Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elena Zelepuga is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elena Zelepuga.


Current Microbiology | 2003

Ecophysiological variabilities in Ectohydrolytic enzyme activities of some Pseudoalteromonas species, P. citrea, P. issachenkonii, and P. nigrifaciens

Elena P. Ivanova; Irina Y. Bakunina; Olga I. Nedashkovskaya; Nataliya M. Gorshkova; Yulia V. Alexeeva; Elena Zelepuga; Tatiyana N. Zvaygintseva; Dan V. Nicolau; Valery V. Mikhailov

The ecophysiological variabilities in the ectohydrolytic enzyme profiles of the three species of Pseudoalteromonas, P. citrea, P. issachenkonii, and P. nigrifaciens, have been investigated. Forty-one bacteria isolated from several invertebrates, macroalgae, sea grass, and the surrounding water exhibited different patterns of hydrolytic enzyme activities measured as the hydrolysis of either native biopolymers or fluorogenic substrates. The activities of the following enzymes were assayed: proteinase, tyrosinase, lipase, amylase, chitinase, agarase, fucoidan hydrolase, laminaranase, alginase, pustulanase, cellulase, β-glucosidase, α- and β-galactosidases, β-N-acetylglucosaminidase, β-glucosaminidase, β-xylosidase, and α-mannosidase. The occurrence and cell-specific activities of all enzymes varied over a broad range (from 0 to 44 μmol EU per hour) and depended not only on taxonomic affiliation of the strain, but also on the source/place of its isolation. This suggests ‘specialization’ of different species for different types of polymeric substrates as, for example, all strains of P. citrea and P. issachenkonii hydrolyzed alginate and laminaran, while strains of P. nigrifaciens were lacking the ability to hydrolyze most of the algal polysaccharides. The incidence of certain enzymes such as fucoidan hydrolases, alginate lyases, agarases, and α-galactosidases might be strain specific and reflect its particular ecological habitat.


Peptides | 2012

A new multigene superfamily of Kunitz-type protease inhibitors from sea anemone Heteractis crispa.

M. P. Isaeva; Victoriya E. Chausova; Elena Zelepuga; Konstantin V. Guzev; Valentin M. Tabakmakher; M. M. Monastyrnaya; E. P. Kozlovskaya

Despite a considerable number of publications devoted to isolation and physicochemical properties of protease inhibitors from sea anemones, virtually nothing is known about the structure of the genes, and the nature of their isoforms diversity. Using the PCR-based cloning approach we discovered the Kunitz-type multigene superfamily composed of distinct gene families (GS-, RG-, GG-, and GN-gene families). It has been identified only three full-length GS-transcripts indicating a much greater variety of Kunitz homologs in Heteractis crispa. We have examined an exon-intron structure of GS-genes; an open reading frame is interrupted by a single intron located at the middle of the signal peptide. 33 deduced mature GS-polypeptides have been categorized into three groups according to the nature of a P1 residue. Some of them corresponded to native Kunitz-type protease inhibitors earlier isolated from H. crispa. The deduced GS-polypeptide sequences demonstrated diverse charge distribution ranging from the local point charges forms to the overall positive ones. We have suggested that the GS-gene family has evolved through gene tandem duplication followed by adaptive divergence of the P1 residue in the reactive site selected for divergent functions in paralogs. The expansion of this Kunitz-type multigene superfamily during evolution is lineage-specific, providing the tropical sea anemone H. crispa with the ability to interact an increasing diversity of the preys and predators. Our results show that the Kunitz-type polypeptides are encoded by a multigene superfamily and realized via a combinatory Kunitz-type library in the H. crispa tentacles venom.


Marine Drugs | 2012

Atypical reactive center Kunitz-type inhibitor from the sea anemone Heteractis crispa.

