86 results on '"Simon C, Drew"'
Search Results
2. Ternary Cu2+ Complexes of Human Serum Albumin and Glycyl-<scp>l</scp>-histidyl-<scp>l</scp>-lysine
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Simon C. Drew, Karolina Bossak-Ahmad, Tomasz Frączyk, and Wojciech Bal
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Chemistry ,Lysine ,medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Ternary operation ,Human serum albumin ,Ternary complex ,Binding constant ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Human serum albumin (HSA) and the growth factor glycyl-l-histidyl-l-lysine (GHK) bind Cu2+ as part of their normal functions. GHK is found at its highest concentration in the albumin-rich fraction of plasma, leading to speculation that HSA and GHK form a ternary Cu2+ complex. Although preliminary evidence was presented 40 years ago, the structure and stability of such a complex have remained elusive. Here, we show that two ternary Cu(GHK)NImHSA complexes are formed between GHK and the imino nitrogen (NIm) of His side chains of HSA. We identified His3 as one site of ternary complex formation (conditional binding constant cKCu(GHK)NImHis3Cu(GHK) = 2900 M-1 at pH 7.4), with the second site (cKCu(GHK)NImHisXCu(GHK) = 1700 M-1) likely being supplied by either His128 or His510. Together with the established role of HSA as a molecular shuttle in the blood, these complexes may aid the transport of the exchangeable Cu2+ pool and the functional form of GHK.
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- 2021
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3. Intermediate Cu(II)-Thiolate Species in the Reduction of Cu(II)GHK by Glutathione: A Handy Chelate for Biological Cu(II) Reduction
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Tomasz Frączyk, Simon C. Drew, Kosma Szutkowski, Wojciech Wróblewski, Iwona Ufnalska, Igor Zhukov, Wojciech Bal, and Urszula E. Wawrzyniak
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Reaction mechanism ,Molecular Structure ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Glutathione ,Reaction intermediate ,Tripeptide ,Copper ,Medicinal chemistry ,Redox ,Article ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Coordination Complexes ,Humans ,Chelation ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Cyclic voltammetry ,Oligopeptides ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
Gly-His-Lys (GHK) is a tripeptide present in the human bloodstream that exhibits a number of biological functions. Its activity is attributed to the copper-complexed form, Cu(II)GHK. Little is known, however, about the molecular aspects of the mechanism of its action. Here, we examined the reaction of Cu(II)GHK with reduced glutathione (GSH), which is the strongest reductant naturally occurring in human plasma. Spectroscopic techniques (UV–vis, CD, EPR, and NMR) and cyclic voltammetry helped unravel the reaction mechanism. The impact of temperature, GSH concentration, oxygen access, and the presence of ternary ligands on the reaction were explored. The transient GSH-Cu(II)GHK complex was found to be an important reaction intermediate. The kinetic and redox properties of this complex, including tuning of the reduction rate by ternary ligands, suggest that it may provide a missing link in copper trafficking as a precursor of Cu(I) ions, for example, for their acquisition by the CTR1 cellular copper transporter., Gly-His-Lys (GHK) is a human bioactive tripeptide thought to be activated by Cu(II) binding, but little is known about the molecular aspects of its action. UV−vis, circular dichroism (CD), EPR, and NMR spectroscopies, and cyclic voltammetry were used to examine the reduction of Cu(II)GHK with glutathione (GSH), the most abundant biological thiol. A semistable GSH-Cu(II)GHK reaction intermediate was discovered, with properties suitable for delivering Cu(I) to biological transport proteins.
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- 2021
4. The Case for Abandoning Therapeutic Chelation of Copper Ions in Alzheimer's Disease
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Simon C. Drew
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Alzheimer's disease ,β-amyloid ,copper ,bioinorganic chemistry ,N-truncation ,chelator ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The “therapeutic chelation” approach to treating Alzheimer's disease (AD) evolved from the metals hypothesis, with the premise that small molecules can be designed to prevent transition metal-induced amyloid deposition and oxidative stress within the AD brain. Over more than 20 years, countless in vitro studies have been devoted to characterizing metal binding, its effect on Aβ aggregation, ROS production, and in vitro toxicity. Despite a lack of evidence for any clinical benefit, the conjecture that therapeutic chelation is an effective approach for treating AD remains widespread. Here, the author plays the devil's advocate, questioning the experimental evidence, the dogma, and the value of therapeutic chelation, with a major focus on copper ions.
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- 2017
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5. Chelator PBT2 Forms a Ternary Cu2+ Complex with β-Amyloid That Has High Stability but Low Specificity
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Simon C. Drew
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Molecular Biology ,Spectroscopy ,Catalysis ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
The metal chelator PBT2 (5,7-dichloro-2-[(dimethylamino)methyl]-8-hydroxyquinoline) acts as a terdentate ligand capable of forming binary and ternary Cu2+ complexes. It was clinically trialed as an Alzheimer’s disease (AD) therapy but failed to progress beyond phase II. The β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide associated with AD was recently concluded to form a unique Cu(Aβ) complex that is inaccessible to PBT2. Herein, it is shown that the species ascribed to this binary Cu(Aβ) complex in fact corresponds to ternary Cu(PBT2)NImAβ complexes formed by the anchoring of Cu(PBT2) on imine nitrogen (NIm) donors of His side chains. The primary site of ternary complex formation is His6, with a conditional stepwise formation constant at pH 7.4 (Kc [M−1]) of logKc = 6.4 ± 0.1, and a second site is supplied by His13 or His14 (logKc = 4.4 ± 0.1). The stability of Cu(PBT2)NImH13/14 is comparable with that of the simplest Cu(PBT2)NIm complexes involving the NIm coordination of free imidazole (logKc = 4.22 ± 0.09) and histamine (logKc = 4.00 ± 0.05). The 100-fold larger formation constant for Cu(PBT2)NImH6 indicates that outer-sphere ligand–peptide interactions strongly stabilize its structure. Despite the relatively high stability of Cu(PBT2)NImH6, PBT2 is a promiscuous chelator capable of forming a ternary Cu(PBT2)NIm complex with any ligand containing an NIm donor. These ligands include histamine, L-His, and ubiquitous His side chains of peptides and proteins in the extracellular milieu, whose combined effect should outweigh that of a single Cu(PBT2)NImH6 complex regardless of its stability. We therefore conclude that PBT2 is capable of accessing Cu(Aβ) complexes with high stability but low specificity. The results have implications for future AD therapeutic strategies and understanding the role of PBT2 in the bulk transport of transition metal ions. Given the repurposing of PBT2 as a drug for breaking antibiotic resistance, ternary Cu(PBT2)NIm and analogous Zn(PBT2)NIm complexes may be relevant to its antimicrobial properties.
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- 2023
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6. Aldehyde Production as a Calibrant of Ultrasonic Power Delivery During Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification
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Simon C. Drew
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Aldehydes ,Protein Folding ,0303 health sciences ,Chemistry ,Radical ,Sonication ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Organic Chemistry ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Bioengineering ,Biochemistry ,Prion Proteins ,Analytical Chemistry ,Sonochemistry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ultrasonic Waves ,Nucleic acid ,Biophysics ,Animals ,Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification ,Bioorganic chemistry ,Protein folding ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) technique employs repeated cycles of incubation and sonication to amplify minute amounts of misfolded protein conformers. Spontaneous (de novo) prion formation and ultrasonic power level represent two potentially interrelated sources of variation that frustrate attempts to replicate results from different laboratories. We previously established that water splitting during PMCA provides a radical-rich environment leading to oxidative damage to substrate molecules as well as the polypropylene PCR tubes used for sample containment. Here it is shown that the cross-linking agent formaldehyde is generated from buffer ions that are attacked by hydroxyl radicals. In addition, free radical damage to protein, nucleic acid, lipid, and detergent molecules produces a substantial concentration of aldehydes (hundreds of micromolar). The measurement of aldehydes using the Hantzsch reaction provides a reliable and inexpensive method for measuring the power delivered to individual PMCA samples, and for calibrating the power output characteristics of an individual sonicator. The proposed method may also be used to better account for inter-assay and inter-laboratory variation in prion replication and de novo prion generation, the latter of which may correlate with aldehyde-induced cross-linking of substrate molecules.
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- 2020
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7. Ternary Cu
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Karolina, Bossak-Ahmad, Wojciech, Bal, Tomasz, Frączyk, and Simon C, Drew
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Histones ,Coordination Complexes ,Lysine ,Glycine ,Humans ,Serum Albumin, Human ,Copper - Abstract
Human serum albumin (HSA) and the growth factor glycyl-l-histidyl-l-lysine (GHK) bind Cu
- Published
- 2021
8. Stable radical content and anti-radical activity of roasted Arabica coffee: from in-tact bean to coffee brew.
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Gordon J Troup, Luciano Navarini, Furio Suggi Liverani, and Simon C Drew
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The roasting of coffee beans generates stable radicals within melanoidins produced by non-enzymatic browning. Roasting coffee beans has further been suggested to increase the antioxidant (AO) capacity of coffee brews. Herein, we have characterized the radical content and AO capacity of brews prepared from Coffea arabica beans sourced directly from an industrial roasting plant. In-tact beans exhibited electron paramagnetic resonance signals arising from Fe3+, Mn2+ and at least three distinct stable radicals as a function of roasting time, whose intensity changed upon grinding and ageing. In coffee brews, the roasting-induced radicals were harboured within the high molecular weight (> 3 kD) melanoidin-containing fraction at a concentration of 15 nM and was associated with aromatic groups within the melanoidins. The low molecular weight (< 3 kD) fraction exhibited the highest AO capacity using DPPH as an oxidant. The AO activity was not mediated by the stable radicals or by metal complexes within the brew. While other non-AO functions of the roasting-induced radical and metal complexes may be possible in vivo, we confirm that the in vitro antiradical activity of brewed coffee is dominated by low molecular weight phenolic compounds.
