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Dive into the research topics where Berevan Baban is active.

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Featured researches published by Berevan Baban.


Biochemistry | 2014

The binding of apolipoprotein E to oligomers and fibrils of amyloid-β alters the kinetics of amyloid aggregation.

Kanchan Garai; Philip B. Verghese; Berevan Baban; David M. Holtzman; Carl Frieden

Deposition of amyloid-β (Aβ) in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is strongly correlated with the APOE genotype. However, the role of apolipoprotein E (apoE) in Aβ aggregation has remained unclear. Here we have used different apoE preparations, such as recombinant protein or protein isolated from cultured astrocytes, to examine the effect of apoE on the aggregation of both Aβ1–40 and Aβ1–42. The kinetics of aggregation, measured by the loss of fluorescence of tetramethylrhodamine-labeled Aβ, is shown to be dramatically slowed by the presence of substoichiometric concentrations of apoE. Using these concentrations, we conclude that apoE binds primarily to and affects the growth of oligomers that lead to the nuclei required for fibril growth. At higher apoE concentrations, the protein also binds to Aβ fibrils, resulting in fibril stabilization and a slower rate of fibril growth. The aggregation of Aβ1–40 is dependent on the apoE isoform, being the most dramatic for apoE4 and less so for apoE3 and apoE2. Our results indicate that the detrimental role of apoE4 in AD could be related to apoE-induced stabilization of the soluble but cytotoxic oligomeric forms and intermediates of Aβ, as well as fibril stabilization.


Biochemistry | 2011

Dissociation of apolipoprotein E oligomers to monomer is required for high-affinity binding to phospholipid vesicles.

Kanchan Garai; Berevan Baban; Carl Frieden

The apolipoprotein apoE plays a key role in cholesterol and lipid metabolism. There are three isoforms of this protein, one of which, apoE4, is the major risk factor for Alzheimers disease. At micromolar concentrations all lipid-free apoE isoforms exist primarily as monomers, dimers, and tetramers. However, the molecular weight form of apoE that binds to lipid has not been clearly defined. We have examined the role of self-association of apoE with respect to interactions with phospholipids. Measurements of the time dependence of turbidity clearance of small unilamellar vesicles of dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) upon addition of apoE show that higher molecular weight oligomers bind poorly if at all. The kinetic data can be described by a reaction model in which tetramers and dimers of apoE must first dissociate to monomers which then bind to the liposome surface in a fast and reversible manner. A slow but not readily reversible conformational conversion of the monomer then occurs. Prior knowledge of the rate constants for the association-dissociation process allows us to determine the rate constant of the conformational conversion. This rate constant is isoform dependent and appears to correlate with the stability of the apoE isoforms with the rate of dissociation of the apoE oligomers to monomers being the rate-limiting process for lipidation. Differences in the lipidation kinetics between the apoE isoforms arise from their differences in the self-association behavior leading to the conclusion that self-association behavior may influence biological functions of apoE in an isoform-dependent manner.


Biochemistry | 2011

Self-association and stability of the ApoE isoforms at low pH: implications for ApoE-lipid interactions.

Kanchan Garai; Berevan Baban; Carl Frieden

Apolipoprotein E (apoE) isoforms are known to differentially accumulate in the lysosomes of neuronal cells, and the deleterious effects of the apoE4 isoform in Alzheimers disease may relate to its properties at the low lysosomal pH. However, the effect of pH on the molecular properties of full-length apoE is unclear. Here we examine the pH dependence of the monomer-dimer-tetramer reaction, of lipid binding, and of the stability of the three major apoE isoforms. Using FRET measurements, we find that the association-dissociation behavior of apoE proteins changes dramatically with changes in pH. At pH 4.5, approximating the pH of the lysosome, rate constants for association and dissociation are 2-10 times faster than those at pH 7.4. Aggregation beyond the tetrameric form is also more evident at lower pH values. Stability, as measured by urea denaturation at pH 4.5, is found to be considerably greater than that at neutral pH and to be isoform dependent. Lipid binding, as measured by turbidity clearance of unilamellar vesicles of DMPC, is faster at acidic pH values and consistent with our previous hypothesis that it is only the monomeric form of apoE that binds lipid tightly. Since apoE is more stable at pH 4.5 than at neutral pH, the more rapid apoE-lipid interactions at low pH are not correlated with the stability of the apoE isoforms, but rather to the faster association-dissociation behavior. Our results indicate that pathological behavior of apoE4 may arise from altered molecular properties of this protein at the acidic pH of the lysosome.