Irina Gladkikh; M. M. Monastyrnaya; Elena Leychenko; Elena Zelepuga; Victoria Chausova; M. P. Isaeva; Stanislav D. Anastyuk; Yaroslav A. Andreev; Steve Peigneur; Jan Tytgat; Emma Kozlovkaya

The primary structure of a new Kunitz-type protease inhibitor InhVJ from the sea anemone Heteractis crispa (Radianthus macrodactylus) was determined by protein sequencing and cDNA cloning. InhVJ amino acid sequence was shown to share high sequence identity (up to 98%) with the other known Kunitz-type sea anemones sequences. It was determined that the P1 Thr at the reactive site resulted in a decrease of the Ki of InhVJ to trypsin and α-chymotrypsin (7.38 × 10−8 M and 9.93 × 10−7 M, respectively). By structure modeling the functional importance of amino acids at the reactive site as well as at the weak contact site were determined. The significant role of Glu45 for the orientation and stabilization of the InhVJ-trypsin complex was elucidated. We can suggest that there has been an adaptive evolution of the P1 residue at the inhibitor reactive site providing specialization or functional diversification of the paralogs. The appearance of a key so-called P1 Thr residue instead of Lys might lead to refinement of inhibitor specificity in the direction of subfamilies of serine proteases. The absence of Kv channel and TRPV1-receptor modulation activity was confirmed by electrophysiological screening tests.


Biochemistry | 2011

New actinoporins from sea anemone Heteractis crispa: Cloning and functional expression

E. S. Tkacheva; Elena Leychenko; M. M. Monastyrnaya; Marina P. Issaeva; Elena Zelepuga; S. D. Anastuk; Pavel S. Dmitrenok; E. P. Kozlovskaya

A new actinoporin Hct-S4 (molecular mass 19,414 ± 10 Da) belonging to the sphingomyelin-inhibited α-pore forming toxin (α-PFT) family was isolated from the tropical sea anemone Heteractis crispa (also called Radianthus macrodactylus) and purified by methods of protein chemistry. The N-terminal nucleotide sequence (encoding 20 amino acid residues) of actinoporin Hct-S4 was determined. Genes encoding 18 new isoforms of H. crispa actinoporins were cloned and sequenced. These genes form a multigene Hct-S family characterized by presence of N-terminal serine in the mature proteins. Highly conserved residues comprising the aromatic phosphorylcholine-binding site and significant structure-function changes in the N-terminal segment (10–27 amino acid residues) of actinoporins were established. Two expressed recombinant actinoporins (rHct-S5 and rHct-S6) were one order less hemolytically active than native actinoporins.


Marine Drugs | 2015

New Kunitz-Type HCRG Polypeptides from the Sea Anemone Heteractis crispa

Irina Gladkikh; M. M. Monastyrnaya; Elena Zelepuga; Oksana Sintsova; Valentin M. Tabakmakher; O. V. Gnedenko; A. S. Ivanov; Kuo-Feng Hua; E. P. Kozlovskaya

Sea anemones are a rich source of Kunitz-type polypeptides that possess not only protease inhibitor activity, but also Kv channels toxicity, analgesic, antihistamine, and anti-inflammatory activities. Two Kunitz-type inhibitors belonging to a new Heteractis crispa RG (HCRG) polypeptide subfamily have been isolated from the sea anemone Heteractis crispa. The amino acid sequences of HCRG1 and HCRG2 identified using the Edman degradation method share up to 95% of their identity with the representatives of the HCGS polypeptide multigene subfamily derived from H. crispa cDNA. Polypeptides are characterized by positively charged Arg at the N-terminus as well as P1 Lys residue at their canonical binding loop, identical to those of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). These polypeptides are shown by our current evidence to be more potent inhibitors of trypsin than the known representatives of the HCGS subfamily with P1Thr. The kinetic and thermodynamic characteristics of the intermolecular interactions between inhibitors and serine proteases were determined by the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) method. Residues functionally important for polypeptide binding to trypsin were revealed using molecular modeling methods. Furthermore, HCRG1 and HCRG2 possess anti-inflammatory activity, reducing tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin 6 (IL-6) secretions, as well as proIL-1β expression in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated macrophages. However, there was no effect on nitric oxide (NO) generation.


Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2012

Interaction of sea anemone Heteractis crispa Kunitz type polypeptides with pain vanilloid receptor TRPV1: In silico investigation

Elena Zelepuga; Valentin M. Tabakmakher; Victoria Chausova; M. M. Monastyrnaya; M. P. Isaeva; E. P. Kozlovskaya