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- 2015
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9. The Prion Protein N1 and N2 Cleavage Fragments Bind to Phosphatidylserine and Phosphatidic Acid; Relevance to Stress-Protection Responses.
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Cathryn L Haigh, Carolin Tumpach, Simon C Drew, and Steven J Collins
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Internal cleavage of the cellular prion protein generates two well characterised N-terminal fragments, N1 and N2. These fragments have been shown to bind to anionic phospholipids at low pH. We sought to investigate binding with other lipid moieties and queried how such interactions could be relevant to the cellular functions of these fragments. Both N1 and N2 bound phosphatidylserine (PS), as previously reported, and a further interaction with phosphatidic acid (PA) was also identified. The specificity of this interaction required the N-terminus, especially the proline motif within the basic amino acids at the N-terminus, together with the copper-binding region (unrelated to copper saturation). Previously, the fragments have been shown to be protective against cellular stresses. In the current study, serum deprivation was used to induce changes in the cellular lipid environment, including externalisation of plasma membrane PS and increased cellular levels of PA. When copper-saturated, N2 could reverse these changes, but N1 could not, suggesting that direct binding of N2 to cellular lipids may be part of the mechanism by which this peptide signals its protective response.
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- 2015
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10. The Sub‐picomolar Cu2+Dissociation Constant of Human Serum Albumin
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Tomasz Frączyk, Simon C. Drew, Karolina Bossak-Ahmad, and Wojciech Bal
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Circular dichroism ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Serum albumin ,Tripeptide ,010402 general chemistry ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Human serum albumin ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Binding constant ,0104 chemical sciences ,Divalent ,body regions ,Dissociation constant ,Crystallography ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The apparent affinity of human serum albumin (HSA) for divalent copper has long been the subject of great interest, due to its presumed role as the major Cu2+ -binding ligand in blood and cerebrospinal fluid. Using a combination of electronic absorption, circular dichroism and room-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies, together with potentiometric titrations, we competed the tripeptide GGH against HSA to reveal a conditional binding constant of log c K Cu Cu ( HSA ) =13.02±0.05 at pH 7.4. This rigorously determined value of the Cu2+ affinity has important implications for understanding the extracellular distribution of copper.
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- 2019
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11. Interplay between Copper, Neprilysin, and N-Truncation of β-Amyloid
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Tomasz Frączyk, Wojciech Bal, Mariusz Mital, and Simon C. Drew
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inorganic chemicals ,0301 basic medicine ,Proteolysis ,Peptide ,Divalent ,Inorganic Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Insulin-degrading enzyme ,Humans ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Neprilysin ,Fluorescent Dyes ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Oligopeptide ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,fungi ,Peptide Fragments ,Recombinant Proteins ,Endopeptidase ,Zinc ,030104 developmental biology ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Oligopeptides ,Copper ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Homeostasis - Abstract
Sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with an inefficient clearance of the β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide from the central nervous system. The protein levels and activity of the Zn2+-dependent endopeptidase neprilysin (NEP) inversely correlate with brain Aβ levels during aging and in AD. The present study considered the ability of Cu2+ ions to inhibit human recombinant NEP and the role for NEP in generating N-truncated Aβ fragments with high-affinity Cu2+ binding motifs that can prevent this inhibition. Divalent copper noncompetitively inhibited NEP ( Ki = 1.0 μM), while proteolysis of Aβ yielded the soluble, Aβ4-9 fragment that can bind Cu2+ with femtomolar affinity at pH 7.4. This provides Aβ4-9 with the potential to act as a Cu2+ carrier and to mediate its own production by preventing NEP inhibition. Enzyme inhibition at high Zn2+ concentrations ( Ki = 20 μM) further suggests a mechanism for modulating NEP activity, Aβ4-9 production, and Cu2+ homeostasis.
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- 2018
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12. The Cu(II) affinity of the N-terminus of human copper transporter CTR1: Comparison of human and mouse sequences
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Ewelina Stefaniak, Simon C. Drew, Karolina Bossak, Dawid Płonka, Wojciech Bal, and Arkadiusz Bonna
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0301 basic medicine ,Stereochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Peptide ,Tripeptide ,Plasma protein binding ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Binding site ,Cation Transport Proteins ,Copper Transporter 1 ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,Chemistry ,fungi ,Human serum albumin ,Copper ,0104 chemical sciences ,Transport protein ,N-terminus ,030104 developmental biology ,Protein Binding ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Copper Transporter 1 (CTR1) is a homotrimeric membrane protein providing the main route of copper transport into eukaryotic cells from the extracellular milieu. Its N-terminal extracellular domain, rich in His and Met residues, is considered responsible for directing copper into the transmembrane channel. Most of vertebrate CTR1 proteins contain the His residue in position three from N-terminus, creating a well-known Amino Terminal Cu(II)- and Ni(II)-Binding (ATCUN) site. CTR1 from humans, primates and many other species contains the Met-Asp-His (MDH) sequence, while some rodents including mouse have the Met-Asn-His (MNH) N-terminal sequence. CTR1 is thought to collect Cu(II) ions from blood copper transport proteins, including albumin, but previous reports indicated that the affinity of N-terminal peptide/domain of CTR1 is significantly lower than that of albumin, casting serious doubt on this aspect of CTR1 function. Using potentiometry and spectroscopic techniques we demonstrated that MDH-amide, a tripeptide model of human CTR1 N-terminus, binds Cu(II) with K of 1.3 × 1013 M−1 at pH 7.4, ~13 times stronger than Human Serum Albumin (HSA), and MNH-amide is even stronger, K of 3.2 × 1014 M−1 at pH 7.4. These results indicate that the N-terminus of CTR1 may serve as intermediate binding site during Cu(II) transfer from blood copper carriers to the transporter. MDH-amide, but not MNH-amide also forms a low abundance complex with non-ATCUN coordination involving the Met amine, His imidazole and Asp carboxylate. This species might assist Cu(II) relay down the peptide chain or its reduction to Cu(I), both steps necessary for the CTR1 function.
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- 2018
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13. Prion protein cleavage fragments regulate adult neural stem cell quiescence through redox modulation of mitochondrial fission and SOD2 expression
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Steven J. Collins, Simon C. Drew, Carolin Tumpach, Bradley R. Groveman, and Cathryn L. Haigh
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0301 basic medicine ,Cellular differentiation ,SOD2 ,Mice, Transgenic ,DRP1 ,Mitochondrion ,Mitochondrial Dynamics ,Prion Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nox2 ,Neural Stem Cells ,Superoxides ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Cell Proliferation ,Mice, Knockout ,Pharmacology ,NADPH oxidase ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Chemistry ,Neurogenesis ,N2 ,N1 ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Biology ,Peptide Fragments ,Neural stem cell ,Mitochondria ,nervous system diseases ,Cell biology ,Adult Stem Cells ,030104 developmental biology ,nervous system ,Molecular Medicine ,Original Article ,RNA Interference ,Mitochondrial fission ,Reactive oxygen species ,Oxidation-Reduction ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Intracellular ,Adult stem cell - Abstract
Neurogenesis continues in the post-developmental brain throughout life. The ability to stimulate the production of new neurones requires both quiescent and actively proliferating pools of neural stem cells (NSCs). Actively proliferating NSCs ensure that neurogenic demand can be met, whilst the quiescent pool makes certain NSC reserves do not become depleted. The processes preserving the NSC quiescent pool are only just beginning to be defined. Herein, we identify a switch between NSC proliferation and quiescence through changing intracellular redox signalling. We show that N-terminal post-translational cleavage products of the prion protein (PrP) induce a quiescent state, halting NSC cellular growth, migration, and neurite outgrowth. Quiescence is initiated by the PrP cleavage products through reducing intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species. First, inhibition of redox signalling results in increased mitochondrial fission, which rapidly signals quiescence. Thereafter, quiescence is maintained through downstream increases in the expression and activity of superoxide dismutase-2 that reduces mitochondrial superoxide. We further observe that PrP is predominantly cleaved in quiescent NSCs indicating a homeostatic role for this cascade. Our findings provide new insight into the regulation of NSC quiescence, which potentially could influence brain health throughout adult life. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s00018-018-2790-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2018
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14. Alzheimer's Aβ peptides with disease-associated N-terminal modifications: influence of isomerisation, truncation and mutation on Cu2+ coordination.
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Simon C Drew, Colin L Masters, and Kevin J Barnham
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide is the primary component of the extracellular senile plaques characteristic of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The metals hypothesis implicates redox-active copper ions in the pathogenesis of AD and the Cu(2+) coordination of various Aβ peptides has been widely studied. A number of disease-associated modifications involving the first 3 residues are known, including isomerisation, mutation, truncation and cyclisation, but are yet to be characterised in detail. In particular, Aβ in plaques contain a significant amount of truncated pyroglutamate species, which appear to correlate with disease progression. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We previously characterised three Cu(2+)/Aβ1-16 coordination modes in the physiological pH range that involve the first two residues. Based upon our finding that the carbonyl of Ala2 is a Cu(2+) ligand, here we speculate on a hypothetical Cu(2+)-mediated intramolecular cleavage mechanism as a source of truncations beginning at residue 3. Using EPR spectroscopy and site-specific isotopic labelling, we have also examined four Aβ peptides with biologically relevant N-terminal modifications, Aβ1[isoAsp]-16, Aβ1-16(A2V), Aβ3-16 and Aβ3[pE]-16. The recessive A2V mutation preserved the first coordination sphere of Cu(2+)/Aβ, but altered the outer coordination sphere. Isomerisation of Asp1 produced a single dominant species involving a stable 5-membered Cu(2+) chelate at the amino terminus. The Aβ3-16 and Aβ3[pE]-16 peptides both exhibited an equilibrium between two Cu(2+) coordination modes between pH 6-9 with nominally the same first coordination sphere, but with a dramatically different pH dependence arising from differences in H-bonding interactions at the N-terminus. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: N-terminal modifications significantly influence the Cu(2+) coordination of Aβ, which may be critical for alterations in aggregation propensity, redox-activity, resistance to degradation and the generation of the Aβ3-× (× = 40/42) precursor of disease-associated Aβ3[pE]-x species.
