Heat-labile enterotoxin (LT), produced by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli, is a close relative of cholera toxin (CT). These two toxins share approximately 80% sequence identity, and consists of one 240-residue A chain and five 103-residue B subunits. The B pentamer is responsible for GM1 receptor recognition, whereas the A subunit carries out an ADP-ribosylation of an arginine residue in the G protein, Gs alpha, in the epithelial target cell. This paper explores the importance of specific amino acids in loop 47-56 of the A subunit. This loop was observed to be highly mobile in the inactive R7K mutant of the A subunit. The position of the loop in wild-type protein is such that it might require considerable reorganization during substrate binding and is likely to have a crucial role in substrate binding. Five single-site substitutions have been made in the LT-A subunit 47-56 loop to investigate its possible role in the enzymatic activity and toxicity of LT and CT. The wild-type residues Thr-50 and Val-53 were replaced either by a glycine or by a proline. The glycine substitutions were intended to increase the mobility of this active-site loop, and the proline substitutions were intended to decrease the mobility of this same loop by restricting the accessible conformational space. Under the hypothesis that mobility of the loop is important for catalysis, the glycine-substitution mutants T50G and V53G would be expected to exhibit activity equal to or greater than that of the wild-type A subunit, while the proline substitution mutants T50P and T53P would be less active. Cytotoxicity assays showed, however, that all four of these mutants were considerably less active than wild-type LT. These results lend support for assignment of a prominent role to loop 47-56 in catalysis by LT and CT.
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Ultrasound Med Biol
January 2024
Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
Objective: Echocardiography, a critical tool for assessing left atrial (LA) volume, often relies on manual or semi-automated measurements. This study introduces a fully automated, real-time method for measuring LA volume in both 2-D and 3-D imaging, in the aim of offering accuracy comparable to that of expert assessments while saving time and reducing operator variability.
Methods: We developed an automated pipeline comprising a network to identify the end-systole (ES) time point and robust 2-D and 3-D U-Nets for segmentation.
Med Eng Phys
December 2020
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA; Motion Study Laboratory, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Electronic address:
Spinal cord injury (SCI) often results in loss of the ability to keep the trunk erect and stable while seated. Functional neuromuscular stimulation (FNS) can cause muscles paralyzed by SCI to contract and assist with trunk stability. We have extended the results of a previously reported threshold-based controller for restoring upright posture using FNS in the sagittal plane to more challenging displacements of the trunk in the coronal plane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
March 2021
Division of Peptide Biochemistry, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technische Universität München (TUM), Emil-Erlenmeyer-Forum 5, 85354, Freising, Germany.
Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) is an inflammatory cytokine and atypical chemokine with a key role in inflammatory diseases including atherosclerosis. Key atherogenic functions of MIF are mediated by noncognate interaction with the chemokine receptor CXCR2. The MIF N-like loop comprising the sequence 47-56 is an important structural determinant of the MIF/CXCR2 interface and MIF(47-56) blocks atherogenic MIF activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
October 2017
Department of Biotechnology, School of Life Sciences, Pondicherry University, 605014, Puducherry, India. Electronic address:
A gene coding lipase from Bacillus sp. PU1 was cloned and expressed in E. coli BL21(DE3) pLysS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProg Biophys Mol Biol
September 2017
Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics, King's College London, UK. Electronic address:
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