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Dive into the research topics where Galina S. Kachalova is active.

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Featured researches published by Galina S. Kachalova.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2006

Purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray study of the fungal laccase from Cerrena maxima

A. V. Lyashenko; Nadegda E. Zhukhlistova; Azat G. Gabdoulkhakov; Yuliya N. Zhukova; Wolfang Voelter; Viatcheslav N. Zaitsev; Isabel Bento; E. V. Stepanova; Galina S. Kachalova; Ol’ga V. Koroleva; Evgeniy A. Cherkashyn; V. I. Tishkov; Victor S. Lamzin; Katja Schirwitz; Ekaterina Yu. Morgunova; Christian Betzel; Peter F. Lindley; Al’bert M. Mikhailov

The crystallization and preliminary X-ray structure at 1.9 Å resolution of the fungal laccase from C. maxima are presented.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Crystal Structure Analysis of Free and Substrate-Bound 6-Hydroxy-l-Nicotine Oxidase from Arthrobacter nicotinovorans.

Galina S. Kachalova; Gleb Bourenkov; Thorsten Mengesdorf; Susann Schenk; Henry R. Maun; Manfred Burghammer; Christian Riekel; Karl Decker; Hans D. Bartunik

The pathway for oxidative degradation of nicotine in Arthrobacter nicotinovorans includes two genetically and structurally unrelated flavoenzymes, 6-hydroxy-L-nicotine oxidase (6HLNO) and 6-hydroxy-D-nicotine oxidase, which act with absolute stereospecificity on the L- and D-forms, respectively, of 6-hydroxy-nicotine. We solved the crystal structure of 6HLNO at 1.95 A resolution by combined isomorphous/multiple-wavelength anomalous dispersion phasing. The overall structure of each subunit of the 6HLNO homodimer and the folds of the individual domains are closely similar as in eukaryotic monoamine oxidases. Unexpectedly, a diacylglycerophospholipid molecule was found to be non-covalently bound to each protomer of 6HLNO. The fatty acid chains occupy hydrophobic channels that penetrate deep into the interior of the substrate-binding domain of each subunit. The solvent-exposed glycerophosphate moiety is located at the subunit-subunit interface. We further solved the crystal structure of a complex of dithionite-reduced 6HLNO with the natural substrate 6-hydroxy-L-nicotine at 2.05 A resolution. The location of the substrate in a tight cavity suggests that the binding geometry of this unproductive complex may be closely similar as under oxidizing conditions. The observed orientation of the bound substrate relative to the isoalloxazine ring of the flavin adenine dinucleotide cofactor is suitable for hydride-transfer dehydrogenation at the carbon atom that forms the chiral center of the substrate molecule. A comparison of the substrate-binding modes of 6HLNO and 6-hydroxy-D-nicotine oxidase, based on models of complexes with the D-substrate, suggests an explanation for the stereospecificity of both enzymes. The two enzymes are proposed to orient the enantiomeric substrates in mirror symmetry with respect to the plane of the flavin.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Structural analysis of the heterodimeric type IIS restriction endonuclease R.BspD6I acting as a complex between a monomeric site-specific nickase and a catalytic subunit.

Galina S. Kachalova; Eugeny A. Rogulin; A. K. Yunusova; Rimma I. Artyukh; T. A. Perevyazova; N. I. Matvienko; L. A. Zheleznaya; Hans D. Bartunik

The heterodimeric restriction endonuclease R.BspD6I from Bacillus species D6 recognizes a pseudosymmetric sequence and cuts both DNA strands outside the recognition sequence. The large subunit, Nt.BspD6I, acts as a type IIS site-specific monomeric nicking endonuclease. The isolated small subunit, ss.BspD6I, does not bind DNA and is not catalytically active. We solved the crystal structures of Nt.BspD6I and ss.BspD6I at high resolution. Nt.BspD6I consists of three domains, two of which exhibit structural similarity to the recognition and cleavage domains of FokI. ss.BspD6I has a fold similar to that of the cleavage domain of Nt.BspD6I, each containing a PD-(D/E)XK motif and a histidine as an additional putative catalytic residue. In contrast to the DNA-bound FokI structure, in which the cleavage domain is rotated away from the DNA, the crystal structure of Nt.BspD6I shows the recognition and cleavage domains in favorable orientations for interactions with DNA. Docking models of complexes of Nt.BspD6I and R.BspD6I with cognate DNA were constructed on the basis of structural similarity to individual domains of FokI, R.BpuJI and HindIII. A three-helix bundle forming an interdomain linker in Nt.BspD6I acts as a rigid spacer adjusting the orientations of the spatially separated domains to match the distance between the recognition and cleavage sites accurately.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Crystallographic snapshots of the complete reaction cycle of nicotine degradation by an amine oxidase of the monoamine oxidase (MAO) family

