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Dive into the research topics where Elias Eliopoulos is active.

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Featured researches published by Elias Eliopoulos.


Nature | 1986

The structure of β-lactoglobulin and its similarity to plasma retinol-binding protein

Miroslav Z. Papiz; Lindsay Sawyer; Elias Eliopoulos; Anthony C. T. North; John B. C. Findlay; R. Sivaprasadarao; T. A. Jones; M. E. Newcomer; P. J. Kraulis

Since its first isolation1, bovine β-lactoglobulin (BLG) has been an enigma: although it is abundant in the whey fraction of milk, its function is still not clear. The results of the many physicochemical studies on the protein need a structural interpretation. We report here the structure of the orthorhombic crystal form of cow BLG at pH 7.6, at a resolution of 2.8 Å. It has an unusual protein fold, composed of two slabs of antiparallel β-sheet, which shows a remarkable similarity to plasma retinol-binding protein. A possible binding site for retinol in BLG has been identified by model-building. This suggests a role for BLG in vitamin A transport and we have discovered specific receptors for the BLG–retinol complex in the intestine of neonate calves.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1987

Crystal structure of the trigonal form of bovine beta-lactoglobulin and of its complex with retinol at 2.5 A resolution.

Hugo L. Monaco; Giuseppe Zanotti; Paola Spadon; Martino Bolognesi; Lindsay Sawyer; Elias Eliopoulos

The structure of the trigonal crystal form of bovine beta-lactoglobulin has been determined by X-ray diffraction methods. An electron density map, calculated with phases obtained by the multiple isomorphous replacement method, served as a starting point for alternate cycles of model building and restrained least-squares refinement. The model of the molecule fitted to the initial Fourier map was the one built for the orthorhombic crystal form of beta-lactoglobulin, solved at 2.8 A resolution (1 A = 0.1 nm). The final R factor for 1456 atoms (1276 non-hydrogen protein atoms and 180 solvent atoms) is 0.22, including 5245 reflections from 6.0 to 2.5 A. The molecule shows significant differences in the two crystal forms mentioned, mainly due to different packing. In the trigonal form, the species crystallized does not appear to be dimeric, but a linear polymer with tight intermolecular contacts. A difference electron density map between the complex of beta-lactoglobulin with retinol and the native protein shows no significant peaks in the cavity which, in the similar retinol-binding protein, binds the chromophore. Instead, differences are found at a surface pocket, which is limited almost completely by hydrophobic residues.


PLOS ONE | 2010

The Anopheles gambiae Odorant Binding Protein 1 (AgamOBP1) Mediates Indole Recognition in the Antennae of Female Mosquitoes

Harald Biessmann; Evi Andronopoulou; Max R. Biessmann; Vassilis Douris; Spiros Dimitratos; Elias Eliopoulos; Patrick M. Guerin; Kostas Iatrou; Robin W. Justice; Thomas Kröber; Osvaldo Marinotti; Panagiota Tsitoura; Daniel F. Woods; Marika F. Walter

Haematophagous insects are frequently carriers of parasitic diseases, including malaria. The mosquito Anopheles gambiae is the major vector of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa and is thus responsible for thousands of deaths daily. Although the role of olfaction in A. gambiae host detection has been demonstrated, little is known about the combinations of ligands and odorant binding proteins (OBPs) that can produce specific odor-related responses in vivo. We identified a ligand, indole, for an A. gambiae odorant binding protein, AgamOBP1, modeled the interaction in silico and confirmed the interaction using biochemical assays. RNAi-mediated gene silencing coupled with electrophysiological analyses confirmed that AgamOBP1 binds indole in A. gambiae and that the antennal receptor cells do not respond to indole in the absence of AgamOBP1. This case represents the first documented instance of a specific A. gambiae OBP–ligand pairing combination, demonstrates the significance of OBPs in odor recognition, and can be expanded to the identification of other ligands for OBPs of Anopheles and other medically important insects.


