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Статті в журналах з теми "Nucleoid-associated Protein HU"

1

Ali Azam, Talukder, Akira Iwata, Akiko Nishimura, Susumu Ueda, and Akira Ishihama. "Growth Phase-Dependent Variation in Protein Composition of the Escherichia coli Nucleoid." Journal of Bacteriology 181, no. 20 (October 15, 1999): 6361–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.181.20.6361-6370.1999.

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ABSTRACT The genome DNA of Escherichia coli is associated with about 10 DNA-binding structural proteins, altogether forming the nucleoid. The nucleoid proteins play some functional roles, besides their structural roles, in the global regulation of such essential DNA functions as replication, recombination, and transcription. Using a quantitative Western blot method, we have performed for the first time a systematic determination of the intracellular concentrations of 12 species of the nucleoid protein in E. coli W3110, including CbpA (curved DNA-binding protein A), CbpB (curved DNA-binding protein B, also known as Rob [right origin binding protein]), DnaA (DNA-binding protein A), Dps (DNA-binding protein from starved cells), Fis (factor for inversion stimulation), Hfq (host factor for phage Qβ), H-NS (histone-like nucleoid structuring protein), HU (heat-unstable nucleoid protein), IciA (inhibitor of chromosome initiation A), IHF (integration host factor), Lrp (leucine-responsive regulatory protein), and StpA (suppressor oftd mutant phenotype A). Intracellular protein levels reach a maximum at the growing phase for nine proteins, CbpB (Rob), DnaA, Fis, Hfq, H-NS, HU, IciA, Lrp, and StpA, which may play regulatory roles in DNA replication and/or transcription of the growth-related genes. In descending order, the level of accumulation, calculated in monomers, in growing E. coli cells is Fis, Hfq, HU, StpA, H-NS, IHF*, CbpB (Rob), Dps*, Lrp, DnaA, IciA, and CbpA* (stars represent the stationary-phase proteins). The order of abundance, in descending order, in the early stationary phase is Dps*, IHF*, HU, Hfq, H-NS, StpA, CbpB (Rob), DnaA, Lrp, IciA, CbpA, and Fis, while that in the late stationary phase is Dps*, IHF*, Hfq, HU, CbpA*, StpA, H-NS, CbpB (Rob), DnaA, Lrp, IciA, and Fis. Thus, the major protein components of the nucleoid change from Fis and HU in the growing phase to Dps in the stationary phase. The curved DNA-binding protein, CbpA, appears only in the late stationary phase. These changes in the composition of nucleoid-associated proteins in the stationary phase are accompanied by compaction of the genome DNA and silencing of the genome functions.
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Qian, Zhong, Victor B. Zhurkin, and Sankar Adhya. "DNA–RNA interactions are critical for chromosome condensation inEscherichia coli." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114, no. 46 (October 30, 2017): 12225–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1711285114.

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Bacterial chromosome (nucleoid) conformation dictates faithful regulation of gene transcription. The conformation is condition-dependent and is guided by several nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs) and at least one nucleoid-associated noncoding RNA, naRNA4. Here we investigated the molecular mechanism of how naRNA4 and the major NAP, HU, acting together organize the chromosome structure by establishing multiple DNA–DNA contacts (DNA condensation). We demonstrate that naRNA4 uniquely acts by forming complexes that may not involve long stretches of DNA–RNA hybrid. Also, uncommonly, HU, a chromosome-associated protein that is essential in the DNA–RNA interactions, is not present in the final complex. Thus, HU plays a catalytic (chaperone) role in the naRNA4-mediated DNA condensation process.
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3

Yee, Benjamin, Evgeny Sagulenko, and John A. Fuerst. "Making heads or tails of the HU proteins in the planctomycete Gemmata obscuriglobus." Microbiology 157, no. 7 (July 1, 2011): 2012–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.047605-0.

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Gemmata obscuriglobus has a highly condensed nucleoid which is implicated in its resistance to radiation. However, the mechanisms by which such compaction is achieved, and the proteins responsible, are still unknown. Here we have examined the genome of G. obscuriglobus for the presence of proteins homologous to those that have been associated with nucleoid condensation. We found two different proteins homologous to the bacterial nucleoid-associated protein HU, one with an N-terminal and one with a C-terminal extension relative to the amino acid sequence of the HU found in Escherichia coli. Sequence analysis revealed that one of these HU homologues represents a novel type with a high number of prolines in its C-terminal extension, whereas the other one has motifs similar to the N terminus of the HU homologue from the radio-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. The occurrence of two such HU homologue proteins with these two different terminal extensions in one organism appears to be unique among the Bacteria.
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Hammel, Michal, Dhar Amlanjyoti, Francis E. Reyes, Jian-Hua Chen, Rochelle Parpana, Henry Y. H. Tang, Carolyn A. Larabell, John A. Tainer, and Sankar Adhya. "HU multimerization shift controls nucleoid compaction." Science Advances 2, no. 7 (July 2016): e1600650. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1600650.

