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    New Muteins of RNase A with Enhanced Antitumor Action

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    Monomeric bovine pancreatic RNase A has been transformed into a dimeric ribonuclease with antitumor activity (Di Donato, A., Cafaro, V. and D'Alessio, G. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 17394-17396). This was accomplished by replacing the residues located in the RNase chain at positions 19, 28, 31, and 32, with proline, leucine, and two cysteine residues, respectively, i.e. those present at identical positions in the subunit of bovine seminal RNase, a dimeric RNase of the pancreatic-type superfamily, endowed with a powerful antitumor action. However, as an antitumor agent this mutant dimeric RNase A is not as powerful as seminal RNase. We report here site-directed mutagenesis experiments which have led to the identification of two other amino acid residues, glycine 38 and 111, whose substitution in the polypeptide chain of the first generation dimeric mutant of RNase A, is capable of conferring to the mutein the full cytotoxic activity characteristic of native seminal RNase. Copyright (C) 1998 Federation of European Biochemical Societies

    In vitro evolution of a dimeric variant of human pancreatic ribonuclease

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    Site-directed mutagenesis of human pancreatic RNase (HP-RNase) was used as a model system for investigating the genetic events underlying the evolutionary origins of protein oligomers. HP-RNase is a monomeric enzyme with no natural tendency to oligomerize (K(d) for any dimers in solution of > 280 mM). Nevertheless, deletion of five amino acid residues in the loop linking the N-terminal helix of HP-RNase to the rest of the protein was found to drive polypeptide chains to fold into dimers. These dimers could not be dissociated by heating at 70 °C, and small amounts of monomer were detected only in highly diluted samples. Measurement of dimer and monomer concentrations under equilibrium conditions yielded a K(d) of 1.5 μM. This implies that the deletion increases the protein propensity to dimerize at least 5.2 orders of magnitude. Moreover, the HP-RNase dimers were found to be over 4.6 orders of magnitude more stable than the dimers of bovine pancreatic RNase A obtained by lyophilization from acetic acid (K(d) > 73 mM). Cross- linking experiments with divinyl sulfone indicated that the HP-RNase dimers are stabilized by the exchange between subunits of their N-terminal helices. This generates composite active sites, i.e., each contributed by two subunit chains, that retain full enzymatic activity. Overall, these results show that a deletion of few residues in a key region of a monomeric protein can be the primary event irreversibly leading to oligomerization of the protein through the swap of a secondary structure element between protomers

    Second generation human antitumour RNase. Significance of its structural and functional features for the mechanism of antitumour action.

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    A second generation mutant of dimeric human pancreas RNase (HHP2-RNase), was obtained by a single residue mutation (Glu(111)-->Gly) of the previously described dimeric human pancreas RNase variant (HHP-RNase). HHP2-RNase was found to be a highly specific antitumour agent, with an enhanced cytotoxic activity compared with HHP-RNase. The structural and functional requisites of the antitumour action of HHP2-RNase were investigated and compared with those of other dimeric antitumour RNases. The stability of the dimeric structure, i.e. the resistance of human dimeric RNase variants to reductive cleavage of the two intersubunit disulphide bonds that bridge the subunits, was determined to be an essential feature of antitumour dimeric RNases. The stability of the dimeric structure is in turn responsible for the resistance to inhibition by the cytosolic RNase inhibitor (cRI). Both the stability of the dimeric structure and the resistance to cRI inhibition appeared to be highly enhanced by an RNase substrate. This suggests a possible role for RNA in the amplification of the antitumour potential of dimeric RNases

    Second generation human antitumour RNase. Significance of its structural and functional features for the mechanism of antitumour action.

    No full text
    A second generation mutant of dimeric human pancreas RNase (HHP2-RNase), was obtained by a single residue mutation (Glu(111)-->Gly) of the previously described dimeric human pancreas RNase variant (HHP-RNase). HHP2-RNase was found to be a highly specific antitumour agent, with an enhanced cytotoxic activity compared with HHP-RNase. The structural and functional requisites of the antitumour action of HHP2-RNase were investigated and compared with those of other dimeric antitumour RNases. The stability of the dimeric structure, i.e. the resistance of human dimeric RNase variants to reductive cleavage of the two intersubunit disulphide bonds that bridge the subunits, was determined to be an essential feature of antitumour dimeric RNases. The stability of the dimeric structure is in turn responsible for the resistance to inhibition by the cytosolic RNase inhibitor (cRI). Both the stability of the dimeric structure and the resistance to cRI inhibition appeared to be highly enhanced by an RNase substrate. This suggests a possible role for RNA in the amplification of the antitumour potential of dimeric RNases

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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