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Dive into the research topics where Johannes P. M. Schelvis is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes P. M. Schelvis.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Spectroscopic and Thermodynamic Comparisons of Escherichia coli DNA Photolyase and Vibrio cholerae Cryptochrome 1

Kathleen Sokolowsky; Maire Newton; Carlos Lucero; Bradley Wertheim; Jaryd Freedman; Frank B. Cortazar; Jennifer Czochor; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Yvonne M. Gindt

Escherichia coli DNA photolyase and cryptochrome 1 isolated from Vibrio cholerae, a member of the CRY-DASH family, are directly compared using a variety of experimental methods including UV-vis and Raman spectroscopy, reduction potential measurements, and isothermal titration calorimetry. The semiquinone form of the cryptochrome has an absorption spectrum that is red-shifted from that of the photolyase, but the Raman spectrum indicates that the FAD binding pocket is similar to that of photolyase. The FADH(-)/FADH* reduction potential of the cryptochrome is significantly higher than that of the photolyase at 164 mV vs NHE, but it also increases upon substrate binding (to 195 mV vs NHE), an increase similar to what is observed in photolyase. The FADH(-)/FADH* reduction potential for both proteins was found to be insensitive to ATP binding. Isothermal titration calorimetry found that photolyase binds tighter to substrate (K(A) approximately 10(5) M(-1) for photolyase and approximately 10(4) M(-1) for cryptochrome 1), and the binding constants for both proteins were slightly sensitive to oxidation state. Based upon this work, it appears that this cryptochrome has significant spectroscopic and electrochemical similarities to CPD photolyase. The thermodynamic cycle of the enzymatic repair in the context of this work is discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Antibiotic Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis PEROXIDASE INTERMEDIATE BYPASS CAUSES POOR ISONIAZID ACTIVATION BY THE S315G MUTANT OF M. TUBERCULOSIS CATALASE-PEROXIDASE (KatG)

Javier Suarez; Kalina Ranguelova; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Richard S. Magliozzo

KatG (catalase-peroxidase) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is responsible for activation of isoniazid (INH), a pro-drug used to treat tuberculosis infections. Resistance to INH is a global health problem most often associated with mutations in the katG gene. The origin of INH resistance caused by the KatG[S315G] mutant enzyme is examined here. Overexpressed KatG[S315G] was characterized by optical, EPR, and resonance Raman spectroscopy and by studies of the INH activation mechanism in vitro. Catalase activity and peroxidase activity with artificial substrates were moderately reduced (50 and 35%, respectively), whereas the rates of formation of oxyferryl heme:porphyrin π-cation radical and the decay of heme intermediates were ∼2-fold faster in KatG[S315G] compared with WT enzyme. The INH binding affinity for the resting enzyme was unchanged, whereas INH activation, measured by the rate of formation of an acyl-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide adduct considered to be a bactericidal molecule, was reduced by 30% compared with WT KatG. INH resistance is suggested to arise from a redirection of catalytic intermediates into nonproductive reactions that interfere with oxidation of INH. In the resting mutant enzyme, a rapid evolution of 5-c heme to 6-c species occurred in contrast with the behavior of WT KatG and KatG[S315T] and consistent with greater flexibility at the heme edge in the absence of the hydroxyl of residue 315. Insights into the effects of mutations at residue 315 on enzyme structure, peroxidation kinetics, and specific interactions with INH are presented.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Role of the Oxyferrous Heme Intermediate and Distal Side Adduct Radical in the Catalase Activity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis KatG Revealed by the W107F Mutant

Xiangbo Zhao; Shengwei Yu; Kalina Ranguelova; Javier Suarez; Leonid Metlitsky; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Richard S. Magliozzo

