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Dive into the research topics where Fred Naider is active.

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Featured researches published by Fred Naider.


Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1993

Proline-Dependent Structural and Biological Properties of Peptides and Proteins

Arieh Yaron; Fred Naider

Proline residues confer unique structural constraints on peptide chains and markedly influence the susceptibility of proximal peptide bonds to protease activity. This review presents a critical analysis of peptidases involved in the cleavage of proline-containing peptide bonds, with particular attention to the role of proline peptidases in the regulation of the lifetime of biologically active peptides. Peptidases discussed include aminopeptidase P, prolidase, dipeptidyl peptidase IV, prolyl endopeptidase, and prolyl iminopeptidase. Attention is also given to HIV-1 protease, because this key enzyme processes an Xaa-Pro peptide bond. Analysis of the above enzymes reveals that they may function as key pacemakers in the control of the activity of many peptide hormones and that they are involved in a variety of immunological processes, including T-cell-mediated immune response. The novel occurrence of cis-trans isomerization about Xaa-Pro bonds and the biological function of peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerases (immunophilins) are reviewed.


Molecular Microbiology | 1995

The PTR family: a new group of peptide transporters

Henry-York Steiner; Fred Naider; Jeffrey M. Becker

The transport of peptides into cells is a well‐documented biological phenomenon which is accomplished by specific, energy‐dependent transporters found in a number of organisms as diverse as bacteria and humans. Until recently, the majority of peptide transporters cloned and characterized were found to be proteins of the ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) family. We report the identification of a new family of peptide transporters, which we call the PTR family. This group of proteins, distinct from the ABC‐type peptide transporters, was uncovered by sequence analyses of a number of recently discovered peptide transport proteins. Alignment of these proteins demonstrated a high number of identical and similar residues and identified conserved glycosylation and phosphorylation sites, as well as a structural motif unique to this group of proteins. Cluster analysis among the proteins indicated these sequences were indeed related and could be further divided into two subfamilies. A phylogenetic analysis of these new peptide transport sequences, compared to over 50 other peptide and membrane‐bound transporters, showed that these proteins comprise a distinct, separate group of proteins.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Proline-rich peptide from the coral pathogen Vibrio shiloi that inhibits photosynthesis of Zooxanthellae.

Ehud Banin; Sanjay Khare; Fred Naider; Eugene Rosenberg

ABSTRACT The coral-bleaching bacterium Vibrio shiloibiosynthesizes and secretes an extracellular peptide, referred to as toxin P, which inhibits photosynthesis of coral symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae). Toxin P was produced during the stationary phase when the bacterium was grown on peptone or Casamino Acids media at 29°C. Glycerol inhibited the production of toxin P. Toxin P was purified to homogeneity, yielding the following 12-residue peptide: PYPVYAPPPVVP (molecular weight, 1,295.54). The structure of toxin P was confirmed by chemical synthesis. In the presence of 12.5 mM NH4Cl, pure natural or synthetic toxin P (10 μM) caused a 64% decrease in the photosynthetic quantum yield of zooxanthellae within 5 min. The inhibition was proportional to the toxin P concentration. Toxin P bound avidly to zooxanthellae, such that subsequent addition of NH4Cl resulted in rapid inhibition of photosynthesis. When zooxanthellae were incubated in the presence of NH4Cl and toxin P, there was a rapid decrease in the pH (pH 7.8 to 7.2) of the bulk liquid, suggesting that toxin P facilitates transport of NH3 into the cell. It is known that uptake of NH3 into cells can destroy the pH gradient and block photosynthesis. This mode of action of toxin P can help explain the mechanism of coral bleaching by V. shiloi.


Microbiology | 1997

An oligopeptide transport gene from Candida albicans.

