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Dive into the research topics where Nilesh K. Banavali is active.

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Featured researches published by Nilesh K. Banavali.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Novel Broad Spectrum Inhibitors Targeting the Flavivirus Methyltransferase.

Matthew Brecher; Hui Chen; Binbin Liu; Nilesh K. Banavali; Susan A. Jones; Jing Zhang; Zhong Li; Laura D. Kramer; Hongmin Li

The flavivirus methyltransferase (MTase) is an essential enzyme that sequentially methylates the N7 and 2’-O positions of the viral RNA cap, using S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) as a methyl donor. We report here that small molecule compounds, which putatively bind to the SAM-binding site of flavivirus MTase and inhibit its function, were identified by using virtual screening. In vitro methylation experiments demonstrated significant MTase inhibition by 13 of these compounds, with the most potent compound displaying sub-micromolar inhibitory activity. The most active compounds showed broad spectrum activity against the MTase proteins of multiple flaviviruses. Two of these compounds also exhibited low cytotoxicity and effectively inhibited viral replication in cell-based assays, providing further structural insight into flavivirus MTase inhibition.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Insertion domain within mammalian mitochondrial translation initiation factor 2 serves the role of eubacterial initiation factor 1

Aymen S. Yassin; Md. Emdadul Haque; Partha P. Datta; Kevin Elmore; Nilesh K. Banavali; Linda L. Spremulli; Rajendra K. Agrawal

Mitochondria have their own translational machineries for the synthesis of thirteen polypeptide chains that are components of the complexes that participate in the process of oxidative phosphorylation (or ATP generation). Translation initiation in mammalian mitochondria requires two initiation factors, IF2mt and IF3mt, instead of the three that are present in eubacteria. The mammalian IF2mt possesses a unique 37 amino acid insertion domain, which is known to be important for the formation of the translation initiation complex. We have obtained a three-dimensional cryoelectron microscopic map of the mammalian IF2mt in complex with initiator and the eubacterial ribosome. We find that the 37 amino acid insertion domain interacts with the same binding site on the ribosome that would be occupied by the eubacterial initiation factor IF1, which is absent in mitochondria. Our finding suggests that the insertion domain of IF2mt mimics the function of eubacterial IF1, by blocking the ribosomal aminoacyl-tRNA binding site (A site) at the initiation step.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2015

Identification and Characterization of Novel Broad-Spectrum Inhibitors of the Flavivirus Methyltransferase.

Matthew Brecher; Hui Chen; Zhong Li; Nilesh K. Banavali; Susan A. Jones; Jing Zhang; Laura D. Kramer; Hongmin Li

Flavivirus methyltransferase (MTase) is essential for viral replication. Here we report the identification of small molecules through virtual screening that putatively bind to the SAM-binding site of flavivirus MTase and inhibit its function. Six of these computationally predicted binders were identified to show significant MTase inhibition with low micromolar inhibitory activity. The most active compounds showed broad-spectrum activity against the MTase proteins of other flaviviruses. Two of these compounds also showed low cytotoxicity and high antiviral efficacy in cell-based assays. Competitive binding analyses indicated that the inhibitors performed their inhibitory function through competitive binding to the SAM cofactor binding site of the MTase. The crystal structure of the MTase-inhibitor complex further supports the mode of action and provides routes for their further optimization as flavivirus MTase inhibitors.


Cell Research | 2017

Existing drugs as broad-spectrum and potent inhibitors for Zika virus by targeting NS2B-NS3 interaction

Zhong Li; Matthew Brecher; Yong Qiang Deng; Jing Zhang; Srilatha Sakamuru; Binbin Liu; Ruili Huang; Cheri A. Koetzner; Christina A. Allen; Susan A. Jones; Haiying Chen; Na Na Zhang; Min Tian; Fengshan Gao; Qishan Lin; Nilesh K. Banavali; Jia Zhou; Nathan Boles; Menghang Xia; Laura D. Kramer; Cheng-Feng Qin; Hongmin Li

Recent outbreaks of Zika virus (ZIKV) highlight an urgent need for therapeutics. The protease complex NS2B-NS3 plays essential roles during flaviviral polyprotein processing, and thus represents an attractive drug target. Here, we developed a split luciferase complementation-based high-throughput screening assay to identify orthosteric inhibitors that directly target flavivirus NS2B-NS3 interactions. By screening a total of 2 816 approved and investigational drugs, we identified three potent candidates, temoporfin, niclosamide, and nitazoxanide, as flavivirus NS2B-NS3 interaction inhibitors with nanomolar potencies. Significantly, the most potent compound, temoporfin, not only inhibited ZIKV replication in human placental and neural progenitor cells, but also prevented ZIKV-induced viremia and mortality in mouse models. Structural docking suggests that temoporfin potentially binds NS3 pockets that hold critical NS2B residues, thus inhibiting flaviviral polyprotein processing in a non-competitive manner. As these drugs have already been approved for clinical use in other indications either in the USA or other countries, they represent promising and easily developed therapies for the management of infections by ZIKV and other flaviviruses.


PLOS ONE | 2013

S-Adenosyl-Homocysteine Is a Weakly Bound Inhibitor for a Flaviviral Methyltransferase

Hui Chen; Bing Zhou; Matthew Brecher; Nilesh K. Banavali; Susan A. Jones; Zhong Li; Jing Zhang; Dilip K. Nag; Laura D. Kramer; Arun K. Ghosh; Hongmin Li

The methyltransferase enzyme (MTase), which catalyzes the transfer of a methyl group from S-adenosyl-methionine (AdoMet) to viral RNA, and generates S-adenosyl-homocysteine (AdoHcy) as a by-product, is essential for the life cycle of many significant human pathogen flaviviruses. Here we investigated inhibition of the flavivirus MTase by several AdoHcy-derivatives. Unexpectedly we found that AdoHcy itself barely inhibits the flavivirus MTase activities, even at high concentrations. AdoHcy was also shown to not inhibit virus growth in cell-culture. Binding studies confirmed that AdoHcy has a much lower binding affinity for the MTase than either the AdoMet co-factor, or the natural AdoMet analog inhibitor sinefungin (SIN). While AdoMet is a positively charged molecule, SIN is similar to AdoHcy in being uncharged, and only has an additional amine group that can make extra electrostatic contacts with the MTase. Molecular Mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann Sovation Area analysis on AdoHcy and SIN binding to the MTase suggests that the stronger binding of SIN may not be directly due to interactions of this amine group, but due to distributed differences in SIN binding resulting from its presence. The results suggest that better MTase inhibitors could be designed by using SIN as a scaffold rather than AdoHcy.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Characterizing structural transitions using localized free energy landscape analysis.

Nilesh K. Banavali; Alexander D. MacKerell

Background Structural changes in molecules are frequently observed during biological processes like replication, transcription and translation. These structural changes can usually be traced to specific distortions in the backbones of the macromolecules involved. Quantitative energetic characterization of such distortions can greatly advance the atomic-level understanding of the dynamic character of these biological processes. Methodology/Principal Findings Molecular dynamics simulations combined with a variation of the Weighted Histogram Analysis Method for potential of mean force determination are applied to characterize localized structural changes for the test case of cytosine (underlined) base flipping in a GTCAGCGCATGG DNA duplex. Free energy landscapes for backbone torsion and sugar pucker degrees of freedom in the DNA are used to understand their behavior in response to the base flipping perturbation. By simplifying the base flipping structural change into a two-state model, a free energy difference of upto 14 kcal/mol can be attributed to the flipped state relative to the stacked Watson-Crick base paired state. This two-state classification allows precise evaluation of the effect of base flipping on local backbone degrees of freedom. Conclusions/Significance The calculated free energy landscapes of individual backbone and sugar degrees of freedom expectedly show the greatest change in the vicinity of the flipping base itself, but specific delocalized effects can be discerned upto four nucleotide positions away in both 5′ and 3′ directions. Free energy landscape analysis thus provides a quantitative method to pinpoint the determinants of structural change on the atomic scale and also delineate the extent of propagation of the perturbation along the molecule. In addition to nucleic acids, this methodology is anticipated to be useful for studying conformational changes in all macromolecules, including carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins.


Molecular Microbiology | 2017

Chemical activation of adenylyl cyclase Rv1625c inhibits growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis on cholesterol and modulates intramacrophage signaling

Richard M. Johnson; Guangchun Bai; Christopher M. DeMott; Nilesh K. Banavali; Christine R. Montague; Caroline Moon; Alexander Shekhtman; Brian C. VanderVen; Kathleen A. McDonough

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) uses a complex 3′, 5′‐cyclic AMP (cAMP) signaling network to sense and respond to changing environments encountered during infection, so perturbation of cAMP signaling might be leveraged to disrupt Mtb pathogenesis. However, understanding of cAMP signaling pathways is hindered by the presence of at least 15 distinct adenylyl cyclases (ACs). Recently, the small molecule V‐58 was shown to inhibit Mtb replication within macrophages and stimulate cAMP production in Mtb. Here we determined that V‐58 rapidly and directly activates Mtb AC Rv1625c to produce high levels of cAMP regardless of the bacterial environment or growth medium. Metabolic inhibition by V‐58 was carbon source dependent in Mtb and did not occur in Mycobacterium smegmatis, suggesting that V‐58‐mediated growth inhibition is due to interference with specific Mtb metabolic pathways rather than a generalized cAMP toxicity. Chemical stimulation of cAMP production by Mtb within macrophages also caused down regulation of TNF‐α production by the macrophages, indicating a complex role for cAMP in Mtb pathogenesis. Together these studies describe a novel approach for targeted stimulation of cAMP production in Mtb, and provide new insights into the myriad roles of cAMP signaling in Mtb, particularly during Mtbs interactions with macrophages.


Biopolymers | 2016

RNA approaches the B-form in stacked single strand dinucleotide contexts.

Ada Sedova; Nilesh K. Banavali

Duplex RNA adopts an A‐form structure, while duplex DNA interconverts between the A‐ and B‐forms depending on the environment. The C2′‐endo sugar pucker seen in B‐form DNA can occur infrequently in ribose sugars as well, but RNA is not understood to assume B‐form conformations. Through analysis of over 45,000 stacked single strand dinucleotide (SSD) crystal structure conformations, this study demonstrates that RNA is capable of adopting a wide conformational range between the canonical A‐ and B‐forms at the localized SSD level, including many B‐form‐like conformations. It does so through C2′‐endo ribose conformations in one or both nucleotides, and B‐form‐like neighboring base stacking patterns. As chemical reactions on nucleic acids involve localized changes in chemical bonds, the understanding of how enzymes distinguish between DNA and RNA nucleotides is altered by the energetic accessibility of these rare B‐form‐like RNA SSD conformations. The existence of these conformations also has direct implications in parametrization of molecular mechanics energy functions used extensively to model nucleic acid behavior., 2016.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Computational Exploration of Structural Hypotheses for an Additional Sequence in a Mammalian Mitochondrial Protein

Aymen S. Yassin; Rajendra K. Agrawal; Nilesh K. Banavali

Background Proteins involved in mammalian mitochondrial translation, when compared to analogous bacterial proteins, frequently have additional sequence regions whose structural or functional roles are not always clear. For example, an additional short insert sequence in the bovine mitochondrial initiation factor 2 (IF2mt) seems sufficient to fulfill the added role of eubacterial initiation factor IF1. Prior to our recent cryo-EM study that showed IF2mt to structurally occupy both the IF1 and IF2 binding sites, the spatial separation of these sites, and the short length of the insert sequence, posed ambiguity in whether it could perform the role of IF1 through occupation of the IF1 binding site on the ribosome. Results The present study probes how well computational structure prediction methods can a priori address hypothesized roles of such additional sequences by creating quasi-atomic models of IF2mt using bacterial IF2 cryo-EM densities (that lack the insert sequences). How such initial IF2mt predictions differ from the observed IF2mt cryo-EM map and how they can be suitably improved using further sequence analysis and flexible fitting are analyzed. Conclusions By hypothesizing that the insert sequence occupies the IF1 binding site, continuous IF2mt models that occupy both the IF2 and IF1 binding sites can be predicted computationally. These models can be improved by flexible fitting into the IF2mt cryo-EM map to get reasonable quasi-atomic IF2mt models, but the exact orientation of the insert structure may not be reproduced. Specific eukaryotic insert sequence conservation characteristics can be used to predict alternate IF2mt models that have minor secondary structure rearrangements but fewer unusually extended linker regions. Computational structure prediction methods can thus be combined with medium-resolution cryo-EM maps to explore structure-function hypotheses for additional sequence regions and to guide further biochemical experiments, especially in mammalian systems where high-resolution structures are difficult to determine.


Biochemistry | 2014

Cytosine Unstacking and Strand Slippage at an Insertion–Deletion Mutation Sequence in an Overhang-Containing DNA Duplex

Swati R. Manjari; Janice D. Pata; Nilesh K. Banavali

Base unstacking in template strands, when accompanied by strand slippage, can result in deletion mutations during strand extension by nucleic acid polymerases. In a GCCC mutation hot-spot sequence, which was previously identified to have a 50% probability of causing such mutations during DNA replication by a Y-family polymerase, a single-base deletion mutation could result from such unstacking of any one of its three template cytosines. In this study, the intrinsic energetic differences in unstacking among these three cytosines in a solvated DNA duplex overhang model were examined using umbrella sampling molecular dynamics simulations. The free energy profiles obtained show that cytosine unstacking grows progressively more unfavorable as one moves inside the duplex from the 5′-end of the overhang template strand. Spontaneous strand slippage occurs in response to such base unstacking in the direction of both the major and minor grooves for all three cytosines. Unrestrained simulations run from three distinct strand-slipped states and one non-strand-slipped state suggest that a more duplexlike environment can help stabilize strand slippage. The possible underlying reasons and biological implications of these observations are discussed in the context of nucleic acid replication active site dynamics.

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Hongmin Li

New York State Department of Health

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Zhong Li

New York State Department of Health

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Jing Zhang

New York State Department of Health

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Laura D. Kramer

New York State Department of Health

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Susan A. Jones

New York State Department of Health

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Hui Chen

New York State Department of Health

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Matthew Brecher

New York State Department of Health

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Rajendra K. Agrawal

New York State Department of Health

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Ada Sedova

State University of New York System

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