Publications by authors named "Ruchi Anand"

Portable, low-cost, and accurate monitoring of hazardous mono-aromatic pollutants, such as phenol or benzene group of compounds in water is a challenging task due to the lack of suitable detectable functional groups and complex matrix of environmental samples. Here, we use a series of protein-based biosensing recognition scaffolds to enable specific detection of several mono-aromatic classes of xenobiotics. The biosensor is tuned to perform in intricate environmental conditions and is interfaced with an in-house manufactured, multi-channel device (AroTrack) capable of direct and sensitive detection of several of these aromatic contaminants, such as phenol, benzene, and 2,3-dimethylphenol (2,3-DMP) in the low ppb range (10-200 ppb).

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To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Cell Press and the Cell special issue focusing on structural biology, we want to highlight the rapid progress of cryo-EM related research in India in this collection of Voices. We have asked structural biologists to introduce their research and the national cryo-EM facilities throughout the country.

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Xenobiotic aromatic water pollutants pose an extreme threat to environmental sustainability. Due to the lack of detectable functional groups in these compounds and scarcity of selective bio-recognition scaffolds, easy-to-use sensing strategies capable of on-site detection remain unavailable. Herein, to address this , we entail a strategy that combines biosensor scaffolds with organic electronics to create a compact device for environmental aromatic pollution monitoring.

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Specialized sensing mechanisms in bacteria enable the identification of cognate ligands with remarkable selectivity in highly xenobiotic-polluted environments where these ligands are utilized as energy sources. Here, via integrating all-atom computer simulation, biochemical assay, and isothermal titration calorimetry measurements, we determine the molecular basis of MopR, a phenol biosensor's complex selection process of ligand entry. Our results reveal a set of strategically placed selectivity filters along the ligand entry pathway of MopR.

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Purine nucleotides, generated by de novo synthesis and salvage pathways, are essential for metabolism and act as building blocks of genetic material. To avoid an imbalance in the nucleotide pool, nature has devised several strategies to regulate/tune the catalytic performance of key purine metabolic enzymes. Here, we discuss some recent examples, such as stress-regulating alarmones that bind to select pathway enzymes, huge ensembles like dynamic metabolons and self-assembled filaments that highlight the layered fine-control prevalent in the purine metabolic pathway to fulfill requisite purine demands.

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The NtrC family of proteins senses external stimuli and accordingly stimulates stress and virulence pathways via activation of associated σ-dependent RNA polymerases. However, the structural determinants that mediate this activation are not well understood. Here, we establish using computational, structural, biochemical, and biophysical studies that MopR, an NtrC protein, harbors a dynamic bidirectional electrostatic network that connects the phenol pocket to two distal regions, namely the "G-hinge" and the "allosteric linker.

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The NtrC family of AAA+ proteins are bacterial transcriptional regulators that control σ54-dependent RNA polymerase transcription under certain stressful conditions. MopR, which is a member of this family, is responsive to phenol and stimulates its degradation. Biochemical studies to understand the role of ATP and phenol in oligomerization and allosteric regulation, which are described here, show that MopR undergoes concentration-dependent oligomerization in which dimers assemble into functional hexamers.

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Antibiotic resistance via epigenetic methylation of ribosomal RNA is one of the most prevalent strategies adopted by multidrug resistant pathogens. The erythromycin-resistance methyltransferase (Erm) methylates rRNA at the conserved A2058 position and imparts resistance to macrolides such as erythromycin. However, the precise mechanism adopted by Erm methyltransferases for locating the target base within a complicated rRNA scaffold remains unclear.

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Methylation of specific nucleotides is integral for ribosomal biogenesis and also serves as a common mechanism to confer antibiotic resistance by pathogenic bacteria. Here, by determining the high-resolution structure of the 30S-KsgA complex by cryo-electron microscopy, a state was captured, where KsgA juxtaposes between helices h44 and h45 of the 30S ribosome, separating them, thereby enabling remodeling of the surrounded rRNA and allowing the cognate site to enter the methylation pocket. With the structure as a guide, several mutant versions of the ribosomes, where interacting bases in the catalytic helix h45 and surrounding helices h44, h24, and h27, were mutated and evaluated for their methylation efficiency revealing factors that direct the enzyme to its cognate site with high fidelity.

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Environmental monitoring of pollutants is an imperative first step to remove the genotoxic, embryotoxic, and carcinogenic toxins. Various biological sensing elements such as proteins, aptamers, whole cells, etc., have been used to track down major pollutants, including heavy metals, aromatic pollutants, pathogenic microorganisms, and pesticides in both environmental samples and drinking water, demonstrating their potential in a true sense.

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Molecular tunnels regulate delivery of substrates/intermediates in enzymes which either harbor deep-seated reaction centers or are for transport of reactive/toxic intermediates that need to be specifically delivered. Here, we focus on the importance of structural diversity in tunnel architectures, especially for the gaseous substrate translocation, in rendering differential substrate preferences and directionality. Two major types of tunnels have been discussed, one that transports stable gases from the environment to the active site, namely, external gaseous (EG) tunnels, and the other that transports molecules between active sites, namely, internal gaseous (IG) tunnels.

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The pantothenate analogue hopantenate (HoPan) is widely used as a modulator of coenzyme A (CoA) levels in cell biology and disease models─especially for pantothenate kinase associated neurodegeneration (PKAN), a genetic disease rooted in impaired CoA metabolism. This use of HoPan was based on reports that it inhibits pantothenate kinase (PanK), the first enzyme of CoA biosynthesis. Using a combination of enzyme kinetic studies, crystal structure analysis, and experiments in a typical PKAN cell biology model, we demonstrate that instead of inhibiting PanK, HoPan relies on it for metabolic activation.

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Guanine deaminases (GD) are essential enzymes that help in regulating the nucleobase pool. Since the deamination reaction can result in the accumulation of mutagenic bases that can lead to genomic instability, these enzymes are tightly regulated and are nonpromiscuous. Here, we delineate the basis of their substrate fidelity via entailing the reaction mechanism of deamination by employing density functional theory (DFT) calculations on NE0047, a GD from .

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Fluorescent probes provide an unparalleled opportunity to visualize and quantify dynamic events. Here, we employ a medium-size, cysteine specific coumarin based switch-ON fluorescent probe 'L' to track protein unfolding profiles and accessibility of cysteine residues in proteins. It was established that 'L' is highly selective and exhibits no artifact due to interaction with other bystander species.

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Guanine deaminases (GDs) are essential enzymes that regulate the overall nucleobase pool. Since the deamination of guanine to xanthine results in the production of a mutagenic base, these enzymes have evolved to be very specific in nature. Surprisingly, they accept structurally distinct triazine ammeline, an intermediate in the melamine pathway, as one of the moonlighting substrates.

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Aromatics such as phenols, benzene, and toluene are carcinogenic xenobiotics which are known to pollute water resources. By employing synthetic biology approaches combined with a structure-guided design, we created a tunable array of whole-cell biosensors (WCBs). The MopR genetic system that has the natural ability to sense and degrade phenol was adapted to detect phenol down to ∼1 ppb, making this sensor capable of directly detecting phenol in permissible limits in drinking water.

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Thiolases are a well characterized family of enzymes with two distinct categories: degradative, β-ketoadipyl-CoA thiolases and biosynthetic, acetoacetyl-CoA thiolases. Both classes share an identical catalytic triad but catalyze reactions in opposite directions. Moreover, it is established that in contrast to the biosynthetic thiolases the degradative thiolases can accept substrates with broad chain lengths.

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Transient tunnels that assemble and disassemble to facilitate passage of unstable intermediates in enzymes containing multiple reaction centers are controlled by allosteric cues. Using the 140-kDa purine biosynthetic enzyme PurL as a model system and a combination of biochemical and x-ray crystallographic studies, we show that long-distance communication between ~25-Å distal active sites is initiated by an allosteric switch, residing in a conserved catalytic loop, adjacent to the synthetase active site. Further, combinatory experiments seeded from molecular dynamics simulations help to delineate transient states that bring out the central role of nonfunctional adaptor domains.

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Fluorescent nucleic acid base mimics serve as excellent site-specific and real-time reporters of the local and global dynamics. In this work, using the fluorescent guanine mimic 6-methylisoxanthopterin (6-MI), we unravel the differential dynamics of replication fork barrier/terminator sequences (RFB1 and RFB3) mediated by fork blocking protein (Fob1). By strategic and site-specific incorporation of this probe, we show that 6-MI is able to capture the changes in global dynamics exhibited by Fob1 and aids in distinguishing between varied architectural forms like double-stranded DNA versus Holliday junctions (HJs).

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Post-translational methylation of rRNA at select positions is a prevalent resistance mechanism adopted by pathogens. In this work, KsgA, a housekeeping ribosomal methyltransferase (rMtase) involved in ribosome biogenesis, was exploited as a model system to delineate the specific targeting determinants that impart substrate specificity to rMtases. With a combination of evolutionary and structure-guided approaches, a set of chimeras were created that altered the targeting specificity of KsgA such that it acted similarly to erythromycin-resistant methyltransferases (Erms), rMtases found in multidrug-resistant pathogens.

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Benzene and its derivatives form a class of priority pollutants whose exposure poses grave risk to human health. Since benzene lacks active functional groups, devising specific sensors for its direct detection from a milieu of aromatics has remained a daunting task. Here, we report three engineered protein-based biosensors that exclusively and specifically detect benzene and its derivatives up to a detection limit of 0.

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Fob1 protein plays an important role in aging and maintains genomic stability by avoiding clashes between the replication and transcription machinery. It facilitates polar arrest by binding to replication fork barrier (RFB) sites, present within the nontranscribed spacer region of the ribosomal DNA. Here, we investigate the mechanism of unidirectional arrest by creating multiple prosthetic forks within the RFB, with fluorescent adenine analogue 2-aminopurine incorporated site-specifically in both the "permissible" and "nonpermissible" directions.

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Phenol and its derivatives constitute a class of highly toxic xenobiotics that pollute both river and groundwater. Here, we use a highly stable enzyme-based in vitro biosensing scaffold to develop a chip-based environmental diagnostic for in situ accurate, direct detection of phenol with selectively down to 10 ppb. Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MCM41) having a pore diameter of 6.

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Nucleobase deaminases are essential enzymes that are involved in the catabolic pathway and stringently regulate the concentration of the nucleobase derivative pool, which is paramount for nucleotide recycling. This review presents an overview of the structure, function and mechanism of CDA deaminases and their potential as enzyme systems for the development of new antimicrobial therapies. The evolutionary divergence of human nucleobase deaminases with respect to bacterial enzymes has been used as a central theme towards the development of strategies for potential drug targets.

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