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Dive into the research topics where Mahdi Muhammad Moosa is active.

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Featured researches published by Mahdi Muhammad Moosa.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Counteracting chemical chaperone effects on the single-molecule α-synuclein structural landscape

Allan Chris M. Ferreon; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Yann Gambin; Ashok A. Deniz

Protein structure and function depend on a close interplay between intrinsic folding energy landscapes and the chemistry of the protein environment. Osmolytes are small-molecule compounds that can act as chemical chaperones by altering the environment in a cellular context. Despite their importance, detailed studies on the role of these chemical chaperones in modulating structure and dimensions of intrinsically disordered proteins have been limited. Here, we used single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer to test the counteraction hypothesis of counterbalancing effects between the protecting osmolyte trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) and denaturing osmolyte urea for the case of α-synuclein, a Parkinson’s disease-linked protein whose monomer exhibits significant disorder. The single-molecule experiments, which avoid complications from protein aggregation, do not exhibit clear solvent-induced cooperative protein transitions for these osmolytes, unlike results from previous studies on globular proteins. Our data demonstrate the ability of TMAO and urea to shift α-synuclein structures towards either more compact or expanded average dimensions. Strikingly, the experiments directly reveal that a 2∶1 [urea]∶[TMAO] ratio has a net neutral effect on the protein’s dimensions, a result that holds regardless of the absolute osmolyte concentrations. Our findings shed light on a surprisingly simple aspect of the interplay between urea and TMAO on α-synuclein in the context of intrinsically disordered proteins, with potential implications for the biological roles of such chemical chaperones. The results also highlight the strengths of single-molecule experiments in directly probing the chemical physics of protein structure and disorder in more chemically complex environments.


Nature plants | 2017

Comparative genomics of two jute species and insight into fibre biogenesis

Shahidul Islam; Jennifer A. Saito; Emdadul Mannan Emdad; Borhan Ahmed; Mohammad Moinul Islam; Abdul Halim; Quazi Md Mosaddeque Hossen; Zakir Hossain; Rasel Ahmed; Sabbir Hossain; Shah Md Tamim Kabir; Sarwar Alam Khan; Mursalin Khan; Rajnee Hasan; Nasima Aktar; Ummay Honi; Rahin Islam; Mamunur Rashid; Xuehua Wan; Shaobin Hou; Taslima Haque; Muhammad Shafiul Azam; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Sabrina M. Elias; A. M. Mahedi Hasan; Niaz Mahmood; Shafiuddin; Saima Shahid; Nusrat Sharmeen Shommu; Sharmin Jahan

Jute (Corchorus sp.) is one of the most important sources of natural fibre, covering ∼80% of global bast fibre production1. Only Corchorus olitorius and Corchorus capsularis are commercially cultivated, though there are more than 100 Corchorus species2 in the Malvaceae family. Here we describe high-quality draft genomes of these two species and their comparisons at the functional genomics level to support tailor-designed breeding. The assemblies cover 91.6% and 82.2% of the estimated genome sizes for C. olitorius and C. capsularis, respectively. In total, 37,031 C. olitorius and 30,096 C. capsularis genes are identified, and most of the genes are validated by cDNA and RNA-seq data. Analyses of clustered gene families and gene collinearity show that jute underwent shared whole-genome duplication ∼18.66 million years (Myr) ago prior to speciation. RNA expression analysis from isolated fibre cells reveals the key regulatory and structural genes involved in fibre formation. This work expands our understanding of the molecular basis of fibre formation laying the foundation for the genetic improvement of jute.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Reentrant Phase Transition Drives Dynamic Substructure Formation in Ribonucleoprotein Droplets

Priya R. Banerjee; Anthony N. Milin; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Paulo L. Onuchic; Ashok A. Deniz

Intracellular ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules are membrane-less droplet organelles that are thought to regulate posttranscriptional gene expression. While liquid-liquid phase separation may drive RNP granule assembly, the mechanisms underlying their supramolecular dynamics and internal organization remain poorly understood. Herein, we demonstrate that RNA, a primary component of RNP granules, can modulate the phase behavior of RNPs by controlling both droplet assembly and dissolution in vitro. Monotonically increasing the RNA concentration initially leads to droplet assembly by complex coacervation and subsequently triggers an RNP charge inversion, which promotes disassembly. This RNA-mediated reentrant phase transition can drive the formation of dynamic droplet substructures (vacuoles) with tunable lifetimes. We propose that active cellular processes that can create an influx of RNA into RNP granules, such as transcription, can spatiotemporally control the organization and dynamics of such liquid-like organelles.


ChemPhysChem | 2015

Forced Folding of a Disordered Protein Accesses an Alternative Folding Landscape

Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Allan Chris M. Ferreon; Ashok A. Deniz

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are involved in diverse cellular functions. Many IDPs can interact with multiple binding partners, resulting in their folding into alternative ligand-specific functional structures. For such multi-structural IDPs, a key question is whether these multiple structures are fully encoded in the protein sequence, as is the case in many globular proteins. To answer this question, here we employed a combination of single-molecule and ensemble techniques to compare ligand-induced and osmolyte-forced folding of α-synuclein. Our results reveal context-dependent modulation of the proteins folding landscape, suggesting that the codes for the proteins native folds are partially encoded in its primary sequence, and are completed only upon interaction with binding partners. Our findings suggest a critical role for cellular interactions in expanding the repertoire of folds and functions available to disordered proteins.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

