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Dive into the research topics where Dipali Sinha is active.

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Featured researches published by Dipali Sinha.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Factor XI homodimer structure is essential for normal proteolytic activation by factor XIIa, thrombin and factor XIa

Wenman Wu; Dipali Sinha; Sergei Shikov; Calvin K. Yip; Thomas Walz; Paul C. Billings; James D. Lear; Peter N. Walsh

Coagulation factor XI (FXI) is a covalent homodimer consisting of two identical subunits of 80 kDa linked by a disulfide bond formed by Cys-321 within the Apple 4 domain of each subunit. Because FXIC321S is a noncovalent dimer, residues within the interface between the two subunits must mediate its homodimeric structure. The crystal structure of FXI demonstrates formation of salt bridges between Lys-331 of one subunit and Glu-287 of the other subunit and hydrophobic interactions at the interface of the Apple 4 domains involving Ile-290, Leu-284, and Tyr-329. FXIC321S, FXIC321S,K331A, FXIC321S,E287A, FXIC321S,I290A, FXIC321S,Y329A, FXIC321S,L284A, FXIC321S,K331R, and FXIC321S,H343A were expressed in HEK293 cells and characterized using size exclusion chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation, electron microscopy, and functional assays. Whereas FXIC321S and FXIC321S,H343A existed in monomer/dimer equilibrium (Kd ∼ 40 nm), all other mutants were predominantly monomers with impaired dimer formation by analytical ultracentrifugation (Kd = 3–38 μm). When converted to the active enzyme, FXIa, all the monomeric mutants activated FIX similarly to wild-type dimeric FXIa. In contrast, these monomeric mutants could not be activated efficiently by FXIIa, thrombin, or autoactivation in the presence of dextran sulfate. We conclude that salt bridges formed between Lys-331 of one subunit and Glu-287 of the other together with hydrophobic interactions at the interface, involving residues Ile-290, Leu-284, and Tyr-329, are essential for homodimer formation. The dimeric structure of FXI is essential for normal proteolytic activation of FXI by FXIIa, thrombin, or FXIa either in solution or on an anionic surface but not for FIX activation by FXIa in solution.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

The amyloid precursor protein/protease nexin 2 Kunitz inhibitor domain is a highly specific substrate of mesotrypsin

Moh’d A. Salameh; Jessica Robinson; Duraiswamy Navaneetham; Dipali Sinha; Benjamin J. Madden; Peter N. Walsh; Evette S. Radisky

The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is a ubiquitously expressed transmembrane adhesion protein and the progenitor of amyloid-β peptides. The major splice isoforms of APP expressed by most tissues contain a Kunitz protease inhibitor domain; secreted APP containing this domain is also known as protease nexin 2 and potently inhibits serine proteases, including trypsin and coagulation factors. The atypical human trypsin isoform mesotrypsin is resistant to inhibition by most protein protease inhibitors and cleaves some inhibitors at a substantially accelerated rate. Here, in a proteomic screen to identify potential physiological substrates of mesotrypsin, we find that APP/protease nexin 2 is selectively cleaved by mesotrypsin within the Kunitz protease inhibitor domain. In studies employing the recombinant Kunitz domain of APP (APPI), we show that mesotrypsin cleaves selectively at the Arg15-Ala16 reactive site bond, with kinetic constants approaching those of other proteases toward highly specific protein substrates. Finally, we show that cleavage of APPI compromises its inhibition of other serine proteases, including cationic trypsin and factor XIa, by 2 orders of magnitude. Because APP/protease nexin 2 and mesotrypsin are coexpressed in a number of tissues, we suggest that processing by mesotrypsin may ablate the protease inhibitory function of APP/protease nexin 2 in vivo and may also modulate other activities of APP/protease nexin 2 that involve the Kunitz domain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Determinants of affinity and proteolytic stability in interactions of Kunitz family protease inhibitors with mesotrypsin.

