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Dive into the research topics where Kira A. Markossian is active.

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Featured researches published by Kira A. Markossian.


Biochemistry | 2004

Protein folding, misfolding, and aggregation. Formation of inclusion bodies and aggresomes

Kira A. Markossian; Boris I. Kurganov

In this review the mechanisms of protein folding, misfolding, and aggregation as well as the mechanisms of cell defense against toxic protein aggregates are considered. Misfolded and aggregated proteins in cells are exposed to chaperonemediated refolding and are degraded by proteasomes if refolding is impossible. Proteolysis-stable protein aggregates accumulate, forming inclusion bodies. In eucaryotic cells, protein aggregates form structures in the pericentrosomal area that have been termed “aggresomes”. Formation of aggresomes in cells is a general cellular response to the presence of misfolded proteins when the degrading capacity of the cells is exceeded. The role of aggresomes in disturbance of the proteasomal system operation and in cellular death, particularly in the so-called “protein conformational diseases”, is discussed.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2009

Mechanism of suppression of protein aggregation by α-crystallin.

Kira A. Markossian; Igor K. Yudin; Boris I. Kurganov

This review summarizes experimental data illuminating the mechanism of suppression of heat-induced protein aggregation by α-crystallin, one of the small heat shock proteins. The dynamic light scattering data show that the initial stage of thermal aggregation of proteins is the formation of the initial aggregates involving hundreds of molecules of the denatured protein. Further sticking of the starting aggregates proceeds in a regime of diffusion-limited cluster-cluster aggregation. The protective effect of α-crystallin is due to transition of the aggregation process to the regime of reaction-limited cluster-cluster aggregation, wherein the sticking probability for the colliding particles becomes lower than unity.


Biochemistry | 2003

Copper Chaperones, Intracellular Copper Trafficking Proteins. Function, Structure, and Mechanism of Action

Kira A. Markossian; Boris I. Kurganov

This review summarizes findings on a new family of small cytoplasmic proteins called copper chaperones. The copper chaperones bind and deliver copper ions to intracellular compartments and insert the copper into the active sites of specific partners, copper-dependent enzymes. Three types of copper chaperones have been found in eukaryotes. Their three-dimensional structures have been determined, intracellular target proteins identified, and mechanisms of action have been revealed. The Atx1 copper chaperone binds Cu(I) and interacts directly with the copper-binding domains of a P-type ATPase copper transporter, its physiological partner. The copper chaperone CCS delivers Cu(I) to Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase 1. Cox17 and Cox11 proteins serve as copper chaperones for cytochrome c oxidase, a copper-dependent enzyme.


FEBS Letters | 2007

Evidence for the formation of start aggregates as an initial stage of protein aggregation.

Nikolay V. Golub; Alexey V. Meremyanin; Kira A. Markossian; Tatyana B. Eronina; Natalia A. Chebotareva; R.A. Asryants; Vladimir Muronets; Boris I. Kurganov

The kinetics of thermal aggregation of glycogen phosphorylase b and glyceraldehyde 3‐phosphate dehydrogenase from rabbit skeletal muscles were studied using dynamic light scattering. Use of high concentrations of the enzymes (1–3 mg/ml) provided a simultaneous registration of the native enzyme forms and protein aggregates. It was shown that initially registered aggregates (start aggregates) were large‐sized particles. The hydrodynamic radius of the start aggregates was about 100 nm. The intermediate states between the native enzyme forms and start aggregates were not detected. The initial increase in the light scattering intensity is connected with accumulation of the start aggregates, the size of the latter remaining unchanged. From a certain moment in time aggregates of higher order, formed as a result of sticking of the start aggregates, make a major contribution to the enhancement of the light scattering intensity.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Kinetics of Thermal Denaturation and Aggregation of Bovine Serum Albumin

Vera A. Borzova; Kira A. Markossian; Natalia A. Chebotareva; Sergey Yu. Kleymenov; Nikolay B. Poliansky; Konstantin O. Muranov; Vita Stein-Margolina; Vladimir V. Shubin; Denis I. Markov; Boris I. Kurganov

Thermal aggregation of bovine serum albumin (BSA) has been studied using dynamic light scattering, asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation and analytical ultracentrifugation. The studies were carried out at fixed temperatures (60°C, 65°C, 70°C and 80°C) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, at BSA concentration of 1 mg/ml. Thermal denaturation of the protein was studied by differential scanning calorimetry. Analysis of the experimental data shows that at 65°C the stage of protein unfolding and individual stages of protein aggregation are markedly separated in time. This circumstance allowed us to propose the following mechanism of thermal aggregation of BSA. Protein unfolding results in the formation of two forms of the non-native protein with different propensity to aggregation. One of the forms (highly reactive unfolded form, Uhr) is characterized by a high rate of aggregation. Aggregation of Uhr leads to the formation of primary aggregates with the hydrodynamic radius (Rh,1) of 10.3 nm. The second form (low reactive unfolded form, Ulr) participates in the aggregation process by its attachment to the primary aggregates produced by the Uhr form and possesses ability for self-aggregation with formation of stable small-sized aggregates (Ast). At complete exhaustion of Ulr, secondary aggregates with the hydrodynamic radius (Rh,2) of 12.8 nm are formed. At 60°C the rates of unfolding and aggregation are commensurate, at 70°C the rates of formation of the primary and secondary aggregates are commensurate, at 80°C the registration of the initial stages of aggregation is complicated by formation of large-sized aggregates.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Mechanism of thermal aggregation of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase I Role of intramolecular chaperone

