to identify that one structural element, loop 3 of Fn3 domain in PelI, interacts both with the secretin, the outer membrane T2SS component, and with the PDZ domain of OutC, an inner membrane T2SS component. These results suggest that this loop 3 is a part of the secretion motif. The same approach permitted us to identify two other regions of PelI interacting with the T2SS: a linker situated between the two domains of PelI, which interacts with OutD, and an exposed region of the catalytic domain of PelI interacting with OutC. In another approach, pBpa was introduced into the T2SS components, OutC and OutD. These experiments suggested that the PDZ domain of OutC interacts with the secreted protein PelB. This study, in complement with other approaches, allowed us to uncover some important molecular features of the protein secretion by the T2SS
8

Studies of conformational changes and dynamics accompanying substrate recognition, allostery and catalysis in bacteriophage lambda integrase

Subramaniam, Srisunder 19 April 2005 (has links)
No description available.
9

Ribosomal RNA Modification Enzymes : Structural and functional studies of two methyltransferases for 23S rRNA modification in Escherichia coli

Punekar, Avinash S. January 2014 (has links)
Escherichia coli ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is post-transcriptionally modified by site-specific enzymes. The role of most modifications is not known and little is known about how these enzymes recognize their target substrates. In this thesis, we have structurally and functionally characterized two S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM) dependent 23S rRNA methyltransferases (MTases) that act during the early stages of ribosome assembly in E. coli. RlmM methylates the 2'O-ribose of C2498 in 23S rRNA. We have solved crystal structures of apo RlmM at 1.9Å resolution and of an RlmM-SAM complex at 2.6Å resolution. The RlmM structure revealed an N-terminal THUMP domain and a C-terminal catalytic Rossmann-fold MTase domain. A continuous patch of conserved positive charge on the RlmM surface is likely used for RNA substrate recognition. The SAM-binding site is open and shallow, suggesting that the RNA substrate may be required for tight cofactor binding. Further, we have shown RlmM MTase activity on in vitro transcribed 23S rRNA and its domain V. RlmJ methylates the exocyclic N6 atom of A2030 in 23S rRNA. The 1.85Å crystal structure of RlmJ revealed a Rossmann-fold MTase domain with an inserted small subdomain unique to the RlmJ family. The 1.95Å structure of the RlmJ-SAH-AMP complex revealed that ligand binding induces structural rearrangements in the four loop regions surrounding the active site. The active site of RlmJ is similar to N6-adenine DNA MTases. We have shown RlmJ MTase activity on in vitro transcribed 23S rRNA and a minimal substrate corresponding to helix 72, specific for adenosine. Mutagenesis experiments show that residues Y4, H6, K18 and D164 are critical for catalytic activity. These findings have furthered our understanding of the structure, evolution, substrate recognition and mechanism of rRNA MTases.
10

Caractérisation structurale et thermodynamique de la reconnaissance du substrat par le ribozyme VS de Neurospora

