116 research outputs found
Outcomes Following Extended Surgery for Retroperitoneal Sarcomas: Results From a UK Referral Centre
Structural Studies Of Mycobacterial Uracil-DNA Glycosylase (Ung) And Single-Stranded DNA Binding Protein (SSB)
For survival and successful propagation, every organism has to maintain the genomic integrity of the cell. The information content, in the form of nucleotide bases, is constantly threatened by endogenous agents and environmental pollutants. In particular, pathogenic mycobacteria are constantly exposed to DNA-damaging assaults such as reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen intermediate (RNI), in their habitat which is inside host macrophage. In addition, the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis makes it more susceptible for guanine oxidation and cytosine deamination as it is G-C rich. Therefore DNA repair mechanisms are extremely important for the mycobacterium. An important enzyme involved in DNA repair is uracil-DNA glycosylase (Ung). To access the genomic information, during repair as well as DNA replication and recombination, dsDNA must unwind to form single stranded (ss) intermediates. ssDNA is more prone to chemical and nuclease attacks that can produce breaks or lesions and can also inappropriately self associate. In order to preserve ssDNA intermediates, cells have evolved a specialized class of ssDNA-binding proteins (SSB) that associate with ssDNA with high affinity. As part of a major programme on mycobacterial proteins in this laboratory, structural studies on mycobacterial uracil-DNA glycosylase (Ung) and single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB) have been carried out.
The structures were solved using the well-established techniques of protein X-ray crystallography. The hanging drop vapour diffusion and microbatch methods were used for crystallization in all cases. X-ray intensity data were collected on a MAR Research imaging plate mounted on a Rigaku RU200 X-ray generator. The data were processed using the HKL program suite. The structures were solved by the molecular replacement method using the program PHASER and AMoRe. Structure refinements were carried out using the programs CNS and REFMAC. Model building was carried out using COOT. PROCHECK, ALIGN, INSIGHT and NACCESS were used for structure validation and analysis of the refined structures. MD simulations were performed using the software package GROMACS v 3.3.1.
Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG), a repair enzyme involved in the excision of uracil from DNA, from mycobacteria differs from UNGs from other sources, particularly in the sequence in the catalytically important loops. The structure of the enzyme from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtUng) in complex with a proteinaceous inhibitor (Ugi) has been determined by X-ray analysis of a crystal containing seven crystallographically independent copies of the complex. This structure provides the first geometric characterization of a mycobacterial UNG. A comparison of the structure with those of other UNG proteins of known structure shows that a central core region of the molecule is relatively invariant in structure and sequence, while the N- and C-terminal tails exhibit high variability. The tails are probably important in folding and stability. The mycobacterial enzyme exhibits differences in UNG-Ugi interactions compared with those involving UNG from other sources. The MtUng-DNA complex modelled on the basis of the known structure of the complex involving the human enzyme indicates a domain closure in the enzyme when binding to DNA. The binding involves a larger burial of surface area than is observed in binding by human UNG. The DNA-binding site of MtUng is characterized by the presence of a higher proportion of arginyl residues than is found in the binding site of any other UNG of known structure. In addition to the electrostatic effects produced by the arginyl residues, the hydrogen bonds in which they are involved compensate for the loss of some interactions arising from changes in amino-acid residues, particularly in the catalytic loops. The results arising from the present investigation represent unique features of the structure and interaction of mycobacterial Ungs.
To gain further insights, the structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Ung (MtUng) in its free form was also determined. Comparison with appropriate structures indicate that the two domain enzyme slightly closes up when binding to DNA while it slightly opens up when binding to its proteinaceous inhibitor Ugi. The structural changes on complexation in the catalytic loops reflect the special features of their structure in the mycobacterial protein. A comparative analysis of available sequences of the enzyme from different sources indicates high conservation of amino acid residues in the catalytic loops. The uracil binding pocket in the structure is occupied by a citrate ion. The interactions of the citrate ion with the protein mimic those of uracil in addition to providing insights into other possible interactions that inhibitors could be involved in.
