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Dive into the research topics where Kaspars Tars is active.

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Featured researches published by Kaspars Tars.


Virology | 2003

The three-dimensional structure of cocksfoot mottle virus at 2.7 A resolution.

Kaspars Tars; Andris Zeltins; Lars Liljas

Cocksfoot mottle virus is a plant virus that belongs to the genus Sobemovirus. The structure of the virus has been determined at 2.7 A resolution. The icosahedral capsid has T = 3 quasisymmetry and 180 copies of the coat protein. Except for a couple of stacked bases, the viral RNA is not visible in the electron density map. The coat protein has a jelly-roll beta-sandwich fold and its conformation is very similar to that of other sobemoviruses and tobacco necrosis virus. The N-terminal arm of one of the three quasiequivalent subunits is partly ordered and follows the same path in the capsid as the arm in rice yellow mottle virus, another sobemovirus. In other sobemoviruses, the ordered arm follows a different path, but in both cases the arms from three subunits meet and form a similar structure at a threefold axis. A comparison of the structures and sequences of viruses in this family shows that the only conserved parts of the protein-protein interfaces are those that form binding sites for calcium ions. Still, the relative orientations and position of the subunits are maintained.


Biochemistry | 2009

Structural analysis of a glutathione transferase A1-1 mutant tailored for high catalytic efficiency with toxic alkenals.

Larissa M. Balogh; Isolde Le Trong; Kimberly A. Kripps; Kaspars Tars; Ronald E. Stenkamp; Bengt Mannervik; William M. Atkins

The specificity of human glutathione transferase (GST) A1-1 is drastically altered to favor alkenal substrates in the GIMFhelix mutant designed to mimic first-sphere interactions utilized by GSTA4-4. This redesign serves as a model for improving our understanding of the structural determinants that contribute to the distinct specificities of alpha class GSTs. Herein we report the first crystal structures of GIMFhelix, both in complex with GSH and in apo form at 1.98 and 2.38 A resolution. In contrast to the preorganized hydrophobic binding pocket that accommodates alkenals in GSTA4-4, GSTA1-1 includes a dynamic alpha9 helix that undergoes a ligand-dependent localization to complete the active site. Comparisons of the GIMFhelix structures with previously reported structures show a striking similarity with the GSTA4-4 active site obtained within an essentially GSTA1-1 scaffold and reveal the alpha9 helix assumes a similar localized structure regardless of active site occupancy in a manner resembling that of GSTA4-4. However, we cannot fully account for all the structural elements important in GSTA4-4 within the mutants active site. The contribution of Phe10 to the Tyr212-Phe10-Phe220 network prevents complete C-terminal closure and demonstrates that the presence of Phe10 within the context of a GSTA4-4-like active site may ultimately hinder Phe220, a key C-terminal residue, from effectively contributing to the active site. In total, these results illustrate the remaining structural differences presumably reflected in the previously reported catalytic efficiencies of GIMFhelix and GSTA4-4 and emphasize the F10P mutation as being necessary to completely accomplish the transformation to a highly specific GST from the more promiscuous GSTA1-1 enzyme.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2000

Structure determination of bacteriophage PP7 from Pseudomonas aeruginosa: from poor data to a good map

Kaspars Tars; Kerstin Fridborg; Maija Bundule; Lars Liljas

The structure of bacteriophage PP7 from Pseudomomas aeruginosa was determined to 3.7 A resolution. Triclinic crystals of three forms were obtained, diffracting to between 4.5 and 3.4 A resolution. The quality of the crystals was exceptionally poor, leading to problems in the evaluation of the recorded images and to a final data set which would appear to be useless with standard criteria for protein crystals. In all crystal forms, the unit cell contains two icosahedral particles, providing 120-fold non-crystallographic symmetry. For two of the crystal forms, the particle orientations were calculated using the self-rotation function. The two particles in the asymmetric unit had very similar but distinct orientations. The position of the second particle was found using the Patterson function. Initial phases to 15 A resolution were calculated using the related phage MS2 as a model. Real-space averaging was performed and phases were extended from 15 A resolution to the limit of the data. The map was improved significantly by using only the high resolution data in the resolution range 7-3.7 A, allowing the positions of most side chains to be determined. The better quality of the 7-3.7 A resolution map is presumably a consequence of the presence of satellite crystals. The position of the second particle was improved using the correlation coefficient in the averaging process to monitor the refinement by moving the particle around in small steps.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