Moh’d A. Salameh; Alexei S. Soares; Duraiswamy Navaneetham; Dipali Sinha; Peter N. Walsh; Evette S. Radisky

An important functional property of protein protease inhibitors is their stability to proteolysis. Mesotrypsin is a human trypsin that has been implicated in the proteolytic inactivation of several protein protease inhibitors. We have found that bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), a Kunitz protease inhibitor, inhibits mesotrypsin very weakly and is slowly proteolyzed, whereas, despite close sequence and structural homology, the Kunitz protease inhibitor domain of the amyloid precursor protein (APPI) binds to mesotrypsin 100 times more tightly and is cleaved 300 times more rapidly. To define features responsible for these differences, we have assessed the binding and cleavage by mesotrypsin of APPI and BPTI reciprocally mutated at two nonidentical residues that make direct contact with the enzyme. We find that Arg at P1 (versus Lys) favors both tighter binding and more rapid cleavage, whereas Met (versus Arg) at P′2 favors tighter binding but has minimal effect on cleavage. Surprisingly, we find that the APPI scaffold greatly enhances proteolytic cleavage rates, independently of the binding loop. We draw thermodynamic additivity cycles analyzing the interdependence of P1 and P′2 substitutions and scaffold differences, finding multiple instances in which the contributions of these features are nonadditive. We also report the crystal structure of the mesotrypsin·APPI complex, in which we find that the binding loop of APPI displays evidence of increased mobility compared with BPTI. Our data suggest that the enhanced vulnerability of APPI to mesotrypsin cleavage may derive from sequence differences in the scaffold that propagate increased flexibility and mobility to the binding loop.


Biochemical Journal | 2002

Molecular cloning and biochemical characterization of rabbit factor XI.

Dipali Sinha; Mariola Marcinkiewicz; David Gailani; Peter N. Walsh

Human factor XI, a plasma glycoprotein required for normal haemostasis, is a homodimer (160 kDa) formed by a single interchain disulphide bond linking the Cys-321 of each Apple 4 domain. Bovine, porcine and murine factor XI are also disulphide-linked homodimers. Rabbit factor XI, however, is an 80 kDa polypeptide on non-reducing SDS/PAGE, suggesting that rabbit factor XI exists and functions physiologically either as a monomer, as does prekallikrein, a structural homologue to factor XI, or as a non-covalent homodimer. We have investigated the structure and function of rabbit factor XI to gain insight into the relation between homodimeric structure and factor XI function. Characterization of the cDNA sequence of rabbit factor XI and its amino acid translation revealed that in the rabbit protein a His residue replaces the Cys-321 that forms the interchain disulphide linkage in human factor XI, explaining why rabbit factor XI is a monomer in non-reducing SDS/PAGE. On size-exclusion chromatography, however, purified plasma rabbit factor XI, like the human protein and unlike prekallikrein, eluted as a dimer, demonstrating that rabbit factor XI circulates as a non-covalent dimer. In functional assays rabbit factor XI and human factor XI behaved similarly. Both monomeric and dimeric factor XI were detected in extracts of cells expressing rabbit factor XI. We conclude that the failure of rabbit factor XI to form a covalent homodimer due to the replacement of Cys-321 with His does not impair its functional activity because it exists in plasma as a non-covalent homodimer and homodimerization is an intracellular process.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2004

Do platelets synthesize factor XI

David Gailani; Ariella Zivelin; Dipali Sinha; Peter N. Walsh

D. GA ILANI ,* A . Z IVEL IN , D. S INHA§ and P . N . WALSH§ *Departments of Pathology and Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; The Amalia Biron Research Institute of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer and Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel; and §The Sol Sherry Thrombosis Research Center, Departments of Medicine and Biochemistry, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Philadelphia, USA


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1992

Complete cDNA sequence of bovine α1-antitrypsin

Dipali Sinha; Meenakshi R. Bakhshi; Edward P. Kirby

A cDNA clone coding for the entire bovine alpha 1-antitrypsin molecule has been isolated from a lambda gt11 bovine liver cDNA library using a human alpha 1-antitrypsin cDNA as a probe. The bovine cDNA was sequenced by the dideoxynucleotide chain termination method. Comparison of the translated amino acid sequence of the bovine alpha 1-antitrypsin with those of the human, baboon, sheep, rat and mouse demonstrates the preservation of most of the critical structural determinants. The bovine and the sheep molecules have a sequence homology of 94% and both the molecules contain four cysteine residues; there is only one cysteine in the others.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Productive Recognition of Factor IX by Factor XIa Exosites Requires Disulfide Linkage between Heavy and Light Chains of Factor XIa