SSB is an essential accessory protein required during DNA replication, repair and recombination, and various other DNA transactions. Eubacteral single stranded DNA binding (SSB) proteins constitute an extensively studied family of proteins. The variability in the quaternary association in these tetrameric proteins was first demonstrated through the X-ray analysis of the crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis SSB (MtSSB) and Mycobacterium smegmatis (MsSSB) in this laboratory. Subsequent studies on these proteins elsewhere have further explored this variability, but attention was solely concentrated on the variability in the relative orientation of the two dimers that constitute the tetramer. Furthermore, the effect of this variability on the properties of the tetrameric molecule was not adequately addressed. In order to further explore this variability and strengthen structural information on mycobacterial SSBs in particular, and on SSB proteins in general, the crystal structures of two forms of Mycobacterium leprae single stranded DNA-binding protein (MlSSB) has been determined. Comparison of the structures with other eubacterial SSB structures indicates considerable variation in their quaternary association although the DNA binding domains in all of them exhibit the same OB-fold. This variation has no linear correlation with sequence variation, but it appears to correlate well with variation in protein stability. Molecular dynamics simulations have been carried out on tetrameric molecules derived from the two forms and the prototype E. coli SSB and the individual subunits of both the proteins. The X-ray studies and molecular dynamics simulations together yield information on the relatively rigid and flexible regions of the molecule and the effect of oligomerization on flexibility. The simulations provide insights into the changes in the subunit structure on oligomerization. They also provide insights into the stability and time evolution of the hydrogen bonds/water-bridges that connect two pairs of monomers in the tetramer.
In continuation of our effort to understand structure-function relationships of mycobacterial SSBs, the structure of MsSSB complexed with a 31-mer polydeoxy-cytidine single stranded DNA (ssDNA) was determined. The mode of ssDNA binding in the MsSSB is different from the modes in the known structures of similar complexes of the proteins from E. coli (EcSSB) and Helicobacter pylori (HpSSB). The modes in the EcSSB and HpSSB also exhibit considerable differences between them. A comparison of the three structures reveals the promiscuity of DNA-binding to SSBs from different species in terms of symmetry and the path followed by the bound DNA chain. It also reveals commonalities within the diversity. The regions of the protein molecule involved in DNA-binding and the nature of the residues which interact with the DNA, exhibit substantial similarities. The regions which exhibit similarities are on the central core of the subunit which is unaffected by tetramerisation. The variable features of DNA binding are associated with the periphery of the subunit, which is involved in oligomerization. Thus, there is some correlation between variability in DNA-binding and the known variability in tetrameric association in SSBs.
In addition to the work on Ung and SSB, the author was involved in X-ray studies on crystals of horse methemoglobin at different levels of hydration, which is described in the Appendix of the thesis. The crystal structure of high-salt horse methaemoglobin has been determined at environmental relative humidities (r.h.) of 88, 79, 75 and 66%. The molecule is in the R state in the native and the r.h. 88% crystals. At r.h.79% the molecule appears to move towards the R2 state. The crystal structure at r.h.66% is similar, but not identical, to that at r.h.75%. Thus variation in hydration leads to variation in the quaternary structure. Furthermore, partial dehydration appears to shift the structure from the R state to the R2 state. This observation is in agreement with the earlier conclusion that the changes in protein structure that accompany partial dehydration are similar to those that occur during protein action.
A part of the work presented in the thesis has been reported in the following publications.
1. Singh, P., Talawar, R.K., Krishna, P.D., Varshney, U. & Vijayan, M. (2006). Overexpression, purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of uracil N-glycosylase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis in complex with a proteinaceous inhibitor. Acta Crystallogr. F62, 1231-1234.
