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Dive into the research topics where Magdalena Nowak is active.

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Featured researches published by Magdalena Nowak.


Microbiology | 2011

Degradation of fibrinogen and collagen by staphopains, cysteine proteases released from Staphylococcus aureus

Takehisa Ohbayashi; Atsushi Irie; Yoji Murakami; Magdalena Nowak; Jan Potempa; Yasuharu Nishimura; Masanori Shinohara; Takahisa Imamura

Staphylococcus aureus is the most frequently isolated pathogen in gram-positive sepsis often complicated by a blood clotting disorder, and is the leading cause of infective endocarditis induced by bacterial destruction of endocardial tissues. The bacterium secretes cysteine proteases referred to as staphopain A (ScpA) and staphopain B (SspB). To investigate virulence activities of staphopains pertinent to clotting disorders and tissue destruction, we examined their effects on collagen, one of the major tissue components, and on plasma clotting. Both staphopains prolonged the partial thromboplastin time of plasma in a dose- and activity-dependent manner, with SspB being threefold more potent than ScpA. Staphopains also prolonged the thrombin time of both plasma and fibrinogen, indicating that these enzymes can cause impaired plasma clotting through fibrinogen degradation. Whereas SspB cleaved the fibrinogen Aα-chain at the C-terminal region very efficiently, ScpA degraded it rather slowly. This explains the superior ability of the former enzyme to impair fibrinogen clottability. Enzymically active staphopains, at concentrations as low as 10 nM, degraded collagen with comparable efficiency. These results show novel virulence activities of staphopains in degrading fibrinogen and collagen, and suggest an involvement of staphopains in the clotting impairment and tissue destruction caused by staphylococcal infection.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The outer-membrane export signal of Porphyromonas gingivalis type IX secretion system (T9SS) is a conserved C-terminal β-sandwich domain

Iñaki de Diego; Miroslaw Ksiazek; Danuta Mizgalska; Lahari Koneru; Przemyslaw Golik; Borys Szmigielski; Magdalena Nowak; Zuzanna Nowakowska; Barbara Potempa; John Houston; Jan J. Enghild; Ida B. Thøgersen; Jinlong Gao; Ann H. Kwan; Jill Trewhella; Grzegorz Dubin; F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth; Ky-Anh Nguyen; Jan Potempa

In the recently characterized Type IX Secretion System (T9SS), the conserved C-terminal domain (CTD) in secreted proteins functions as an outer membrane translocation signal for export of virulence factors to the cell surface in the Gram-negative Bacteroidetes phylum. In the periodontal pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis, the CTD is cleaved off by PorU sortase in a sequence-independent manner, and anionic lipopolysaccharide (A-LPS) is attached to many translocated proteins, thus anchoring them to the bacterial surface. Here, we solved the atomic structure of the CTD of gingipain B (RgpB) from P. gingivalis, alone and together with a preceding immunoglobulin-superfamily domain (IgSF). The CTD was found to possess a typical Ig-like fold encompassing seven antiparallel β-strands organized in two β-sheets, packed into a β-sandwich structure that can spontaneously dimerise through C-terminal strand swapping. Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) revealed no fixed orientation of the CTD with respect to the IgSF. By introducing insertion or substitution of residues within the inter-domain linker in the native protein, we were able to show that despite the region being unstructured, it nevertheless is resistant to general proteolysis. These data suggest structural motifs located in the two adjacent Ig-like domains dictate the processing of CTDs by the T9SS secretion pathway.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Structural and functional probing of PorZ, an essential bacterial surface component of the type-IX secretion system of human oral-microbiomic Porphyromonas gingivalis.

Anna M. Lasica; Theodoros Goulas; Danuta Mizgalska; Xiaoyan Zhou; Iñaki de Diego; Miroslaw Ksiazek; Mariusz Madej; Yonghua Guo; Tibisay Guevara; Magdalena Nowak; Barbara Potempa; Apoorv Goel; Maryta Sztukowska; Apurva T. Prabhakar; Monika Bzowska; Magdalena Widziołek; Ida B. Thøgersen; Jan J. Enghild; Mary Simonian; Arkadiusz W. Kulczyk; Ky-Anh Nguyen; Jan Potempa; F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth

Porphyromonas gingivalis is a member of the human oral microbiome abundant in dysbiosis and implicated in the pathogenesis of periodontal (gum) disease. It employs a newly described type-IX secretion system (T9SS) for secretion of virulence factors. Cargo proteins destined for secretion through T9SS carry a recognition signal in the conserved C-terminal domain (CTD), which is removed by sortase PorU during translocation. Here, we identified a novel component of T9SS, PorZ, which is essential for surface exposure of PorU and posttranslational modification of T9SS cargo proteins. These include maturation of enzyme precursors, CTD removal and attachment of anionic lipopolysaccharide for anchorage in the outer membrane. The crystal structure of PorZ revealed two β-propeller domains and a C-terminal β-sandwich domain, which conforms to the canonical CTD architecture. We further documented that PorZ is itself transported to the cell surface via T9SS as a full-length protein with its CTD intact, independently of the presence or activity of PorU. Taken together, our results shed light on the architecture and possible function of a novel component of the T9SS. Knowledge of how T9SS operates will contribute to our understanding of protein secretion as part of host-microbiome interactions by dysbiotic members of the human oral cavity.


