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Dive into the research topics where Andrei V. Alexeevski is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrei V. Alexeevski.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

NPIDB: nucleic acid—protein interaction database

Dmitry D. Kirsanov; Olga Zanegina; Evgeniy Aksianov; Sergei Spirin; Anna S. Karyagina; Andrei V. Alexeevski

The Nucleic acid—Protein Interaction DataBase (http://npidb.belozersky.msu.ru/) contains information derived from structures of DNA–protein and RNA–protein complexes extracted from the Protein Data Bank (3846 complexes in October 2012). It provides a web interface and a set of tools for extracting biologically meaningful characteristics of nucleoprotein complexes. The content of the database is updated weekly. The current version of the Nucleic acid—Protein Interaction DataBase is an upgrade of the version published in 2007. The improvements include a new web interface, new tools for calculation of intermolecular interactions, a classification of SCOP families that contains DNA–binding protein domains and data on conserved water molecules on the DNA–protein interface.


Biochemistry | 2006

Hydrogen peroxide produced inside mitochondria takes part in cell-to-cell transmission of apoptotic signal

O. Yu. Pletjushkina; Fetisova Ek; Konstantin G. Lyamzaev; O. Yu. Ivanova; Domnina Lv; M. Yu. Vyssokikh; Antonina V. Pustovidko; Andrei V. Alexeevski; D. A. Alexeevski; Jury M. Vasiliev; Michael P. Murphy; Boris V. Chernyak; Vladimir P. Skulachev

In monolayer of HeLa cells treated with tumor necrosis factor (TNF), apoptotic cells formed clusters indicating possible transmission of apoptotic signal via the culture media. To investigate this phenomenon, a simple method of enabling two cell cultures to interact has been employed. Two coverslips were placed side by side in a Petri dish, one coverslip covered with apoptogen-treated cells (the inducer) and another with non-treated cells (the recipient). TNF, staurosporine, or H2O2 treatment of the inducer cells is shown to initiate apoptosis on the recipient coverslip. This effect is increased by a catalase inhibitor aminotriazole and is arrested by addition of catalase or by pre-treatment of either the inducer or the recipient cells with nanomolar concentrations of mitochondria-targeted cationic antioxidant MitoQ (10-(6′-ubiquinolyl)decyltriphenylphosphonium), which specifically arrests H2O2-induced apoptosis. The action of MitoQ is abolished by an uncoupler preventing accumulation of MitoQ in mitochondria. It is concluded that reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by mitochondria in the apoptotic cells initiate the release of H2O2 from these cells. The H2O2 released is employed as a long-distance cell suicide messenger. In processing of such a signal by the recipient cells, mitochondrial ROS production is also involved. It is suggested that the described phenomenon may be involved in expansion of the apoptotic region around a damaged part of the tissue during heart attack or stroke as well as in “organoptosis”, i.e. disappearance of organs during ontogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Site Specific S-acylation of Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin: the Location of the Acylation Site Relative to the Membrane Border is the Decisive Factor for Attachment of Stearate

Katharina Brett; Larisa V. Kordyukova; Marina V. Serebryakova; Ramil R. Mintaev; Andrei V. Alexeevski; Michael Veit

Background: S-Acylation of hemagglutinin with stearate and palmitate is essential for influenza virus replication. Results: Mass spectrometry showed that shifting a cysteine from the transmembrane region to a cytoplasmic position eliminates attachment of stearate. Conclusion: The location of the acylation site is the decisive factor for site-specific acylation. Significance: Similar differential acylation might occur in cellular transmembrane proteins. S-Acylation of hemagglutinin (HA), the main glycoprotein of influenza viruses, is an essential modification required for virus replication. Using mass spectrometry, we have previously demonstrated specific attachment of acyl chains to individual acylation sites. Whereas the two cysteines in the cytoplasmic tail of HA contain only palmitate, stearate is exclusively attached to a cysteine positioned at the end of the transmembrane region (TMR). Here we analyzed recombinant viruses containing HA with exchange of conserved amino acids adjacent to acylation sites or with a TMR cysteine shifted to a cytoplasmic location to identify the molecular signal that determines preferential attachment of stearate. We first developed a new protocol for sample preparation that requires less material and might thus also be suitable to analyze cellular proteins. We observed cell type-specific differences in the fatty acid pattern of HA: more stearate was attached if human viruses were grown in mammalian compared with avian cells. No underacylated peptides were detected in the mass spectra, and even mutations that prevented generation of infectious virus particles did not abolish acylation of expressed HA as demonstrated by metabolic labeling experiments with [3H]palmitate. Exchange of conserved amino acids in the vicinity of an acylation site had a moderate effect on the stearate content. In contrast, shifting the TMR cysteine to a cytoplasmic location virtually eliminated attachment of stearate. Thus, the location of an acylation site relative to the transmembrane span is the main signal for stearate attachment, but the sequence context and the cell type modulate the fatty acid pattern.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Solitary restriction endonucleases in prokaryotic genomes