2. Kaushal, P.S., Talawar, R.K., Krishna, P.D., Varshney, U. & Vijayan, M. (2008). Unique features of the structure and interactions of mycobacterial uracil-DNA glycosylase: structure of a complex of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis enzyme in comparison with those from other sources. Acta Crystallogr. D64, 551-560.
3. Kaushal, P.S., Sankaranarayanan, R. & Vijayan, M. (2008). Water-mediated variability in the structure of relaxed-state haemoglobin. Acta Crystallogr. F64, 463-469
Structural Studies On Three-Fold Symmetric Plant Lectins
Lectins, multivalent carbohydrate-binding proteins of non-immune origin, have the unique ability to decode the information contained in complex carbohydrate structures of glycoproteins and glycolipids by stereo-specifically recognizing and binding to carbohydrates and carbohydrate linkages. The ubiquitous distribution of lectins in all forms of life and viruses along with their involvement in various biological processes such as cell-cell communication, host-pathogen interaction, cancer metastasis, embryogenesis, tissue development and mitogenic stimulation further emphasizes the importance of lectins in biological systems. Although not much is known about the endogenous roles of plant lectins, they constitute the most thoroughly studied class of lectins. On the basis of their subunit folds plant lectins have been divided in six major classes. They include jelly roll fold lectins (or legume lectins), hevein domain lectins (or cereal lectins), β-trefoil fold lectins, β-prism II fold lectins (or bulb lectins), β-prism I fold lectins and the most recently discovered lectin homologous to cyanovirin-N (http://www.cermav.cnrs.fr/lectines). Interestingly, of these, lectin subunits harbor an approximate three-fold symmetry in three cases and each subunit is believed to have evolved through successive gene duplication, fusion and divergent evolution. One of the major research activities in this laboratory involves structural studies on plant lectins. Decades of extensive studies in the laboratory have shed light on various structural and functional aspects of lectins such as variability in quaternary association, lectin-carbohydrate interactions, strategies for generating ligand specificity and multivalency. Furthermore, the β-prism I fold was first identified as a lectin fold in this laboratory through the X-ray analysis of the methyl-α-galactose complex of jacalin, one of the two lectins from the seeds of Artocarpus integrifolia. Subsequently, many other lectins with the same fold have been structurally characterized here and else where (http://www.cermav.cnrs.fr/lectines). They include mannose specific tetrameric artocarpin and dimeric banana lectin studied in this laboratory. Also investigated here is the structure of first dimeric β-prism II fold lectin, namely, garlic lectin. The subsequent work, carried out by the author, on the structure and dynamics of three-fold symmetric lectins form the subject matter of this thesis.
Different web-servers available at NCBI and EXPASY web sites were used for sequence annotation studies. MRBAYES and MEGA were used for phylogenetic analysis. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out using the simulation package GROMACS v.3.3.1. OPLS-AA/L and GLYCAM-06 force fields were used for proteins and carbohydrates respectively. Simulations were performed in explicit water system with TIP4P water model under NPT conditions with unit dielectric constant. The hanging drop method was used for crystallizing banana lectin and its complexes. Intensity data were collected on a MAR 345 image plate mounted on a Rigaku RU200 rotating-anode X-ray generator. The Oxford cryosystem was used when collecting data at low temperature. The data were processed using DENZO and SCALEPACK of HKL suite of programs. The structure factors from the processed data were calculated using TRUNCATE of CCP4 suite of programs. The molecular replacement program MOLREP was used for structure solution. Structure refinements were carried out using the CNS software package and REFMAC of CCP4. Model building was done using the molecular graphics program COOT. INSIGHT II, ALIGN, CONTACT, MUSTANG and SC of CCP4 were used for analysis of structural features. PROCHECK and web-server MOLPROBITY were used for the validation of the refined structures.
The β-prism II fold lectins of known structure, all from monocots, invariably have three carbohydrate-binding sites in each subunit / domain. Until recently, β-prism I fold lectins of known structure were all from dicots and they exhibited one carbohydrate-binding site per subunit / domain. However, the recently determined structure of the β-prism I fold lectin from banana, a monocot, has two very similar carbohydrate-binding sites. This prompted a detailed analysis of all the sequences appropriate for the two lectin folds and which carry one or more relevant carbohydrate-binding motifs. The recent observation of a β-prism I fold lectin, griffithsin, with three binding sites in each domain further confirmed the need for such an analysis. The detailed sequence and phylogenetic analysis of all the β-prism I fold lectin or lectin-like sequences, available then, with particular attention to their carbohydrate-binding sites in them, in conjunction with the analysis of available three-dimensional structures demonstrate substantial diversity in the number of binding sites, unrelated to the taxonomical position of the plant source. However, the number of binding sites and the symmetry within the sequence exhibit reasonable correlation. The distribution of the two families of β-prism fold lectins among plants and the number of binding sites in them, appear to suggest that both of them arose through successive gene duplication, fusion and divergent evolution of the same primitive carbohydrate-binding motif involving a Greek key. Analysis with sequences in individual Greek keys as independent units lends further support to this conclusion. It would seem that the prepondence of three carbohydrate-binding sites per domain in monocot lectins, particularly those with the β-prism II fold, is related to the role of plant lectins in defence.
Jacalin is the most thoroughly studied β-prism I fold lectin. A wealth of structural and thermodynamic data, mostly from this laboratory, led to a thorough characterization of carbohydrate-recognition in the case of jacalin. One aspect of jacalin that has not been investigated so far was its dynamics. The issue was addressed through reasonably long MD simulations, in explicit solvent system using all atom force field, of all the jacalin-carbohydrate complexes of known structure, models of unliganded molecules derived from the complexes and also models of relevant complexes where X-ray structures are not available. Results of the simulations and the available crystal structures involving jacalin permit delineation of the relatively rigid and flexible regions of the molecule and the dynamical variability of the hydrogen bonds involved in stabilizing the structure. Local flexibility appears to be related to solvent accessibility. Hydrogen bonds involving side chains and water bridges involving buried water molecules appear to be important in the stabilization of loop structures. The lectin-carbohydrate interactions observed in crystal structures, the average parameters pertaining to them derived from simulations, energetic contribution of the stacking residue estimated from quantum mechanical calculations and the scatter of the locations of carbohydrate and carbohydrate-binding residues, are consistent with the known thermodynamic parameters of jacalin-carbohydrate interactions. The simulations, along with X-ray results, provide a fuller picture of carbohydrate binding by jacalin than provided by crystallographic analysis alone. The simulations confirm that in the unliganded structures water molecules tend to occupy the positions occupied by carbohydrate oxygens in the lectin-carbohydrate complexes. Population distributions in simulations of the free lectin, the ligands and the complexes indicate a combination of conformational selection and induced fit.
Mannose-specific β-prism I fold lectins, like lectins belonging to other plant families, exhibit interesting variability in their quaternary association. Mannose specific artocarpin and MornigaM are tetrameric, heltuba is octameric in the crystal structure and banana lectin and calsepa are dimeric. The modes of the dimerization in the last two are however, entirely different. This variability was explored through modelling and molecular dynamics simulations based on the known three-dimensional structures. This study, which combines computational approaches and results of X-ray analyses, provides valuable insights into the origin of the variability in quaternary association. MD simulations on individual subunits and the oligomers provide insights into the changes in the structure brought about in the protomers on oligomerization, including swapping of the N-terminal stretch in one instance. The regions which undergo changes also tend to exhibit dynamic flexibility during MD simulations. The internal symmetries of individual oligomers are substantially retained during the calculations. Simulations were also carried out on models using all possible oligomers employing the four different protomers. The unique dimerization pattern observed in calsepa could be traced to unique substitutions in a peptide stretch involved in dimerization. The impossibility of a specific mode of oligomerization involving a particular protomer is often expressed in terms of unacceptable steric contacts or dissociation of the oligomer during simulations. The calculations also lead to a rationale for the observation of a heltuba tetramer in solution although the lectin exists as an octamer in the crystal, in addition to providing insights into relations among evolution, oligomerization and ligand binding.
The known crystal structures of banana lectin in its native and ligand bound forms revealed interesting features including the presence of two functional carbohydrate-binding sites per subunit. However, some confusion remained on the role of glycosidic linkage in carbohydrate-binding. The three crystal structures reported in this thesis provide information on details of the interactions of mannose and mannosylα-1,3-mannose with banana lectin and evidence for the binding of glucosyl-α-1,2glucose to the lectin. The known structures involving the lectin include a complex with glucosyl-β-1,3-glucose. Modelling studies on the three disaccharide complexes with the reducing end and the non-reducing end at the primary binding site are also presented here. The results of the X-ray and modelling studies show that the disaccharides with an α-1,3 linkage prefers to have the non-reducing end at the primary binding site while the reducing end is preferred at the site when the linkage is β-1,3 in mannose/glucose specific β-prism I fold lectins. In the corresponding galactose-specific lectins, however, α-1,3 linked disaccharides cannot bind the lectin with the non-reducing end at the primary binding site on account of steric clashes with an aromatic residue which occurs only when the lectin is galactose-specific. MD simulations based on the known structures involving banana lectin enrich the information on lectin-carbohydrate interactions obtained from crystal structures. They demonstrate that conformational selection as well as induced fit operate when carbohydrates bind to banana lectin.
Snake gourd seed lectin (SGSL) isolated from Trichosanthes anguina is a glycosylated, galactose-specific, non-toxic lectin similar to type II ribosome inactivating proteins (RIPs) with a molecular weight of ~53kDa. It was established through preliminary X-ray studies that chain A with molecular weight of ~23kDa adopts the same fold as that of type I RIPs and the toxic chain of type II RIPs. Chain B with molecular weight ~32kDa has two β-trefoil fold domains and is responsible for the lectin activity of the protein. The two chains are connected with a disulphide bond. The sequence of the protein could not be determined using conventional methods despite extensive effort. It was derived from X-ray data at 2.4 Å resolution, which was used for structure analysis. The non-toxicity of SGSL appears to result from a combination of changes in the catalytic site in chain A and sugar-binding site in chain B. Detailed analysis of the sequences of type II RIPs of known structure and their homologues with unknown structure, provide valuable insights into the evolution of this class of proteins. It also indicates some variability in carbohydrate-binding sites, which appears to contribute to different levels of toxicity exhibited by lectins from various sources.
In addition to the work on plant lectins, the author was also involved in studies on the crystal structures of the adipic acid complexes of L- and DL-Lysine. This investigation is presented in an appendix.
A part of the work presented in the thesis has been reported in the following
publications.
Sharma, A., Thamotharan, S., Roy, S., & Vijayan, M. (2006). X-ray studies of
crystalline complexes involving amino acids and peptides. XLIII. Adipic acid
complexes of L- and DL-lysine. Acta Cryst, C62, o148-o152.
Sharma, A., Chandran, D., Singh, D.D., & Vijayan, M. (2007). Multiplicity of
carbohydrate-binding sites in beta-prism fold lectins: occurrence and possible
evolutionary implications. J Biosci, 32, 1089-1110.
