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Dive into the research topics where Boaz Shaanan is active.

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Featured researches published by Boaz Shaanan.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2001

The ACT domain family.

David M. Chipman; Boaz Shaanan

A novel ligand-binding domain, named the ACT domain, was recently identified by a PSI-BLAST search. The archetypical ACT domain is the C-terminal regulatory domain of 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (3PGDH), which folds with a ferredoxin-like betaalphabetabetaalphabeta topology. A pair of ACT domains form an eight-stranded antiparallel sheet with two molecules of the allosteric inhibitor serine bound in the interface. The ACT domain is found in a variety of contexts and is proposed to be a conserved regulatory ligand binding fold. Rat phenylalanine hydroxylase has a regulatory domain with a similar fold, but different ligand-binding mode. Putative ACT domains in some proteins of unknown structure (e.g. acetohydroxyacid synthase regulatory subunits) may also fold like the 3PGDH regulatory domain. The regulatory domain of threonine deaminase, although not a member of the ACT sequence family, is similar in structure to the paired 3PGDH regulatory domains. Repeats of ACT-like domains can create nonequivalent ligand-binding sites with the potential for complex regulatory patterns. The structures and mechanisms of such systems have only begun to be examined.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

Glyoxylate carboligase lacks the canonical active site glutamate of thiamine-dependent enzymes

Alexander Kaplun; Elad Binshtein; Maria Vyazmensky; Andrea Steinmetz; Ze'ev Barak; David M. Chipman; Kai Tittmann; Boaz Shaanan

Thiamine diphosphate (ThDP), a derivative of vitamin B1, is an enzymatic cofactor whose special chemical properties allow it to play critical mechanistic roles in a number of essential metabolic enzymes. It has been assumed that all ThDP-dependent enzymes exploit a polar interaction between a strictly conserved glutamate and the N1 of the ThDP moiety. The crystal structure of glyoxylate carboligase challenges this paradigm by revealing that valine replaces the conserved glutamate. Through kinetic, spectroscopic and site-directed mutagenesis studies, we show that although this extreme change lowers the rate of the initial step of the enzymatic reaction, it ensures efficient progress through subsequent steps. Glyoxylate carboligase thus provides a unique illustration of the fine tuning between catalytic stages imposed during evolution on enzymes catalyzing multistep processes.


FEBS Journal | 2009

Reaction mechanisms of thiamin diphosphate enzymes: new insights into the role of a conserved glutamate residue.

Boaz Shaanan; David M. Chipman

Subsequent to the demonstration in the late 1950s of the catalytic power of the C2 anion/ylid of thiamin diphosphate, further convincing evidence was provided demonstrating that the 4′‐aminopyrimidine group plays a vital role in activation of this cofactor. Structural evidence from several crystal structures of thiamin diphosphate‐dependent enzymes emphasized the presence of a glutamate residue in hydrogen‐bonding distance from N1′ as a conserved element in these enzymes. The important role of this conserved glutamate in promoting C2‐H ionization and activation of thiamin diphosphate was emphasized by site‐directed mutagenesis studies. This role was further elaborated by spectroscopic studies of the 4′‐aminopyrimidine–iminopyrimidine tautomerization. The low polarity of the environment of the protein‐bound thiazolium is an additional factor in the stabilization of the C2 anion/ylid. The recently determined crystal structure and mutagenesis studies of glyoxylate carboligase, in which the position of the conserved glutamate is occupied by valine, now show that, for the multi‐step reaction catalyzed by this enzyme, the advantages of accelerating the ionization of C2‐H by re‐introducing a carboxylate are outweighed by the apparent overstabilization of intermediates.


Bioinformatics | 2006

Haloferax volcanii PitA: an example of functional interaction between the Pfam chlorite dismutase and antibiotic biosynthesis monooxygenase families?

Elizabeta Bab-Dinitz; Hagay Shmuely; Julie A. Maupin-Furlow; Jerry Eichler; Boaz Shaanan

A curious fusion between chlorite dismutase-like and antibiotic biosynthesis monooxygenase-like domains within a single open reading frame has been revealed by both sequence homology and structural modeling in Haloferax volcanii PitA and its homologues in other halophilic archaea. While this fusion may reflect an environmental adaptation to life in hypersaline environments and hence one specific to haloarchaea, PitA and its homologues may represent a paradigm of biologically-relevant interplay between these two distinct activities in accordance with the Rosetta Stone approach.


