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Dive into the research topics where Alejandro J. Vila is active.

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Featured researches published by Alejandro J. Vila.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

Mechanism of Cu(A) assembly.

Luciano A. Abriata; Lucia Banci; Ivano Bertini; Simone Ciofi-Baffoni; Petros V. Gkazonis; Georgios A. Spyroulias; Alejandro J. Vila; Shenlin Wang

Copper is essential for proper functioning of cytochrome c oxidases, and therefore for cellular respiration in eukaryotes and many bacteria. Here we show that a new periplasmic protein (PCu(A)C) selectively inserts Cu(I) ions into subunit II of Thermus thermophilus ba(3) oxidase to generate a native Cu(A) site. The purported metallochaperone Sco1 is unable to deliver copper ions; instead, it works as a thiol-disulfide reductase to maintain the correct oxidation state of the Cu(A) cysteine ligands.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Structural basis of lipid biosynthesis regulation in Gram-positive bacteria

Gustavo E. Schujman; Marcelo Guerin; Alejandro Buschiazzo; Francis Schaeffer; Leticia I. Llarrull; Georgina Reh; Alejandro J. Vila; Pedro M. Alzari; Diego de Mendoza

Malonyl‐CoA is an essential intermediate in fatty acid synthesis in all living cells. Here we demonstrate a new role for this molecule as a global regulator of lipid homeostasis in Gram‐positive bacteria. Using in vitro transcription and binding studies, we demonstrate that malonyl‐CoA is a direct and specific inducer of Bacillus subtilis FapR, a conserved transcriptional repressor that regulates the expression of several genes involved in bacterial fatty acid and phospholipid synthesis. The crystal structure of the effector‐binding domain of FapR reveals a homodimeric protein with a thioesterase‐like ‘hot‐dog’ fold. Binding of malonyl‐CoA promotes a disorder‐to‐order transition, which transforms an open ligand‐binding groove into a long tunnel occupied by the effector molecule in the complex. This ligand‐induced modification propagates to the helix‐turn‐helix motifs, impairing their productive association for DNA binding. Structure‐based mutations that disrupt the FapR–malonyl‐CoA interaction prevent DNA‐binding regulation and result in a lethal phenotype in B. subtilis, suggesting this homeostatic signaling pathway as a promising target for novel chemotherapeutic agents against Gram‐positive pathogens.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Adaptive protein evolution grants organismal fitness by improving catalysis and flexibility

Pablo E. Tomatis; Stella M. Fabiane; Fabio Simona; Paolo Carloni; Brian J. Sutton; Alejandro J. Vila

Protein evolution is crucial for organismal adaptation and fitness. This process takes place by shaping a given 3-dimensional fold for its particular biochemical function within the metabolic requirements and constraints of the environment. The complex interplay between sequence, structure, functionality, and stability that gives rise to a particular phenotype has limited the identification of traits acquired through evolution. This is further complicated by the fact that mutations are pleiotropic, and interactions between mutations are not always understood. Antibiotic resistance mediated by β-lactamases represents an evolutionary paradigm in which organismal fitness depends on the catalytic efficiency of a single enzyme. Based on this, we have dissected the structural and mechanistic features acquired by an optimized metallo-β-lactamase (MβL) obtained by directed evolution. We show that antibiotic resistance mediated by this enzyme is driven by 2 mutations with sign epistasis. One mutation stabilizes a catalytically relevant intermediate by fine tuning the position of 1 metal ion; whereas the other acts by augmenting the protein flexibility. We found that enzyme evolution (and the associated antibiotic resistance) occurred at the expense of the protein stability, revealing that MβLs have not exhausted their stability threshold. Our results demonstrate that flexibility is an essential trait that can be acquired during evolution on stable protein scaffolds. Directed evolution aided by a thorough characterization of the selected proteins can be successfully used to predict future evolutionary events and design inhibitors with an evolutionary perspective.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Nitration of Solvent-exposed Tyrosine 74 on Cytochrome c Triggers Heme Iron-Methionine 80 Bond Disruption NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE AND OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPY STUDIES

Luciano A. Abriata; Adriana Cassina; Verónica Tórtora; Mónica Marín; José M. Souza; Laura Castro; Alejandro J. Vila; Rafael Radi

Cytochrome c, a mitochondrial electron transfer protein containing a hexacoordinated heme, is involved in other physiologically relevant events, such as the triggering of apoptosis, and the activation of a peroxidatic activity. The latter occurs secondary to interactions with cardiolipin and/or post-translational modifications, including tyrosine nitration by peroxynitrite and other nitric oxide-derived oxidants. The gain of peroxidatic activity in nitrated cytochrome c has been related to a heme site transition in the physiological pH region, which normally occurs at alkaline pH in the native protein. Herein, we report a spectroscopic characterization of two nitrated variants of horse heart cytochrome c by using optical spectroscopy studies and NMR. Highly pure nitrated cytochrome c species modified at solvent-exposed Tyr-74 or Tyr-97 were generated after treatment with a flux of peroxynitrite, separated, purified by preparative high pressure liquid chromatography, and characterized by mass spectrometry-based peptide mapping. It is shown that nitration of Tyr-74 elicits an early alkaline transition with a pKa = 7.2, resulting in the displacement of the sixth and axial iron ligand Met-80 and replacement by a weaker Lys ligand to yield an alternative low spin conformation. Based on the study of site-specific Tyr to Phe mutants in the four conserved Tyr residues, we also show that this transition is not due to deprotonation of nitro-Tyr-74, but instead we propose a destabilizing steric effect of the nitro group in the mobile Ω-loop of cytochrome c, which is transmitted to the iron center via the nearby Tyr-67. The key role of Tyr-67 in promoting the transition through interactions with Met-80 was further substantiated in the Y67F mutant. These results therefore provide new insights into how a remote post-translational modification in cytochrome c such as tyrosine nitration triggers profound structural changes in the heme ligation and microenvironment and impacts in protein function.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Membrane topology of the acyl-lipid desaturase from Bacillus subtilis.

Alejandra R. Diaz; María C. Mansilla; Alejandro J. Vila; Diego de Mendoza

The Bacillus subtilisacyl-lipid desaturase (Δ5-Des) is an iron-dependent integral membrane protein, able to selectively introduce double bonds into long chain fatty acids. Structural information on membrane-bound desaturases is still limited, and the present topological information is restricted to hydropathy plots or sequence comparison with the evolutionary related alkane hydroxylase. The topology of Δ5-Des was determined experimentally in Escherichia coli using a set of nine different fusions of N-terminal fragments of Δ5-Des with the reporter alkaline phosphatase (Δ5-Des-PhoA). The alkaline phosphatase activities of cells expressing the Δ5-Des-PhoA fusions, combined with site-directed mutagenesis of His residues identified in most desaturases, suggest that a tripartite motif of His essential for catalysis is located on the cytoplasmic phase of the membrane. These data, together with surface Lys biotinylation experiments, support a model for Δ5-Des as a polytopic membrane protein with six transmembrane- and one membrane-associated domain, which likely represents a substrate-binding motif. This study provides the first experimental evidence for the topology of a plasma membrane fatty acid desaturase. On the basis of our results and the presently available hydrophobicity profile of many acyl-lipid desaturases, we propose that these enzymes contain a new transmembrane domain that might play a critical role in the desaturation of fatty acids esterified in glycerolipids.


Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 1999

Metallo-β-lactamases: does it take two to tango?

Julia A. Cricco; Elena G. Orellano; Rodolfo M. Rasia; Eduardo A. Ceccarelli; Alejandro J. Vila

Abstract Metallo-β-lactamases are a subset of zinc hydrolases able to hydrolyze the β-lactam ring of several antibiotics. The number of structural and mechanistic studies on these metalloenzymes has grown steadily in the recent years, due to their biomedical relevance in bacterial resistance. Crystallographic and spectroscopic studies on enzymes from different sources indicate that a conserved metal ligand set is able to bind either one of two metal equivalents. Even if both the mono- and bimetallic forms of these enzymes seem to be active in most cases, the binuclear species appear to be the most fit for conferring antibiotic resistance. The active nucleophile is a water/hydroxide molecule which has been found binding to either one or two Zn(II)s. The affinity for binding the second metal ion equivalent is related to the needs of the different enzymes in their natural environments. The exact role of the second Zn(II) is still unknown, but it has been proposed that it may help in positioning the substrate for the nucleophilic attack.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Trapping and Characterization of a Reaction Intermediate in Carbapenem Hydrolysis by B. cereus Metallo-β-lactamase

Mariana F. Tioni; Leticia I. Llarrull; Andrés A. Poeylaut-Palena; Marcelo A. Martí; Miguel Saggu; Gopal R. Periyannan; Ernesto G. Mata; Brian Bennett; Daniel H. Murgida; Alejandro J. Vila

Metallo-beta-lactamases hydrolyze most beta-lactam antibiotics. The lack of a successful inhibitor for them is related to the previous failure to characterize a reaction intermediate with a clinically useful substrate. Stopped-flow experiments together with rapid freeze-quench EPR and Raman spectroscopies were used to characterize the reaction of Co(II)-BcII with imipenem. These studies show that Co(II)-BcII is able to hydrolyze imipenem in both the mono- and dinuclear forms. In contrast to the situation met for penicillin, the species that accumulates during turnover is an enzyme-intermediate adduct in which the beta-lactam bond has already been cleaved. This intermediate is a metal-bound anionic species with a novel resonant structure that is stabilized by the metal ion at the DCH or Zn2 site. This species has been characterized based on its spectroscopic features. This represents a novel, previously unforeseen intermediate that is related to the chemical nature of carbapenems, as confirmed by the finding of a similar intermediate for meropenem. Since carbapenems are the only substrates cleaved by B1, B2, and B3 lactamases, identification of this intermediate could be exploited as a first step toward the design of transition-state-based inhibitors for all three classes of metallo-beta-lactamases.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005

Sensitive EDTA-based microbiological assays for detection of metallo-{beta}-lactamases in nonfermentative gram-negative bacteria.