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Molecular mechanisms controlling functional bacterial chromosome (nucleoid) compaction and organization are surprisingly enigmatic but partly depend on conserved, histone-like proteins HUαα and HUαβ and their interactions that span the nanoscale and mesoscale from protein-DNA complexes to the bacterial chromosome and nucleoid structure. We determined the crystal structures of these chromosome-associated proteins in complex with native duplex DNA. Distinct DNA binding modes of HUαα and HUαβ elucidate fundamental features of bacterial chromosome packing that regulate gene transcription. By combining crystal structures with solution x-ray scattering results, we determined architectures of HU-DNA nucleoproteins in solution under near-physiological conditions. These macromolecular conformations and interactions result in contraction at the cellular level based on in vivo imaging of native unlabeled nucleoid by soft x-ray tomography upon HUβ and ectopic HUα38 expression. Structural characterization of charge-altered HUαα-DNA complexes reveals an HU molecular switch that is suitable for condensing nucleoid and reprogramming noninvasiveEscherichia coliinto an invasive form. Collective findings suggest that shifts between networking and cooperative and noncooperative DNA-dependent HU multimerization control DNA compaction and supercoiling independently of cellular topoisomerase activity. By integrating x-ray crystal structures, x-ray scattering, mutational tests, and x-ray imaging that span from protein-DNA complexes to the bacterial chromosome and nucleoid structure, we show that defined dynamic HU interaction networks can promote nucleoid reorganization and transcriptional regulation as efficient general microbial mechanisms to help synchronize genetic responses to cell cycle, changing environments, and pathogenesis.
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Salerno, Paola, Jessica Larsson, Giselda Bucca, Emma Laing, Colin P. Smith, and Klas Flärdh. "One of the Two Genes Encoding Nucleoid-Associated HU Proteins in Streptomyces coelicolor Is Developmentally Regulated and Specifically Involved in Spore Maturation." Journal of Bacteriology 191, no. 21 (August 28, 2009): 6489–500. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00709-09.

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ABSTRACT Streptomyces genomes encode two homologs of the nucleoid-associated HU proteins. One of them, here designated HupA, is of a conventional type similar to E. coli HUα and HUβ, while the other, HupS, is a two-domain protein. In addition to the N-terminal part that is similar to that of HU proteins, it has a C-terminal domain that is similar to the alanine- and lysine-rich C termini of eukaryotic linker histones. Such two-domain HU proteins are found only among Actinobacteria. In this phylum some organisms have only a single HU protein of the type with a C-terminal histone H1-like domain (e.g., Hlp in Mycobacterium smegmatis), while others have only a single conventional HU. Yet others, including the streptomycetes, produce both types of HU proteins. We show here that the two HU genes in Streptomyces coelicolor are differentially regulated and that hupS is specifically expressed during sporulation, while hupA is expressed in vegetative hyphae. The developmental upregulation of hupS occurred in sporogenic aerial hyphal compartments and was dependent on the developmental regulators whiA, whiG, and whiI. HupS was found to be nucleoid associated in spores, and a hupS deletion mutant had an average nucleoid size in spores larger than that in the parent strain. The mutant spores were also defective in heat resistance and spore pigmentation, although they possessed apparently normal spore walls and displayed no increased sensitivity to detergents. Overall, the results show that HupS is specifically involved in sporulation and may affect nucleoid architecture and protection in spores of S. coelicolor.
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Peraman, Ramalingam, Geethavani Meka, Naresh Babu Chilamakuru, Vinay Kumar Kutagulla, Saloni Malla, Charles R. Ashby, Amit K. Tiwari, and Padmanabha Reddy Yiragamreddy. "Novel stilbene scaffolds efficiently target Mycobacterium tuberculosis nucleoid-associated protein, HU." New Journal of Chemistry 45, no. 24 (2021): 10683–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0nj05947a.

