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Dive into the research topics where Berna Sariyar Akbulut is active.

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Featured researches published by Berna Sariyar Akbulut.


Journal of Peptide Science | 2015

A novel chimeric peptide with antimicrobial activity

Begum Alaybeyoglu; Berna Sariyar Akbulut; Elif Ozkirimli

Beta‐lactamase‐mediated bacterial drug resistance exacerbates the prognosis of infectious diseases, which are sometimes treated with co‐administration of beta‐lactam type antibiotics and beta‐lactamase inhibitors. Antimicrobial peptides are promising broad‐spectrum alternatives to conventional antibiotics in this era of evolving bacterial resistance. Peptides based on the Ala46–Tyr51 beta‐hairpin loop of beta‐lactamase inhibitory protein (BLIP) have been previously shown to inhibit beta‐lactamase. Here, our goal was to modify this peptide for improved beta‐lactamase inhibition and cellular uptake. Motivated by the cell‐penetrating pVEC sequence, which includes a hydrophobic stretch at its N‐terminus, our approach involved the addition of LLIIL residues to the inhibitory peptide N‐terminus to facilitate uptake. Activity measurements of the peptide based on the 45–53 loop of BLIP for enhanced inhibition verified that the peptide was a competitive beta‐lactamase inhibitor with a Ki value of 58 μM. Incubation of beta‐lactam‐resistant cells with peptide decreased the number of viable cells, while it had no effect on beta‐lactamase‐free cells, indicating that this peptide had antimicrobial activity via beta‐lactamase inhibition. To elucidate the molecular mechanism by which this peptide moves across the membrane, steered molecular dynamics simulations were carried out. We propose that addition of hydrophobic residues to the N‐terminus of the peptide affords a promising strategy in the design of novel antimicrobial peptides not only against beta‐lactamase but also for other intracellular targets. Copyright


Canadian Journal of Microbiology | 2011

Proteomic insight into phenolic adaptation of a moderately halophilic Halomonas sp. strain AAD12

Selim Ceylan; Berna Sariyar Akbulut; Aziz Akın Denizci; Dilek Kazan

A gram-negative, moderately halophilic bacterium was isolated from Çamaltı Saltern area, located in the Aegean Region of Turkey. Analysis of its 16S rRNA gene sequence and physiological characteristics showed that this strain belonged to the genus Halomonas ; hence, it was designated as Halomonas sp. strain AAD12. The isolate tolerated up to 800 mg⋅L(-1) phenol; however, at elevated concentrations, phenol severely retarded cell growth. The increase in lag phase with increasing phenol concentrations indicated that the microorganism was undergoing serious adaptative changes. To understand the physiological responses of Halomonas sp. strain AAD12 to phenol, a 2-dimensional electrophoresis approach combined with mass spectrometric analysis was used. This approach showed that the expression of 14 protein spots were altered as phenol concentration increased from 200 to 800 mg⋅L(-1). Among the identified proteins were those involved in protein biosynthesis, energy, transport, and stress metabolism. So far, this is the first study on phenolic adaptation of a gram-negative, moderately halophilic bacteria using proteomic tools. The results provided new insights for understanding the general mechanism used by moderately halophilic bacteria to tolerate phenol and suggested the potential for using these microorganisms in bioremediation.


Archive | 2012

Protein-Peptide Interactions Revolutionize Drug Development

Elif Ozkirimli Olmez; Berna Sariyar Akbulut

Protein-protein interactions form the basis of many cellular processes. Disruption or deregulation of these complex interactions is the main cause of a significant number of human ailments. Consequently, there is intense research effort to design inhibitors that target specific protein-protein interactions. This places intricate protein-protein interactions in the heart of the development for novel drug leads. The emergence of ‘omic’ technologies, namely genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics, has greatly accelerated our understanding of the protein-protein interaction networks leading to the discovery of a number of proteins and their interaction interface as potential drug targets.


Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 2016

Insights into membrane translocation of the cell-penetrating peptide pVEC from molecular dynamics calculations

Begum Alaybeyoglu; Berna Sariyar Akbulut; Elif Ozkirimli

Discovery of cargo carrying cell-penetrating peptides has opened a new gate in the development of peptide-based drugs that can effectively target intracellular enzymes. Success in application and development of cell-penetrating peptides in drug design depends on understanding their translocation mechanisms. In this study, our aim was to examine the bacterial translocation mechanism of the cell-penetrating pVEC peptide (LLIILRRRIRKQAHAHSK) using steered molecular dynamics (SMD) simulations. The significance of specific residues or regions for translocation was studied by performing SMD simulations on the alanine mutants and other variants of pVEC. Residue-based analysis showed that positively charged residues contribute to adsorption to the lipid bilayer and to electrostatic interactions with the lipid bilayer as peptides are translocated. Translocation takes place in three main stages; the insertion of the N-terminus into the bilayer, the inclusion of the whole peptide inside the membrane and the exit of the N-terminus from the bilayer. These three stages mirror the three regions on pVEC; namely, the hydrophobic N-terminus, the cationic midsection, and the hydrophilic C-terminus. The N-terminal truncated pVEC, I3A, L5A, R7A mutants and scramble-pVEC make weaker interactions with the lipids during translocation highlighting the contribution of the N-terminal residues and the sequence of the structural regions to the translocation mechanism. This study provides atomistic detail about the mechanism of pVEC peptide translocation and can guide future peptide-based drug design efforts.


