Publications by authors named "Christina Sizun"

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) poses a significant treatment challenge in pediatric patients due to its aggressive nature and difficulty in crossing the blood-brain barrier with effective therapies. ONC201 (dordaviprone) shows promises in inducing apoptosis in cancer cells but suffers from poor water solubility and stability issues. Moreover, conventional solubilizing agents acceptable in formulations intended for adult patients are not suitable for pediatric use.

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Cutaneous leishmaniasis, caused by Leishmania parasites, requires treatments with fewer side effects than those currently available. The development of a topical solution based on amphotericin B (AmB) was pursued. The considerable interest in deep eutectic solvents (DESs) and their remarkable advantages inspired the search for a suitable hydrophobic excipient.

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Although amphiphilic cyclodextrin derivatives (ACDs) serve as valuable building blocks for nanomedicine formulations, their widespread production still encounters various challenges, limiting large-scale manufacturing. This work focuses on a robust alternative pathway using mineral base catalysis to transesterify β-cyclodextrin with long-chain vinyl esters, yielding ACD with modular and controlled hydrocarbon chain grafting. ACDs with a wide range of degrees of substitution (DS) were reliably synthesized, as indicated by extensive physicochemical characterization, including MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry.

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Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) RNA synthesis takes place in cytoplasmic viral factories also called inclusion bodies (IBs), which are membrane-less organelles concentrating the viral RNA polymerase complex. The assembly of IBs is driven by liquid-liquid phase separation promoted by interactions between the viral nucleoprotein N and the phosphoprotein P. We recently demonstrated that cyclopamine (CPM) inhibits RSV multiplication by disorganizing and hardening IBs.

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This edition of the continuing "Biophysical Reviews Meet the Editors Series" introduces Dr. Christina Sizun, physical chemist, member of the Biophysical Reviews editorial board and current Treasurer of the International Union for Pure and Applied Biophysics (IUPAB).

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Translationally Controlled Tumor Protein (TCTP) serves as a pro-survival factor in tumor cells, inhibiting the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway by enhancing the function of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members Mcl-1 and Bcl-xL. TCTP specifically binds to Bcl-xL, preventing Bax-dependent Bcl-xL-induced cytochrome c release, and it reduces Mcl-1 turnover by inhibiting its ubiquitination, thereby decreasing Mcl-1-mediated apoptosis. TCTP harbors a BH3-like motif that forms a β-strand buried in the globular domain of the protein.

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Article Synopsis
  • The interaction between the phosphoprotein P and nucleoprotein N of the Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) is crucial for forming the holo RSV polymerase needed for viral replication.
  • In testing antiviral drugs that target the N-P interaction, researchers found that the binding dynamics are influenced by the length and flexibility of C-terminal P peptides and their phosphorylation status.
  • The study resulted in identifying key features for an effective RSV N-P inhibition assay, validated with the M76 molecule, a compound with antiviral properties, paving the way for further drug screening.
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Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are prosthetic groups of proteins biosynthesized on scaffold proteins by highly conserved multi-protein machineries. Biosynthesis of Fe-S clusters into the ISCU scaffold protein is initiated by ferrous iron insertion, followed by sulfur acquisition, via a still elusive mechanism. Notably, whether iron initially binds to the ISCU cysteine-rich assembly site or to a cysteine-less auxiliary site via N/O ligands remains unclear.

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Human RSV is the leading cause of infantile bronchiolitis in the world and one of the major causes of childhood deaths in resource-poor settings. It is a major unmet target for vaccines and anti-viral drugs. Respiratory syncytial virus has evolved a unique strategy to evade host immune response by coding for two non-structural proteins NS1 and NS2.

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Pneumoviruses include pathogenic human and animal viruses, the most known and studied being the human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV) and the metapneumovirus (hMPV), which are the major cause of severe acute respiratory tract illness in young children worldwide, and main pathogens infecting elderly and immune-compromised people. The transcription and replication of these viruses take place in specific cytoplasmic inclusions called inclusion bodies (IBs). These activities depend on viral polymerase L, associated with its cofactor phosphoprotein P, for the recognition of the viral RNA genome encapsidated by the nucleoprotein N, forming the nucleocapsid (NC).

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TCTP protein is a pharmacological target in cancer and TCTP inhibitors such as sertraline have been evaluated in clinical trials. The direct interaction of TCTP with the drugs sertraline and thioridazine has been reported in vitro by SPR experiments to be in the ∼30-50 μM K range (Amson et al. Nature Med 2012), supporting a TCTP-dependent mode of action of the drugs on tumor cells.

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The phosphoprotein P of () is an essential co-factor of the viral RNA polymerase L. Its prime function is to recruit L to the ribonucleocapsid composed of the viral genome encapsidated by the nucleoprotein N. phosphoproteins often contain a high degree of disorder.

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The process of genome packaging in most of viruses is poorly understood, notably the role of the genome itself in the nucleocapsid structure. For simple icosahedral single-stranded RNA viruses, the branched topology due to the RNA secondary structure is thought to lower the free energy required to complete a virion. We investigate the structure of nucleocapsids packaging RNA segments with various degrees of compactness by small-angle x-ray scattering and cryotransmission electron microscopy.