Sharma, A., Sekar, K., & Vijayan, M. (2009). Structure, dynamics, and interactions of
jacalin. Insights from molecular dynamics simulations examined in conjunction
with results of X-ray studies. Proteins, 77, 760-777
Predictive nomograms for oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma applying the American Joint Committee on Cancer/Union Internationale Contre le Cancer 8th edition staging system
Nomograms applying the 8th edition of the TNM staging system aimed at predicting overall (OS), disease-specific (DSS), locoregional recurrence-free (LRRFS) and distant recurrence-free survivals (DRFS) for oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC) are still lacking
Grotesque Realism in O.V Vijayan’s The Saga of Dharmapuri
The Saga of Dharmapuri by O.V. Vijayan is a dystopian fantasy set in the imaginary country of Dharmapuri, which could be a depiction of India or any other newly independent country in the post-colonial era. Mikhail Bakhtin in his treatise Rabelais and his World (1965) justifies the use of Grotesque Realism, a literary trope that allows the author to move away from the conventions of propriety and decency to convey messages that are real and powerful nevertheless. Usually exaggeration and hyperbole are key elements of this style. Through the centuries, literature has often been a medium through which contemporary concerns have been transmitted. This paper argues that O.V. Vijayan uses Grotesque Realism in his novel to depict the political, social and economic condition of India of the 1970s- specifically a country that was under emergency. Like all dystopian fables, The Saga of Dharmapuri has been prophetic in anticipating some of the social issues that we face even today. The paper aims at examining how Vijayan uses explicit language and scatological and sexual imagery so as to achieve this sense of realism within his novel
Photoinduced heat generation mechanism in Ag nanoparticles embedded in SiO2 and β-In2S3 matrix
Temporal Delta Layer: Training Towards Brain Inspired Temporal Sparsity for Energy Efficient Deep Neural Networks
In the recent past, real-time video processing using state-of-the-art deep neural networks (DNN) has achieved human-like accuracy but at the cost of high energy consumption, making them infeasible for edge device deployment. The energy consumed by running DNNs on hardware accelerators is dominated by the number of memory read/writes and multiplyaccumulate (MAC) operations required. As a potential solution, this work explores the role of activation sparsity in efficient DNN inference. As the predominant operation in DNNs is matrix-vector multiplication of weights with activations, skipping operations and memoryfetches where (at least) one of them is zero can make inference more energy efficient. Although spatial sparsification of activations is researched extensively, introducing and exploiting temporal sparsity is much less explored in DNN literature. This work presents a new DNN layer (called temporal delta layer) whose primary objective is to induce temporal activation sparsity during training. The temporal delta layer promotes activation sparsity by performing delta operation facilitated by activation quantization and l1 norm based penalty to the cost function. During inference, the resulting model acts as a conventional quantizedDNN with high temporal activation sparsity. The new layer was incorporated as a part of the standard ResNet50 architecture to be trained and tested on the popular human action recognition dataset (UCF101). The method caused 2x improvement in activation sparsity, with 5% accuracy loss.Electrical Engineerin
Digitization of indigenous materials : problems and solutions in the Context of Kerala University
The paper evaluates the ICT infrastructure available at Kerala University (KU) in India. KU has automated its library system and has powerful ICT infrastructures for more than a decade. But they are found to be lacking information relevant to KU, which exist only in traditional media at various sources under it. Information generated by the research in KU is also not digitized and added to the system. The study reveals that archives, libraries and other document collections as they exist now in KU limit mainly to collection, preservation and services using original exhibits, printed documents, manuscripts and non?print materials like microforms. Even a decade after having required ICT infrastructures KU has not cared to digitise its content and make it accessible online. Identifies the institutions under KU where unique content not otherwise available exists and the different media in which they are recorded. Various projects that have transformed content like that existing in KU are examined. The solutions used in such projects are discussed. The problem of local scripts to be dealt by KU and the projects, which handled scripts relevant to KU, are examined. Make suggestions in selecting relevant DL solutions and for ensuring the conservation of the unique knowledge content available at KU
Structural Studies On Mycobacterial RecA And RuvA
Homologous recombination is a fundamental cellular process evolved to maintain genomic integrity and to generate genetic diversity. It plays a crucial role in DNA repair, correct segregation of meiotic chromosomes and resumption of the stalled replication forks. In vitro, the homologous recombination pathway is kinetically separable into a four step process involving initiation, homologous pairing, branch migration and junction resolution. The process of pairing and strand exchange between two homologous double-stranded DNA molecules leads to the formation of an intermediate structure called the Holliday junction (HJ). The crucial enzyme involved in this step in bacteria is RecA. In eubacteria, the junction is processed by three proteins, collectively referred to as the RuvABC protein complex. RuvA binds to the HJ, while RuvB, a helicase, binds to the RuvA-HJ complex and pumps the duplex DNA thus facilitating branch migration. The work reported here is concerned with structural studies on mycobacterial RecA and RuvA.