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- 2010
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15. The N-terminal 14-mer model peptide of human Ctr1 can collect Cu(<scp>ii</scp>) from albumin. Implications for copper uptake by Ctr1
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Karolina Bossak-Ahmad, M. Jake Pushie, Kathryn L. Haas, Wojciech Bal, Peter Faller, Nina E. Wezynfeld, Ewelina Stefaniak, Dawid Płonka, and Simon C. Drew
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Models, Molecular ,Stereochemistry ,Biophysics ,Serum albumin ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Serum Albumin, Human ,Peptide ,Plasma protein binding ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Biomaterials ,medicine ,Humans ,Binding site ,Cation Transport Proteins ,Copper Transporter 1 ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Metals and Alloys ,Albumin ,Biological Transport ,Human serum albumin ,Copper ,Peptide Fragments ,0104 chemical sciences ,Transport protein ,chemistry ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,biology.protein ,Protein Binding ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Human cells acquire copper primarily via the copper transporter 1 protein, hCtr1. We demonstrate that at extracellular pH 7.4 CuII is bound to the model peptide hCtr11-14via an ATCUN motif and such complexes are strong enough to collect CuII from albumin, supporting the potential physiological role of CuII binding to hCtr1.
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- 2018
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16. Electron paramagnetic resonance microscopy using spins in diamond under ambient conditions
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Simon C. Drew, Steven Petrou, Liam T. Hall, Paul S. Donnelly, Paul Mulvaney, David Simpson, Robert G. Ryan, Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg, and Evgeniy Panchenko
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Materials science ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Molecular physics ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,law.invention ,Paramagnetism ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,lcsh:Science ,010306 general physics ,Spin (physics) ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Spectroscopy ,Electron nuclear double resonance ,Multidisciplinary ,Condensed matter physics ,Spins ,Pulsed EPR ,Resonance ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,lcsh:Q ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy is one of the most important tools in chemical and bio-medical research. However, sensitivity limitations typically restrict imaging resolution to ~ 10 µm. Here we bring quantum control to the detection of chemical systems to demonstrate high-resolution electron spin imaging using the quantum properties of an array of nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond. Our electron paramagnetic resonance microscope selectively images electronic spin species by precisely tuning a magnetic field to bring the quantum probes into resonance with the external target spins. This provides diffraction limited spatial resolution of the target spin species over a field of view of 50 × 50 µm2 with a spin sensitivity of 104 spins per voxel or ∼100 zmol. The ability to perform spectroscopy and dynamically monitor spin-dependent redox reactions at these scales enables the development of electron spin resonance and zepto-chemistry in the physical and life sciences., Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy has important scientific and medical uses but improving the resolution of conventional methods requires cryogenic, vacuum environments. Simpson et al. show nitrogen vacancy centres can be used for sub-micronmetre imaging with improved sensitivity in ambient conditions.
- Published
- 2017
17. The Sub-picomolar Cu
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Karolina, Bossak-Ahmad, Tomasz, Frączyk, Wojciech, Bal, and Simon C, Drew
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Humans ,Serum Albumin, Human ,Copper - Abstract
The apparent affinity of human serum albumin (HSA) for divalent copper has long been the subject of great interest, due to its presumed role as the major Cu
- Published
- 2019
18. A 2-Substituted 8-Hydroxyquinoline Stimulates Neural Stem Cell Proliferation by Modulating ROS Signalling
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Carolin Tumpach, Simon C. Drew, Cathryn L. Haigh, and Steven J. Collins
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0301 basic medicine ,Neurite ,Blotting, Western ,Biophysics ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neural Stem Cells ,Neurosphere ,Animals ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Proliferation ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,NADPH oxidase ,biology ,Cell growth ,Neurogenesis ,NADPH Oxidases ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Flow Cytometry ,Oxyquinoline ,Hedgehog signaling pathway ,Neural stem cell ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,Ki-67 Antigen ,030104 developmental biology ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Eight-hydroxyquinolines (8HQs) are a class of compounds that have been identified as potential therapeutics for a number of neurodegenerative diseases. Understanding the influence of structural modifications to the 8HQ scaffold on cellular behaviour will aid the identification of compounds that might be effective in treating dementias. In this study, we describe the action of 2-[(dimethylamino)methyl]-8-hydroxyquinoline (DMAMQ) on adult murine neural stem cells (NSCs) cultured in vitro. Treatment of NSCs with DMAMQ resulted in enhanced self-renewal and increased neurite outgrowth. Concurrent with the positive growth effects was an increase in intracellular reactive oxygen species, with the growth being inhibited by inactivation of the NADPH oxidase (Nox) enzyme family. Our results indicate that DMAMQ can stimulate neurogenesis via the Nox signalling pathway, which may provide therapeutic benefit in treating dementias of various types by replenishing neurones using the brain's own reserves. The narrow concentration range over which these effects were observed, however, suggests that there may exist only a small therapeutic window for neuro-regenerative applications.
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- 2016
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19. Resistance of Cu(Aβ4 – 16) to Copper Capture by Metallothionein‐3 Supports a Function for the Aβ4 – 42 Peptide as a Synaptic Cu II Scavenger
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Simon C. Drew, Ewelina Stefaniak, Kinga Stachucy, Agnieszka Drozd, Dawid Płonka, Wojciech Bal, Nina E. Wezynfeld, and Artur Krężel
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0301 basic medicine ,Antioxidant ,Synaptic cleft ,Amyloid beta ,medicine.medical_treatment ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Peptide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Neuroprotection ,Catalysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Metalloprotein ,medicine ,Metallothionein ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Free Radical Scavengers ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Copper ,Metallothionein 3 ,0104 chemical sciences ,Zinc ,030104 developmental biology ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein - Abstract
Aβ4-42 is a major species of Aβ peptide in the brains of both healthy individuals and those affected by Alzheimer's disease. It has recently been demonstrated to bind Cu(II) with an affinity approximately 3000 times higher than the commonly studied Aβ1-42 and Aβ1-40 peptides, which are implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Metallothionein-3, a protein considered to orchestrate copper and zinc metabolism in the brain and provide antioxidant protection, was shown to extract Cu(II) from Aβ1-40 when acting in its native Zn7 MT-3 form. This reaction is assumed to underlie the neuroprotective effect of Zn7 MT-3 against Aβ toxicity. In this work, we used the truncated model peptides Aβ1-16 and Aβ4-16 to demonstrate that the high-affinity Cu(II) complex of Aβ4-16 is resistant to Zn7 MT-3 reactivity. This indicates that the analogous complex of the full-length peptide Cu(Aβ4-42) will not yield copper to MT-3 in the brain, thus supporting the concept of a physiological role for Aβ4-42 as a Cu(II) scavenger in the synaptic cleft.
- Published
- 2016
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20. Probing the quaternary structure of metal-bridged peptide oligomers
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Simon C. Drew
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0301 basic medicine ,Macromolecular Substances ,Stereochemistry ,Peptide ,010402 general chemistry ,Antiparallel (biochemistry) ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,Divalent ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Metal ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Protein Structure, Quaternary ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chemistry ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,0104 chemical sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Monomer ,Metals ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Protein quaternary structure ,Peptides ,Copper ,Stoichiometry ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The oligomerisation of many proteins and peptides is known to be influenced by the binding of transition metal ions such as divalent copper. To investigate the oligomeric state of model peptides related to the N-terminus of α-synuclein (αSyn) in the presence of Cu(II), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and isotopic labelling were recently used to conclude that Cu(II) occupies N-terminal bridging positions within closed-chain αSyn dimers and trimers with a Cu/peptide stoichiometry of 1:1. Herein, a statistical correction is identified and the consequences are evaluated. The analysis reveals that αSyn forms Cu-bridged antiparallel dimers and closed-chain trimers that coexist with Cu(II)-bound monomers (including a "macrochelate") and, depending on metal stoichiometry and protein environment, with open-chain Cu-bridged oligomers and heterodimers. The results demonstrate that the Cu(II) ion can be exploited as a probe of protein quaternary structure, with the potential to delineate heterogeneous oligomeric populations.
