hosted by
publicationslist.org
    

Pedro A Reche


preche@gmail.com

Journal articles

2012
Labib R Zakka, Pedro A Reche, A Razzaque Ahmed (2012)  The molecular basis for the presence of two autoimmune diseases occurring simultaneously--preliminary observations based on computer analysis.   Autoimmunity 45: 3. 253-263 May  
Abstract: Specific Human Leukocyte Antigen Class II (HLA II) molecules associated with pemphigus vulgaris (PV), mucous membraine pemphigoid (MMP), and mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) may react with multiple T cell epitopes within desmoglein 3 (Dsg 3), bullous pemphigoid antigen 2 (BPAG 2), and 70 kDa polypeptide small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP70) in autoantibody production. We report a group of patients with simultaneous occurrences of PV with MCTD, and MMP with MCTD. In one patient group, we performed serological studies to show presence of antibodies to Dsg 3, Dsg 1, and snRNP70 simultaneously. In the second group, we performed serological studies to show presence of antibodies to BPAG 1, BPAG 2, β4 integrin, and snRNP70 simultaneously. In both groups, HLA II genes were analyzed and the observations were consistent with previously described associations with PV, MMP, and MCTD. It is possible that HLA-DQβ1*0301 allele, present in 10 of 17 patients and DRβ1*04 in some of the others, may have the ability to bind to several relevant T cell epitopes in the snRNP70 molecule. We have utilized a computer model to demonstrate that HLA II-restricted T cell epitopes present within the known autoantigens may be capable of eliciting an immune response. While other explanations and mechanisms exist, the authors suggest that epitope spreading may be one possible mechanism, amongst others, that may result in the simultaneous presence of two separate pathogenic autoantibodies.
Notes:
2011
Eduardo Martínez-Naves, Esther M Lafuente, Pedro A Reche (2011)  Recognition of the ligand-type specificity of classical and non-classical MHC I proteins.   FEBS Lett 585: 21. 3478-3484 Nov  
Abstract: Functional characterization of proteins belonging to the MHC I superfamily involves knowing their cognate ligands, which can be peptides, lipids or none. However, the experimental identification of these ligands is not an easy task and generally requires some a priori knowledge of their chemical nature (ligand-type specificity). Here, we trained k-nearest neighbor and support vector machine classifiers that predict the ligand-type specificity MHC I proteins with great accuracy. Moreover, we applied these classifiers to human and mouse MHC I proteins of uncharacterized ligands, obtaining some results that can be instrumental to unravel the function of these proteins.
Notes:
L R Zakka, P Reche, A R Ahmed (2011)  Role of MHC Class II genes in the pathogenesis of pemphigoid.   Autoimmun Rev 11: 1. 40-47 Nov  
Abstract: Pemphigoid (Pg) is an autoimmune subepidermal blistering disease that affects the elderly population. The phenotype can be Bullous Pemphigoid (BP), which primarily involves the skin, or Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid (MMP), which primarily involves mucus membranes. Ocular Cicatricial Pemphigoid (OCP) and Oral Pemphigoid (OP) are subsets of MMP. The known antigens in BP are Bullous Pemphigoid Antigen 1 (BPAG1, also known as BP230), Bullous Pemphigoid Antigen 2 (BPAG2, also known as BP180), and subunits of human integrins α6 and β4. The Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) allele HLA-DQβ1*0301 has been reported to be associated with enhanced susceptibility to all of these subsets. Sera of patients with the four subsets are characterized by the presence of anti-Basement Membrane Zone (anti-BMZ) antibodies. In this manuscript, we present a model in which relevant portions of the four different antigens involved in pemphigoid have potential sites that could be presented by an antigen presenting cell (APC) in conjunction with DQβ1*0301 to a T cell receptor to initiate the process that results in anti-BMZ antibody production. Thus, this model provides a hypothetical computer-based mechanism to explain how a single HLA allele can be associated with the production of antibodies to four different antigens that result in four different subsets of a disease with four different clinical profiles and prognoses.
Notes:
2010
Carmen M Diez-Rivero, Esther M Lafuente, Pedro A Reche (2010)  Computational analysis and modeling of cleavage by the immunoproteasome and the constitutive proteasome.   BMC Bioinformatics 11: 09  
Abstract: Proteasomes play a central role in the major histocompatibility class I (MHCI) antigen processing pathway. They conduct the proteolytic degradation of proteins in the cytosol, generating the C-terminus of CD8 T cell epitopes and MHCI-peptide ligands (P1 residue of cleavage site). There are two types of proteasomes, the constitutive form, expressed in most cell types, and the immunoproteasome, which is constitutively expressed in mature dendritic cells. Protective CD8 T cell epitopes are likely generated by the immunoproteasome and the constitutive proteasome, and here we have modeled and analyzed the cleavage by these two proteases.
Notes:
Carmen M Diez-Rivero, Bernardo Chenlo, Pilar Zuluaga, Pedro A Reche (2010)  Quantitative modeling of peptide binding to TAP using support vector machine.   Proteins 78: 1. 63-72 Jan  
Abstract: The transport of peptides to the endoplasmic reticulum by the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is a necessary step towards determining CD8 T cell epitopes. In this work, we have studied the predictive performance of support vector machine models trained on single residue positions and residue combinations drawn from a large dataset consisting of 613 nonamer peptides of known affinity to TAP. Predictive performance of these TAP affinity models was evaluated under 10-fold cross-validation experiments and measured using Pearson's correlation coefficients (R(p)). Our results show that every peptide position (P1-P9) contributes to TAP binding (minimum R(p) of 0.26 +/- 0.11 was achieved by a model trained on the P6 residue), although the largest contributions to binding correspond to the C-terminal end (R(p) = 0.68 +/- 0.06) and the P1 (R(p) = 0.51 +/- 0.09) and P2 (0.57 +/- 0.08) residues of the peptide. Training the models on additional peptide residues generally improved their predictive performance and a maximum correlation (R(p) = 0.89 +/- 0.03) was achieved by a model trained on the full-length sequences or a residue selection consisting of the first 5 N- and last 3 C-terminal residues of the peptides included in the training set. A system for predicting the binding affinity of peptides to TAP using the methods described here is readily available for free public use at http://imed.med.ucm.es/Tools/tapreg/.
Notes:
L R Zakka, D B Keskin, P Reche, A R Ahmed (2010)  Relationship between target antigens and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II genes in producing two pathogenic antibodies simultaneously.   Clin Exp Immunol 162: 2. 224-236 Nov  
Abstract: In this report,we present 15 patients with histological and immunopathologically proven pemphigus vulgaris (PV). After a mean of 80 months since the onset of disease, when evaluated serologically, they had antibodies typical of PV and pemphigoid (Pg). Similarly, 18 patients with bullous pemphigoid (BP) and mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) were diagnosed on the basis of histology and immunopathology.After a mean of 60 months since the onset of disease, when their sera were evaluated they were found to have Pg and PV autoantibodies. In both groups of patients the diseases were characterized by a chronic course, which included several relapses and recurrences and were non-responsive to conventional therapy. The major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) genes were studied in both groups of patients and phenotypes associated typically with them were observed. Hence, in 33 patients, two different pathogenic autoantibodies were detected simultaneously. The authors provide a computer model to show that each MHC II gene has relevant epitopes that recognize the antigens associated with both diseases. Using the databases in these computer models, the authors present the hypothesis that these two autoantibodies are produced simultaneously due to the phenomena of epitope spreading.
