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Dive into the research topics where Irit Sagi is active.

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Featured researches published by Irit Sagi.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Correlated structural kinetics and retarded solvent dynamics at the metalloprotease active site.

Moran Grossman; Benjamin Born; Matthias Heyden; Dmitry Tworowski; Gregg B. Fields; Irit Sagi; Martina Havenith

Solvent dynamics can play a major role in enzyme activity, but obtaining an accurate, quantitative picture of solvent activity during catalysis is quite challenging. Here, we combine terahertz spectroscopy and X-ray absorption analyses to measure changes in the coupled water-protein motions during peptide hydrolysis by a zinc-dependent human metalloprotease. These changes were tightly correlated with rearrangements at the active site during the formation of productive enzyme-substrate intermediates and were different from those in an enzyme–inhibitor complex. Molecular dynamics simulations showed a steep gradient of fast-to-slow coupled protein-water motions around the protein, active site and substrate. Our results show that water retardation occurs before formation of the functional Michaelis complex. We propose that the observed gradient of coupled protein-water motions may assist enzyme-substrate interactions through water-polarizing mechanisms that are remotely mediated by the catalytic metal ion and the enzyme active site.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2002

Structural Differences Between Biogenic Amorphous Calcium Carbonate Phases Using X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy**

Yael Levi-Kalisman; Sefi Raz; Steve Weiner; Lia Addadi; Irit Sagi

We compare the organization of the first coordination shells around the calcium ion in biogenic ACC phases from three different sources. The results show that although the three biogenic samples have the same chemical composition, which is referred to collectively under the name “amorphous calcium carbonate”, they are structurally different from one another. These differences may be attributed to the diverse modes of formation of such biogenic materials and may account for their known variations in stability.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Structural and functional bases for allosteric control of MMP activities: can it pave the path for selective inhibition?

Netta Sela-Passwell; Gabriel Rosenblum; Tsipi Shoham; Irit Sagi

The zinc-dependent matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) belong to a large family of structurally homologous enzymes. These enzymes are involved in a wide variety of biological processes ranging from physiological cell proliferation and differentiation to pathological states associated with tumor metastasis, inflammation, tissue degeneration, and cell death. Controlling the enzymatic activity of specific individual MMPs by antagonist molecules is highly desirable, first, for studying their individual roles, and second as potential therapeutic agents. However, blocking the enzymatic activity with synthetic small inhibitors appears to be an extremely difficult task. Thus, this is an unmet need presumably due to the high structural homology between MMP catalytic domains. Recent reports have recognized a potential role for exosite or allosteric protein regions, distinct from the extended catalytic pocket, in mediating MMP activation and substrate hydrolysis. This raises the possibility that MMP enzymatic and non-enzymatic activities may be modified via antagonist molecules targeted to such allosteric sites or to alternative enzyme domains. In this review, we discuss the structural and functional bases for potential allosteric control of MMPs and highlight potential alternative enzyme domains as targets for designing highly selective MMP inhibitors.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Active site electronic structure and dynamics during metalloenzyme catalysis

Oded Kleifeld; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Jan M. L. Martin; Irit Sagi

Zinc-dependent enzymes play important roles in many cellular processes. Assignment of their reaction mechanisms is often a subject of debate because the zinc ion is silent in several spectroscopic techniques. We have combined time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy, pre-steady state kinetics and computational quantum chemistry to study the active site zinc ion of bacterial alcohol dehydrogenase during single substrate turnover. We detect a series of alternations in the coordination number and structure of the catalytic zinc ion with concomitant changes in metal–ligand bond distances. These structural changes are reflected in the effective charge of the metal ion. The present work emphasizes the flexibility of catalytic zinc sites during catalysis and provides novel mechanistic insights into alcohol dehydrogenase catalysis.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Antibodies targeting the catalytic zinc complex of activated matrix metalloproteinases show therapeutic potential

Netta Sela-Passwell; Raghavendra Kikkeri; Orly Dym; Haim Rozenberg; Raanan Margalit; Rina Arad-Yellin; Miriam Eisenstein; Ori Brenner; Tsipi Shoham; Tamar Danon; Abraham Shanzer; Irit Sagi