The N-terminal domain of ALS-linked TDP-43 assembles without misfolding

Phoebe S. Tsoi; Kyoungjae J. Choi; Paul G. Leonard; Antons Sizovs; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Kevin R. MacKenzie; Josephine C. Ferreon; Allan Chris M. Ferreon

Transactivation response element (TAR) DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) misfolding is implicated in several neurodegenerative diseases characterized by aggregated protein inclusions. Misfolding is believed to be mediated by both the N- and C-terminus of TDP-43; however, the mechanistic basis of the contribution of individual domains in the process remained elusive. Here, using single-molecule fluorescence and ensemble biophysical techniques, and a wide range of pH and temperature conditions, we show that TDP-43NTD is thermodynamically stable, well-folded and undergoes reversible oligomerization. We propose that, in full-length TDP-43, association between folded N-terminal domains enhances the propensity of the intrinsically unfolded C-terminal domains to drive pathological aggregation.


Genetic Testing and Molecular Biomarkers | 2010

Mutation Analysis of the HBB Gene in Selected Bangladeshi β-Thalassemic Individuals: Presence of Rare Mutations

Mustak Ibn Ayub; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Golam Sarwardi; Waqar Ahmed Khan; Haseena Khan; Sabina Yeasmin

INTRODUCTION AND AIMS Bangladesh has a large number of thalassemic patients. However, no extensive analysis of the mutations in the HBB gene of thalassemic patients has been previously carried out. We have conducted a systematic research to reveal thalassemia mutations in the Bangladeshi population. In this preliminary analysis of 587 bp of the HBB gene in selected thalassemic individuals, some rare mutations in world perspective have been found to be significantly high in the Bangladeshi population, together with the common mutations for thalassemia. RESULTS A 587-bp segment of the HBB gene from 32 chromosomes of 16 beta-thalassemic individuals was analyzed for molecular characterization of the disease. Splice junction mutation IVS-I-5 was found to be the most common. The analysis also revealed some rare mutations HBB: c.-80T>C, HBB: c. 92G>C, HBB: c-92C>G, which are not prevalent in geographically adjacent populations. CONCLUSION This is a first of this kind of study in the Bangladeshi population. Although the small sample size makes it difficult to make any population genetics inference, this study can be regarded as the seminal research for a large-scale study to determine the complete mutation profile underlying thalassemia in the Bangladeshi population. The complete mutation profile will provide invaluable strategies (e.g., prenatal diagnosis and genetic counseling) for better management of thalassemia in the Bangladeshi population.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Two-Dimensional Crowding Uncovers a Hidden Conformation of α-Synuclein.

Priya R. Banerjee; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Ashok A. Deniz

The intrinsically disordered protein (IDP), α-synuclein (αS), is well-known for phospholipid membrane binding-coupled folding into tunable helical conformers. Here, using single-molecule experiments in conjunction with ensemble assays and a theoretical model, we present a unique case demonstrating that the interaction-folding landscape of αS can be tuned by two-dimensional (2D) crowding through simultaneous binding of a second protein on the bilayer surface. Unexpectedly, the experimental data show a clear deviation from a simple competitive inhibition model, but are consistent with a bimodal inhibition mechanism wherein membrane binding of a second protein (a membrane interacting chaperone, Hsp27, in this case) differentially inhibits two distinct modules of αS-membrane interaction. As a consequence, αS molecules are forced to access a hidden conformational state on the phospholipid bilayer in which only the higher-affinity module remains membrane-bound. Our results demonstrate that macromolecular crowding in two dimensions can play a significant role in shaping the conformational landscape of membrane-binding IDPs with multiple binding modes.


Interdisciplinary Sciences: Computational Life Sciences | 2012

In silico Analysis Reveals the Presence of a Large Number of Ankyrin Repeat Containing Proteins in Ectocarpus siliculosus

Niaz Mahmood; Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Nahid Tamanna; Suprovath Kumar Sarker; Rifat Ara Najnin; Salma Sultana Alam

Proteins with Ankyrin repeat motifs (ANK) are found to be associated with diverse biological processes and molecular functions in most of the studied organisms. Several studies have been done on the ANK-motif containing proteins of various model species, but similar studies on their counterparts in brown algae are not available. In this study, we have identified a total of 1,372 ankyrin repeats in 339 proteins of the model brown algae Ectocarpus siliculosus and the consensus sequence of the ANK repeats was determined. The proteins were classified into eight different subfamilies depending on their structural diversity. The data provided in this study may provide useful basis for future reverse genetics analysis of the members of this family.


European Biophysics Journal | 2018

Denaturant-specific effects on the structural energetics of a protein-denatured ensemble

Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Asha Z. Goodman; Josephine C. Ferreon; Chul Won Lee; Allan Chris M. Ferreon; Ashok A. Deniz

Protein thermodynamic stability is intricately linked to cellular function, and altered stability can lead to dysfunction and disease. The linear extrapolation model (LEM) is commonly used to obtain protein unfolding free energies (


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2011

Combination of two rare mutations causes β-thalassaemia in a Bangladeshi patient

Mahdi Muhammad Moosa; Mustak Ibn Ayub; Ama Emran Bashar; Golam Sarwardi; Waqar Ahmed Khan; Haseena Khan; Sabina Yeasmin

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Ashok A. Deniz

Scripps Research Institute

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Priya R. Banerjee

Scripps Research Institute

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Anthony N. Milin

Scripps Research Institute

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Paulo L. Onuchic

Scripps Research Institute

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