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Dive into the research topics where Mantas Malisauskas is active.

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Featured researches published by Mantas Malisauskas.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Amyloid Protofilaments from the Calcium-binding Protein Equine Lysozyme: Formation of Ring and Linear Structures Depends on pH and Metal Ion Concentration

Mantas Malisauskas; Vladimir Zamotin; Jana Jass; Wim Noppe; Christopher M. Dobson; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

The calcium-binding equine lysozyme has been found to undergo conversion into amyloid fibrils during incubation in solution at acidic pH. At pH 4.5 and 57 degrees C, where equine lysozyme forms a partially unfolded molten globule state, the protein forms protofilaments with a width of ca. 2 nm. In the absence of Ca(2+) the protofilaments are present as annular structures with a diameter of 40-50 nm. In the presence of 10 mM CaCl(2) the protofilaments of equine lysozyme are straight or curved; they can assemble into thicker threads, but they do not appear to undergo circularisation. At pH 2.0, where the protein is more destabilised compared to pH 4.5, fibril formation occurs at 37 degrees C and 57 degrees C. At pH 2.0, both ring-shaped and linear protofilaments are formed, in which periodic repeats of ca 35 nm can be distinguished clearly. The rings constitute about 10% of all fibrillar species under these conditions and they are characterised by a larger diameter of 70-80 nm. All the structures bind Congo red and thioflavine T in a manner similar to fibrils associated with a variety of amyloid diseases. At pH 2.0, fibril formation is accompanied by some acidic hydrolysis, producing specific fragmentation of the protein, leading to the accumulation of two peptides in particular, consisting of residues 1-80 and 54-125. At the initial stages of incubation, however, full-length equine lysozyme represents the dominant species within the fibrils. We propose that the ring-shaped structures observed here, and in the case of disease-associated proteins such as alpha-synuclein, could be a second generic type of amyloid structure in addition to the more common linear fibrils.


Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders | 2004

Autoimmune Responses to Amyloid Structures of Aβ(25–35) Peptide and Human Lysozyme in the Serum of Patients with Progressive Alzheimer’s Disease

M.A. Gruden; T.B. Davudova; Mantas Malisauskas; V.V. Zamotin; Robert David Edmund Sewell; N.I. Voskresenskaya; I.A. Kostanyan; V.V. Sherstnev; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

We have found an increased level of serum antibodies to the prefibrillar structures of both Aβ(25–35) peptide and human lysozyme in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients compared to age-matched controls, indicating that autoimmunity is implicated in AD. In the serum of AD patients with a long-term duration (>15 years) the titer of serum antibodies to aggregates of Aβ(25–35) peptide increased by approximately 5-fold, whilst the antibody titer to lysozyme protofilaments decreased by approximately 8-fold compared to patients with AD duration of <5 years. The content of immunoglobulins of the A, G and M types declined, particularly in AD duration of >15 years. An increase in the concentration of immune complexes and higher lysozyme activity was detected in the serum of all patients and this was suggestive of an inflammatory reaction. We propose that the autoimmune response to different amyloid structures in AD can be viewed as a clearance pathway targeting amyloid development. Autoimmune response can be exploited as a marker of ongoing protein aggregation and hence be used as a diagnostic feature of AD.


European Journal of Neurology | 2007

Immune reactivity towards insulin, its amyloid and protein S100B in blood sera of Parkinson's disease patients

Kristina Wilhelm; Kiran Yanamandra; M. A. Gruden; Vladimir Zamotin; Mantas Malisauskas; Vida Casaite; Adas Darinskas; Lars Forsgren; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

Peripheral immune responses can be sensitive indicators of disease pathology. We evaluated the autoimmune reactions to endocrine (insulin) and astrocytical (S100B) biomarkers in the blood sera of 26 Parkinsons disease (PD) patients compared with controls by using ELISA. We found a statistically significant increase of the autoimmune responses to both antigens in PD patients compared with controls with a mean increase of 70% and 50% in the autoimmune reactions towards insulin and S100B, respectively. Heterogeneity of the immune responses observed in patients may reflect the modulating effect of multiple variables associated with neurodegeneration and also changes in the basic mechanisms of individual autoimmune reactivity. We did not detect any pronounced immune reactions towards insulin amyloid fibrils and oligomers in PD patients, indicating that an amyloid‐specific conformational epitope is not involved in immune recognition of this amyloid type, while sequential epitope of native insulin is hidden within the amyloid structures. Immune reactions towards S100B and insulin may reflect the neurodegenerative brain damaging processes and impaired insulin homeostasis occurring in PD.


Biotechnology Progress | 2008

Ultrathin silver nanowires produced by amyloid biotemplating.

