Eleonora Kurtenbach
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Featured researches published by Eleonora Kurtenbach.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003
Mônica Caramez Triches Damaso; Marcius S. Almeida; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Orlando B. Martins; Nei Pereira; Carolina M. M. C. Andrade; Rodolpho M. Albano
ABSTRACT Highly efficient production of a Thermomyces lanuginosus IOC-4145 β-1,4-xylanase was achieved in Pichia pastoris under the control of the AOX1 promoter. P. pastoris colonies expressing recombinant xylanase were selected by enzymatic activity plate assay, and their ability to secrete high levels of the enzyme was evaluated in small-scale cultures. Furthermore, an optimization of enzyme production was carried out with a 23 factorial design. The influence of initial cell density, methanol, and yeast nitrogen base concentration was evaluated, and initial cell density was found to be the most important parameter. A time course profile of recombinant xylanase production in 1-liter flasks with the optimized conditions was performed and 148 mg of xylanase per liter was achieved. Native and recombinant xylanases were purified by gel filtration and characterized by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, circular dichroism spectroscopy, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry and physicochemical behavior. Three recombinant protein species of 21.9, 22.1, and 22.3 kDa were detected in the mass spectrum due to variability in the amino terminus. The optimum temperature, thermostability, and circular dichroic spectra of the recombinant and native xylanases were identical. For both enzymes, the optimum temperature was 75°C, and they retained 60% of their original activity after 80 min at 70°C or 40 min at 80°C. The high level of fully active recombinant xylanase obtained in P. pastoris makes this expression system attractive for fermentor growth and industrial applications.
FEBS Letters | 2004
Patricia Machado Bueno Fernandes; Tatiana Domitrovic; Camilla M. Kao; Eleonora Kurtenbach
Gene expression patterns in response to hydrostatic pressure were determined by whole genome microarray hybridization. Functional classification of the 274 genes affected by pressure treatment of 200 MPa for 30 min revealed a stress response expression profile. The majority of the >2‐fold upregulated genes were involved in stress defense and carbohydrate metabolism while most of the repressed ones were in cell cycle progression and protein synthesis categories. Furthermore, uncharacterized genes were among the 10 highest expressed sequences and represented 45% of the total upregulated genes. The results of this study revealed a hydrostatic pressure‐specific stress response pattern and suggested interesting information about the mechanisms involved in adaptation of cells to a high‐pressure environment.
Protein Expression and Purification | 2003
Katia M. S. Cabral; Marcius S. Almeida; Ana Paula Valente; Fabio C. L. Almeida; Eleonora Kurtenbach
Plant defensins are small cysteine-rich proteins that present high activity against fungi and bacteria and inhibition of insect proteases and alpha-amylases. Here, we present the expression in Pichia pastoris, purification and characterization of the recombinant Pisum sativum defensin 1(rPsd1); a pea defensin which presents four disulfide bridges and high antifungal activity. For this, we had to overcome the inefficiency of the STE13 protease. Our strategy was to clone the corresponding cDNA directly in-frame with a variant of the widely used secretion signal from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae alpha-mating factor, devoid of the STE13 proteolytic signal cleavage sequence. Using an optimized expression protocol, which included a buffered basal salt media formulation, it was possible to obtain about 63.0mg/L of 15N-labeled and unlabeled rPsd1. The recombinants were purified to homogeneity by gel filtration chromatography, followed by reversed-phase HPLC. Mass spectrometry of native and recombinant Psd1 revealed that the protein expressed heterologously was post-translationally processed to the same mature protein as the native one. Circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy analysis indicated that the recombinant protein had the same folding when compared to native Psd1. In addition, the rPsd1 was fully active against Aspergillus niger, if compared with native Psd1. To our knowledge, this is the first heterologous expression of a fully active plant defensin in a high-yield flask.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Luciano Neves de Medeiros; Renata Angeli; Carolina Galvão Sarzedas; Eliana Barreto-Bergter; Ana Paula Valente; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Fabio C. L. Almeida