The Capsid of the Small RNA Phage PRR1 Is Stabilized by Metal Ions

Magnus Persson; Kaspars Tars; Lars Liljas

Many nonenveloped virus particles are stabilized by calcium ions bound in the interfaces between the protein subunits. These ions may have a role in the disassembly process. The small RNA phages of the Leviviridae family have T=3 quasi-symmetry and are unique among simple viruses in that they have a coat protein with a translational repressor activity and a fold that has not been observed in other viruses. The crystal structure of phage PRR1 has been determined to 3.5 A resolution. The structure shows a tentative binding site for a calcium ion close to the quasi-3-fold axis. The RNA-binding surface used for repressor activity is mostly conserved. The structure does not show any significant differences between quasi-equivalent subunits, which suggests that the assembly is not controlled by conformational switches as in many other simple viruses.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Modulating catalytic activity by unnatural amino acid residues in a GSH-binding loop of GST P1-1.

Usama M. Hegazy; Kaspars Tars; Ulf Hellman; Bengt Mannervik

The loop following helix alpha2 in glutathione transferase P1-1 has two conserved residues, Cys48 and Tyr50, important for glutathione (GSH) binding and catalytic activity. Chemical modification of Cys48 thwarts the catalytic activity of the enzyme, and mutation of Tyr50 generally decreases the k(cat) value and the affinity for GSH in a differential manner. Cys48 and Tyr50 were targeted by site-specific mutations and chemical modifications in order to investigate how the alpha2 loop modulates GSH binding and catalysis. Mutation of Cys48 into Ala increased K(M)(GSH) 24-fold and decreased the binding energy of GSH by 1.5 kcal/mol. Furthermore, the protein stability against thermal inactivation and chemical denaturation decreased. The crystal structure of the Cys-free variant was determined, and its similarity to the wild-type structure suggests that the mutation of Cys48 increases the flexibility of the alpha2 loop rather than dislocating the GSH-interacting residues. On the other hand, replacement of Tyr50 with Cys, producing mutant Y50C, increased the Gibbs free energy of the catalyzed reaction by 4.8 kcal/mol, lowered the affinity for S-hexyl glutathione by 2.2 kcal/mol, and decreased the thermal stability. The targeted alkylation of Cys50 in Y50C increased the affinity for GSH and protein stability. Characterization of the most active alkylated variants, S-n-butyl-, S-n-pentyl-, and S-cyclobutylmethyl-Y50C, indicated that the affinity for GSH is restored by stabilizing the alpha2 loop through positioning of the key residue into the lock structure of the neighboring subunit. In addition, k(cat) can be further modulated by varying the structure of the key residue side chain, which impinges on the rate-limiting step of catalysis.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006

Structural Basis of the Suppressed Catalytic Activity of Wild-Type Human Glutathione Transferase T1-1 Compared to its W234R Mutant.

Kaspars Tars; Anna-Karin Larsson; Abeer Shokeer; Birgit Olin; Bengt Mannervik; Gerard J. Kleywegt


Virology | 2000

The Three-Dimensional Structure of Bacteriophage PP7 from Pseudomonas aeruginosa at 3.7-Å Resolution

Kaspars Tars; Kerstin Fridborg; Maija Bundule; Lars Liljas


Structure | 2006

Structural Basis of RNA Binding Discrimination between Bacteriophages Qbeta and MS2.

Wilf T. Horn; Kaspars Tars; Elin Grahn; Charlotte Helgstrand; Andrew J. Baron; Hugo Lago; Chris J. Adams; David S. Peabody; Simon E. V. Phillips; Nicola J. Stonehouse; Lars Liljas; Peter G. Stockley


Virology | 2007

The three-dimensional structure of ryegrass mottle virus at 2.9 Å resolution

Pavel Plevka; Kaspars Tars; Andris Zeltins; Ina Balke; Erkki Truve; Lars Liljas


Journal of Molecular Recognition | 2006

Molecular basis for regulation of Src by the docking protein p130Cas

Fariborz Nasertorabi; Kaspars Tars; Kathleen Becherer; Ramadurgam Kodandapani; Lars Liljas; Kristiina Vuori; Kathryn R. Ely

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Bengt Mannervik

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Andris Zeltins

Latvian Biomedical Research and Study centre

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Ulf Hellman

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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