Galina S. Kachalova; Karl Decker; Andrew Holt; Hans D. Bartunik

FAD-linked oxidases constitute a class of enzymes which catalyze dehydrogenation as a fundamental biochemical reaction, followed by reoxidation of reduced flavin. Here, we present high-resolution crystal structures showing the flavoenzyme 6-hydroxy-l-nicotine oxidase in action. This enzyme was trapped during catalytic degradation of the native substrate in a sequence of discrete reaction states corresponding to the substrate-reduced enzyme, a complex of the enzyme with the intermediate enamine product and formation of the final aminoketone product. The inactive d-stereoisomer binds in mirror symmetry with respect to the catalytic axis, revealing absolute stereospecificity of hydrogen transfer to the flavin. The structural data suggest deprotonation of the substrate when bound at the active site, an overall binary complex mechanism and oxidation by direct hydride transfer. The amine nitrogen has a critical role in the dehydrogenation step and may activate carbocation formation at the α-carbon via delocalization from the lone pair to σ* Cα-H. Enzymatically assisted hydrolysis of the intermediate product occurs at a remote (P site) cavity. Substrate entry and product exit follow different paths. Structural and kinetic data suggest that substrate can also bind to the reduced enzyme, associated with slower reoxidation as compared to the rate of reoxidation of free enzyme. The results are of general relevance for the mechanisms of flavin amine oxidases.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2012

Structural comparison of the poplar plastocyanin isoforms PCa and PCb sheds new light on the role of the copper site geometry in interactions with redox partners in oxygenic photosynthesis.

Galina S. Kachalova; Alexandra Shosheva; Gleb Bourenkov; Anthony A. Donchev; Mitko Dimitrov; Hans D. Bartunik

Plastocyanin (PC) from poplar leaves is present in two isoforms, PCa and PCb, which differ in sequence by amino acid replacements at locations remote from the copper center and simultaneously act in the photosynthetic electron-transport chain. We describe ultra-high resolution structures of PCa and high-resolution structures of PCb, both under oxidizing and reducing conditions at pH 4, 6 and 8. The docking on cytochrome f and photosystem I, respectively, has been modeled for both isoforms. PCa and PCb exhibit closely similar overall and active-site structures, except for a difference in the relative orientation of the acidic patches. The isoforms exhibit substantial differences in the dependence of the reduced (Cu(I)) geometry on pH. In PCa, the decrease in pH causes a gradual dissociation of His87 from Cu(I) at low pH, probably adopting a neutral tautomeric state. In PCb, the histidine remains covalently bound to Cu(I) and may adopt a doubly protonated state at low pH. The fact that both isoforms have similar although not identical functions in photosynthetic electron flows suggests that the His87 imidazole does not play a crucial role for the pathway of electron transport from cytochrome f to oxidized PC.


Journal of Molecular Graphics | 1994

An algorithm to find channels and cavities within protein crystals

Oleg S. Kisljuk; Galina S. Kachalova; Nadejda Ph. Lanina

We have written a package called CHANNEL for determining and analyzing the channels and cavities within protein crystals. By using CHANNEL, the intermolecular space within a crystal lattice can be divided into closed cavities and channels. This package is certainly useful in determining the channel topological structure and quantitative characteristics. The package allows also the volume, and maximal and minimal areas of channels along a required direction to be calculated.


Crystallography Reports | 2006

Three-Dimensional Structure of Laccase from Coriolus zonatus at 2.6 Å Resolution

A. V. Lyashenko; Yu. N. Zhukova; N. E. Zhukhlistova; Viatcheslav N. Zaitsev; E. V. Stepanova; Galina S. Kachalova; O. V. Koroleva; Wolfgang Voelter; Ch. Betzel; V. I. Tishkov; I. Bento; A. G. Gabdulkhakov; E.Yu. Morgunova; P. F. Lindley; A. M. Mikhailov