Notes:
2009
Esther M Lafuente, Pedro A Reche (2009)  Prediction of MHC-peptide binding: a systematic and comprehensive overview.   Curr Pharm Des 15: 28. 3209-3220  
Abstract: T cell immune responses are driven by the recognition of peptide antigens (T cell epitopes) that are bound to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. T cell epitope immunogenicity is thus contingent on several events, including appropriate and effective processing of the peptide from its protein source, stable peptide binding to the MHC molecule, and recognition of the MHC-bound peptide by the T cell receptor. Of these three hallmarks, MHC-peptide binding is the most selective event that determines T cell epitopes. Therefore, prediction of MHC-peptide binding constitutes the principal basis for anticipating potential T cell epitopes. The tremendous relevance of epitope identification in vaccine design and in the monitoring of T cell responses has spurred the development of many computational methods for predicting MHC-peptide binding that improve the efficiency and economics of T cell epitope identification. In this report, we will systematically examine the available methods for predicting MHC-peptide binding and discuss their most relevant advantages and drawbacks.
Notes:
2008
Carmen M Diez-Rivero, María García-Boronat, Pedro A Reche (2008)  Integrating T-cell epitope annotations with sequence and structural information using DAS.   Bioinformation 3: 4. 156-158 12  
Abstract: Immunoinformatics is an emerging new field that benefits from computational analyses and tools that facilitate the understanding of the immune system. A large number of immunoinformatics resources such as immune-related databases and analysis software are available through the World Wide Web for the benefit of the research community. However, immunoinformatics developments have sometimes remained isolated from mainstream bioinformatics. Therefore, there is clearly a need for integration, which will empower the exchange of data and annotations within the scientific community in a quick and efficient fashion. Here, we have chosen the Distributed Annotation System (DAS), for integrating in house annotations on experimental and predicted HLA I-restriction elements of CD8 T-cell epitopes with sequence and structural information.
Notes:
Maria Garcia-Boronat, Carmen M Diez-Rivero, Ellis L Reinherz, Pedro A Reche (2008)  PVS: a web server for protein sequence variability analysis tuned to facilitate conserved epitope discovery.   Nucleic Acids Res 36: Web Server issue. W35-W41 Jul  
Abstract: We have developed PVS (Protein Variability Server), a web-based tool that uses several variability metrics to compute the absolute site variability in multiple protein-sequence alignments (MSAs). The variability is then assigned to a user-selected reference sequence consisting of either the first sequence in the alignment or a consensus sequence. Subsequently, PVS performs tasks that are relevant for structure-function studies, such as plotting and visualizing the variability in a relevant 3D-structure. Neatly, PVS also implements some other tasks that are thought to facilitate the design of epitope discovery-driven vaccines against pathogens where sequence variability largely contributes to immune evasion. Thus, PVS can return the conserved fragments in the MSA-as defined by a user-provided variability threshold-and locate them in a relevant 3D-structure. Furthermore, PVS can return a variability-masked sequence, which can be directly submitted to the RANKPEP server for the prediction of conserved T-cell epitopes. PVS is freely available at: http://imed.med.ucm.es/PVS/.
Notes:
2007
Pedro A Reche, Ellis L Reinherz (2007)  Definition of MHC supertypes through clustering of MHC peptide-binding repertoires.   Methods Mol Biol 409: 163-173  
Abstract: Identification of peptides that can bind to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules is important for anticipation of T-cell epitopes and for the design of epitope-based vaccines. Population coverage of epitope vaccines is, however, compromised by the extreme polymorphism of MHC molecules, which is in fact the basis for their differential peptide binding. Therefore, grouping of MHC molecules into supertypes according to peptide-binding specificity is relevant for optimizing the composition of epitope-based vaccines. Despite the fact that the peptide-binding specificity of MHC molecules is linked to their specific amino acid sequences, it is unclear how amino sequence differences correlate with peptide-binding specificities. In this chapter, we detail a method for defining MHC supertypes based on the analysis and subsequent clustering of their peptide-binding repertoires.
Notes:
Pedro A Reche, Ellis L Reinherz (2007)  Prediction of peptide-MHC binding using profiles.   Methods Mol Biol 409: 185-200  
Abstract: Prediction of peptide binding to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules is a basis for anticipating T-cell epitopes. Peptides that bind to a given MHC molecule are related by sequence similarity. Therefore, a position-specific scoring matrix (PSSM)---also known as profile--derived from a set of aligned peptides known to bind to a given MHC molecule can be used as a predictor of both peptide-MHC binding and T-cell epitopes. In this approach, the binding potential of any peptide sequence (query) to the MHC molecule is determined by its similarity to a set of known peptide-MHC binders and can be obtained by comparing the query to the PSSM. Following structural considerations of the peptide-MHC interaction, we will describe here how to derive alignments and PSSMs that are suitable for the prediction of peptide-MHC binding.
Notes:
2006
Pedro A Reche, Derin B Keskin, Rebecca E Hussey, Petronela Ancuta, Dana Gabuzda, Ellis L Reinherz (2006)  Elicitation from virus-naive individuals of cytotoxic T lymphocytes directed against conserved HIV-1 epitopes.   Med Immunol 5: 05  
Abstract: Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) protect against viruses including HIV-1. To avoid viral escape mutants that thwart immunity, we chose 25 CTL epitopes defined in the context of natural infection with functional and/or structural constraints that maintain sequence conservation. By combining HLA binding predictions with knowledge concerning HLA allele frequencies, a metric estimating population protection coverage (PPC) was computed and epitope pools assembled. Strikingly, only a minority of immunocompetent HIV-1 infected individuals responds to pools with PPC >95%. In contrast, virus-naive individuals uniformly expand IFNgamma producing cells and mount anti-HIV-1 cytolytic activity. This disparity suggests a vaccine design paradigm shift from infected to normal subjects.
Notes:
Manoj Bhasin, Ellis L Reinherz, Pedro A Reche (2006)  Recognition and classification of histones using support vector machine.   J Comput Biol 13: 1. 102-112 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Histones are DNA-binding proteins found in the chromatin of all eukaryotic cells. They are highly conserved and can be grouped into five major classes: H1/H5, H2A, H2B, H3, and H4. Two copies of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 bind to about 160 base pairs of DNA forming the core of the nucleosome (the repeating structure of chromatin) and H1/H5 bind to its DNA linker sequence. Overall, histones have a high arginine/lysine content that is optimal for interaction with DNA. This sequence bias can make the classification of histones difficult using standard sequence similarity approaches. Therefore, in this paper, we applied support vector machine (SVM) to recognize and classify histones on the basis of their amino acid and dipeptide composition. On evaluation through a five-fold cross-validation, the SVM-based method was able to distinguish histones from nonhistones (nuclear proteins) with an accuracy around 98%. Similarly, we obtained an overall >95% accuracy in discriminating the five classes of histones through the application of 1-versus-rest (1-v-r) SVM. Finally, we have applied this SVM-based method to the detection of histones from whole proteomes and found a comparable sensitivity to that accomplished by hidden Markov motifs (HMM) profiles.
Notes:
2005
Helge Otto, Pedro A Reche, Fernando Bazan, Katharina Dittmar, Friedrich Haag, Friedrich Koch-Nolte (2005)  In silico characterization of the family of PARP-like poly(ADP-ribosyl)transferases (pARTs).   BMC Genomics 6: 10  
Abstract: ADP-ribosylation is an enzyme-catalyzed posttranslational protein modification in which mono(ADP-ribosyl)transferases (mARTs) and poly(ADP-ribosyl)transferases (pARTs) transfer the ADP-ribose moiety from NAD onto specific amino acid side chains and/or ADP-ribose units on target proteins.
