Yerba mate (YM, ) is an economically important crop marketed for the elaboration of mate, the third-most widely consumed caffeine-containing infusion worldwide. Here, we report the first genome assembly of this species, which has a total length of 1.06 Gb and contains 53,390 protein-coding genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClathrin forms a triskelion, or three-legged, network that regulates cellular processes by facilitating cargo internalization and trafficking in eukaryotes. Its N-terminal domain is crucial for interacting with adaptor proteins, which link clathrin to the membrane and engage with specific cargo. The N-terminal domain contains up to four adaptor-binding sites, though their role in preferential occupancy by adaptor proteins remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein-protein interactions (PPIs) are essential, and modulating their function through PPI-targeted drugs is an important research field. PPI sites are shallow protein surfaces readily accessible to the solvent, thus lacking a proper pocket to fit a drug, while their lack of endogenous ligands prevents drug design by chemical similarity. The development of PPI-blocking compounds is, therefore, a tough challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComputer-aided drug discovery methods play a major role in the development of therapeutically important small molecules, but their performance needs to be improved. Molecular dynamics simulations in mixed solvents are useful in understanding protein-ligand recognition and improving molecular docking predictions. In this work, we used ethanol as a cosolvent to find relevant interactions for ligands toward protein kinase G, an essential protein of ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDF(Mtb), the causative agent of Tuberculosis, has 11 eukaryotic-like serine/threonine protein kinases, which play essential roles in cell growth, signal transduction, and pathogenesis. Protein kinase G (PknG) regulates the carbon and nitrogen metabolism by phosphorylation of the glycogen accumulation regulator (GarA) protein at Thr21. Protein kinase B (PknB) is involved in cell wall synthesis and cell shape, as well as phosphorylates GarA but at Thr22.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta Proteins Proteom
February 2022
Bacteriophage endolysins are crucial for progeny release at the end of the lytic cycle. Mycobacteriophage's genomes carry a lysin A essential gene, whose product cleaves the peptidoglycan (PG) layer and a lysin B, coding for an esterase, that cleaves the linkage between the mycolic acids and the arabinogalactan-PG complex. Lysin A mycobacteriophage proteins are highly modular and in gp29 (LysA) of phage TM4 three distinctive domains were identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytochromes constitute a widespread photoreceptor family that typically interconverts between two photostates called Pr (red light–absorbing) and Pfr (far-red light–absorbing). The lack of full-length structures solved at the (near-)atomic level in both pure Pr and Pfr states leaves gaps in the structural mechanisms involved in the signal transmission pathways during the photoconversion. Here, we present the crystallographic structures of three versions from the plant pathogen virulence regulator BphP bacteriophytochrome, including two full-length proteins, in the Pr and Pfr states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr D Struct Biol
October 2021
All biological processes rely on the formation of protein-ligand, protein-peptide and protein-protein complexes. Studying the affinity, kinetics and thermodynamics of binding between these pairs is critical for understanding basic cellular mechanisms. Many different technologies have been designed for probing interactions between biomolecules, each based on measuring different signals (fluorescence, heat, thermophoresis, scattering and interference, among others).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe spike protein is the main protein component of the SARS-CoV-2 virion surface. The spike receptor-binding motif mediates recognition of the human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 receptor, a critical step in infection, and is the preferential target for spike-neutralizing antibodies. Posttranslational modifications of the spike receptor-binding motif have been shown to modulate viral infectivity and host immune response, but these modifications are still being explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDifferential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) using the inherent fluorescence of proteins (nDSF) is a popular technique to evaluate thermal protein stability in different conditions (e.g. buffer, pH).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Pyruvate kinase deficiency (PKD) is a rare recessive congenital hemolytic anemia caused by mutations in the PKLR gene. The disease shows a marked variability in clinical expression. We studied the molecular features of nine unrelated Argentinian patients with congenital hemolytic anemia associated with erythrocyte pyruvate kinase deficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAromatic rings are important residues for biological interactions and appear to a large extent as part of protein-drug and protein-protein interactions. They are relevant for both protein stability and molecular recognition processes due to their natural occurrence in aromatic aminoacids (Trp, Phe, Tyr and His) as well as in designed drugs since they are believed to contribute to optimizing both affinity and specificity of drug-like molecules. Despite the mentioned relevance, the impact of aromatic clusters on protein-protein and protein-drug complexes is still poorly characterized, especially in those that go beyond a dimer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA library of thirty N-substituted tosyl N'-acryl-hydrazones was prepared with p-toluenesulfonyl hydrazide, methyl