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Boyko, Konstantin, Marina Gorbacheva, Tatiana Rakitina, Dmitry Korzhenevskiy, Anna Vanyushkina, Dmitry Kamashev, Alexey Lipkin, and Vladimir Popov. "Expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of the histone-like HU protein fromSpiroplasma melliferumKC3." Acta Crystallographica Section F Structural Biology Communications 71, no. 1 (January 1, 2015): 24–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s2053230x14025333.

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HU proteins belong to the nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs) that are involved in vital processes such as DNA compaction and reparation, gene transcriptionetc.No data are available on the structures of HU proteins from mycoplasmas. To this end, the HU protein from the parasitic mycoplasmaSpiroplasma melliferumKC3 was cloned, overexpressed inEscherichia coliand purified to homogeneity. Prismatic crystals of the protein were obtained by the vapour-diffusion technique at 4°C. The crystals diffracted to 1.36 Å resolution (the best resolution ever obtained for a HU protein). The diffraction data were indexed in space groupC2 and the structure of the protein was solved by the molecular-replacement method with one monomer per asymmetric unit.
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Thakur, Bhishem, Archit Gupta, and Purnananda Guptasarma. "A novel protein-engineered dsDNA-binding protein (HU-Simulacrum) inspired by HU, a nucleoid-associated DNABII protein." Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 534 (January 2021): 47–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2020.11.088.

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9

Lin, Szu-Ning, Gijs J. L. Wuite, and Remus T. Dame. "Effect of Different Crowding Agents on the Architectural Properties of the Bacterial Nucleoid-Associated Protein HU." International Journal of Molecular Sciences 21, no. 24 (December 15, 2020): 9553. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21249553.

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HU is a nucleoid-associated protein expressed in most eubacteria at a high amount of copies (tens of thousands). The protein is believed to bind across the genome to organize and compact the DNA. Most of the studies on HU have been carried out in a simple in vitro system, and to what extent these observations can be extrapolated to a living cell is unclear. In this study, we investigate the DNA binding properties of HU under conditions approximating physiological ones. We report that these properties are influenced by both macromolecular crowding and salt conditions. We use three different crowding agents (blotting grade blocker (BGB), bovine serum albumin (BSA), and polyethylene glycol 8000 (PEG8000)) as well as two different MgCl2 conditions to mimic the intracellular environment. Using tethered particle motion (TPM), we show that the transition between two binding regimes, compaction and extension of the HU protein, is strongly affected by crowding agents. Our observations suggest that magnesium ions enhance the compaction of HU–DNA and suppress filamentation, while BGB and BSA increase the local concentration of the HU protein by more than 4-fold. Moreover, BGB and BSA seem to suppress filament formation. On the other hand, PEG8000 is not a good crowding agent for concentrations above 9% (w/v), because it might interact with DNA, the protein, and/or surfaces. Together, these results reveal a complex interplay between the HU protein and the various crowding agents that should be taken into consideration when using crowding agents to mimic an in vivo system.
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Phan, Ngoc Quang, Takashi Uebanso, Takaaki Shimohata, Mutsumi Nakahashi, Kazuaki Mawatari, and Akira Takahashi. "DNA-Binding Protein HU Coordinates Pathogenicity in Vibrio parahaemolyticus." Journal of Bacteriology 197, no. 18 (July 6, 2015): 2958–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00306-15.

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ABSTRACTHU is one of the most abundant nucleoid-associated proteins in bacterial cells and regulates the expression of many genes involved in growth, motility, metabolism, and virulence. It is known thatVibrio parahaemolyticuspathogenicity is related to its characteristic rapid growth and that type III secretion system 1 (T3SS1) contributes to its cytotoxicity. However, it is not known if HU plays a role in the pathogenicity ofV. parahaemolyticus. In the present study, we investigated the effect of HU proteins HU-2 (HUα) (V. parahaemolyticus2911 [vp2911]) and HUβ (vp0920) on the pathogenicity ofV. parahaemolyticus. We found that a deletion of both HU subunits (yielding the ΔHUs [Δvp0920Δvp2911] strain), but not single deletions, led to a reduction of the growth rate. In addition, expression levels of T3SS1-related genes, includingexsA(positive regulator),exsD(negative regulator),vp1680(cytotoxic effector), andvp1671(T3SS1 apparatus), were reduced in the ΔHUs strain compared to the wild type (WT). As a result, cytotoxicity to HeLa cells was decreased in the ΔHUs strain. The additional deletion ofexsDin the ΔHUs strain restored T3SS1-related gene expression levels and cytotoxicity but not the growth rate. These results suggest that the HU protein regulates the levels of T3SS1 gene expression and cytotoxicity in a growth rate-independent manner.IMPORTANCENucleoid-binding protein HU regulates cellular behaviors, including nucleoid structuring, general recombination, transposition, growth, replication, motility, metabolism, and virulence. It is thought that both the number of bacteria and the number of virulence factors may affect the pathogenicity of bacteria. In the present study, we investigated which factor(s) has a dominant role during infection in one of the most rapidly growing bacterial species,Vibrio parahaemolyticus. We found thatV. parahaemolyticuscytotoxicity is regulated, in a growth rate-independent manner, by the HU proteins through regulation of a number of virulence factors, including T3SS1 gene expression.
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Дисертації з теми "Nucleoid-associated Protein HU"