BMC Cell Biology | 2008

The Drosophila IKK-related kinase (Ik2) and Spindle-F proteins are part of a complex that regulates cytoskeleton organization during oogenesis

Dikla Dubin-Bar; Amir Bitan; Rotem Kaiden-Hasson; Sharon Etzion; Boaz Shaanan; Uri Abdu

BackgroundIkappaB kinases (IKKs) regulate the activity of Rel/NF-kappaB transcription factors by targeting their inhibitory partner proteins, IkappaBs, for degradation. The Drosophila genome encodes two members of the IKK family. Whereas the first is a kinase essential for activation of the NF-kappaB pathway, the latter does not act as IkappaB kinase. Instead, recent findings indicate that Ik2 regulates F-actin assembly by mediating the function of nonapoptotic caspases via degradation of DIAP1. Also, it has been suggested that ik2 regulates interactions between the minus ends of the microtubules and the actin-rich cortex in the oocyte. Since spn-F mutants display oocyte defects similar to those of ik2 mutant, we decided to investigate whether Spn-F could be a direct regulatory target of Ik2.ResultsWe found that Ik2 binds physically to Spn-F, biomolecular interaction analysis of Spn-F and Ik2 demonstrating that both proteins bind directly and form a complex. We showed that Ik2 phosphorylates Spn-F and demonstrated that this phosphorylation does not lead to Spn-F degradation. Ik2 is localized to the anterior ring of the oocyte and to punctate structures in the nurse cells together with Spn-F protein, and both proteins are mutually required for their localization.ConclusionWe conclude that Ik2 and Spn-F form a complex, which regulates cytoskeleton organization during Drosophila oogenesis and in which Spn-F is the direct regulatory target for Ik2. Interestingly, Ik2 in this complex does not function as a typical IKK in that it does not direct SpnF for degradation following phosphorylation.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

Substrate promiscuity: AglB, the archaeal oligosaccharyltransferase, can process a variety of lipid-linked glycans.

Chen Cohen-Rosenzweig; Ziqiang Guan; Boaz Shaanan; Jerry Eichler

ABSTRACT Across evolution, N-glycosylation involves oligosaccharyltransferases that transfer lipid-linked glycans to selected Asn residues of target proteins. While these enzymes catalyze similar reactions in each domain, differences exist in terms of the chemical composition, length and degree of phosphorylation of the lipid glycan carrier, the sugar linking the glycan to the lipid carrier, and the composition and structure of the transferred glycan. To gain insight into how oligosaccharyltransferases cope with such substrate diversity, the present study analyzed the archaeal oligosaccharyltransferase AglB from four haloarchaeal species. Accordingly, it was shown that despite processing distinct lipid-linked glycans in their native hosts, AglB from Haloarcula marismortui, Halobacterium salinarum, and Haloferax mediterranei could readily replace their counterpart from Haloferax volcanii when introduced into Hfx. volcanii cells deleted of aglB. As the four enzymes show significant sequence and apparently structural homology, it appears that the functional similarity of the four AglB proteins reflects the relaxed substrate specificity of these enzymes. Such demonstration of AglB substrate promiscuity is important not only for better understanding of N-glycosylation in Archaea and elsewhere but also for efforts aimed at transforming Hfx. volcanii into a glycoengineering platform.


Bioinformatics | 2004

Poorly conserved ORFs in the genome of the archaea Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 correspond to expressed proteins

Hagay Shmuely; E. Dinitz; Idit Dahan; Jerry Eichler; Daniel Fischer; Boaz Shaanan

MOTIVATIONnA large fraction of open reading frames (ORFs) identified as hypothetical proteins correspond to either conserved hypothetical proteins, representing sequences homologous to ORFs of unknown function from other organisms, or to hypothetical proteins lacking any significant sequence similarity to other ORFs in the databases. Elucidating the functions and three-dimensional structures of such orphan ORFs, termed ORFans or poorly conserved ORFs (PCOs), is essential for understanding biodiversity. However, it has been claimed that many ORFans may not encode for expressed proteins.nnnRESULTSnA genome-wide experimental study of paralogous PCOs in the halophilic archaea Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 was conducted. Paralogous PCOs are ORFs with at least one homolog in the same organism, but with no clear homologs in other organisms. The results reveal that mRNA is synthesized for a majority of the Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 paralogous PCO families, including those comprising relatively short proteins, strongly suggesting that these Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 paralogous PCOs correspond to true, expressed proteins. Hence, further computational and experimental studies aimed at characterizing PCOs in this and other organisms are merited. Such efforts could shed light on PCOs functions and origins, thereby serving to elucidate the vast diversity observed in the genetic material.