Using methods of molecular biology we defined the structures of the 31 sea anemone Heteractis crispa genes encoding polypeptides which are structurally homologous to the Kunitz protease inhibitor family. The identified sequences have single-point amino acid substitutions, a high degree of homology with sequences of known Kunitz family members from H. crispa, and represent a combinatorial library of polypeptides. We generated their three-dimensional structures by methods of homology modeling. Analysis of their molecular electrostatic potential allowed the division of the polypeptides into three clusters. One of them includes polypeptides APHC1, APHC2, and APHC3 which have been shown to possess, in addition to their trypsin inhibitory activity, a unique property of inhibiting the pain vanilloid receptor TRPV1 in vitro and providing the analgesic effects in vivo. The spatial structure of the polypeptide complexes with TRPV1, the nature of the interactions, as well as functionally important structural elements involved in the complex formation, were established by molecular docking technique. The designed models allowed us to propose a hypothesis contributing to the understanding of how APHC1-APHC3 affect the pain signals transduction by TRPV1: apparently, relaxation time of the receptor increases due to binding of its two chains with a polypeptide molecule which disrupts functioning of TRPV1 and leads to partial inhibition of the signal transduction in electrophysiological experiments.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Glycosides from edible sea cucumbers stimulate macrophages via purinergic receptors

Dmitry L. Aminin; Evgeny A. Pislyagin; Maxim Astashev; Andrey Es’kov; Valery Kozhemyako; Sergei Avilov; Elena Zelepuga; Ekaterina Yurchenko; Leonid Kaluzhskiy; E. P. Kozlovskaya; A. S. Ivanov; Valentin A. Stonik

Since ancient times, edible sea cucumbers have been considered a jewel of the seabed and used in Asian folk medicine for stimulation of resistance against different diseases. However, the power of this sea food has not been established on a molecular level. A particular group of triterpene glycosides was found to be characteristic metabolites of the animals, responsible for this biological action. Using one of them, cucumarioside A2-2 (CA2-2) from the edible Cucumaria japonica species as an example as well as inhibitory analysis, patch-clamp on single macrophages, small interfering RNA technique, immunoblotting, SPR analysis, computer modeling and other methods, we demonstrate low doses of CA2-2 specifically to interact with P2X receptors (predominantly P2X4) on membranes of mature macrophages, enhancing the reversible ATP-dependent Ca2+ intake and recovering Ca2+ transport at inactivation of these receptors. As result, interaction of glycosides of this type with P2X receptors leads to activation of cellular immunity.


Marine Drugs | 2016

Kunitz-Type Peptide HCRG21 from the Sea Anemone Heteractis crispa Is a Full Antagonist of the TRPV1 Receptor

M. M. Monastyrnaya; Steve Peigneur; Elena Zelepuga; Oksana Sintsova; Irina Gladkikh; Elena Leychenko; M. P. Isaeva; Jan Tytgat; E. P. Kozlovskaya

Sea anemone venoms comprise multifarious peptides modulating biological targets such as ion channels or receptors. The sequence of a new Kunitz-type peptide, HCRG21, belonging to the Heteractis crispa RG (HCRG) peptide subfamily was deduced on the basis of the gene sequence obtained from the Heteractis crispa cDNA. HCRG21 shares high structural homology with Kunitz-type peptides APHC1–APHC3 from H. crispa, and clusters with the peptides from so named “analgesic cluster” of the HCGS peptide subfamily but forms a separate branch on the NJ-phylogenetic tree. Three unique point substitutions at the N-terminus of the molecule, Arg1, Gly2, and Ser5, distinguish HCRG21 from other peptides of this cluster. The trypsin inhibitory activity of recombinant HCRG21 (rHCRG21) was comparable with the activity of peptides from the same cluster. Inhibition constants for trypsin and α-chymotrypsin were 1.0 × 10−7 and 7.0 × 10−7 M, respectively. Electrophysiological experiments revealed that rHCRG21 inhibits 95% of the capsaicin-induced current through transient receptor potential family member vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) and has a half-maximal inhibitory concentration of 6.9 ± 0.4 μM. Moreover, rHCRG21 is the first full peptide TRPV1 inhibitor, although displaying lower affinity for its receptor in comparison with other known ligands. Macromolecular docking and full atom Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations of the rHCRG21–TRPV1 complex allow hypothesizing the existence of two feasible, intra- and extracellular, molecular mechanisms of blocking. These data provide valuable insights in the structural and functional relationships and pharmacological potential of bifunctional Kunitz-type peptides.