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Ghosh, Soumitra. "Nucleoid-associated Proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis : Insights into their Functions." Thesis, 2014. https://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/4561.

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Bacteria face the challenging task of compacting their chromosomes to accommodate them in a small cytoplasmic volume and at the same time maintaining the nucleoids in a highly organized and dynamic state for transcription, DNA replication, and chromosome partitioning to take place with accuracy and speed. DNA also has to be protected from damage to preserve the genetic information. The structure and organization of the bacterial chromatin is shaped by compacting forces, such as DNA supercoiling, macromolecular crowding, and by nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs). The NAPs are often referred to as histone-like proteins due to their functional similarity with eukaryotic histones. In Escherichia coli, a dozen proteins have been identified as NAPs. The well characterized members of this family are HU, H-NS, IHF, Lrp, and Fis. NAPs carry out wrapping, bridging, and bending of the bacterial DNA, resulting in its compaction and topological rearrangements. Most NAPs display broad specificity toward DNA and can thus have a global effect on gene expression. NAPs are known to influence the virulence and pathogenesis of different pathogenic bacteria. In spite of their critical role in bacterial physiology and virulence, very limited information is available on NAPs of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). The work presented in this thesis describes the functional characterization of two important NAPs of Mtb namely, Rv3852 and Rv2986c (HU) and understanding their role in genome organization and topology modulation. Chapter 1 of the thesis provides introduction on bacterial nucleoid and its architectural organization. The importance of nucleoid-associated proteins in maintenance of genome architecture and supercoiling have been discussed. Further, the functions of some of the well characterized NAPs have been described with specific examples. Finally, a brief overview of Mtb genome, disease epidemiology, and pathogenesis is presented along with the description of the initial studies on mycobacterial NAPs. In Chapter 2 studies have been directed to functionally characterize Rv3852, a NAP of Mtb, conserved among the pathogenic and slow growing species of mycobacteria. Data presented in this part show that the NAP binds DNA in a sequence independent manner and ectopic expression of the protein in Mycobacterium smegmatis cells causes spreading of the nucleoid. The protein has both DNA binding and membrane anchoring properties and is predominantly localizes in the cell membrane. The carboxyl terminal region of the protein has the propensity to form transmembrane helix which is shown to be necessary for its membrane localization. The protein is involved in genome organization and its ectopic expression in M. smegmatis results in defects in biofilm formation, sliding motility and change in a polar lipid profile. The study demonstrates the crucial role of Rv3852 in regulating the expression of KasA, KasB and GroEL1 proteins which are in turn involved in controlling the surface phenotypes in mycobacteria. Chapter 3 describes the studies on an essential NAP, Rv2986c, the homologue of histone-like protein HU in Mtb (MtHU). HU plays an important role in maintenance of chromosomal architecture and in global regulation of DNA transactions in bacteria. The work described in this chapter reports the functional characterization of HU from Mtb. Although HU is essential for growth of Mtb, there have been no reported attempts to perturb MtHU function with small molecules. Based on the crystal structure, a core region within the MtHU-DNA interface has been identified that can be targeted using stilbene derivatives. These small molecules specifically inhibit MtHU-DNA binding, disrupt nucleoid architecture and reduce Mtb growth. The stilbene inhibitors induce gene expression changes in Mtb that resemble those induced by HU deficiency. The results indicate that HU is a potential target for development of therapeutics against tuberculosis. The work presented in Chapter 4 focuses on understanding the role of MtHU in maintenance of DNA topology. The topological homeostasis of bacterial chromosomes is achieved by the balance between compaction and topological organization of genomes. Two classes of proteins play major roles in chromosome organization: The NAPs and topoisomerases. The NAPs bind DNA to compact the chromosome, whereas topoisomerases catalytically remove or introduce supercoils into the genome. The data presented here demonstrates that MtHU specifically stimulates the DNA relaxation ability of mycobacterial topoisomerase I (TopoI) at lower concentrations but interferes at higher concentrations. A direct physical interaction between MtHU and TopoI is necessary for enhancing the enzyme activity both in vitro and in vivo. The interaction is between amino terminal domain of MtHU and carboxyl terminal domain of TopoI. Binding of MtHU does not affect the two catalytic trans-esterification steps but enhances the DNA strand passage, requisite for the completion of DNA relaxation, a new mechanism of regulation of topoisomerase activity. An interaction deficient mutant of MtHU is compromised in enhancing the strand passage activity. The species specific physical and functional cooperation between MtHU and TopoI may be the key to achieve DNA relaxation levels needed to maintain optimal superhelical density of mycobacterial genomes.
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Dey, Debayan. "Crystal Structures of Native and AdoMet Bound rRNA Methyltransferase from Sinorhizobium meliloti : Structural Insights into rRNA Recognition. Evolutionary, Structural and Functional Studies on Nucleoid-Associated Proteins HU and IHF." Thesis, 2016. http://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/4062.

