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Dive into the research topics where Andrey A. Lebedev is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrey A. Lebedev.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2011

REFMAC5 for the refinement of macromolecular crystal structures

Garib N. Murshudov; Pavol Skubák; Andrey A. Lebedev; Navraj S. Pannu; Roberto A. Steiner; Robert A. Nicholls; Winn; Fei Long; A.A. Vagin

The general principles behind the macromolecular crystal structure refinement program REFMAC5 are described.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 1999

Efficient anisotropic refinement of macromolecular structures using FFT

Garib N. Murshudov; Andrey A. Lebedev; Keith S. Wilson; Eleanor J. Dodson

This paper gives the equations for the use of fast Fourier transformations in individual atomic anisotropic refinement. Restraints on bonded atoms, on the sphericity of each atom and between non-crystallographic symmetry related atoms are described. These have been implemented in the program REFMAC and its performance with several examples is analysed. All the tests show that anisotropic refinement not only reduces the R value and Rfree but also improves the fit to geometric targets, indicating that this parameterization is valuable for improving models derived from experimental data. The computer time taken is comparable to that for isotropic refinements.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

REFMAC5 dictionary: organization of prior chemical knowledge and guidelines for its use

Roberto A. Steiner; Andrey A. Lebedev; Liz Potterton; Stuart McNicholas; Fei Long; Garib N. Murshudov

One of the most important aspects of macromolecular structure refinement is the use of prior chemical knowledge. Bond lengths, bond angles and other chemical properties are used in restrained refinement as subsidiary conditions. This contribution describes the organization and some aspects of the use of the flexible and human/machine-readable dictionary of prior chemical knowledge used by the maximum-likelihood macromolecular-refinement program REFMAC5. The dictionary stores information about monomers which represent the constitutive building blocks of biological macromolecules (amino acids, nucleic acids and saccharides) and about numerous organic/inorganic compounds commonly found in macromolecular crystallography. It also describes the modifications the building blocks undergo as a result of chemical reactions and the links required for polymer formation. More than 2000 monomer entries, 100 modification entries and 200 link entries are currently available. Algorithms and tools for updating and adding new entries to the dictionary have also been developed and are presented here. In many cases, the REFMAC5 dictionary allows entirely automatic generation of restraints within REFMAC5 refinement runs.


Structure | 2000

Crystal structure of decameric 2-Cys peroxiredoxin from human erythrocytes at 1.7Å resolution

Ewald Schröder; Jennifer A Littlechil; Andrey A. Lebedev; Neil Errington; Michail N. Isupov

BACKGROUND The peroxiredoxins (Prxs) are an emerging family of multifunctional enzymes that exhibit peroxidase activity in vitro, and in vivo participate in a range of cellular processes known to be sensitive to reactive oxygen species. Thioredoxin peroxidase B (TPx-B), a 2-Cys type II Prx from erythrocytes, promotes potassium efflux and down-regulates apoptosis and the recruitment of monocytes by endothelial tissue. RESULTS The crystal structure of human decameric TPx-B purified from erythrocytes has been determined to 1.7 [corrected)] A resolution. The structure is a toroid comprising five dimers linked end-on through predominantly hydrophobic interactions, and is proposed to represent an intermediate in the in vivo reaction cycle. In the crystal structure, Cys51, the site of peroxide reduction, is oxidised to cysteine sulphinic acid. The residue Cys172, lies approximately 10 A away from Cys51 [corrected]. CONCLUSIONS The oxidation of Cys51 appears to have trapped the structure into a stable decamer, as confirmed by sedimentation analysis. A comparison with two previously reported dimeric Prx structures reveals that the catalytic cycle of 2-Cys Prx requires significant conformational changes that include the unwinding of the active-site helix and the movement of four loops. It is proposed that the stable decamer forms in vivo under conditions of oxidative stress. Similar decameric structures of TPx-B have been observed by electron microscopy, which show the protein associated with the erythrocyte membrane.


Archive | 2000

Research ArticleCrystal structure of decameric 2-Cys peroxiredoxin from human erythrocytes at 1.7Å resolution

Ewald Schröder; Jennifer A Littlechil; Andrey A. Lebedev; Neil Errington; Michail N. Isupov

