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1.
Sci Immunol ; 9(95): eadn0126, 2024 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38728413

ABSTRACT

MR1T cells are a recently found class of T cells that recognize antigens presented by the major histocompatibility complex-I-related molecule MR1 in the absence of microbial infection. The nature of the self-antigens that stimulate MR1T cells remains unclear, hampering our understanding of their physiological role and therapeutic potential. By combining genetic, pharmacological, and biochemical approaches, we found that carbonyl stress and changes in nucleobase metabolism in target cells promote MR1T cell activation. Stimulatory compounds formed by carbonyl adducts of nucleobases were detected within MR1 molecules produced by tumor cells, and their abundance and antigenicity were enhanced by drugs that induce carbonyl accumulation. Our data reveal carbonyl-nucleobase adducts as MR1T cell antigens. Recognizing cells under carbonyl stress allows MR1T cells to monitor cellular metabolic changes with physiological and therapeutic implications.


Subject(s)
Histocompatibility Antigens Class I , Histocompatibility Antigens Class I/immunology , Histocompatibility Antigens Class I/metabolism , Humans , Minor Histocompatibility Antigens/metabolism , Minor Histocompatibility Antigens/immunology , Animals , Lymphocyte Activation/immunology , Mice , T-Lymphocytes/immunology
2.
Chem Rev ; 122(10): 9422-9467, 2022 05 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35005884

ABSTRACT

Paramagnetic centers in biomolecules, such as specific metal ions that are bound to a protein, affect the nuclei in their surrounding in various ways. One of these effects is the pseudocontact shift (PCS), which leads to strong chemical shift perturbations of nuclear spins, with a remarkably long range of 50 Å and beyond. The PCS in solution NMR is an effect originating from the anisotropic part of the dipole-dipole interaction between the magnetic momentum of unpaired electrons and nuclear spins. The PCS contains spatial information that can be exploited in multiple ways to characterize structure, function, and dynamics of biomacromolecules. It can be used to refine structures, magnify effects of dynamics, help resonance assignments, allows for an intermolecular positioning system, and gives structural information in sensitivity-limited situations where all other methods fail. Here, we review applications of the PCS in biomolecular solution NMR spectroscopy, starting from early works on natural metalloproteins, following the development of non-natural tags to chelate and attach lanthanoid ions to any biomolecular target to advanced applications on large biomolecular complexes and inside living cells. We thus hope to not only highlight past applications but also shed light on the tremendous potential the PCS has in structural biology.


Subject(s)
Lanthanoid Series Elements , Metalloproteins , Ions , Lanthanoid Series Elements/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Protein Conformation
3.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 56(84): 12861-12864, 2020 Oct 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32969418

ABSTRACT

Herein, a novel and rationally designed ortho-substituted pyridine activator is reported that reacts rapidly and selectively with cysteine thiols. It forms reduction-stable conjugates and induces large pseudocontact shifts, residual dipolar couplings and paramagnetic relaxation enhancement on both ubiquitin S57C and human carbonic anhydrase II S50C constructs under physiological conditions.


Subject(s)
Carbonic Anhydrase II/chemistry , Chelating Agents/chemistry , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Indicators and Reagents/chemistry , Lanthanoid Series Elements/chemistry , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Alkylation , Anisotropy , Cysteine/chemistry , Humans , Models, Molecular , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Conformation , Pyridines/chemistry , Sulfhydryl Compounds/chemistry , Ubiquitin/chemistry
5.
Prog Nucl Magn Reson Spectrosc ; 114-115: 284-312, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31779884

ABSTRACT

In this review, lanthanide chelating tags and their applications to pseudocontact shift NMR spectroscopy as well as analysis of residual dipolar couplings are covered. A complete overview is presented of DOTA-derived and non-DOTA-derived lanthanide chelating tags, critical points in the design of lanthanide chelating tags as appropriate linker moieties, their stability under reductive conditions, e.g., for in-cell applications, the magnitude of the anisotropy transferred from the lanthanide chelating tag to the biomacromolecule under investigation and structural properties, as well as conformational bias of the lanthanide chelating tags are discussed. Furthermore, all DOTA-derived lanthanide chelating tags used for PCS NMR spectroscopy published to date are displayed in tabular form, including their anisotropy parameters, with all employed lanthanide ions, CB-Ln distances and tagging reaction conditions, i.e., the stoichiometry of lanthanide chelating tags, pH, buffer composition, temperature and reaction time. Additionally, applications of lanthanide chelating tags for pseudocontact shifts and residual dipolar couplings that have been reported for proteins, protein-protein and protein-ligand complexes, carbohydrates, carbohydrate-protein complexes, nucleic acids and nucleic acid-protein complexes are presented and critically reviewed. The vast and impressive range of applications of lanthanide chelating tags to structural investigations of biomacromolecules in solution clearly illustrates the significance of this particular field of research. The extension of the repertoire of lanthanide chelating tags from proteins to nucleic acids holds great promise for the determination of valuable structural parameters and further developments in characterizing intermolecular interactions.


Subject(s)
Carbohydrates/chemistry , Lanthanoid Series Elements/chemistry , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Nucleic Acids/chemistry , Proteins/chemistry , Animals , Humans , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/instrumentation
6.
Chem Sci ; 10(29): 7049-7058, 2019 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31588272

ABSTRACT

The formylglycine generating enzyme (FGE) catalyzes oxidative conversion of specific peptidyl-cysteine residues to formylglycine. FGE mediates O2-activation and hydrogen-atom abstraction in an active site that contains Cu(i) coordinated to two cysteine residues. Similar coordination geometries are common among copper-sensing transcription factors and copper-chaperone but are unprecedented among copper-dependent oxidases. To examine the mechanism of this unusual catalyst we determined the 1.04 Å structure of FGE from Thermomonospora curvata in complex with copper and a cysteine-containing peptide substrate. This structure unveils a network of four crystallographic waters and two active site residues that form a highly acidic O2-binding pocket juxtaposed to the trigonal planar tris-cysteine coordinated Cu(i) center. Comparison with structures of FGE in complex with Ag(i) and Cd(ii) combined with evidence from NMR spectroscopy and kinetic observations highlight several structural changes that are induced by substrate binding and prime the enzyme for O2-binding and subsequent activation.

7.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(71): 10543-10546, 2019 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31414670

ABSTRACT

Herein we report a DOTA-based lanthanide chelating tag (LCT) with rigidified backbone and a reduction-stable linker. The newly developed tag induces strong pseudocontact shifts suitable for paramagnetic protein nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and the obtained anisotropic susceptibility parameters are in the range of the best performing LCTs.

8.
Chem Sci ; 10(19): 5064-5072, 2019 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31183057

ABSTRACT

Unraveling the native structure of protein-ligand complexes in solution enables rational drug design. We report here the use of 19F pseudocontact shift (PCS) NMR as a method to determine fluorine positions of high affinity ligands bound within the drug target human carbonic anhydrase II with high accuracy. Three different ligands were localized within the protein by analysis of the obtained PCS from simple one-dimensional 19F spectra with an accuracy of up to 0.8 Å. In order to validate the PCS, four to five independent magnetic susceptibility tensors induced by lanthanide chelating tags bound site-specifically to single cysteine mutants were refined. Least-squares minimization and a Monte-Carlo approach allowed the assessment of experimental errors on the intersection of the corresponding four to five PCS isosurfaces. By defining an angle score that reflects the relative isosurface orientation for different tensor combinations, it was established that the ligand can be localized accurately using only three tensors, if the isosurfaces are close to orthogonal. For two out of three ligands, the determined position closely matched the X-ray coordinates. Our results for the third ligand suggest, in accordance with previously reported ab initio calculations, a rotated position for the difluorophenyl substituent, enabling a favorable interaction with Phe-131. The lanthanide-fluorine distance varied between 22 and 38 Å and induced 19F PCS ranged from 0.078 to 0.409 ppm, averaging to 0.213 ppm. Accordingly, even longer metal-fluorine distances will lead to meaningful PCS, rendering the investigation of protein-ligand complexes significantly larger than 30 kDa feasible.

9.
Chemistry ; 25(51): 11910-11917, 2019 Sep 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31199526

ABSTRACT

A sterically overcrowded lanthanide-chelating tag has been synthesized in order to investigate the influence on the obtained pseudocontact shifts and the anisotropic part of the magnetic susceptibility tensor compared to those of its predecessor DOTA-M8-(4R,4S)-SSPy. For the first time, a concise synthetic route is presented for isopropyl-substituted cyclen, the macrocyclic scaffold of the lanthanide-chelating tag, delivering the macrocycle in an overall yield of 6 % over 11 steps. The geometry of the lutetium complex has been assigned by ROESY experiments, adopting exclusively a Λ(δδδδ) conformation, and DFT calculations have confirmed a stabilization of 32.6 kJ mol-1 compared to the Δ(δδδδ) conformer. The highly rigidified lanthanide-chelating tag induces strong pseudocontact shifts of up to 6.5 ppm on ubiquitin S57 C, shows significantly improved tensor properties compared to those of its predecessor, and constitutes a highly promising starting point for the further development of lanthanide-chelating tags.

10.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(32): 4715-4718, 2019 Apr 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30942236

ABSTRACT

A rational strategy for the facile and efficient cyclization of amino acid-based linear precursors forming nine and twelve-membered cyclic peptidomimetics is reported. The resulting chiral lactams can readily be reduced to substituted cyclic polyamine analogues of 1,4,7,10-tetraaza-cyclododecane (cyclen) and 1,4,7-triaza-cyclononane (TACN).


Subject(s)
Heterocyclic Compounds, 1-Ring/chemical synthesis , Peptidomimetics/chemical synthesis , Polyamines/chemical synthesis , Cyclization , Molecular Structure , Stereoisomerism
12.
J Biomol NMR ; 72(1-2): 29-38, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30117038

ABSTRACT

Pseudocontact shifts (PCS) generated by lanthanide chelating tags yield valuable restraints for investigating protein structures, dynamics and interactions in solution. In this work, dysprosium-, thulium- and terbium-complexes of eight-fold methylated 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid tags [DOTA-M8-(4R4S)-SSPy] are presented that induce large pseudocontact shifts up to 5.5 ppm and adopt exclusively the square antiprismatic conformation. This is in contrast to our earlier findings on complexes of the stereoisomeric DOTA-M8-(8S)-SSPy, where significant amounts of the twisted square antiprismatic conformer for the Dy tag were observed. The Dy-, Tm-, Tb- and Lu-complexes of DOTA-M8-(4R4S)-SSPy were conjugated to ubiquitin S57C and selectively 15N leucine labeled human carbonic anhydrase II S50C, resulting in only one set of signals. Furthermore, we investigated the conformation of the thulium- and dysprosium-complexes in vacuo and with implicit water solvent using density functional theory calculations. The calculated energy differences between the two different conformations (7.0-50.5 kJ/mol) and experimental evidence from the corresponding ytterbium- and yttrium-complexes clearly suggest a SAP [Λ(δδδδ)] geometry for the complexes presented in this study. The lanthanide chelating tag studied in this work offer insights into the solution structure of proteins by inducing strong pseudocontact shifts, show different tensor properties compared to its predecessor, enables a convenient assignment procedure, is accessed by a more economic synthesis than its predecessor and constitutes a highly promising starting point for further developments of lanthanide chelating tags.


Subject(s)
Chelating Agents/chemistry , Lanthanoid Series Elements/chemistry , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Staining and Labeling/methods , Carbonic Anhydrase II/chemistry , Heterocyclic Compounds, 1-Ring , Humans , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Ubiquitin/chemistry , Water/chemistry
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