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Dive into the research topics where Liliya N. Yuldasheva is active.

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Featured researches published by Liliya N. Yuldasheva.


Molecular Microbiology | 2000

Electrophysiological evidence for heptameric stoichiometry of ion channels formed by Staphylococcus aureus alpha‐toxin in planar lipid bilayers

Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Petr G. Merzlyak; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Claudio G. Rodrigues; Sucharit Bhakdi; Angela Valeva

Staphylococcal alpha‐toxin forms homo‐oligomeric channels in lipid bilayers and cell membranes. Here, we report that electrophysiological monitoring of single‐channel function using a derivatized cysteine substitution mutant allows accurate determination of the subunit stoichiometry of the oligomer in situ. The electrophysiological phenotype of channels formed in planar lipid bilayers with the cysteine replacement mutant I7C is equal to that of the wild type. When pores were formed with I7C, alterations of several channel properties were observed upon modification with SH reagents. Decreases in conductance then occurred that were seen only as negative voltage was applied. At the level of single channels, these were manifest as stepwise changes in conductance, each step most probably reflecting modification of a single SH group within the oligomer. Because seven steps were observed, the functional channel formed by alpha‐toxin in planar lipid membranes is a heptamer.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Lumen geometry of ion channels formed by Vibrio cholerae EL Tor cytolysin elucidated by nonelectrolyte exclusion

Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Petr G. Merzlyak; Alexander Zitzer; Claudio G. Rodrigues; Sucharit Bhakdi; Oleg V. Krasilnikov

Vibrio cholerae EL Tor cytolysin, a water-soluble protein with a molecular mass of 63 kDa, forms small pores in target cell membranes. In this communication, planar lipid bilayers under voltage clamp conditions were used to investigate the geometric properties of the pores. It was established that all cytolysin channels were inserted into membranes with the same orientation. Sharp asymmetry in the I-V curve of fully open cytolysin channels persisting at high electrolyte concentrations indicated asymmetry in the geometry of the channel lumen. Using the nonelectrolyte exclusion method, evidence was obtained that the cis opening of the channel had a larger diameter (< or = 1.9 nm) than the trans opening (< or = 1.6 nm). The channel lumen appeared constricted, with a diameter of < or = 1.2 nm. Cup-shaped lumen geometry was deduced for both channel openings, which appeared to be connected to each other via a central narrow part. The latter contributed significantly to the total electrical resistance and determined the discontinuous character of channel filling with nonelectrolytes. Comparisons of the properties of pores formed by cytolysins of two V. cholerae biotypes (EL Tor and non-O1) indicated that the two ion channels possessed a similar geometry.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2003

Probing the volume changes during voltage gating of Porin 31BM channel with nonelectrolyte polymers

Carlos M.M. Carneiro; Petr G. Merzlyak; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Leandro G. Silva; Friedrich P. Thinnes; Oleg V. Krasilnikov

To probe the volume changes of the voltage-dependent anion-selective channel (VDAC), the nonelectrolyte exclusion technique was taken because it is one of the few existing methods that may define quite accurately the rough geometry of lumen of ion channels (in membranes) for which there is no structural data.Here, we corroborate the data from our previous study [FEBS Lett. 416 (1997) 187] that the gross structural features of VDAC in its highest conductance state are asymmetric with respect to the plane of the membrane, and state that this asymmetry is not dependent on sign of voltage applied. Hence, the plasticity of VDAC does not play a role in the determination of lumen geometry at this state and the asymmetry is an internal property of the channel. We also show that the apparent diameter of the cis segment of the pore decreases slightly from 2 to 1.8 nm when the channels conductance decreases from its high to low state. However, the trans funnel segment undergoes a more marked change in polymer accessible volume. Specifically, its larger diameter decreases from approximately 4 to 2.4 nm. Supposing the channels total length is 4.6 nm, the apparent change in channel volume during this transition is estimated to be about 10 nm(3), i.e. about 40% of the channels volume in the high conductance state.


European Biophysics Journal | 2005

Protein electrostriction: a possibility of elastic deformation of the α-hemolysin channel by the applied field

Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Petr G. Merzlyak; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Maria F. Capistrano

While conformational flexibility of proteins is widely recognized as one of their functionally crucial features and enjoys proper attention for this reason, their elastic properties are rarely discussed. In ion channel studies, where the voltage-induced or ligand-induced conformational transitions, gating, are the leading topic of research, the elastic structural deformation by the applied electric field has never been addressed at all. Here we examine elasticity using a model channel of known crystal structure—Staphylococcus aureusα-hemolysin. Working with single channels reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers, we first show that their ionic conductance is asymmetric with voltage even at the highest salt concentration used where the static charges in the channel interior are maximally shielded. Second, choosing 18-crown-6 as a molecular probe whose size is close to the size of the narrowest part of the α-hemolysin pore, we analyze the blockage of the channel by the crown/K+ complex. Analysis of the blockage within the framework of the Woodhull model in its generalized form demonstrates that the model is able to correctly describe the crown effect only if the parameters of the model are considered to be voltage-dependent. Specifically, one has to include either a voltage-dependent barrier for crown release to the cis side of the channel or voltage-dependent interactions between the binding site and the crown. We suggest that the voltage sensitivity of both the ionic conductance of the channel seen at the highest salt concentration and its blockage by the crown reflects a field-induced deformation of the pore.