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- 2016
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21. Correction to: Aldehyde Production as a Calibrant of Ultrasonic Power Delivery During Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification
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Simon C. Drew
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Bioorganic chemistry ,Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification ,Bioengineering ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Biochemistry ,Aldehyde ,Combinatorial chemistry ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 2021
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22. The Palladium(II) Complex of Aβ4−16 as Suitable Model for Structural Studies of Biorelevant Copper(II) Complexes of N-Truncated Beta-Amyloids
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Tomasz Frączyk, Mariusz Mital, Piotr Skrobecki, Wojciech Bal, Jarosław Poznański, Kosma Szutkowski, Simon C. Drew, Igor Zhukov, and Karolina Bossak-Ahmad
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Palladium(II) ,Amino Acid Motifs ,Molecular Conformation ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Peptide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Catalysis ,Supramolecular assembly ,lcsh:Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,NMR spectroscopy ,Coordination Complexes ,Cations ,Aβ peptide ,Humans ,Chelation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Isostructural ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,Spectroscopy ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Models, Theoretical ,ATCUN motif ,0104 chemical sciences ,Computer Science Applications ,Solutions ,Crystallography ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,13C relaxation ,Alzheimer’s disease ,Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Copper ,Palladium ,Heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopy - Abstract
The A&beta, 4&minus, 42 peptide is a major beta-amyloid species in the human brain, forming toxic aggregates related to Alzheimer&rsquo, s Disease. It also strongly chelates Cu(II) at the N-terminal Phe-Arg-His ATCUN motif, as demonstrated in A&beta, 16 and A&beta, 9 model peptides. The resulting complex resists ROS generation and exchange processes and may help protect synapses from copper-related oxidative damage. Structural characterization of Cu(II)A&beta, x complexes by NMR would help elucidate their biological function, but is precluded by Cu(II) paramagneticism. Instead we used an isostructural diamagnetic Pd(II)-A&beta, 16 complex as a model. To avoid a kinetic trapping of Pd(II) in an inappropriate transient structure, we designed an appropriate pH-dependent synthetic procedure for ATCUN Pd(II)A&beta, 16, controlled by CD, fluorescence and ESI-MS. Its assignments and structure at pH 6.5 were obtained by TOCSY, NOESY, ROESY, 1H-13C HSQC and 1H-15N HSQC NMR experiments, for natural abundance 13C and 15N isotopes, aided by corresponding experiments for Pd(II)-Phe-Arg-His. The square-planar Pd(II)-ATCUN coordination was confirmed, with the rest of the peptide mostly unstructured. The diffusion rates of A&beta, 16, Pd(II)-A&beta, 16 and their mixture determined using PGSE-NMR experiment suggested that the Pd(II) complex forms a supramolecular assembly with the apopeptide. These results confirm that Pd(II) substitution enables NMR studies of structural aspects of Cu(II)-A&beta, complexes.
- Published
- 2020
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23. Ternary Cu(II) Complex with GHK Peptide and Cis-Urocanic Acid as a Potential Physiologically Functional Copper Chelate
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Marta D Wiśniewska, Wojciech Bal, Tomasz Frączyk, Karolina Bossak-Ahmad, and Simon C. Drew
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Serum ,Stereochemistry ,Peptide ,Tripeptide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,ternary complex ,Catalysis ,lcsh:Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Humans ,Molecule ,Chelation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,Ternary complex ,Spectroscopy ,Histidine ,Chelating Agents ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,010405 organic chemistry ,Circular Dichroism ,Urocanic Acid ,Organic Chemistry ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Imidazoles ,General Medicine ,Cis-Urocanic Acid ,0104 chemical sciences ,Computer Science Applications ,Urocanic acid ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,chemistry ,imidazole ligands ,Protein Multimerization ,Oligopeptides ,Copper - Abstract
The tripeptide NH2&ndash, Gly&ndash, His&ndash, Lys&ndash, COOH (GHK), cis-urocanic acid (cis-UCA) and Cu(II) ions are physiological constituents of the human body and they co-occur (e.g., in the skin and the plasma). While GHK is known as Cu(II)-binding molecule, we found that urocanic acid also coordinates Cu(II) ions. Furthermore, both ligands create ternary Cu(II) complex being probably physiologically functional species. Regarding the natural concentrations of the studied molecules in some human tissues, together with the affinities reported here, we conclude that the ternary complex [GHK][Cu(II)][cis-urocanic acid] may be partly responsible for biological effects of GHK and urocanic acid described in the literature.
- Published
- 2020
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24. Oligopeptides Generated by Neprilysin Degradation of β-Amyloid Have the Highest Cu(II) Affinity in the Whole Aβ Family
- Author
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Dawid Płonka, Karolina Bossak-Ahmad, Simon C. Drew, Wojciech Bal, and Mariusz Mital
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Circular dichroism ,Stereochemistry ,Amino Acid Motifs ,Peptide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Coordination Complexes ,Amyloid precursor protein ,Peptide bond ,Molecule ,Chelation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Neprilysin ,Chelating Agents ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Oligopeptide ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,biology ,Molecular Structure ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Peptide Fragments ,0104 chemical sciences ,biology.protein ,Oligopeptides ,Copper - Abstract
The catabolism of β-amyloid (Aβ) is carried out by numerous endopeptidases including neprilysin, which hydrolyzes peptide bonds preceding positions 4, 10, and 12 to yield Aβ4-9 and a minor Aβ12- x species. Alternative processing of the amyloid precursor protein by β-secretase also generates the Aβ11- x species. All these peptides contain a Xxx-Yyy-His sequence, also known as an ATCUN or NTS motif, making them strong chelators of Cu(II) ions. We synthesized the corresponding peptides, Phe-Arg-His-Asp-Ser-Gly-OH (Aβ4-9), Glu-Val-His-His-Gln-Lys-am (Aβ11-16), Val-His-His-Gln-Lys-am (Aβ12-16), and pGlu-Val-His-His-Gln-Lys-am (pAβ11-16), and investigated their Cu(II) binding properties using potentiometry, and UV-vis, circular dichroism, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies. We found that the three peptides with unmodified N-termini formed square-planar Cu(II) complexes at pH 7.4 with analogous geometries but significantly varied Kd values of 6.6 fM (Aβ4-9), 9.5 fM (Aβ12-16), and 1.8 pM (Aβ11-16). Cyclization of the N-terminal Glu11 residue to the pyroglutamate species pAβ11-16 dramatically reduced the affinity (5.8 nM). The Cu(II) affinities of Aβ4-9 and Aβ12-16 are the highest among the Cu(II) complexes of Aβ peptides. Using fluorescence spectroscopy, we demonstrated that the Cu(II) exchange between the Phe-Arg-His and Val-His-His motifs is very slow, on the order of days. These results are discussed in terms of the relevance of Aβ4-9, a major Cu(II) binding Aβ fragment generated by neprilysin, as a possible Cu(II) carrier in the brain.
- Published
- 2018
25. Identification of the Binding Site of Apical Membrane Antigen 1 (AMA1) Inhibitors Using a Paramagnetic Probe
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Peter J. Scammells, Mansura Akter, Martin J. Scanlon, Simon C. Drew, Bankala Krishnarjuna, Geqing Wang, Raymond S. Norton, Nyssa Drinkwater, Sheena McGowan, Cael Debono, Shane M. Devine, and Christopher A. MacRaild
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Models, Molecular ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Protozoan Proteins ,Peptide ,Antigens, Protozoan ,Plasma protein binding ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Ligands ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,parasitic diseases ,Drug Discovery ,Pyrroles ,Amino Acid Sequence ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Apical membrane antigen 1 ,Binding site ,Spin label ,Furans ,Peptide sequence ,Quinazolinones ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sulfonamides ,Binding Sites ,Molecular Structure ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Cell Membrane ,Membrane Proteins ,Apical membrane ,0104 chemical sciences ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,Pyrimidines ,Molecular Probes ,Biophysics ,Molecular Medicine ,Pyrazoles ,Benzimidazoles ,Molecular probe ,Peptides ,Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) is essential for the invasion of host cells by malaria parasites. Several small-molecule ligands have been shown to bind to a conserved hydrophobic cleft in Plasmodium falciparum AMA1. However, a lack of detailed structural information on the binding pose of these molecules has hindered their further optimisation as inhibitors. We have developed a spin-labelled peptide based on RON2, the native binding partner of AMA1, to probe the binding sites of compounds on PfAMA1. The crystal structure of this peptide bound to PfAMA1 shows that it binds at one end of the hydrophobic groove, leaving much of the binding site unoccupied and allowing fragment hits to bind without interference. In paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE)-based NMR screening, the 1 H relaxation rates of compounds binding close to the probe were enhanced. Compounds experienced different degrees of PRE as a result of their different orientations relative to the spin label while bound to AMA1. Thus, PRE-derived distance constraints can be used to identify binding sites and guide further hit optimisation.
- Published
- 2018
26. Structural Insight into Redox Dynamics of Copper Bound N-Truncated Amyloid-β Peptides from in Situ X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy
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Simon C. Drew, Stephen P. Best, Christopher T. Chantler, Victor A. Streltsov, and Ruwini S. K. Ekanayake
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Models, Molecular ,Absorption spectroscopy ,Nitrogen ,Amitriptyline ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Peptide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Redox ,law.invention ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Cryobiology ,law ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Binding site ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,X-ray absorption spectroscopy ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Binding Sites ,010405 organic chemistry ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Copper ,0104 chemical sciences ,Crystallography ,X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy ,chemistry ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
X-ray absorption spectroscopy of CuII amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) under in situ electrochemical control (XAS-EC) has allowed elucidation of the redox properties of CuII bound to truncated peptide forms. The Cu binding environment is significantly different for the Aβ1–16 and the N-truncated Aβ4–9, Aβ4–12, and Aβ4–16 (Aβ4–9/12/16) peptides, where the N-truncated sequence (F4R5H6) provides the high-affinity amino-terminal copper nickel (ATCUN) binding motif. Low temperature (ca. 10 K) XAS measurements show the adoption of identical CuII ATCUN-type binding sites (CuIIATCUN) by the first three amino acids (FRH) and a longer-range interaction modeled as an oxygen donor ligand, most likely water, to give a tetragonal pyramid geometry in the Aβ4–9/12/16 peptides not previously reported. Both XAS-EC and EPR measurements show that CuII:Aβ4–16 can be reduced at mildly reducing potentials, similar to that of CuII:Aβ1–16. Reduction of peptides lacking the H13H14 residues, CuII:Aβ4–9/12, require far more forcing conditions...