Endogenous tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) have key roles in regulating physiological and pathological cellular processes. Imitating the inhibitory molecular mechanisms of TIMPs while increasing selectivity has been a challenging but desired approach for antibody-based therapy. TIMPs use hybrid protein-protein interactions to form an energetic bond with the catalytic metal ion, as well as with enzyme surface residues. We used an innovative immunization strategy that exploits aspects of molecular mimicry to produce inhibitory antibodies that show TIMP-like binding mechanisms toward the activated forms of gelatinases (matrix metalloproteinases 2 and 9). Specifically, we immunized mice with a synthetic molecule that mimics the conserved structure of the metalloenzyme catalytic zinc-histidine complex residing within the enzyme active site. This immunization procedure yielded selective function-blocking monoclonal antibodies directed against the catalytic zinc-protein complex and enzyme surface conformational epitopes of endogenous gelatinases. The therapeutic potential of these antibodies has been demonstrated with relevant mouse models of inflammatory bowel disease. Here we propose a general experimental strategy for generating inhibitory antibodies that effectively target the in vivo activity of dysregulated metalloproteinases by mimicking the mechanism employed by TIMPs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

From Sensors to Silencers: Quinoline- and Benzimidazole-Sulfonamides as Inhibitors for Zinc Proteases

Matthieu Rouffet; César Augusto F. de Oliveira; Yael Udi; Arpita Agrawal; Irit Sagi; J. Andrew McCammon; Seth M. Cohen

Derived from the extensive work in the area of small molecule zinc(II) ion sensors, chelating fragment libraries of quinoline- and benzimidazole-sulfonamides have been prepared and screened against several different zinc(II)-dependent matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). The fragments show impressive inhibition of these metalloenzymes and preferences for different MMPs based on the nature of the chelating group. The findings show that focused chelator libraries are a powerful strategy for the discovery of lead fragments for metalloprotein inhibition.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The glial scar-monocyte interplay: a pivotal resolution phase in spinal cord repair.

Ravid Shechter; Catarina Raposo; Anat London; Irit Sagi; Michal Schwartz

The inflammatory response in the injured spinal cord, an immune privileged site, has been mainly associated with the poor prognosis. However, recent data demonstrated that, in fact, some leukocytes, namely monocytes, are pivotal for repair due to their alternative anti-inflammatory phenotype. Given the pro-inflammatory milieu within the traumatized spinal cord, known to skew monocytes towards a classical phenotype, a pertinent question is how parenchymal-invading monocytes acquire resolving properties essential for healing, under such unfavorable conditions. In light of the spatial association between resolving (interleukin (IL)-10 producing) monocytes and the glial scar matrix chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (CSPG), in this study we examined the mutual relationship between these two components. By inhibiting the de novo production of CSPG following spinal cord injury, we demonstrated that this extracellular matrix, mainly known for its ability to inhibit axonal growth, serves as a critical template skewing the entering monocytes towards the resolving phenotype. In vitro cell culture studies demonstrated that this matrix alone is sufficient to induce such monocyte polarization. Reciprocal conditional ablation of the monocyte-derived macrophages concentrated at the lesion margins, using diphtheria toxin, revealed that these cells have scar matrix-resolving properties. Replenishment of monocytic cell populations to the ablated mice demonstrated that this extracellular remodeling ability of the infiltrating monocytes requires their expression of the matrix-degrading enzyme, matrix metalloproteinase 13 (MMP-13), a property that was found here to be crucial for functional recovery. Altogether, this study demonstrates that the glial scar-matrix, a known obstacle to regeneration, is a critical component skewing the encountering monocytes towards a resolving phenotype. In an apparent feedback loop, monocytes were found to regulate scar resolution. This cross-regulation between the glial scar and monocytes primes the resolution of this interim phase of spinal cord repair, thereby providing a fundamental platform for the dynamic healing response.


Nature | 2017

The extracellular matrix protein Agrin promotes heart regeneration in mice.

Elad Bassat; Yara Eid Mutlak; Alex Genzelinakh; Ilya Y. Shadrin; Kfir Baruch-Umansky; Oren Yifa; David Kain; Dana Rajchman; John Leach; Daria Riabov Bassat; Yael Udi; Rachel Sarig; Irit Sagi; James F. Martin; Nenad Bursac; Shenhav Cohen; Eldad Tzahor

The adult mammalian heart is non-regenerative owing to the post-mitotic nature of cardiomyocytes. The neonatal mouse heart can regenerate, but only during the first week of life. Here we show that changes in the composition of the extracellular matrix during this week can affect cardiomyocyte growth and differentiation in mice. We identify agrin, a component of neonatal extracellular matrix, as required for the full regenerative capacity of neonatal mouse hearts. In vitro, recombinant agrin promotes the division of cardiomyocytes that are derived from mouse and human induced pluripotent stem cells through a mechanism that involves the disassembly of the dystrophin–glycoprotein complex, and Yap- and ERK-mediated signalling. In vivo, a single administration of agrin promotes cardiac regeneration in adult mice after myocardial infarction, although the degree of cardiomyocyte proliferation observed in this model suggests that there are additional therapeutic mechanisms. Together, our results uncover a new inducer of mammalian heart regeneration and highlight fundamental roles of the extracellular matrix in cardiac repair.


Nature Medicine | 2015

PAR1 signaling regulates the retention and recruitment of EPCR-expressing bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells

Shiri Gur-Cohen; Tomer Itkin; Sagarika Chakrabarty; Claudine Graf; Orit Kollet; Aya Ludin; Karin Golan; Alexander Kalinkovich; Guy Ledergor; Eitan Wong; Elisabeth Niemeyer; Ziv Porat; Ayelet Erez; Irit Sagi; Charles T. Esmon; Wolfram Ruf; Tsvee Lapidot

Retention of long-term repopulating hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs) in the bone marrow is essential for hematopoiesis and for protection from myelotoxic injury. We report that signaling cascades that are traditionally viewed as coagulation related also control retention of endothelial protein C receptor–positive (EPCR+) LT-HSCs in the bone marrow and their recruitment to the blood via two pathways mediated by protease activated receptor 1 (PAR1). Thrombin-PAR1 signaling induces nitric oxide (NO) production, leading to EPCR shedding mediated by tumor necrosis factor-α–converting enzyme (TACE), enhanced CXCL12-CXCR4–induced motility and rapid stem and progenitor cell mobilization. Conversely, bone marrow blood vessels provide a microenvironment enriched with activated protein C (aPC) that retains EPCR+ LT-HSCs by limiting NO generation, reducing Cdc42 activity and enhancing integrin VLA4 affinity and adhesion. Inhibition of NO production by aPC-EPCR-PAR1 signaling reduces progenitor cell egress from the bone marrow, increases retention of bone marrow NOlow EPCR+ LT-HSCs and protects mice from chemotherapy-induced hematological failure and death. Our study reveals new roles for PAR1 and EPCR in controlling NO production to balance maintenance and recruitment of bone marrow EPCR+ LT-HSCs, with potential clinical relevance for stem cell transplantation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Visualization of unwinding activity of duplex RNA by DbpA, a DEAD box helicase, at single-molecule resolution by atomic force microscopy

Arnon Henn; Ohad Medalia; Shu-Ping Shi; Michal Steinberg; Francois Franceschi; Irit Sagi

The Escherichia coli protein DbpA is unique in its subclass of DEAD box RNA helicases, because it possesses ATPase-specific activity toward the peptidyl transferase center in 23S rRNA. Although its remarkable ATPase activity had been well defined toward various substrates, its RNA helicase activity remained to be characterized. Herein, we show by using biochemical assays and atomic force microscopy that DbpA exhibits ATP-stimulated unwinding activity of RNA duplex regardless of its primary sequence. This work presents an attempt to investigate the action of DEAD box proteins by a single-molecule visualization methodology. Our atomic force microscopy images enabled us to observe directly the unwinding reaction of a DEAD box helicase on long stretches of double-stranded RNA. Specifically, we could differentiate between the binding of DbpA to RNA in the absence of ATP and the formation of a Y-shaped intermediate after its progression through double-stranded RNA in the presence of ATP. Recent studies have questioned the designation of DbpA, in particular, and DEAD box proteins in general as RNA helicases. However, accumulated evidence and the results reported herein suggest that these proteins are indeed helicases that resemble in many aspects the DNA helicases.

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Moran Grossman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Inna Solomonov

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Tamar Danon

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Eitan Wong

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Gabriel Rosenblum

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Oded Kleifeld

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Yael Udi

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Arnon Henn

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Mark R. Chance

Case Western Reserve University

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