Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos
University of the Basque Country
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Alessandro Alaimo; Araitz Alberdi; Carolina Gomis-Perez; Juncal Fernández-Orth; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Covadonga Malo; Oscar Millet; Pilar Areso; Alvaro Villarroel
Kv7.2 (KCNQ2) is the principal molecular component of the slow voltage gated M-channel, which strongly influences neuronal excitability. Calmodulin (CaM) binds to two intracellular C-terminal segments of Kv7.2 channels, helices A and B, and it is required for exit from the endoplasmic reticulum. However, the molecular mechanisms by which CaM controls channel trafficking are currently unknown. Here we used two complementary approaches to explore the molecular events underlying the association between CaM and Kv7.2 and their regulation by Ca2+. First, we performed a fluorometric assay using dansylated calmodulin (D-CaM) to characterize the interaction of its individual lobes to the Kv7.2 CaM binding site (Q2AB). Second, we explored the association of Q2AB with CaM by NMR spectroscopy, using 15N-labeled CaM as a reporter. The combined data highlight the interdependency of the N- and C-lobes of CaM in the interaction with Q2AB, suggesting that when CaM binds Ca2+ the binding interface pivots between the N-lobe whose interactions are dominated by helix B and the C-lobe where the predominant interaction is with helix A. In addition, Ca2+ makes CaM binding to Q2AB more difficult and, reciprocally, the channel weakens the association of CaM with Ca2+.
Journal of Cell Science | 2015
Araitz Alberdi; Carolina Gomis-Perez; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Alessandro Alaimo; Covadonga Malo; Juncal Aldaregia; Carlos Lopez-Robles; Pilar Areso; Elisabeth Butz; Christian Wahl-Schott; Alvaro Villarroel
ABSTRACT We show that the combination of an intracellular bi-partite calmodulin (CaM)-binding site and a distant assembly region affect how an ion channel is regulated by a membrane lipid. Our data reveal that regulation by phosphatidylinositol(4,5)bisphosphate (PIP2) and stabilization of assembled Kv7.2 subunits by intracellular coiled-coil regions far from the membrane are coupled molecular processes. Live-cell fluorescence energy transfer measurements and direct binding studies indicate that remote coiled-coil formation creates conditions for different CaM interaction modes, each conferring different PIP2 dependency to Kv7.2 channels. Disruption of coiled-coil formation by epilepsy-causing mutation decreases apparent CaM-binding affinity and interrupts CaM influence on PIP2 sensitivity. Summary: Conformational changes in the helix D coiled-coil of the Kv7.2 channel affect interactions with calmodulin, which binds to helices AB, modulating channel gating and PIP2 sensitivity.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2017
Jean-Marc Blouin; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Emma Sasso; Julie Esteve; Cécile Ged; Magalie Lalanne; Arantza Sanz-Parra; Pedro Urquiza; Hubert de Verneuil; Oscar Millet; Emmanuel Richard
Congenital erythropoietic porphyria (CEP) is an inborn error of heme biosynthesis characterized by uroporphyrinogen III synthase (UROS) deficiency resulting in deleterious porphyrin accumulation in blood cells responsible for hemolytic anemia and cutaneous photosensitivity. We analyzed here the molecular basis of UROS impairment associated with twenty nine UROS missense mutations actually described in CEP patients. Using a computational and biophysical joint approach we predicted that most disease-causing mutations would affect UROS folding and stability. Through the analysis of enhanced green fluorescent protein-tagged versions of UROS enzyme we experimentally confirmed these data and showed that thermodynamic instability and premature protein degradation is a major mechanism accounting for the enzymatic deficiency associated with twenty UROS mutants in human cells. Since the intracellular loss in protein homeostasis is in excellent agreement with the in vitro destabilization, we used molecular dynamic simulation to rely structural 3D modification with UROS disability. We found that destabilizing mutations could be clustered within three types of mechanism according to side chain rearrangements or contact alterations within the pathogenic UROS enzyme so that the severity degree correlated with cellular protein instability. Furthermore, proteasome inhibition using bortezomib, a clinically available drug, significantly enhanced proteostasis of each unstable UROS mutant. Finally, we show evidence that abnormal protein homeostasis is a prevalent mechanism responsible for UROS deficiency and that modulators of UROS proteolysis such as proteasome inhibitors or chemical chaperones may represent an attractive therapeutic option to reduce porphyrin accumulation and prevent skin photosensitivity in CEP patients when the genotype includes a missense variant.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Marija Petricevic; Lukasz F. Sobala; Pearl Z. Fernandes; Lluís Raich; Andrew J. Thompson; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Oscar Millet; Sha Zhu; Matthieu Sollogoub; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Carme Rovira; Gideon J. Davies; Spencer J. Williams
Inhibitor design incorporating features of the reaction coordinate and transition-state structure has emerged as a powerful approach for the development of enzyme inhibitors. Such inhibitors find use as mechanistic probes, chemical biology tools, and therapeutics. Endo-α-1,2-mannosidases and endo-α-1,2-mannanases, members of glycoside hydrolase family 99 (GH99), are interesting targets for inhibitor development as they play key roles in N-glycan maturation and microbiotal yeast mannan degradation, respectively. These enzymes are proposed to act via a 1,2-anhydrosugar “epoxide” mechanism that proceeds through an unusual conformational itinerary. Here, we explore how shape and charge contribute to binding of diverse inhibitors of these enzymes. We report the synthesis of neutral dideoxy, glucal and cyclohexenyl disaccharide inhibitors, their binding to GH99 endo-α-1,2-mannanases, and their structural analysis by X-ray crystallography. Quantum mechanical calculations of the free energy landscapes reveal how the neutral inhibitors provide shape but not charge mimicry of the proposed intermediate and transition state structures. Building upon the knowledge of shape and charge contributions to inhibition of family GH99 enzymes, we design and synthesize α-Man-1,3-noeuromycin, which is revealed to be the most potent inhibitor (KD 13 nM for Bacteroides xylanisolvens GH99 enzyme) of these enzymes yet reported. This work reveals how shape and charge mimicry of transition state features can enable the rational design of potent inhibitors.