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DNA- and RNA-binding proteins play a central role in gene regulation, which includes transcriptional control, alternative splicing, post-translational and transcriptional modifications like methylation and acetylation among other roles. In this way, they control most of the working machinery of the cell in direct or indirect manner. Although more than 60 years ago the structure of DNA was proposed by Watson and Crick, our understanding of how RNA- and DNA-binding proteins interact with the genome and transcriptome remains scarce. One of the most important questions in biology is how a large number of DNA- and RNA-binding proteins find their target, interact and later disassociate. These nucleic acid binding proteins either recognizes the unique structural and chemical signatures of the bases (base readout) which give the specificity or it recognizes a sequence-dependent shape (shape readout). Methyltransferases are enzymes with diverse folds, which perform methyltransfer to various substrates using mainly S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet) as a methyl donor. RNA methylation is one of the most crucial post-transcriptional modifications which influences a wide variety of cellular processes like metabolic stabilization of RNA, quality control in protein synthesis, resistance to antibiotics, mRNA reading frame maintenance, splicing, viral nucleoprotein stabilization among others. Specificity in recognition and methylation in ribosomal RNA (rRNA) methyltransferases is very crucial, as rRNA is highly conserved and lack of specificity would influence the stabilization of RNA and thus, will affect the ribosome. In recent years, rRNA modifications which confer resistance to ribosomal antibiotics have also been observed. The mechanism of recognition to their unique rRNA target site with high selectivity and their evolution still remains an enigma. Thus, the evolution of antibiotic resistance-conferring methyltransferases in pathogenic organisms needs to be investigated from the structural and evolutionary perspective. In the last two decades, many global regulators in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes have been discovered, which promiscuously bind to a large number of DNA sequences. In prokaryotes, they are called as ‘Nucleoid-associated proteins’ (NAPs), which influence the transcriptional process and exhibit multi-specificity or promiscuity. They also take part in the formation of many multi-protein complexes. HU and Integration Host Factor (IHF) are NAPs which belong to prokaryotic DNA-bending protein family (DNABII family). HU and IHF play crucial architectural roles in bacterial DNA condensation and additionally play a regulatory role in many cellular processes. Although sharing structural similarity, the DNA binding and bending features of HU and IHF are strikingly different, allowing them to selectively regulate genes from different genomic locations. HU binds to DNA in a sequence promiscuous manner while IHF is moderately sequence specific. The molecular mechanism of DNA binding multi-specificity (differential specificity with varied binding affinity) of HU/IHF proteins remains unexplored, as little attention has been paid to the determinants at the sequence level. Now, the fundamental question which the author attempted to understand is the structural and evolutionary determinants of specificity in DNA- and RNA-binding proteins. The candidate has taken nucleoid-associated protein HU and SPOUT superfamily RNA methyltransferase as model systems. As the very limited number of structural folds makes up the DNA- and RNA-binding proteins, it is intriguing to examine closely related nucleic acid binding domains or folds carrying out specific functions. Also, we observed that some proteins having a particular structural fold (or homologous ancestry) bind to DNA or RNA with high specificity, while its other homolog binds promiscuously. These observations tempted us to find the sequence and structural determinants which guide this phenomenon, not just specific to only a single protein family, but, determinants are of more general nature, where results can possibly be applied to other nucleic acid binding proteins too. The first part of the thesis reports the crystal structures of native and AdoMet bound ribosomal RNA Methyltransferase from Sinorhizobium meliloti (smMtase), by single anomalous