- Published
- 2018
27. Tuning the Redox Properties of Copper(II) Complexes with Amyloid-β Peptides
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Magdalena Z. Wiloch, Iwona Ufnalska, Simon C. Drew, Wojciech Wróblewski, Wojciech Bal, Urszula E. Wawrzyniak, and Arkadiusz Bonna
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010405 organic chemistry ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Chemistry ,Inorganic chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,010402 general chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Combinatorial chemistry ,Redox ,Copper ,Amyloid β peptide ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Materials Chemistry ,Electrochemistry - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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28. Cavitation during the protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) method – The trigger for de novo prion generation?
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Cathryn L. Haigh and Simon C. Drew
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Protein Folding ,Prions ,animal diseases ,Sonication ,Blotting, Western ,Biophysics ,Phospholipid ,Biochemistry ,Cofactor ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Prion protein ,Molecular Biology ,Spin trapping ,biology ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,RNA ,Cell Biology ,nervous system diseases ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Protein Misfolding Cyclic Amplification ,Protein folding ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
The protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) technique has become a widely-adopted method for amplifying minute amounts of the infectious conformer of the prion protein (PrP). PMCA involves repeated cycles of 20 kHz sonication and incubation, during which the infectious conformer seeds the conversion of normally folded protein by a templating interaction. Recently, it has proved possible to create an infectious PrP conformer without the need for an infectious seed, by including RNA and the phospholipid POPG as essential cofactors during PMCA. The mechanism underpinning this de novo prion formation remains unknown. In this study, we first establish by spin trapping methods that cavitation bubbles formed during PMCA provide a radical-rich environment. Using a substrate preparation comparable to that employed in studies of de novo prion formation, we demonstrate by immuno-spin trapping that PrP- and RNA-centered radicals are generated during sonication, in addition to PrP-RNA cross-links. We further show that serial PMCA produces protease-resistant PrP that is oxidatively modified. We suggest a unique confluence of structural (membrane-mimetic hydrophobic/hydrophilic bubble interface) and chemical (ROS) effects underlie the phenomenon of de novo prion formation by PMCA, and that these effects have meaningful biological counterparts of possible relevance to spontaneous prion formation in vivo.
- Published
- 2015
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29. α-Synuclein and β-Amyloid form a Bridged Copper Complex
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Simon C. Drew
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Amyloid ,chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Ligand ,Extracellular ,Chelation ,Protein folding ,Peptide ,Senile plaques ,Redox ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Abstract
The deposition of insoluble β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide into extracellular senile plaques is a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease. Fragmented α-synuclein (αSyn) and a relatively high concentration of Cu2+ ions are found within amyloid deposits. Both Aβ and αSyn bind Cu2+ with an apparent dissociation constant in the sub-nanomolar range at physiological pH, fuelling speculation that deleterious redox chemistry and metal-mediated protein misfolding may contribute to disease progression. Binary Cu(Aβ) and Cu(αSyn) complexes have been extensively studied, although the Cu2+ coordination of heterogeneous mixtures of Aβ and αSyn has yet to be characterised. This study used synthetic N-terminal fragments Aβ1–16 and αSyn1–56 to reveal a new Cu(αSyn)(Aβ) coordination mode anchored upon a 5,6-membered chelate supplied by Met1–Asp2 of αSyn, with the fourth equatorial ligand being supplied by a His side chain of Aβ.
- Published
- 2015
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30. Interactions of α-Factor-1, a Yeast Pheromone, and Its Analogue with Copper(II) Ions and Low-Molecular-Weight Ligands Yield Very Stable Complexes
- Author
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Karolina Bossak, Arkadiusz Bonna, Simon C. Drew, Wojciech Bal, Mariusz Mital, and Jarosław Poznański
- Subjects
Protein Conformation ,Stereochemistry ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Peptide ,Ligands ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Ion ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Organic chemistry ,Imidazole ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Ternary complex ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Circular Dichroism ,Imidazoles ,biology.organism_classification ,Amides ,Copper ,Yeast ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Yield (chemistry) ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Mating Factor - Abstract
α-Factor-1 (WHWLQLKPGQPMY), a peptidic pheromone of Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast, contains a XHX type copper(II) binding N-terminal site. Using a soluble analogue, WHWSKNR-amide, we demonstrated that the W(1)H(2)W(3) site alone binds copper(II) with a Kd value of 0.18 pM at pH 7.4 and also binds imidazole (Im) in a ternary complex (Kd of 1 mM at pH 7.4). This interaction boosts the ability of the peptide to sequester copper(II) depending on the Im concentration up to a subfemtomolar range, not available for any oligopeptidic system studied before. Therefore, α-factor-1 and other XHX-type peptides are likely copper(II) carriers in biological systems.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. In Vivo-Near Infrared Imaging of Neurodegeneration
- Author
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Victoria A, Lawson, Carolin, Tumpach, Cathryn L, Haigh, and Simon C, Drew
- Subjects
Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,Cell Death ,Staining and Labeling ,Brain ,Contrast Media ,Succinimides ,Caspase Inhibitors ,Amino Acid Chloromethyl Ketones ,Molecular Imaging ,Prion Diseases ,Mice ,Caspases ,Injections, Intravenous ,Animals - Abstract
In vivo near-infrared (NIR) imaging of molecular processes at the preclinical stage promises to provide more valuable mechanistic information about pathological pathways involved in neurodegeneration. NIR imaging has the potential to improve in vivo therapeutic screening protocols by enabling noninvasive monitoring of presymptomatic responses to treatment. We have developed new NIR fluorescent contrast agents conjugated to markers of cell death, and using these agents we have identified molecular pathways associated with prion-induced neurodegeneration and determined the optimal window for meaningful therapeutic intervention in prion disease. This chapter provides a description of the synthesis and purification of our NIR cell Death (NIRD) contrast agent and the application of in vivo NIRD (iNIRD) imaging to a prion model of neurodegeneration.
- Published
- 2017
32. Neutron Reflectometry Studies Define Prion Protein N-terminal Peptide Membrane Binding
- Author
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Simon C. Drew, Cathryn L. Haigh, Anton P. Le Brun, Michael James, Martin Boland, and Steven J. Collins
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Membranes ,Prions ,Cell Membrane ,Lipid Bilayers ,Biophysics ,Phospholipid ,Peptide ,Plasma protein binding ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Cleavage (embryo) ,Peptide Fragments ,Cell membrane ,Neutron Diffraction ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Membrane ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,medicine ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Neutron reflectometry ,Lipid bilayer ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The prion protein (PrP), widely recognized to misfold into the causative agent of the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, has previously been shown to bind to lipid membranes with binding influenced by both membrane composition and pH. Aside from the misfolding events associated with prion pathogenesis, PrP can undergo various posttranslational modifications, including internal cleavage events. Alpha- and beta-cleavage of PrP produces two N-terminal fragments, N1 and N2, respectively, which interact specifically with negatively charged phospholipids at low pH. Our previous work probing N1 and N2 interactions with supported bilayers raised the possibility that the peptides could insert deeply with minimal disruption. In the current study we aimed to refine the binding parameters of these peptides with lipid bilayers. To this end, we used neutron reflectometry to define the structural details of this interaction in combination with quartz crystal microbalance interrogation. Neutron reflectometry confirmed that peptides equivalent to N1 and N2 insert into the interstitial space between the phospholipid headgroups but do not penetrate into the acyl tail region. In accord with our previous studies, interaction was stronger for the N1 fragment than for the N2, with more peptide bound per lipid. Neutron reflectometry analysis also detected lengthening of the lipid acyl tails, with a concurrent decrease in lipid area. This was most evident for the N1 peptide and suggests an induction of increased lipid order in the absence of phase transition. These observations stand in clear contrast to the findings of analogous studies of Ab and α-synuclein and thereby support the possibility of a functional role for such N-terminal fragment-membrane interactions.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Cu2+ Coordination of Covalently Cross-linked β-Amyloid Dimers
- Author
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Simon C. Drew, Craig A. Hutton, Kevin J. Barnham, and W. Mei Kok
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,Stereochemistry ,P3 peptide ,Peptide ,Fibril ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Residue (chemistry) ,Monomer ,chemistry ,Covalent bond ,Extracellular - Abstract
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by deposition of extracellular amyloid plaques comprised from fibrillar aggregates of the amyloid-β peptide (Aβ). Cu2+ interactions with Aβ appear to be involved in both the production of reactive oxygen species and the misfolding of Aβ into oligomeric intermediates including covalently cross-linked dimers. We have previously investigated the Cu2+ coordination of Aβ monomers in detail, whilst others have shown that Aβ fibrils coordinate Cu2+ in a similar manner to Aβ monomers. However, the coordination of low-molecular-weight Aβ species, which are believed to be responsible for neuronal dysfunction in AD, has not been widely investigated. Here, we report the first study of Cu2+ coordination by synthetic Aβ dimers containing an artificial diaminopimelic acid (DAP) or a dityrosine cross-link at residue 10. Our preliminary findings show that dityrosine cross-linking imparts unique structural constraints, resulting in Cu2+ coordination distinct from Aβ monomers and fibrils, which may be relevant to the greater toxicity of low-molecular-weight Aβ oligomers in AD.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Tuning Radical Species in Graphene Oxide in Aqueous Solution by Photoirradiation
- Author
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Simon C. Drew, Lu Sun, Bin Tang, Jingliang Li, Xungai Wang, and Xueliang Hou
- Subjects
Aqueous solution ,Solution state ,Graphene ,Radical ,fungi ,Inorganic chemistry ,Oxide ,Nanoparticle ,Chromophore ,Photochemistry ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,General Energy ,chemistry ,law ,Graphite ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Abstract
Graphene oxide (GO) possesses unusual electronic and mechanical properties, including the ability to stabilize graphene radicals (GRs). However, controlled generation of GRs remains a challenge for applications requiring large-scale production. In this study, we demonstrate controlled production of GRs by UVB irradiation of GO solutions. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of GO solutions revealed a dose-dependent exponential growth in radical production as a function of UVB exposure time. The GRs were air-stable over a long period, both in the solution state and in freeze-dried powders, suggesting they are graphene-based phenalenyl-like radicals. The redox activity of GRs was demonstrated by their ability to oxidize the chromophore 3,5,3′,5′-tetramethylbenzidine, with oxidation capacity of GO increasing with GR content.
- Published
- 2013
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35. An Isotopic Dilution Strategy for Characterisation of Paramagnetic Metal Bridging of Proteins and Peptides
- Author
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Simon C. Drew
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Metal ions in aqueous solution ,Inorganic chemistry ,Peptide ,Isotope dilution ,Oligomer ,law.invention ,Metal ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Crystallography ,Monomer ,chemistry ,law ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Peptide sequence - Abstract
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy in conjunction with site-selective isotopic labelling provides a valuable tool for probing the local coordination environment of paramagnetic metal ions. Sometimes the metal ligands are inter-molecular in origin, such as during biological catalysis involving enzyme/metal-ion/substrate complexes or within oligomeric forms of peptides and proteins. Inter- and intra-molecular metal binding within peptide oligomers can be delineated by combining two fractions of peptide monomers containing the same amino acid sequence but having different isotopic content. Here, the principles of isotopic dilution in EPR spectroscopy are described and simulations provided to demonstrate its application to the identification of Cu2+-bridging of peptide oligomers.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. In Vivo-Near Infrared Imaging of Neurodegeneration
- Author
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Victoria A. Lawson, Cathryn L. Haigh, Simon C. Drew, and Carolin Tumpach
- Subjects
Caspase inhibitors ,business.industry ,Neurodegeneration ,010402 general chemistry ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,surgical procedures, operative ,0302 clinical medicine ,In vivo ,medicine ,Near infrared imaging ,Molecular imaging ,Preclinical stage ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In vivo near-infrared (NIR) imaging of molecular processes at the preclinical stage promises to provide more valuable mechanistic information about pathological pathways involved in neurodegeneration. NIR imaging has the potential to improve in vivo therapeutic screening protocols by enabling noninvasive monitoring of presymptomatic responses to treatment. We have developed new NIR fluorescent contrast agents conjugated to markers of cell death, and using these agents we have identified molecular pathways associated with prion-induced neurodegeneration and determined the optimal window for meaningful therapeutic intervention in prion disease. This chapter provides a description of the synthesis and purification of our NIR cell Death (NIRD) contrast agent and the application of in vivo NIRD (iNIRD) imaging to a prion model of neurodegeneration.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Copper Exchange and Redox Activity of a Prototypical 8-Hydroxyquinoline: Implications for Therapeutic Chelation
- Author
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Wojciech Wróblewski, Magdalena Z. Wiloch, Vijaya Kenche, Wojciech Bal, Urszula E. Wawrzyniak, Mariusz Mital, Izabela Zawisza, and Simon C. Drew
- Subjects
Stereochemistry ,Kinetics ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Peptide ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Alzheimer Disease ,Side chain ,Humans ,Chelation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,010405 organic chemistry ,Ligand ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,8-Hydroxyquinoline ,Oxyquinoline ,Copper ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Quinolines ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
The N-truncated β-amyloid (Aβ) isoform Aβ4-x is known to bind Cu(2+) via a redox-silent ATCUN motif with a conditional Kd = 30 fM at pH 7.4. This study characterizes the Cu(2+) interactions and redox activity of Aβx-16 (x = 1, 4) and 2-[(dimethylamino)-methyl-8-hydroxyquinoline, a terdentate 8-hydroxyquinoline (8HQ) with a conditional Kd(CuL) = 35 pM at pH 7.4. Metal transfer between Cu(Aβ1-16), CuL, CuL2, and ternary CuL(NIm(Aβ)) was rapid, while the corresponding equilibrium between L and Aβ4-16 occurred slowly via a metastable CuL(NIm(Aβ)) intermediate. Both CuL and CuL2 were redox-silent in the presence of ascorbate, but a CuL(NIm) complex can generate reactive oxygen species. Because the NIm(Aβ) ligand will be readily exchangeable with NIm ligands of ubiquitous protein His side chains in vivo, this class of 8HQ ligand could transfer Cu(2+) from inert Cu(Aβ4-x) to redox-active CuL(NIm). These findings have implications for the use of terdentate 8HQs as therapeutic chelators to treat neurodegenerative disease.
- Published
- 2016
38. The Unusual Magnetic Resonance Properties of Trigonal Prismatic Tc and Re Complexes
- Author
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John Baldas, Simon C. Drew, and John F. Boas
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Intermolecular force ,Trigonal prismatic molecular geometry ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Spectral line ,law.invention ,Delocalized electron ,Crystallography ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Unpaired electron ,law ,Quadrupole ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Hyperfine structure - Abstract
The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of the trigonal prismatic complexes Tc(abt)3, Tc(bdt)3, Re(abt)3 and Re(bdt)3 (abt, O-aminobenzenethiol; bdt, benzene-1,2-dithiol) in dilute frozen solution are interpreted in terms of an axially symmetric spin Hamiltonian, with g values close to two, principal hyperfine couplings of |A Tc| ~ 5–12 × 10−4 cm−1, nuclear quadrupole couplings of |P Tc| ~ 0.3–0.35 × 10−4 cm−1 and the unusual values 5 × 10−4 cm−1 ~ |A Re
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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39. Stereospecific interactions are necessary for Alzheimer disease amyloid-β toxicity
- Author
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Tong-Lay Lau, John D. Wade, Timothy Johanssen, Cyril C. Curtain, Varsha Lal, Kevin J. Barnham, Jeffrey P. Smith, Roberto Cappai, Giuseppe D. Ciccotosto, Colin L. Masters, Deborah J. Tew, Danielle G. Smith, Keyla Perez, Frances Separovic, and Simon C. Drew
- Subjects
Aging ,Patch-Clamp Techniques ,Time Factors ,Protein Conformation ,Long-Term Potentiation ,Biophysics ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Annexin ,medicine ,Amyloid precursor protein ,Animals ,Benzothiazoles ,Annexin A5 ,Binding site ,Cells, Cultured ,Cerebral Cortex ,Neurons ,Phosphatidylethanolamine ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Cell Death ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Neurotoxicity ,Long-term potentiation ,Hydrogen Peroxide ,Phosphatidylserine ,Embryo, Mammalian ,medicine.disease ,Electric Stimulation ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Thiazoles ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Tyrosine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Protein Binding ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Previous studies suggest membrane binding is a key determinant of amyloid β (Aβ) neurotoxicity. However, it is unclear whether this interaction is receptor driven. To address this issue, a D-handed enantiomer of Aβ42 (D-Aβ42) was synthesized and its biophysical and neurotoxic properties were compared to the wild-type Aβ42 (L-Aβ42). The results showed D- and L-Aβ42 are chemically equivalent with respect to copper binding, generation of reactive oxygen species and aggregation profiles. Cell binding studies show both peptides bound to cultured cortical neurons. However, only L-Aβ42 was neurotoxic and inhibited long term potentiation indicating L-Aβ42 requires a stereospecific target to mediate toxicity. We identified the lipid phosphatidylserine, as a potential target. Annexin V, which has very high affinity for externalized phosphatidylserine, significantly inhibited L-Aβ42 but not D-Aβ42 binding to the cultured cortical neurons and significantly rescued L-Aβ42 neurotoxicity. This suggests that Aβ mediated toxicity in Alzheimer disease is dependent upon Aβ binding to phosphatidylserine on neuronal cells.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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40. Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging of Apoptotic Neuronal Cell Death in a Live Animal Model of Prion Disease
- Author
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Steven J. Collins, Blaine R. Roberts, Colin L. Masters, Cathryn L. Haigh, Victoria A. Lawson, Helen M. J. Klemm, Simon C. Drew, Vijaya Kenche, and Kevin J. Barnham
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Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging ,Proteases ,Programmed cell death ,Infrared Rays ,Physiology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Blotting, Western ,Apoptosis ,Neuroimaging ,Biochemistry ,Prion Diseases ,Mice ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Caspase ,Fluorescent Dyes ,Neurons ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Neurodegeneration ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Carbocyanines ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Cysteine protease ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Caspases ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Oligopeptides - Abstract
Apoptotic cell death via activation of the caspase family of cysteine proteases is a common feature of many neurodegenerative diseases including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Molecular imaging of cysteine protease activities at the preclinical stage may provide valuable mechanistic information about pathophysiological pathways involved in disease evolution and in response to therapy. In this study, we report synthesis and characterization of a near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent contrast agent capable of noninvasively imaging neuronal apoptosis in vivo, by conjugating a NIR cyanine dye to Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone (VAD-fmk), a general inhibitor of active caspases. Following intravenous administration of the NIR-VAD-fmk contrast agent, in vivo fluorescence reflectance imaging identified significantly higher levels of active caspases in the brain of mice with advanced but preclinical prion disease, when compared with healthy controls. The contrast agent and related analogues will enable the longitudinal study of disease progression and therapy in animal models of many neurodegenerative conditions.
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- 2010
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41. Copper Coordination by Familial Mutants of Parkinson’s Disease-Associated α-Synuclein
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Roberto Cappai, Colin L. Masters, Deborah J. Tew, Simon C. Drew, and Kevin J. Barnham
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inorganic chemicals ,Mutation ,Parkinson's disease ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,MPTP ,Mutant ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Recombinant DNA ,medicine ,Side chain ,Peptide bond ,Electron paramagnetic resonance - Abstract
α-Synuclein (αS) is a small natively unfolded protein whose interactions with Cu2+ have been proposed to play a role in Parkinson’s disease (PD). We recently studied the Cu2+ coordination of recombinant human αS using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and identified two coordination modes at physiological pH, one anchored upon the amino terminus (mode 1) and the other anchored upon the side chain of His50 (mode 2). Here we report the Cu2+ coordination of the A30P, E46K and A53T mutants associated with inherited forms of PD. At physiological pH, the same two Cu2+ coordination modes were adopted by each of the familial mutants. The spectrum of Cu2+/αS(A53T) was very similar to the spectrum of the native Cu2+/αS complex; however, mode 2 coordination was marginally higher in the spectrum of Cu2+/αS(E46K) and considerably more favored in the Cu2+/αS(A30P) complex. The alteration in only the relative proportion of modes 1 and 2 suggests the familial mutations introduce structural changes of the protein backbone that indirectly affect the stability, but not the identity, of the native Cu2+ coordination modes.
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- 2009
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42. Dominant roles of the polybasic proline motif and copper in the PrP23-89-mediated stress protection response
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Victoria A. Lawson, Cathryn L. Haigh, Colin L. Masters, Kevin J. Barnham, Steven J. Collins, Simon C. Drew, and Martin Boland
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Time Factors ,Proline ,Protein Conformation ,Amino Acid Motifs ,Cell Line ,Superoxide dismutase ,Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Membrane Microdomains ,Protein structure ,Cellular stress response ,Animals ,PrPC Proteins ,Binding site ,Neurons ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Proteoglycan binding ,Cell Biology ,Endocytosis ,Peptide Fragments ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Cell biology ,Amino acid ,Oxidative Stress ,Cholesterol ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Cytoprotection ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Copper ,Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans ,Intracellular ,Half-Life - Abstract
Beta-cleavage of the neurodegenerative disease-associated prion protein (PrP) protects cells from death induced by oxidative insults. The beta-cleavage event produces two fragments, designated N2 and C2. We investigated the role of the N2 fragment (residues 23-89) in cellular stress response, determining mechanisms involved and regions important for this reaction. The N2 fragment differentially modulated the reactive oxygen species (ROS) response induced by serum deprivation, with amelioration when copper bound. Amino acid residues 23-50 alone mediated a ROS reduction response. PrP23-50 ROS reduction was not due to copper binding or direct antioxidant activity, but was instead mediated through proteoglycan binding partners localised in or interacting with cholesterol-rich membrane domains. Furthermore, mutational analyses of both PrP23-50 and N2 showed that their protective capacity requires the sterically constraining double proline motif within the N-terminal polybasic region. Our findings show that N2 is a biologically active fragment that is able to modulate stress-induced intracellular ROS through interaction of its structurally defined N-terminal polybasic region with cell-surface proteoglycans.
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- 2009
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43. Determination of the Metal−Dithiolate Fold Angle in Mononuclear Molybdenum(V) Centers by EPR Spectroscopy
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Simon C. Drew and Graeme R. Hanson
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Molybdenum ,biology ,Chemistry ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Active site ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Electrons ,Crystal structure ,Electronic structure ,law.invention ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Crystallography ,Metals ,law ,biology.protein ,Molecular symmetry ,Quantum Theory ,Density functional theory ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Oxidoreductases ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Monoclinic crystal system - Abstract
The active sites of mononuclear molybdenum-containing enzymes contain a low-symmetry Mo(V)-dithiolene intermediate whose structure can be probed using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). The relationship between experimental EPR spectra and the electronic and geometric structure of the active site can be difficult to establish, not least because of the low molecular symmetry. When density functional theory is used, it is possible to assess this relationship by systematically varying the geometric structure and comparing the theoretical EPR parameters with those obtained experimentally. We employed this approach to examine the relationship between the metal-dithiolate fold angle and the monoclinic spin Hamiltonian parameters (g, A, beta) of a prototypical mononuclear molybdenyl model complex. By comparing the experimental EPR parameters with these results, we show that the metal-dithiolate fold angle of the complex in solution may be obtained from the non-coincidence angle beta that transforms the principal axes of g to those of A. This will provide a useful method for probing the structure of the Mo(V) intermediate of mononuclear molybdenum enzymes, where the electronic structure of the active site is modulated by the fold angle of the dithiolate ligand (the "metal-dithiolate folding effect").
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- 2009
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44. Pleomorphic Copper Coordination by Alzheimer’s Disease Amyloid-β Peptide
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Graeme R. Hanson, Simon C. Drew, Colin Louis Masters, Christopher J. Noble, and Kevin Jeffrey Barnham
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Coordination sphere ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,Amyloid beta ,Stereochemistry ,Ligand ,Point mutation ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Peptide ,General Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Copper ,Peptide Fragments ,Catalysis ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,chemistry ,Alzheimer Disease ,biology.protein ,Molecule ,Binding site - Abstract
Numerous conflicting models have been proposed regarding the nature of the Cu(2+) coordination environment of the amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide, the causative agent of Alzheimer's disease. This study used multifrequency CW-EPR spectroscopy to directly resolve the superhyperfine interactions between Cu(2+) and the ligand nuclei of Abeta, thereby avoiding ambiguities associated with introducing point mutations. Using a library of Abeta16 analogues with site-specific (15)N-labeling at Asp1, His6, His13, and His14, numerical simulations of the superhyperfine resonances delineated two independent 3N1O Cu(2+) coordination modes, {N(a)(D1), O, N(epsilon)(H6), N(epsilon)(H13)} (component Ia) and {N(a)(D1), O, N(epsilon)(H6), N(epsilon)(H14)} (component Ib), between pH 6-7. A third coordination mode (component II) was identified at pH 8.0, and simulation of the superhyperfine resonances indicated a 3N1O coordination sphere involving nitrogen ligation by His6, His13, and His14. No differences were observed upon (17)O-labeling of the phenolic oxygen of Tyr10, confirming it is not a key oxygen ligand in the physiological pH range. Hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopy, in conjunction with site-specific (15)N-labeling, provided additional support for the common role of His6 in components Ia and Ib, and for the assignment of a {O, N(epsilon)(H6), N(epsilon)(H13), N(epsilon)(H14)} coordination sphere to component II. HYSCORE studies of a peptide analogue with selective (13)C-labeling of Asp1 revealed (13)C cross-peaks characteristic of equatorial coordination by the carboxylate oxygen of Asp1 in component Ia/b coordination. The direct resolution of Cu(2+) ligand interactions, together with the key finding that component I is composed of two distinct coordination modes, provides valuable insight into a range of conflicting ligand assignments and highlights the complexity of Cu(2+)/Abeta interactions.
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- 2009
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45. Cu2+ Binding Modes of Recombinant α-Synuclein − Insights from EPR Spectroscopy
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Simon C. Drew, Chi L.L. Pham, Roberto Cappai, Luke A. Miles, Colin L. Masters, Deborah J. Tew, Kevin J. Barnham, and Su Ling Leong
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Protein Folding ,Coordination sphere ,Protein Conformation ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,law.invention ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Protein structure ,law ,Humans ,Binding site ,Spectroscopy ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Hyperfine structure ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,Chemistry ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Parkinson Disease ,General Chemistry ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Recombinant Proteins ,Amino acid ,Crystallography ,Mutation ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,alpha-Synuclein ,Protein folding ,Copper - Abstract
The interaction of the small (140 amino acid) protein, alpha-synuclein (alphaS), with Cu(2+) has been proposed to play a role in Parkinson's disease (PD). While some insight from truncated model complexes has been gained, the nature of the corresponding Cu(2+) binding modes in the full length protein remains comparatively less well characterized. This work examined the Cu(2+) binding of recombinant human alphaS using Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Wild type (wt) alphaS was shown to bind stoichiometric Cu(2+) via two N-terminal binding modes at physiological pH. An H50N mutation isolated one binding mode, whose g parallel, A parallel, and metal-ligand hyperfine parameters correlated well with a {NH2, N(-), beta-COO(-), H2O} mode previously identified in truncated model fragments. Electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) studies of wt alphaS confirmed the second binding mode at pH 7.4 involved coordination of His50 and its g parallel and A parallel parameters correlated with either {NH2, N(-), beta-COO(-), N(Im)} or {N(Im), 2 N(-)} coordination observed in alphaS fragments. At pH 5.0, His50-anchored Cu(2+) binding was greatly diminished, while {NH2, N(-), beta-COO(-), H2O} binding persisted in conjunction with another two binding modes. Metal-ligand hyperfine interactions from one of these indicated a 1N3O coordination sphere, which was ascribed to a {NH2, CO} binding mode. The other was characterized by a spectrum similar to that previously observed for diethylpyrocarbonate-treated alphaS and was attributed to C-terminal binding centered on Asp121. In total, four Cu(2+) binding modes were identified within pH 5.0-7.4, providing a more comprehensive picture of the Cu(2+) binding properties of recombinant alphaS.
