Kallol Gupta
Indian Institute of Science
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kallol Gupta.
Nature | 2017
Kallol Gupta; Joseph A.C. Donlan; Jonathan T. S. Hopper; Povilas Uzdavinys; Michael Landreh; Weston B. Struwe; David Drew; Andrew J. Baldwin; Phillip J. Stansfeld; Carol V. Robinson
Oligomerization of membrane proteins in response to lipid binding has a critical role in many cell-signalling pathways but is often difficult to define or predict. Here we report the development of a mass spectrometry platform to determine simultaneously the presence of interfacial lipids and oligomeric stability and to uncover how lipids act as key regulators of membrane-protein association. Evaluation of oligomeric strength for a dataset of 125 α-helical oligomeric membrane proteins reveals an absence of interfacial lipids in the mass spectra of 12 membrane proteins with high oligomeric stability. For the bacterial homologue of the eukaryotic biogenic transporters (LeuT, one of the proteins with the lowest oligomeric stability), we found a precise cohort of lipids within the dimer interface. Delipidation, mutation of lipid-binding sites or expression in cardiolipin-deficient Escherichia coli abrogated dimer formation. Molecular dynamics simulation revealed that cardiolipin acts as a bidentate ligand, bridging across subunits. Subsequently, we show that for the Vibrio splendidus sugar transporter SemiSWEET, another protein with low oligomeric stability, cardiolipin shifts the equilibrium from monomer to functional dimer. We hypothesized that lipids are essential for dimerization of the Na+/H+ antiporter NhaA from E. coli, which has the lowest oligomeric strength, but not for the substantially more stable homologous Thermus thermophilus protein NapA. We found that lipid binding is obligatory for dimerization of NhaA, whereas NapA has adapted to form an interface that is stable without lipids. Overall, by correlating interfacial strength with the presence of interfacial lipids, we provide a rationale for understanding the role of lipids in both transient and stable interactions within a range of α-helical membrane proteins, including G-protein-coupled receptors.
Nature Methods | 2016
Joseph Gault; Joseph A.C. Donlan; Idlir Liko; Jonathan T. S. Hopper; Kallol Gupta; Nicholas G. Housden; Weston B. Struwe; Michael T. Marty; Todd H. Mize; Cherine Bechara; Ya Zhu; Beili Wu; Mikhail E. Belov; Eugen Damoc; Alexander Makarov; Carol V. Robinson
Small molecules are known to stabilize membrane proteins and to modulate their function and oligomeric state, but such interactions are often hard to precisely define. Here we develop and apply a high-resolution, Orbitrap mass spectrometry–based method for analyzing intact membrane protein–ligand complexes. Using this platform, we resolve the complexity of multiple binding events, quantify small molecule binding and reveal selectivity for endogenous lipids that differ only in acyl chain length.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Subhalaxmi Nambi; Kallol Gupta; Moitrayee Bhattacharyya; Parvathy Ramakrishnan; Vaishnavi Ravikumar; Nida Siddiqui; Ann Terene Thomas; Sandhya S. Visweswariah
Background: KATmt is the first identified cAMP-regulated protein lysine acetylase in mycobacteria. Results: KATmt acylates fatty acyl CoA ligases in vivo in a cAMP-dependent manner, thus regulating their activity. Conclusion: Mycobacteria utilize KATmt to regulate the metabolic pool of acetyl and propionyl CoA. Significance: We provide novel paradigms for linking cAMP signaling and fatty acid metabolism in mycobacteria. Acetylation of lysine residues is a posttranslational modification that is used by both eukaryotes and prokaryotes to regulate a variety of biological processes. Here we identify multiple substrates for the cAMP-dependent protein lysine acetyltransferase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (KATmt). We demonstrate that a catalytically important lysine residue in a number of FadD (fatty acyl CoA synthetase) enzymes is acetylated by KATmt in a cAMP-dependent manner and that acetylation inhibits the activity of FadD enzymes. A sirtuin-like enzyme can deacetylate multiple FadDs, thus completing the regulatory cycle. Using a strain deleted for the KATmt ortholog in Mycobacterium bovis Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), we show for the first time that acetylation is dependent on intracellular cAMP levels. KATmt can utilize propionyl CoA as a substrate and, therefore, plays a critical role in alleviating propionyl CoA toxicity in mycobacteria by inactivating acyl CoA synthetase (ACS). The precision by which mycobacteria can regulate the metabolism of fatty acids in a cAMP-dependent manner appears to be unparalleled in other biological organisms and is ideally suited to adapt to the complex environment that pathogenic mycobacteria experience in the host.