Bouchard, Patricia 08 1900 (has links)
Les interactions ARN/ARN de type kissing-loop sont des éléments de structure tertiaire qui jouent souvent des rôles clés chez les ARN, tant au niveau fonctionnel que structural. En effet, ce type d’interaction est crucial pour plusieurs processus dépendant des ARN, notamment pour l’initiation de la traduction, la reconnaissance des ARN antisens et la dimérisation de génome rétroviral. Les interactions kissing-loop sont également importantes pour le repliement des ARN, puisqu’elles permettent d’établir des contacts à longue distance entre différents ARN ou encore entre les domaines éloignés d’un même ARN. Ce type d’interaction stabilise aussi les structures complexes des ARN fonctionnels tels que les ARNt, les riborégulateurs et les ribozymes. Comme d’autres ARN fonctionnels, le ribozyme VS de Neurospora contient une interaction kissing-loop importante. Celle-ci est impliquée dans la reconnaissance du substrat et se forme entre la tige-boucle I (stem-loop I, SLI) du substrat et la tige-boucle V (stem-loop V, SLV) du domaine catalytique. Des études biochimiques ont démontré que l’interaction kissing-loop I/V, dépendante du magnésium, implique trois paires de bases Watson-Crick (W-C). De plus, cette interaction est associée à un réarrangement de la structure du substrat, le faisant passer d’une conformation inactive dite unshifted à une conformation active dite shifted. Les travaux présentés dans cette thèse consistent en une caractérisation structurale et thermodynamique de l’interaction kissing-loop I/V du ribozyme VS, laquelle est formée de fragments d’ARN représentant les tige-boucles I et V dérivées du ribozyme VS (SLI et SLV). Cette caractérisation a été réalisée principalement par spectroscopie de résonance magnétique nucléaire (RMN) et par titrage calorimétrique isotherme (isothermal titration calorimetry, ITC) en utilisant différents complexes SLI/SLV dans lesquels l’ARN SLV est commun à tous les complexes, alors que différentes variations de l’ARN SLI ont été utilisées, soit en conformation shiftable ou preshifted. Les données d’ITC ont permis de démontrer qu’en présence d’une concentration saturante de magnésium, l’affinité d’un substrat SLI preshifted pour SLV est extrêmement élevée, rendant cette interaction plus stable que ce qui est prédit pour un duplexe d’ARN équivalent. De plus, l’étude effectuée par ITC montre que des ARN SLI preshifted présentent une meilleure affinité pour SLV que des ARN SLI shiftable, ce qui a permis de calculer le coût énergétique associé au réarrangement de structure du substrat. En plus de confirmer la formation des trois paires de bases W-C prédites à la jonction I/V, les études de RMN ont permis d’obtenir une preuve structurale directe du réarrangement structural des substrats SLI shiftable en présence de magnésium et de l’ARN SLV. La structure RMN d’un complexe SLI/SLV de grande affinité démontre que les boucles terminales de SLI et SLV forment chacune un motif U-turn, ce qui facilite l’appariement W-C intermoléculaire. Plusieurs autres interactions ont été définies à l’interface I/V, notamment des triplets de bases, ainsi que des empilements de bases. Ces interactions contribuent d’ailleurs à la création d’une structure présentant un empilement continu, c’est-à-dire qui se propage du centre de l’interaction jusqu’aux bouts des tiges de SLI et SLV. Ces études de RMN permettent donc de mieux comprendre la stabilité exceptionnelle de l’interaction kissing-loop I/V au niveau structural et mènent à l’élaboration d’un modèle cinétique de l’activation du substrat par le ribozyme VS. En considérant l’ensemble des données d’ITC et de RMN, l’étonnante stabilité de l’interaction I/V s’explique probablement par une combinaison de facteurs, dont les motifs U-turn, la présence d’un nucléotide exclu de la boucle de SLV (U700), la liaison de cations magnésium et l’empilement de bases continu à la jonction I/V. / Kissing loops are tertiary structure elements that often play key roles in functional RNAs. Their formation is central to many RNA-mediated processes, such as translation initiation, antisense recognition and retroviral dimerization. Kissing loops are also involved in RNA folding as they form long-range interactions between different RNAs or remote domains within the same RNA and stabilize the complex architecture of functional RNA, such as tRNA, riboswitch aptamers and ribozymes. Like several other functional RNAs, the Neurospora VS ribozyme contains an important kissing-loop interaction. The substrate recognition by the VS ribozyme depends largely on the formation of a magnesium-dependent kissing-loop interaction between stem-loop V (SLV) of the catalytic domain and stem-loop I (SLI) that defines the substrate domain. It has been shown from biochemical studies that the I/V kissing-loop interaction involves three Watson-Crick base pairs and is associated with a structural rearrangement of the SLI substrate from an unshifted and inactive to a shifted and active conformation. Here, we present a thermodynamic and structural characterization of the VS ribozyme I/V kissing-loop interaction using isolated stem-loop fragments (SLI and SLV). Both isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy studies were conducted with several SLI/SLV complexes using a common SLV, but either shiftable or preshifted SLI variants. From the ITC studies, we show that, under saturating amount of magnesium ions, the affinity of the preshifted SLI variants for SLV is remarkably high, the interaction being more stable than predicted for a comparable duplex. In addition, these ITC studies demonstrate that preshifted SLI variants have higher affinity for SLV than shiftable SLI variants, and these results allow us to evaluate the energetic cost of the conformational shift in SLI. From the NMR studies, we confirm formation of three Watson-Crick base pairs at the kissing-loop junction and provide direct evidence on the structural rearrangement of shiftable SLI variants in the presence of magnesium and SLV. The NMR structure of a high-affinity SLI/SLV complex demonstrates that both the SLI and SLV loops adopt U-turn structures, which facilitate intermolecular Watson-Crick base pairing. Several other interactions at the I/V interface, including base triples and base stacking help create a continuously stacked structure. These NMR studies provide a structural basis for the high stability of the kissing-loop interaction and lead us to propose a kinetic model for substrate activation by the VS ribozyme. Taken together, our ITC and NMR data suggest that the remarkable stability of the I/V interaction is likely provided by a combination of several elements, especially the presence of the U-turn motif, the presence of an extruded nucleotide in SLV (U700), the binding of magnesium ions and the extensive base stacking interactions at the junction.

Page generated in 0.1387 seconds