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- 2008
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46. Electron paramagnetic resonance characterization of the copper-resistance protein PcoC from Escherichia coli
- Author
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John F. Boas, Zhiguang Xiao, Kevin J. Barnham, John R. Pilbrow, Simon C. Drew, Lianyi Zhang, Anthony G. Wedd, Karrera Y. Djoko, and Melissa S. T. Koay
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Models, Molecular ,Alanine ,Binding Sites ,Molecular Structure ,Pulsed EPR ,Chemistry ,Copper protein ,Ligand ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Ligands ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Crystallography ,Residue (chemistry) ,law ,Escherichia coli ,Binding site ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Histidine - Abstract
Continuous-wave and pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance have been applied to the study of the Cu(II) site of the copper-resistance protein PcoC from Escherichia coli and certain variant forms. Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) experiments confirm the presence of two histidine ligands, His1 and His92, at the Cu(II) site of wild-type PcoC, consistent with the available X-ray crystallographic data for the homolog CopC (67% sequence identity) from Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato. The variants H1F and H92F each lack one of the histidine residues close to the Cu(II) site. The ESEEM data suggest that the surviving histidine residue remains as a ligand. The nA variant features an extra alanine residue at the N terminus, which demotes the His1 ligand to position 2. At least one of the two histidine residues is bound at the Cu(II) site in this form. Simulation of the (14)N superhyperfine structure in the continuous-wave spectra confirms the presence of at least three nitrogen-based ligands at the Cu(II) sites of the wild-type, H92F and nA forms, while the H1F variant has two nitrogen ligands. The spectra of wild-type form can be fitted adequately with a 3N or a 4N model. The former is consistent with the crystal structure of the CopC homolog, where His1 acts as a bidentate ligand. The latter raises the possibility of an additional unidentified nitrogen ligand. The markedly different spectra of the H1F and nA forms compared with the wild-type and H92F proteins further highlight the integral role of the N-terminal histidine residue in the high-affinity Cu(II) site of PcoC.
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- 2008
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47. Synthesis, Structural Characterization, and Multifrequency Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Studies of Mononuclear Thiomolybdenyl Complexes
- Author
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Robert W. Gable, Simon C. Drew, Charles G. Young, I. Lane, Graeme R. Hanson, and Jason P. Hill
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Models, Molecular ,Denticity ,Molecular Conformation ,Electrons ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Photochemistry ,Mass spectrometry ,Spectral line ,law.invention ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Electrochemistry ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Phenols ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Triethylamine ,Molybdenum ,biology ,Chemistry ,Ligand ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Active site ,Crystallography ,biology.protein - Abstract
Reaction of Tp*MoVSCl2 with a variety of phenols and thiols in the presence of triethylamine produces mononuclear, thiomolybdenyl complexes Tp*MoVSX2 [Tp* = hydrotris(3,5-dimethylpyrazol-1-yl)borate; X = 2-(ethylthio)phenolate (etp), 2-(n-propyl)phenolate (pp), phenolate; X2 = benzene-1,2-dithiolate (bdt), 4-methylbenzene-1,2-dithiolate (tdt), benzene-1,2-diolate (cat)]. The complexes have been characterized by microanalysis, mass spectrometry, IR, EPR, and UV-visible spectroscopic data, and X-ray crystallography (for the etp, pp, bdt, and cat derivatives). The mononuclear, six-coordinate, distorted-octahedral Mo centers are coordinated by terminal sulfido (MoS = 2.123(1)-2.1368(8) A), tridentate facial Tp*, and monodentate or bidentate O/S-donor ligands. Multifrequency (S-, X-, Q-band) EPR spectra of the complexes and selected molybdenyl analogues were acquired at 130 K and 295 K and yielded a spin Hamiltonian of Cs symmetry or lower, with gzzgyygxxge and Az'z'Ax'x' approximately Ay'y', and a noncoincidence angle in the range of beta = 24-39 degrees . Multifrequency EPR, especially at S-band, was found to be particularly valuable in the unambiguous assignment of the spin Hamiltonian parameters in these low-symmetry complexes. The weaker pi-donor terminal sulfido ligand yields a smaller SOMO-LUMO gap and reduced g-values for the thiomolybdenyl complexes compared with molybdenyl analogues, supporting existing crystallographic and EPR data for an apically coordinated oxo group in the active site of xanthine oxidase.
- Published
- 2007
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48. The prion protein regulates beta-amyloid-mediated self-renewal of neural stem cells in vitro
- Author
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Victoria Lewis, Blaine R. Roberts, Steven J. Collins, Cathryn L. Haigh, Victoria A. Lawson, Qiao-Xin Li, Timothy M. Ryan, Carolin Tumpach, and Simon C. Drew
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Amyloid ,Prions ,Neurogenesis ,animal diseases ,Short Report ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Subventricular zone ,Biology ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neural Stem Cells ,medicine ,Animals ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Cell Proliferation ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Cell growth ,Neurodegeneration ,Cell Cycle Checkpoints ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Neural stem cell ,Mitochondria ,nervous system diseases ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,nervous system ,Molecular Medicine ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Stem cell ,Signal transduction ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The beta-amyloid (Aβ) peptide and the Aβ-oligomer receptor, prion protein (PrP), both influence neurogenesis. Using in vitro murine neural stem cells (NSCs), we investigated whether Aβ and PrP interact to modify neurogenesis. Aβ imparted PrP-dependent changes on NSC self-renewal, with PrP-ablated and wild-type NSCs displaying increased and decreased cell growth, respectively. In contrast, differentiation of Aβ-treated NSCs into mature cells was unaffected by PrP expression. Such marked PrP-dependent differences in NSC growth responses to Aβ provides further evidence of biologically significant interactions between these two factors and an important new insight into regulation of NSC self-renewal in vivo. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13287-015-0067-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2015
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49. A Functional Role for Aβ in Metal Homeostasis? N-Truncation and High-Affinity Copper Binding
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Wojciech Bal, Carolin Tumpach, Kevin J. Barnham, Mariusz Mital, Simon C. Drew, Arkadiusz Bonna, Tomasz Frączyk, Urszula E. Wawrzyniak, Nina E. Wezynfeld, Magdalena Z. Wiloch, and Cathryn L. Haigh
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Gene isoform ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Amyloid ,010405 organic chemistry ,Peptide ,Bioinorganic chemistry ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Extracellular ,medicine ,Homeostasis ,Senile plaques ,Alzheimer's disease ,Copper - Abstract
Accumulation of the β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide in extracellular senile plaques rich in copper and zinc is a defining pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The Aβ1-x (x=16/28/40/42) peptides have been the primary focus of Cu(II) binding studies for more than 15 years; however, the N-truncated Aβ4-42 peptide is a major Aβ isoform detected in both healthy and diseased brains, and it contains a novel N-terminal FRH sequence. Proteins with His at the third position are known to bind Cu(II) avidly, with conditional log K values at pH 7.4 in the range of 11.0-14.6, which is much higher than that determined for Aβ1-x peptides. By using Aβ4-16 as a model, it was demonstrated that its FRH sequence stoichiometrically binds Cu(II) with a conditional Kd value of 3×10(-14) M at pH 7.4, and that both Aβ4-16 and Aβ4-42 possess negligible redox activity. Combined with the predominance of Aβ4-42 in the brain, our results suggest a physiological role for this isoform in metal homeostasis within the central nervous system.
- Published
- 2015
50. Synthetic, EPR spectroscopic, magnetic and X-ray crystallographic structural studies on copper(II) complexes of the tridentate N2S donor ligand formed from 6-methyl-2-formylpyridine and S-methyldithiocarbazate (Hmpsme)
- Author
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K. S. Murray, Mohammad Ali, Graeme R. Hanson, R J Fereday, Ray J. Butcher, Julie M. Fuller, Boujemaa Moubaraki, Lawrence R. Gahan, Simon C. Drew, and Aminul Huq Mirza
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Schiff base ,Denticity ,Coordination sphere ,Chemistry ,Ligand ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Crystal structure ,Copper ,law.invention ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,2-Formylpyridine ,Crystallography ,law ,Materials Chemistry ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Electron paramagnetic resonance - Abstract
New copper(II) complexes of general empirical formula, Cu(mpsme)X center dot xCH(3)COCH(3) (mpsme = anionic form of the 6-methyl-2-formylpyridine Schiff base of S-methyldithiocarbazate; X = Cl, N-3, NCS, NO3; x = 0, 0.5) have been synthesized and characterized by IR, electronic, EPR and susceptibility measurements. Room temperature mu(eff) values for the complexes are in the range 1.75-2.1 mu(beta) typical of uncoupled or weakly coupled Cu(II) centres. The EPR spectra of the [Cu(mpsme)X] (X = Cl, N-3, NO3, NCS) complexes reveal a tetragonally distorted coordination sphere around the mononuclear Cu(II) centre. We have exploited second derivative EPR spectra in conjunction with Fourier filtering (sine bell and Hamming functions) to extract all of the nitrogen hyperfine coupling matrices. While the X-ray crystallography of [Cu(mpsme)NCS] reveals a linear polymer in which the thiocyanate anion bridges the two copper(II) ions, the EPR spectra in solution are typical of a magnetically isolated monomeric Cu(II) centres indicating dissociation of the polymeric chain in solution. The structures of the free ligand, Hmpsme and the {[Cu(mpsme)NO3] center dot 0.5CH(3)COCH(3)}(2) and [Cu(mpsme)NCS](n) complexes have been determined by X-ray diffraction. The {[Cu(mpsme)NO3]0.5CH(3)COCH(3)}(2) complex is a centrosymmetric dimer in which each copper atom adopts a five-coordinate distorted square-pyramidal geometry with an N2OS2 coordination environment, the Schiff base coordinating as a uninegatively charged tridentate ligand chelating through the pyridine and azomethine nitrogen atoms and the thiolate, an oxygen atom of a unidentate nitrato ligand and a bridging sulfur atom from the second ligand completing the coordination sphere. The [Cu(mpsme)(NCS)](n) complex has a novel staircase-like one dimensional polymeric structure in which the NCS- ligands bridge two adjacent copper(II) ions asymmetrically in an end-to-end fashion providing its nitrogen atom to one copper and the sulfur atom to the other. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2005
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