Journal of Cell Science | 2015
Carolina Gomis-Perez; Alessandro Alaimo; Juncal Fernández-Orth; Araitz Alberdi; Paloma Aivar-Mateo; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Covadonga Malo; Pilar Areso; Antonio Felipe; Alvaro Villarroel
ABSTRACT Calmodulin (CaM) binding to the AB module is crucial for multiple mechanisms governing the function of Kv7.2 (also known as KCNQ2) K+ channel subunits, which mediate one of the main components of the non-inactivating K+ M-current, a key controller of neuronal excitability. Structural analysis indicates that the CaM N-lobe engages with helix B, whereas the C-lobe anchors to the IQ site within helix A. Here, we report the identification of a new site between helices A and B that assists in CaM binding whose sequence is reminiscent of the TW helix within the CaM C-lobe anchoring site of SK2 K+ channels (also known as KCNN2). Mutations that disrupt CaM binding within the TW site, helix B or helix A yield functional channels, whereas no function is observed when the TW site and helix A, or the TW site and helix B are mutated simultaneously. Our data indicate that the TW site is dispensable for function, contributes to the stabilization of the CaM–Kv7.2 complex and becomes essential when docking to either helix A or when helix B is perturbed. Summary: A new dispensable site in the Kv7.2 channel affects its regulation by CaM, such that its function can be rescued by CaM when one of the other two CaM-interaction sites is impaired.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Eider Nuñez; Carolina Gomis; Covadonga Malo; Alvaro Villarroel; Oscar Millet
Significance Ion channels are sophisticated proteins that exert control over a plethora of body functions. Specifically, the members of the Kv7 family are prominent components of the nervous systems, responsible for the ion fluxes that regulate the electrical signaling in neurons and cardiac myocytes. Albeit its relevance, there are still several questions, including the Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM)-mediated gating mechanism. We found that Ca2+ binding to CaM triggers a segmental rotation that allosterically transmits the signal from the cytosol up to the transmembrane region. NMR-derived analysis of the dynamics demonstrates that it occurs through a conformational selection mechanism. Energetically, CaM association with the channel tunes the affinities of the CaM lobes (calmodulation) so that the channel can sense the specific changes in [Ca2+] resulting after an action potential. The Kv7.2 (KCNQ2) channel is the principal molecular component of the slow voltage-gated, noninactivating K+ M-current, a key controller of neuronal excitability. To investigate the calmodulin (CaM)-mediated Ca2+ gating of the channel, we used NMR spectroscopy to structurally and dynamically describe the association of helices hA and hB of Kv7.2 with CaM, as a function of Ca2+ concentration. The structures of the CaM/Kv7.2-hAB complex at two different calcification states are reported here. In the presence of a basal cytosolic Ca2+ concentration (10–100 nM), only the N-lobe of CaM is Ca2+-loaded and the complex (representative of the open channel) exhibits collective dynamics on the millisecond time scale toward a low-populated excited state (1.5%) that corresponds to the inactive state of the channel. In response to a chemical or electrical signal, intracellular Ca2+ levels rise up to 1–10 μM, triggering Ca2+ association with the C-lobe. The associated conformational rearrangement is the key biological signal that shifts populations to the closed/inactive channel. This reorientation affects the C-lobe of CaM and both helices in Kv7.2, allosterically transducing the information from the Ca2+-binding site to the transmembrane region of the channel.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Alessandro Alaimo; Eider Nuñez; Paloma Aivar; Juncal Fernández-Orth; Carolina Gomis-Perez; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Covadonga Malo; Alvaro Villarroel
Tetrameric coiled-coil structures are present in many ion channels, often adjacent to a calmodulin (CaM) binding site, although the relationship between the two is not completely understood. Here we examine the dynamic properties of the ABCD domain located in the intracellular C-terminus of tetrameric, voltage-dependent, potassium selective Kv7.2 channels. This domain encompasses the CaM binding site formed by helices A and B, followed by helix C, which is linked to the helix D coiled-coil. The data reveals that helix D stabilizes CaM binding, promoting trans-binding (CaM embracing neighboring subunits), and they suggest that the ABCD domain can be exchanged between subunits of the tetramer. Exchange is faster when mutations in AB weaken the CaM interaction. The exchange of ABCD domains is slower in the presence of Ca2+, indicating that CaM stabilization of the tetrameric assembly is enhanced when loaded with this cation. Our observations are consistent with a model that involves a dynamic mechanism of helix D assembly, which supports reciprocal allosteric coupling between the A-B module and the coiled-coil formed by the helix D. Thus, formation of the distal helix D tetramer influences CaM binding and CaM-dependent Kv7.2 properties, whereas reciprocally, CaM and Ca2+ influence the dynamic behavior of the helix D coiled-coil.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Hugo Fraga; Jordi Pujols; Marcos Gil-Garcia; Alicia Roque; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Carlo Santambrogio; Joan-Josep Bech-Serra; Francesc Canals; Pau Bernadó; Rita Grandori; Oscar Millet; Salvador Ventura
