Publications by authors named "Alona Pavlova"

The most frequently used method for establishing epidemiological relationships between Plesiomonas shigelloides strains is O:H serotyping. However, a number of strains are not serotypeable and isolates from diverse sources can display the same serovar. Moreover, since the zoonotic nature of Plesiomonas has been suggested and this hypothesis is based on the identical serovars found in animals and humans, we intend to use four DNA-based techniques: random amplified polymorphic DNA-PCR, enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus-PCR, repetitive extragenic palindromic-PCR, and pulsed field gel electrophoresis in order to screen 24 strains belonging to nine O:H serovars isolated from humans, animals, and the environment.

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Replacement of the three N-terminal residues preceding the conserved Gly of cystatin A by the corresponding 10-residue long segment of cystatin C increased the affinity of the inhibitor for the major lysosomal cysteine proteinase, cathepsin B, by approximately 15-fold. This tighter binding was predominantly due to a higher overall association rate constant. Characterization of the interaction with an inactive Cys29 to Ala variant of cathepsin B indicated that the higher rate constant was a result of an increased ability of the N-terminal region of the chimeric inhibitor to promote displacement of the cathepsin B occluding loop in the second binding step.

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The aim of this work was to elucidate the roles of individual residues within the flexible second binding loop of human cystatin A in the inhibition of cysteine proteases. Four recombinant variants of the inhibitor, each with a single mutation, L73G, P74G, Q76G or N77G, in the most exposed part of this loop were generated by PCR-based site-directed mutagenesis. The binding of these variants to papain, cathepsin L, and cathepsin B was characterized by equilibrium and kinetic methods.

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