Patricia Marchiaro; María Alejandra Mussi; Viviana Ballerini; Fernando Pasteran; Alejandro M. Viale; Alejandro J. Vila; Adriana S. Limansky

ABSTRACT The worldwide spread of metallo-β-lactamase (MBL)-producing gram-negative bacilli represents a great concern nowadays. Sensitive assays for their specific detection are increasingly demanded to aid infection control and to prevent their dissemination. We have developed a novel microbiological assay employing crude bacterial extracts, designated EDTA-imipenem microbiological assay (EIM), to identify MBLs in nonfermentative gram-negative clinical strains. We also evaluated the ability of EIM to detect MBLs in comparison to those of other currently employed screening methods, such as the EDTA disk synergy test (EDS) with imipenem as a substrate and the Etest method. The sensitivities of EIM and Etest were similar (1 versus 0.92, respectively) and much higher than that of EDS (0.67). Moreover, both EIM and Etest displayed the maximum specificity. Modifications were introduced to EDS, including the simultaneous testing of three different β-lactams (imipenem, meropenem, and ceftazidime) and two different EDTA concentrations. This resulted in a sensitivity improvement (0.92), albeit at a cost to its specificity. A simple strategy to accurately detect MBL producers is proposed; this strategy combines (i) an initial screening of the isolates by the extended EDS assay to select the potential candidates and (ii) confirmation of the true presence of MBL activity by EIM.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

The Metallo-β-lactamase GOB is a mono-Zn(II) enzyme with a novel active site

Jorgelina Morán-Barrio; Javier M. González; María-Natalia Lisa; Alison L. Costello; Matteo Dal Peraro; Paolo Carloni; Brian Bennett; David L. Tierney; Adriana S. Limansky; Alejandro M. Viale; Alejandro J. Vila

Metallo-β-lactamases (MβLs) are zinc-dependent enzymes able to hydrolyze and inactivate most β-lactam antibiotics. The large diversity of active site structures and metal content among MβLs from different sources has limited the design of a pan-MβL inhibitor. Here we report the biochemical and biophysical characterization of a novel MβL, GOB-18, from a clinical isolate of a Gram-negative opportunistic pathogen, Elizabethkingia meningoseptica. Different spectroscopic techniques, three-dimensional modeling, and mutagenesis experiments, reveal that the Zn(II) ion is bound to Asp120, His121, His263, and a solvent molecule, i.e. in the canonical Zn2 site of dinuclear MβLs. Contrasting all other related MβLs, GOB-18 is fully active against a broad range of β-lactam substrates using a single Zn(II) ion in this site. These data further enlarge the structural diversity of MβLs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Evidence for a Dinuclear Active Site in the Metallo-β-lactamase BcII with Substoichiometric Co(II) A NEW MODEL FOR METAL UPTAKE

Leticia l. Llarrull; Mariana F. Tioni; Jason M. Kowalski; Brian Bennett; Alejandro J. Vila

Metallo-β-lactamases are zinc-dependent enzymes that constitute one of the main resistance mechanisms to β-lactam antibiotics. Metallo-β-lactamases have been characterized both in mono- and dimetallic forms. Despite many studies, the role of each metal binding site in substrate binding and catalysis is still unclear. This is mostly due to the difficulties in assessing the metal content and site occupancy in solution. For this reason, Co(II) has been utilized as a useful probe of the active site structure. We have employed UV-visible, EPR, and NMR spectroscopy to study Co(II) binding to the metallo-β-lactamase BcII from Bacillus cereus. The spectroscopic features were attributed to the two canonical metal binding sites, the 3H (His116, His118, and His196) and DCH (Asp120, Cys221, and His263) sites. These data clearly reveal the coexistence of mononuclear and dinuclear Co(II)-loaded forms at Co(II)/enzyme ratios as low as 0.6. This picture is consistent with the macroscopic dissociation constants here determined from competition binding experiments. A spectral feature previously assigned to the DCH site in the dinuclear species corresponds to a third, weakly bound Co(II) site. The present work emphasizes the importance of using different spectroscopic techniques to follow the metal content and localization during metallo-β-lactamase turnover.

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Matteo Dal Peraro

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Paolo Carloni

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Daniel H. Murgida

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Robert A. Bonomo

Case Western Reserve University

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Alejandro M. Viale

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Lisandro J González

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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