Biochemistry | 2012
Keith K. Khoo; Kallol Gupta; Brad R. Green; Min Min Zhang; Maren Watkins; Baldomero M. Olivera; Padmanabhan Balaram; Doju Yoshikami; Grzegorz Bulaj; Raymond S. Norton
In the preparation of synthetic conotoxins containing multiple disulfide bonds, oxidative folding can produce numerous permutations of disulfide bond connectivities. Establishing the native disulfide connectivities thus presents a significant challenge when the venom-derived peptide is not available, as is increasingly the case when conotoxins are identified from cDNA sequences. Here, we investigate the disulfide connectivity of μ-conotoxin KIIIA, which was predicted originally to have a [C1-C9,C2-C15,C4-C16] disulfide pattern based on homology with closely related μ-conotoxins. The two major isomers of synthetic μ-KIIIA formed during oxidative folding were purified and their disulfide connectivities mapped by direct mass spectrometric collision-induced dissociation fragmentation of the disulfide-bonded polypeptides. Our results show that the major oxidative folding product adopts a [C1-C15,C2-C9,C4-C16] disulfide connectivity, while the minor product adopts a [C1-C16,C2-C9,C4-C15] connectivity. Both of these peptides were potent blockers of Na(V)1.2 (K(d) values of 5 and 230 nM, respectively). The solution structure for μ-KIIIA based on nuclear magnetic resonance data was recalculated with the [C1-C15,C2-C9,C4-C16] disulfide pattern; its structure was very similar to the μ-KIIIA structure calculated with the incorrect [C1-C9,C2-C15,C4-C16] disulfide pattern, with an α-helix spanning residues 7-12. In addition, the major folding isomers of μ-KIIIB, an N-terminally extended isoform of μ-KIIIA identified from its cDNA sequence, were isolated. These folding products had the same disulfide connectivities as μ-KIIIA, and both blocked Na(V)1.2 (K(d) values of 470 and 26 nM, respectively). Our results establish that the preferred disulfide pattern of synthetic μ-KIIIA and μ-KIIIB folded in vitro is 1-5/2-4/3-6 but that other disulfide isomers are also potent sodium channel blockers. These findings raise questions about the disulfide pattern(s) of μ-KIIIA in the venom of Conus kinoshitai; indeed, the presence of multiple disulfide isomers in the venom could provide a means of further expanding the snails repertoire of active peptides.