international symposium health informatics and bioinformatics | 2010

Investigation of TEM-1 and SHV-1 beta-lactamase ligand binding

Pinar Kanlikiliçer; Elif Ozkirimli Olmez; Nilay Büdeyri; Berna Sariyar Akbulut

The abuse, overuse and misuse of beta-lactam antibiotics in treating bacterial infections have caused bacteria to develop resistance against them. One common antibiotic resistance mechanism utilized by bacteria is the production of beta-lactamase enzymes that cleave the amide bond in beta-lactam ring rendering the antibiotic ineffective. One way to combat this problem is to use beta-lactamase inhibitors in combination with beta-lactam antibiotics. Beta-lactamase inhibitor protein (BLIP) is an effective inhibitor of class A beta-lactamases such as TEM-1 and SHV-1. In the current research, the binding of BLIP to TEM-1 and to SHV-1 beta lactamase was investigated using molecular dynamics simulations. The binding free energies of BLIP complex with TEM-1 and SHV-1 betalactamases were calculated using Molecular Mechanic Poisson Bolztmann Surface Area (MM-PBSA) methodology. It was found that BLIP has significant differences in binding affinities toward TEM-1 and SHV-1 beta-lactamases.


Journal of Peptide Science | 2017

The effect of a beta-lactamase inhibitor peptide on bacterial membrane structure and integrity: a comparative study: Effects of an Inhibitor Peptide on Bacterial Viability

Begum Alaybeyoglu; Bilge Gedik Uluocak; Berna Sariyar Akbulut; Elif Ozkirimli

Co‐administration of beta‐lactam antibiotics and beta‐lactamase inhibitors has been a favored treatment strategy against beta‐lactamase‐mediated bacterial antibiotic resistance, but the emergence of beta‐lactamases resistant to current inhibitors necessitates the discovery of novel non‐beta‐lactam inhibitors. Peptides derived from the Ala46–Tyr51 region of the beta‐lactamase inhibitor protein are considered as potent inhibitors of beta‐lactamase; unfortunately, peptide delivery into the cell limits their potential. The properties of cell‐penetrating peptides could guide the design of beta‐lactamase inhibitory peptides. Here, our goal is to modify the peptide with the sequence RRGHYY that possesses beta‐lactamase inhibitory activity under in vitro conditions. Inspired by the work on the cell‐penetrating peptide pVEC, our approach involved the addition of the N‐terminal hydrophobic residues, LLIIL, from pVEC to the inhibitor peptide to build a chimera. These residues have been reported to be critical in the uptake of pVEC. We tested the potential of RRGHYY and its chimeric derivative as a beta‐lactamase inhibitory peptide on Escherichia coli cells and compared the results with the action of the antimicrobial peptide melittin, the beta‐lactam antibiotic ampicillin, and the beta‐lactamase inhibitor potassium clavulanate to get mechanistic details on their action. Our results show that the addition of LLIIL to the N‐terminus of the beta‐lactamase inhibitory peptide RRGHYY increases its membrane permeabilizing potential. Interestingly, the addition of this short stretch of hydrophobic residues also modified the inhibitory peptide such that it acquired antimicrobial property. We propose that addition of the hydrophobic LLIIL residues to the peptide N‐terminus offers a promising strategy to design novel antimicrobial peptides in the battle against antibiotic resistance. Copyright


Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

An evolutionarily conserved allosteric site modulates beta-lactamase activity

Fatma Gizem Avci; Fatma Ece Altinisik; Didem Vardar Ulu; Elif Ozkirimli Olmez; Berna Sariyar Akbulut

Abstract Declining efficiency of antibiotic-inhibitor combinatorial therapies in treating beta-lactamase mediated resistance necessitates novel inhibitor development. Allosteric inhibition offers an alternative to conventional drugs that target the conserved active site. Here, we show that the evolutionarily conserved PWP triad located at the N-terminus of the H10 helix directly interacts with the allosteric site in TEM-1 beta-lactamase and regulates its activity. While point mutations in the PWP triad preserve the overall secondary structures around the allosteric site, they result in a more open and dynamic global structure with decreased chemical stability and increased aggregation propensity. These mutant enzymes with a less compact hydrophobic core around the allosteric site displayed significant activity loss. Detailed sequence and structure conservation analyses revealed that the PWP triad is an evolutionarily conserved motif unique to class A beta-lactamases aligning its allosteric site and hence is an effective potential target for enzyme regulation and selective drug design.