Mariola Marcinkiewicz; Dipali Sinha; Peter N. Walsh

Background: The heavy chain of FXIa (FXIa-HC) is essential for efficient FIX activation, although the light chain (FXIa-LC) contains the active site. Results: Efficient FIX activation by FXIa occurred only when FXIa-HC and FXIa-LC were disulfide-linked. Conclusion: Substrate recognition by FXIa exosites requires disulfide-linked FXIa-HC and FXIa-LC. Significance: Covalent linkage between FXIa-HC and FXIa-LC is required to form the substrate binding exosite. In the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation factor XIa (FXIa) activates factor IX (FIX) by cleaving the zymogen at Arg145-Ala146 and Arg180-Val181 bonds releasing an 11-kDa activation peptide. FXIa and its isolated light chain (FXIa-LC) cleave S-2366 at comparable rates, but FXIa-LC is a very poor activator of FIX, possibly because FIX undergoes allosteric modification on binding to an exosite on the heavy chain of FXIa (FXIa-HC) required for optimal cleavage rates of the two scissile bonds of FIX. However preincubation of FIX with a saturating concentration of isolated FXIa-HC did not result in any potentiation in the rate of FIX cleavage by FXIa-LC. Furthermore, if FIX binding via the heavy chain exosite of FXIa determines the affinity of the enzyme-substrate interaction, then the isolated FXIa-HC should inhibit the rate of FIX activation by depleting the substrate. However, whereas FXIa/S557A inhibited FIX activation of by FXIa, FXIa-HC did not. Therefore, we examined FIX binding to FXIa/S557A, FXIa-HC, FXIa-LC, FXIa/C362S/C482S, and FXIa/S557A/C362S/C482S. The heavy and light chains are disulfide-linked in FXIa/S557A but not in FXIa/C362S/C482S and FXIa/S557A/C362S/C482S. In an ELISA assay only FXI/S557A ligated FIX with high affinity. Partial reduction of FXIa/S557A to produce heavy and light chains resulted in decreased FIX binding, and this function was regained upon reformation of the disulfide linkage between the heavy and the light chains. We therefore conclude that substrate recognition by the FXIa exosite(s) requires disulfide-linked heavy and light chains.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

The Role of Factor XIa (FXIa) Catalytic Domain Exosite Residues in Substrate Catalysis and Inhibition by the Kunitz Protease Inhibitor Domain of Protease Nexin 2

Ya-Chi Su; Tara N. Miller; Duraiswamy Navaneetham; Robert T. Schoonmaker; Dipali Sinha; Peter N. Walsh

To select residues in coagulation factor XIa (FXIa) potentially important for substrate and inhibitor interactions, we examined the crystal structure of the complex between the catalytic domain of FXIa and the Kunitz protease inhibitor (KPI) domain of a physiologically relevant FXIa inhibitor, protease nexin 2 (PN2). Six FXIa catalytic domain residues (Glu98, Tyr143, Ile151, Arg3704, Lys192, and Tyr5901) were subjected to mutational analysis to investigate the molecular interactions between FXIa and the small synthetic substrate (S-2366), the macromolecular substrate (factor IX (FIX)) and inhibitor PN2KPI. Analysis of all six Ala mutants demonstrated normal Km values for S-2366 hydrolysis, indicating normal substrate binding compared with plasma FXIa; however, all except E98A and K192A had impaired values of kcat for S-2366 hydrolysis. All six Ala mutants displayed deficient kcat values for FIX hydrolysis, and all were inhibited by PN2KPI with normal values of Ki except for K192A, and Y5901A, which displayed increased values of Ki. The integrity of the S1 binding site residue, Asp189, utilizing p-aminobenzamidine, was intact for all FXIa mutants. Thus, whereas all six residues are essential for catalysis of the macromolecular substrate (FIX), only four (Tyr143, Ile151, Arg3704, and Tyr5901) are important for S-2366 hydrolysis; Glu98 and Lys192 are essential for FIX but not S-2366 hydrolysis; and Lys192 and Tyr5901 are required for both inhibitor and macromolecular substrate interactions.


Journal of Biochemical and Biophysical Methods | 1993

PCR to identify specific clones of interest for DNA sequencing

Dipali Sinha; Meenakshi R. Bakhshi; Xiaoxin Yang; Edward P. Kirby

We describe a rapid method for identifying specific clones of interest for the purpose of sequencing. The method essentially is polymerase chain reaction using one internal primer and one vector specific primer. The procedure is particularly useful when relatively large numbers of clones are to be examined either to establish the nucleotide sequence of a full-length cDNA or to find a specific section of a large DNA. The relative orientations of inserts in different clones can also be determined using the same procedure.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1985

Functional characterization of human blood coagulation factor XIa using hybridoma antibodies.

Dipali Sinha; A Koshy; F S Seaman; Peter N. Walsh

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