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 1990

Three-dimensional modelling of G protein-linked receptors

John B. C. Findlay; Elias Eliopoulos

Members of the G protein-linked receptor superfamily have not yet yielded to X-ray crystallography. However, diffraction data from other membrane-bound receptors - the photosynthetic reaction centre and bacteriorhodopsin - have provided some information that may also apply to the G protein family. John Findlay and Elias Eliopoulos integrate this information together with analysis of amino acid sequences from cloned receptors, to derive workable three-dimensional models of these proteins. Such models identify ligand-binding and G protein-associating domains.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 1982

A structural model for the chromophore-binding domain of ovine rhodopsin

Elias Eliopoulos; A.J. Geddes; M. Brett; Darryl Pappin; John B. C. Findlay

Abstract A putative model for the structure of the relatively independent carboxyl-terminal domain of (rhod)opsin has been developed by use of a combination of several secondary structure prediction methods. The validity of this approach was confirmed by comparing the secondary structure for bacteriorhodopsin as predicted by these methods with its known low resolution structure. The resulting predicted structure agreed well with the experimental data. The model obtained for opsin incorporates two transmembrane α-helical rods linked by an intradiscal loop. Each of the helical sections is interrupted by a short irregular region. One of these includes the lysyl residue to which the chromophore 11- cis retinal is attached. The second non-regular segment, almost opposite the first, contains a cysteinyl and a tryptophanyl residue which may be involved in protein—chromophore interaction. The proposed structure of this whole domain could prove instructive in the elucidation of the primary events of visual transduction.


Gene | 1991

Multiple sequence alignment of protein families showing low sequence homology : a methodological approach using database pattern-matching discriminators for G-protein-linked receptors

Teresa K. Attwood; Elias Eliopoulos; John B. C. Findlay

A multiple alignment has been constructed, containing 37 sequences from related families of membrane-bound receptors believed to share the same structural framework as rhodopsin. Sequence homology within families was high (occasionally greater than 90%), but homology between them was generally low (20% or less). Database pattern-scanning methods were therefore used to construct a set of discriminators to aid both the task of alignment and the identification of distantly related sequences showing similar rhodopsin-like transmembrane helices. The results indicate that these discriminators are uniquely able to identify each of the transmembrane helices without major cross-reaction with similar regions in unrelated integral membrane proteins. This ability engenders more accurate alignments of the sequences and facilitates structural analysis and model building of the receptors.


Immunogenetics | 2005

T-cell recognition of HLA-DQ2-bound gluten peptides can be influenced by an N-terminal proline at p-1

Dariusz Stepniak; L. Willemijn Vader; Yvonne Kooy; Peter A. van Veelen; Antonis K. Moustakas; Nikolaos Papandreou; Elias Eliopoulos; Jan W. Drijfhout; George K. Papadopoulos; Frits Koning

Recent research has implicated a large number of gluten-derived peptides in the pathogenesis of celiac disease, a preponderantly HLA-DQ2-associated disorder. Current evidence indicates that the core of some of those peptides is ten amino acids long, while HLA class II normally accommodates nine amino acids in the binding groove. We have now investigated this in detail, using gluten-specific T-cell clones, HLA-DQ2-specific peptide-binding assays and molecular modelling. T-cell recognition of both a γ-gliadin peptide and a low-molecular-weight glutenin peptide was found to be strictly dependent on a ten-amino acids-long peptide. Subsequent peptide-binding studies indicated that the glutenin peptide bound in a conventional p1/p9 register, with an additional proline at p-1. Testing of substitution analogues demonstrated that the nature of the amino acid at p-1 strongly influenced T-cell recognition of the peptide. Moreover, molecular modelling confirmed that the glutenin peptide binds in a p1/p9 register, and that the proline at p-1 points upward towards the T-cell receptor. Database searches indicate that a large number of potential T-cell stimulatory gluten peptides with an additional proline at relative position p-1 exist, suggesting that the recognition of other gluten peptides may depend on this proline as well. This knowledge may be of importance for the identification of additional T-cell stimulatory gluten peptides and the design of a peptide-based, tolerance-inducing therapy.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 1999

Molecular modeling for the design of a biomimetic chimeric ligand. Application to the purification of bovine heart L-lactate dehydrogenase

