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Dive into the research topics where Jurij Lah is active.

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Featured researches published by Jurij Lah.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Thermodynamic fingerprints of ligand binding to human telomeric G-quadruplexes.

Matjaž Bončina; Črtomir Podlipnik; Ivo Piantanida; Julita Eilmes; Marie-Paule Teulade-Fichou; Gorazd Vesnaver; Jurij Lah

Thermodynamic studies of ligand binding to human telomere (ht) DNA quadruplexes, as a rule, neglect the involvement of various ht-DNA conformations in the binding process. Therefore, the thermodynamic driving forces and the mechanisms of ht-DNA G-quadruplex-ligand recognition remain poorly understood. In this work we characterize thermodynamically and structurally binding of netropsin (Net), dibenzotetraaza[14]annulene derivatives (DP77, DP78), cationic porphyrin (TMPyP4) and two bisquinolinium ligands (Phen-DC3, 360A-Br) to the ht-DNA fragment (Tel22) AGGG(TTAGGG)3 using isothermal titration calorimetry, CD and fluorescence spectroscopy, gel electrophoresis and molecular modeling. By global thermodynamic analysis of experimental data we show that the driving forces characterized by contributions of specific interactions, changes in solvation and conformation differ significantly for binding of ligands with low quadruplex selectivity over duplexes (Net, DP77, DP78, TMPyP4; KTel22 ≈ KdsDNA). These contributions are in accordance with the observed structural features (changes) and suggest that upon binding Net, DP77, DP78 and TMPyP4 select hybrid-1 and/or hybrid-2 conformation while Phen-DC3 and 360A-Br induce the transition of hybrid-1 and hybrid-2 to the structure with characteristics of antiparallel or hybrid-3 type conformation.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

A New Pathway of DNA G-Quadruplex Formation†

Slavko Čeru; Primož Šket; Iztok Prislan; Jurij Lah; Janez Plavec

A new folding intermediate of Oxytricha nova telomeric Oxy-1.5 G-quadruplex was characterized in aqueous solution using NMR spectroscopy, native gel electrophoresis, thermal differential spectra (TDS), CD spectroscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). NMR experiments have revealed that this intermediate (i-Oxy-1.5) exists in two symmetric bimolecular forms in which all guanine bases are involved in GG N1-carbonyl symmetric base pairs. Kinetic analysis of K(+) -induced structural transitions shows that folding of Oxy-1.5 G-quadruplex from i-Oxy-1.5 is much faster and proceeds through less intermediates than folding from single strands. Therefore, a new folding pathway of Oxy-1.5 G-quadruplex is proposed. This study provides evidence that G-rich DNA sequences can self-assemble into specific pre-organized DNA structures that are predisposed to fold into G-quadruplex when interacting with cations such as potassium ions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Driving Forces of Gyrase Recognition by the Addiction Toxin CcdB

Mario Simic; Natalie De Jonge; Remy Loris; Gorazd Vesnaver; Jurij Lah

Gyrase, an essential bacterial topoisomerase, is the target of several antibiotics (e.g. quinolones) as well as of bacterial toxin CcdB. This toxin, encoded by Escherichia coli toxin-antitoxin module ccd, poisons gyrase by causing inhibition of both transcription and replication. Because the molecular driving forces of gyrase unfolding and CcdB-gyrase binding were unknown, the nature of the CcdB-gyrase recognition remained elusive. Therefore, we performed a detailed thermodynamic analysis of CcdB binding to several fragments of gyrase A subunit (GyrA) that contain the CcdB-binding site. Binding of CcdB to the shorter fragments was studied directly by isothermal titration calorimetry. Its binding to the longer GyrA59 fragment in solution is kinetically limited and was therefore investigated via urea induced unfolding of the GyrA59-CcdB complex and unbound GyrA59 and CcdB, monitored by circular dichroism spectroscopy. Model analysis of experimental data, in combination with the relevant structural information, indicates that CcdB binding to gyrase is an enthalpic process driven mainly by specific interactions between CcdB and the highly stable dimerization domain of the GyrA. The dissection of binding energetics indicates that CcdB-gyrase recognition is accompanied by opening of the tower and catalytic domain of GyrA. Such extensive structural rearrangements appear to be crucial driving forces for the functioning of the ccd toxin-antitoxin module.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

What drives the binding of minor groove-directed ligands to DNA hairpins?

