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Dive into the research topics where Aleksei Kuznetsov is active.

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Featured researches published by Aleksei Kuznetsov.


Bioorganic Chemistry | 2009

Mechanism and stoichiometry of 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging by glutathione and its novel α-glutamyl derivative

Säde Viirlaid; Riina Mahlapuu; Kalle Kilk; Aleksei Kuznetsov; Ursel Soomets; Jaak Järv

Kinetic mechanism and stoichiometry of scavenging the 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical by glutathione and its novel analog, containing alpha-glutamyl residue in place of the gamma-glutamyl moiety, were studied using different ratios of reagents. At low concentrations of the peptides, the process was described as a bimolecular reaction obeying the stoichiometric ratio 1:1. However, at excess of peptides the formation of a non-covalent complex between the reagents was discovered and characterized by dissociation constants K = 0.61 mM for glutathione and K = 0.27 mM for the glutathione alpha-glutamyl analog, respectively. The complex formation was followed by a reaction step that was characterized by the similar rate constant k = 0.02 s(-1) for both peptides. Thus, the apparently different antioxidant activity of these two peptides, observed under common assay conditions, was determined by differences in the formation of this non-covalent complex.


Ultrasonics Sonochemistry | 2013

Kinetic sonication effects in aqueous acetonitrile solutions. Reaction rate levelling by ultrasound

Sander Piiskop; Siim Salmar; Ants Tuulmets; Aleksei Kuznetsov; Jaak Järv

The kinetics of the pH-independent hydrolysis of 4-methoxyphenyl dichloroacetate were investigated with and without ultrasonic irradiation in acetonitrile-water binary mixtures containing 0.008 to 35 wt.% of acetonitrile and the kinetic sonication effects (kson/knon) were calculated. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the structure of the solutions were performed with ethyl acetate as the model ester. The ester is preferentially solvated by acetonitrile. The excess of acetonitrile over water in the solvation shell grows fast with an increase in the co-solvent content in the bulk solution. In parallel, the formation of a second solvation shell rich in acetonitrile takes place. Significant kinetic sonication effects for the hydrolysis were explained with facile destruction of the diffuse second solvation shell followed by a rearrangement of the remaining solvent layer under sonication. The rate levelling effect of ultrasound was discussed. In an aqueous-organic binary solvent, independent of the solvent composition, the ultrasonic irradiation evokes changes in the reaction medium which result in an almost identical solvation state of the reagent thus leading to the reaction rate levelling.


Ultrasonics Sonochemistry | 2013

Kinetic sonication effects in light of molecular dynamics simulation of the reaction medium

Siim Salmar; Aleksei Kuznetsov; Ants Tuulmets; Jaak Järv; Sander Piiskop

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of the structure of ethyl acetate solutions in two water-ethanol mixtures was performed at 280 and 330K. The MD simulations revealed that ethyl acetate was preferentially solvated by ethanol, water being mainly located in the next solvation layer. With increasing temperature ethanol was gradually replaced by water in the first solvation shell. These findings explain the decrease in the rate of ester hydrolysis with increasing molar ratio of ethanol in the solution as the reaction rate was linearly dependent on the relative ethanol content in the first solvation shell of the ester. Predominance of ethanol results in decreased polarity and water activity in the shell and accordingly in a decreased reaction rate. Based on the results of the MD simulations, the principal conclusion of this work is that ultrasound enhances the kinetic energy (the effective temperature) of species in the solution and, in this way, evokes shifts in the solvation equilibria thus affecting the reaction rate. It appears that ultrasound does not completely break down the solvent shells or clusters in the solution as previously believed. Phenomena of thermo-solvatochromism and reaction rate levelling by ultrasound in binary solvents are described.


Bioorganic Chemistry | 2011

Effect of two simultaneous aza-β3-amino acid substitutions on recognition of peptide substrates by cAMP dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit

Ksenija Kisseljova; Aleksei Kuznetsov; Michèle Baudy-Floc’h; Jaak Järv

Peptidomimetic analogs of the hexapeptide RRASVA, containing simultaneously two aza-β(3)-amino acid residues in different positions of this sequence, except for the phosphorylatable serine residue, were synthesized and tested as substrates for the cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit. All these peptidomimetics were phosphorylated by the enzyme and this reaction was characterized by the K(m) and k(cat) values as well as by the second-order rate constants k(II). Affinity and reactivity of all peptidomimetics was lower than that for the parent peptide RRASVA. The effect of backbone modification was dependent upon the positions where these two aza-β(3) residues were located, although the sequence of amino acid side groups remained the same in all compounds. It was found that the influence of two backbone modifications in the substrate structure was not described additively, i.e. the effect of each structural alteration was dependent upon the position of the second modification. The results were in agreement with the concept of specificity-determining clusters in the sequence of peptide and peptidomimetic ligands, which predominantly determine the molecular recognition of these ligands by their target sites and therefore serve as major modification points for the design of activity of peptidomimetic ligands.


Central European Journal of Biology | 2009

Ligand structure controlled allostery in cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit

Aleksei Kuznetsov; Jaak Järv

Protein kinase A (cAMP dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit, EC 2.7.11.11) binds simultaneously ATP and a phosphorylatable peptide. These structurally dissimilar allosteric ligands influence the binding effectiveness of each other. The same situation is observed with substrate congeners, which reversibly inhibit the enzyme. In this review these allosteric effects are quantified using the interaction factor, which compares binding effectiveness of ligands with the free enzyme and the pre-loaded enzyme complex containing another ligand. This analysis revealed that the allosteric effect depends upon structure of the interacting ligands, and the principle “better binding: stronger allostery” observed can be formalized in terms of linear free-energy relationships, which point to similar mechanism of the allosteric interaction between the enzyme-bound substrates and/or inhibitor molecules. On the other hand, the type of effect is governed by ligand binding effectiveness and can be inverted from positive allostery to negative allostery if we move from effectively binding ligands to badly binding compounds. Thus the outcome of the allostery in this monomeric enzyme is the same as defined by classical theories for multimeric enzymes: making the enzyme response more efficient if appropriate ligands bind.