Kira A. Markossian; Nikolay V. Golub; Helen A. Khanova; Dmitrii I. Levitsky; Nikolay B. Poliansky; Konstantin O. Muranov; Boris I. Kurganov

Kinetics of thermal aggregation of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase I (yADH) have been studied using dynamic light scattering at a fixed temperature (56 degrees C) and under the conditions where the temperature was elevated at a constant rate (1 K/min). The initial parts of the dependences of the hydrodynamic radius on time (or temperature) follow the exponential law. At rather high values of time splitting of the population of aggregates into two components occurs. It is assumed that such peculiarities of the kinetics of thermal aggregation of yADH are due to the presence of a sequence -YSGVCHTDLHAWHGDWPLPVK- in the polypeptide chain possessing chaperone-like activity. Thermodynamic parameters for thermal denaturation of yADH have been calculated from the differential scanning calorimetry data.


Biophysical Chemistry | 2012

Kinetics of aggregation of UV-irradiated glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from rabbit skeletal muscle. Effect of agents possessing chaperone-like activity

Olga I. Maloletkina; Kira A. Markossian; Natalia A. Chebotareva; R.A. Asryants; Sergey Yu. Kleymenov; Nikolay B. Poliansky; Konstantin O. Muranov; Valentina F. Makeeva; Boris I. Kurganov

An aggregation test system based on the aggregation of UV-irradiated glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) from rabbit skeletal muscle has been proposed. On the basis of the measurements of the enzyme activity and differential scanning calorimetry data a conclusion has been made that UV radiation results in formation of damaged protein molecules with lower thermostability. It was shown that the order of aggregation rate for UV-irradiated GAPDH with respect to the protein was close to 2. This means that such a test system allows detecting the effect of various agents exclusively on the stage of aggregation of unfolded protein molecules. The influence of α-crystallin and 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HP-β-CD) on aggregation of UV-irradiated GAPDH was studied. Despite the fact that HP-β-CD accelerates thermal aggregation of non-irradiated GAPDH, in the case of aggregation of UV-irradiated GAPDH HP-β-CD reveals a purely protective effect.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1985

The effect of nitrite on cytochrome oxidase.

Norair A. Paitian; Kira A. Markossian; Robert M. Nalbandyan

Nitrite inhibits the oxygen uptake by the system ferrocytochrome c-cytochrome oxidase with Ki = 1.5 mM. In the absence of ferrocytochrome c the oxygen uptake by cytochrome oxidase in the presence of nitrite was observed indicating that the enzyme has some nitrite oxidase activity. Nitrite induces changes in optical difference spectra of cytochrome oxidase and, in particular, the formation of the transient band at 607 nm. The reciprocal relation was observed between the intensity of this band and the rate of the oxygen uptake by cytochrome oxidase. This means that the form of the enzyme with this band does not involved in the nitrite oxidase activity. It is suggested that the nitrite oxidase activity relates to the oxygen binding site rather than the cytochrome c binding site of the enzyme.


Biophysical Chemistry | 2010

Thermal stability and aggregation of creatine kinase from rabbit skeletal muscle. Effect of 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin.

Olga I. Maloletkina; Kira A. Markossian; Lyubov V. Belousova; Sergey Yu. Kleimenov; Victor N. Orlov; Valentina F. Makeeva; Boris I. Kurganov

Effect of 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HP-beta-CD) on thermal aggregation of creatine kinase from rabbit skeletal muscle (RMCK) at 48 degrees C has been studied using dynamic light scattering. An increase in the duration of the lag period on the kinetic curves of aggregation, registered as an increment of the light scattering intensity in time, has been observed in the presence of HP-beta-CD. It has been shown that the initial parts of the dependences of the hydrodynamic radius (R(h)) of the protein aggregates on time follow the exponential law. The reciprocal value of parameter t(2R) (t(2R) is the time interval over which the R(h) value is doubled) was used to characterize the rate of aggregation. A 10-fold decrease in the 1/t(2R) value was observed in the presence of 76mM HP-beta-CD. Judging from the data on the kinetics of RMCK inactivation and the data on differential scanning calorimetry of RMCK, HP-beta-CD does not affect the rate of RMCK unfolding.


Biochemistry | 2004

Antibacterial Proline-Rich Oligopeptides and Their Target Proteins

Kira A. Markossian; Alexander A. Zamyatnin; Boris I. Kurganov

This review presents findings on a new family of antibacterial proline-rich oligopeptides—pyrrhocoricin, drosocin, apidaecin, and formaecin—isolated from insects. The functional and physicochemical properties of proline-rich oligopeptides are considered, a role of proline in their antibacterial activity is discussed, and experimental evidence is given in favor of the ability of these oligopeptides to suppress metabolism of bacteria by means of stereospecific interaction with heat shock protein DnaK and inhibition of DnaK-dependent protein folding. Binding of the peptides under investigation with DnaK correlates with their antibacterial activity. Evidence that pyrrhocoricin, drosocin, apidaecin, and formaecin are nontoxic for human and animal cells serves as a prerequisite for their use as novel antibiotic drugs.

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Boris I. Kurganov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Vera A. Borzova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Nikolay V. Golub

Russian Academy of Sciences

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