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Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology

Crystal Structure Of Human Thymidylate Synthase: A Structural Mechanism For Guiding Substrates Into The Active Site, Celia Schiffer, Ian Clifton, V. Jo Davisson, Daniel Santi, Robert Stroud Nov 2011

Crystal Structure Of Human Thymidylate Synthase: A Structural Mechanism For Guiding Substrates Into The Active Site, Celia Schiffer, Ian Clifton, V. Jo Davisson, Daniel Santi, Robert Stroud

Celia A. Schiffer

The crystal structure of human thymidylate synthase, a target for anti-cancer drugs, is determined to 3.0 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic residual of 17.8%. The structure implicates the enzyme in a mechanism for facilitating the docking of substrates into the active site. This mechanism involves a twist of approximately 180 degrees of the active site loop, pivoted around the neighboring residues 184 and 204, and implicates ordering of external, eukaryote specific loops along with the well-characterized closure of the active site upon substrate binding. The highly conserved, but eukaryote-specific insertion of twelve residues 90-101 (h117-128), and of eight …


Expression, Purification, And Characterization Of Thymidylate Synthase From Lactococcus Lactis, Patricia Greene, Pak-Lam Yu, Jia Zhao, Celia Schiffer, Daniel Santi Nov 2011

Expression, Purification, And Characterization Of Thymidylate Synthase From Lactococcus Lactis, Patricia Greene, Pak-Lam Yu, Jia Zhao, Celia Schiffer, Daniel Santi

Celia A. Schiffer

The thymidylate synthase (TS) gene from Lactococcus lactis has been highly expressed in Escherichia coli. The TS protein was purified by sequential chromatography on Q-Sepharose and phenyl-Sepharose. Six grams of cell pellet yielded 140 mg of homogeneous TS. TS is a highly conserved enzyme, and several of the conserved amino acid residues that have been implicated in catalytic function are altered in L. lactis TS. By use of a 3-dimensional homology model, we have predicted covariant changes that might compensate for these differences. With the large amounts of L. lactis TS now available, studies can be pursued to understand the …


Substrate Specificity In Hiv-1 Protease By A Biased Sequence Search Method, Nevra Ozer, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Substrate Specificity In Hiv-1 Protease By A Biased Sequence Search Method, Nevra Ozer, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Drug resistance in HIV-1 protease can also occasionally confer a change in the substrate specificity. Through the use of computational techniques, a relationship can be determined between the substrate sequence and three-dimensional structure of HIV-1 protease, and be utilized to predict substrate specificity. In this study, we introduce a biased sequence search threading (BSST) methodology to analyze the preferences of substrate positions and correlations between them that might also identify which positions within known substrates can likely tolerate sequence variability and which cannot. The potential sequence space was efficiently explored using a low-resolution knowledge-based scoring function. The low-energy substrate sequences …


Insights Into Interferon Regulatory Factor Activation From The Crystal Structure Of Dimeric Irf5, Weijun Chen, Suvana Lam, Hema Srinath, Zhaozhao Jiang, John Correia, Celia Schiffer, Katherine Fitzgerald, Kai Lin, William Royer Nov 2011

Insights Into Interferon Regulatory Factor Activation From The Crystal Structure Of Dimeric Irf5, Weijun Chen, Suvana Lam, Hema Srinath, Zhaozhao Jiang, John Correia, Celia Schiffer, Katherine Fitzgerald, Kai Lin, William Royer

Celia A. Schiffer

Interferon regulatory factors (IRFs) are essential in the innate immune response and other physiological processes. Activation of these proteins in the cytoplasm is triggered by phosphorylation of serine and threonine residues in a C-terminal autoinhibitory region, which stimulates dimerization, transport into the nucleus, assembly with the coactivator CBP/p300 and initiation of transcription. The crystal structure of the transactivation domain of pseudophosphorylated human IRF5 strikingly reveals a dimer in which the bulk of intersubunit interactions involve a highly extended C-terminal region. The corresponding region has previously been shown to block CBP/p300 binding to unphosphorylated IRF3. Mutation of key interface residues supports …


Dynamics Of Preferential Substrate Recognition In Hiv-1 Protease: Redefining The Substrate Envelope, Aysegul Ozen, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Dynamics Of Preferential Substrate Recognition In Hiv-1 Protease: Redefining The Substrate Envelope, Aysegul Ozen, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease (PR) permits viral maturation by processing the gag and gag-pro-pol polyproteins. HIV-1 PR inhibitors (PIs) are used in combination antiviral therapy but the emergence of drug resistance has limited their efficacy. The rapid evolution of HIV-1 necessitates consideration of drug resistance in novel drug design. Drug-resistant HIV-1 PR variants no longer inhibited efficiently, continue to hydrolyze the natural viral substrates. Though highly diverse in sequence, the HIV-1 PR substrates bind in a conserved three-dimensional shape we termed the substrate envelope. Earlier, we showed that resistance mutations arise where PIs protrude beyond the substrate …


N88d Facilitates The Co-Occurrence Of D30n And L90m And The Development Of Multidrug Resistance In Hiv Type 1 Protease Following Nelfinavir Treatment Failure, Yumi Mitsuya, Mark Winters, W. Jeffrey Fessel, Soo-Yon Rhee, Leo Hurley, Michael Horberg, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Zolopa, Robert Shafer Nov 2011

