Publications by authors named "Malene Jensen"

Advances in the characterization of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) have unveiled a remarkably complex and diverse interaction landscape, including coupled folding and binding, highly dynamic complexes, multivalent interactions, and even interactions between entirely disordered proteins. Here we review recent examples of IDP binding mechanisms elucidated by experimental techniques such as nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer, and stopped-flow fluorescence. These techniques provide insights into the structural details of transition pathways and complex intermediates, and they capture the dynamics of IDPs within complexes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To evaluate safety, preliminary efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics, of fostroxacitabine bralpamide (fostrox, MIV-818), a novel oral troxacitabine nucleotide prodrug designed to direct exposure to the liver, while minimizing systemic toxicity.

Patients And Methods: Fostrox monotherapy was administered in an open-label, single-arm, first-in-human, phase 1a/1b study, in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, or solid tumor liver metastases. The first part (1a) consisted of intra/inter-patient escalating doses (3 mg to 70 mg) QD for up to 5 days, and the second part (1b), doses of 40 mg QD for 5 days, in 21-day cycles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • JIP1 and JIP2 are scaffold proteins that help coordinate multiple kinases in the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling pathway, which is important for cellular signaling specificity.
  • Research using NMR showed that JIP1 and JIP2 can form heterodimers, and their interaction strength is similar to when they form homodimers.
  • The study presents detailed structures of both the JIP2 homodimer and the JIP1-JIP2 heterodimer, revealing how specific residues stabilize these structures and highlighting their functional importance in activating the JNK pathway through targeted mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The interplay between humans and their microbiome is crucial for various physiological processes, including nutrient absorption, immune defense, and maintaining homeostasis. Microbiome alterations can directly contribute to diseases or heighten their likelihood. This relationship extends beyond humans; microbiota play vital roles in other organisms, including eukaryotic pathogens causing severe diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prodrugs have little or no pharmacological activity and are converted to active drugs in the body by enzymes, metabolic reactions, or through human-controlled actions. However, prodrugs promoting their chemical bioconversion without any of these processes have not been reported before. Here, we present an enzyme-independent prodrug activation mechanism by boron-based compounds (benzoxaboroles) targeting leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS), including an antibiotic that recently has completed phase II clinical trials to cure tuberculosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gastric hormone ghrelin stimulates food intake and increases plasma glucose through activation of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR). Liver-expressed antimicrobial peptide 2 (LEAP2) has been proposed to inhibit actions of ghrelin through inverse effects on GHSR activity. Here, we investigate the effects of exogenous LEAP2 on postprandial glucose metabolism and food intake in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial of 20 healthy men.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Intrinsically disordered proteins are common in all living organisms and are crucial for various biochemical processes.
  • Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a powerful technique to study their structure and dynamics, revealing insights into their function and interactions.
  • Recent NMR applications help us understand the energy landscape, dynamics, and behavior of these proteins in different environments, including within cells, highlighting their importance for human health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aromatic residues cluster in the core of folded proteins, where they stabilize the structure through multiple interactions. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies in the 1970s showed that aromatic side chains can undergo ring flips-that is, 180° rotations-despite their role in maintaining the protein fold. It was suggested that large-scale 'breathing' motions of the surrounding protein environment would be necessary to accommodate these ring flipping events.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The processes of genome replication and transcription of SARS-CoV-2 represent important targets for viral inhibition. Betacoronaviral nucleoprotein (N) is a highly dynamic cofactor of the replication-transcription complex (RTC), whose function depends on an essential interaction with the amino-terminal ubiquitin-like domain of nsp3 (Ubl1). Here, we describe this complex (dissociation constant - 30 to 200 nM) at atomic resolution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Studying the conformational landscape of intrinsically disordered and partially folded proteins is challenging and only accessible to a few solution state techniques, such as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), small-angle scattering techniques, and single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET). While each of the techniques is sensitive to different properties of the disordered chain, such as local structural propensities, overall dimension, or intermediate- and long-range contacts, conformational ensembles describing intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) accurately should ideally respect all of these properties. Here we develop an integrated approach using a large set of FRET efficiencies and fluorescence lifetimes, NMR chemical shifts, and paramagnetic relaxation enhancements (PREs), as well as small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) to derive quantitative conformational ensembles in agreement with all parameters.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease causes significant burdens for patients. To secure safe care and treatment in the first part of the patient trajectory, it is essential to explore patients' experiences during admission in the acute phase following an exacerbation due to COPD.

