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Dive into the research topics where L. P. Lichko is active.

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Featured researches published by L. P. Lichko.


Progress in molecular and subcellular biology | 1999

Metabolism and Function of Polyphosphates in Bacteria and Yeast

I. S. Kulaev; T. V. Kulakovskaya; N. A. Andreeva; L. P. Lichko

Inorganic polyphosphate (polyPs) found in living organisms more than 100 years ago by Lieberman (1888) are linear polymers containing 2-1000 residues of orthophosphate linked by the energy-rich phosphoanhydride bond. They are widely spread in various microoganisms and are found in small amounts in the cells of animals and plants (Kulaev 1979; Kulaev and Vagabov 1983; Wood and Clark 1988). PolyPs perform varied biological functions. Recent investigations have shown the polyPs belong to biopolymers, the function of which changes when passing from prokaryotic cells to cells of lower and then higher eukaryotes. The comparative characteristics of the functions and metabolic ways of polyPs in different organisms are of interest from the viewpoint of the evolutionary physiology of the cell.


Biochemistry | 2008

Inactivation of PPX1 and PPN1 genes encoding exopolyphosphatases of Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not prevent utilization of polyphosphates as phosphate reserve

L. P. Lichko; T. V. Kulakovskaya; E. V. Kulakovskaya; I. S. Kulaev

Cytosol polyphosphates (polyPs) are the main phosphate (Pi) reserve in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In this work, the participation of cytosol polyPs and exopolyphosphatases in maintenance of Pi homeostasis under Pi deficit in the cultivation medium has been studied in different strains of S. cerevisiae. The growth of yeast strains with inactivated genes PPX1 and PPN1 encoding the yeast exopolyphosphatases and a strain with double mutations in these genes in a Pi-deficient medium is not disturbed. All the studied strains are able to maintain relatively constant Pi levels in the cytosol. In Pi-deficient medium, polyP hydrolysis in the cytosol of the parent and PPN1-deficient strains seems to be performed by exopolyphosphatase Ppx1 and proceeds without any change of the spectrum of polyP chain lengths. In the PPX1-deficient strain, long-chain polyPs are depleted first, and only then short-chain polyPs are hydrolyzed. In the double PPX1 and PPN1 mutant having low exopolyphosphatase activity, polyP hydrolysis in the cytosol starts with a notable delay, and about 20% of short-chain polyPs still remain after the polyP hydrolysis in other strains has almost been completed. This fact suggests that S. cerevisiae possesses a system, which makes it possible to compensate for inactivation of the PPX1 and PPN1 genes encoding exopolyphosphatases of the yeast cells.


Biochemistry | 2006

Inorganic polyphosphates and exopolyphosphatases in different cell compartments of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

L. P. Lichko; T. V. Kulakovskaya; I. S. Kulaev

The cytosol, nuclei, vacuoles, and mitochondria of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae possess inorganic polyphosphates (polyPs). PolyP levels, spectra of polyP chain lengths, and their dependence on the growth phase are distinguished in the mentioned compartments. Inactivation of the PPX1 gene has no effect on the polyP metabolism under cultivation of the yeast in medium with glucose and 5–7 mM Pi. Inactivation of the PPN1 gene results in elimination of the high-molecular-mass exopolyphosphatases (∼120 to 830 kD) of the cytosol, nuclei, vacuoles, and mitochondria of S. cerevisiae suggesting that it is just PPN1 that encodes these enzymes. Expression of the low-molecular-mass exopolyphosphatase of ∼45 kD encoded by the PPX1 gene decreases under PPN1 inactivation as well. While PPN1 inactivation has negligible effect on polyP levels, it results in increase in the long-chain polyPs in all the compartments under study.


Microbiological Research | 1997

Comparison of exopolyphosphatases of different yeast cell compartments

I. S. Kulaev; Nadezhda Andreeva; L. P. Lichko; T. V. Kulakovskaya

Purified cell-envelope polyphosphatase as well as polyphoshatase activities of cytosol and isolated vacuoles, of nuclei and mitochondria of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae were compared. The polyphosphatases of cell envelope and cytosol are similar, the polyphosphatases of nuclei, vacuoles and mitochondria differ in their kinetic properties, substrate specificity, requirements in divalent cations and in some effector actions both from these and from each other.


Biochemistry | 2010

Inorganic polyphosphates in mitochondria

T. V. Kulakovskaya; L. P. Lichko; V. M. Vagabov; I. S. Kulaev

Current data concerning the crucial role of inorganic polyphosphates (polyP) in mitochondrial functions and dysfunctions in yeast and animal cells are reviewed. Biopolymers with short chain length (∼15 phosphate residues) were found in the mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. They comprised 7–10% of the total polyP content of the cell. The polyP are located in the membranes and intermembrane space of mitochondria. The mitochondrial membranes possess polyP/Ca2+/polyhydroxybutyrate complexes. PolyP accumulation is typical of promitochondria but not of functionally active mitochondria. Yeast mitochondria possess two exopolyphosphatases splitting Pi from the end of the polyP chain. One of them, encoded by the PPX1 gene, is located in the matrix; the other one, encoded by the PPN1 gene, is membrane-bound. Formation of well-developed mitochondria in the cells of S. cerevisiae after glucose depletion is accompanied by decrease in the polyP level and the chain length. In PPN1 mutants, the polyP chain length increased under glucose consumption, and the formation of well-developed mitochondria was blocked. These mutants were defective in respiration functions and consumption of oxidizable carbon sources such as lactate and ethanol. Since polyP is a compound with high-energy bonds, its metabolism vitally depends on the cell bioenergetics. The maximal level of short-chain acid-soluble polyP was observed in S. cerevisiae under consumption of glucose, while the long-chain polyP prevailed under ethanol consumption. In insects, polyP in the mitochondria change drastically during ontogenetic development, indicating involvement of the polymers in the regulation of mitochondrial metabolism during ontogenesis. In human cell lines, specific reduction of mitochondrial polyP under expression of yeast exopolyphosphatase PPX1 significantly modulates mitochondrial bioenergetics and transport.