dispersion (SAD) phasing on seleno-methionine substituted crystal, which diffracted to 2.28Å and 2.9 Å resolutions respectively in space group P212121. smMtase belong to an rRNA binding SPOUT superfamily protein, which is fused with an RNA binding L30e domain at the N-terminus. We focused our study on these types of proteins among the large superfamily (henceforth termed as SPOUTL30). The author also has conducted a phylogenetic study, which revealed 11 major clades, out of which we focused our present study in understanding the sequence conservation and variations of 5 (A-E) clades, for which structural, biochemical and functional data is available. These proteins share homology to antibiotic resistance conferring methyltransferases. The availability of experimentally determined structures of native and AdoMet bound smMtase along with an analysis of other homologous crystal structures has enabled a critical examination of factors influencing RNA binding specificity. Also, the thesis reports for the first time an evolutionary and structural inter-connectivity of the three conserved motifs (I-III) in SPOUT superfamily, which is responsible for AdoMet binding and catalysis. The results highlight that both the location of conserved positive and negatively charged residues influence the RNA binding, specificity, and affinity. The conservation of these residues could be at superfamily, family or at clade level, and the position of these charged residues at specific sites, alters their salt-bridge geometry, which ultimately fixes the conformation of RNA-binding residues, thus defining a particular binding site specific to its cognate RNA. The study conducted by the author reveals that the dynamics of salt-bridge and other directional interactions like hydrogen bonding and aromatic interactions essentially determines the specificity of SPOUTL30. The second part of the thesis reports evolutionary, structural and functional studies on nucleoid-associated proteins HU and IHF. To understand the sequence determinants, which influence the degree of DNA binding specificity, we undertook a phylogenetic study in conjunction with analysis of three-dimensional structures. The phylogenetic analysis revealed three major clades, belonging to HU, IHFα, and IHFβ like proteins with reference to E. coli. The author observed statistically significant amino acid compositional bias in the DNA binding sites of HU and IHF clade proteins. The author proposes that the molecular mechanisms giving rise to specificity or multi-specificity depend on a combination effect of the amino acid composition of the binding site, its flexibility, ionic and steric constraints. In continuation of this part of the thesis, the candidate examined the role of protein interacting interface of HU-IHF family proteins, understanding its evolutionary history and utilizing it in designing inhibitors for Mycobacterium tuberculosis HU (MtbHU). The present results give a model example of an evolutionary study of a protein interface of nucleoid-associated protein, which is used to understand the interface and computationally design inhibitors targeting it. The author was a part of the study (Bhowmick et al. 2014, Nature communications) which has determined the crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis HU, inhibited it using stilbene derivatives (SD1 and SD4) which curtailed the Mtb cell growth. In the present thesis, the candidate observed from microarray analysis that the SD1 stimulon consists of genes involved majorly in lipid biosynthesis pathway, ribosomal genes which affect the overall translation, aerobic respiration pathways, antigenic membrane proteins involved in pathogenicity. Nearly half of the genes in affected by SD1 are essential in nature, thus could explain the curtailing of cellular growth. The whole study provides a system inspired view of probing as well, inhibiting global regulator HU using novel chemical molecules.
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Bhowmick, Tuhin. "Crystal Structure Of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Histone Like Protein HU And Structure Based Design Of Molecules To Inhibit MtbHU-DNA Interaction : Leads For A New Target. Structure Aided Computational Analysis Of Metal Coordinated Complexes Containing Amino Acids And Organic Moieties Designed For Photo Induced DNA Cleavage." Thesis, 2012. https://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/2469.

