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Dive into the research topics where Markandeswar Panda is active.

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Featured researches published by Markandeswar Panda.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Productive and Nonproductive Intermediates in the Folding of Denatured Rhodanese

Markandeswar Panda; Boris M. Gorovits; Paul M. Horowitz

The competition between protein aggregation and folding has been investigated using rhodanese (thiosulfate:cyanide sulfurtransferase, EC 2.8.1.1) as a model. During folding from a urea-denatured state, rhodanese rapidly forms associated species or intermediates, some of which are large and/or sticky. The early removal of such particles by filtration results in a decreased refolding yield. With time, a portion of the smaller aggregates can partition back first to intermediates and then to refolded protein, while a fraction of these irreversibly form unproductive higher aggregates. Dynamic light scattering measurements indicate that the average sizes of the aggregates formed during rhodanese folding increase from 225 to 325 nm over 45 min and they become increasingly heterogeneous. Glycerol addition or the application of high hydrostatic pressure improved the final refolding yields by stabilizing smaller particles. Although addition of glycerol into the refolding mixture blocks the formation of unproductive aggregates, it cannot dissociate them back to productive intermediates. The presence of 3.9 m urea keeps the aggregates small, and they can be dissociated to monomers by high hydrostatic pressure even after 1 h of incubation. These studies suggest that early associated intermediates formed during folding can be reversed to give active species.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008

Cyanide Produced by Human Isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Contributes to Lethality in Drosophila melanogaster

Kate E. Broderick; Adriano Chan; Maheswari Balasubramanian; Jake Feala; Sharon L. Reed; Markandeswar Panda; Vijay S. Sharma; Renate B. Pilz; Timothy D. Bigby; Gerry R. Boss

Some Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains are cyanogenic, and cyanide may contribute to the bacteriums virulence. Using human isolates of P. aeruginosa, we have shown that Drosophila melanogaster suspended above cyanogenic strains become motionless and develop bradycardia and that flies injected with cyanogenic bacterial strains die more rapidly than those injected with noncyanogenic strains. Flies exposed to cyanogenic strains had high cyanide and low adenosine triphosphate (ATP) concentrations in body extracts, and treatment with a cyanide antidote equalized survival of flies injected with cyanogenic and noncyanogenic strains. P. aeruginosa PAO1 strain with a mutation in the hydrogen cyanide synthase gene cluster was much less toxic to flies than the parental cyanogenic strain or 2 knock-in strains. Transgenic flies overexpressing rhodanese, which detoxifies cyanide by converting it to thiocyanate, were resistant to cyanide and the increased virulence of cyanogenic strains. We conclude that D. melanogaster is a good model for studying cyanide produced by P. aeruginosa.


Journal of Protein Chemistry | 2000

Active-Site Sulfhydryl Chemistry Plays a Major Role in the Misfolding of Urea-Denatured Rhodanese

Markandeswar Panda; Paul M. Horowitz

Unfolded bovine rhodanese, a sulfurtransferase, does not regain full activity upon refolding due to the formation of aggregates and disulfide-linked misfolded states unless a large excess of reductant such as 200 mM β-ME and 5 mg/ml detergent are present [Tandon and Horowitz (1990), J. Biol. Chem.265, 5967]. Even then, refolding is incomplete. We have studied the unfolding and refolding of three rhodanese forms whose crystal structures are known: ES, containing the transferred sulfur as a persulfide; E, without the transferred sulfur, and carboxymethylated rhodanese (CMR), in which the active site was blocked by chemical modification. The X-ray structures of ES, E, and CMR are virtually the same, but their tertiary structures in solution differ somewhat as revealed by near-UV CD. Among these three, CMR is the only form of rhodanese that folds reversibly, requiring 1 mM DTT. A minimum three-state folding model of CMR (N↔I↔U) followed by fluorescence at 363 nm, (N↔I) by fluorescence at 318 nm, and CD (I↔U) is consistent with the presence of a thermodynamically stable molten globule intermediate in 5–6 M urea. We conclude that the active-site sulfhydryl group in the persulfide form is very reactive; therefore, its modification leads to the successful refolding of urea-denatured rhodanese even in the absence of a large excess of reductant and detergent. The requirement for DTT for complete reversibility of CMR suggests that oxidation among the three non-active-site SH groups can represent a minor trap for refolding through species that can be easily reduced.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Active rhodanese lacking nonessential sulfhydryl groups contains an unstable C-terminal domain and can be bound, inactivated, and reactivated by GroEL.

Jesse Ybarra; Anusri Mitra Bhattacharyya; Markandeswar Panda; Paul M. Horowitz

Mutation of all nonessential cysteine residues in rhodanese turns the enzyme into a form (C3S) that is fully active but less stable than wild type (WT). This less stable mutant allowed testing of two hypotheses; (a) the two domains of rhodanese are differentially stable, and (b) the chaperonin GroEL can bind better to less stable proteins. Reduced temperatures during expression and purification were required to limit inclusion bodies and obtain usable quantities of soluble C3S. C3S and WT have the same secondary structures by circular dichroism. C3S, in the absence of the substrate thiosulfate, is cleaved by trypsin to give a stable 21-kDa species. With thiosulfate, C3S is resistant to proteolysis. In contrast, wild type rhodanese is not proteolyzed significantly under any of the experimental conditions used here. Mass spectrometric analysis of bands from SDS gels of digested C3S indicated that the C-terminal domain of C3S was preferentially digested. Active C3S can exist in a state(s) recognized by GroEL, and it displays additional accessibility of tryptophans to acrylamide quenching. Unlike WT, the sulfur-loaded mutant form (C3S-ES) shows slow inactivation in the presence of GroEL. Both WT and C3S lacking transferred sulfur (WT-E and C3S-E) become inactivated. Inactivation is not due to irreversible covalent modification, since GroEL can reactivate both C3S-E and WT-E in the presence of GroES and ATP. C3S-E can be reactivated to 100%, the highest reactivation observed for any form of rhodanese. These results suggest that inactivation of C3S-E or WT-E is due to formation of an altered, labile conformation accessible from the native state. This conformation cannot as easily be achieved in the presence of the substrate, thiosulfate.


International Journal of Chemical Kinetics | 1996

Ruthenium (VIII) mediated oxidation of some aliphatic and alicyclic ketones by periodate‐ruthenium (III) system in aqueous HClO4 medium

Markandeswar Panda; Subas C. Pati

The kinetics of Ruthenium(III) chloride mediated oxidation of acetone, 2-butanone, 4-methyl-2-pentanone, 2-pentanone, cyclopentanone, and cyclohexanone by sodium periodate in aqueous HClO4 media was zero-order in [IO4−] and first-order in [ketone]. The reaction was independent of added [Ru(III)] and showed first-order dependence on [H+] for all the ketones studied, except acetone. In the case of acetone at [H+] 0.05 M the reaction showed unit dependence on [H+] and the order in [Ru(III)] was zero. Ruthenium(VIII) generated in situ is postulated as the hydride abstracting species. A mechanism involving enolization as the rate determining step is proposed. Acetone at lower acidity of the medium is shown to react directly with Ru(VIII). In the absence of ruthenium(III) chloride, the kinetics were first-order in [IO4−], [ketone], and [H+]. Structure-reactivity relationship is discussed and thermodynamic parameters are reported.


Biochemistry | 2006

Photolabeling of cardiolipin binding subunits within bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase.

Erik Sedlák; Markandeswar Panda; Marsha P. Dale; Susan T. Weintraub; Neal C. Robinson


Biochemistry | 2001

The binding of bis-ANS to the isolated GroEL apical domain fragment induces the formation of a folding intermediate with increased hydrophobic surface not observed in tetradecameric GroEL.

Alison L. Smoot; Markandeswar Panda; Bill T. Brazil; Ashley M. Buckle; and Alan R. Fersht; Paul M. Horowitz


Biochemistry | 1995

KINETICS AND MECHANISM FOR THE BINDING OF HCN TO CYTOCHROME C OXIDASE

Markandeswar Panda; Neal C. Robinson


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

High Hydrostatic Pressure Can Probe the Effects of Functionally Related Ligands on the Quaternary Structures of the Chaperonins GroEL and GroES

Markandeswar Panda; Jesse Ybarra; Paul M. Horowitz


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Circular Dichroism Study of Supramolecular Assemblies of Guanosine 5'-Monophosphate

Markandeswar Panda; Judith A. Walmsley

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Paul M. Horowitz

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Jesse Ybarra

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Neal C. Robinson

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Adriano Chan

University of California

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Anusri Mitra Bhattacharyya

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Barry T. Nall

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Bill T. Brazil

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Boris M. Gorovits

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Daifeng Jiang

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Erik Sedlák

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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