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Liposomal formulations represent attractive biocompatible and tunable drug delivery systems for peptide drugs. Among the tools to analyze their physicochemical properties, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, despite being an obligatory technique to characterize molecular structure and dynamics in chemistry as well as in structural biology, yet appears to be rather sparsely used to study drug-liposome formulations. In this work, we exploited several facets of liquid-state NMR spectroscopy to characterize liposomal delivery systems for the apelin-derived K14P peptide and K14P modified by Nα-fatty acylation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Phosphoproteins (P) are crucial components of viral polymerases, linking the catalytic subunit to the ribonucleoprotein template, featuring a conserved overall structure despite their diverse forms.
  • *They are primarily small, multidomain proteins with an oligomerization domain that has a defined 3D structure, while most of their regions are intrinsically disordered, allowing flexibility in interactions.
  • *P proteins facilitate viral transcription and replication by forming transient complexes with viral and cellular proteins, showcasing the structural adaptability of intrinsically disordered protein domains.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the interactions between Matrix (M) and Phosphoprotein (P) of Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) to understand how they contribute to the assembly and release of virus-like particles (VLPs), which mimic natural RSV virions.
  • - Researchers employed a Split Nano Luciferase assay and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) to confirm a direct interaction between M and P, identifying specific interaction sites on P that are crucial for VLP formation.
  • - This work highlights the importance of P in the RSV life cycle, suggesting it not only plays a key role in the virus's early transcription and replication but is also critical for later stages involving assembly and budding of new viruses, which
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Prions result from a drastic conformational change of the host-encoded cellular prion protein (PrP), leading to the formation of β-sheet-rich, insoluble, and protease-resistant self-replicating assemblies (PrP). The cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in spontaneous prion formation in sporadic and inherited human prion diseases or equivalent animal diseases are poorly understood, in part because cell models of spontaneously forming prions are currently lacking. Here, extending studies on the role of the H2 α-helix C terminus of PrP, we found that deletion of the highly conserved HTVTTTT segment of ovine PrP led to spontaneous prion formation in the RK13 rabbit kidney cell model.

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The antipsychotic drug chlorpromazine (CPZ) has potential for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia, if central nervous system side-effects resulting from its passage through the blood-brain barrier can be prevented. A robust drug delivery system for repurposed CPZ would be drug-in-cyclodextrin-in-liposome that would redirect the drug away from the brain while avoiding premature release in the circulation. As a first step, CPZ complexation with cyclodextrin (CD) has been studied.

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Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are essential protein cofactors whose biosynthetic defects lead to severe diseases among which is Friedreich's ataxia caused by impaired expression of frataxin (FXN). Fe-S clusters are biosynthesized on the scaffold protein ISCU, with cysteine desulfurase NFS1 providing sulfur as persulfide and ferredoxin FDX2 supplying electrons, in a process stimulated by FXN but not clearly understood. Here, we report the breakdown of this process, made possible by removing a zinc ion in ISCU that hinders iron insertion and promotes non-physiological Fe-S cluster synthesis from free sulfide in vitro.

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Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) RNA synthesis occurs in cytoplasmic inclusion bodies (IBs) in which all the components of the viral RNA polymerase are concentrated. In this work, we show that RSV P protein recruits the essential RSV transcription factor M2-1 to IBs independently of the phosphorylation state of M2-1. We also show that M2-1 dephosphorylation is achieved by a complex formed between P and the cellular phosphatase PP1.

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In bacteria, one primary and multiple alternative sigma (σ) factors associate with the RNA polymerase core enzyme (E) to form holoenzymes (Eσ) with different promoter recognition specificities. The alternative σ factor RpoS/σ is produced in stationary phase and under stress conditions and reprograms global gene expression to promote bacterial survival. To date, the three-dimensional structure of a full-length free σ factor remains elusive.

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Mapping out regions of PrP influencing prion conversion remains a challenging issue complicated by the lack of prion structure. The portion of PrP associated with infectivity contains the α-helical domain of the correctly folded protein and turns into a β-sheet-rich insoluble core in prions. Deletions performed so far inside this segment essentially prevented the conversion.

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Phosphoprotein is the main cofactor of the viral RNA polymerase of It is involved in multiple interactions that are essential for the polymerase function. Most prominently it positions the polymerase complex onto the nucleocapsid, but also acts as a chaperone for the nucleoprotein. phosphoproteins lack sequence conservation, but contain all large disordered regions.

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Unlabelled: Mammalian prions are PrP proteins with altered structures causing transmissible fatal neurodegenerative diseases. They are self-perpetuating through formation of beta-sheet-rich assemblies that seed conformational change of cellular PrP. Pathological PrP usually forms an insoluble protease-resistant core exhibiting beta-sheet structures but no more alpha-helical content, loosing the three alpha-helices contained in the correctly folded PrP.

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In many Gram-negative bacteria, including Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium), the sigma factor RpoS/σ(S) accumulates during stationary phase of growth, and associates with the core RNA polymerase enzyme (E) to promote transcription initiation of genes involved in general stress resistance and starvation survival. Whereas σ factors are usually inactivated upon interaction with anti-σ proteins, σ(S) binding to the Crl protein increases σ(S) activity by favouring its association to E.

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