Publications by authors named "Raquel Godoy-Ruiz"

Enterovirus-D68 (EV-D68) is a plus-strand RNA virus that primarily causes infant respiratory infections. In rare pediatric cases, infection with EV-D68 has been associated with acute flaccid myelitis, a polio-like paralytic disease. We have previously demonstrated that EV-D68 induces nonselective autophagy for its benefit.

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Administration of neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) has proved to be effective by providing immediate protection against SARS-CoV-2. However, dual strategies combining virus neutralization and immune response stimulation to enhance specific cytotoxic T cell responses, such as dendritic cell (DC) cross-priming, represent a promising field but have not yet been explored. Here, a broadly nAb, TN , are first generated by grafting an anti-RBD biparatopic tandem nanobody onto a trimerbody scaffold.

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Immune mediated graft loss still represents a major risk to transplant recipients. Creative approaches to immunosuppression that exploit the recipient's own alloregulatory mechanisms could reduce the need for pharmacologic immunosuppression and potentially induce immune tolerance. In the process of studying recipient derived myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), we identified key alloregulatory MDSC mechanisms, mediated by isolatable proteins IL-4, IL-34, and IL-10.

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The binary toxin (CDT) enters host cells via endosomal delivery like many other 'AB'-type binary toxins. In this study, the cell-binding component of CDT, termed CDTb, was found to bind and form pores in lipid bilayers upon depleting free Ca ion concentrations, and not by lowering pH, as found for other binary toxins (i.e.

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Type 2 transglutaminase (TG2) functions as an important cancer cell survival protein in a range of cancers including epidermal squamous cell carcinoma. TG2 exists in open and closed conformations each of which has a distinct and mutually exclusive activity. The closed conformation has GTP-binding/GTPase activity while the open conformation functions as a transamidase to catalyze protein-protein crosslinking.

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The interaction of calmodulin (CaM) with the receptor for retinol uptake, STRA6, involves an α-helix termed BP2 that is located on the intracellular side of this homodimeric transporter (Chen et al., 2016 [1]). In the absence of Ca, NMR data showed that a peptide derived from BP2 bound to the C-terminal lobe (C-lobe) of Mg-bound CaM (CaM).

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Unlabelled: The taro plant, , contains bioactive proteins with potential as cancer therapeutics. Several groups have reported anti-cancer activity in vitro and in vivo of taro-derived extracts (TEs). We reported that TE inhibits metastasis in a syngeneic murine model of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC).

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Novel therapeutics are needed to treat pathologies associated with the binary toxin (CDT), particularly when infection (CDI) occurs in the elderly or in hospitalized patients having illnesses, in addition to CDI, such as cancer. While therapies are available to block toxicities associated with the large clostridial toxins (TcdA and TcdB) in this nosocomial disease, nothing is available yet to treat toxicities arising from strains of CDI having the binary toxin. Like other binary toxins, the active CDTa catalytic subunit of CDT is delivered into host cells together with an oligomeric assembly of CDTb subunits via host cell receptor-mediated endocytosis.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers created special enzymes that can break down a protein called RAS, which is important in many cancers when it's not functioning properly.
  • They made these enzymes work better by making them rely on extra helper molecules for being effective.
  • These engineered enzymes were shown to successfully target and destroy RAS in lab experiments, and their design could be used for other important proteins too!
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Clostridioides difficile is a bacterial pathogen responsible for the majority of nosocomial infections in the developed world. C. difficile infection (CDI) is difficult to treat in many cases because hypervirulent strains have evolved that contain a third toxin, termed the C.

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The article H, C, and N resonance assignments of human calmodulin bound to a peptide derived from the STRA6 vitamin A transporter (CaMBP2), written by Kristen M. Varney, Paul T. Wilder, Raquel Godoy-Ruiz, Filippo Mancia and David J.

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Targeting infection is challenging because treatment options are limited, and high recurrence rates are common. One reason for this is that hypervirulent strains often have a binary toxin termed the toxin, in addition to the enterotoxins TsdA and TsdB. The toxin has an enzymatic component, termed CDTa, and a pore-forming or delivery subunit termed CDTb.

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Vitamin A is a necessary nutrient for all mammals, and it is required for the transcription of many genes and vital for vision. While fasting, the vitamin A alcohol form (Retinol) from storage in the liver is mobilized and transported through the bloodstream while bound to retinol binding protein (RBP). Details of how exactly vitamin A is released from RBP and taken into the cells are still unclear.

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Theory and experiments have shown that microsecond folding proteins exhibit characteristic thermodynamic properties that reflect the limited cooperativity of folding over marginal barriers (downhill folding). Those studies have mostly focused on proteins with large α-helical contents and small size, which tend to be the fastest folders. A key open question is whether such properties are also present in the fastest all-β proteins.

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The tumorigenic activity of upregulated Mcl-1 is manifested by binding the BH3 α-helical death domains of opposing Bcl-2 family members, neutralizing them and preventing apoptosis. Accordingly, the development of Mcl-1 inhibitors largely focuses on synthetic BH3 mimicry. The condensation of α-pyridinium methyl ketone salts and α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds in the presence of a source of ammonia, or the Kröhnke pyridine synthesis, is a simple approach to afford highly functionalized pyridines.

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Vitamin A homeostasis is critical to normal cellular function. Retinol-binding protein (RBP) is the sole specific carrier in the bloodstream for hydrophobic retinol, the main form in which vitamin A is transported. The integral membrane receptor STRA6 mediates cellular uptake of vitamin A by recognizing RBP-retinol to trigger release and internalization of retinol.

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Clostridium difficile is a bacterial pathogen and is the most commonly reported source of nosocomial infection in industrialized nations. Symptoms of C. difficile infection (CDI) include antibiotic-associated diarrhea, pseudomembranous colitis, sepsis and death.

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Local protein interactions ("molecular context" effects) dictate amino acid replacements and can be described in terms of site-specific, energetic preferences for any different amino acid. It has been recently debated whether these preferences remain approximately constant during evolution or whether, due to coevolution of sites, they change strongly. Such research highlights an unresolved and fundamental issue with far-reaching implications for phylogenetic analysis and molecular evolution modeling.

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Serine/threonine protein phosphatase 5 (PP5, PPP5C) is known to interact with the chaperonin heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) and is involved in the regulation of multiple cellular signaling cascades that control diverse cellular processes, such as cell growth, differentiation, proliferation, motility, and apoptosis. Here, we identify PP5 in stable complexes with extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs). Studies using mutant proteins reveal that the formation of PP5·ERK1 and PP5·ERK2 complexes partially depends on HSP90 binding to PP5 but does not require PP5 or ERK1/2 activity.

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Molecular Dynamics simulations of the pentamidine-S100B complex, where two molecules of pentamidine bind per monomer of S100B, were performed in an effort to determine what properties would be desirable in a pentamidine-derived compound as an inhibitor for S100B. These simulations predicted that increasing the linker length of the compound would allow a single molecule to span both pentamidine binding sites on the protein. The resulting compound, SBi4211 (also known as heptamidine), was synthesized and experiments to study its inhibition of S100B were performed.

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Relaxation violated coherence transfer NMR spectroscopy (Tugarinov et al. in J Am Chem Soc 129:1743-1750, 2007) is an established experimental tool for quantitative estimation of the amplitudes of side-chain motions in methyl-protonated, highly deuterated proteins. Relaxation violated coherence transfer experiments monitor the buildup of methyl proton multiple-quantum coherences that can be created in magnetically equivalent spin-systems as long as their transverse magnetization components relax with substantially different rates.

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A recurrent theme of many structural studies of homo-oligomeric protein systems is concerned with verification that the conformation observed in a crystal represents the functionally relevant structure. An asymmetric conformation adopted by two chemically identical subunits in homo-oligomers can represent an intrinsic property of a protein or be an artifact induced by crystal packing forces. Solution NMR studies can distinguish between these two possibilities.

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A two-dimensional TROSY-based SIM-(13)C(m)-(1)H(m)/(1)H-(15)N NMR experiment for simultaneous measurements of methyl (1) D (CH) and backbone amide (1) D (NH) residual dipolar couplings (RDC) in {U-[(15)N,(2)H]; Ileδ1-[(13)CH(3)]; Leu,Val-[(13)CH(3)/(12)CD(3)]}-labeled samples of large proteins is described. Significant variation in the alignment tensor of the 82-kDa enzyme Malate synthase G is observed as a function of only slight changes in experimental conditions. The SIM-(13)C(m)-(1)H(m)/(1)H-(15)N data sets provide convenient means of establishing the alignment tensor characteristics via the measurement of (1) D (NH) RDCs in the same protein sample.

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The importance and utility of Ala(β) methyl groups as NMR probes of molecular structure and dynamics in high-molecular-weight proteins is explored. Using (2)H and (13)C relaxation measurements in {U-(2)H; Ala(β)-[(13)CHD(2)]}-labeled Malate Synthase G (MSG)--an 82-kDa monomeric enzyme that contains 73 Ala(β) methyl groups--we show that the vast majority of selectively labeled Ala(β) methyls are highly ordered. A number of NMR applications used for solution studies of structure and dynamics of large protein molecules can benefit from proximity of Ala(β) methyls to the protein backbone and their high degree of ordering.

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NMR methodology is developed for high-resolution, accurate measurements of methyl (1)H(m)-(13)C(m) ((1)D(CH)) and (13)C(m)-(13)C ((1)D(CC)) residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) in ILV-methyl-protonated high-molecular-weight proteins. Both types of RDCs are measured in a three-dimensional (3D) mode that allows dispersion of correlations to the third ((13)C(β/γ)) dimension, alleviating the problem of overlap of methyl resonances in highly complex and methyl-abundant protein structures. The methodology is applied to selectively ILV-protonated 82-kDa monomeric enzyme malate synthase G (MSG) that contains 273 ILV methyl groups with substantial overlap of methyl resonances in 2D methyl (1)H-(13)C correlation maps.

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