X-ray crystallography was used to solve the protein crystal structures. The hanging drop vapour diffusion method was used for crystallization in all cases. X-ray intensity data were collected on a MAR Research imaging plate mounted on a Rigaku RU200 X-ray generator except for two data sets collected using synchrotron radiation. The data were processed mostly using Mosflm and Scala and few data sets were processed using the HKL program suite. The molecular replacement method using programs Phaser and AMoRe was used for structure solution. Structure refinements were carried out using programs CNS and PHENIX. Model building was performed using COOT and O. PROCHECK, MOLPROBITY, ALIGN and NACCESS were used for structure validation and analysis of the refined structures.
Mycobacterium smegmatis RecA (MsRecA) and its nucleotide complexes crystallize in three different, but closely related, forms characterized by specific ranges of unit cell dimensions. The six crystals discussed in the earlier part of the thesis and the five reported earlier, all grown under the same or very similar conditions, belong to these three forms, all in space group P61. They include one obtained by reducing the relative humidity around the crystal. In all crystals, RecA monomers form filaments around a 61 screw axis. Thus, the c-dimension of the crystal corresponds to the pitch of the RecA filament. As reported in the case of E.coli RecA, the variation in the pitch among the three forms correlate well with the motion of the C-terminal domain of the RecA monomers with respect to the main domain. The domain motion is compatible with formation of inactive as well as active RecA filaments involving monomers with a fully ordered C-domain. It does not appear to influence the movement upon nucleotide-binding of the switch residue Gln 196, which is believed to provide the trigger for transmitting the effect of nucleotide-binding to the DNA-binding region. Interestingly, partial dehydration of the crystal results in the movement of the residue, in a way similar to that caused by nucleotide-binding. The ordering of the DNA-binding loops L1 and L2, which present an ensemble of conformations, is also unaffected by domain motion. The conformation of loop L2 appears to depend upon nucleotide-binding presumably on account of the movement of the switch residue which forms part of the loop. The conformations of loops L1 and L2 are correlated and have implications to intermolecular communications within the RecA filament. The structures resulting from different orientations of the C-domain and different conformations of the DNA-binding loops appear to represent snapshots of the RecA molecule at different phases of activity and provide insights into the mechanism of action of RecA.
Crystal structures of mutants of MsRecA involving changes of Gln 196 from glutamine to alanine, asparagine and glutamic acid, wild type MsRecA and several of their nucleotide complexes were subsequently determined using mostly low temperature and partly room temperature X-ray data. At both the temperatures, nucleotide binding results in a movement of Gln 196 towards the bound nucleotide in the wild type protein. This movement is abolished in the mutants, thus establishing the structural basis for the triggering action of the residue in terms of the size, shape and the chemical nature of the side chain. The 25 crystal structures reported in this thesis, along with the 5 MsRecA structures reported earlier, provide further elaboration of the relation among the pitch of the `inactive´ RecA filament, the orientation of the C-terminal domain with respect to the main domain and the location of the switch residue. The low temperature structures define one extreme of the range of positions the C-domain can occupy. The movement of the C-domain is correlated to those of the LexA binding loop and the loop that connects the main and the N-terminal domains. These elements of molecular plasticity are made use of in the transition to the `active´ filament, as evidenced by the recently reported structures of RecA-DNA complexes. The available structures of RecA resulting from X-ray and electron microscopic studies appear to represent different stages in the trajectory of the allosteric transformations of the RecA filament. This work contributes to the description of the early stages of this trajectory and provides insights into structures relevant to the later stages.