Catalase-peroxidase (KatG) is essential in Mycobacterium tuberculosis for oxidative stress management and activation of the antitubercular pro-drug isoniazid. The role of a unique distal side adduct found in KatG enzymes, involving linked side chains of residues Met255, Tyr229, and Trp107 (MYW), in the unusual catalase activity of KatG is addressed here and in our companion paper (Suarez, J., Ranguelova, K., Jarzecki, A. A., Manzerova, J., Krymov, V., Zhao, X., Yu, S., Metlitsky, L., Gerfen, G. J., and Magliozzo, R. S. (2009) J. Biol. Chem. 284, in press). The KatG[W107F] mutant exhibited severely reduced catalase activity yet normal peroxidase activity, and as isolated contains more abundant 6-coordinate heme in high spin and low spin forms compared with the wild-type enzyme. Most interestingly, oxyferrous heme is also found in the purified enzyme. Oxyferrous KatG[W107F] was prepared by photolysis in air of the carbonyl enzyme or was generated using hydrogen peroxide decayed with a t½ of 2 days compared with 6 min for wild-type protein. The stability of oxyenyzme was modestly enhanced in KatG[Y229F] but was not affected in KatG[M255A]. Optical stopped-flow experiments showed rapid formation of Compound I in KatG[W107F] and facile formation of oxyferrous heme in the presence of micromolar hydrogen peroxide. An analysis of the relationships between catalase activity, stability of oxyferrous enzyme, and a proposed MYW adduct radical is presented. The loss of catalase function is assigned to the loss of the MYW adduct radical and structural changes that lead to greatly enhanced stability of oxyenzyme, an intermediate of the catalase cycle of native enzyme.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Effect of the Cyclobutane Cytidine Dimer on the Properties of Escherichia coli DNA Photolyase

Anar K. Murphy; Margaret Tammaro; Frank B. Cortazar; Yvonne M. Gindt; Johannes P. M. Schelvis

Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) photolyases are structure specific DNA-repair enzymes that specialize in the repair of CPDs, the major photoproducts that are formed upon irradiation of DNA with ultraviolet light. The purified enzyme binds a flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), which is in the neutral radical semiquinone (FADH(*)) form. The CPDs are repaired by a light-driven, electron transfer from the anionic hydroquinone (FADH(-)) singlet excited state to the CPD, which is followed by reductive cleavage of the cyclobutane ring and subsequent monomerization of the pyrimidine bases. CPDs formed between two adjacent thymidine bases (T< >T) are repaired with greater efficiency than those formed between two adjacent cytidine bases (C< >C). In this paper, we investigate the changes in Escherichia coli photolyase that are induced upon binding to DNA containing C< >C lesions using resonance Raman, UV-vis absorption, and transient absorption spectroscopies, spectroelectrochemistry, and computational chemistry. The binding of photolyase to a C< >C lesion modifies the energy levels of FADH(*), the rate of charge recombination between FADH(-) and Trp(306)(*), and protein-FADH(*) interactions differently than binding to a T< >T lesion. However, the reduction potential of the FADH(-)/FADH(*) couple is modified in the same way with both substrates. Our calculations show that the permanent electric dipole moment of C< >C is stronger (12.1 D) and oriented differently than that of T< >T (8.7 D). The possible role of the electric dipole moment of the CPD in modifying the physicochemical properties of photolyase as well as in affecting CPD repair will be discussed.


Biochemistry | 2008

Impact of Distal Side Water and Residue 315 on Ligand Binding to Ferric Mycobacterium tuberculosis Catalase-Peroxidase (KatG) †

Kalina Ranguelova; Javier Suarez; Leonid Metlitsky; Shengwei Yu; Shelly Brejt; Sidney Zelig Brejt; Lin Zhao; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Richard S. Magliozzo

