Publications by authors named "Sinisa Bjelic"

Transferrin receptor 1 (TfR) delivers iron across cellular membranes by shuttling the ion carrier protein transferrin. This ability to deliver large protein ligands inside cells is taken advantage of by pathogens to infiltrate human cells. Notably, the receptor's outermost ectodomain, the apical domain, is used as a point of attachment for several viruses including hemorrhagic arenaviruses.

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Diseases with readily available therapies may eventually prevail against the specific treatment by the acquisition of resistance. The constitutively active Abl1 tyrosine kinase known to cause chronic myeloid leukemia is an example, where patients may experience relapse after small inhibitor drug treatment. Mutations in the Abl1 tyrosine kinase domain (Abl1-KD) are a critical source of resistance and their emergence depends on the conformational states that have been observed experimentally: the inactive state, the active state, and the intermediate inactive state that resembles Src kinase.

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Human transferrin receptor 1 (TfR) is necessary for the delivery of the iron carrier protein transferrin into cells and can be utilized for targeted delivery across cellular membranes. Binding of transferrin to the receptor is regulated by hereditary hemochromatosis protein (HFE), an iron regulatory protein that partly shares a binding site with transferrin on TfR. Here, we derived essential binding interactions from HFE and computationally grafted these into a library of small protein scaffolds.

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Coiled coils represent the simplest form of a complex formed between two interacting protein partners. Their extensive study has led to the development of various methods aimed towards the investigation and design of complex forming interactions. Despite the progress that has been made to predict the binding affinities for protein complexes, and specifically those tailored towards coiled coils, many challenges still remain.

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Machupo virus, known to cause hemorrhagic fevers, enters human cells via binding with its envelope glycoprotein to transferrin receptor 1 (TfR). Similarly, the receptor interactions have been explored in biotechnological applications as a molecular system to ferry therapeutics across the cellular membranes and through the impenetrable blood-brain barrier that effectively blocks any such delivery into the brain. Study of the experimental structure of Machupo virus glycoprotein 1 (MGP1) in complex with TfR and glycoprotein sequence homology has identified some residues at the interface that influence binding.

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Supply of iron into human cells is achieved by iron carrier protein transferrin and its receptor that upon complex formation get internalized by endocytosis. Similarly, the iron needs to be delivered into the brain, and necessitates the transport across the blood-brain barrier. While there are still unanswered questions about these mechanisms, extensive efforts have been made to use the system for delivery of therapeutics into biological compartments.

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FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) has been found to be mutated in ~ 30% of acute myeloid leukaemia patients. Small-molecule inhibitors targeting FLT3 that are currently approved or still undergoing clinical trials are subject to drug resistance due to FLT3 mutations. How these mutations lead to drug resistance is hitherto poorly understood.

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Background: Abl1 is a protein tyrosine kinase whose aberrant activation due to mutations is the culprit of several cancers, most notably chronic myeloid leukaemia. Several Abl1 inhibitors are used as anti-cancer drugs. Unfortunately, drug resistance limits their effectiveness.

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The coiled coil structural motif consists of alpha helices supercoiling around each other to form staggered knobs-into-holes packing. Such structures are deceptively simple, especially as they often can be described with parametric equations, but are known to exist in various conformations. Even the simplest systems, consisting of 2 monomers, can assemble into a wide range of states.

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Computational enzyme design holds great promise for providing new biocatalysts for synthetic chemistry. A strategy to design small mutant libraries of complementary enantioselective epoxide hydrolase variants for the production of highly enantioenriched (S,S)-diols and (R,R)-diols is developed. Key features of this strategy (CASCO, catalytic selectivity by computational design) are the design of mutations that favor binding of the substrate in a predefined orientation, the introduction of steric hindrance to prevent unwanted substrate binding modes, and ranking of designs by high-throughput molecular dynamics simulations.

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Enzyme-based tags attached to a protein-of-interest (POI) that react with a small molecule, rendering the conjugate fluorescent, are very useful for studying the POI in living cells. These tags are typically based on endogenous enzymes, so protein engineering is required to ensure that the small-molecule probe does not react with the endogenous enzyme in the cell of interest. Here we demonstrate that de novo-designed enzymes can be used as tags to attach to POIs.