Jurij Lah; Igor Drobnak; Marko Dolinar; Gorazd Vesnaver

Understanding the molecular basis of ligand–DNA-binding events, and its application to the rational design of novel drugs, requires knowledge of the structural features and forces that drive the corresponding recognition processes. Existing structural evidence on DNA complexation with classical minor groove-directed ligands and the corresponding studies of binding energetics have suggested that this type of binding can be described as a rigid-body association. In contrast, we show here that the binding-coupled conformational changes may be crucial for the interpretation of DNA (hairpin) association with a classical minor groove binder (netropsin). We found that, although the hairpin form is the only accessible state of ligand-free DNA, its association with the ligand may lead to its transition into a duplex conformation. It appears that formation of the fully ligated duplex from the ligand-free hairpin, occurring via two pathways, is enthalpically driven and accompanied by a significant contribution of the hydrophobic effect. Our thermodynamic and structure-based analysis, together with corresponding theoretical studies, shows that none of the predicted binding steps can be considered as a rigid-body association. In this light we anticipate our thermodynamic approach to be the basis of more sophisticated nucleic acid recognition mechanisms, which take into account the dynamic nature of both the nucleic acid and the ligand molecule.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Thermodynamics of the lysozyme--salt interaction from calorimetric titrations.

Matjaž Bončina; Jurij Lah; Jurij Reščič; Vojko Vlachy

It is well-known that the addition of salts influences the properties of proteins in solution. The essential nature of this phenomenon is far from being fully understood, partly due to the absence of the relevant thermodynamic information. To help fill this gap, in this work isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was employed to study the ion-lysozyme association in aqueous buffer solutions at pH = 4.0. ITC curves measured for NaCl, NaBr, NaI, NaNO3, NaSCN, KCl, CaCl2, and BaCl2 salts at three different temperatures were described by a model assuming two sets of independent binding sites on the lysozyme. The resulting thermodynamic parameters of binding of anions (counterions) to the first class of sites (N approximately 7) indicate that the binding constant (K approximately 102 M-1) increases in the order Cl- < Br- < I- < NO3- < SCN-. The anion-lysozyme association is entropy driven, accompanied by a small favorable enthalpy contribution and a positive change in heat capacity. It seems that the entropy and heat capacity increase is due to the water released upon binding, while the net exothermic effect originates from the anion-NH3+ pair formation. Moreover, the results reveal that the nature of the cation has little effect on the thermodynamics of the anion-lysozyme association under the given experimental conditions. Taken together, it seems that the observed thermodynamics of association is a result of a combination of both electrostatic and short-range interactions. The anion ordering reflects the strength of water mediated interactions between anions and lysozyme.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Diverse Polymorphism of G-Quadruplexes as a Kinetic Phenomenon

Iztok Prislan; Jurij Lah; Gorazd Vesnaver

Knowledge of forces that drive conformational transitions of G-quadruplexes is crucial for understanding the molecular basis of several key cellular processes. It can only be acquired by combining structural, thermodynamic and kinetic information. Existing biophysical and structural evidences on polymorphism of intermolecular G-quadruplexes have shown that the formation of a number of these structures is a kinetically controlled process. Reported kinetic models that have been used to describe the association of single strands into quadruplex structures seem to be inappropriate since the corresponding model-predicted activation energies turn out to be negative. By contrast, we propose here a novel kinetic model that successfully describes experimentally monitored folding/unfolding transitions of G-quadruplexes and gives positive activation energies for all elementary steps, including those describing association of two single strands into bimolecular quadruplex structures. It is based on a combined thermodynamic and kinetic investigation of polymorphic behavior of bimolecular G-quadruplexes formed from d(G4T4G4) and d(G4T4G3) strands in the presence of Na(+) ions, monitored by spectroscopic (UV, CD) and calorimetric (DSC) techniques. According to our experiment and model analysis the topology of the measured G-quadruplexes is clearly flexible with the conformational forms that respond to the rate of temperature change at which global unfolding/folding transitions occur.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Model-Based Thermodynamic Analysis of Reversible Unfolding Processes