Anna S. Ershova; A. S. Karyagina; Mikhail Vasiliev; Alexander M. Lyashchuk; V. G. Lunin; Sergei A. Spirin; Andrei V. Alexeevski

Prokaryotic restriction-modification (R-M) systems defend the host cell from the invasion of a foreign DNA. They comprise two enzymatic activities: specific DNA cleavage activity and DNA methylation activity preventing cleavage. Typically, these activities are provided by two separate enzymes: a DNA methyltransferase (MTase) and a restriction endonuclease (RE). In the absence of a corresponding MTase, an RE of Type II R-M system is highly toxic for the cell. Genes of the R-M system are linked in the genome in the vast majority of annotated cases. There are only a few reported cases in which the genes of MTase and RE from one R-M system are not linked. Nevertheless, a few hundreds solitary RE genes are present in the Restriction Enzyme Database (http://rebase.neb.com) annotations. Using the comparative genomic approach, we analysed 272 solitary RE genes. For 57 solitary RE genes we predicted corresponding MTase genes located distantly in a genome. Of the 272 solitary RE genes, 99 are likely to be fragments of RE genes. Various explanations for the existence of the remaining 116 solitary RE genes are also discussed.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2011

New words in human mutagenesis

Alexander Y. Panchin; Sergey I. Mitrofanov; Andrei V. Alexeevski; Sergei A. Spirin; Yuri V. Panchin

BackgroundThe substitution rates within different nucleotide contexts are subject to varying levels of bias. The most well known example of such bias is the excess of C to T (C > T) mutations in CpG (CG) dinucleotides. The molecular mechanisms underlying this bias are important factors in human genome evolution and cancer development. The discovery of other nucleotide contexts that have profound effects on substitution rates can improve our understanding of how mutations are acquired, and why mutation hotspots exist.ResultsWe compared rates of inherited mutations in 1-4 bp nucleotide contexts using reconstructed ancestral states of human single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from intergenic regions. Chimp and orangutan genomic sequences were used as outgroups. We uncovered 3.5 and 3.3-fold excesses of T > C mutations in the second position of ATTG and ATAG words, respectively, and a 3.4-fold excess of A > C mutations in the first position of the ACAA word.ConclusionsAlthough all the observed biases are less pronounced than the 5.1-fold excess of C > T mutations in CG dinucleotides, the three 4 bp mutation contexts mentioned above (and their complementary contexts) are well distinguished from all other mutation contexts. This provides a challenge to discover the underlying mechanisms responsible for the observed excesses of mutations.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2007

Changes in chromosome positioning may contribute to the development of diseases related to X-chromosome aneuploidy

N. V. Petrova; Irina I. Yakutenko; Andrei V. Alexeevski; Valentin A. Verbovoy; Sergey V. Razin; Olga V. Iarovaia

The radial positions of the centromeric regions of chromosomes 1 and X were determined in normal male fibroblasts (XY) and in fibroblasts from a patient with a rare case of XXXXY polysomy. The centromeric regions and presumably the whole territories of active X chromosomes were demonstrated to occupy similar, although not identical, positions in XY and XXXXY cells. The centromeres of inactive X chromosomes (Barr bodies) were located closer to the nuclear periphery as compared with the centromeres of active X chromosomes. In addition, it was established that the nuclear radial position of gene‐rich chromosome 1 was changed in XXXXY cells as compared to normal XY cells. The data are discussed in the context of the hypothesis postulating that changes in nuclear positioning of chromosomal territories induced by the presence of extra copies of individual chromosomes may contribute to the development of diseases related to different polysomies. J. Cell. Physiol. 213: 278–283, 2007.


Biochemistry | 2015

Role of restriction-modification systems in prokaryotic evolution and ecology

Anna S. Ershova; Ivan Rusinov; Sergei A. Spirin; A. S. Karyagina; Andrei V. Alexeevski

Restriction–modification (R-M) systems are able to methylate or cleave DNA depending on methylation status of their recognition site. It allows them to protect bacterial cells from invasion by foreign DNA. Comparative analysis of a large number of available bacterial genomes and methylomes clearly demonstrates that the role of R-M systems in bacteria is wider than only defense. R-M systems maintain heterogeneity of a bacterial population and are involved in adaptation of bacteria to change in their environmental conditions. R-M systems can be essential for host colonization by pathogenic bacteria. Phase variation and intragenomic recombinations are sources of the fast evolution of the specificity of R-M systems. This review focuses on the influence of R-M systems on evolution and ecology of prokaryotes.


Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology | 2010

IDENTIFICATION OF CONSERVED FEATURES OF LAGLIDADG HOMING ENDONUCLEASES

Alexander Grishin; Ines Fonfara; Andrei V. Alexeevski; Sergei A. Spirin; Olga Zanegina; A. S. Karyagina; Daniil Alexeyevsky; Wolfgang Wende

LAGLIDADG family of homing endonucleases are rare-cutting enzymes which recognize long target sequences and are of great interest in genome engineering. Despite advances in homing endonuclease engineering, effective methods of broadening the range of cleaved sequences are still lacking. Here, we present a study of conserved structural features of LAGLIDADG homing endonucleases that might aid further development of such methods. The protein-DNA interface of LAGLIDADG homing endonucleases differs considerably with the particular nuclease, and the analysis of conserved protein-DNA interactions could not identify any residues crucial for DNA binding and common to most nucleases of the family. For the homing endonuclease PI-SceI, a comparison of structural and experimental data derived from literature helped to identify 23 residues that are likely to be important for DNA binding. Analysis of the LAGLIDADG domain dimerization interface allowed the choosing of six positions that contribute to dimerization specificity most, while comparison of 446 sequences of LAGLIDADG endonucleases revealed groups of residues in these positions that appear to be most favorable for dimerization.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Broken MLL Gene Is Frequently Located Outside the Inherent Chromosome Territory in Human Lymphoid Cells Treated with DNA Topoisomerase II Poison Etoposide

Sergey I. Glukhov; Mikhail A. Rubtsov; Daniil Alexeyevsky; Andrei V. Alexeevski; Sergey V. Razin; Olga V. Iarovaia

The mixed lineage leukaemia (MLL) gene is frequently rearranged in secondary leukaemias, in which it could fuse to a variety of different partners. Breakage in the MLL gene preferentially occurs within a ~8 kb region that possesses a strong DNA topoisomerase II cleavage site. It has been proposed that DNA topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage within this and other regions triggers translocations that occur due to incorrect joining of broken DNA ends. To further clarify a possible mechanism for MLL rearrangements, we analysed the frequency of MLL cleavage in cells exposed to etoposide, a DNA topoisomerase II poison commonly used as an anticancer drug, and positioning of the broken 3’-end of the MLL gene in respect to inherent chromosomal territories. It was demonstrated that exposure of human Jurkat cells to etoposide resulted in frequent cleavage of MLL genes. Using MLL-specific break-apart probes we visualised cleaved MLL genes in ~17% of nuclei. Using confocal microscopy and 3D modelling, we demonstrated that in cells treated with etoposide and cultivated for 1 h under normal conditions, ~9% of the broken MLL alleles were present outside the chromosome 11 territory, whereas in both control cells and cells inspected immediately after etoposide treatment, virtually all MLL alleles were present within the chromosomal territory. The data are discussed in the framework of the “breakage first” model of juxtaposing translocation partners. We propose that in the course of repairing DNA topoisomerase II-mediated DNA lesions (removal of stalled DNA topoisomerase II complexes and non-homologous end joining), DNA ends acquire additional mobility, which allows the meeting and incorrect joining of translocation partners.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

An updated version of NPIDB includes new classifications of DNA–protein complexes and their families

Olga Zanegina; Dmitry D. Kirsanov; Eugene Baulin; A. S. Karyagina; Andrei V. Alexeevski; Sergei A. Spirin

The recent upgrade of nucleic acid–protein interaction database (NPIDB, http://npidb.belozersky.msu.ru/) includes a newly elaborated classification of complexes of protein domains with double-stranded DNA and a classification of families of related complexes. Our classifications are based on contacting structural elements of both DNA: the major groove, the minor groove and the backbone; and protein: helices, beta-strands and unstructured segments. We took into account both hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interaction. The analyzed material contains 1942 structures of protein domains from 748 PDB entries. We have identified 97 interaction modes of individual protein domain–DNA complexes and 17 DNA–protein interaction classes of protein domain families. We analyzed the sources of diversity of DNA–protein interaction modes in different complexes of one protein domain family. The observed interaction mode is sometimes influenced by artifacts of crystallization or diversity in secondary structure assignment. The interaction classes of domain families are more stable and thus possess more biological sense than a classification of single complexes. Integration of the classification into NPIDB allows the user to browse the database according to the interacting structural elements of DNA and protein molecules. For each family, we present average DNA shape parameters in contact zones with domains of the family.

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Evgeniy Aksianov

Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

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Ivan Rusinov

Moscow State University

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Olga Zanegina

Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

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Boris Nagaev

Moscow State University

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Michael Veit

Free University of Berlin

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