Mantas Malisauskas; Rolandas Meškys; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

By using a self‐assembled amyloid from lysozyme as biotemplate we produced an ultrathin silver wire of 1 nm diameter and up to 2 μm in length, which is at the limit attainable in nanobiotechnological manufacturing. We showed that 2,2,2‐trifluoroethanol produces a dual effect: it reduces ionic silver to colloidal nanoparticles with a regular size, depending on the length of incubation, and induces fibrillar assembly into the amyloid scaffold, forming the hollow channel filled with silver.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2007

A False Paradise - Mixed Blessings in the Protein Universe: The Amyloid as a New Challenge in Drug Development

Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche; Mantas Malisauskas

Significant advances in therapeutic applications of proteins and peptides have brought new challenges in the field of drug development. Ordered protein aggregation known as amyloid formation has recently emerged as a universal phenomenon due to extensive research in protein folding and amyloid diseases. The amyloid represents a new generic structure characterized by cross-beta-sheet formation in its core, which implies that any polypeptide can adopt this conformation under amyloid-prone conditions. Some widely-used biopharmaceuticals such as insulin, glucagon, amylin and calcitonin have been shown to form amyloids and this list may be significantly extended upon further research. Compared to soluble precursor proteins and amorphous aggregates amyloids gain new properties such as remarkable stability and protease resistance, polymorphism, self-propagation via seeding and cross-seeding, cytotoxicity and induced immunogenicity. Some of them can be hazardous in biopharmaceutical applications. The causes of amyloid aggregation and strategies for its prevention are reviewed here. They utilize the current knowledge of amyloid properties, structure-based design principles and protein chemistry. Once these challenges are met, they will ultimately lead to safer and surer pharmaceuticals.


Biochemistry | 2006

Intermediate amyloid oligomers of lysozyme : is their cytotoxicity a particular case or general rule for amyloid?

Mantas Malisauskas; Adas Darinskas; Vladimir Zamotin; Anna L. Gharibyan; I. A. Kostanyan; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

In the current study we investigated the molecular mechanisms of cytotoxicity of amyloid oligomers of horse milk lysozyme. We have shown that lysozyme forms soluble amyloid oligomers and protofibrils during incubation at pH 2.0 and 4.5 and 57°C. These structures bind the amyloid-specific dyes thioflavin T and Congo Red, and their morphology and size were analyzed by atomic force microscopy. Monomeric lysozyme and its fibrils did not affect the viability of three cell types used in our experiments including primary murine neurons and fibroblasts, as well as neuroblastoma cell line IMR-32. However, soluble amyloid oligomers of lysozyme caused death of all these cell types, as estimated by flow-cytometry counting dead cells stained with ethidium bromide. The primary cell cultures appeared to be more sensitive to amyloid than neuroblastoma cell line IMR-32. Amyloid cytotoxicity depends on the size of oligomeric particles: samples containing 20-mers formed at pH 4.5 were more toxic than tetramers and octamers present in the solution at pH 2.0. Soluble amyloid oligomers can self-assemble into doughnut-like structures; however, no correlation was observed between the amount of the doughnut-like structures in the sample and its cytotoxicity. The fact that the intermediate oligomers of such an abundant protein as lysozyme display cytotoxicity confirms a hypothesis that cytotoxicity is a common feature of protein amyloid. Inhibition of intermediate oligomer formation is crucial in preventing amyloid pathogeneses.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Lability Landscape and Protease Resistance of Human Insulin Amyloid: A New Insight into Its Molecular Properties

Mantas Malisauskas; Christoph Weise; Kiran Yanamandra; Magnus Wolf-Watz; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

Amyloid formation is a universal behavior of proteins central to many important human pathologies and industrial processes. The extreme stability of amyloids towards chemical and proteolytic degradation is an acquired property compared to the precursor proteins and is a major prerequisite for their accumulation. Here, we report a study on the lability of human insulin amyloid as a function of pH and amyloid ageing. Using a range of methods such as atomic force microscopy, thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism, and gas-phase electrophoretic mobility macromolecule analysis, we probed the propensity of human insulin amyloid to propagate or dissociate in a wide span of pH values and ageing in a low concentration regime. We generated a three-dimensional amyloid lability landscape in coordinates of pH and amyloid ageing, which displays three distinctive features: (i) a maximum propensity to grow near pH 3.8 and an age corresponding to the inflection point of the growth phase, (ii) an abrupt cutoff between growth and disaggregation at pH 8-10, and (iii) isoclines shifted towards older age during the amyloid growth phase at pH 4-9, reflecting the greater stability of aged amyloid. Thus, lability of amyloid strongly depends on the ionization state of insulin and on the structure and maturity of amyloid fibrils. The stability of insulin amyloid towards protease K was assessed by using real-time atomic force microscopy and thioflavin T fluorescence. We estimated that amyloid fibrils can be digested both from the free ends and within the length of the fibril with a rate of ca 4 nm/min. Our results highlight that amyloid structures, depending on solution conditions, can be less stable than commonly perceived. These results have wide implications for understanding the propagation of amyloids via a seeding mechanism as well as for understanding their natural clearance and dissociation under solution conditions unfavorable for amyloid formation in biological systems and industrial applications.


