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Dive into the research topics where M. Soledad Celej is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Soledad Celej.


Biochemical Journal | 2004

Superactivity and conformational changes on alpha-chymotrypsin upon interfacial binding to cationic micelles.

M. Soledad Celej; Mariana G. D'andrea; Patricia T. Campana; Gerardo D. Fidelio; M. Lucia Bianconi

The catalytic behaviour of alpha-CT (alpha-chymotrypsin) is affected by cationic micelles of CTABr (hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide). The enzyme-micelle interaction leads to an increase in both the V(max) and the affinity for the substrate p -nitrophenyl acetate, indicating higher catalytic efficiency for bound alpha-CT. The bell-shaped profile of alpha-CT activity with increasing CTABr concentrations suggests that the micelle-bound enzyme reacts with the free substrate. Although more active with CTABr micelles, the enzyme stability is essentially the same as observed in buffer only. Enzyme activation is accompanied by changes in alpha-CT conformation. Changes in tertiary structure were observed by the increase in intensity and the red shift in the alpha-CT tryptophan fluorescence spectrum, suggesting the annulment of internal quenching and a more polar location of tryptophan residues. Near-UV CD also indicated the transfer of aromatic residues to a more flexible environment. CTABr micelles also induces an increase in alpha-helix, as seen by far-UV CD and FTIR (Fourier-transform infrared) spectroscopies. The far-UV CD spectrum of alpha-CT shows an increase in the intensity of the positive band at 198 nm and in the negative band at 222 nm, indicating an increased alpha-helical content. This is in agreement with FTIR studies, where an increase in the band at 1655 cm(-1), corresponding to the alpha-helix, was shown by fitting analysis and difference spectroscopy. Spectral deconvolution indicated a reduction in the beta-sheet content in micelle-bound alpha-CT. Our data suggest that the higher catalytic efficiency of micelle-bound alpha-CT results from significant conformational changes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Structural Insights into Amyloid Oligomers of the Parkinson Disease-related Protein α-Synuclein

J. Ignacio Gallea; M. Soledad Celej

Background: Soluble oligomers of α-synuclein, rather than the amyloid fibrils, are presumed to be more neurotoxic in Parkinson disease. Results: A site-specific fluorescence approach is used to unravel the internal architecture of α-synuclein oligomers. Conclusion: α-Synuclein oligomers are organized aggregates with a defined network of intermolecular contacts. Significance: This contact map can be used for developing molecular models, essential for mechanistic studies and drug design. The presence of intraneuronal deposits mainly formed by amyloid fibrils of the presynaptic protein α-synuclein (AS) is a hallmark of Parkinson disease. Currently, neurotoxicity is attributed to prefibrillar oligomeric species rather than the insoluble aggregates, although their mechanisms of toxicity remain elusive. Structural details of the supramolecular organization of AS oligomers are critically needed to decipher the structure-toxicity relationship underlying their pathogenicity. In this study, we employed site-specific fluorescence to get a deeper insight into the internal architecture of AS oligomeric intermediates. We demonstrate that AS oligomers are ordered assemblies possessing a well defined pattern of intermolecular contacts. Some of these contacts involve regions that form the β-sheet core in the fibrillar state, although their spatial arrangement may differ in the two aggregated forms. However, even though the two termini are excluded from the fibrillar core, they are engaged in a number of intermolecular interactions within the oligomer. Therefore, substantial structural remodeling of early oligomeric interactions is essential for fibril growth. The intermolecular contacts identified in AS oligomers can serve as targets for the rational design of anti-amyloid compounds directed at preventing oligomeric interactions/reorganizations.


Journal of Fluorescence | 2010

Characterization of Coupled Ground State and Excited State Equilibria by Fluorescence Spectral Deconvolution

Wouter Caarls; M. Soledad Celej; Alexander P. Demchenko; Thomas M. Jovin

Fluorescence probes with multiparametric response based on the relative variation in the intensities of several emission bands are of great general utility. An accurate interpretation of the system requires the determination of the number, positions and intensities of the spectral components. We have developed a new algorithm for spectral deconvolution that is applicable to fluorescence probes exhibiting a two-state ground-state equilibrium and a two-state excited-state reaction. Three distinct fluorescence emission bands are resolved, with a distribution of intensities that is excitation-wavelength-dependent. The deconvolution of the spectrum into individual components is based on their representation as asymmetric Siano-Metzler log-normal functions. The application of the algorithm to the solvation response of a 3-hydroxychromone (3HC) derivative that exhibits an H-bonding-dependent excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) reaction allowed the separation of the spectral signatures characteristic of polarity and hydrogen bonding. This example demonstrates the ability of the method to characterize two potentially uncorrelated parameters characterizing dye environment and interactions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Structural Characterization of Heparin-induced Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate Dehydrogenase Protofibrils Preventing α-Synuclein Oligomeric Species Toxicity

César L. Ávila; Clarisa M. Torres-Bugeau; Leandro R.S. Barbosa; Elisa Morandé Sales; Mohand Ouidir Ouidja; Sergio B. Socías; M. Soledad Celej; Rita Raisman-Vozari; Dulce Papy-Garcia; Rosangela Itri; Rosana N. Chehín