Computational Biology and Chemistry | 2016

Computational modeling of acrylodan-labeled cAMP dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit unfolding

Aleksei Kuznetsov; Rait Kivi; Jaak Järv

Structure of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit, where the asparagine residue 326 was replaced with acrylodan-cystein conjugate to implement this fluorescence reporter group into the enzyme, was modeled by molecular dynamics (MD) method and the positioning of the dye molecule in protein structure was characterized at temperatures 300K, 500K and 700K. It was found that the acrylodan moiety, which fluorescence is very sensitive to solvating properties of its microenvironment, was located on the surface of the native protein at 300K that enabled its partial solvation with water. At high temperatures the protein structure significantly changed, as the secondary and tertiary structure elements were unfolded and these changes were sensitively reflected in positioning of the dye molecule. At 700K complete unfolding of the protein occurred and the reporter group was entirely expelled into water. However, at 500K an intermediate of the protein unfolding process was formed, where the fluorescence reporter group was directed towards the protein interior and buried in the core of the formed molten globule state. This different positioning of the reporter group was in agreement with the two different shifts of emission spectrum of the covalently bound acrylodan, observed in the unfolding process of the protein.


Computational Biology and Chemistry | 2014

Research Article: Computational simulation of ligand docking to L-type pyruvate kinase subunit

Aleksei Kuznetsov; Ilona Faustova; Jaak Järv

Computational blind docking approach was used for mapping of possible binding sites in L-type pyruvate kinase subunit for peptides, RRASVA and the phosphorylated derivative RRAS(Pi)VA, which model the phosphorylatable N-terminal regulatory domain of the enzyme. In parallel, the same docking analysis was done for both substrates of this enzyme, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and adenosine diphosphate (ADP), and for docking of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP), which is the allosteric activator of the enzyme. The binding properties of the entire surface of the protein were scanned and several possible binding sites were identified in domains A and C of the protein, while domain B revealed no docking sites for peptides or for substrates or the allosteric regulator. It was found that the docking sites of different ligands were partially overlapping, pointing to the possibility that some regulatory effects, observed in the case of L-type pyruvate kinase, may be caused by the competition of different ligands for the same binding sites.


Organic and medicinal chemistry letters | 2011

Nβ-methylation changes the recognition pattern of aza-β3-amino acid containing peptidomimetic substrates by protein kinase A.

Ksenija Kisseljova; Michèle Baudy-Floc'h; Aleksei Kuznetsov; Jaak Järv

The protein kinase A (PKA)-catalyzed phosphorylation of peptide substrate RRASVA analogs, containing Nβ-Me-aza-β3-amino acid residues in all subsequent positions, was studied. This work follows along the lines of our previous research of the phosphorylation of aza-β3-analogs of RRASVA (the shortest active substrate of PKA) and allows characterizing the influence of Nβ-methylation of aza-β3-amino acid residues on substrate recognition by PKA on substrate binding and phosphorylation steps. It was found that the effect of Nβ-methylation was dependent upon the position of the structure alteration. Moreover, the presence of a single Nβ-methylation site in the substrate changed the recognition pattern of this series of peptidomimetics, strongly affecting the phosphorylation step. Structure modeling of aza-β3- and Nβ-Me-aza-β3-containing substrates revealed that Nβ-methylation of aza-β3-moieties changed the peptide bond geometry from trans- to cis-configuration in -CO-NMe- fragments, with an exception for the N-terminally methylated Nβ-Me-aza-β3-RRRASVA (with the N-terminal amino group not participating in the peptide bond) and RRAS-Nβ-Me-aza-β3-VA. As has been shown in literature, this conformational preference of the backbone has a significant influence on the flexibility of the peptide substrate chain. Following our results, this property seems to have significant influence on the recognition of the amino acid side groups by the enzyme binding site, and in the case of PKA this structural modification was decisive for the phosphate transfer step of the catalytic process.


Central European Journal of Biology | 2010

Phosphorylation is switch of L-type pyruvate kinase allostery

Ilona Faustova; Aleksei Kuznetsov; Erkki Juronen; Mart Loog; Jaak Järv

AbstractAmong four pyruvate kinase isoenzymes, M1, M2, R and L, only M1 is considered as a nonallosteric enzyme. However, here we show that the non-phosphorylated L-type pyruvate kinase (L-PK) is also a non-allosteric enzyme with respect to its substrate phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). The allosteric catalytic properties of L-PK are switched on through phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The non-phosphorylated enzyme was produced by expressing the rat L-PK in E. coli, as the bacterium does not have mammalian-type protein kinases. The resulting tetrameric protein was phosphorylated with a stoichiometric ratio of one mole of phosphate per one L-PK monomer. Activity of the phosphorylated enzyme was allosterically regulated by PEP with the Hill coefficient n=2.5. It was observed that allostery was engaged by phosphorylation of the first subunit in the tetrameric enzyme, while further phosphorylation only modulated this effect. The discovered switching between non-allosteric and allosteric forms of L-PK and the possibility of modulating the allostery by phosphorylation are important for understanding of the interrelationship between allostery and the regulatory phosphorylation in general, and may have implication for further analysis of glycolysis regulation in the liver.


Bioorganic Chemistry | 2004

Kinetic analysis of inhibition of cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit by the peptide-nucleoside conjugate AdcAhxArg6

Aleksei Kuznetsov; Asko Uri; Gerda Raidaru; Jaak Järv

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