Nikolaos E. Labrou; Elias Eliopoulos; Yannis D. Clonis

Molecular modeling was employed for the design of a biomimetic chimeric ligand for L-lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). This ligand is an anthraquinone monochlorotriazinyl dye comprising two moieties: (a) the ketocarboxyl biomimetic moiety, 2-(4-aminophenyl)-ethyloxamic acid, linked on the monochlorotriazine ring, mimicking the natural substrate of LDH, and (b) the anthraquinone chromophore moiety, linked also on the same monochlorotriazine ring via a diaminobenzenesulfonate group, acting as pseudomimetic of the cofactor NAD+. The positioning of the dye in the enzymes binding site is primarily achieved by the recognition and positioning of the pseudomimetic anthraquinone moiety. The positioning of the biomimetic ketocarboxylic moiety is based on a match between the polar and hydrophobic regions of the enzymes binding site with those of the biomimetic moiety of the ligand. The length of the biomimetic moiety is predetermined for the ketoacid to approach the enzyme catalytic site and form charge-charge interactions. The biomimetic chimeric ligand and the commercial nonbiomimetic ligand Cibacron(R) blue 3GA (CB3GA), were immobilized on crosslinked beaded agarose gel via their chlorotriazine ring. The two affinity adsorbents were evaluated for their purifying ability for LDH from six sources (bovine heart and pancreas, porcine muscle, chicken liver and muscle, and pea seeds). The biomimetic adsorbent exhibited approximately twofold higher purifying ability for LDH compared to the CB3GA adsorbent; therefore, the former was integrated in the purification procedure of LDH from bovine heart extract. The LDH afforded by this two-step purification procedure shows specific activity equal to 600 U/mg (25 degrees C) and a single band after SDS-PAGE analysis.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 1984

A structural model for ovine rhodopsin

Darryl Pappin; Elias Eliopoulos; John B. C. Findlay

Abstract An experimentally testable structure for ovine rhodopsin has been modelled from a combination of several secondary-structure prediction methods. The proposed structure agrees well with available experimental data. The model envisages seven transmembrane segments that are largely, but not entirely, α-helical. The prediction of roughly adjacent regions of more irregular structure within these segments (which could introduce significant changes in helix pitch or rotation) may provide a good working model for considering the structural mobility of the protein.


Lupus | 2011

Association of the PTPN22 R620W polymorphism with increased risk for SLE in the genetically homogeneous population of Crete

Elias Eliopoulos; Maria Zervou; A Andreou; K Dimopoulou; N Cosmidis; G Voloudakis; H Mysirlaki; V Vazgiourakis; P Sidiropoulos; Timothy B. Niewold; Dt Boumpas; George N. Goulielmos

Autoimmune diseases affect approximately 5% of the population, but much work remains to define the genetic risk factors and pathogenic mechanisms underlying these conditions. There is accumulating evidence that common genetic factors might predispose to multiple autoimmune disorders. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are complex autoimmune disorders with multiple susceptibility genes. The functional R620W (C1858T) polymorphism of the protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor type 22 (PTPN22) gene, a member of the PTPs that negatively regulate T-cell activation, has been recently associated with susceptibility to various autoimmune diseases. The aim of this study was to assess whether the C1858T polymorphism of PTPN22 also confers increased risk for SLE and RA in the genetically homogeneous population of Crete. It was found that the minor T allele of the PTPN22 C1858T SNP was more common in SLE patients than in control individuals (odds ratio [OR] = 1.91, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.11 to 3.9, p = 0.017). No significant difference was observed in the frequency of this allele when RA patients were compared with controls (OR = 1.14, 95% CI = 0.65 to 1.9, p = 0.64). Although the PTPN22 1858 T allele is found at decreased frequency in Southern Europe, including Crete, an association was found between this allele and SLE in the population studied.

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Trias Thireou

National Technical University of Athens

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Michael Loukas

Agricultural University of Athens

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Dimitrios T. Boumpas

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Nikolaos E. Labrou

Agricultural University of Athens

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