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Dive into the research topics where Natalia V. Rudenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalia V. Rudenko.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2003

Homogeneous assay for biotin based on Aequorea victoria bioluminescence resonance energy transfer system.

Andrey Yu. Gorokhovatsky; Natalia V. Rudenko; Victor V. Marchenkov; Vitaly S. Skosyrev; Maxim A. Arzhanov; Nils Burkhardt; Mikhail V. Zakharov; Gennady V. Semisotnov; Leonid M. Vinokurov; Yuli B. Alakhov

Here we describe a homogeneous assay for biotin based on bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) between aequorin and enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). The fusions of aequorin with streptavidin (SAV) and EGFP with biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP) were purified after expression of the corresponding genes in Escherichia coli cells. Association of SAV-aequorin and BCCP-EGFP fusions was followed by BRET between aequorin (donor) and EGFP (acceptor), resulting in significantly increasing 510 nm and decreasing 470 nm bioluminescence intensity. It was shown that free biotin inhibited BRET due to its competition with BCCP-EGFP for binding to SAV-aequorin. These properties were exploited to demonstrate competitive homogeneous BRET assay for biotin.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2009

Universal and rapid method for purification of GFP-like proteins by the ethanol extraction

Olga N. Samarkina; Anastasia G. Popova; Elena Yu. Gvozdik; Anna V. Chkalina; Ivan V. Zvyagin; Yulia V. Rylova; Natalia V. Rudenko; Konstantin A. Lusta; Ilya V. Kelmanson; Andrey Yu. Gorokhovatsky; Leonid M. Vinokurov

GFP-like fluorescent proteins (FPs) are crucial in biological and biomedical studies. The majority of FP purification techniques either include multiple time-consuming chromatography steps with a low yield of the desired product or require prior protein modification (addition of special tags). In the present work, we propose an alternative ethanol extraction-based technique previously used for GFP purification and then modified for diverse FPs originated from different sources. The following recombinant FPs were expressed using Escherichia coli M15 (pREP4) strain as a host transformed with pQE30 plasmid bearing one of the target FP genes: TagCFP, TagGFP, TagYFP, TagRFP, TurboGFP, TurboRFP, Dendra2, TurboFP602 and KillerRed. Despite their diversity, all tested recombinant FPs were successfully purified and yielded a highly homogeneous product. The method is easily scalable for purification of any amount of protein and requires no expensive reagents and equipment.


Bioorganicheskaia khimiia | 2001

[The dependence of stability of the green fluorescent protein-obelin hybrids on the nature of their constituent modules and the structure of the amino acid linker].

Vitaly S. Skosyrev; A. Yu. Gorokhovatsky; Leonid M. Vinokurov; Natalia V. Rudenko; Tanya V. Ivashina; Vladimir N. Ksenzenko; Yu. B. Alakhov

Recombinant plasmids containing genes for the green fluorescent protein (GFP) from Aequorea victoriaand the photoprotein obelin from Obelia longissimalinked in-frame by inserts differing in nucleotides sequences were constructed. The expression of the chimeric genes in Escherichia colicells resulted in synthesis of the GFP–obelin hybrid proteins. These proteins were purified to homogeneity and subjected to limited trypsinolysis. It was shown that the resistance of GFP–obelin hybrid proteins to trypsin depends on the nature of their constituent modules and the amino acid sequences of linkers between the modules. The kinetics of accumulation of full-length hybrid proteins during the growth of bacterial cells does not depend on the structure of the peptide linkers. Most of the full-length product accumulates in cells in the form of inclusion bodies resistant to endogenous proteases. The soluble fraction of the protein undergoes considerable proteolysis regardless of the linker structure.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2014

The presence of soluble carbonic anhydrase in the thylakoid lumen of chloroplasts from Arabidopsis leaves

Tat’yana P. Fedorchuk; Natalia V. Rudenko; L. K. Ignatova; Boris A. Ivanov

Supernatant obtained after high-speed centrifugation of disrupted thylakoids that had been washed free from extrathylakoid carbonic anhydrases demonstrated carbonic anhydrase activity that was inhibited by the specific inhibitors acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide. A distinctive feature of the effect of Triton X-100 on this activity also suggested that the source of the activity is a soluble protein. Native electrophoresis of a preparation obtained using chromatography with agarose/mafenide as an affinity sorbent revealed one protein band with carbonic anhydrase activity. The same protein was revealed in a mutant deficient in soluble stromal carbonic anhydrase β-CA1, and this indicated that the newly revealed carbonic anhydrase is not a product of the At3g01500 gene. These data imply the presence of soluble carbonic anhydrase in the thylakoid lumen of higher plants.


Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2017

Molecular forms of AlpA and AlpB lytic endopeptidases from Lysobacter sp. Xl1: immunochemical determination of their intra- and extracellular localization

Natalia V. Rudenko; Anna Petrovna Karatovskaya; I. M. Tsfasman; F. A. Brovko; Natalia V. Vasilyeva

Homologous endopeptidases AlpA and AlpB are components of the secreted complex of lytic enzymes of the Gram-negative bacterium Lysobacter sp. ХL1. These enzymes are synthesized as precursors that consist of a signal peptide, propeptide, and proteolytically active mature part. To understand the topogenetic features of these proteins, bacterial cell fractions were investigated by a sensitive sandwich enzymelinked immunosorbent assay and immunoblot analysis with the use of monoclonal antibodies recognizing unique epitopes of proteins’ mature forms and their propeptides. Only mature forms of the enzymes, without propeptides, were shown to be released outside the cell into the environment. AlpA significantly exceeds AlpB in the production level at the early stationary growth stage. The AlpB precursor was revealed in the cytoplasmic and periplasmic fractions, and the AlpA precursor was found only in the cytoplasmic fraction. The periplasmic fraction was also found to contain the mature forms of both enzymes and their propeptides. These results indicate that AlpA and AlpB are released into the environment through different mechanisms. AlpA is translocated across the cell envelope without being interrupted in the periplasm. The homologous AlpB enzyme, on the contrary, accumulates in the periplasmic space and is captured by outer membrane vesicles in the process of their formation.


Biomedical optics | 2003

Aggregation strongly influence the pH-profile of the yellow fluorescent protein zFP538

Nadya N. Zubova; Natalia V. Rudenko; Alexander P. Savitsky

Fluorescence of the yellow fluorescent protein zFP538 strongly depends on concentration and starting pH form which pH profile is recorded. pH transitions typical for chromopeptides isolated from zFP538 can be observed for whole protein in diluted solutions. The quenching fluorescence of zFP538 is irreversible upon acidification or alkalization of the low concentrated soultions. In concentrated solutions, according to the data of dynamic light scattering, the protein zFP538 is strongly aggretaed (or oligomerized) and become more stable against acid denaturation. Spectral changes on pH are almost reversible both for fluorescence and absorbance. Two major chromopeptides obtained from zFP538 have different spectral properties and no similarity to the spectral properties of the chromopeptide obtained from GFP.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2004

Fusion of Aequorea victoria GFP and aequorin provides their Ca2+-induced interaction that results in red shift of GFP absorption and efficient bioluminescence energy transfer ☆

Andrey Yu. Gorokhovatsky; Victor V. Marchenkov; Natalia V. Rudenko; Tanya V. Ivashina; Vladimir N. Ksenzenko; Nils Burkhardt; Gennady V. Semisotnov; Leonid M. Vinokurov; Yuli B. Alakhov


Biochemistry | 2004

zFP538, a yellow fluorescent protein from coral, belongs to the DsRed subfamily of GFP-like proteins but possesses the unexpected site of fragmentation.

Vasily E. Zagranichny; Natalia V. Rudenko; Andrey Yu. Gorokhovatsky; Mikhail V. Zakharov; Zakhar O. Shenkarev; Tamara A. Balashova; Alexander S. Arseniev


Biochemistry | 2004

Traditional GFP-type cyclization and unexpected fragmentation site in a purple chromoprotein from Anemonia sulcata, asFP595.

Vasily E. Zagranichny; Natalia V. Rudenko; Andrey Yu. Gorokhovatsky; Mikhail V. Zakharov; Tamara A. Balashova; Alexander S. Arseniev


Journal of Biochemical and Biophysical Methods | 2007

Barnase-barstar high affinity interaction phenomenon as the base for the heterogenous bioluminescence pseudorabies virus' immunoassay.

Natalia V. Rudenko; Lilia L. Sinegina; Maxim A. Arzhanov; Vladimir N. Ksenzenko; Tatiana V. Ivashina; Oleg S. Morenkov; Lyubov Shaloiko; Leonid M. Vinokurov

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F. A. Brovko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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I. M. Tsfasman

Russian Academy of Sciences

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