Nicola Salvi
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Featured researches published by Nicola Salvi.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Nicola Salvi; Roberto Buratto; Aurélien Bornet; Simone Ulzega; Inmaculada Rentero Rebollo; Alessandro Angelini; Christian Heinis; Geoffrey Bodenhausen
A new NMR method for the study of ligand-protein interactions exploits the unusual lifetimes of long-lived states (LLSs). The new method provides better contrast between bound and free ligands and requires a protein-ligand ratio ca. 25 times lower than for established T(1ρ) methods, thus saving on costly proteins. The new LLS method was applied to the screening of inhibitors of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), which is a prototypical target of cancer research. With only 10 μM protein, a dissociation constant (K(D)) of 180 ± 20 nM was determined for the strong ligand (inhibitor) UK-18, which can be compared with K(D) = 157 ± 39 nM determined by the established surface plasmon resonance method.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Evangelos Papadopoulos; Simon Jenni; Eihab Kabha; Khuloud Takrouri; Tingfang Yi; Nicola Salvi; Rafael E. Luna; Evripidis Gavathiotis; Poornachandran Mahalingam; Haribabu Arthanari; Ricard Rodriguez-Mias; Revital Yefidoff-Freedman; Bertal H. Aktas; Michael Chorev; Jose A. Halperin; Gerhard Wagner
Significance eIF4E is critical for protein synthesis and becomes hyperactive in cancer cells. Small-molecule inhibitors of the eIF4E/eIF4G initiation factor complex have recently been found to exhibit antitumor activity in vitro and in vivo. However, their mode of action at the atomic level has remained elusive. Here, we report high-resolution crystal structures of complexes of 4EGI-1 analogue inhibitors with eIF4E. We find that inhibition of eIF4G binding must be allosteric, because the 4EGI-1 and eIF4G bind at distant epitopes on eIF4E. Compound binding induces extension of an α-helix that stretches between the two binding sites. Indeed, mutations increasing helix propensity in this region reduce eIF4G affinity in the absence of the inhibitor, which is consistent with the proposed allosteric model. The interaction of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4E with the initiation factor eIF4G recruits the 40S ribosomal particle to the 5′ end of mRNAs, facilitates scanning to the AUG start codon, and is crucial for eukaryotic translation of nearly all genes. Efficient recruitment of the 40S particle is particularly important for translation of mRNAs encoding oncoproteins and growth-promoting factors, which often harbor complex 5′ UTRs and require efficient initiation. Thus, inhibiting the eIF4E/eIF4G interaction has emerged as a previously unpursued route for developing anticancer agents. Indeed, we discovered small-molecule inhibitors of this eIF4E/eIF4G interaction (4EGIs) that inhibit translation initiation both in vitro and in vivo and were used successfully in numerous cancer–biology and neurobiology studies. However, their detailed molecular mechanism of action has remained elusive. Here, we show that the eIF4E/eIF4G inhibitor 4EGI-1 acts allosterically by binding to a site on eIF4E distant from the eIF4G binding epitope. Data from NMR mapping and high-resolution crystal structures are congruent with this mechanism, where 4EGI-1 attaches to a hydrophobic pocket of eIF4E between β-sheet2 (L60-T68) and α-helix1 (E69-N77), causing localized conformational changes mainly in the H78-L85 region. It acts by unfolding a short 310-helix (S82-L85) while extending α-helix1 by one turn (H78-S82). This unusual helix rearrangement has not been seen in any previous eIF4E structure and reveals elements of an allosteric inhibition mechanism leading to the dislocation of eIF4G from eIF4E.
ChemMedChem | 2014
Roberto Buratto; Aurélien Bornet; Jonas Milani; Daniele Mammoli; Nicola Salvi; Maninder Singh; Aurélien Laguerre; Solène Passemard; Sandrine Gerber-Lemaire; Sami Jannin; Geoffrey Bodenhausen
Transverse and longitudinal relaxation times (T1ρ and T1) have been widely exploited in NMR to probe the binding of ligands and putative drugs to target proteins. We have shown recently that long‐lived states (LLS) can be more sensitive to ligand binding. LLS can be excited if the ligand comprises at least two coupled spins. Herein we broaden the scope of ligand screening by LLS to arbitrary ligands by covalent attachment of a functional group, which comprises a pair of coupled protons that are isolated from neighboring magnetic nuclei. The resulting functionalized ligands have longitudinal relaxation times T1(1H) that are sufficiently long to allow the powerful combination of LLS with dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (D‐DNP). Hyperpolarized weak “spy ligands” can be displaced by high‐affinity competitors. Hyperpolarized LLS allow one to decrease both protein and ligand concentrations to micromolar levels and to significantly increase sample throughput.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Nicola Salvi; Simone Ulzega; Fabien Ferrage; Geoffrey Bodenhausen
Understanding how proteins function at the atomic level relies in part on a detailed characterization of their dynamics. Ubiquitin, a small single-domain protein, displays rich dynamic properties over a wide range of time scales. In particular, several regions of ubiquitin show the signature of chemical exchange, including the hydrophobic patch and the β4-α2 loop, which are both involved in many interactions. Here, we use multiple-quantum relaxation techniques to identify the extent of chemical exchange in ubiquitin. We employ our recently developed heteronuclear double resonance method to determine the time scales of motions that give rise to chemical exchange. Dispersion profiles are obtained for the backbone NH(N) pairs of several residues in the hydrophobic patch and the β4-α2 loop, as well as the C-terminus of helix α1. We show that a single time scale (ca. 50 μs) can be used to fit the data for most residues. Potential mechanisms for the propagation of motions and the possible extent of correlation of these motions are discussed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Anton Abyzov; Nicola Salvi; Robert Schneider; Damien Maurin; Rob W. H. Ruigrok; Malene Ringkjøbing Jensen; Martin Blackledge
The dynamic modes and time scales sampled by intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) define their function. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin relaxation is probably the most powerful tool for investigating these motions delivering site-specific descriptions of conformational fluctuations from throughout the molecule. Despite the abundance of experimental measurement of relaxation in IDPs, the physical origin of the measured relaxation rates remains poorly understood. Here we measure an extensive range of auto- and cross-correlated spin relaxation rates at multiple magnetic field strengths on the C-terminal domain of the nucleoprotein of Sendai virus, over a large range of temperatures (268-298 K), and combine these data to describe the dynamic behavior of this archetypal IDP. An Arrhenius-type relationship is used to simultaneously analyze up to 61 relaxation rates per amino acid over the entire temperature range, allowing the measurement of local activation energies along the chain, and the assignment of physically distinct dynamic modes. Fast (τ ≤ 50 ps) components report on librational motions, a dominant mode occurs on time scales around 1 ns, apparently reporting on backbone sampling within Ramachandran substates, while a slower component (5-25 ns) reports on segmental dynamics dominated by the chain-like nature of the protein. Extending the study to three protein constructs of different lengths (59, 81, and 124 amino acids) substantiates the assignment of these contributions. The analysis is shown to be remarkably robust, accurately predicting a broad range of relaxation data measured at different magnetic field strengths and temperatures. The ability to delineate intrinsic modes and time scales from NMR spin relaxation will improve our understanding of the behavior and function of IDPs, adding a new and essential dimension to the description of this biologically important and ubiquitous class of proteins.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Elise Delaforge; Sigrid Milles; Guillaume Bouvignies; Denis Bouvier; Stephane Boivin; Nicola Salvi; Damien Maurin; Anne L. Martel; Adam Round; Edward A. Lemke; Malene Ringkjøbing Jensen; Darren J. Hart; Martin Blackledge
Influenza A RNA polymerase complex is formed from three components, PA, PB1, and PB2. PB2 is independently imported into the nucleus prior to polymerase reconstitution. All crystallographic structures of the PB2 C-terminus (residues 536-759) reveal two globular domains, 627 and NLS, that form a tightly packed heterodimer. The molecular basis of the affinity of 627-NLS for importins remained unclear from these structures, apparently requiring large-scale conformational changes prior to importin binding. Using a combination of solution-state NMR, small-angle neutron scattering, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET), we show that 627-NLS populates a temperature-dependent dynamic equilibrium between closed and open states. The closed state is stabilized by a tripartite salt bridge involving the 627-NLS interface and the linker, that becomes flexible in the open state, with 627 and NLS dislocating into a highly dynamic ensemble. Activation enthalpies and entropies associated with the rupture of this interface were derived from simultaneous analysis of temperature-dependent chemical exchange saturation transfer measurements, revealing a strong temperature dependence of both open-state population and exchange rate. Single-molecule FRET and SAXS demonstrate that only the open-form is capable of binding to importin α and that, upon binding, the 627 domain samples a dynamic conformational equilibrium in the vicinity of the C-terminus of importin α. This intrinsic large-scale conformational flexibility therefore enables 627-NLS to bind importin through conformational selection from a temperature-dependent equilibrium comprising both functional forms of the protein.
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Shahid Nawaz Khan; Cyril Charlier; Rafal Augustyniak; Nicola Salvi; Victoire Déjean; Geoffrey Bodenhausen; Olivier Lequin; Philippe Pelupessy; Fabien Ferrage
Intrinsically disordered proteins and intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) are ubiquitous in the eukaryotic proteome. The description and understanding of their conformational properties require the development of new experimental, computational, and theoretical approaches. Here, we use nuclear spin relaxation to investigate the distribution of timescales of motions in an IDR from picoseconds to nanoseconds. Nitrogen-15 relaxation rates have been measured at five magnetic fields, ranging from 9.4 to 23.5 T (400–1000 MHz for protons). This exceptional wealth of data allowed us to map the spectral density function for the motions of backbone NH pairs in the partially disordered transcription factor Engrailed at 11 different frequencies. We introduce an approach called interpretation of motions by a projection onto an array of correlation times (IMPACT), which focuses on an array of six correlation times with intervals that are equidistant on a logarithmic scale between 21 ps and 21 ns. The distribution of motions in Engrailed varies smoothly along the protein sequence and is multimodal for most residues, with a prevalence of motions around 1 ns in the IDR. We show that IMPACT often provides better quantitative agreement with experimental data than conventional model-free or extended model-free analyses with two or three correlation times. We introduce a graphical representation that offers a convenient platform for a qualitative discussion of dynamics. Even when relaxation data are only acquired at three magnetic fields that are readily accessible, the IMPACT analysis gives a satisfactory characterization of spectral density functions, thus opening the way to a broad use of this approach.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016
Nicola Salvi; Anton Abyzov; Martin Blackledge
Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) access highly diverse ensembles of conformations in their functional states. Although this conformational plasticity is essential to their function, little is known about the dynamics underlying interconversion between accessible states. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation rates contain a wealth of information about the time scales and amplitudes of motion in IDPs, but the highly dynamic nature of IDPs complicates their interpretation. We present a novel framework in which a series of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are used in combination with experimental (15)N relaxation measurements to characterize the ensemble of dynamic processes contributing to the observed rates. By accounting for the distinct dynamic averaging present in the different conformational states sampled by the equilibrium ensemble, we are able to accurately describe both dynamic time scales and local and global conformational sampling. The method is robust, systematically improving agreement with independent experimental relaxation data, irrespective of the actively targeted rates, and suggesting interdependence of motions occurring on time scales varying over 3 orders of magnitude.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Elise Delaforge; Jaka Kragelj; Laura Tengo; Andrés Palencia; Sigrid Milles; Guillaume Bouvignies; Nicola Salvi; Martin Blackledge; Malene Ringkjøbing Jensen
Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) display a large number of interaction modes including folding-upon-binding, binding without major structural transitions, or binding through highly dynamic, so-called fuzzy, complexes. The vast majority of experimental information about IDP binding modes have been inferred from crystal structures of proteins in complex with short peptides of IDPs. However, crystal structures provide a mainly static view of the complexes and do not give information about the conformational dynamics experienced by the IDP in the bound state. Knowledge of the dynamics of IDP complexes is of fundamental importance to understand how IDPs engage in highly specific interactions without concomitantly high binding affinity. Here, we combine rotating-frame R1ρ, Carr-Purcell-Meiboom Gill relaxation dispersion as well as chemical exchange saturation transfer to decipher the dynamic interaction profile of an IDP in complex with its partner. We apply the approach to the dynamic signaling complex formed between the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) p38α and the intrinsically disordered regulatory domain of the MAPK kinase MKK4. Our study demonstrates that MKK4 employs a subtle combination of interaction modes in order to bind to p38α, leading to a complex displaying significantly different dynamics across the bound regions.
ChemPhysChem | 2011
Simone Ulzega; Nicola Salvi; Takuya F. Segawa; Fabien Ferrage; Geoffrey Bodenhausen
A fully analytical description of the control of the cross-correlated cross relaxation of multiple-quantum coherences in the presence of local dynamics under heteronuclear double-resonance radio-frequency (RF) irradiation is presented. The contribution of chemical exchange to relaxation can be partly or fully quenched by RF fields. We assume a correlated two-site chemical exchange model with arbitrary populations, and show that in the limit of fast exchange the dependence of the effective multiple-quantum cross-relaxation rate on the applied RF amplitude can be described by a compact analytical expression. Numerical simulations and preliminary experiments support our theoretical results. The relaxation dispersion as a function of RF amplitude can provide accurate information on the kinetics of correlated processes.