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In bacteria, nucleoid associated proteins (NAPs) represent a prominent group of global regulators that perform the tasks of genome compaction, establishing chromosomal architecture and regulation of various DNA transactions like replication, transcription, recombination and repair. HU, a basic histone like protein, is one of the most important NAPs in Eubacteria. Mycobacterium tuberculosis produces a homodimeric HU (MtbHU), which interacts with DNA non-specifically through minor groove binding. Exploration for essential genes in Mtb (H37Rv) through transposon insertion has identified HU coding gene [Rv2986c, hupB; Gene Id: 15610123; Swiss-Prot ID: P95109)] to be vital for the survival and growth of this pathogen. MtbHU contains two domains, the N-terminal domain which is considerably conserved among the HU proteins of the prokaryotic world, and a C–terminal domain consisting of Lys-Ala rich multiple repeat degenerate motifs. Sequence analysis carried out by the thesis candidate showed that MtbHU exhibits 86 to 100 percent identity within the N-term region among all the mycobacterium species and some of the members of actinobacteria, including important pathogens like M. tuberculosis, M. leprae, M. ulcerans, M. bovis, Nocardia; while C term repeat region varies relatively more. This strikingly high cross species identity establishes the MtbHU N-terminal domain (MtbHUN) as an important representative structural model for the above mentioned group of pathogens. The thesis candidate has solved the X-ray crystal structure of MtbHUN, crystallized in two different forms, P2 and P21. The crystal structures in combination with computational analyses elucidate the structural details of MtbHU interaction with DNA. Moreover, the similar mode of self assembly of MtbHUN observed in two different crystal forms reveals that the same DNA binding interface of the protein can also be utilized to form higher order oligomers, that HU is known to form at higher concentrations. Though the bifunctional interface involved in both DNA binding and self assembly is not akin to a typical enzyme active site, the structural analysis identified key interacting residues involved in macromolecular interactions, allowing us to develop a rationale for inhibitor design. Further, the candidate has performed virtual screening against a vast library of compounds, and design of small molecules to target MtbHU and disrupt its binding to DNA. Various biochemical, mutational and biological studies were performed in the laboratory of our collaborator Prof. V. Nagaraja, MCBL, IISc., to investigate these aspects. After a series of iterations including design, synthesis and validation, we have identified novel candidate molecules, which bind to MtbHU, disrupt chromosomal architecture and arrest M. tuberculosis growth. Thus, the study suggests that, these molecules can serve as leads for a new class of DNA-interaction inhibitors and HU as a druggable target, more so because HU is essential to Mtb, but absent in human. Our study proposes that, targeting the nucleoid associated protein HU in Mtb can strategize design of new anti-mycobacterial therapeutics. Perturbation of MtbHU-DNA binding through the identified compounds provides the first instance of medium to small molecular inhibitors of NAP, and augurs well for the development of chemical probe(s) to perturb HU functions, and can be used as a fundamental chemical tool for the system level studies of HU-interactome. Section I: “Crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis histone like protein HU and structure based design of molecules to inhibit MtbHU-DNA interaction: Leads for a new target.” of this thesis presents an elaborate elucidation of the above mentioned work. The candidate has additionally carried out structure based computational and theoretical work to elucidate the interaction of amino acid based metal complexes which efficiently bind to DNA via minor-groove, major-groove or base intercalation interaction and display DNA cleavage activity on photo-irradiation. This understanding is crucial for the design of molecules towards Photodynamic Therapy (PDT). PDT is an emerging method of non-invasive treatment of cancer in which drugs like Photofrin show localized toxicity on photoactivation at the tumor cells leaving the healthy cells unaffected. The work carried out in our group in close collaboration with Prof. A.R. Chakravarty of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry Department elaborates the structure based design of Amino acid complexes containing single Cu (II), such as [Cu(L-trp)(dpq)(H2O)]+ , [Cu (L-arg) 2](NO3)2 , Amino acid complexes containing oxobridged diiron Fe(III), such as [{Fe(L-his)(bpy)}2(μ-O)](ClO4)2 , [{Fe(L-his)(phen)}2(μ-O)](ClO4)2 , and Complexes containing Binuclear Cu(II) coordinated organic moiety, such as [{(dpq) CuII}2(μ-dtdp)2], which bind to DNA through minor groove/major groove/base intercalation interactions. Docking analysis was performed with the X-ray crystallographic structure of DNA as receptor and the metal complexes as ligands, to study the mode of binding to DNA and to understand the possible mode of DNA cleavage (single/double strand) when activated with laser. Section II: “Structure based computational and theoretical analysis of metal coordinated complexes containing amino acids and organic moieties designed for photo induced DNA cleavage” of this thesis presents a detailed presentation of the above mentioned work.
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Bhowmick, Tuhin. "Crystal Structure Of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Histone Like Protein HU And Structure Based Design Of Molecules To Inhibit MtbHU-DNA Interaction : Leads For A New Target. Structure Aided Computational Analysis Of Metal Coordinated Complexes Containing Amino Acids And Organic Moieties Designed For Photo Induced DNA Cleavage." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2005/2469.

