Publications by authors named "Avijeet Kulshrestha"

Plasma membrane-induced protein folding and conformational transitions play a central role in cellular homeostasis. Several transmembrane proteins are folded in the complex lipid milieu to acquire a specific structure and function. Bacterial pore forming toxins (PFTs) are proteins expressed by a large class of pathogenic bacteria that exploit the plasma membrane environment to efficiently undergo secondary structure changes, oligomerize, and form transmembrane pores.

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Several bacterial infections are mediated by pore-forming toxins (PFTs), a subclass of proteins that oligomerize on mammalian cell membranes forming lytic nanopores. Cytolysin A (ClyA), an α-PFT, undergoes a dramatic conformational change restructuring its two membrane-binding motifs (the β-tongue and the N-terminus helix), during pore formation. A complete molecular picture for this key transition and the driving force behind the secondary structure change upon membrane binding remain elusive.

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The transition of an α-helix to a β-sheet in proteins is among the most complex conformational changes seen in biomolecular systems. Due to long time scales involved in the transition, it is challenging to study such protein conformational changes using direct molecular dynamics simulations. This limitation is typically overcome using an indirect approach wherein one computes the free energy landscape associated with the transition.

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