propiolate and different aldehydes in a one-pot synthesis via an aza-Michael reaction. The scope of the reaction was studied, including aliphatic, isoprenylic, aromatic and carbocyclic aldehydes. The prepared collection was tested against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistidine kinases (HK) of bacterial two-component systems represent a hallmark of allosterism in proteins, being able to detect a signal through the sensor domain and transmit this information through the protein matrix to the kinase domain which, once active, autophosphorylates a specific histidine residue. Inactive-to-active transition results in a large conformational change that moves the kinase on top of the histidine. In the present work, we use several molecular simulation techniques (Molecular Dynamics, Hybrid QM/MM, and constant pH molecular dynamics) to study the activation and autophosphorylation reactions in WalK, a -acting HK.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein kinases (PKs) are allosteric enzymes that play an essential role in signal transduction by regulating a variety of key cellular processes. Most PKs suffer conformational rearrangements upon phosphorylation that strongly enhance the catalytic activity. Generally, it involves the movement of the phosphorylated loop toward the active site and the rotation of the whole C-terminal lobe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirtual screening of large compound databases, looking for potential ligands of a target protein, is a major tool in computer-aided drug discovery. Throughout the years, different techniques such as similarity searching, pharmacophore matching, or molecular docking have been applied with the aim of finding hit compounds showing appreciable affinity. Molecular dynamics simulations in mixed solvents have been shown to identify hot spots relevant for protein-drug interaction, and implementations based on this knowledge were developed to improve pharmacophore matching of small molecules, binding free-energy estimations, and docking performance in terms of pose prediction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSummary: The performance of docking calculations can be improved by tuning parameters for the system of interest, e.g. biasing the results towards the formation of relevant protein-ligand interactions, such as known ligand pharmacophore or interaction sites derived from cosolvent molecular dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSimulations of molecular dynamics (MD) are playing an increasingly important role in structure-based drug discovery (SBDD). Here we review the use of MD for proteins in aqueous solvation, organic/aqueous mixed solvents (MDmix) and with small ligands, to the classic SBDD problems: Binding mode and binding free energy predictions. The simulation of proteins in their condensed state reveals solvent structures and preferential interaction sites (hot spots) on the protein surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTuberculosis (Edinb)
May 2018
Sensor histidine kinases (SHKs) are an integral component of the molecular machinery that permits bacteria to adapt to widely changing environmental conditions. CpxA, an extensively studied SHK, is a multidomain homodimeric protein with each subunit consisting of a periplasmic sensor domain, a transmembrane domain, a signal-transducing HAMP domain, a dimerization and histidine phospho-acceptor sub-domain (DHp) and a catalytic and ATP-binding subdomain (CA). The key activation event involves the rearrangement of the HAMP-DHp helical core and translation of the CA towards the acceptor histidine, which presumably results in an autokinase-competent complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTuberculosis (TB) is a chronic disease caused by the bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis(Mtb) and remains a leading cause of mortality worldwide. The bacteria has an external wall which protects it from being killed, and the enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of the cell wall components have been proposed as promising targets for future drug development efforts. Cyclopropane Mycolic Acid Synthases (CMAS) constitute a group of ten homologous enzymes which belong to the mycolic acid biosynthesis pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne of the most important biological processes at the molecular level is the formation of protein-ligand complexes. Therefore, determining their structure and underlying key interactions is of paramount relevance and has direct applications in drug development. Because of its low cost relative to its experimental sibling, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in the presence of different solvent probes mimicking specific types of interactions have been increasingly used to analyze protein binding sites and reveal protein-ligand interaction hot spots.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase from Trypanosoma cruzi (TcHPRT) is a critical enzyme for the survival of the parasite. This work demonstrates that the full-length form in solution adopts a stable and enzymatically active tetrameric form, exhibiting large inter-subunit surfaces. Although this protein irreversibly aggregates during unfolding, oligomerization is reversible and can be modulated by low concentrations of urea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent Tuberculosis treatment is long and expensive, faces the increasing burden of MDR/XDR strains and lack of effective treatment against latent form, resulting in an urgent need of new anti-TB drugs. Key to TB biology is its capacity to fight the host's RNOS mediated attack. RNOS are known to display a concentration dependent mycobactericidal activity, which leads to the following hypothesis "if we know which proteins are targeted by RNOS and kill TB, we we might be able to inhibit them with drugs resulting in a synergistic bactericidal effect".
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