Biochemistry | 2014

Quantifying stickiness : thermodynamic characterization of intramolecular domain interactions to guide the design of Förster Resonance Energy Transfer sensors

Lh Laurens Lindenburg; Mantas Malisauskas; Taf Tari Sips; Lmpe Lisanne van Oppen; Spw Sjors Wijnands; Sfj van de Graaf; Maarten Merkx

The introduction of weak, hydrophobic interactions between fluorescent protein domains (FPs) can substantially increase the dynamic range (DR) of Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based sensor systems. Here we report a comprehensive thermodynamic characterization of the stability of a range of self-associating FRET pairs. A new method is introduced that allows direct quantification of the stability of weak FP interactions by monitoring intramolecular complex formation as a function of urea concentration. The commonly used S208F mutation stabilized intramolecular FP complex formation by 2.0 kCal/mol when studied in an enhanced cyan FP (ECFP)-linker-enhanced yellow FP (EYFP) fusion protein, whereas a significantly weaker interaction was observed for the homologous Cerulean/Citrine FRET pair (ΔG0(o-c) = 0.62 kCal/mol). The latter effect could be attributed to two mutations in Cerulean (Y145A and H148D) that destabilize complex formation with Citrine. Systematic analysis of the contribution of residues 125 and 127 at the dimerization interface in mOrange.linker.mCherry fusion proteins yielded a toolbox of new mOrange-mCherry combinations that allowed tuning of their intramolecular interaction from very weak (ΔG0(o-c) = .0.39 kCal/mol) to relatively stable (ΔG0(o-c) = 2.2 kCal/mol). The effects of these mutations were also studied by monitoring homodimerization of mCherry variants using fluorescence anisotropy. These mutations affected intramolecular and intermolecular domain interactions similarly, although FP interactions were found to be stronger in the latter. The knowledge thus obtained allowed successful construction of a red-shifted variant of the bile acid FRET sensor BAS-1 by replacement of the self-associating Cerulean-Citrine pair by mOrange.mCherry variants with a similar intramolecular affinity. Our findings thus allow a better understanding of the subtle but important role of intramolecular domain interactions in current FRET sensors and help guide the construction of new sensors using modular design strategies.


Cellular & Molecular Biology Letters | 2007

Engrafting fetal liver cells into multiple tissues of healthy adult mice without the use of immunosuppressants

Adas Darinskas; Renata Gasparaviciute; Mantas Malisauskas; Kristina Wilhelm; Jurij A. Kozhevnikov; Evaldas Liutkevicius; Audrone Pilinkiene; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

We have shown the fetal liver cell engraftments into multiple tissues of adult healthy mice, achieved without suppressing the animals’ immune systems. Fetal cells from the livers of male C57Bl/6J Black lineage mice at day 13 to 15 of gestation were injected intravenously into female adult CC57W/MY White mice. The grafting was evaluated by Y-chromosome-specific PCR, cytometric analysis of fluorescently stained donor cells, and histological analysis. All the methods consistently showed the presence of multiple engraftments randomly distributed through the various organs of the recipients. After 60 days, the grafts still constituted 0.1 to 2.75% of the tissues. The grafted cells did not change their appearance in any of the organs except the brain, where they became enlarged. Inflammatory reactions were not detected in any of the histological preparations. The frequency of engraftments was higher in the liver, indicating that similarity between the donor and recipient cells facilitates engraftment. The high inherent plasticity of fetal liver cells underlies their ability to integrate into healthy recipient organs, which can be governed by environmental conditions and connections with neighboring cells rather than by the initial cellular developmental programs. The fact that fetal liver cells can be grafted into multiple tissues of healthy animals indicates that they can be used to replace the natural loss of cells in adult organisms.


Biochemistry | 2006

Amyloidogenic properties of the artificial protein albebetin and its biologically active derivatives. The role of electrostatic interactions in fibril formation.

Marika A. Lavrikova; Vladimir Zamotin; Mantas Malisauskas; R. V. Chertkova; I. A. Kostanyan; D. A. Dolgikh; Kirpichnikov Mp; Ludmilla A. Morozova-Roche

The artificial protein albebetin (ABB) and its derivatives containing biologically active fragments of natural proteins form fibrils at physiological pH. The amyloid nature of the fibrils was confirmed by far UV circular dichroism spectra indicating for rich β-structure, thioflavin T binding assays, and examination of the obtained polymers by atomic force microscopy. Fusing of short peptides—octapeptide of human α2-interferon (130–137) or hexapeptide HLDF-6 (41–46) of human leukemia differentiation factor—with the N-terminus of ABB led to increased amyloidogenicity of the protein: the rate of fibril formation increased and the morphology of fibrils became more complex. The presence of free hexapeptide HLDF-6 in the ABB solution had the same effect. Increasing ionic strength also activated the process of amyloid formation, but to less extent than did the peptides fused with ABB or added to the ABB solution. We suggest an important role of electrostatic interactions in formation of ABB fibrils. The foregoing ways (addition of salt or peptides) allow decrease in electrostatic repulsion between ABB molecules carrying large negative charge (−12) at neutral pH, thus promoting fibril formation.

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I. A. Kostanyan

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Kirpichnikov Mp

Russian Academy of Sciences

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