Recent experiments with amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide indicate that formation of toxic oligomers may be an important contribution to the onset of Alzheimer's disease. The toxicity of Abeta oligomers depends on their structure, which is governed by assembly dynamics. Due to limitations of current experimental techniques, a detailed knowledge of oligomer structure at the atomic level is missing. We introduce a molecular dynamics approach to study Abeta dimer formation. 1), We use discrete molecular dynamics simulations of a coarse-grained model to identify a variety of dimer conformations; and 2), we employ all-atom molecular mechanics simulations to estimate thermodynamic stability of all dimer conformations. Our simulations of a coarse-grained Abeta peptide model predicts 10 different planar beta-strand dimer conformations. We then estimate the free energies of all dimer conformations in all-atom molecular mechanics simulations with explicit water. We compare the free energies of Abeta(1-42) and Abeta(1-40) dimers. We find that 1), dimer conformations have higher free energies compared to their corresponding monomeric states; and 2), the free-energy difference between the Abeta(1-42) and the corresponding Abeta(1-40) dimer conformation is not significant. Our results suggest that Abeta oligomerization is not accompanied by the formation of thermodynamically stable planar beta-strand dimers.
Background:Lignin is a plant cell wall polymer that inhibits enzymatic saccharification of polysaccharides for the production of biofuel. Results: The adsorption of enzymes to lignin surfaces correlates to solvent-exposed hydrophobic clusters. Conclusion: Hydrophobicity, not surface charge, identifies proteins that preferentially adsorb to lignin. Significance: The method could be used to design improved cellulase cocktails to lower the cost of biofuel production.
The ability to manipulate protein binding affinities is important for the development of proteins as biosensors, industrial reagents, and therapeutics. We have developed a structure-based method to rationally predict single mutations at protein-protein interfaces that enhance binding affinities. The protocol is based on the premise that increasing buried hydrophobic surface area and/or reducing buried hydrophilic surface area will generally lead to enhanced affinity if large steric clashes are not introduced and buried polar groups are not left without a hydrogen bond partner. The procedure selects affinity enhancing point mutations at the protein-protein interface using three criteria: (1) the mutation must be from a polar amino acid to a non-polar amino acid or from a non-polar amino acid to a larger non-polar amino acid, (2) the free energy of binding as calculated with the Rosetta protein modeling program should be more favorable than the free energy of binding calculated for the wild-type complex and (3) the mutation should not be predicted to significantly destabilize the monomers. The performance of the computational protocol was experimentally tested on two separate protein complexes; Galpha(i1) from the heterotrimeric G-protein system bound to the RGS14 GoLoco motif, and the E2, UbcH7, bound to the E3, E6AP from the ubiquitin pathway. Twelve single-site mutations that were predicted to be stabilizing were synthesized and characterized in the laboratory. Nine of the 12 mutations successfully increased binding affinity with five of these increasing binding by over 1.0 kcal/mol. To further assess our approach we searched the literature for point mutations that pass our criteria and have experimentally determined binding affinities. Of the eight mutations identified, five were accurately predicted to increase binding affinity, further validating the method as a useful tool to increase protein-protein binding affinities.
Cellulase enzymes deconstruct cellulose to glucose, and are often comprised of glycosylated linkers connecting glycoside hydrolases (GHs) to carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). Although linker modifications can alter cellulase activity, the functional role of linkers beyond domain connectivity remains unknown. Here we investigate cellulase linkers connecting GH Family 6 or 7 catalytic domains to Family 1 or 2 CBMs, from both bacterial and eukaryotic cellulases to identify conserved characteristics potentially related to function. Sequence analysis suggests that the linker lengths between structured domains are optimized based on the GH domain and CBM type, such that linker length may be important for activity. Longer linkers are observed in eukaryotic GH Family 6 cellulases compared to GH Family 7 cellulases. Bacterial GH Family 6 cellulases are found with structured domains in either N to C terminal order, and similar linker lengths suggest there is no effect of domain order on length. O-glycosylation is uniformly distributed across linkers, suggesting that glycans are required along entire linker lengths for proteolysis protection and, as suggested by simulation, for extension. Sequence comparisons show that proline content for bacterial linkers is more than double that observed in eukaryotic linkers, but with fewer putative O-glycan sites, suggesting alternative methods for extension. Conversely, near linker termini where linkers connect to structured domains, O-glycosylation sites are observed less frequently, whereas glycines are more prevalent, suggesting the need for flexibility to achieve proper domain orientations. Putative N-glycosylation sites are quite rare in cellulase linkers, while an N-P motif, which strongly disfavors the attachment of N-glycans, is commonly observed. These results suggest that linkers exhibit features that are likely tailored for optimal function, despite possessing low sequence identity. This study suggests that cellulase linkers may exhibit function in enzyme action, and highlights the need for additional studies to elucidate cellulase linker functions.
Exposure of mice to the copper chelator, cuprizone, results in CNS demyelination. There is remyelination after removal of the metabolic insult. We present brain regional studies identifying corpus callosum as particularly severely affected; 65% of cerebroside is lost after 6 weeks of exposure. We examined recovery of cerebroside and ability to synthesize cerebroside and cholesterol following removal of the toxicant. The temporal pattern for concentration of myelin basic protein resembled that of cerebroside. We applied Affymetrix GeneChip technology to corpus callosum to identify temporal changes in levels of mRNAs during demyelination and remyelination. Genes coding for myelin structural components were greatly down-regulated during demyelination and up-regulated during remyelination. Genes related to microglia/macrophages appeared in a time-course (peaking at 6 weeks) correlating with phagocytosis of myelin and repair of lesions. mRNAs coding for many cytokines had peak expression at 4 weeks, compatible with intercellular signaling roles. Of interest were other genes with temporal patterns correlating with one of the three above patterns, but of function not obviously related to demyelination/remyelination. The ability to correlate gene expression with known pathophysiological events should help in elucidating further function of such genes as related to demyelination/remyelination.
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