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Dive into the research topics where Marcia Y. Kondo is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcia Y. Kondo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Studies on the Catalytic Mechanism of a Glutamic Peptidase

Marcia Y. Kondo; Debora N. Okamoto; Jorge A.N. Santos; Maria A. Juliano; Kohei Oda; Bindu Pillai; Michael N. G. James; Luiz Juliano; Iuri E. Gouvea

Scytalidoglutamic peptidase (SGP) is the prototype of fungal glutamic peptidases that are characteristically pepstatin insensitive. These enzymes have a unique catalytic dyad comprised of Gln53 and Glu136 that activate a bound water molecule for nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon atom of the scissile peptide bond. The hydrolysis by SGP at peptide bonds with proline in the P1′ position is a rare event among peptidases that we investigated using the series of fluorescence resonance energy transfer peptides, Abz-KLXPSKQ-EDDnp, compared with the series Abz-KLXSSKQ-EDDnp. The preference observed in these two series for Phe and His over Leu, Ile, Val, Arg, and Lys, seems to be related to the structure of the S1 subsite of SGP. These results and the pH profiles of SGP activity showed that its S1 subsite can accommodate the benzyl group of Phe at pH 4 as well as the positively charged imidazolium group of His. In the pH range 2 to 7, SGP maintains its structure and activity, but at pH 8 or higher it is irreversibly denatured. The intrinsic fluorescence of the Trp residues of SGP were sensitive to the titration of carboxyl groups having low pK values; this can be attributed to the buried Asp57 and/or Asp43 as described in SGP three-dimensional structure. The solvent kinetic isotope effects and the proton inventory experiments support a mechanism for the glutamic peptidase SGP that involves the nucleophilic attack of the general base (Glu136) activated water, and establish a fundamental role of the S1 subsite interactions in promoting catalysis.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Isomannide derivatives as new class of inhibitors for human kallikrein 7.

Renato F. Freitas; Thiago S.P. Teixeira; Thalita G. Barros; Jorge A.N. Santos; Marcia Y. Kondo; Maria A. Juliano; Luiz Juliano; Michael Blaber; Octavio A. C. Antunes; Odonírio Abrahão; Sergio Pinheiro; Estela Maris Freitas Muri; Luciano Puzer

Human kallikrein 7 (KLK7) is a potential target for the treatment of skin inflammation and cancer. Despite its potential, few KLK7-specific small-molecule inhibitors have been reported in the literature. As an extension of our program to design serine protease inhibitors, here we describe the in vitro assays and the investigation of the binding mechanism by molecular dynamics simulation of a novel class of pseudo-peptide inhibitors derived from isomannide. Of the inhibitors tested, two inhibited KLK7 with K(i) values in the low micromolar range (9g=1.8μM; 9j=3.0μM). Eadie-Hofstee and Dixon plots were used to evaluate the competitive mechanism of inhibition for the molecules. Calculated binding free energies using molecular MM/PB(GB)SA approach are in good agreement with experimental results, suggesting that the inhibitors share the same binding mode, which is stabilized by hydrophobic interactions and by a conserved network of hydrogen bonds. The promising results obtained in this study make these compounds valid leads for further optimization studies aiming to improve the potency of this new class of kallikrein inhibitors.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

Internally quenched fluorescent peptide libraries with randomized sequences designed to detect endopeptidases

Lilian C.G. Oliveira; Vinícius O. Silva; Debora N. Okamoto; Marcia Y. Kondo; Saara Maria Batista dos Santos; Isaura Y. Hirata; Marcelo A. Vallim; Renata C. Pascon; Iuri E. Gouvea; Maria A. Juliano; Luiz Juliano

Identification of synthetic peptide substrates for novel peptidases is an essential step for their study. With this purpose we synthesized fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) peptide libraries Abz (or MCA)-GXXXXXQ-EDDnp and Abz (or MCA)-GXXZXXQ-EDDnp, where X consists of an equimolar mixture of all amino acids, the Z position is fixed with one of the proteinogenic amino acids (cysteine was excluded), Abz (ortho-aminobenzoic acid) or MCA ([7-amino-4-methyl]coumarin) is the fluorescence donor and Q-EDDnp (glutamine-[N-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)-ethylenediamine]) is the fluorescence acceptor. The peptide libraries MCA-GXXX↓XXQ-EDDnp and MCA-GXXZ↓XXQ-EDDnp were cleaved as indicated (↓) by trypsin, chymotrypsin, cathepsin L, pepsin A, and Eqolisin as confirmed by Edman degradation of the products derived from the digestion of these libraries. The best hydrolyzed Abz-GXXZXXQ-EDDnp sublibraries by these proteases, including Dengue 2 virus NS2B-NS3 protease, contained amino acids at the Z position that are reported to be well accepted by their S(1) subsite. The pH profiles of the hydrolytic activities of these canonical proteases on the libraries were similar to those reported for typical substrates. The FRET peptide libraries provide an efficient and simple approach for detecting nanomolar concentrations of endopeptidases and are useful for initial specificity characterization as performed for two proteases secreted by a Bacillus subtilis.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Kinetic analysis of salting activation of a subtilisin-like halophilic protease.