Notes:
Pedro A Reche, Ellis L Reinherz (2005)  PEPVAC: a web server for multi-epitope vaccine development based on the prediction of supertypic MHC ligands.   Nucleic Acids Res 33: Web Server issue. W138-W142 Jul  
Abstract: Prediction of peptide binding to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules is a basis for anticipating T-cell epitopes, as well as epitope discovery-driven vaccine development. In the human, MHC molecules are known as human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) and are extremely polymorphic. HLA polymorphism is the basis of differential peptide binding, until now limiting the practical use of current epitope-prediction tools for vaccine development. Here, we describe a web server, PEPVAC (Promiscuous EPitope-based VACcine), optimized for the formulation of multi-epitope vaccines with broad population coverage. This optimization is accomplished through the prediction of peptides that bind to several HLA molecules with similar peptide-binding specificity (supertypes). Specifically, we offer the possibility of identifying promiscuous peptide binders to five distinct HLA class I supertypes (A2, A3, B7, A24 and B15). We estimated the phenotypic population frequency of these supertypes to be 95%, regardless of ethnicity. Targeting these supertypes for promiscuous peptide-binding predictions results in a limited number of potential epitopes without compromising the population coverage required for practical vaccine design considerations. PEPVAC can also identify conserved MHC ligands, as well as those with a C-terminus resulting from proteasomal cleavage. The combination of these features with the prediction of promiscuous HLA class I ligands further limits the number of potential epitopes. The PEPVAC server is hosted by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at the site http://immunax.dfci.harvard.edu/PEPVAC/.
Notes:
Pedro A Reche, Hong Zhang, John-Paul Glutting, Ellis L Reinherz (2005)  EPIMHC: a curated database of MHC-binding peptides for customized computational vaccinology.   Bioinformatics 21: 9. 2140-2141 May  
Abstract: SUMMARY: EPIMHC is a relational database of MHC-binding peptides and T cell epitopes that are observed in real proteins. Currently, the database contains 4867 distinct peptide sequences from various sources, including 84 tumor-associated antigens. The EPIMHC database is accessible through a web server that has been designed to facilitate research in computational vaccinology. Importantly, peptides resulting from a query can be selected to derive specific motif-matrices. Subsequently, these motif-matrices can be used in combination with a dynamic algorithm for predicting MHC-binding peptides from user-provided protein queries. AVAILABILITY: The EPIMHC database server is hosted by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at the site http://immunax.dfci.harvard.edu/bioinformatics/epimhc/
Notes:
Manoj Bhasin, Hong Zhang, Ellis L Reinherz, Pedro A Reche (2005)  Prediction of methylated CpGs in DNA sequences using a support vector machine.   FEBS Lett 579: 20. 4302-4308 Aug  
Abstract: DNA methylation plays a key role in the regulation of gene expression. The most common type of DNA modification consists of the methylation of cytosine in the CpG dinucleotide. At the present time, there is no method available for the prediction of DNA methylation sites. Therefore, in this study we have developed a support vector machine (SVM)-based method for the prediction of cytosine methylation in CpG dinucleotides. Initially a SVM module was developed from human data for the prediction of human-specific methylation sites. This module achieved a MCC and AUC of 0.501 and 0.814, respectively, when evaluated using a 5-fold cross-validation. The performance of this SVM-based module was better than the classifiers built using alternative machine learning and statistical algorithms including artificial neural networks, Bayesian statistics, and decision trees. Additional SVM modules were also developed based on mammalian- and vertebrate-specific methylation patterns. The SVM module based on human methylation patterns was used for genome-wide analysis of methylation sites. This analysis demonstrated that the percentage of methylated CpGs is higher in UTRs as compared to exonic and intronic regions of human genes. This method is available on line for public use under the name of Methylator at http://bio.dfci.harvard.edu/Methylator/.
Notes:
Hailin Yang, Sung-Kwon Kim, Mikyung Kim, Pedro A Reche, Tiara J Morehead, Inger K Damon, Raymond M Welsh, Ellis L Reinherz (2005)  Antiviral chemotherapy facilitates control of poxvirus infections through inhibition of cellular signal transduction.   J Clin Invest 115: 2. 379-387 Feb  
Abstract: The EGF-like domain of smallpox growth factor (SPGF) targets human ErbB-1, inducing tyrosine phosphorylation of certain host cellular substrates via activation of the receptor's kinase domain and thereby facilitating viral replication. Given these findings, low molecular weight organic inhibitors of ErbB-1 kinases might function as antiviral agents against smallpox. Here we show that CI-1033 and related 4-anilinoquinazolines inhibit SPGF-induced human cellular DNA synthesis, protein tyrosine kinase activation, and c-Cbl association with ErbB-1 and resultant internalization. Infection of monkey kidney BSC-40 and VERO-E6 cells in vitro by variola strain Solaimen is blocked by CI-1033, primarily at the level of secondary viral spreading. In an in vivo lethal vaccinia virus pneumonia model, CI-1033 alone promotes survival of animals, augments systemic T cell immunity and, in conjunction with a single dose of anti-L1R intracellular mature virus particle-specific mAb, fosters virtually complete viral clearance of the lungs of infected mice by the eighth day after infection. Collectively, these findings show that chemical inhibitors of host-signaling pathways exploited by viral pathogens may represent potent antiviral therapies.
Notes:
Helge Otto, Pedro A Reche, Fernando Bazan, Katharina Dittmar, Friedrich Haag, Friedrich Koch-Nolte (2005)  In silico characterization of the family of PARP-like poly(ADP-ribosyl)transferases (pARTs).   BMC Genomics 6: 10  
Abstract: ADP-ribosylation is an enzyme-catalyzed posttranslational protein modification in which mono(ADP-ribosyl)transferases (mARTs) and poly(ADP-ribosyl)transferases (pARTs) transfer the ADP-ribose moiety from NAD onto specific amino acid side chains and/or ADP-ribose units on target proteins.
Notes:
2004
Pedro A Reche, John-Paul Glutting, Hong Zhang, Ellis L Reinherz (2004)  Enhancement to the RANKPEP resource for the prediction of peptide binding to MHC molecules using profiles.   Immunogenetics 56: 6. 405-419 Sep  
Abstract: We introduced previously an on-line resource, RANKPEP that uses position specific scoring matrices (PSSMs) or profiles for the prediction of peptide-MHC class I (MHCI) binding as a basis for CD8 T-cell epitope identification. Here, using PSSMs that are structurally consistent with the binding mode of MHC class II (MHCII) ligands, we have extended RANKPEP to prediction of peptide-MHCII binding and anticipation of CD4 T-cell epitopes. Currently, 88 and 50 different MHCI and MHCII molecules, respectively, can be targeted for peptide binding predictions in RANKPEP. Because appropriate processing of antigenic peptides must occur prior to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) binding, cleavage site prediction methods are important adjuncts for T-cell epitope discovery. Given that the C-terminus of most MHCI-restricted epitopes results from proteasomal cleavage, we have modeled the cleavage site from known MHCI-restricted epitopes using statistical language models. The RANKPEP server now determines whether the C-terminus of any predicted MHCI ligand may result from such proteasomal cleavage. Also implemented is a variability masking function. This feature focuses prediction on conserved rather than highly variable protein segments encoded by infectious genomes, thereby offering identification of invariant T-cell epitopes to thwart mutation as an immune evasion mechanism.
Notes:
Mikyung Kim, Hailin Yang, Sung-Kwon Kim, Pedro A Reche, Rebecca S Tirabassi, Rebecca E Hussey, Yasmin Chishti, James G Rheinwald, Tiara J Morehead, Tobias Zech, Inger K Damon, Raymond M Welsh, Ellis L Reinherz (2004)  Biochemical and functional analysis of smallpox growth factor (SPGF) and anti-SPGF monoclonal antibodies.   J Biol Chem 279: 24. 25838-25848 Jun  
Abstract: Variola, the causative agent of smallpox, is a highly infectious double-stranded DNA virus of the orthopox genus that replicates within the cytoplasm of infected cells. For unknown reasons prominent skin manifestations, including "pox," mark the course of this systemic human disease. Here we characterized smallpox growth factor (SPGF), a protein containing an epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domain that is conserved among orthopox viral genomes, and investigated its possible mechanistic link. We show that after recombinant expression, refolding, and purification, the EGF domain of SPGF binds exclusively to the broadly expressed cellular receptor, erb-B1 (EGF receptor), with subnanomolar affinity, stimulating the growth of primary human keratinocytes and fibroblasts. High affinity monoclonal antibodies specific for SPGF reveal in vivo immunoprotection in a murine vaccinia pneumonia model by a mechanism distinct from viral neutralization. These findings suggest that blockade of pathogenic factor actions, in general, may be advantageous to the infected host.
Notes:
Masha Fridkis-Hareli, Pedro A Reche, Ellis L Reinherz (2004)  Peptide variants of viral CTL epitopes mediate positive selection and emigration of Ag-specific thymocytes in vivo.   J Immunol 173: 2. 1140-1150 Jul  
Abstract: During development, thymocytes carrying TCRs mediating low-affinity interactions with MHC-bound self-peptides are positively selected for export into the mature peripheral T lymphocyte pool. Thus, exogenous administration of certain altered peptide ligands (APL) with reduced TCR affinity relative to cognate Ags may provide a tool to elicit maturation of desired TCR specificities. To test this "thymic vaccination" concept, we designed APL of the viral CTL epitopes gp33-41 and vesicular stomatitis virus nucleoprotein octapeptide N52-59 relevant for the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus-specific P14- and vesicular stomatitis virus-specific N15-TCRs, respectively, and examined their effects on thymocytes in vivo using irradiation chimeras. Injection of APL into irradiated congenic (Ly-5.1) mice, reconstituted with T cell progenitors from the bone marrow of P14 RAG2(-/-) (Ly-5.2) or N15 RAG2(-/-) (Ly-5.2) transgenic mice, resulted in positive selection of T cells expressing the relevant specificity. Moreover, the variants led to export of virus-specific T cells to lymph nodes, but without inducing T cell proliferation. These findings show that the mature T cell repertoire can be altered by in vivo peptide administration through manipulation of thymic selection.
Notes:
2003
Pedro A Reche, Ellis L Reinherz (2003)  Sequence variability analysis of human class I and class II MHC molecules: functional and structural correlates of amino acid polymorphisms.   J Mol Biol 331: 3. 623-641 Aug  
Abstract: Major histocompatibility complex class I (MHCI) and class II (MHCII) molecules display peptides on antigen-presenting cell surfaces for subsequent T-cell recognition. Within the human population, allelic variation among the classical MHCI and II gene products is the basis for differential peptide binding, thymic repertoire bias and allograft rejection. While available 3D structural analysis suggests that polymorphisms are found primarily within the peptide-binding site, a broader informatic approach pinpointing functional polymorphisms relevant for immune recognition is currently lacking. To this end, we have now analyzed known human class I (774) and class II (485) alleles at each amino acid position using a variability metric (V). Polymorphisms (V>1) have been identified in residues that contact the peptide and/or T-cell receptor (TCR). Using sequence logos to investigate TCR contact sites on HLA molecules, we have identified conserved MHCI residues distinct from those of conserved MHCII residues. In addition, specific class II (HLA-DP, -DQ, -DR) and class I (HLA-A, -B, -C) contacts for TCR binding are revealed. We discuss these findings in the context of TCR restriction and alloreactivity.
Notes:
Weimin Zhong, Pedro A Reche, Char-Chang Lai, Bruce Reinhold, Ellis L Reinherz (2003)  Genome-wide characterization of a viral cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitope repertoire.   J Biol Chem 278: 46. 45135-45144 Nov  
Abstract: A genome-wide search using major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I binding and proteosome cleavage site algorithms identified 101 influenza A PR8 virus-derived peptides as potential epitopes for CD8+ T cell recognition in the H-2b mouse. Cytokine-based flow cytometry, ELISPOT, and cytotoxic T lymphocyte assays reveal that 16 are recognized by CD8+ T cells recovered directly ex vivo from infected animals, accounting for greater than 70% of CD8+ T cells recruited to lung after primary infection. Only six of the 22 highest affinity MHC class I binding peptides comprise cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitopes. The remaining non-immunogenic peptides have equivalent MHC affinity and MHC-peptide complex half-lives, eliciting T cell responses when given in adjuvant and with T cell receptor-ligand avidity comparable with their immunogenic counterparts. As revealed by a novel high sensitivity nanospray tandem mass spectrometry methodology, failure to process those predicted epitopes may contribute significantly to the absent response. These results have important implications for rationale design of CD8+ T cell vaccines.
Notes:
2002
Pedro A Reche, John-Paul Glutting, Ellis L Reinherz (2002)  Prediction of MHC class I binding peptides using profile motifs.   Hum Immunol 63: 9. 701-709 Sep  
Abstract: Peptides that bind to a given major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule share sequence similarity. Therefore, a position specific scoring matrix (PSSM) or profile derived from a set of peptides known to bind to a specific MHC molecule would be a suitable predictor of whether other peptides might bind, thus anticipating possible T-cell epitopes within a protein. In this approach, the binding potential of any peptide sequence (query) to a given MHC molecule is linked to its similarity to a group of aligned peptides known to bind to that MHC, and can be obtained by comparing the query to the PSSM. This article describes the derivation of alignments and profiles from a collection of peptides known to bind a specific MHC, compatible with the structural and molecular basis of the peptide-MHC class I (MHCI) interaction. Moreover, in order to apply these profiles to the prediction of peptide-MHCI binding, we have developed a new search algorithm (RANKPEP) that ranks all possible peptides from an input protein using the PSSM coefficients. The predictive power of the method was evaluated by running RANKPEP on proteins known to bear MHCI K(b)- and D(b)-restricted T-cell epitopes. Analysis of the results indicates that > 80% of these epitopes are among the top 2% of scoring peptides. Prediction of peptide-MHC binding using a variety of MHCI-specific PSSMs is available on line at our RANKPEP web server (www.mifoundation.org/Tools/rankpep.html). In addition, the RANKPEP server also allows the user to enter additional profiles, making the server a powerful and versatile computational biology benchmark for the prediction of peptide-MHC binding.
Notes:
Gustavo Glowacki, Rickmer Braren, Kathrin Firner, Marion Nissen, Maren Kühl, Pedro Reche, Fernando Bazan, Marina Cetkovic-Cvrlje, Edward Leiter, Friedrich Haag, Friedrich Koch-Nolte (2002)  The family of toxin-related ecto-ADP-ribosyltransferases in humans and the mouse.   Protein Sci 11: 7. 1657-1670 Jul  
Abstract: ADP-ribosyltransferases including toxins secreted by Vibrio cholera, Pseudomonas aerurginosa, and other pathogenic bacteria inactivate the function of human target proteins by attaching ADP-ribose onto a critical amino acid residue. Cross-species polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and database mining identified the orthologs of these ADP-ribosylating toxins in humans and the mouse. The human genome contains four functional toxin-related ADP-ribosyltransferase genes (ARTs) and two related intron-containing pseudogenes; the mouse has six functional orthologs. The human and mouse ART genes map to chromosomal regions with conserved linkage synteny. The individual ART genes reveal highly restricted expression patterns, which are largely conserved in humans and the mouse. We confirmed the predicted extracellular location of the ART proteins by expressing recombinant ARTs in insect cells. Two human and four mouse ARTs contain the active site motif (R-S-EXE) typical of arginine-specific ADP-ribosyltransferases and exhibit the predicted enzyme activities. Two other human ARTs and their murine orthologues deviate in the active site motif and lack detectable enzyme activity. Conceivably, these ARTs may have acquired a new specificity or function. The position-sensitive iterative database search program PSI-BLAST connected the mammalian ARTs with most known bacterial ADP-ribosylating toxins. In contrast, no related open reading frames occur in the four completed genomes of lower eucaryotes (yeast, worm, fly, and mustard weed). Interestingly, these organisms also lack genes for ADP-ribosylhydrolases, the enzymes that reverse protein ADP-ribosylation. This suggests that the two enzyme families that catalyze reversible mono-ADP-ribosylation either were lost from the genomes of these nonchordata eucaryotes or were subject to horizontal gene transfer between kingdoms.
Notes:
Vassili Soumelis, Pedro A Reche, Holger Kanzler, Wei Yuan, Gina Edward, Bernhart Homey, Michel Gilliet, Steve Ho, Svetlana Antonenko, Annti Lauerma, Kathleen Smith, Daniel Gorman, Sandra Zurawski, Jon Abrams, Satish Menon, Terri McClanahan, Rene de de Rd, Fernando Bazan, Robert A Kastelein, Yong-Jun Liu (2002)  Human epithelial cells trigger dendritic cell mediated allergic inflammation by producing TSLP.   Nat Immunol 3: 7. 673-680 Jul  
Abstract: Whether epithelial cells play a role in triggering the immune cascade leading to T helper 2 (T(H)2)-type allergic inflammation is not known. We show here that human thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) potently activated CD11c(+) dendritic cells (DCs) and induced production of the T(H)2-attracting chemokines TARC (thymus and activation-regulated chemokine; also known as CCL17) and MDC (macrophage-derived chemokine; CCL22). TSLP-activated DCs primed naïve T(H) cells to produce the proallergic cytokines interleukin 4 (IL-4), IL-5, IL-13 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, while down-regulating IL-10 and interferon-gamma. TSLP was highly expressed by epithelial cells, especially keratinocytes from patients with atopic dermatitis. TSLP expression was associated with Langerhans cell migration and activation in situ. These findings shed new light on the function of human TSLP and the role played by epithelial cells and DCs in initiating allergic inflammation.
Notes:
Emma Fiorini, Ingo Schmitz, Wilfred E Marissen, Stephanie L Osborn, Maki Touma, Tetsuro Sasada, Pedro A Reche, Elena V Tibaldi, Rebecca E Hussey, Ada M Kruisbeek, Ellis L Reinherz, Linda K Clayton (2002)  Peptide-induced negative selection of thymocytes activates transcription of an NF-kappa B inhibitor.   Mol Cell 9: 3. 637-648 Mar  
Abstract: Negative selection eliminates thymocytes bearing autoreactive T cell receptors (TCR) via an apoptotic mechanism. We have cloned an inhibitor of NF-kappa B, I kappa BNS, which is rapidly expressed upon TCR-triggered but not dexamethasone- or gamma irradiation-stimulated thymocyte death. The predicted protein contains seven ankyrin repeats and is homologous to I kappa B family members. In class I and class II MHC-restricted TCR transgenic mice, transcription of I kappa BNS is stimulated by peptides that trigger negative selection but not by those inducing positive selection (i.e., survival) or nonselecting peptides. I kappa BNS blocks transcription from NF-kappa B reporters, alters NF-kappa B electrophoretic mobility shifts, and interacts with NF-kappa B proteins in thymic nuclear lysates following TCR stimulation. Retroviral transduction of I kappa BNS in fetal thymic organ culture enhances TCR-triggered cell death consistent with its function in selection.
Notes:
Vassili Soumelis, Pedro A Reche, Holger Kanzler, Wei Yuan, Gina Edward, Bernhart Homey, Michel Gilliet, Steve Ho, Svetlana Antonenko, Annti Lauerma, Kathleen Smith, Daniel Gorman, Sandra Zurawski, Jon Abrams, Satish Menon, Terri McClanahan, Rene de de Rd, Fernando Bazan, Robert A Kastelein, Yong-Jun Liu (2002)  Human epithelial cells trigger dendritic cell mediated allergic inflammation by producing TSLP.   Nat Immunol 3: 7. 673-680 Jul  
Abstract: Whether epithelial cells play a role in triggering the immune cascade leading to T helper 2 (T(H)2)-type allergic inflammation is not known. We show here that human thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) potently activated CD11c(+) dendritic cells (DCs) and induced production of the T(H)2-attracting chemokines TARC (thymus and activation-regulated chemokine; also known as CCL17) and MDC (macrophage-derived chemokine; CCL22). TSLP-activated DCs primed naïve T(H) cells to produce the proallergic cytokines interleukin 4 (IL-4), IL-5, IL-13 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, while down-regulating IL-10 and interferon-gamma. TSLP was highly expressed by epithelial cells, especially keratinocytes from patients with atopic dermatitis. TSLP expression was associated with Langerhans cell migration and activation in situ. These findings shed new light on the function of human TSLP and the role played by epithelial cells and DCs in initiating allergic inflammation.
Notes:
Gustavo Glowacki, Rickmer Braren, Kathrin Firner, Marion Nissen, Maren Kühl, Pedro Reche, Fernando Bazan, Marina Cetkovic-Cvrlje, Edward Leiter, Friedrich Haag, Friedrich Koch-Nolte (2002)  The family of toxin-related ecto-ADP-ribosyltransferases in humans and the mouse.   Protein Sci 11: 7. 1657-1670 Jul  
Abstract: ADP-ribosyltransferases including toxins secreted by Vibrio cholera, Pseudomonas aerurginosa, and other pathogenic bacteria inactivate the function of human target proteins by attaching ADP-ribose onto a critical amino acid residue. Cross-species polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and database mining identified the orthologs of these ADP-ribosylating toxins in humans and the mouse. The human genome contains four functional toxin-related ADP-ribosyltransferase genes (ARTs) and two related intron-containing pseudogenes; the mouse has six functional orthologs. The human and mouse ART genes map to chromosomal regions with conserved linkage synteny. The individual ART genes reveal highly restricted expression patterns, which are largely conserved in humans and the mouse. We confirmed the predicted extracellular location of the ART proteins by expressing recombinant ARTs in insect cells. Two human and four mouse ARTs contain the active site motif (R-S-EXE) typical of arginine-specific ADP-ribosyltransferases and exhibit the predicted enzyme activities. Two other human ARTs and their murine orthologues deviate in the active site motif and lack detectable enzyme activity. Conceivably, these ARTs may have acquired a new specificity or function. The position-sensitive iterative database search program PSI-BLAST connected the mammalian ARTs with most known bacterial ADP-ribosylating toxins. In contrast, no related open reading frames occur in the four completed genomes of lower eucaryotes (yeast, worm, fly, and mustard weed). Interestingly, these organisms also lack genes for ADP-ribosylhydrolases, the enzymes that reverse protein ADP-ribosylation. This suggests that the two enzyme families that catalyze reversible mono-ADP-ribosylation either were lost from the genomes of these nonchordata eucaryotes or were subject to horizontal gene transfer between kingdoms.
Notes:
2001
P A Reche, V Soumelis, D M Gorman, T Clifford, Liu Mr, M Travis, S M Zurawski, J Johnston, Y J Liu, H Spits, R de de Malefyt, R A Kastelein, J F Bazan (2001)  Human thymic stromal lymphopoietin preferentially stimulates myeloid cells.   J Immunol 167: 1. 336-343 Jul  
Abstract: The sequence of a novel hemopoietic cytokine was discovered in a computational screen of genomic databases, and its homology to mouse thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) suggests that it is the human orthologue. Human TSLP is proposed to signal through a heterodimeric receptor complex that consists of a new member of the hemopoietin family termed human TSLP receptor and the IL-7R alpha-chain. Cells transfected with both receptor subunits proliferated in response to purified, recombinant human TSLP, with induced phosphorylation of Stat3 and Stat5. Human TSLPR and IL-7Ralpha are principally coexpressed on monocytes and dendritic cell populations and to a much lesser extent on various lymphoid cells. In accord, we find that human TSLP functions mainly on myeloid cells; it induces the release of T cell-attracting chemokines from monocytes and, in particular, enhances the maturation of CD11c(+) dendritic cells, as evidenced by the strong induction of the costimulatory molecules CD40 and CD80 and the enhanced capacity to elicit proliferation of naive T cells.
Notes:
D D Jones, K M Stott, P A Reche, R N Perham (2001)  Recognition of the lipoyl domain is the ultimate determinant of substrate channelling in the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex.   J Mol Biol 305: 1. 49-60 Jan  
Abstract: Reductive acetylation of the lipoyl domain (E2plip) of the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Escherichia coli is catalysed specifically by its partner pyruvate decarboxylase (E1p), and no productive interaction occurs with the analogous 2-oxoglutarate decarboxylase (E1o) of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. Residues in the lipoyl-lysine beta-turn region of the unlipoylated E2plip domain (E2plip(apo)) undergo significant changes in both chemical shift and transverse relaxation time (T(2)) in the presence of E1p but not E1o. Residue Gly11, in a prominent surface loop between beta-strands 1 and 2 in the E2plip domain, was also observed to undergo a significant change in chemical shift. Addition of pyruvate to the mixture of E2plip(apo) and E1p caused larger changes in chemical shift and the appearance of multiple cross-peaks for certain residues, suggesting that the domain was experiencing more than one type of interaction. Residues in both beta-strands 4 and 5, together with those in the prominent surface loop and the following beta-strand 2, appeared to be interacting with E1p, as did a small patch of residues centred around Glu31. The values of T(2) across the polypeptide chain backbone were also lower than in the presence of E1p alone, suggesting that E2plip(apo) binds more tightly after the addition of pyruvate. The lipoylated domain (E2plip(holo)) also exhibited significant changes in chemical shift and decreases in the overall T(2) relaxation times in the presence of E1p, the residues principally affected being restricted to the half of the domain that contains the lipoyl-lysine (Lys41) residue. In addition, small chemical shift changes and a general drop in T(2) times in the presence of E1o were observed, indicating that E2plip(holo) can interact, weakly but non-productively, with E1o. It is evident that recognition of the protein domain is the ultimate determinant of whether reductive acetylation of the lipoyl group occurs, and that this is ensured by a mosaic of interactions with the Elp.
Notes:
A M Moody, D Chui, P A Reche, J J Priatel, J D Marth, E L Reinherz (2001)  Developmentally regulated glycosylation of the CD8alphabeta coreceptor stalk modulates ligand binding.   Cell 107: 4. 501-512 Nov  
Abstract: The functional consequences of glycan structural changes associated with cellular differentiation are ill defined. Herein, we investigate the role of glycan adducts to the O-glycosylated polypeptide stalk tethering the CD8alphabeta coreceptor to the thymocyte surface. We show that immature CD4(+)CD8(+) double-positive thymocytes bind MHCI tetramers more avidly than mature CD8 single-positive thymocytes, and that this differential binding is governed by developmentally programmed O-glycan modification controlled by the ST3Gal-I sialyltransferase. ST3Gal-I induction and attendant core 1 sialic acid addition to CD8beta on mature thymocytes decreases CD8alphabeta-MHCI avidity by altering CD8alphabeta domain-domain association and/or orientation. Hence, glycans on the CD8beta stalk appear to modulate the ability of the distal binding surface of the dimeric CD8 globular head domains to clamp MHCI.
Notes:
F Koch-Nolte, P Reche, F Haag, F Bazan (2001)  ADP-ribosyltransferases: plastic tools for inactivating protein and small molecular weight targets.   J Biotechnol 92: 2. 81-87 Dec  
Abstract: ADP-ribosyltransferases (ADPRTs) form an interesting class of enzymes with well-established roles as potent bacterial toxins and metabolic regulators. ADPRTs catalyze the transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety from NAD(+) onto specific substrates including proteins. ADP-ribosylation usually inactivates the function of the target. ADPRTs have become adapted to function in extra- and intracellular settings. Regulation of ADPRT activity can be mediated by ligand binding to associated regulatory domains, proteolytic cleavage, disulphide bond reduction, and association with other proteins. Crystallisation has revealed a conserved core set of elements that define an unusual minimal scaffold of the catalytic domain with remarkably plastic sequence requirements--only a single glutamic acid residue critical to catalytic activity is invariant. These inherent properties of ADPRTs suggest that the ADPRT catalytic fold is an attractive, malleable subject for protein design.
Notes:
F Koch-Nolte, P Reche, F Haag, F Bazan (2001)  ADP-ribosyltransferases: plastic tools for inactivating protein and small molecular weight targets.   J Biotechnol 92: 2. 81-87 Dec  
Abstract: ADP-ribosyltransferases (ADPRTs) form an interesting class of enzymes with well-established roles as potent bacterial toxins and metabolic regulators. ADPRTs catalyze the transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety from NAD(+) onto specific substrates including proteins. ADP-ribosylation usually inactivates the function of the target. ADPRTs have become adapted to function in extra- and intracellular settings. Regulation of ADPRT activity can be mediated by ligand binding to associated regulatory domains, proteolytic cleavage, disulphide bond reduction, and association with other proteins. Crystallisation has revealed a conserved core set of elements that define an unusual minimal scaffold of the catalytic domain with remarkably plastic sequence requirements--only a single glutamic acid residue critical to catalytic activity is invariant. These inherent properties of ADPRTs suggest that the ADPRT catalytic fold is an attractive, malleable subject for protein design.
Notes:
P A Reche, V Soumelis, D M Gorman, T Clifford, Liu Mr, M Travis, S M Zurawski, J Johnston, Y J Liu, H Spits, R de de Malefyt, R A Kastelein, J F Bazan (2001)  Human thymic stromal lymphopoietin preferentially stimulates myeloid cells.   J Immunol 167: 1. 336-343 Jul  
Abstract: The sequence of a novel hemopoietic cytokine was discovered in a computational screen of genomic databases, and its homology to mouse thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) suggests that it is the human orthologue. Human TSLP is proposed to signal through a heterodimeric receptor complex that consists of a new member of the hemopoietin family termed human TSLP receptor and the IL-7R alpha-chain. Cells transfected with both receptor subunits proliferated in response to purified, recombinant human TSLP, with induced phosphorylation of Stat3 and Stat5. Human TSLPR and IL-7Ralpha are principally coexpressed on monocytes and dendritic cell populations and to a much lesser extent on various lymphoid cells. In accord, we find that human TSLP functions mainly on myeloid cells; it induces the release of T cell-attracting chemokines from monocytes and, in particular, enhances the maturation of CD11c(+) dendritic cells, as evidenced by the strong induction of the costimulatory molecules CD40 and CD80 and the enhanced capacity to elicit proliferation of naive T cells.
Notes:
2000
D D Jones, H J Horne, P A Reche, R N Perham (2000)  Structural determinants of post-translational modification and catalytic specificity for the lipoyl domains of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Escherichia coli.   J Mol Biol 295: 2. 289-306 Jan  
Abstract: The lipoyl domains of the dihydrolipoyl acyltransferase (E2p, E2o) components of the pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase multienzyme complexes are specifically recognised by their cognate 2-oxo acid decarboxylase (E1p, E1o). A prominent surface loop links the first and second beta-strands in all lipoyl domains, close in space to the lipoyl-lysine beta-turn. This loop was subjected to various modifications by directed mutagenesis of a sub-gene encoding a lipoyl domain of Escherichia coli E2p. Deletion of the loop (four residues) rendered the domain incapable of reductive acetylation by E. coli E1p in the presence of pyruvate, but insertion of a new loop (six residues) corresponding to that in the E2o lipoyl domain partly restored this ability, albeit with a much lower rate. However, the modified domain remained unable to undergo reductive succinylation by E1o in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate. Additional exchange of the two residues on the C-terminal side of the loop (V14A, E15T) had no effect. Insertion of a different four-residue loop also restored a limited ability to undergo reductive acetylation, but still significantly less than that of the wild-type domain. Exchanging the residue on the N-terminal side of the lipoyl-lysine beta-turn in the E2p and E2o domains (G39T), both singly and in conjunction with the loop exchange, had no effect on the ability of the E2p domain to be reductively acetylated but did confer a slight increase in susceptibility to reductive succinylation. All mutant E2p domains, apart from that with the loop deletion (LD), were readily lipoylated in vitro by E. coli lipoate protein ligase A; the E2p LD mutant could be lipoylated only at a significantly lower rate. Likewise, this domain exhibited 1D and 2D NMR spectra characteristic of a partially folded protein, whereas the spectra of mutants with modified loops were similar to those of the wild-type domain. The surface loop is evidently important to the structural integrity of the domain and may help to stabilize the thioester bond linking the acyl group to the reduced lipoyl-lysine swinging arm as part of the catalytic mechanism. Recognition of the lipoyl domain by its partner E1 appears to be a complex process and not attributable to any single determinant on the domain.
Notes:
P A Reche (2000)  Lipoylating and biotinylating enzymes contain a homologous catalytic module.   Protein Sci 9: 10. 1922-1929 Oct  
Abstract: Biotin and lipoic acid moieties are the covalently attached coenzyme cofactors of several multicomponent enzyme complexes that catalyze key metabolic reactions. Attachment of these moieties to the biotinyl- and lipoyl-dependent enzymes is post-translationally catalyzed by specific biotinylating and lipoylating protein enzymes. In Escherichia coli, two different enzymes, LplA and LipB, catalyze independent pathways for the lipoylation of the relevant enzymes, whereas only one enzyme, the BirA protein, is responsible for all the biotinylation. Counterparts of the E. coli BirA, LplA, and LipB enzymes have been previously identified in many organisms, but homology among the three families has never been reported. Computational analysis based on PSI-BLAST profiles and secondary structure predictions indicates, however, that lipoylating and biotinylating enzymes are evolutionarily related protein families containing a homologous catalytic module. Sequence conservation among the three families is very poor, but a single lysine residue is strictly conserved in all of them, which, according to the available X-ray crystal structure of the E. coli BirA protein, is expected to contribute to the binding of lipoic acid in the LplA and LipB enzymes.
Notes:
P A Reche, M J Howard, R W Broadhurst, R N Perham (2000)  Heteronuclear NMR studies of the specificity of the post-translational modification of biotinyl domains by biotinyl protein ligase.   FEBS Lett 479: 3. 93-98 Aug  
Abstract: The lipoyl domains of 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase multienzyme complexes and the biotinyl domains of biotin-dependent enzymes have homologous structures, but the target lysine residue in each domain is correctly selected for posttranslational modification by lipoyl protein ligase and biotinyl protein ligase, respectively. We have applied two-dimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy to investigate the interaction between the apo form of the biotinyl domain of the biotin carboxyl carrier protein of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and the biotinyl protein ligase (BPL) from Escherichia coli. Heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence NMR spectra of the 15N-labelled biotinyl domain were recorded in the presence and absence of the ligase and backbone amide 1H and 15N chemical shifts were evaluated. Small, but significant, changes in chemical shift were found in two regions, including the tight beta-turn that houses the lysine residue targetted for biotinylation, and the beta-strand 2 and the loop that precedes it in the domain. When compared with the three-dimensional structure, sequence alignments of other biotinyl and lipoyl domains, and mutagenesis data, these results give a clear indication of how the biotinyl domain is both recognised by BPL and distinguished from the structurally related lipoyl domain to ensure correct posttranslational modification.
Notes:
1999
P Reche, R N Perham (1999)  Structure and selectivity in post-translational modification: attaching the biotinyl-lysine and lipoyl-lysine swinging arms in multifunctional enzymes.   EMBO J 18: 10. 2673-2682 May  
Abstract: The post-translational attachment of biotin and lipoic acid to specific lysine residues displayed in protruding beta-turns in homologous biotinyl and lipoyl domains of their parent enzymes is catalysed by two different ligases. We have expressed in Escherichia coli a sub-gene encoding the biotinyl domain of E.coli acetyl-CoA carboxylase, and by a series of mutations converted the protein from the target for biotinylation to one for lipoylation, in vivo and in vitro. The biotinylating enzyme, biotinyl protein ligase (BPL), and the lipoylating enzyme, LplA, exhibited major differences in the recognition process. LplA accepted the highly conserved MKM motif that houses the target lysine residue in the biotinyl domain beta-turn, but was responsive to structural cues in the flanking beta-strands. BPL was much less sensitive to changes in these beta-strands, but could not biotinylate a lysine residue placed in the DKA motif characteristic of the lipoyl domain beta-turn. The presence of a further protruding thumb between the beta2 and beta3 strands in the wild-type biotinyl domain, which has no counterpart in the lipoyl domain, is sufficient to prevent aberrant lipoylation in E.coli. The structural basis of this discrimination contrasts with other forms of post-translational modification, where the sequence motif surrounding the target residue can be the principal determinant.