Methods: Thirteen semi-structured interviews were performed, using Kvale and Brinkman's meaning condensation as an analytical approach.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) can engage in promiscuous interactions with their protein targets; however, it is not clear how this feature is encoded in the primary sequence of the IDPs and to what extent the surface properties and the shape of the binding cavity dictate the binding mode and the final bound conformation. Here we show, using a combination of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), that the promiscuous interaction of the intrinsically disordered regulatory domain of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase MKK4 with p38α and JNK1 is facilitated by folding-upon-binding into two different conformations, despite the high sequence conservation and structural homology between p38α and JNK1. Our results support a model whereby the specific surface properties of JNK1 and p38α dictate the bound conformation of MKK4 and that enthalpy-entropy compensation plays a major role in maintaining comparable binding affinities for MKK4 towards the two kinases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Protein Ensemble Database (PED) (https://proteinensemble.org), which holds structural ensembles of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), has been significantly updated and upgraded since its last release in 2016. The new version, PED 4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Temperate bacteriophages can follow two paths after infecting a bacteria: the lysogenic cycle or the lytic cycle.
  • The choice depends on specific proteins in the virus that control its actions, particularly a protein called CI and another called MOR that influences it.
  • Researchers discovered how MOR works by studying its structure and found that if MOR doesn’t work correctly, the virus can’t choose the lytic cycle, which is important for its life cycle and is similar in other related viruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Avian influenza polymerase undergoes host adaptation in order to efficiently replicate in human cells. Adaptive mutants are localised on the C-terminal (627-NLS) domains of the PB2 subunit. In particular, mutation of PB2 residue 627 from E to K rescues polymerase activity in mammalian cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The measles virus replication complex represents a potentially important, but as yet relatively unexplored target for viral inhibition. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms that underpin replication and transcription in paramyxoviruses. In recent years it has become clear that conformational dynamics play an important role in paramyxoviral replication, and that a complete understanding of the viral cycle requires a description of the structural plasticity of the different components.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the complex structural features of Nipah virus phosphoprotein, which contains both ordered and intrinsically disordered regions, highlighting its role in the virus's ability to counteract host immune responses.
  • Using a combination of x-ray crystallography, NMR spectroscopy, and small angle x-ray scattering, the researchers achieved a detailed atomistic representation of the protein's structure, revealing that it forms tetramers.
  • The research also identifies specific regions in the phosphoprotein that interact with cellular components, providing insights into the protein’s functions and its coordination with other viral proteins, enhancing understanding of NiV's pathogenic mechanisms.*
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many viruses are known to form cellular compartments, also called viral factories. Paramyxoviruses, including measles virus, colocalize their proteomic and genomic material in puncta in infected cells. We demonstrate that purified nucleoproteins (N) and phosphoproteins (P) of measles virus form liquid-like membraneless organelles upon mixing in vitro.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are flexible biomolecules whose essential functions are defined by their dynamic nature. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is ideally suited to the investigation of this behavior at atomic resolution. NMR relaxation is increasingly used to detect conformational dynamics in free and bound forms of IDPs under conditions approaching physiological, although a general framework providing a quantitative interpretation of these exquisitely sensitive probes as a function of experimental conditions is still lacking.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Electrostatic interactions are crucial for the function of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), particularly focusing on the δ subunit of RNA polymerase which has a highly charged unfolded domain.
  • A specialized analytical strategy was employed to investigate transient contacts between regions of the protein, revealing that a negatively charged segment folds back onto a positively charged strand, allowing compactness while maintaining flexibility.
  • Mutations in the positively charged area disrupt these long-range contacts, resulting in changes to the protein's conformation and decreasing its transcription activity and fitness in bacterial cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) underpin biological regulation and hence are highly desirable drug-development targets. NMR is normally the tool of choice for studying the conformational preferences of IDPs, but the association of regions with residual structure into partially collapsed states can lead to poor spectral quality. The bHLH-LZ domain of the oncoprotein Myc is an archetypal example of such behavior.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Assembly of paramyxoviral nucleocapsids on the RNA genome is an essential step in the viral cycle. The structural basis of this process has remained obscure due to the inability to control encapsidation. We used a recently developed approach to assemble measles virus nucleocapsid-like particles on specific sequences of RNA hexamers (poly-Adenine and viral genomic 5') in vitro, and determined their cryoelectron microscopy maps to 3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Over the last two decades, it has become increasingly clear that a large fraction of the human proteome is intrinsically disordered or contains disordered segments of significant length. These intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) play important regulatory roles throughout biology, underlining the importance of understanding their conformational behavior and interaction mechanisms at the molecular level. Here we review recent progress in the NMR characterization of the structure and dynamics of IDPs in various functional states and environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF