Publications by authors named "Georgina Garza-Ramos"

Many enzymes can self-assemble into higher-order structures with helical symmetry. A particularly noteworthy example is that of nitrilases, enzymes in which oligomerization of dimers into spiral homo-oligomers is a requirement for their enzymatic function. Nitrilases are widespread in nature where they catalyze the hydrolysis of nitriles into the corresponding carboxylic acid and ammonia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To understand whether protein Tv-PSP1 from recognizes mRNA parasite stem-loop structures, we conducted REMSA and intrinsic fluorescence assays. We found the recombinant Tv-PSP1 structure, determined with X-ray crystallography, showed unusual thermal stability of the quaternary structure, associated with a disulfide bridge CYS76-CYS104. To gain deeper insight into the Tv-PSP1 interaction with mRNA stem-loops (mRNAsl) and its relationship with thermal stability, we also used an integrated computational protocol that combined molecular dynamics simulations, docking assays, and binding energy calculations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Small nanoparticles of gold, silver, and copper (≈2 nm) were synthesized and stabilized with l- and d-cysteine, exhibiting chiroptical activity in the range of 250-400 nm, which was not present in the bare nanoparticles or ligands alone.
  • Silver-cysteine (Ag-Cys) nanoparticles showed the strongest anisotropy factor, while gold-cysteine (Au-Cys) exhibited optical properties slightly shifted toward the visible spectrum.
  • Copper-cysteine (Cu-Cys) nanoparticles displayed multiple circular dichroism (CD) bands that were weaker in intensity compared to those of gold and silver, with the differences in their spectral behavior attributed to the interactions at the metal-ligand interface, as
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

is an opportunistic bacterium associated with healthcare infections in intensive care units (ICUs), ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), surgical site infections, and burns. This bacterium causes 75% of death in burned patients, since it can develop a persistent biofilm associated with infections, express several virulence factors, and antibiotic-resistance mechanisms. Some of these virulence factors are proteases such as elastase and alkaline protease, or toxic metabolites such as pyocyanin and is one of the few microorganisms able to produce cyanide, which inhibits the cytochrome oxidase of host cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A perchloric acid-soluble protein (PSP), named here tv-psp1, was identified in Trichomonas vaginalis. It is expressed under normal culture conditions according to expressed sequence tag (EST) analysis. On the other hand, Tv-PSP1 protein was identified by mass spectrometry with a 40% of identity to human PSP (p14.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this work, we examine the hypothesis about how trapped water molecules at the interface between triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) and either of two phosphorylated inhibitors, 2-phosphoglycolate (2PG) or phosphoglycolohydroxamate (PGH), can explain the anomalous highly negative binding heat capacities (ΔC) of both complexes, TIM-2PG and TIM-PGH. We performed fluorimetric titrations of the enzyme with PGH inhibitor under osmotic stress conditions, using various concentrations of either osmolyte: sucrose, ethylene glycol or glycine betaine. We also analyze the binding processes under various stressor concentrations using a novel calorimetric methodology that allows ΔC determinations in single experiments: Multithermal Titration Calorimetry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Saccharomyces cerevisiae triosephosphate isomerase (yTIM) is a dimeric protein that shows noncoincident unfolding and refolding transitions (hysteresis) in temperature scans, a phenomenon indicative of the slow forward and backward reactions of the native-unfolded process. Thermal unfolding scans suggest that no stable intermediates appear in the unfolding of yTIM. However, reported evidence points to the presence of residual structure in the denatured monomer at high temperature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Plant ALDH10 enzymes are aminoaldehyde dehydrogenases (AMADHs) that oxidize different ω-amino or trimethylammonium aldehydes, but only some of them have betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH) activity and produce the osmoprotectant glycine betaine (GB). The latter enzymes possess alanine or cysteine at position 441 (numbering of the spinach enzyme, SoBADH), while those ALDH10s that cannot oxidize betaine aldehyde (BAL) have isoleucine at this position. Only the plants that contain A441- or C441-type ALDH10 isoenzymes accumulate GB in response to osmotic stress.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDHs) have potential potassium-binding sites of as yet unknown structural or functional roles. To explore possible K(+)-specific effects, we performed comparative structural studies on the tetrameric betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PaBADH) and on the dimeric BADH from spinach (SoBADH), whose activities are K(+)-dependent and K(+)-independent, respectively, although both enzymes contain potassium-binding sites. Size exclusion chromatography, dynamic light scattering, far- and near-UV circular dichroism, and extrinsic fluorescence results indicated that in the absence of K(+) ions and at very low ionic strength, PaBADH remained tetrameric but its tertiary structure was significantly altered, accounting for its inactivation, whereas SoBADH formed tetramers that maintained the native tertiary structure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hunter-killer peptides combine two activities in a single polypeptide that work in an independent fashion like many other multi-functional, multi-domain proteins. We hypothesize that emergent functions may result from the combination of two or more activities in a single protein domain and that could be a mechanism selected in nature to form moonlighting proteins. We designed moonlighting peptides using the two mechanisms proposed to be involved in the evolution of such molecules (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The guanidine hydrochloride-induced conformational transitions of glycosomal triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) were monitored with functional, spectroscopic, and hydrodynamic measurements. The equilibrium folding pathway was found to include two intermediates (N(2) ↔I(2) ↔2M↔2U). According to this model, the conformational stability parameters of TIM are as follows: ΔG(I2-N2) = 5.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

β-glucosidase B (BglB), 1,4-β-D: -glucanohydrolase, is an enzyme with various technological applications for which some thermostable mutants have been obtained. Because BglB denatures irreversibly with heating, the stabilities of these mutants are assessed kinetically. It, therefore, becomes relevant to determine whether the measured rate constants reflect one or several elementary kinetic steps.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Electrostatic interactions have a central role in some biological processes, such as recognition of charged ligands by proteins. We characterized the binding energetics of yeast triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) with phosphorylated inhibitors 2-phosphoglycollate (2PG) and phosphoglycolohydroxamate (PGH). We determined the thermodynamic parameters of the binding process (K(b), ΔG(b), ΔH(b), ΔS(b) and ΔC(p)) with different concentrations of NaCl, using fluorimetric and calorimetric titrations in the conventional mode of ITC and a novel method, multithermal titration calorimetry (MTC), which enabled us to measure ΔC(p) in a single experiment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The F1-inhibitor protein complex (F1-IP) was purified from heart submitochondrial particles. Size exclusion chromatography of the endogenous complex showed that it contains dimers (D) and monomers (M) of F1-IP. Further chromatographic analysis showed that D and M interconvert.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Homodimeric triosephosphate isomerases from Trypanosoma cruzi (TcTIM) and Trypanosoma brucei (TbTIM) have markedly similar catalytic properties and 3-D structures; their overall amino acid sequence identity is 68% and 85% in their interface residues. Nonetheless, active dimer formation from guanidinium chloride unfolded monomers is faster and more efficient in TcTIM than in TbTIM. The enzymes thus provide a unique opportunity for exploring the factors that control the formation of active dimers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In homodimeric triosephosphate isomerase from Trypanosoma brucei (TbTIM), cysteine 14 of each the two subunits forms part of the dimer interface. This residue is central for the catalysis and stability of TbTIM. Cys14 was changed to the other 19 amino acids to determine the characteristics that the residue must have to yield catalytically competent stable enzymes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF