8 results on '"Anastasia A. Chernyatina"'
Search Results
2. Lateral A
- Author
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Anastasia V, Lilina, Anastasia A, Chernyatina, Dmytro, Guzenko, and Sergei V, Strelkov
- Subjects
Protein Conformation, alpha-Helical ,Nuclear Lamina ,Protein Domains ,Protein Conformation ,Intermediate Filaments ,Humans ,Vimentin ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Protein Multimerization ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Cytoskeleton ,Lamins - Abstract
The assembly of intermediate filaments (IFs) including nuclear lamins is driven by specific interactions of the elementary coiled-coil dimers in both lateral and longitudinal direction. The assembly mode A
- Published
- 2019
3. Lateral A11 type tetramerization in lamins
- Author
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Sergei V. Strelkov, Anastasia A. Chernyatina, Anastasia V. Lilina, and Dmytro Guzenko
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MECHANISM ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,MOLECULAR ARCHITECTURE ,Biophysics ,ORGANIZATION ,Antiparallel (biochemistry) ,FRACTION ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tetramer ,COILED COILS ,Structural Biology ,Keratin ,Intermediate filaments ,HEAD ,Intermediate filament ,Coiled coil ,X-ray crystallography ,030304 developmental biology ,TAIL ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Science & Technology ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Cell Biology ,VIMENTIN ,chemistry ,Cytoplasm ,Nuclear lamina ,Nuclear lamins ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,INTERMEDIATE-FILAMENT STRUCTURE ,Lamin - Abstract
The assembly of intermediate filaments (IFs) including nuclear lamins is driven by specific interactions of the elementary coiled-coil dimers in both lateral and longitudinal direction. The assembly mode A11 is dependent on lateral tetramerization of the second coiled-coil segment (coil1b) in antiparallel fashion. Recent cryo-electron microscopy studies pointed to 3.5 nm lamin filaments built from two antiparallel threads of longitudinally associated dimers but little molecular detail is available to date. Here we present the 2.6 Å resolution X-ray structure of a lamin A fragment including residues 65-222 which reveals the molecular basis of the A11 interaction. The crystal structure also indicates a continuous α-helical structure for the preceding linker L1 region. The middle part of the antiparallel tetramer reveals unique interactions due to the lamin-specific 42-residue insert in coil1b. At the same time, distinct characteristics of this insert provide for the preservation of common structural principles shared with lateral coil1b tetramers of vimentin and keratin K1/K10. In addition, structural analysis suggests that the A11 interaction in lamins is somewhat weaker than in cytoplasmic IFs, despite a 30% longer overlap. Establishing the structural detail of the A11 interaction across IF types is the first step towards a rational understanding of the IF assembly process which is indispensable for establishing the mechanism of disease-related mutations. ispartof: JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY vol:209 issue:1 ispartof: location:United States status: published
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Crystallographic Studies of Intermediate Filament Proteins
- Author
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Dmytro, Guzenko, Anastasia A, Chernyatina, and Sergei V, Strelkov
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Protein Conformation, alpha-Helical ,Intermediate Filament Proteins ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Crystallography, X-Ray - Abstract
Intermediate filaments (IFs), together with microtubules and actin microfilaments, are the three main cytoskeletal components in metazoan cells. IFs are formed by a distinct protein family, which is made up of 70 members in humans. Most IF proteins are tissue- or organelle-specific, which includes lamins, the IF proteins of the nucleus. The building block of IFs is an elongated dimer, which consists of a central α-helical 'rod' domain flanked by flexible N- and C-terminal domains. The conserved rod domain is the 'signature feature' of the IF family. Bioinformatics analysis reveals that the rod domain of all IF proteins contains three α-helical segments of largely conserved length, interconnected by linkers. Moreover, there is a conserved pattern of hydrophobic repeats within each segment, which includes heptads and hendecads. This defines the presence of both left-handed and almost parallel coiled-coil regions along the rod length. Using X-ray crystallography on multiple overlapping fragments of IF proteins, the atomic structure of the nearly complete rod domain has been determined. Here, we discuss some specific challenges of this procedure, such as crystallization and diffraction data phasing by molecular replacement. Further insights into the structure of the coiled coil and the terminal domains have been obtained using electron paramagnetic resonance measurements on the full-length protein, with spin labels attached at specific positions. This atomic resolution information, as well as further interesting findings, such as the variation of the coiled-coil stability along the rod length, provide clues towards interpreting the data on IF assembly, collected by a range of methods. However, a full description of this process at the molecular level is not yet at hand.