Yeast | 2006

Inorganic polyphosphate and exopolyphosphatase in the nuclei of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: dependence on the growth phase and inactivation of the PPX1 and PPN1 genes.

L. P. Lichko; T. V. Kulakovskaya; I. S. Kulaev

Nuclei of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae possess inorganic polyphosphates (polyP) with chain lengths of ca. 10–200 phosphate residues. Subfractionation of the nuclei reveals that the most part of polyP is not associated with DNA. Transition of the yeast cells from stationary phase to active growth at orthophosphate (Pi) excess in the medium is followed by the synthesis of the shortest polyP (<15 phosphate residues) and hydrolysis of the high‐molecular polyP (>45 phosphate residues) in the nuclei. Nuclear exopolyphosphatase (exopolyPase) activity does not depend on the growth phase. The PPX1 gene encoding the major cytosolic exopolyPase does not encode the nuclear one and its inactivation has no effect on polyP metabolism in this compartment. Under inactivation of the PPN1 gene encoding another yeast exopolyPase, elimination of the nuclear exopolyPase is observed. The effect of PPN1 inactivation on the polyP level in the nuclei is insignificant in the stationary phase, while in the exponential phase this level increases 2.3‐fold as compared with the parent strain of S. cerevisiae. In the active growth phase, no hydrolysis of high‐molecular polyP is detected while the synthesis of short‐chain polyP is retained. The data obtained indicate substantial changes in polyP metabolism in nuclei under the renewal of active growth, which only partially depends on the genes of polyP metabolism known to date. Copyright


Biochemistry | 2010

Properties of Partially Purified Endopolyphosphatase of the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

L. P. Lichko; T. V. Kulakovskaya; I. S. Kulaev

Partially purified endopolyphosphatase from cytosol of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae with inactivated genes PPX1 and PPN1 encoding exopolyphosphatases was obtained with ion_exchange and affinity chromatography. The enzyme activity was estimated by decrease of polyphosphate chain length determined by PAGE. The enzyme cleaved inorganic polyphosphate without the release of orthophosphate (Pi) and was inhibited by heparin and insensitive to fluoride. Mg2+, Mn2+, and Co2+ (1.5 mM) stimulated the activity, and Ca2+ was ineffective. The molecular mass of the endopolyphosphatase determined by gel filtration was of ≈20 kDa.


Biochemistry | 2014

PPX1 gene overexpression has no influence on polyphosphates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

L. P. Lichko; Mikhail A. Eldarov; M. V. Dumina; T. V. Kulakovskaya

The role of exopolyphosphatase PPX1 in polyphosphate metabolism in yeasts has been studied in strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with inactivated PPX1 and PPN1 genes transformed by the expression vector carrying the yeast PPX1 gene. Exopolyphosphatase activity in transformant strains increased 90- and 40-fold compared to the ΔPPX1 and ΔPPN1 strains, respectively. The purified recombinant exopolyphosphatase PPX1 was similar to the PPX1 of wild strains in its substrate specificity and requirement for divalent metal cations. It was more active with tripolyphosphate and low molecular mass polyphosphates than with high molecular mass polyphosphates and required Mg2+ for its activity. The high level of recombinant PPX1 expression caused no decrease in polyphosphate content in the cells of the transformant. This fact suggests the restricted role of PPX1 in polyphosphate metabolism in yeasts.


Biochemistry | 2014

Diversity of phosphorus reserves in microorganisms

T. V. Kulakovskaya; L. P. Lichko; Lubov Ryazanova

Phosphorus compounds are indispensable components of the Earth’s biomass metabolized by all living organisms. Under excess of phosphorus compounds in the environment, microorganisms accumulate reserve phosphorus compounds that are used under phosphorus limitation. These compounds vary in their structure and also perform structural and regulatory functions in microbial cells. The most common phosphorus reserve in microorganism is inorganic polyphosphates, but in some archae and bacteria insoluble magnesium phosphate plays this role. Some yeasts produce phosphomannan as a phosphorus reserve. This review covers also other topics, i.e. accumulation of phosphorus reserves under nutrient limitation, phosphorus reserves in activated sludge, mycorrhiza, and the role of mineral phosphorus compounds in mammals.


Microbiology | 2006

[The effect of inactivation of the exo- and endopolyphosphatase genes PPX1 and PPN1 on the level of different polyphosphates in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae].

T. V. Kulakovskaya; L. V. Trilisenko; L. P. Lichko; V. M. Vagabov; I. S. Kulaev

The inactivation of the PPX1 and PPN1 genes, which encode the major enzymes of polyphosphate degradation (exopolyphosphatase and endopolyphosphatase, respectively), was found to exert different effects on the content of different polyphosphates in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The content of relatively low-molecular-weight acid-soluble polyphosphates in mutant yeast strains is inversely proportional to the exopolyphosphatase activity of the cytosol. At the same time, the mutation of these genes exerts no effect on salt-soluble polyphosphates. The content of high-molecular-weight alkali-soluble polyphosphates increases twofold in a mutant with inactivated genes of both exopolyphosphatase and endopolyphosphatase. The data obtained confirm the earlier suggestion that the metabolic pathways of particular polyphosphates in yeasts are different.

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I. S. Kulaev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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T. V. Kulakovskaya

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. A. Andreeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. M. Vagabov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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L. V. Trilisenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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E. V. Kulakovskaya

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. A. Pestov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Nadezhda Andreeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Lev A. Okorokov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Lubov Ryazanova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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