Debora N. Okamoto; Marcia Y. Kondo; Jorge A.N. Santos; Sawa Nakajima; Kazumi Hiraga; Kohei Oda; Maria A. Juliano; Luiz Juliano; Iuri E. Gouvea

The secreted extracellular subtilase SR5-3 from Halobacillus sp. bacterium, isolated from the high-salt environment of Thai fish sauce, was utilized as a model halophilic serine protease. The dependence of salt activation on the size and structure of substrates was evaluated assaying the enzyme with Suc-AAPF-MCA and with the Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) peptide Abz-AAPFSSKQ-EDDnp. Solvent isotope effects (SIE) and the thermodynamic parameters for activation of the hydrolysis of Suc-AAPF-MCA and Abz-AAPFSSKQ-EDDnp by SR5-3 protease in the presence of salts were also performed. All the obtained results support the notion that the salting out effect is responsible for the halophilic character of SR5-3, and the magnitude of its hydrolytic activity is mainly derived from the improvement of catalytic and/or interaction steps depending on the nature and size of the substrates, principally if they occupy the substrate prime subsites.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2013

Human tissue kallikreins 3 and 5 can act as plasminogen activator releasing active plasmin

Lucas R. de Souza; Pollyana M.S. Melo; Thaysa Paschoalin; Adriana K. Carmona; Marcia Y. Kondo; Izaura Y. Hirata; Michael Blaber; Ivarne L.S. Tersariol; Joyce Takatsuka; Maria A. Juliano; Luiz Juliano; Roseli Aparecida da Silva Gomes; Luciano Puzer

Human tissue kallikreins (KLKs) are a group of serine proteases found in many tissues and biological fluids and are differentially expressed in several specific pathologies. Here, we present evidences of the ability of these enzymes to activate plasminogen. Kallikreins 3 and 5 were able to induce plasmin activity after hydrolyzing plasminogen, and we also verified that plasminogen activation was potentiated in the presence of glycosaminoglycans compared with plasminogen activation by tPA. This finding can shed new light on the plasminogen/plasmin system and its involvement in tumor metastasis, in which kallikreins appear to be upregulated.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2013

Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae in vitro peptidase activities: Identification and cleavage of kallikrein-kinin system-like substrates

Lucas Moitinho-Silva; Marcia Y. Kondo; Lilian C.G. Oliveira; Debora N. Okamoto; Jéssica Andrade Paes; Maurício F.M. Machado; Camila Lopes Veronez; Guacyara Motta; Sheila Siqueira Andrade; Maria A. Juliano; Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira; Luiz Juliano; Iuri E. Gouvea

Bacterial proteases are important for metabolic processes and pathogenesis in host organisms. The bacterial swine pathogen Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae has 15 putative protease-encoding genes annotated, but none of them have been functionally characterized. To identify and characterize peptidases that could be relevant for infection of swine hosts, we investigated the peptidase activity present in the pathogenic 7448 strain of M. hyopneumoniae. Combinatorial libraries of fluorescence resonance energy transfer peptides, specific inhibitors and pH profiling were used to screen and characterize endopeptidase, aminopeptidase and carboxypeptidase activities in cell lysates. One metalloendopeptidase, one serine endopeptidase, and one aminopeptidase were detected. The detected metalloendopeptidase activity, prominent at neutral and basic pH ranges, was due to a thimet oligopeptidase family member (M3 family), likely an oligoendopeptidase F (PepF), which cleaved the peptide Abz-GFSPFRQ-EDDnp at the F-S bond. A chymotrypsin-like serine endopeptidase activity, possibly a subtilisin-like serine protease, was prominent at higher pH levels, and was characterized by its preference for a Phe residue at the P1 position of the substrate. The aminopeptidase P (APP) activity showed a similar profile to that of human membrane-bound APP. Genes coding for these three peptidases were identified and their transcription was confirmed in the 7448 strain. Furthermore, M. hyopneumoniae cell lysate peptidases showed effects on kallikrein-kinin system-like substrates, such as bradykinin-derived substrates and human high molecular weight kininogen. The M. hyopneumoniae peptidase activities, here characterized for the first time, may be important for bacterial survival strategies and thus represent possible targets for drug development against M. hyopneumoniae swine infections.


Protein and Peptide Letters | 2012

Baupain, a plant cysteine proteinase that hinders thrombin-induced human platelet aggregation.

Sheila Siqueira Andrade; Mariana Cristina Cabral Silva; Iuri E. Gouvea; Marcia Y. Kondo; Maria A. Juliano; Misako U. Sampaio; Maria Luzia Oliva

Bauninia forficata is trivially known as cow paw, and popularly used in Brazil for treatment of diabetes mellitus. Denominated baupain a cysteine proteinase was purified from B. forficata leaves. In this study, we investigated the baupain effect on aggregation of isolated human platelets in vitro and the results show that baupain hinders thrombin - but not ADP- and collagen- induced platelet aggregation. With synthetic quenched-fluorescent peptides, the kinetics of the cleavage site of human proteinase-activated receptor 1 / 2 / 3 and 4 [PAR-1 / 2 / 3 and 4] by baupain was determined. In conclusion, similar to bromelain and papain, baupain hinders human platelets aggregation, probably through an unspecific cleavage in the Phe-Leu bond of PAR1.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

The natural flavone fukugetin as a mixed-type inhibitor for human tissue kallikreins.

Jorge A.N. Santos; Marcia Y. Kondo; Renato F. Freitas; Marcelo Henrique dos Santos; Teodorico C. Ramalho; Diego M. Assis; Luiz Juliano; Maria A. Juliano; Luciano Puzer

The human tissue kallikreins (KLK1-KLK15) comprise a family of 15 serine peptidases detected in almost every tissue of the human body and that actively participate in many physiological and pathological events. Some kallikreins are involved in diseases for which no effective therapy is available, as for example, epithelial disorders, bacterial infections and in certain cancers metastatic processes. In recent years our group have made efforts to find inhibitors for all kallikreins, based on natural products and synthetic molecules, and all the inhibitors developed by our group presented a competitive mechanism of inhibition. Here we describe fukugetin, a natural product that presents a mixed-type mechanism of inhibition against KLK1 and KLK2. This type of inhibitor is gaining importance today, especially for the development of exosite-type inhibitors, which present potential to selectively inhibit the enzyme activity only against specific substrate.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2015

Halotolerant bacteria in the São Paulo Zoo composting process and their hydrolases and bioproducts

Lilian C.G. Oliveira; Patrícia Locosque Ramos; Alyne Marem; Marcia Y. Kondo; Rafael Costa Santos Rocha; Thiago Bertolini; Marghuel A.V. Silveira; João Batista da Cruz; Suzan Pantaroto de Vasconcellos; Luiz Juliano; Debora N. Okamoto

Halophilic microorganisms are able to grow in the presence of salt and are also excellent source of enzymes and biotechnological products, such as exopolysaccharides (EPSs) and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs). Salt-tolerant bacteria were screened in the Organic Composting Production Unit (OCPU) of São Paulo Zoological Park Foundation, which processes 4 ton/day of organic residues including plant matter from the Atlantic Rain Forest, animal manure and carcasses and mud from water treatment. Among the screened microorganisms, eight halotolerant bacteria grew at NaCl concentrations up to 4 M. These cultures were classified based on phylogenetic characteristics and comparative partial 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis as belonging to the genera Staphylococcus, Bacillus and Brevibacterium. The results of this study describe the ability of these halotolerant bacteria to produce some classes of hydrolases, namely, lipases, proteases, amylases and cellulases, and biopolymers. The strain characterized as of Brevibacterium avium presented cellulase and amylase activities up to 4 M NaCl and also produced EPSs and PHAs. These results indicate the biotechnological potential of certain microorganisms recovered from the composting process, including halotolerant species, which have the ability to produce enzymes and biopolymers, offering new perspectives for environmental and industrial applications.


Biochimie | 2012

Kinetic characterization of gyroxin, a serine protease from Crotalus durissus terrificus venom

Camila M. Yonamine; Marcia Y. Kondo; Maria A. Juliano; Marcelo Y. Icimoto; Gandhi Rádis Baptista; Tetsuo Yamane; Vitor Oliveira; Luis Juliano; Antonio José Lapa; Maria Teresa R. Lima-Landman; Mirian A.F. Hayashi

This work describes for the first time the characterization of the enzymatic features of gyroxin, a serine protease from Crotalus durissus terrificus venom, capable to induce barrel rotation syndrome in rodents. Measuring the hydrolysis of the substrate ZFR-MCA, the optimal pH for proteolytic cleavage of gyroxin was found to be at pH 8.4. Increases in the hydrolytic activity were observed at temperatures from 25 °C to 45 °C, and increases of NaCl concentration up to 1 M led to activity decreases. The preference of gyroxin for Arg residues at the substrate P1 position was also demonstrated. Taken together, this work describes the characterization of substrate specificity of gyroxin, as well as the effects of salt and pH on its enzymatic activity.

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Luiz Juliano

Federal University of São Paulo

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Maria A. Juliano

Federal University of São Paulo

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Debora N. Okamoto

Federal University of São Paulo

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Iuri E. Gouvea

Federal University of São Paulo

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Lilian C.G. Oliveira

Federal University of São Paulo

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Jorge A.N. Santos

Federal University of São Paulo

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Luciano Puzer

Federal University of São Paulo

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Kohei Oda

Kyoto Institute of Technology

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Michael Blaber

Florida State University

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Sheila Siqueira Andrade

Federal University of São Paulo

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