Journal of Peptide Science | 2018

pVEC hydrophobic N-terminus is critical for antibacterial activity

Begum Alaybeyoglu; Berna Sariyar Akbulut; Elif Ozkirimli

Cell‐penetrating peptides (CPPs) are commonly defined by their shared ability to be internalized into eukaryotic cells, without inducing permanent membrane damage, and to improve cargo delivery. Many CPPs also possess antimicrobial action strong enough to selectively lyse microbes in infected mammalian cultures. pVEC, a CPP derived from cadherin, is able to translocate into mammalian cells, and it is also antimicrobial. Structure‐activity relationship and sequence alignment studies have suggested that the hydrophobic N‐terminus (LLIIL) of pVEC is essential for this peptides uptake into eukaryotic cells. In this study, our aim was to examine the contribution of these residues to the antimicrobial action and the translocation mechanism of pVEC. We performed antimicrobial activity and microscopy experiments with pVEC and with del5 pVEC (N‐terminal truncated variant of pVEC) and showed that pVEC loses its antimicrobial effect upon deletion of the LLIIL residues, even though both peptides induce membrane permeability. We also calculated the free energy of the transport process using steered molecular dynamic simulations and replica exchange umbrella sampling simulations to compare the difference in uptake mechanism of the 2 peptides in atomistic detail. Despite the difference in experimentally observed antimicrobial activity, the simulations on the 2 peptides showed similar characteristics and the energetic cost of translocation of pVEC was higher than that of del5 pVEC, suggesting that pVEC uptake mechanism cannot be explained by simple passive transport. Our results suggest that LLIIL residues are key contributors to pVEC antibacterial activity because of irreversible membrane disruption.


Phytochemistry | 2018

An OMIC approach to elaborate the antibacterial mechanisms of different alkaloids

Fatma Gizem Avci; Nihat Alpagu Sayar; Berna Sariyar Akbulut

Plant-derived substances have regained interest in the fight against antibiotic resistance owing to their distinct antimicrobial mechanisms and multi-target properties. With the recent advances in instrumentation and analysis techniques, OMIC approaches are extensively used for target identification and elucidation of the mechanism of phytochemicals in drug discovery. In the current study, RNA sequencing based transcriptional profiling together with global differential protein expression analysis was used to comparatively elaborate the activities and the effects of the plant alkaloids boldine, bulbocapnine, and roemerine along with the well-known antimicrobial alkaloid berberine in Bacillus subtilis cells. The transcriptomic findings were validated by qPCR. Images from scanning electron microscope were obtained to visualize the effects on the whole-cells. The results showed that among the three selected alkaloids, only roemerine possessed antibacterial activity. Unlike berberine, which is susceptible to efflux through multidrug resistance pumps, roemerine accumulated in the cells. This in turn resulted in oxidative stress and building up of reactive oxygen species, which eventually deregulated various pathways such as iron uptake. Treatment with boldine or bulbocapnine slightly affected various metabolic pathways but has not changed the growth patterns at all.


Journal of Molecular Graphics & Modelling | 2018

Targeting a hidden site on class A beta-lactamases

Fatma Gizem Avci; Fatma Ece Altinisik; Ipek Karacan; Duygu Senturk Karagoz; Serhat Ersahin; Ayse Eren; Nihat Alpagu Sayar; Didem Vardar Ulu; Elif Ozkirimli; Berna Sariyar Akbulut

Increasing resistance against available orthosteric beta-lactamase inhibitors necessitates the search for novel and powerful inhibitor molecules. In this respect, allosteric inhibitors serve as attractive alternatives. Here, we examine the structural basis of inhibition in a hidden, druggable pocket in TEM-1 beta-lactamase. Based on crystallographic evidence that 6-cyclohexyl-1-hexyl-β-D-maltoside (CYMAL-6) binds to this site, first we determined the kinetic mechanism of inhibition by CYMAL-6. Activity measurements with CYMAL-6 showed that it competitively inhibits the wild type enzyme. Interestingly, it exhibits a steep dose-response curve with an IC50 of 100 μM. The IC50 value changes neither with different enzyme concentration nor with incubation of the enzyme with the inhibitor, showing that inhibition is not aggregation-based. The presence of the same concentrations of CYMAL-6 does not influence the activity of lactate dehydrogenase, further confirming the specificity of CYMAL-6 for TEM-1 beta-lactamase. Then, we identified compounds with high affinity to this allosteric site by virtual screening using Glide and Schrödinger Suite. Virtual screening performed with 500,000 drug like compounds from the ZINC database showed that top scoring compounds interact with the hydrophobic pocket that forms between H10 and H11 helices and with the catalytically important Arg244 residue through pi-cation interactions. Discovery of novel chemical scaffolds that target this allosteric site will pave the way for a new avenue in the design of new antimicrobials.

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