Doklady Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2015

Analgesic effect of novel Kunitz-type polypeptides of the sea anemone Heteractis crispa

Valentin M. Tabakmakher; Oksana Sintsova; O. N. Krivoshapko; Elena Zelepuga; M. M. Monastyrnaya; E. P. Kozlovskaya

80 To date, ample experimental data have been accu mulated demonstrating the role of cellular receptors and ion channels of excitable and nonexcitable mem branes of the peripheral and central nervous system in perception and transmission of nociceptive stimuli [1]. The disruption of the functioning of thee membrane components can lead to the development of various channelopathies and chronic pain. In view of this, the search for and study of the molecules that specifically and selectively interact with ionotropic receptors and ion channels is one of the most important tasks of the complex of sciences that investigate the molecular organization and mechanisms of functioning of living systems. The stability of the peptide components of animal venoms in combination with their biological activity, selectivity, and specificity of action on the molecular targets allows the compounds to be used as unique bio medical tools and models for the development of ther apeutics [2]. That is why the polypeptides of the Kunitz structural family, found in the venoms of dif ferent species of sea anemones, which modulate and block ion channels [3], draw an increasing interest of researchers. Earlier, as a result of the study of serine proteinase inhibitors of the sea anemone Heteractis crispa, it was found that the APHC1 polypeptide has a unique abil ity to inhibit the nociceptive vanilloid receptor TRPV1 [4] and exert analgesic effects in vivo [4, 5]. Later, it was shown that the homologous polypeptides APHC2 and APHC3 exhibit similar properties [6]. Electrophysiological studies on TRPV1 channels expressed in frog oocytes and on thermal pain stimu lation models showed that, despite the partial (35%) inhibition of the channel function, the analgesic polypeptides APHC1–APHC3 block the pain signal transmission and that the analgesic effect reached in this case is hundreds of times greater than the effect of morphine [4, 6]. Recent studies in vivo showed that, unlike the majority of low molecular weight TRPV1 antagonists, polypeptides APHC1 and APHC3 exert analgesic effect accompanied by hypothermia [7], probably due to the combined effect on the vanilloid receptor and inflammatory proteases [8].


Biochemistry (moscow) Supplement Series A: Membrane and Cell Biology | 2011

OmpC-like porin from Yersinia pseudotuberculosis: Molecular characteristics, physico-chemical and functional properties

O. D. Novikova; V. A. Khomenko; V. I. Emelyanenko; G. N. Likhatskaya; Elena Zelepuga; N. Yu. Kim; M. P. Isaeva; O. Yu. Portnyagina; O. P. Vostrikova; O. V. Sidorova; T. F. Solov’eva

Pore-forming protein from the outer membrane of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis cultured at 37°C has been isolated and characterized. Comparative analysis of the primary and three-dimensional structures of this protein and of OmpC porin from E. coli was carried out, functional properties of these proteins have been studied using bilayer lipid membranes (BLM) technique. The degree of homology, molecular mass and pore-forming properties of the isolated porin was found to be closer to those of OmpC porin from E. coli than OmpF porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis. The value of the most probable conductivity of OmpC porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis (0.18 pS) in BLM corresponded to the conductivity of the native trimer of this protein. Using CD spectroscopy, the porins investigated were shown to belong to the β-structured proteins. Data of the primary structure and intrinsic protein fluorescence revealed essential differences in localization and microenvironment of tryptophan residues in the porins investigated. Participation of external loops L2 and L6 in the formation of the antigenic structure of OmpC porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis was demonstrated. On the basis of crystal structure of osmoporin from Klebsiella pneumoniae, three-dimensional models of the monomer and trimer of the Y. pseudotuberculosis porin were obtained. Using Web server AGGRESCAN, the localization of protein structure sites with the increased aggregation capability (hot spots) has been deter-mined. It turned out that some of these zones localize in the region of intramonomeric contacts in the porin trimer; however, a large part of them is located on the external surface of the β-barrel. The process of thermal denaturation has been studied and the melting points of the porins were determined. It was found that significant changes in the microenvironment of the indole fluorophores (especially tryptophan residues of spectral class I) took place in the process of the thermodenaturation of the proteins. These changes preceded the irreversible conformational transition observed for the E. coli porin at 77°C and for the Y. pseudotuberculosis porin at 70°C.

Collaboration


Dive into the Elena Zelepuga's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. P. Kozlovskaya

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. M. Monastyrnaya

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. P. Isaeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elena Leychenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irina Gladkikh

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

O. D. Novikova

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oksana Sintsova

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

V. A. Khomenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Victoria Chausova

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge