Publications by authors named "V N Uverskiĭ"

Recently it became evident that proteins can perform their function not only in globular state but also in partially or completely disordered state. The majority of globular proteins are enzymes which function is strictly determined. Regulation and signaling proteins participating in interconnection with variety of partners must have much more lability, and macromolecules of such proteins are mainly in partially or completely disordered state.

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The stability of fluorescent proteins (FPs) is of great importance for their use as reporters in studies of gene expression, protein dynamics and localization in cell. A comparative analysis of conformational stability of fluorescent proteins, having different association state was done. The list of studied proteins includes EGFP (monomer of green fluorescent protein, GFP), zFP506 (tetramer GFP), mRFP1 and "dimer2" (monomer and dimmer of red fluorescent protein), DsRed1 (red tetramer).

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Unlike wild type recoverin with only two (the second and the third) functioning Ca(2+)-binding sites out of four potential ones, the +EF4 mutant contains a third active Ca(2+)-binding site. This site was reconstructed from the fourth potential Ca(2+)-binding domain by the introduction of several amino acid substitutions in it by site-directed mutagenesis. The effect of these mutations in the fourth potential Ca(2+)-binding site of myristoylated recoverin on the structural features and conformational stability of the protein was studied by fluorimetry and circular dichroism.

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The structural properties of myristoylated forms of recombinant recoverin of the wild type and of its mutants with damaged second and/or third Ca(2+)-binding sites were studied by fluorimetry and circular dichroism. The interaction of wild-type recoverin with calcium ions was shown to induce unusual structural rearrangements in its molecule. In particular, protein binding with Ca2+ ions results in an increase in the mobility of the environment of Trp residues, in higher hydrophobicity, and in elevated thermal stability (its thermal transition shifts by 15 degrees C to higher temperatures) but has almost no effect on its secondary structure.

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The molecule of photoreceptor Ca(2+)-binding protein recoverin contains four potential Ca(2+)-binding sites of the EF-hand type, but only two of them (the second and the third) can actually bind calcium ions. We studied the interaction of Ca2+ with recoverin and its mutant forms containing point amino acid substitutions at the working Ca(2+)-binding sites by measuring the intrinsic protein fluorescence and found that the substitution of Gln for Glu residues chelating Ca2+ in one (the second or the third) or simultaneously in both (the second and the third) Ca(2+)-binding sites changes the affinity of the protein to Ca2+ ions in different ways. The Gln for Glu121 substitution in the third site and the simultaneous Gln substitutions in the second (for Glu85) and in the third (for Glu121) sites result in the complete loss of the capability of recoverin for a strong binding of Ca(2+)-ions.

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