Biochemistry | 2012

Glyoxylate Carboligase: A Unique Thiamin Diphosphate-Dependent Enzyme That Can Cycle between the 4′-Aminopyrimidinium and 1′,4′-Iminopyrimidine Tautomeric Forms in the Absence of the Conserved Glutamate

Natalia S. Nemeria; Elad Binshtein; Hetalben Patel; Anand Balakrishnan; Ilan Vered; Boaz Shaanan; Ze’ev Barak; David M. Chipman; Frank Jordan

Glyoxylate carboligase (GCL) is a thiamin diphosphate (ThDP)-dependent enzyme, which catalyzes the decarboxylation of glyoxylate and ligation to a second molecule of glyoxylate to form tartronate semialdehyde (TSA). This enzyme is unique among ThDP enzymes in that it lacks a conserved glutamate near the N1 atom of ThDP (replaced by Val51) or any other potential acid-base side chains near ThDP. The V51D substitution shifts the pH optimum to 6.0-6.2 (pK(a) of 6.2) for TSA formation from pH 7.0-7.7 in wild-type GCL. This pK(a) is similar to the pK(a) of 6.1 for the 1,4-iminopyrimidine (IP)-4-aminopyrimidinium (APH(+)) protonic equilibrium, suggesting that the same groups control both ThDP protonation and TSA formation. The key covalent ThDP-bound intermediates were identified on V51D GCL by a combination of steady-state and stopped-flow circular dichroism methods, yielding rate constants for their formation and decomposition. It was demonstrated that active center variants with substitution at I393 could synthesize (S)-acetolactate from pyruvate solely, and acetylglycolate derived from pyruvate as the acetyl donor and glyoxylate as the acceptor, implying that this substitutent favored pyruvate as the donor in carboligase reactions. Consistent with these observations, the I393A GLC variants could stabilize the predecarboxylation intermediate analogues derived from acetylphosphinate, propionylphosphinate, and methyl acetylphosphonate in their IP tautomeric forms notwithstanding the absence of the conserved glutamate. The role of the residue at the position occupied typically by the conserved Glu controls the pH dependence of kinetic parameters, while the entire reaction sequence could be catalyzed by ThDP itself, once the APH(+) form is accessible.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Transition metal binding selectivity in proteins and its correlation with the phylogenomic classification of the cation diffusion facilitator protein family

Shiran Barber-Zucker; Boaz Shaanan; Raz Zarivach

Divalent d-block metal cations (DDMCs), such as Fe, Zn and Mn, participate in many biological processes. Understanding how specific DDMCs are transported to and within the cell and what controls their binding selectivity to different proteins is crucial for defining the mechanisms of metalloproteins. To better understand such processes, we scanned the RCSB Protein Data Bank, performed a de novo structural-based comprehensive analysis of seven DDMCs and found their amino acid binding and coordination geometry propensities. We then utilized these results to characterize the correlation between metal selectivity, specific binding site composition and phylogenetic classification of the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) protein family, a family of DDMC transporters found throughout evolution and sharing a conserved structure, yet with different members displaying distinct metal selectivity. Our analysis shows that DDMCs differ, at times significantly, in terms of their binding propensities, and that in each CDF clade, the metal selectivity-related binding site has a unique and conserved sequence signature. However, only limited correlation exists between the composition of the DDMC binding site in each clade and the metal selectivity shown by its proteins.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006

Structure of the regulatory subunit of acetohydroxyacid synthase isozyme III from Escherichia coli

Alexander Kaplun; Maria Vyazmensky; Yuri Zherdev; Inna Belenky; Alex Slutzker; Sharon Mendel; Ze'ev Barak; David M. Chipman; Boaz Shaanan

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David M. Chipman

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Jerry Eichler

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Elad Binshtein

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Hagay Shmuely

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Maria Vyazmensky

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Alexander Kaplun

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Idit Dahan

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Inna Belenky

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Raz Zarivach

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Ze'ev Barak

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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