Protein Science | 2009

Structural differences between apolipoprotein E3 and E4 as measured by 19F NMR

Kanchan Garai; Sourajit M. Mustafi; Berevan Baban; Carl Frieden

The apolipoprotein E family contains three major isoforms (ApoE4, E3, and E2) that are directly involved with lipoprotein metabolism and cholesterol transport. ApoE3 and apoE4 differ in only a single amino acid with an arginine in apoE4 changed to a cysteine at position 112 in apoE3. Yet only apoE4 is recognized as a risk factor for Alzheimers disease. Here we used 19F NMR to examine structural differences between apoE4 and apoE3 and the effect of the C‐terminal domain on the N‐terminal domain. After incorporation of 5‐19F‐tryptophan the 1D 19F NMR spectra were compared for the N‐terminal domain and for the full length proteins. The NMR spectra of the N‐terminal region (residues 1–191) are reasonably well resolved while those of the full length wild‐type proteins are broad and ill‐defined suggesting considerable conformational heterogeneity. At least four of the seven tryptophan residues in the wild type protein appear to be solvent exposed. NMR spectra of the wild‐type proteins were compared to apoE containing four mutations in the C‐terminal region that gives rise to a monomeric form either of apoE3 under native conditions (Zhang et al., Biochemistry 2007; 46: 10722–10732) or apoE4 in the presence of 1 M urea. For either wild‐type or mutant proteins the differences in tryptophan resonances in the N‐terminal region of the protein suggest structural differences between apoE3 and apoE4. We conclude that these differences occur both as a consequence of the Arg158Cys mutation and as a consequence of the interaction with the C‐terminal domain.


Biochemistry | 2016

ApoE: In Vitro Studies of a Small Molecule Effector

Tridib Mondal; Hanliu Wang; Gregory T. DeKoster; Berevan Baban; Michael L. Gross; Carl Frieden

Apolipoprotein E4 (apoE4), one of three isoforms of apoE, is the major risk factor for developing late onset Alzheimers disease. The only differences among these isoforms (apoE2, apoE3, and apoE4) are single amino acid changes. Yet these proteins are functionally very different. One approach to ameliorating the effect of apoE4 with respect to Alzheimers disease would be to find small molecular weight compounds that affect the behavior of apoE4. Few studies of this approach have been carried out in part because there was no complete structure of any full-length apoE isoform until 2011. Here, we focus on one small molecular weight compound, EZ-482, and explore the effects of its binding to apoE. Using hydrogen-deuterium exchange, we determined that EZ-482 binds to the C-terminal domains of both apoE3 and apoE4. The binding to apoE4, however, is accompanied by a unique N-terminal allosteric effect. Using fluorescence methods, we determined an apparent dissociation constant of approximately 8 μM. Although EZ-482 binds to the C-terminal domain, it blocks heparin binding to the N-terminal domain. The residues of apoE that bind heparin are the same as those involved in apoE binding to LDL and LRP-1 receptors. The methods and the data presented here may serve as a template for future studies using small molecular weight compounds to modulate the behavior of apoE.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010

Substoichiometric inhibition of Aβ1―40 aggregation by a tandem Aβ40―1-Gly8-1-40 peptide

Sourajit M. Mustafi; Kanchan Garai; Scott L. Crick; Berevan Baban; Carl Frieden

Abeta peptides aggregate to form insoluble and neurotoxic fibrils associated with Alzheimers disease. Inhibition of the aggregation has been the subject of numerous studies. Here we describe a novel, substoichiometric inhibitor of Abeta(1-40) fibrillization as a tandem dimeric construct consisting of Abeta(40-1) (reverse sequence) linked to Abeta(1-40) via an eight residue glycine linker. At molar ratios of the tandem peptide to Abeta(1-40) of 1:10 to 1:25 inhibition of fibrillization, as measured by ThioflavinT, was observed. We postulate that the tandem construct binds to a fibrillar intermediate but the reverse sequence delays or prevents further monomer association.


Biochemistry | 2004

Structures of the Escherichia coli PutA proline dehydrogenase domain in complex with competitive inhibitors

Min Zhang; Tommi A. White; Jonathan P. Schuermann; Berevan Baban; Donald F. Becker; John J. Tanner


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Identification and Characterization of the DNA-binding Domain of the Multifunctional PutA Flavoenzyme

Dan Gu; Yuzhen Zhou; Verena Kallhoff; Berevan Baban; John J. Tanner; Donald F. Becker


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2004

Probing a hydrogen bond pair and the FAD redox properties in the proline dehydrogenase domain of Escherichia coli PutA.

Berevan Baban; Madhavan P. Vinod; John J. Tanner; Donald F. Becker


Archive | 2010

Structural differences between apolipoprotein E3 and E4 as measured

Kanchan Garai; Sourajit M. Mustafi; Berevan Baban; Carl Frieden

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Carl Frieden

Washington University in St. Louis

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Kanchan Garai

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sourajit M. Mustafi

Washington University in St. Louis

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Donald F. Becker

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Scott L. Crick

Washington University in St. Louis

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Dan Gu

University of Missouri

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David M. Holtzman

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gregory T. DeKoster

Washington University in St. Louis

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Hanliu Wang

Washington University in St. Louis

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