Siberian Mathematical Journal | 2014

The shark teeth is a topological IFS-attractor

Magdalena Nowak; Tomasz Szarek

We show that the space called the shark teeth is a topological IFS-attractor, that is, for every open cover of


Open Mathematics | 2012

A class of continua that are not attractors of any IFS

Marcin Kulczycki; Magdalena Nowak


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Structural insights unravel the zymogenic mechanism of the virulence factor gingipain K from Porphyromonas gingivalis, a causative agent of gum disease from the human oral microbiome.

Anja Pomowski; Isabel Usón; Zuzanna Nowakowska; Florian Veillard; Maryta Sztukowska; Tibisay Guevara; Theodoros Goulas; Danuta Mizgalska; Magdalena Nowak; Barbara Potempa; James A. Huntington; Jan Potempa; F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth

X = \bigcup\nolimits_{i = 1}^n {f_i (X)}


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018

The Bacteroidetes Q-rule : pyroglutamate in signal peptidase I substrates

Matthias Bochtler; Danuta Mizgalska; Florian Veillard; Magdalena Nowak; John Houston; Paul D. Veith; Eric C. Reynolds; Jan Potempa


Ginekologia Polska | 2017

Assessment of the implementation of the infectious diseases screening programmes among pregnant women in the Lesser Poland region and comparison with similar programmes conducted in other European Union countries

Małgorzata Radoń-Pokracka; Maciej Piasecki; Alicja Lachowska; Sebastian Baczkowski; Joanna Spaczyńska; Magdalena Górecka; Magdalena Nowak; Hubert Huras

, its image under every suitable large composition from the family of continuous functions {f1, ..., fn} lies in some set from the cover. In particular, there exists a space that is not homeomorphic to any IFS-attractor but is a topological IFS-attractor.


Clinical Imaging | 2017

Screening performance for callosal agenesis in prenatal life. Single center study

Hubert Huras; Magdalena Nowak; Izabela Herman-Sucharska; Małgorzata Radoń-Pokracka; Agnieszka Nocun; Marcin Wiechec

This paper presents a sufficient condition for a continuum in ℝn to be embeddable in ℝn in such a way that its image is not an attractor of any iterated function system. An example of a continuum in ℝ2 that is not an attractor of any weak iterated function system is also given.


Topology and its Applications | 2013

Topological classification of scattered IFS-attractors

Magdalena Nowak

Skewing of the human oral microbiome causes dysbiosis and preponderance of bacteria such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, the main etiological agent of periodontitis. P. gingivalis secretes proteolytic gingipains (Kgp and RgpA/B) as zymogens inhibited by a pro-domain that is removed during extracellular activation. Unraveling the molecular mechanism of Kgp zymogenicity is essential to design inhibitors blocking its activity. Here, we found that the isolated 209-residue Kgp pro-domain is a boomerang-shaped all-β protein similar to the RgpB pro-domain. Using composite structural information of Kgp and RgpB, we derived a plausible homology model and mechanism of Kgp-regulating zymogenicity. Accordingly, the pro-domain would laterally attach to the catalytic moiety in Kgp and block the active site through an exposed inhibitory loop. This loop features a lysine (Lys129) likely occupying the S1 specificity pocket and exerting latency. Lys129 mutation to glutamate or arginine led to misfolded protein that was degraded in vivo. Mutation to alanine gave milder effects but still strongly diminished proteolytic activity, without affecting the subcellular location of the enzyme. Accordingly, the interactions of Lys129 within the S1 pocket are also essential for correct folding. Uniquely for gingipains, the isolated Kgp pro-domain dimerized through an interface, which partially overlapped with that between the catalytic moiety and the pro-domain within the zymogen, i.e. both complexes are mutually exclusive. Thus, pro-domain dimerization, together with partial rearrangement of the active site upon activation, explains the lack of inhibition of the pro-domain in trans. Our results reveal that the specific latency mechanism of Kgp differs from those of Rgps.

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Jan Potempa

Jagiellonian University

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Hubert Huras

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth

Spanish National Research Council

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Theodoros Goulas

Spanish National Research Council

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Tibisay Guevara

Spanish National Research Council

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