Conditionally disordered proteins are either ordered or disordered depending on the environmental context. The substrates of the mitochondrial intermembrane space (IMS) oxidoreductase Mia40 are synthesized on cytosolic ribosomes and diffuse as intrinsically disordered proteins to the IMS, where they fold into their functional conformations; behaving thus as conditionally disordered proteins. It is not clear how the sequences of these polypeptides encode at the same time for their ability to adopt a folded structure and to remain unfolded. Here we characterize the disorder-to-order transition of a Mia40 substrate, the human small copper chaperone Cox17. Using an integrated real-time approach, including chromatography, fluorescence, CD, FTIR, SAXS, NMR, and MS analysis, we demonstrate that in this mitochondrial protein, the conformational switch between disordered and folded states is controlled by the formation of a single disulfide bond, both in the presence and in the absence of Mia40. We provide molecular details on how the folding of a conditionally disordered protein is tightly regulated in time and space, in such a way that the same sequence is competent for protein translocation and activity.
Science Translational Medicine | 2018
Pedro Urquiza; Ana Laín; Arantza Sanz-Parra; Jorge Moreno; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Pierre Dubus; Esperanza Gonzalez; Virginia Gutiérrez-de-Juan; Sandra Luz Malagón García; Hasier Eraña; Itxaso San Juan; Iratxe Macías; Fredj ben Bdira; Paula Pluta; Gabriel Ortega; Julen Oyarzabal; Rosario González-Muñiz; Juan Rodríguez-Cuesta; Juan Anguita; Emilio Díez; Jean-Marc Blouin; Hubert de Verneuil; José M. Mato; Emmanuel Richard; Juan M. Falcon-Perez; Joaquín Castilla; Oscar Millet
The off-patent marketed antifungal ciclopirox improves symptoms in a mouse model of congenital erythropoietic porphyria. Drug repurposing helps iron out porphyria Porphyria is an inherited incurable disorder resulting from the buildup of heme precursors throughout the body. Urquiza et al. showed that ciclopirox, already approved as an antifungal, allosterically stabilized a mutated biosynthetic enzyme (uroporphyrinogen III synthase or UROIIIS) that leads to this condition. Oral ciclopirox administration increased UROIIIS activity and reduced clinical symptoms in a mouse model of porphyria. Further work will be needed to show whether ciclopirox is suitable for chronic treatment. The authors’ drug repurposing pipeline could potentially be co-opted to investigate therapies for other enzyme mutations that cause metabolic disease. Congenital erythropoietic porphyria is a rare autosomal recessive disease produced by deficient activity of uroporphyrinogen III synthase, the fourth enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway. The disease affects many organs, can be life-threatening, and currently lacks curative treatments. Inherited mutations most commonly reduce the enzyme’s stability, altering its homeostasis and ultimately blunting intracellular heme production. This results in uroporphyrin by-product accumulation in the body, aggravating associated pathological symptoms such as skin photosensitivity and disfiguring phototoxic cutaneous lesions. We demonstrated that the synthetic marketed antifungal ciclopirox binds to the enzyme, stabilizing it. Ciclopirox targeted the enzyme at an allosteric site distant from the active center and did not affect the enzyme’s catalytic role. The drug restored enzymatic activity in vitro and ex vivo and was able to alleviate most clinical symptoms of congenital erythropoietic porphyria in a genetic mouse model of the disease at subtoxic concentrations. Our findings establish a possible line of therapeutic intervention against congenital erythropoietic porphyria, which is potentially applicable to most of deleterious missense mutations causing this devastating disease.
Archive | 2017
V. N. Sivanandam; Ganeko Bernardo-Seisdedos; Oscar Millet
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy is a highly resolutive method for drug-discovery as it provides information about drug association to a target protein, over a wide range of affinities and with atomic resolution. The binding event affects many NMR observables that are sensitive to the chemical environment and to putative changes in the structure/dynamics upon binding. The versatility and robustness of this technique explains why pharmaceutical and research groups routinely incorporate NMR spectroscopy into their high-throughput ligand screening strategies. In this chapter, we pay attention to the receptor-based NMR experiments that monitor the target protein to quantitatively describe and validate the small-compound binding phenomena.