Повний текст джерела
Анотація:
In bacteria, nucleoid associated proteins (NAPs) represent a prominent group of global regulators that perform the tasks of genome compaction, establishing chromosomal architecture and regulation of various DNA transactions like replication, transcription, recombination and repair. HU, a basic histone like protein, is one of the most important NAPs in Eubacteria. Mycobacterium tuberculosis produces a homodimeric HU (MtbHU), which interacts with DNA non-specifically through minor groove binding. Exploration for essential genes in Mtb (H37Rv) through transposon insertion has identified HU coding gene [Rv2986c, hupB; Gene Id: 15610123; Swiss-Prot ID: P95109)] to be vital for the survival and growth of this pathogen. MtbHU contains two domains, the N-terminal domain which is considerably conserved among the HU proteins of the prokaryotic world, and a C–terminal domain consisting of Lys-Ala rich multiple repeat degenerate motifs. Sequence analysis carried out by the thesis candidate showed that MtbHU exhibits 86 to 100 percent identity within the N-term region among all the mycobacterium species and some of the members of actinobacteria, including important pathogens like M. tuberculosis, M. leprae, M. ulcerans, M. bovis, Nocardia; while C term repeat region varies relatively more. This strikingly high cross species identity establishes the MtbHU N-terminal domain (MtbHUN) as an important representative structural model for the above mentioned group of pathogens. The thesis candidate has solved the X-ray crystal structure of MtbHUN, crystallized in two different forms, P2 and P21. The crystal structures in combination with computational analyses elucidate the structural details of MtbHU interaction with DNA. Moreover, the similar mode of self assembly of MtbHUN observed in two different crystal forms reveals that the same DNA binding interface of the protein can also be utilized to form higher order oligomers, that HU is known to form at higher concentrations. Though the bifunctional interface involved in both DNA binding and self assembly is not akin to a typical enzyme active site, the structural analysis identified key interacting residues involved in macromolecular interactions, allowing us to develop a rationale for inhibitor design. Further, the candidate has performed virtual screening against a vast library of compounds, and design of small molecules to target MtbHU and disrupt its binding to DNA. Various biochemical, mutational and biological studies were performed in the laboratory of our collaborator Prof. V. Nagaraja, MCBL, IISc., to investigate these aspects. After a series of iterations including design, synthesis and validation, we have identified novel candidate molecules, which bind to MtbHU, disrupt chromosomal architecture and arrest M. tuberculosis growth. Thus, the study suggests that, these molecules can serve as leads for a new class of DNA-interaction inhibitors and HU as a druggable target, more so because HU is essential to Mtb, but absent in human. Our study proposes that, targeting the nucleoid associated protein HU in Mtb can strategize design of new anti-mycobacterial therapeutics. Perturbation of MtbHU-DNA binding through the identified compounds provides the first instance of medium to small molecular inhibitors of NAP, and augurs well for the development of chemical probe(s) to perturb HU functions, and can be used as a fundamental chemical tool for the system level studies of HU-interactome. Section I: “Crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis histone like protein HU and structure based design of molecules to inhibit MtbHU-DNA interaction: Leads for a new target.” of this thesis presents an elaborate elucidation of the above mentioned work. The candidate has additionally carried out structure based computational and theoretical work to elucidate the interaction of amino acid based metal complexes which efficiently bind to DNA via minor-groove, major-groove or base intercalation interaction and display DNA cleavage activity on photo-irradiation. This understanding is crucial for the design of molecules towards Photodynamic Therapy (PDT). PDT is an emerging method of non-invasive treatment of cancer in which drugs like Photofrin show localized toxicity on photoactivation at the tumor cells leaving the healthy cells unaffected. The work carried out in our group in close collaboration with Prof. A.R. Chakravarty of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry Department elaborates the structure based design of Amino acid complexes containing single Cu (II), such as [Cu(L-trp)(dpq)(H2O)]+ , [Cu (L-arg) 2](NO3)2 , Amino acid complexes containing oxobridged diiron Fe(III), such as [{Fe(L-his)(bpy)}2(μ-O)](ClO4)2 , [{Fe(L-his)(phen)}2(μ-O)](ClO4)2 , and Complexes containing Binuclear Cu(II) coordinated organic moiety, such as [{(dpq) CuII}2(μ-dtdp)2], which bind to DNA through minor groove/major groove/base intercalation interactions. Docking analysis was performed with the X-ray crystallographic structure of DNA as receptor and the metal complexes as ligands, to study the mode of binding to DNA and to understand the possible mode of DNA cleavage (single/double strand) when activated with laser. Section II: “Structure based computational and theoretical analysis of metal coordinated complexes containing amino acids and organic moieties designed for photo induced DNA cleavage” of this thesis presents a detailed presentation of the above mentioned work.
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