BACKGROUND The peroxiredoxins (Prxs) are an emerging family of multifunctional enzymes that exhibit peroxidase activity in vitro, and in vivo participate in a range of cellular processes known to be sensitive to reactive oxygen species. Thioredoxin peroxidase B (TPx-B), a 2-Cys type II Prx from erythrocytes, promotes potassium efflux and down-regulates apoptosis and the recruitment of monocytes by endothelial tissue. RESULTS The crystal structure of human decameric TPx-B purified from erythrocytes has been determined to 1.7 [corrected)] A resolution. The structure is a toroid comprising five dimers linked end-on through predominantly hydrophobic interactions, and is proposed to represent an intermediate in the in vivo reaction cycle. In the crystal structure, Cys51, the site of peroxide reduction, is oxidised to cysteine sulphinic acid. The residue Cys172, lies approximately 10 A away from Cys51 [corrected]. CONCLUSIONS The oxidation of Cys51 appears to have trapped the structure into a stable decamer, as confirmed by sedimentation analysis. A comparison with two previously reported dimeric Prx structures reveals that the catalytic cycle of 2-Cys Prx requires significant conformational changes that include the unwinding of the active-site helix and the movement of four loops. It is proposed that the stable decamer forms in vivo under conditions of oxidative stress. Similar decameric structures of TPx-B have been observed by electron microscopy, which show the protein associated with the erythrocyte membrane.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012

JLigand: a graphical tool for the CCP4 template-restraint library

Andrey A. Lebedev; Paul Young; Michail N. Isupov; Olga V. Moroz; A.A. Vagin; Garib N. Murshudov

The CCP4 template-restraint library defines restraints for biopolymers, their modifications and ligands that are used in macromolecular structure refinement. JLigand is a graphical editor for generating descriptions of new ligands and covalent linkages.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Structural Framework for DNA Translocation Via the Viral Portal Protein

Andrey A. Lebedev; Margret Krause; Anabela L Isidro; Elena V. Orlova; Joanne Turner; Eleanor J. Dodson; Paulo Tavares; Alfred A. Antson

Tailed bacteriophages and herpesviruses load their capsids with DNA through a tunnel formed by the portal protein assembly. Here we describe the X‐ray structure of the bacteriophage SPP1 portal protein in its isolated 13‐subunit form and the pseudoatomic structure of a 12‐subunit assembly. The first defines the DNA‐interacting segments (tunnel loops) that pack tightly against each other forming the most constricted part of the tunnel; the second shows that the functional dodecameric state must induce variability in the loop positions. Structural observations together with geometrical constraints dictate that in the portal–DNA complex, the loops form an undulating belt that fits and tightly embraces the helical DNA, suggesting that DNA translocation is accompanied by a ‘mexican wave’ of positional and conformational changes propagating sequentially along this belt.


Nature | 2011

Crystal structure of the FimD usher bound to its cognate FimC―FimH substrate

Gilles Phan; Han Remaut; Tao Wang; William J. Allen; Katharina F. Pirker; Andrey A. Lebedev; Nadine S. Henderson; Sebastian Geibel; Ender Volkan; Jun Yan; Micha B. A. Kunze; Jerome S. Pinkner; Bradley Ford; Christopher W. M. Kay; Huilin Li; Scott J. Hultgren; David G. Thanassi; Gabriel Waksman

Type 1 pili are the archetypal representative of a widespread class of adhesive multisubunit fibres in Gram-negative bacteria. During pilus assembly, subunits dock as chaperone-bound complexes to an usher, which catalyses their polymerization and mediates pilus translocation across the outer membrane. Here we report the crystal structure of the full-length FimD usher bound to the FimC–FimH chaperone–adhesin complex and that of the unbound form of the FimD translocation domain. The FimD–FimC–FimH structure shows FimH inserted inside the FimD 24-stranded β-barrel translocation channel. FimC–FimH is held in place through interactions with the two carboxy-terminal periplasmic domains of FimD, a binding mode confirmed in solution by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. To accommodate FimH, the usher plug domain is displaced from the barrel lumen to the periplasm, concomitant with a marked conformational change in the β-barrel. The amino-terminal domain of FimD is observed in an ideal position to catalyse incorporation of a newly recruited chaperone–subunit complex. The FimD–FimC–FimH structure provides unique insights into the pilus subunit incorporation cycle, and captures the first view of a protein transporter in the act of secreting its cognate substrate.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2008

Model preparation in MOLREP and examples of model improvement using X-ray data

Andrey A. Lebedev; Garib N. Murshudov

The default model-preparation scheme of MOLREP is described. Two examples are presented of model improvement using X-ray data.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2008

Surprises and pitfalls arising from (pseudo)symmetry

Peter H. Zwart; Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve; Andrey A. Lebedev; Garib N. Murshudov; Paul D. Adams

The presence of pseudosymmetry can cause problems in structure determination and refinement. The relevant background and representative examples are presented.

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Ronan Keegan

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Charles Ballard

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Garib N. Murshudov

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Ville Uski

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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David G. Waterman

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Marcin Wojdyr

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Eugene Krissinel

European Bioinformatics Institute

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