The interesting results observed in the case of MsRecA prompted similar studies on the RecA from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtRecA). In this study, the crystals were grown at slightly different conditions and examined at different relative humidities and temperatures. Surprisingly, in spite of the 92% sequence identity between the two proteins, the structures indicated MtRecA to be substantially less plastic than MsRecA. The crystal structures do not provide an obvious explanation for this difference. Further studies are warranted to explain the molecular basis of the difference.
RuvA, along with RuvB, is involved in branch migration of heteroduplex DNA in homologous recombination. The structures of four crystal forms of RuvA from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtRuvA) have been determined. The RuvB-binding domain is cleaved off in one of them. Detailed models of the complexes of octameric RuvA from different species with the Holliday junction have also been constructed. A thorough examination of the structures determined as part of the doctoral programme and those reported earlier bring to light the hitherto unappreciated role of the RuvB-binding domain in determining inter-domain orientation and oligomerization. These structures also permit an exploration of the interspecies variability of structural features such as oligomerization and the conformation of the loop that carries the acidic pin, in terms of amino acid substitutions. These models emphasize the additional role of the RuvB-binding domain in HJ binding. This role along with its role in oligomerization could have important biological implications.
In addition to the work on RecA and RuvA, which forms the body of the thesis, the author was also involved in a structural bioinformatics study in which several carbohydrate binding proteins were probed to identify common minimum principles required for binding mannose, glucose and galactose. The study, presented in an Appendix, identified interactions that were specific to particular sugars, leading to individual fingerprints. These fingerprints were then used for exploring lead compounds, using a fragment based approach. This investigation helped the author to familiarize himself with the analysis of protein structures and ligand design based on them
The Demeanor of Nature in O. V. Vijayan’s The Legends of Khasak
The Legends of Khasak is one of the famous and artistic works of renowned writer Ottupulackal Velukkuty Vijayan, commonly known as O. V. Vijayan, was a novelist and cartoonist, who was one of the most important figures in modern Malayalam literature. He is best known for his first novel Khasakkinte Ithihasam (1969), he was the author of six novels, nine short-story collections, and nine collections of essays, memoirs and reflections. The plot is set in the backwaters of Kerala, in the half of the twentieth century. Critics in Malayalam have been unanimous in their praise of Vijayan's uses of language. Never before, or after, has any writer, they aver, experimented the poetic dimensions of prose with such telling effect. In Khasakkinte Ithihasaam, Vijayan is able to present Khasak as a mythical place of primordial Purity by making use of a strange mixture of Tamil and Malayalam. While Raviand Madhavan Nair speaks pristine Malayalam, the natives use a crude mixture of Malayalam and Tamil. This is reinforced with powerful images and metaphors. Ravi is the protagonist of this novel and he comes to the village of Khasak in Palakkad region as a single school teacher. Ravi is a great visionary in astrophysics who finished his post graduation in Physics from a very famous college at Tambaram. Palakkad District Board has established a single teacher school in the village Khasak for the local children as an effort to give them basic education. Ravi is from a different place and he is to be the first teacher in that village. Khasak is both wondrous and a magical place. Ravi is not only a dominant central figure in this novel. The Legends of Khasak, Vijayan's first novel, appeared in 1969 and it took twelve years' writing and rewriting to reach its final form. It leads to a great literary revolution and cleaved the history of Malayalam fiction into Pre-Khasak and Post-Khasak eras. The novel ends when protagonist begins his journey to some other realms of existence. It was a kind of stepping stone for the writer Vijayan to that world and marked the alight of a truly visionary writer in Malayalam Literature
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