Notes:
1998
P Reche, Y L Li, C Fuller, K Eichhorn, R N Perham (1998)  Selectivity of post-translational modification in biotinylated proteins: the carboxy carrier protein of the acetyl-CoA carboxylase of Escherichia coli.   Biochem J 329 ( Pt 3): 589-596 Feb  
Abstract: Biotin-dependent enzymes contain a biotinyl-lysine residue in a conserved sequence motif, MKM, located in a surface hairpin turn in one of the two beta-sheets that make up the domain. A sub-gene encoding the 82-residue C-terminal biotinyl domain from the biotin carboxy carrier protein of acetyl-CoA carboxylase from Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase was created and over-expressed in E. coli. The biotinyl domain was readily released by cleavage with thrombin. Five mutant domains were created in which the conserved MKM motif was systematically replaced: by MAK and KAM, in which the target lysine is moved one place; by KKM and MKK, in which a second potential site for biotinylation is introduced; and by DKA, the motif found in the correspondingly conserved site of lipoylation in the structurally related lipoyl domains of 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase multienzyme complexes. No biotinylation of the MAK or KAM mutants was observed in vivo or by purified biotinyl protein ligase in vitro; in the KKM and MKK mutants, only one lysine residue, presumed to be that in its native position in the hairpin turn, was found to be biotinylated in vivo and in vitro. The DKA mutant was not biotinylated in vivo, but was partly lipoylated and octanoylated. It was also a poor substrate for lipoylation in vitro catalysed by the E. coli lipoyl protein ligase encoded by the lplA gene. The flanking sequence in the MKM motif is important, but not crucial, and appears to have been conserved in part to be compatible with the subsequent carboxylation reactions of biotin-dependent enzymes. The DKA motif, displayed in the hairpin loop, is sufficient to address lipoylation in E. coli but probably by a pathway different from that mediated by the lplA-dependent ligase. The recognition of the structurally homologous lipoyl and biotinyl domains by the appropriate ligase evidently has a major structural component to it, notably the positioning of the target lysine residue in the exposed hairpin loop, but there appear to be additional recognition sites elsewhere on the domains.
Notes:
1996
P Reche, R Arrebola, D V Santi, D Gonzalez-Pacanowska, L M Ruiz-Perez (1996)  Expression and characterization of the Trypanosoma cruzi dihydrofolate reductase domain.   Mol Biochem Parasitol 76: 1-2. 175-185 Feb/Mar  
Abstract: We have cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli a 702-base pair gene coding for the dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) domain of the bifunctional dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase (DHFR-TS) from Trypanosoma cruzi. The DHFR domain was purified to homogeneity by methotrexate-Sepharose chromatography followed by an anion-exchange chromatography step in a mono Q column, and displayed a single 27-kDa band on SDS-PAGE. Gel filtration showed that the catalytic domain was expressed as a monomer. Kinetic parameters were similar to those reported for the wild-type bifunctional enzyme with Km values of 0.75 microM for dihydrofolate and 16 microM for NADPH and a kcat value of 16.5 s-1. T. cruzi DHFR is poorly inhibited by trimethoprim and pyrimethamine and the inhibition constants were always lower for the bifunctional enzyme. The binding of methotrexate was characteristic of a class of inhibitors that form an initial complex which isomerizes slowly to a tighter complex and are referred to as 'slow, tight-binding' inhibitors. While the slow-binding step of inhibition was apparently unaffected in the individually expressed DHFR domain, the overall inhibition constant was two-fold higher as a consequence of the superior inhibition constant value obtained for the initial inhibitory complex.
Notes:
1995
L García-Fuentes, P Reche, O López-Mayorga, D V Santi, D González-Pacanowska, C Barón (1995)  Thermodynamic analysis of the binding of 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate to thymidylate synthase over a range of temperatures.   Eur J Biochem 232: 2. 641-645 Sep  
Abstract: The binding of 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate (FdUMP) to Lactobacillus casei recombinant thymidylate synthase has been studied by isothermal titration microcalorimetry at pH 7.1 over the temperature range 16-35 degrees C. Calorimetric measurements in various buffer systems with different heats of ionization suggest that a proton uptake is involved in the binding process of the nucleotide. In the temperature range investigated, the mol protons bound/mol nucleotide increases as the temperature decreases. A model of two equal and independent sites fits well with the binding isotherms for thymidylate synthase. The binding constants, the changes in Gibbs energy, enthalpy, and entropy/site for FdUMP binding were calculated at each temperature. The results show that the binding is driven by both enthalpy and entropy contributions in the range 16-35 degrees C. The enthalpy changes become more negative as the temperature increases, with delta Cp = -170 +/- 20 J.K-1.(mol FdUMP bound)-1. The behavior of the system supports the observation that FdUMP binds to thymidylate synthase without producing profound conformational changes in the protein dimer.
Notes:
1994
R Arrebola, A Olmo, P Reche, E P Garvey, D V Santi, L M Ruiz-Perez, D Gonzalez-Pacanowska (1994)  Isolation and characterization of a mutant dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase from methotrexate-resistant Leishmania cells.   J Biol Chem 269: 14. 10590-10596 Apr  
Abstract: The MTX-resistant Leishmania major promastigote cell line D7BR1000 displays extrachromosomal amplified R-region DNA, which contains the gene for dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase (DHFR-TS) (Garvey, E. P., and Santi, D. V. (1986) Science 233, 535-540). Now we report that these methotrexate (MTX)-resistant cells also possessed a structurally altered DHFR-TS. We have performed the cloning, expression, and characterization of the altered DHFR-TS gene. The DNA sequence of the altered DHFR-TS gene revealed a single base change in position 158 which resulted in the substitution of a methionine in position 53 of DHFR for an arginine. Steady-state measurements of the purified recombinant enzyme indicated that the mutation did not cause significant modifications in the Km for DHFR or TS substrates but lowered the kcat by 4-fold. Of greater interest, there was a modification in the effect on MTX inhibition of DHFR. The initial inhibition complex appeared to have been unaffected by the alteration, but the subsequent slow-binding step of inhibition in the wild-type enzyme is absent in the altered enzyme. Consequently, the overall Ki for MTX was 30-fold greater for the mutant than for the wild-type enzyme. Transfection of L. major with the mutant DHFR-TS gene gives parasites that are capable of growing in medium containing 10 mM methotrexate, showing that the altered DHFR gene is in itself capable of conferring MTX resistance in Leishmania.
Notes:
P Reche, R Arrebola, A Olmo, D V Santi, D Gonzalez-Pacanowska, L M Ruiz-Perez (1994)  Cloning and expression of the dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase gene from Trypanosoma cruzi.   Mol Biochem Parasitol 65: 2. 247-258 Jun  
Abstract: We have cloned, sequenced and expressed the Trypanosoma cruzi gene encoding the bifunctional protein dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase (DHFR-TS). The strategy followed for the isolation of positive clones from a genomic library was based on the construction of a probe by the amplification of highly conserved sequences of the TS domain by the polymerase chain reaction. Translation of the open reading frame of 1563 bp yields a polypeptide of 521 amino acids with a molecular mass of 58829 Da. For heterologous expression of T. cruzi DHFR-TS in Escherichia coli, the entire coding sequence was amplified by polymerase chain reaction and cloned into the plasmid vector pKK223.3. The presence of catalytically active DHFR-TS was demonstrated by complementation of the Thy- E. coli strain chi 2913 and the DHFR- Thy- E. coli strain PA414. The gene is expressed as an active protein which constitutes approximately 2% of the total cell soluble protein. Recombinant bifunctional enzyme and the DHFR domain have been purified by methotrexate-Sepharose chromatography to yield 1-2 mg of active DHFR-TS per litre of culture. Southern and electrophoretic analyses using the coding sequence as probe indicated that the T. cruzi enzyme is encoded by a single copy gene which maps to two bands of approximately 990 kb and 1047 kb. It appears that T. cruzi is diploid for the DHFR-TS gene which is located on two different-sized homologous chromosomes.
Notes:
Powered by PublicationsList.org.