Laccase (oxygen oxidoreductase, EC 1.14.18.1) belongs to the copper-containing oxidases. This enzyme catalyzes reduction of molecular oxygen by different organic and inorganic compounds to water without the formation of hydrogen peroxide. The three-dimensional structure of native laccase from Coriolus zonatus was solved and refined at 2.6 Å resolution (Rfactor = 21.23%, Rfree = 23.82%, rms deviations for the bond lengths and bond angles are 0.008 Å and 1.19°, respectively). The primary structure of the polypeptide chain and the architecture of the active site were refined. The carbohydrate component of the enzyme was identified. The access and exit water channels providing the access of molecular oxygen to the active site and release of water, which is the reduction product of molecular oxygen, from the protein molecule were found in the structure.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Flexibility of the Linker between the Domains of DNA Methyltransferase SsoII Revealed by Small-Angle X-Ray Scattering: Implications for Transcription Regulation in SsoII Restriction–Modification System

Petr V. Konarev; Galina S. Kachalova; Ryazanova Ay; E. A. Kubareva; A. S. Karyagina; Hans D. Bartunik; Dmitri I. Svergun

(Cytosine-5)-DNA methyltransferase SsoII (M.SsoII) consists of a methyltransferase domain (residues 72–379) and an N-terminal region (residues 1–71) which regulates transcription in SsoII restriction–modification system. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is employed here to study the low resolution structure of M.SsoII and its complex with DNA containing the methylation site. The shapes reconstructed ab initio from the SAXS data reveal two distinct protein domains of unequal size. The larger domain matches the crystallographic structure of a homologous DNA methyltransferase HhaI (M.HhaI), and the cleft in this domain is occupied by DNA in the model of the complex reconstructed from the SAXS data. This larger domain can thus be identified as the methyltransferase domain whereas the other domain represents the N-terminal region. Homology modeling of the M.SsoII structure is performed by using the model of M.HhaI for the methyltransferase domain and representing the N-terminal region either as a flexible chain of dummy residues or as a rigid structure of a homologous protein (phage 434 repressor) connected to the methyltransferase domain by a short flexible linker. Both models are compatible with the SAXS data and demonstrate high mobility of the N-terminal region. The linker flexibility might play an important role in the function of M.SsoII as a transcription factor.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Structural and Functional Investigation of Flavin Binding Center of the NqrC Subunit of Sodium-Translocating NADH:Quinone Oxidoreductase from Vibrio harveyi

Valentin Borshchevskiy; Ekaterina Round; Yulia V. Bertsova; Vitaly Polovinkin; Ivan Yu. Gushchin; Andrii Ishchenko; Kirill Kovalev; Alexey Mishin; Galina S. Kachalova; Alexander Popov; Alexander V. Bogachev; Valentin I. Gordeliy

Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (NQR) is a redox-driven sodium pump operating in the respiratory chain of various bacteria, including pathogenic species. The enzyme has a unique set of redox active prosthetic groups, which includes two covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) residues attached to threonine residues in subunits NqrB and NqrC. The reason of FMN covalent bonding in the subunits has not been established yet. In the current work, binding of free FMN to the apo-form of NqrC from Vibrio harveyi was studied showing very low affinity of NqrC to FMN in the absence of its covalent bonding. To study structural aspects of flavin binding in NqrC, its holo-form was crystallized and its 3D structure was solved at 1.56 Å resolution. It was found that the isoalloxazine moiety of the FMN residue is buried in a hydrophobic cavity and that its pyrimidine ring is squeezed between hydrophobic amino acid residues while its benzene ring is extended from the protein surroundings. This structure of the flavin-binding pocket appears to provide flexibility of the benzene ring, which can help the FMN residue to take the bended conformation and thus to stabilize the one-electron reduced form of the prosthetic group. These properties may also lead to relatively weak noncovalent binding of the flavin. This fact along with periplasmic location of the FMN-binding domains in the vast majority of NqrC-like proteins may explain the necessity of the covalent bonding of this prosthetic group to prevent its loss to the external medium.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2005

Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of the site-specific DNA nickase Nb.BspD6I.

Galina S. Kachalova; Eugeny A. Rogulin; Rimma I. Artyukh; T. A. Perevyazova; L. A. Zheleznaya; N. I. Matvienko; Hans D. Bartunik

Crystals of site-specific DNA nickase Nb.BspD6I (of molecular weight 70.8 kDa) have been grown at 291 K using PEG 8000 as precipitant. The diffraction pattern of the crystal extends to 3.3 A resolution at 100 K. The crystal belongs to space group P2(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 57.76, b = 90.67, c = 71.71, beta = 110.1 degrees. There is one molecule in the asymmetric unit and the solvent content is estimated to be 53% by volume.

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Hans D. Bartunik

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Rimma I. Artyukh

Russian Academy of Sciences

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L. A. Zheleznaya

Russian Academy of Sciences

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T. A. Perevyazova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. K. Yunusova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. V. Lyashenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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