Igor Drobnak; Gorazd Vesnaver; Jurij Lah

Folding and unfolding of many biological macromolecules can be characterized thermodynamically, yielding a wealth of information about the stability of various conformations and the interactions that hold them together. The relevant thermodynamic parameters are usually obtained by employing spectroscopic and/or calorimetric techniques and fitting an appropriate thermodynamic model to the experimental data. In this work, we compare the traditional approach of fitting the thermodynamic model to experimental data obtained from each experiment individually and the global approach of simultaneously fitting the model to all available data from different experiments. On the basis of several specific examples of DNA and protein unfolding, we demonstrate that piece-by-piece verification of the proposed thermodynamic model using individual fits is frequently inappropriate and can result in an incorrect mechanism and thermodynamics of the studied unfolding process. We find that while the two approaches are complementary in some aspects of analysis global fitting is essential for the appropriate selection and critical evaluation of the model mechanism. Only a good global fit thus gives us confidence that the obtained thermodynamic parameters of unfolding have real physical meaning.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Structural and Thermodynamic Characterization of Vibrio fischeri CcdB

Natalie De Jonge; Walter Hohlweg; Abel Garcia-Pino; Michal Respondek; Lieven Buts; Sarah Haesaerts; Jurij Lah; Klaus Zangger; Remy Loris

CcdBVfi from Vibrio fischeri is a member of the CcdB family of toxins that poison covalent gyrase-DNA complexes. In solution CcdBVfi is a dimer that unfolds to the corresponding monomeric components in a two-state fashion. In the unfolded state, the monomer retains a partial secondary structure. This observation correlates well with the crystal and NMR structures of the protein, which show a dimer with a hydrophobic core crossing the dimer interface. In contrast to its F plasmid homologue, CcdBVfi possesses a rigid dimer interface, and the apparent relative rotations of the two subunits are due to structural plasticity of the monomer. CcdBVfi shows a number of non-conservative substitutions compared with the F plasmid protein in both the CcdA and the gyrase binding sites. Although variation in the CcdA interaction site likely determines toxin-antitoxin specificity, substitutions in the gyrase-interacting region may have more profound functional implications.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Substrate Recognition and Activity Regulation of the Escherichia coli mRNA Endonuclease MazF.

Valentina Zorzini; Andrej Mernik; Jurij Lah; Yann G. J. Sterckx; Natalie De Jonge; Abel Garcia-Pino; Henri De Greve; Wim Versées; Remy Loris

Escherichia coli MazF (EcMazF) is the archetype of a large family of ribonucleases involved in bacterial stress response. The crystal structure of EcMazF in complex with a 7-nucleotide substrate mimic explains the relaxed substrate specificity of the E. coli enzyme relative to its Bacillus subtilis counterpart and provides a framework for rationalizing specificity in this enzyme family. In contrast to a conserved mode of substrate recognition and a conserved active site, regulation of enzymatic activity by the antitoxin EcMazE diverges from its B. subtilis homolog. Central in this regulation is an EcMazE-induced double conformational change as follows: a rearrangement of a crucial active site loop and a relative rotation of the two monomers in the EcMazF dimer. Both are induced by the C-terminal residues Asp-78–Trp-82 of EcMazE, which are also responsible for strong negative cooperativity in EcMazE-EcMazF binding. This situation shows unexpected parallels to the regulation of the F-plasmid CcdB activity by CcdA and further supports a common ancestor despite the different activities of the MazF and CcdB toxins. In addition, we pinpoint the origin of the lack of activity of the E24A point mutant of EcMazF in its inability to support the substrate binding-competent conformation of EcMazF.


Molecular Microbiology | 2012

Alternative interactions define gyrase specificity in the CcdB family.

Natalie De Jonge; Mario Simic; Lieven Buts; Sarah Haesaerts; Kim Roelants; Abel Garcia-Pino; Yann G. J. Sterckx; Henri De Greve; Jurij Lah; Remy Loris

Toxin–antitoxin (TA) modules are small operons associated with stress response of bacteria. F‐plasmid CcdBF was the first TA toxin for which its target, gyrase, was identified. Plasmidic and chromosomal CcdBs belong to distinct families. Conserved residues crucial for gyrase poisoning activity of plasmidic CcdBs are not conserved among these families. Here we show that the chromosomal CcdBVfi from Vibrio fischeri is an active gyrase poison that interacts with its target via an alternative energetic mechanism. Changes in the GyrA14‐binding surface of the Vibrio and F‐plasmid CcdB family members illustrate neutral drift where alternative interactions can be used to achieve the same functionality. Differences in affinity between V. fischeri and F‐plasmid CcdB for gyrase and their corresponding CcdA antitoxin possibly reflect distinct roles for TA modules located on plasmids and chromosomes.

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Remy Loris

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Abel Garcia-Pino

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Igor Drobnak

University of Ljubljana

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Henri De Greve

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Natalie De Jonge

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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San Hadži

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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