Mark A. Lubkowitz; Loren Hauser; Michael Breslav; Fred Naider; Jeffrey M. Becker

A Candida albicans oligopeptide transport gene, OPT1, was cloned from a C. albicans genomic library through heterologous expression in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae di-/tripeptide transport mutant PB1X-9B. When transformed with a plasmid harbouring OPT1, S. cerevisiae PB1X-9B, which did not express tetra-/pentapeptide transport activity under the conditions used, was conferred with an oligopeptide transport phenotype, as indicated by growth on the tetrapeptide Lys-Leu-Leu-Gly, sensitivity to toxic tetra- and pentapeptides, and an increase in the initial uptake rate of the radiolabelled tetrapeptide Lys-Leu-Gly-[3H]Leu. The level of oligopeptide transport was found to be influenced in the heterologous host by the source of nitrogen used for growth. The entire 3.8 kb fragment containing the oligopeptide transport activity was sequenced and an ORF of 2349 nucleotides containing a 58 nucleotide intron was identified. The deduced protein product of 783 amino acid residues contained 12 hydrophobic regions suggestive of a membrane transport protein. Sequence comparisons revealed that similar proteins are encoded by genes from S. cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe and that OPT1 is not a member of the ABC or PTR membrane transport families.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Schizosaccharomyces pombe isp4 encodes a transporter representing a novel family of oligopeptide transporters

Mark A. Lubkowitz; David Barnes; Michael Breslav; Aaron Burchfield; Fred Naider; Jeffrey M. Becker

We have recently cloned an oligopeptide transport gene from Candida albicans denoted OPT1. This gene showed significant sequence similarity to three open reading frames (ORFs) with no previously established function: isp4 from Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Saccharomyces cerevisiae YJL212C and YPR194C, identified during the genome project. The S. pombe gene isp4 was originally identified by Sato et al. as a gene that was upregulated through nitrogen starvation induction of meiosis. However, an isp4Δ strain exhibited a wild‐type phenotype with respect to sexual differentiation. We have found that the same isp4Δ strain is deficient in tetrapeptide transport activity as measured by its resistance to toxic tetrapeptides, by its inability to accumulate a radiolabelled tetrapeptide and by the inability to use tetrapeptides as a sole source of an amino acid to satisfy an auxotrophic requirement. Similarly, we found that the ORF YPR194C from S. cerevisiae encodes an oligopeptide transporter. Sequence analyses as well as physiological evidence has led us to propose that the proteins encoded by isp4 and the genes identified from S. cerevisiae and C. albicans comprise a new group of transporters specific for small oligopeptides, which we have named the OPT family.


Biochemistry | 2002

A Monomeric 310-Helix Is Formed in Water by a 13-Residue Peptide Representing the Neutralizing Determinant of HIV-1 on gp41 †,‡

Zohar Biron; Sanjay Khare; Abraham O. Samson; Yehezkiel Hayek; Fred Naider; Jacob Anglister

The peptide gp41(659-671) (ELLELDKWASLWN) comprises the entire epitope for one of the three known antibodies capable of neutralizing a broad spectrum of primary HIV-1 isolates and is the only such epitope that is sequential. Here we present the NMR structure of gp41(659-671) in water. This peptide forms a monomeric 3(10)-helix stabilized by i,i+3 side chain-side chain interactions favored by its primary sequence. In this conformation the peptide presents an exposed surface, which is mostly hydrophobic and consists of conserved HIV-1 residues. The presence of the 3(10)-helix is confirmed by its characteristic CD pattern. Studies of the 3(10)-helix have been hampered by the absence of a model peptide adopting this conformation. gp41(659-671) can serve as such a model to investigate the spectral characteristics of the 3(10)-helix, the factors that influence its stability, and the propensity of different amino acids to form a 3(10)-helix. The observation that the 3(10)-helical conformation is highly populated in the peptide gp41(659-671) indicates that the corresponding segment in the cognate protein is an autonomous folding unit. As such, it is very likely that the helical conformation is maintained in gp41 throughout the different tertiary structures of the envelope protein that form during the process of viral fusion. However, the exposure of the gp41(659-671) segment may vary, leading to changes in the reactivity of anti-gp41 antibodies in the different stages of viral fusion. Since gp41(659-671) is an autonomous folding unit, peptide immunogens consisting of the complete gp41(659-671) sequence are likely to induce antibodies highly cross-reactive with HIV-1.