Medical Microbiology and Immunology | 1997

Pore-forming properties of proteolytically nicked staphylococcal ⋅-toxin: the ion channel in planar lipid bilayer membranes

Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Petr G. Merzlyak; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Rushana K. Azimova; Romildo de Albuquerque Nogueira

Abstract Staphylococcal α-toxin is a single-chain protein with a molecular mass of 33.2 kDa, which can form large water-filled pores both in lipid bilayers and in erythrocyte membranes. Limited proteolysis of the purified toxin with proteinase K led to time-dependent changes of all the functional features of the channels formed by the toxin. Single-channel conductance in planar bilayers was decreased about threefold. The anion selectivity of the channel was replaced with cation selectivity and the asymmetry in the current-voltage relationship of the channel became more pronounced. At the same time the nicked toxin kept its full ability to form ion channels in lipid bilayers, although it lost a considerable part of its hemolytic activity. In planar bilayers and in erythrocyte membranes, the proteolytically nicked toxin actually formed channels with a slightly smaller diameter (∼1.2 times) than that formed by the native toxin. This decrease was not marked enough to explain changes in the biological effects of the nicked toxin. The change in channel selectivity induced by the cleavage is considered to be the major determinant of the changes in the biological effects of the nicked toxin.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1997

The hinge portion of the S. aureus α-toxin crosses the lipid bilayer and is part of the trans-mouth of the channel

Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Petr G. Merzlyak; Maria-Fatima P Capistrano; Romildo de Albuquerque Nogueira

This paper compares the functional properties of ion channels formed in planar lipid membranes by the wild and mutant Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin. It was shown that replacement of the amino acid Gly at position 130 by Cys in the primary structure of the toxin decreases the single-channel conductance with a concomitant decrease in the pH at which the channel becomes unable to discriminate between Cl- and K+ ions. The mutation also induced an increase in the asymmetry in the current-voltage relationship of the channel. The results of our experiments suggest that the trans-mouth of the channel is responsible for all the observed changes in channel properties. It was assumed that this entrance is built by the glycine-rich hinge portion of the toxin and is situated close to the surface of monolayer facing the trans-compartment.


Biochimie | 2009

Transmembrane cholesterol migration in planar lipid membranes measured with Vibrio cholerae cytolysin as molecular tool

Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Liliya N. Yuldasheva

The rate of transbilayer movement (flip-flop) of cholesterol was estimated using planar bilayers with defined initial asymmetry, formed by the opposing monolayers technique. Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) was utilized as a molecular tool for measuring the cholesterol concentration in the cis leaflet of asymmetric bilayers. To quantify cholesterol flip-flop in planar lipid bilayers, a mathematical model was developed. It considers both the lateral diffusion rate of cholesterol within each monolayer and the flip-flop rate. The difference in initial and steady-state cholesterol contents in bilayer leaflets was used as a start point. Assuming the lateral diffusion coefficient to be of 1 x 10(-8) cm(2) s(-1), the characteristic time of cholesterol flip-flop at 25 +/- 2 degrees C was estimated as <10 s.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1995

Non stochastic distribution of single channels in planar lipid bilayers

Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Peter G. Merzliak; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Romildo de Albuquerque Nogueira; Claudio G. Rodrigues

The selectivity of the planar lipid bilayers modified by two channel-forming proteins (alpha-toxin S. aureus and colicin Ia) was examined. It was established that in all cases the value of zero current potential depended on the amount of open ion channels and increased with the number of channels (from one to about 5-7). These facts point out both the interactions among ion channels and their non stochastic distribution on the membrane surface.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Polymeric Nonelectrolytes to Probe Pore Geometry: Application to the α-Toxin Transmembrane Channel

Petr G. Merzlyak; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Claudio G. Rodrigues; Carlos M.M. Carneiro; Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Sergey M. Bezrukov


Biophysical Journal | 2004

Field-dependent effect of crown ether (18-crown-6) on ionic conductance of α-hemolysin channels

Sergey M. Bezrukov; Oleg V. Krasilnikov; Liliya N. Yuldasheva; Claudio G. Rodrigues

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Oleg V. Krasilnikov

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Petr G. Merzlyak

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Claudio G. Rodrigues

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Carlos M.M. Carneiro

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Sergey M. Bezrukov

National Institutes of Health

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Leandro G. Silva

Federal University of Pernambuco

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