- Published
- 2017
5. Crystallographic Studies of Intermediate Filament Proteins
- Author
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Anastasia A. Chernyatina, Sergei V. Strelkov, and Dmytro Guzenko
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Coiled coil ,Physics ,Protein family ,03 medical and health sciences ,Crystallography ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Microtubule ,medicine ,Molecular replacement ,Cytoskeleton ,Intermediate filament ,Nucleus ,Lamin - Abstract
Intermediate filaments (IFs), together with microtubules and actin microfilaments, are the three main cytoskeletal components in metazoan cells. IFs are formed by a distinct protein family, which is made up of 70 members in humans. Most IF proteins are tissue- or organelle-specific, which includes lamins, the IF proteins of the nucleus. The building block of IFs is an elongated dimer, which consists of a central α-helical ‘rod’ domain flanked by flexible N- and C-terminal domains. The conserved rod domain is the ‘signature feature’ of the IF family. Bioinformatics analysis reveals that the rod domain of all IF proteins contains three α-helical segments of largely conserved length, interconnected by linkers. Moreover, there is a conserved pattern of hydrophobic repeats within each segment, which includes heptads and hendecads. This defines the presence of both left-handed and almost parallel coiled-coil regions along the rod length. Using X-ray crystallography on multiple overlapping fragments of IF proteins, the atomic structure of the nearly complete rod domain has been determined. Here, we discuss some specific challenges of this procedure, such as crystallization and diffraction data phasing by molecular replacement. Further insights into the structure of the coiled coil and the terminal domains have been obtained using electron paramagnetic resonance measurements on the full-length protein, with spin labels attached at specific positions. This atomic resolution information, as well as further interesting findings, such as the variation of the coiled-coil stability along the rod length, provide clues towards interpreting the data on IF assembly, collected by a range of methods. However, a full description of this process at the molecular level is not yet at hand.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Atomic structure of the vimentin central α-helical domain and its implications for intermediate filament assembly
- Author
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Anastasia A. Chernyatina, Ueli Aebi, Stefan Nicolet, Sergei V. Strelkov, and Harald Herrmann
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Protein Conformation ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Intermediate Filaments ,Vimentin ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Antiparallel (biochemistry) ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Protein filament ,Protein structure ,Tetramer ,Escherichia coli ,Atomic model ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Intermediate filament ,Cytoskeleton ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Chemistry ,Biological Sciences ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Crystallography ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Dimerization - Abstract
Together with actin filaments and microtubules, intermediate filaments (IFs) are the basic cytoskeletal components of metazoan cells. Over 80 human diseases have been linked to mutations in various IF proteins to date. However, the filament structure is far from being resolved at the atomic level, which hampers rational understanding of IF pathologies. The elementary building block of all IF proteins is a dimer consisting of an α-helical coiled-coil (CC) “rod” domain flanked by the flexible head and tail domains. Here we present three crystal structures of overlapping human vimentin fragments that comprise the first half of its rod domain. Given the previously solved fragments, a nearly complete atomic structure of the vimentin rod has become available. It consists of three α-helical segments (coils 1A, 1B, and 2) interconnected by linkers (L1 and L12). Most of the CC structure has a left-handed twist with heptad repeats, but both coil 1B and coil 2 also exhibit untwisted, parallel stretches with hendecad repeats. In the crystal structure, linker L1 was found to be α-helical without being involved in the CC formation. The available data allow us to construct an atomic model of the antiparallel tetramer representing the second level of vimentin assembly. Although the presence of the nonhelical head domains is essential for proper tetramer stabilization, the precise alignment of the dimers forming the tetramer appears to depend on the complementarity of their surface charge distribution patterns, while the structural plasticity of linker L1 and coil 1A plays a role in the subsequent IF assembly process.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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7. Stabilization of vimentin coil2 fragment via an engineered disulfide
- Author
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Anastasia A. Chernyatina and Sergei V. Strelkov
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Models, Molecular ,Dimer ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB) ,Crystal structure ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Structural Biology ,Humans ,Vimentin ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Disulfides ,Cytoskeleton ,Intermediate filament ,030304 developmental biology ,Coiled coil ,0303 health sciences ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Crystallography ,Monomer ,chemistry ,Protein Multimerization ,Crystallization ,Linker ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cytoskeletal intermediate filaments (IFs) assemble from the elementary dimers based on a segmented α-helical coiled-coil (CC) structure. Crystallographic studies of IF protein fragments remain the main route to access their atomic structure. To enable crystallization, such fragments must be sufficiently short. As a consequence, they often fail to assemble into the correct CC dimers. In particular, human vimentin fragment D3 corresponding to the first half of coil2 (residues 261–335) stays monomeric in solution. We have induced its dimerization via introducing a disulfide link between two cysteines engineered in the hydrophobic core of the CC close to its N-terminus. The 2.3 A crystal structure of the D3st (stabilized) fragment reveals a mostly parallel α-helical bundle structure in its N-terminal half which smoothly continues into a left-handed CC towards the C-terminus. This provides a direct evidence for a continuously α-helical structure of the coil2 segment and disproves the previously suggested existence of linker L2 separating it into two left-handed CCs. The general principles of CC dimer stabilization by disulfide introduction are also discussed.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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8. How to Study Intermediate Filaments in Atomic Detail
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Sergei V. Strelkov, Anastasia A. Chernyatina, John F. Hess, John C. Voss, and Dmytro Guzenko
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0301 basic medicine ,Chemistry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Structure (category theory) ,Nanotechnology ,Site-directed spin labeling ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Amino acid sequence analysis ,law ,Atomic resolution ,Statistical physics ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Intermediate filament ,Function (engineering) ,media_common ,Spin-½ - Abstract
Studies of the intermediate filament (IF) structure are a prerequisite of understanding their function. In addition, the structural information is indispensable if one wishes to gain a mechanistic view on the disease-related mutations in the IFs. Over the years, considerable progress has been made on the atomic structure of the elementary building block of all IFs, the coiled-coil dimer. Here, we discuss the approaches, methods and practices that have contributed to this advance. With abundant genetic information on hand, bioinformatics approaches give important insights into the dimer structure, including the head and tail regions poorly assessable experimentally. At the same time, the most important contribution has been provided by X-ray crystallography. Following the "divide-and-conquer" approach, many fragments from several IF proteins could be crystallized and resolved to atomic resolution. We will systematically cover the main procedures of these crystallographic studies, suggest ways to maximize their efficiency, and also discuss the possible pitfalls and limitations. In addition, electron paramagnetic resonance with site-directed spin labeling was another method providing a major impact toward the understanding of the IF structure. Upon placing the spin labels into specific positions within the full-length protein, one can evaluate the proximity of the labels and their mobility. This makes it possible to make conclusions about the dimer structure in the coiled-coil region and beyond, as well as to explore the dimer-dimer contacts.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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