N88d Facilitates The Co-Occurrence Of D30n And L90m And The Development Of Multidrug Resistance In Hiv Type 1 Protease Following Nelfinavir Treatment Failure, Yumi Mitsuya, Mark Winters, W. Jeffrey Fessel, Soo-Yon Rhee, Leo Hurley, Michael Horberg, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Zolopa, Robert Shafer

Celia A. Schiffer

Nelfinavir was once one of the most commonly used protease inhibitors (PIs). To investigate the genetic mechanisms of multidrug resistance in protease isolates with the primary nelfinavir resistance mutation D30N, we analyzed patterns of protease mutations in 582 viruses with D30N from 460 persons undergoing HIV-1 genotypic resistance testing at Stanford University Hospital from 1997 to 2005. Three patterns of mutational associations were identified. First, D30N was positively associated with N88D but negatively associated with N88S. Second, D30N and L90M were negatively associated except in the presence of N88D, which facilitated the co-occurrence of D30N and L90M. Third, D30N+N88D+L90M formed …


Simultaneous Refinement Of The Structure Of Bpti Against Nmr Data Measured In Solution And X-Ray Diffraction Data Measured In Single Crystals, Celia Schiffer, Robert Huber, Kurt Wuthrich, Wilfred Van Gunsteren Nov 2011

Simultaneous Refinement Of The Structure Of Bpti Against Nmr Data Measured In Solution And X-Ray Diffraction Data Measured In Single Crystals, Celia Schiffer, Robert Huber, Kurt Wuthrich, Wilfred Van Gunsteren

Celia A. Schiffer

The structure of the bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) has been determined to high resolution by both NMR spectroscopy in solution and X-ray diffraction in crystals. The root-mean-square difference calculated between the two structures for the polypeptide backbone is 0.9 A. Several amino acid side-chains, of which all but one are charged or polar, have different conformations. We find that by refining one structure simultaneously against both the NMR and crystallographic data sets, it can accommodate both. Different starting configurations were used, including the X-ray structure 5pti, an NMR conformer, and the X-ray structure in the full unit cell with …


The Effect Of Clade-Specific Sequence Polymorphisms On Hiv-1 Protease Activity And Inhibitor Resistance Pathways, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Madhavi Kolli, Nancy King, Ellen Nalivaika, Annie Heroux, Junko Kakizawa, Wataru Sugiura, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

The Effect Of Clade-Specific Sequence Polymorphisms On Hiv-1 Protease Activity And Inhibitor Resistance Pathways, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Madhavi Kolli, Nancy King, Ellen Nalivaika, Annie Heroux, Junko Kakizawa, Wataru Sugiura, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The majority of HIV-1 infections around the world result from non-B clade HIV-1 strains. The CRF01_AE (AE) strain is seen principally in Southeast Asia. AE protease differs by approximately 10% in amino acid sequence from clade B protease and carries several naturally occurring polymorphisms that are associated with drug resistance in clade B. AE protease has been observed to develop resistance through a nonactive-site N88S mutation in response to nelfinavir (NFV) therapy, whereas clade B protease develops both the active-site mutation D30N and the nonactive-site mutation N88D. Structural and biochemical studies were carried out with wild-type and NFV-resistant clade B …


Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease-Correlated Cleavage Site Mutations Enhance Inhibitor Resistance, Madhavi Kolli, Eric Stawiski, Colombe Chappey, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease-Correlated Cleavage Site Mutations Enhance Inhibitor Resistance, Madhavi Kolli, Eric Stawiski, Colombe Chappey, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Drug resistance is an important cause of antiretroviral therapy failure in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. Mutations in the protease render the virus resistant to protease inhibitors (PIs). Gag cleavage sites also mutate, sometimes correlating with resistance mutations in the protease, but their contribution to resistance has not been systematically analyzed. The present study examines mutations in Gag cleavage sites that associate with protease mutations and the impact of these associations on drug susceptibilities. Significant associations were observed between mutations in the nucleocapsid-p1 (NC-p1) and p1-p6 cleavage sites and various PI resistance-associated mutations in the protease. Several patterns were frequently …


Structure-Based Design, Synthesis, And Structure-Activity Relationship Studies Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Incorporating Phenyloxazolidinones, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Madhavi Nalam, Saima Anjum, Hong Cao, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana Nov 2011

Structure-Based Design, Synthesis, And Structure-Activity Relationship Studies Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Incorporating Phenyloxazolidinones, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Madhavi Nalam, Saima Anjum, Hong Cao, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana

Celia A. Schiffer

A series of new HIV-1 protease inhibitors with the hydroxyethylamine core and different phenyloxazolidinone P2 ligands were designed and synthesized. Variation of phenyl substitutions at the P2 and P2' moieties significantly affected the binding affinity and antiviral potency of the inhibitors. In general, compounds with 2- and 4-substituted phenyloxazolidinones at P2 exhibited lower binding affinities than 3-substituted analogues. Crystal structure analyses of ligand-enzyme complexes revealed different binding modes for 2- and 3-substituted P2 moieties in the protease S2 binding pocket, which may explain their different binding affinities. Several compounds with 3-substituted P2 moieties demonstrated picomolar binding affinity and low nanomolar …