The catalase-peroxidase (KatG) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is important for the virulence of this pathogen and also is responsible for activation of isoniazid (INH), an antibiotic in use for over 50 years in the first line treatment against tuberculosis infection. Overexpressed Mtb KatG contains a heterogeneous population of heme species that present distinct spectroscopic properties and, as described here, functional properties. A six-coordinate (6-c) heme species that accumulates in the resting enzyme after purification is defined as a unique structure containing weakly associated water on the heme distal side. We present the unexpected finding that this form of the enzyme, generally present as a minority species along with five-coordinate (5-c) enzyme, is the favored reactant for ligand binding. The use of resting enzyme samples with different proportional composition of 5-c and 6-c forms, as well as the use of KatG mutants with replacements at residue 315 that have different tendencies to stabilize the 6-c form, allowed demonstration of more rapid cyanide binding and preferred peroxide binding to enzyme containing 6-c heme. Optical-stopped flow and equilibrium titrations of ferric KatG with potassium cyanide reveal complex behavior that depends in part on the amount of 6-c heme in the resting enzymes. Resonance Raman and low-temperature EPR spectroscopy clearly demonstrate favored ligand (cyanide or peroxide) binding to 6-c heme. The 5-c and 6-c enzyme forms are not in equilibrium on the time scale of the experiments. The results provide evidence for the likely participation of specific water molecule(s) in the first phases of the reaction mechanism of catalase-peroxidase enzymes.


Biochemistry | 2015

Enzyme–Substrate Binding Kinetics Indicate That Photolyase Recognizes an Extrahelical Cyclobutane Thymidine Dimer

Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Xuling Zhu; Yvonne M. Gindt

Escherichia coli DNA photolyase is a DNA-repair enzyme that repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) that are formed on DNA upon exposure of cells to ultraviolet light. The light-driven electron-transfer mechanism by which photolyase catalyzes the CPD monomerization after the enzyme-substrate complex has formed has been studied extensively. However, much less is understood about how photolyase recognizes CPDs on DNA. It has been clearly established that photolyase, like many other DNA-repair proteins, requires flipping of the CPD site into an extrahelical position. Photolyase is unique in that it requires the two dimerized pyrimidine bases to flip rather than just a single damaged base. In this paper, we perform direct measurements of photolyase binding to CPD-containing undecamer DNA that has been labeled with a fluorophore. We find that the association constant of ∼2 × 10(6) M(-1) is independent of the location of the CPD on the undecamer DNA. The binding kinetics of photolyase are best described by two rate constants. The slower rate constant is ∼10(4) M(-1) s(-1) and is most likely due to steric interference of the fluorophore during the binding process. The faster rate constant is on the order of 2.5 × 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) and reflects the binding of photolyase to the CPD on the DNA. This result indicates that photolyase finds and binds to a CPD lesion 100-4000 times slower than other DNA-repair proteins. In light of the existing literature, we propose a mechanism in which photolyase recognizes a CPD that is flipped into an extrahelical position via a three-dimensional search.


Laser Chemistry | 1999

CO PHOTOLYSIS OF CYTOCHROME OXIDASE INVESTIGATED BY PS RESONANCE RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY

Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Costas Varotsis; Geurt Deinum; Gerald T. Babcock

Low-power picosecond resonance Raman spectroscopy was used to investigate the identity of the axial ligand of heme a3 and relaxation processes in the heme a3 pocket of cytochrome oxidase after CO photolysis. Our results show that the proximal histidine remains ligated to heme a3 after CO photolysis excluding the transient ligation of a photolabile, endogenous ligand. Furthermore, the relaxation of the heme a3 macrocycle modes occurs on the sub ps time scale, while relaxation of the heme pocket to its equilibrium conformation takes place on the μs time scale.


Biochemistry | 2000

Inhibition of soluble guanylate cyclase by ODQ.

Yunde Zhao; Philip E. Brandish; Di Valentin M; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Gerald T. Babcock; Michael A. Marletta


Biochemistry | 1998

Identification of histidine 105 in the beta1 subunit of soluble guanylate cyclase as the heme proximal ligand.

Yunde Zhao; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Gerald T. Babcock; Michael A. Marletta


Biochemistry | 2000

Interaction of Soluble Guanylate Cyclase with YC-1: Kinetic and Resonance Raman Studies†

John W. Denninger; Johannes P. M. Schelvis; Philip E. Brandish; Yunde Zhao; Gerald T. Babcock; Michael A. Marletta

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Shengwei Yu

City University of New York

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Yunde Zhao

University of California

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Javier Suarez

City University of New York

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Kalina Ranguelova

National Institutes of Health

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Salem Chouchane

City University of New York

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