Background: Although glycosaminoglycan-induced GAPDH prefibrillar species accelerates α-synuclein aggregation, its role in toxicity remains unclear. Results: The toxic effect exerted by α-synuclein oligomers on cell culture was abolished by GAPDH protofibril, which was identified and structurally characterized. Conclusion: GAPDH protofibrils can efficiently sequester α-synuclein toxic oligomers. Significance: GAPDH protofibrils may play an important role in neuronal proteostasis and could open a novel therapeutic strategy for synucleinopathies. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is a multifunctional enzyme that has been associated with neurodegenerative diseases. GAPDH colocalizes with α-synuclein in amyloid aggregates in post-mortem tissue of patients with sporadic Parkinson disease and promotes the formation of Lewy body-like inclusions in cell culture. In a previous work, we showed that glycosaminoglycan-induced GAPDH prefibrillar species accelerate the conversion of α-synuclein to fibrils. However, it remains to be determined whether the interplay among glycosaminoglycans, GAPDH, and α-synuclein has a role in pathological states. Here, we demonstrate that the toxic effect exerted by α-synuclein oligomers in dopaminergic cell culture is abolished in the presence of GAPDH prefibrillar species. Structural analysis of prefibrillar GAPDH performed by small angle x-ray scattering showed a particle compatible with a protofibril. This protofibril is shaped as a cylinder 22 nm long and a cross-section diameter of 12 nm. Using biocomputational techniques, we obtained the first all-atom model of the GAPDH protofibril, which was validated by cross-linking coupled to mass spectrometry experiments. Because GAPDH can be secreted outside the cell where glycosaminoglycans are present, it seems plausible that GAPDH protofibrils could be assembled in the extracellular space kidnapping α-synuclein toxic oligomers. Thus, the role of GAPDH protofibrils in neuronal proteostasis must be considered. The data reported here could open alternative ways in the development of therapeutic strategies against synucleinopathies like Parkinson disease.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Structural remodeling during amyloidogenesis of physiological Nα-acetylated α-synuclein.

J. Ignacio Gallea; Rabia Sarroukh; Pablo Yunes-Quartino; Jean Marie Ruysschaert; Vincent Raussens; M. Soledad Celej

The misfolding and aggregation of the presynaptic protein α-synuclein (AS) into amyloid fibrils is pathognomonic of Parkinsons disease, though the mechanism by which this structural conversion occurs is largely unknown. Soluble oligomeric species that accumulate as intermediates in the process of fibril formation are thought to be highly cytotoxic. Recent studies indicate that oligomer-to-fibril AS transition plays a key role in cell toxicity and progression of neurodegeneration. We previously demonstrated that a subgroup of oligomeric AS species are ordered assemblies possessing a well-defined pattern of intermolecular contacts which are arranged into a distinctive antiparallel β-sheet structure, as opposed to the parallel fibrillar fold. Recently, it was demonstrated that the physiological form of AS is N-terminally acetylated (Ac-AS). Here, we first showed that well-characterized conformational ensembles of Ac-AS, namely monomers, oligomers and fibrils, recapitulate many biophysical features of the nonacetylated protein, such as hydrodynamic, tinctorial, structural and membrane-leakage properties. Then, we relied on ATR-FTIR spectroscopy to explore the structural reorganization during Ac-AS fibrillogenesis. We found that antiparallel β-sheet transient intermediates are built-up at early stages of aggregation, which then evolve to parallel β-sheet fibrils through helix-rich/disordered species. The results are discussed in terms of regions of the protein that might participate in this structural rearrangement. Our work provides new insights into the complex conformational reorganization occurring during Ac-AS amyloid formation.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2018

Amyloid oligomerization of the Parkinson's disease related protein α-synuclein impacts on its curvature-membrane sensitivity

J. Ignacio Gallea; Ernesto E. Ambroggio; A. Alejandro Vilcaes; Nicholas G. James; David M. Jameson; M. Soledad Celej

The amyloid aggregation of the presynaptic protein α‐synuclein (AS) is pathognomonic of Parkinsons disease and other neurodegenerative disorders. Physiologically, AS contributes to synaptic homeostasis by participating in vesicle maintenance, trafficking, and release. Its avidity for highly curved acidic membranes has been related to the distinct chemistry of the N‐terminal amphipathic helix adopted upon binding to appropriated lipid interfaces. Pathologically, AS populate a myriad of toxic aggregates ranging from soluble oligomers to insoluble amyloid fibrils. Different gain‐of‐toxic function mechanisms are linked to prefibrillar oligomers which are considered as the most neurotoxic species. Here, we investigated if amyloid oligomerization could hamper AS function as a membrane curvature sensor. We used fluorescence correlation spectroscopy to quantitatively evaluate the interaction of oligomeric species, produced using a popular method based on lyophilization and rehydration, to lipid vesicles of different curvatures and compositions. We found that AS oligomerization has a profound impact on protein‐lipid interaction, altering binding affinity and/or curvature sensitivity depending on membrane composition. Our work provides novel insights into how the formation of prefibrillar intermediate species could contribute to neurodegeneration due to a loss‐of‐function mechanism.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2005

Ligand-induced thermostability in proteins: Thermodynamic analysis of ANS–albumin interaction

M. Soledad Celej; S.A. Dassie; Eleonora Freire; M. Lucia Bianconi; Gerardo D. Fidelio


Analytical Biochemistry | 2006

Differential scanning calorimetry as a tool to estimate binding parameters in multiligand binding proteins

M. Soledad Celej; S.A. Dassie; Martín González; M. Lucia Bianconi; Gerardo D. Fidelio


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2004

Conformational flexibility of avidin: the influence of biotin binding.

M. Soledad Celej; Guillermo G. Montich; Gerardo D. Fidelio


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2005

Erratum to “Conformational flexibility of avidin: the influence of biotin binding” [Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 325 (2004) 922–927]

M. Soledad Celej; Guillermo G. Montich; Gerardo D. Fidelio

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Gerardo D. Fidelio

National University of Cordoba

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J. Ignacio Gallea

National University of Cordoba

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M. Lucia Bianconi

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Clarisa M. Torres-Bugeau

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Guillermo G. Montich

National University of Cordoba

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Rosana N. Chehín

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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S.A. Dassie

National University of Cordoba

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