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Although much is known about protein folding in buffers, it remains unclear how the cellular protein homeostasis network functions as a system to partition client proteins between folded and functional, soluble and misfolded, and aggregated conformations. Herein, we develop small molecule folding probes that specifically react with the folded and functional fraction of the protein of interest, enabling fluorescence-based quantification of this fraction in cell lysate at a time point of interest. Importantly, these probes minimally perturb a protein's folding equilibria within cells during and after cell lysis, because sufficient cellular chaperone/chaperonin holdase activity is created by rapid ATP depletion during cell lysis.

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In the design of new enzymes and binding proteins, human intuition is often used to modify computationally designed amino acid sequences prior to experimental characterization. The manual sequence changes involve both reversions of amino acid mutations back to the identity present in the parent scaffold and the introduction of residues making additional interactions with the binding partner or backing up first shell interactions. Automation of this manual sequence refinement process would allow more systematic evaluation and considerably reduce the amount of human designer effort involved.

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Designed retroaldolases have utilized a nucleophilic lysine to promote carbon-carbon bond cleavage of β-hydroxy-ketones via a covalent Schiff base intermediate. Previous computational designs have incorporated a water molecule to facilitate formation and breakdown of the carbinolamine intermediate to give the Schiff base and to function as a general acid/base. Here we investigate an alternative active-site design in which the catalytic water molecule was replaced by the side chain of a glutamic acid.

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The Morita-Baylis-Hillman reaction forms a carbon-carbon bond between the α-carbon of a conjugated carbonyl compound and a carbon electrophile. The reaction mechanism involves Michael addition of a nucleophile catalyst at the carbonyl β-carbon, followed by bond formation with the electrophile and catalyst disassociation to release the product. We used Rosetta to design 48 proteins containing active sites predicted to carry out this mechanism, of which two show catalytic activity by mass spectrometry (MS).

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The Rosetta de novo enzyme design protocol has been used to design enzyme catalysts for a variety of chemical reactions, and in principle can be applied to any arbitrary chemical reaction of interest. The process has four stages: 1) choice of a catalytic mechanism and corresponding minimal model active site, 2) identification of sites in a set of scaffold proteins where this minimal active site can be realized, 3) optimization of the identities of the surrounding residues for stabilizing interactions with the transition state and primary catalytic residues, and 4) evaluation and ranking the resulting designed sequences. Stages two through four of this process can be carried out with the Rosetta package, while stage one needs to be done externally.

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A major issue for organisms living at extreme temperatures is to preserve both stability and activity of their enzymes. Cold-adapted enzymes generally have a reduced thermal stability, to counteract freezing, and show a lower enthalpy and a more negative entropy of activation compared to mesophilic and thermophilic homologues. Such a balance of thermodynamic activation parameters can make the reaction rate decrease more linearly, rather than exponentially, as the temperature is lowered, but the structural basis for rate optimization toward low working temperatures remains unclear.

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Aspartic proteases are receiving considerable attention as potential drug targets in several serious diseases, such as AIDS, malaria, and Alzheimer's disease. These enzymes cleave polypeptide chains, often between specific amino acid residues, but despite the common reaction mechanism, they exhibit large structural differences. Here, the catalytic mechanism of aspartic proteases plasmepsin II, cathepsin D, and HIV-1 protease is examined by computer simulations utilizing the empirical valence bond approach in combination with molecular dynamics and free energy perturbation calculations.

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The histo-aspartic protease (HAP) from the malaria parasite P. falciparum is one of several new promising targets for drug intervention. The enzyme possesses a novel type of active site, but its 3D structure and mechanism of action are still unknown.

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The hemoglobin-degrading aspartic proteases plasmepsin I (Plm I) and plasmepsin II (Plm II) of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum have lately emerged as putative drug targets. A series of C(2)-symmetric compounds encompassing the 1,2-dihydroxyethylene scaffold and a variety of elongated P1/P1' side chains were synthesized via microwave-assisted palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions. Binding affinity calculations with the linear interaction energy method and molecular dynamics simulations reproduced the experimental binding data obtained in a Plm II assay with very good accuracy.

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A series of C(2)-symmetric compounds with a mannitol-based scaffold has been investigated, both theoretically and experimentally, as Plm II inhibitors. Four different stereoisomers with either benzyloxy or allyloxy P1/P1' side chains were studied. Computational ranking of the binding affinities of the eight compounds was carried out using the linear interaction energy (LIE) method relying on a complex previously determined by crystallography.

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