Plant defensins are cysteine-rich cationic peptides, components of the innate immune system. The antifungal sensitivity of certain exemplars was correlated to the level of complex glycosphingolipids in the membrane of fungi strains. Psd1 is a 46 amino acid residue defensin isolated from pea seeds which exhibit antifungal activity. Its structure is characterized by the so-called cysteine-stabilized alpha/beta motif linked by three loops as determined by two-dimensional NMR. In the present work we explored the measurement of heteronuclear Nuclear Overhauser Effects, R1 and R2 (15)N relaxation ratios, and chemical shift to probe the backbone dynamics of Psd1 and its interaction with membrane mimetic systems with phosphatidylcholine (PC) or dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) with glucosylceramide (CMH) isolated from Fusarium solani. The calculated R2 values predicted a slow motion around the highly conserved among Gly12 residue and also in the region of the Turn3 His36-Trp38. The results showed that Psd1 interacts with vesicles of PC or PC:CMH in slightly different forms. The interaction was monitored by chemical shift perturbation and relaxation properties. Using this approach we could map the loops as the binding site of Psd1 with the membrane. The major binding epitope showed conformation exchange properties in the mus-ms timescale supporting the conformation selection as the binding mechanism. Moreover, the peptide corresponding to part of Loop1 (pepLoop1: Gly12 to Ser19) is also able to interact with DPC micelles acquiring a stable structure and in the presence of DPC:CMH the peptide changes to an extended conformation, exhibiting NOE mainly with the carbohydrate and ceramide parts of CMH.
Brain Research | 2005
Regina C.C. Kubrusly; Maria Cristina Caldas da Cunha; Ricardo Augusto de Melo Reis; Heline Soares; Ana Lucia Marques Ventura; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Maria Cristina Fialho de Mello; Fernando G. de Mello
Glia represents the most numerous group of nervous system cells and CNS development and function depend on glial cells. We developed a purified Muller glia culture to investigate the expression of several neurotransmitter markers on these cells, such as dopaminergic, cholinergic, GABAergic and peptidergic receptors or enzymes, based on functional assays measuring second messenger levels or Western blot for specific proteins. Purified Muller cell culture was obtained from 8-day-old (E8) embryonic chick. Glial cells cultured for 15 days (E8C15) expressed D1A and D1B receptors mRNAs, but not D1D, as detected by RT-PCR. The binding of [3H]-SCH 23390 revealed an amount of expressed receptors around 40 fmol/mg protein. Dopamine (100 microM), PACAP (50 nM) and forskolin (10 microM) induced a 50-, 30- and 40-fold cAMP accumulation on glial cells, respectively, but not ip3 production. The dopamine-promoted cAMP accumulation was blocked by 2 microM SCH 23390. Carbachol stimulated a 3-fold ip3 accumulation. Western blot analysis also revealed the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase, L-dopa decarboxylase, PAC1 receptor, GAD67 and beta2-nicotinic receptor subunit by these cells. These results indicate that several components of neurotransmitter signaling and metabolism are found in cultured Muller cells.
Cardiovascular Research | 2003
Ciria C. Hernandez; Luciane Barcellos; Luis Eduardo Díaz Giménez; Rafael Bonfante Cabarcas; Simone Garcia; Roberto Coury Pedrosa; José Nascimento; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Masako Oya Masuda; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho
OBJECTIVES Antibodies against cardiac G protein-coupled receptors have been reported in sera from chronic chagasic patients (CChP) and other non-parasitic cardiomyopathies, but the effects and underlying mechanism of interaction between these antibodies and heart cells are not fully established. To address this point, binding of antibodies purified from sera of CChP patients and normal blood donors (NBD) to cardiac muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChR) and their effect on L-type Ca(2+) currents were examined. METHODS AND RESULTS Saturation [3H]NMS binding experiments with porcine atrial membranes showed that B(max) in the presence of CChP-immunoglobulin G (IgG) decreased from 280.2+/-16.08 fmol/mg (control) to 91.00+/-5.98 fmol/mg, with no apparent change in K(D), while NBD-IgG did not significantly alter these parameters. At the single channel level, CChP-IgG decreased both the fast and slow mean open times and P(o) (from 0.074+/-0.023 to 0.025+/-0.007) without changes in single channel conductance. I/V plots of isoproterenol-stimulated whole-cell L-type Ca(2+) currents (I(Ca)) from rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes showed a significant reduction in peak I(Ca) during perfusion with CChP-IgG (at 0 mV: from 10.61+/-2.97 to 8.45+/-2.54 pA/pF). NBD-IgGs had no effect on I(Ca). A CChP-IgG purified against a peptide corresponding to the second extracellular loop of the M(2) receptor also impaired L-type Ca(2+) currents. All effects of CChP-IgG were blocked by atropine. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that antibodies from CChP bind to mAChR in a non-competitive manner and are able to activate the receptor in an agonist-like form resulting in L-type Ca(2+) current inhibition.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Mauro W. Costa; Stella H. Y. Lee; Milena B. Furtado; Li Xin; Duncan B. Sparrow; Camila Guerra Martinez; Sally L. Dunwoodie; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Tim Mohun; Nadia Rosenthal; Richard P. Harvey
Reversible post-translational protein modifications such as SUMOylation add complexity to cardiac transcriptional regulation. The homeodomain transcription factor Nkx2-5/Csx is essential for heart specification and morphogenesis. It has been previously suggested that SUMOylation of lysine 51 (K51) of Nkx2-5 is essential for its DNA binding and transcriptional activation. Here, we confirm that SUMOylation strongly enhances Nkx2-5 transcriptional activity and that residue K51 of Nkx2-5 is a SUMOylation target. However, in a range of cultured cell lines we find that a point mutation of K51 to arginine (K51R) does not affect Nkx2-5 activity or DNA binding, suggesting the existence of additional Nkx2-5 SUMOylated residues. Using biochemical assays, we demonstrate that Nkx2-5 is SUMOylated on at least one additional site, and this is the predominant site in cardiac cells. The second site is either non-canonical or a “shifting” site, as mutation of predicted consensus sites and indeed every individual lysine in the context of the K51R mutation failed to impair Nkx2-5 transcriptional synergism with SUMO, or its nuclear localization and DNA binding. We also observe SUMOylation of Nkx2-5 cofactors, which may be critical to Nkx2-5 regulation. Our data reveal highly complex regulatory mechanisms driven by SUMOylation to modulate Nkx2-5 activity.
FEBS Letters | 2006
Tatiana Domitrovic; Caroline Mota Fernandes; Emmanuelle Boy-Marcotte; Eleonora Kurtenbach
Msn2 and Msn4 transcription factors activate expression of stress‐responsive element (STRE) controlled genes in response to various stresses triggering the environmental stress response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Although high hydrostatic pressure is known to induce gene expression modification in yeast, the transcription factors involved in this response are currently uncharacterized. In this work, we show that elevated pressure activates STRE dependent transcription through Msn2/4, which are also required for cell resistance and cell adaptation to high pressure. Moreover, it was demonstrated that HSP12 induction after a 50 MPa treatment is largely dependent on Msn2/4, while other transcription factors are involved in HSP12 over‐expression after a 100 MPa treatment.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
Sónia Gonçalves; Alexandre Teixeira; João Abade; Luciano Neves de Medeiros; Eleonora Kurtenbach; Nuno C. Santos
Psd1, a 46 amino acid residues defensin isolated from the pea Pisum sativum seeds, exhibits anti-fungal activity by a poorly understood mechanism of action. In this work, the interaction of Psd1 with biomembrane model systems of different lipid compositions was assessed by fluorescence spectroscopy. Partition studies showed a marked lipid selectivity of this antimicrobial peptide (AMP) toward lipid membranes containing ergosterol (the main sterol in fungal membranes) or specific glycosphingolipid components, with partition coefficients (K(p)) reaching uncommonly high values of 10(6). By the opposite, Psd1 does not partition to cholesterol-enriched lipid bilayers, such as mammalian cell membranes. The Psd1 mutants His36Lys and Gly12Glu present a membrane affinity loss relative to the wild type. Fluorescence quenching data obtained using acrylamide and membrane probes further clarify the mechanism of action of this peptide at the molecular level, pointing out the potential therapeutic use of Psd1 as a natural antimycotic agent.
Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2001
P.M.B. Fernandes; M. Farina; Eleonora Kurtenbach
P.M.B. FERNANDES, M. FARINA AND E. KURTENBACH. 2001.