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Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry

The Study Of The Structure And Dynamics Of Parkin Activation, Elaine Aisha Freeman Dec 2021

The Study Of The Structure And Dynamics Of Parkin Activation, Elaine Aisha Freeman

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Parkin is an RBR E3 ubiquitin ligase that has been implicated in both sporadic and familial Parkinson’s disease. Upon mitochondrial damage, parkin is activated step-wise to recruit and ligate ubiquitin to a substrate on the outer mitochondrial membrane. Disruption of this activation and ligation cascade is hypothesized to result in neuronal death related to Parkinson’s disease.

While structures of parkin for a number of these activation states exist, it is important to note they are not of full-length human parkin. These structures are often truncated and come from various non-human species to eliminate important, yet hard to quantify structural elements. …


Erecta Family Genes Regulate The Shoot Apical Meristem And Organ Formation, Daniel A. Degennaro Dec 2021

Erecta Family Genes Regulate The Shoot Apical Meristem And Organ Formation, Daniel A. Degennaro

Doctoral Dissertations

Plants are sessile and must adjust their organ growth to their environments. A reservoir of stem cells in the shoot apical meristem (SAM) supplies cells for differentiation into organs. The SAM must balance organ production with stem cell maintenance. The ERECTA family (ERfs) encodes the leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases ERECTA (ER), ERECTA-LIKE 1 (ERL1), and ERL2. ERf signaling regulates organ initiation and stem cell maintenance. Results presented in this work include the following:

1) WUSCHEL (WUS) and CLAVATA3 (CLV3) make up a negative feedback loop to maintain SAM size. WUS and CLV3 expression localization is critical for …


Dual Control Of One Component Signaling: Mechanistic And Structural Insights Into El222 Active States, Uthama Phani R. Edupuganti Sep 2021

Dual Control Of One Component Signaling: Mechanistic And Structural Insights Into El222 Active States, Uthama Phani R. Edupuganti

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Photoreceptors play a crucial role in signal transduction as specialized proteins which sense light as environmental stimuli and transduce the signal to control of downstream functions. Here we focus our attention on one class of these proteins, the Light-Oxygen-Voltage (LOV) domain, which is sensitive to blue light via an internally-bound flavin chromophore. Since their initial discovery in plant phototropins, many details of their photochemistry, chromophore interactions, and use with a diverse set of functional effectors have been described. However, several key details, especially a comprehensive understanding of signaling mechanism and its regulation, still remain elusive due in part to the …


The Structural And Functional Role Of Photosensing In Rgs-Lov Proteins, Zaynab Jaber Sep 2021

The Structural And Functional Role Of Photosensing In Rgs-Lov Proteins, Zaynab Jaber

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Light provides organisms with energy and spatiotemporal information. To survive and adapt, organisms have developed the ability to sense light to drive biochemical effects that underlie vision, entrainment of circadian rhythm, stress response, virulence, and many other important molecularly driven responses. Blue-light sensing Light-Oxygen-Voltage (LOV) domains are ubiquitous across multiple kingdoms of life and modulate various physiological events via diverse effector domains. Using a small molecule flavin chromophore, the LOV domain undergoes light-dependent structural changes leading to activation or repression of these catalytic and non-catalytic effectors. In silico analyses of high-throughput genomic sequencing data has led to the marked expansion …


Machine Learning And Solvation Theory For Drug Discovery, Lieyang Chen Sep 2021

Machine Learning And Solvation Theory For Drug Discovery, Lieyang Chen

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Drug discovery is a notoriously expensive and time-consuming process; hence, developing computational methods to facilitate the discovery process and lower the associated costs is a long-sought goal of computational chemists. Protein-ligand binding, which provides the physical and chemical basis for the mechanism of action of most drugs, occurs in an aqueous environment, and binding affinity is determined not only by atomic interactions between the protein and ligand but also by changes in their interactions with surrounding water molecules that occur upon binding. Thus, a quantitative understanding of the roles water molecules play in the protein-ligand binding process is an essential …


New Perspectives On Phosphorylation State In The Parkin Ubiquitination Cascade, Karen Dunkerley Jun 2021

New Perspectives On Phosphorylation State In The Parkin Ubiquitination Cascade, Karen Dunkerley

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

The RBR E3 ligase parkin is recruited to the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) during oxidative stress where it becomes activated and ubiquitinates numerous proteins. Parkin activation involves binding of a phosphorylated ubiquitin (pUb), followed by phosphorylation of parkin itself, both mediated by the OMM kinase, PINK1. However, targeted mitochondrial proteins have little structural or sequence similarity, with the commonality between substrates being proximity to the OMM. The objective of this thesis was to identify the molecular consequences of parkin phosphorylation, interaction with pUb and how this promotes ubiquitination activity of known Ub-acceptor proteins and parkin itself.

The three-dimensional structure of …


Molecular Dynamics Simulations Provide Insight Into Stability Of Hyperthermophilic Endoglucanases, Logan E. Sheffield Jun 2021

Molecular Dynamics Simulations Provide Insight Into Stability Of Hyperthermophilic Endoglucanases, Logan E. Sheffield

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Endoglucanases play a key role in the industrial production of bioethanol, but the most efficient method requires the utilization of high temperatures and is currently limited by the thermostability of endoglucanases. For this reason, it would be beneficial to discover more high-efficiency, thermostable enzymes to utilize in the hydrolytic process. In this study molecular dynamics simulations were performed on structurally similar endoglucanases with varying levels of thermostability to gain insight on what factors contribute to thermostability in endoglucanases. RMSD, RMSF, PCA, hydrogen bonding and salt bridges were analyzed. Finally, protein energy networks were constructed from nonbonded interaction potentials and analysis …


Pharmacological Chaperoning Of Human Lysosomal Neuraminidase 1, Di Chu May 2021

Pharmacological Chaperoning Of Human Lysosomal Neuraminidase 1, Di Chu

Doctoral Dissertations

Human lysosomal neuraminidase 1 (hNEU1) is an exo-a-sialidase which cleaves a(2-3) and a(2-6) linked sialic acids on glycoproteins in the lysosome. Deficiency of hNEU1 in the lysosome results in sialidosis, a lysosomal storage disease. Currently there is no effective treatment for sialidosis, which leads to a rising interest in discovering potential therapies. Here we presented a small molecule, α-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA), increases the protein amount and activity of both wild-type hNEU1 and three different hNEU1 mutations found in sialidosis patients in our mammalian cell system, suggesting that NANA works as a potential pharmacological chaperone for hNEU1 and provides …


Investigations Of The Structure And Protein-Protein Interactions Of Chlamydia Trachomatis Scc4, Thilini Oshadhi Senarath Ukwaththage Mar 2021

Investigations Of The Structure And Protein-Protein Interactions Of Chlamydia Trachomatis Scc4, Thilini Oshadhi Senarath Ukwaththage

LSU Doctoral Dissertations

Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) is the most common, sexually transmitted bacterial disease (STD) in the world. In the developmental cycle of CT, specific chlamydia chaperone 4 (Scc4) is a unique protein with essential and multiple roles. Hence, Scc4 is significant as a virulence target for therapeutic approaches to treat chlamydial infections. A novel approach was discovered to purify tag free Scc4 by utilizing a 6X-histidine-tag on Scc1 in the co-expressed Scc4:Scc1 complex by capturing the complex on nickel-charged immobilized metal affinity chromatography resin, followed by dissociation of Scc4 with sarkosyl. Using triple resonance NMR experiments, backbone and sidechain resonances …


The C. Neoformans Cell Wall: A Scaffold For Virulence, Christine Chrissian Feb 2021

The C. Neoformans Cell Wall: A Scaffold For Virulence, Christine Chrissian

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Cryptococcus neoformans is a globally distributed opportunistic fungal pathogen and the causative agent of life threatening cryptococcal meningoencephalitis in immunocompromised individuals, resulting in ~180,000 deaths each year worldwide. A primary virulence-associated trait of this organism is the production of melanin. Melanins are a class of diverse pigments produced via the oxidation and polymerization of aromatic ring compounds that have a characteristically complex, heterogenous, and amorphous structure. They are synthesized by representatives of all biological kingdoms and share a multitude of remarkable properties such as the ability to absorb ultraviolet (UV) light and protect against ionizing radiation. Melanin production in fungi …


Design Of Fibril Forming Collagen Mimetic Peptides: Heterotrimers And Nucleation Domains, Sally Tan Jan 2021

Design Of Fibril Forming Collagen Mimetic Peptides: Heterotrimers And Nucleation Domains, Sally Tan

Theses and Dissertations

This paper attempts to design collagen mimetic peptides where the triple-helical region mimics that of human Type I Collagen. With consideration for chain selection and chain register, we utilize the NC2 domain of heterotrimeric Type IX Collagen as a nucleation domain for triple-helix folding.


Substrate Trafficking Within The Type Vii Secretion Systems Of Pathogenic Mycobacteria, Zachary A. Williamson Jan 2021

Substrate Trafficking Within The Type Vii Secretion Systems Of Pathogenic Mycobacteria, Zachary A. Williamson

Theses and Dissertations--Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry

Tuberculosis (TB), primarily caused by infection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) in the lungs, is the deadliest infectious bacterial disease killing 1.5 million people annually. A major determinant of virulence is active secretion through three specialized type VII secretion (ESX) systems; ESX-1, ESX-3, and ESX-5. A large group of substrates exported by the ESX systems is the PE (Proline-Glutamine) and PPE (Proline-Proline-Glutamate) families of proteins, which are highly expanded in the pathogenic species of Mycobacteria and encompass over 7% of Mtb’s genome coding capacity. PE and PPE proteins interact together to form PE-PPE heterodimers, and are secreted through …


Interactions Of Post-Pks Enzymes Of The Mithramycin Biosynthetic Pathway, Ryan Wheeler Jan 2021

Interactions Of Post-Pks Enzymes Of The Mithramycin Biosynthetic Pathway, Ryan Wheeler

Theses and Dissertations--Pharmacy

Combinatorial biosynthesis is a powerful tool for generating new, more active drug analogues to combat disease. But in order for combinatorial biosynthesis to be employed to its full potential, a deep understanding of the enzymes that produce the parent molecule must be had. The goals of the work presented in this thesis are to characterize the reaction catalyzed by MtmW, the final enzyme in the mithramycin (MTM) biosynthetic pathway, and to discover the interaction between MtmW and MtmOIV.

MtmW is an aldol-ketoreductase responsible for reducing the most distal carbonyl on the MTM pentyl side chain. It forms an octamer that …


Computational Analysis And Prediction Of Intrinsic Disorder And Intrinsic Disorder Functions In Proteins, Akila I. Katuwawala Jan 2021

Computational Analysis And Prediction Of Intrinsic Disorder And Intrinsic Disorder Functions In Proteins, Akila I. Katuwawala

Theses and Dissertations

COMPUTATIONAL ANALYSIS AND PREDICTION OF INTRINSIC DISORDER AND INTRINSIC DISORDER FUNCTIONS IN PROTEINS

By Akila Imesha Katuwawala

A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy with a concentration in Computer Science at Virginia Commonwealth University.

Virginia Commonwealth University, 2021

Director: Lukasz Kurgan, Professor, Department of Computer Science

Proteins, as a fundamental class of biomolecules, have been studied from various perspectives over the past two centuries. The traditional notion is that proteins require fixed and stable three-dimensional structures to carry out biological functions. However, there is mounting evidence regarding a “special” class …


Investigation Of Multidrug Efflux Transporter Acrb In Escherichia Coli: Assembly, Degradation And Dynamics, Prasangi Irosha Rajapaksha Jan 2021

Investigation Of Multidrug Efflux Transporter Acrb In Escherichia Coli: Assembly, Degradation And Dynamics, Prasangi Irosha Rajapaksha

Theses and Dissertations--Chemistry

The Resistant Nodulation Division (RND) super family member, tripartite AcrA-AcrB-TolC efflux pump, is a major contributor in conferring multidrug-resistance in Escherichia coli. The structure of the pump complex, and drug translocation by functional rotation mechanism have been widely studied. Despite of all these data, the dynamics of the assembly process of the pump and AcrB during functional rotation in the process of drug efflux remains poorly understood. My thesis focuses on understanding the pump assembly process, dynamics of AcrB in functional rotation mechanism, and also investigate the mechanism of degradation of AcrB facilitated by a C-terminal ssrA tag.

In the …


On The Structure And Function Of Mitochondrial Uncoupling Proteins: The Case Of Ucp2, Afshan Ardalan Jan 2021

On The Structure And Function Of Mitochondrial Uncoupling Proteins: The Case Of Ucp2, Afshan Ardalan

Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive)

Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are regulated proton transporters of the mitochondrial inner membrane. UCP-mediated proton leak negatively impacts the rate of ATP synthesis. Despite the importance of their physiological role(s) in certain tissues, molecular aspects of UCPs’ structure-function relationships are not fully understood. The current study explores the tertiary and quaternary structure of UCP2, as well as its proton transport mechanism in lipid membranes. The proteins were expressed in the E. coli inner membrane, purified and reconstituted into liposomes. Proteins were characterized by semi-native SDS-PAGE. Circular dichroism spectroscopy (CD) and fluorescence quenching assays were utilized to study the conformation of proteins …