Analytical Chemistry | 2010
Kallol Gupta; Mukesh Kumar; Padmanabhan Balaram
The critical, and often most difficult, step in structure elucidation of diverse classes of natural peptides is the determination of correct disulfide pairing between multiple cysteine residues. Here, we present a direct mass spectrometric analytical methodology for the determination of disulfide pairing. Protonated peptides, having multiple disulfide bonds, fragmented under collision induced dissociation (CID) conditions and preferentially cleave along the peptide backbone, with occasional disulfide fragmentation either by C(β)-S bond cleavage through H(α) abstraction to yield dehydroalanine and cysteinepersulfide, or by S-S bond cleavage through H(β) abstraction to yield the thioaldehyde and cysteine. Further fragmentation of the initial set of product ions (MS(n)) yields third and fourth generation fragment ions, permitting a distinction between the various possible disulfide bonded structures. This approach is illustrated by establishing cysteine pairing patterns in five conotoxins containing two disulfide bonds. The methodology is extended to the Conus araneosus peptides Ar1446 and Ar1430, two 14 residue sequences containing 3 disulfide bonds. A distinction between 15 possible disulfide pairing schemes becomes possible using direct mass spectral fragmentation of the native peptides together with fragmentation of enzymatically nicked peptides.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2012
Kallol Gupta; Mukesh Kumar; Krishnappa Chandrashekara; K. S. Krishnan; Padmanabhan Balaram
Distinctions between isobaric residues have been a major challenge in mass spectrometric peptide sequencing. Here, we propose a methodology for distinction among isobaric leucine, isoleucine, and hydroxyproline, a commonly found post-translationally modified amino acid with a nominal mass of 113 Da, through a combined electron transfer dissociation-collision-induced dissociation approach. While the absence of c and z(•) ions, corresponding to the Yyy-Xxx (Xxx = Leu, Ile, or Hyp) segment, is indicative of the presence of hydroxyproline, loss of isopropyl (Δm = 43 Da) or ethyl radicals (Δm = 29 Da), through collisional activation of z radical ions, are characteristic of leucine or isoleucine, respectively. Radical migration processes permit distinctions even in cases where the specific z(•) ions, corresponding to the Yyy-Leu or -Ile segments, are absent or of low intensity. This tandem mass spectrometric (MS(n)) method has been successfully implemented in a liquid chromatography-MS(n) platform to determine the identity of 23 different isobaric residues from a mixture of five different peptides. The approach is convenient for distinction of isobaric residues from any crude peptide mixture, typically encountered in natural peptide libraries or proteomic analysis.
Molecular BioSystems | 2013
Moitrayee Bhattacharyya; Kallol Gupta; Konkallu Hanumae Gowd; Padmanabhan Balaram
Disulfide crosslinks are ubiquitous in natural peptides and proteins, providing rigidity to polypeptide scaffolds. The assignment of disulfide connectivity in multiple crosslinked systems is often difficult to achieve. Here, we show that rapid unambiguous characterisation of disulfide connectivity can be achieved through direct mass spectrometric CID fragmentation of the disulfide intact polypeptides. The method requires a direct mass spectrometric fragmentation of the native disulfide bonded polypeptides and subsequent analysis using a newly developed program, DisConnect. Technical difficulties involving direct fragmentation of proteins are surmounted by an initial proteolytic nick and subsequent determination of the structures of these proteolytic peptides through DisConnect. While the connectivity in proteolytic fragments containing one cystine is evident from the MS profile alone, those with multiple cystines are subjected to subsequent mass spectrometric fragmentation. The wide applicability of this method is illustrated using examples of peptide hormones, peptide toxins, proteins, and disulfide foldamers of a synthetic analogue of a marine peptide toxin. The method, coupled with DisConnect, provides an unambiguous, straightforward approach, especially useful for the rapid screening of the disulfide crosslink fidelity in recombinant proteins, determination of disulfide linkages in natural peptide toxins and characterization of folding intermediates encountered in oxidative folding pathways.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2013
Zhihe Kuang; Min Min Zhang; Kallol Gupta; Joanna Gajewiak; Jozsef Gulyas; Padmanabhan Balaram; Jean Rivier; Baldomero M. Olivera; Doju Yoshikami; Grzegorz Bulaj; Raymond S. Norton
Among the μ-conotoxins that block vertebrate voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs), some have been shown to be potent analgesics following systemic administration in mice. We have determined the solution structure of a new representative of this family, μ-BuIIIB, and established its disulfide connectivities by direct mass spectrometric collision induced dissociation fragmentation of the peptide with disulfides intact. The major oxidative folding product adopts a 1-4/2-5/3-6 pattern with the following disulfide bridges: Cys5-Cys17, Cys6-Cys23, and Cys13-Cys24. The solution structure reveals that the unique N-terminal extension in μ-BuIIIB, which is also present in μ-BuIIIA and μ-BuIIIC but absent in other μ-conotoxins, forms part of a short α-helix encompassing Glu3 to Asn8. This helix is packed against the rest of the toxin and stabilized by the Cys5-Cys17 and Cys6-Cys23 disulfide bonds. As such, the side chain of Val1 is located close to the aromatic rings of Trp16 and His20, which are located on the canonical helix that displays several residues found to be essential for VGSC blockade in related μ-conotoxins. Mutations of residues 2 and 3 in the N-terminal extension enhanced the potency of μ-BuIIIB for NaV1.3. One analogue, [d-Ala2]BuIIIB, showed a 40-fold increase, making it the most potent peptide blocker of this channel characterized to date and thus a useful new tool with which to characterize this channel. On the basis of previous results for related μ-conotoxins, the dramatic effects of mutations at the N-terminus were unanticipated and suggest that further gains in potency might be achieved by additional modifications of this region.