Peptides | 2004

The α-factor mating pheromone of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a model for studying the interaction of peptide hormones and G protein-coupled receptors

Fred Naider; Jeffrey M. Becker

Mating in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is initiated by the secretion of diffusible peptide pheromones that are recognized by G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR). This review summarizes the use of the alpha-factor (WHWLQLKPGQPMY)--GPCR (Ste2p) interaction as a paradigm to understand the recognition between medium-sized peptide hormones and their cognate receptors. Studies over the past 15 years have indicated that the alpha-factor is bent around the center of the pheromone and that residues near the amine terminus play a central role in triggering signal transduction. The bend in the center appears not to be rigid and this flexibility is likely necessary for conformational changes that occur as the receptor switches from the inactive to active state. The results of synthetic, biological, biochemical, molecular biological, and biophysical analyses have led to a preliminary model for the structure of the peptide bound to its receptor. Antagonists for Ste2p have changes near the N-terminus of alpha-factor, and mutated forms of Ste2p were discovered that appear to favor binding of these antagonists relative to agonists. Many features of this yeast recognition system are relevant to and have counterparts in mammalian cells.


Molecular Membrane Biology | 2001

Multiplicity and regulation of genes encoding peptide transporters in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Melinda Hauser; Vanny Narita; Amy M. Donhardt; Fred Naider; Jeffrey M. Becker

The model eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae has two distinct peptide transport mechanisms, one for di-/tripeptides (the PTR system) and another for tetra-/pentapeptides (the OPT system). The PTR system consists of three genes, PTR1, PTR2 and PTR3. The transporter (Ptr2p), encoded by the gene PTR2, is a 12 transmembrane domain (TMD) integral membrane protein that translocates di-/tripeptides. Homologues to Ptr2p have been identified in virtually all organisms examined to date and comprise the PTR family of transport proteins. In S. cerevisiae, the expression of PTR2 is highly regulated at the cellular level by complex interactions of many genes, including PTR1, PTR3, CUP9 and SSY1. Oligopeptides, consisting of four to five amino acids, are transported by the 12 - 14 TMD integral membrane protein Opt1p. Unlike Ptr2p, distribution of this protein appears limited to fungi and plants, and there appears to be three paralogues in S. cerevisiae. This transporter has an affinity for enkephalin, an endogenous mammalian pentapeptide, as well as for glutathione. Although it is known that OPT1 is normally expressed only during sporulation, to date little is known about the genes and proteins involved in the regulation of OPT1 expression.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2009

Peptides in the treatment of AIDS.

Fred Naider; Jacob Anglister

Fusion of HIV-1 and target cells is mediated by the envelope protein gp41 that undergoes a series of conformational changes during the process of infection. Knowledge of the structural biology of gp41 allows the design of potent peptide inhibitors that prevent the virus from entering lymphocytes and macrophages. The design of such inhibitors is the subject of this review.


Bioorganic Chemistry | 1971

Conformations of alanine oligopeptides in solution

Murray Goodman; Fred Naider; Raymond Rupp

Abstract The conformations of four series of alanine oligomers containing solubility-enhancing blocking groups were investigated using circular dichroism (CD) in trifluoroethanol (TFE), hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP), and TFE-sulfuric acid, TFE-water mixtures. These studies show that alanine oligomers may exist in α-helical, β-associated, or disordered conformations, depending upon the solvent. The β-conformation, which appears in the higher oligomers, could be disrupted by dilution or by the addition of small amounts of sulfuric acid (1%). A mixture of 99% TFE-1% H2SO4 was found to be helix supporting and was used to determine a critical size for helix formation. Studies in TFE-water suggest that the higher oligomers should exist in a β-conformation in water.

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Jeffrey M. Becker

City University of New York

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Boris Arshava

City University of New York

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Jacob Anglister

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Fa-Xiang Ding

City University of New York

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Murray Goodman

University of California

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Chu-Biao Xue

College of Staten Island

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Leah S. Cohen

City University of New York

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