Nature Communications | 2017
Michael Landreh; Erik G. Marklund; Povilas Uzdavinys; Matteo T. Degiacomi; Mathieu Coincon; Joseph Gault; Kallol Gupta; Idlir Liko; Justin L. P. Benesch; David Drew; Carol V. Robinson
Na+/H+ antiporters are found in all kingdoms of life and exhibit catalysis rates that are among the fastest of all known secondary-active transporters. Here we combine ion mobility mass spectrometry and molecular dynamics simulations to study the conformational stability and lipid-binding properties of the Na+/H+ exchanger NapA from Thermus thermophilus and compare this to the prototypical antiporter NhaA from Escherichia coli and the human homologue NHA2. We find that NapA and NHA2, but not NhaA, form stable dimers and do not selectively retain membrane lipids. By comparing wild-type NapA with engineered variants, we show that the unfolding of the protein in the gas phase involves the disruption of inter-domain contacts. Lipids around the domain interface protect the native fold in the gas phase by mediating contacts between the mobile protein segments. We speculate that elevator-type antiporters such as NapA, and likely NHA2, use a subset of annular lipids as structural support to facilitate large-scale conformational changes within the membrane.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2011
Mousumi Banerjee; Kallol Gupta; Hemalatha Balaram; Padmanabhan Balaram
The triosephosphate isomerase from the hyperthermophilic organism Methanocaldococcus jannaschii (MjTIM) is a tetrameric enzyme, with a monomer molecular mass of 23245 Da. The kinetic parameters, the k(cat) and the K(m) values, of the enzyme, examined at 25 °C and 50 °C, are 4.18 × 10(4) min(-1) and 3.26 × 10(5) min(-1) , and 0.33 and 0.86 mM(-1) min(-1) , respectively. Although the circular dichroism and fluorescence emission spectra of the protein remain unchanged up to 95 °C, suggesting that the secondary and tertiary structures are not lost even at this extreme temperature, surprisingly, incubation of this thermophilic enzyme at elevated temperature (65-85 °C) results in time-dependent inactivation, with almost complete loss of activity after 3 h at 75 °C. High-resolution electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) reveals the monomeric mass of the heated sample to be 23243 Da. The 2 Da difference between native and heated samples suggests a probable formation of a disulfide bridge between proximal cysteine thiol groups. Liquid chromatography (LC)/ESI-MS/MS analysis of tryptic digests in the heated samples permits identification of a pentapeptide (DCGCK, residues 80-84) in which a disulfide bond formation between Cys81 and Cys83 was established through the collision-induced dissociation (CID) fragmentation of the intact disulfide-bonded molecule, yielding characteristic fragmentation patterns with key neutral losses. Neither residue is directly involved in the catalytic activity. Inspection of the three-dimensional structure suggests that subtle conformation effects transmitted through a network of hydrogen bonds to the active site residue Lys8 may be responsible for the loss of catalytic activity.
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Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research
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