O. D. Novikova
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by O. D. Novikova.
Biochemistry | 2005
Konstantin V. Guzev; M. P. Isaeva; O. D. Novikova; T. F. Solov'eva; Valeri A. Rasskazov
Nonspecific pore-forming proteins (porins) are the major proteins of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria responsible for diffusion of low-molecular-weight compounds. Nucleotide sequences of the OmpF-like porins from the pathogenic bacteria Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (YPS) and Yersinia enterocolitica (YE) were cloned and determined. Values of molecular weights (MW) and isoelectric points (IEP) calculated for these proteins (for OmpF-YPS: MW 37.7 kD, IEP 4.45; for OmpF-YE: MW 39.5 kD, IEP 4.34) are in good agreement with experimental data. The OmpF-like Yersinia porins are highly homologous to each other (83–92%) and also to the OmpF protein from Serratia marcescens (70%); the homology to the OmpF porin from E. coli is significantly lower (52–58%). Multiple alignment of the amino acid sequences of mature OmpF proteins provided the distribution of conservative amino acid residues typical for porins. Moreover, the OmpF-like porins from Yersinia are characterized by the presence of extended regions with high and low homologies, which coincide with the transmembrane domains and “external” loops, respectively, of the topological model of the OmpF porin from E. coli. By predictive methods, the secondary structure of the OmpF-like porins from Yersinia was obtained. This structure is represented by 16 β-strands connected by short “ periplasmic” and longer “external” loops with unordered structure.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2006
Sergei Glushkov; O. D. Novikova; Alexander Blinov; Victor Fet
We screened across the taxonomic diversity of order Scorpiones (22 species belonging to 21 genera and 10 families) for the presence of seven different clades of non-LTR retrotransposons in their genomes using PCR with newly designed clade-specific consensus-degenerate hybrid oligonucleotide primers. Scorpion genomes were found to contain four known non-LTR retrotransposon clades: R1, I, Jockey, and CR1. In total, 35 fragments of reverse transcriptase genes of new elements from 22 scorpion species were obtained and analyzed for three clades, Jockey, I, and CR1. Phylogenies of different clades of elements were built using amino acid sequences inferred from 33 non-LTR retrotransposon clones. Distinct evolutionary lineages, with several major groups of the non-LTR retroelements were identified, showing significant variation. Four lineages were revealed in Jockey clade. The phylogeny of I clade showed strong support for the monophyletic origin of such group of elements in scorpions. Three separate lineages can be distingiushed in the phylogenetic tree of CR1 clade. The large fraction of the isolated elements appeared to be defective.
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2004
Marina P. Issaeva; Konstantin V. Guzev; O. D. Novikova; Tamara F. Solovjeva; Sergei Degtyarev; Valeri A. Rasskazov
In summary, the deduced amino acid sequence of OmpF-like porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis is not very closely related to OmpF of E. coli but is very similar to OmpF of S. marcescens. Analysis of the upstream region of the putative ompC gene of Y. pestis reveals an ompF-like promotor motif. Thus the data presented here suggests that the Y. pseudotuberculosis porin belongs to OmpF-like porins.
Biochemistry | 2012
T. F. Solov’eva; O. D. Novikova; O. Yu. Portnyagina
Gram-negative bacteria are enveloped by two membranes, the inner (cytoplasmic) (CM) and the outer (OM). The majority of integral outer membrane proteins are arranged in β-barrels of cylindrical shape composed of amphipathic antiparallel β-strands. In bacteria, β-barrel proteins function as water-filled pores, active transporters, enzymes, receptors, and structural proteins. Proteins of bacterial OM are synthesized in the cytoplasm as unfolded polypeptides with an N-terminal sequence that marks them for transport across the CM. Precursors of membrane proteins move through the aqueous medium of the cytosol and periplasm under the protection of chaperones (SecB, Skp, SurA, and DegP), then cross the CM via the Sec system composed of a polypeptide-conducting channel (SecYEG) and ATPase (SecA), the latter providing the energy for the translocation of the pre-protein. Pre-protein folding and incorporation in the OM require the participation of the Bam-complex, probably without the use of energy. This review summarizes current data on the biogenesis of the β-barrel proteins of bacterial OM. Data on the structure of the proteins included in the multicomponent system for delivery of the OM proteins to their destination in the cell and on their complexes with partners, including pre-proteins, are pre-sented. Molecular models constructed on the basis of structural, genetic, and biochemical studies that describe the mechanisms of β-barrel protein assembly by this molecular transport machinery are also considered.
Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2008
V. A. Khomenko; O. Yu. Portnyagina; O. D. Novikova; M. P. Isaeva; N. Yu. Kim; G. N. Likhatskaya; O. P. Vostrikova; T. F. Solov’eva
The encoding sequence of the pore-forming OmpF-like protein from the Yersinia pseudotuberculosis outer membrane was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli cells. Conditions for isolation and refolding of recombinant monomer and porin trimer were selected. Their spatial structures were characterized by the intrinsic protein fluorescence and CD spectroscopy. It was shown that recombinant porins are similar in the composition of secondary structure elements to isolated porins, but have a considerably less compact tertiary structure. The pore-forming activities of the recombinant proteins are similar to those of Y. pseudotuberculosis native porins.
Biochemistry | 2008
O. D. Novikova; T. I. Vakorina; V. A. Khomenko; G. N. Likhatskaya; N. Yu. Kim; V. I. Emelyanenko; S. M. Kuznetsova; T. F. Solov’eva
The influence of cultivation conditions of pseudotuberculosis bacteria on the spatial structure and the functional activity of nonspecific OmpF-like porin was studied by means of optical spectroscopy, scanning microcalorimetry, and bilayer lipid membrane technique. With this goal, porin samples isolated from microbial masses grown at different temperatures, nutrient medium densities, and growth phases were characterized. According to CD data, the porin samples under investigation represent β-sheet proteins. It was found that the protein isolated from the colonial culture of pseudotuberculosis bacteria grown at low temperature has the most compact structure. Using intrinsic protein fluorescence, it was shown that different conditions of pseudotuberculosis bacteria cultivation (temperature, medium, growth phase) led to the changes in spectral properties of porin fluorescence due to the redistribution of the contributions of tyrosine and different classes of tryptophan residues to the total protein emission. Heat inactivation of porin samples was studied using CD spectroscopy, intrinsic protein fluorescence, and scanning microcalorimetry. Spatial features of the porin samples were found to affect their functional activities. Considering all these data, it is possible to correlate the spatial structure and functional activity of porin samples isolated under different cultivation conditions of bacteria and the composition of the outer membrane lipid matrix.
Biochemistry | 2003
T. I. Vakorina; O. D. Novikova; I. N. Krasikova; G. N. Naberezhnykh; T. F. Solov'eva; Yu. S. Ovodov
The interaction of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis porin solubilized in deoxycholate with the S- and R-forms of endogenous lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was studied by the quenching of intrinsic protein fluorescence. The samples of S-LPS differed both in the length of O-specific polysaccharide (n = 1 and 4) and in the acylation degree of the 3-hydroxytetradecanoic acid residues of the lipid A moiety (12-66%). R-LPS (12%) binding to porin was found to occur with positive cooperativity on two integrated structural regions of the R-LPS macromolecule, namely, core oligosaccharide and lipid A. The mode of porin interaction with low-acylated S-LPSs (15 or 20%) coincided with a model involving three types of binding sites. The shape of Scatchard curves of binding indicates that a complex formation between porin and low-acylated S-LPS is cooperative at low and moderate ligand concentration, whereas at near-saturating LPS concentrations porin binds to LPS independently on two types of binding sites. The O-specific polysaccharide chain in the S-LPS macromolecule increases the affinity of its interaction with porin in comparison with R-LPS–porin binding. A significant increase (to 66%) in the degree of S-LPS acylation substantially changed its porin-binding character: the process becomes anti-cooperative with lowered affinity. Thus, the features of LPS–porin interaction significantly depend on the conformational changes in the LPS molecule due to expanding of its hydrophobic region.
Biochemistry (moscow) Supplement Series A: Membrane and Cell Biology | 2011
O. D. Novikova; V. A. Khomenko; V. I. Emelyanenko; G. N. Likhatskaya; Elena Zelepuga; N. Yu. Kim; M. P. Isaeva; O. Yu. Portnyagina; O. P. Vostrikova; O. V. Sidorova; T. F. Solov’eva
Pore-forming protein from the outer membrane of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis cultured at 37°C has been isolated and characterized. Comparative analysis of the primary and three-dimensional structures of this protein and of OmpC porin from E. coli was carried out, functional properties of these proteins have been studied using bilayer lipid membranes (BLM) technique. The degree of homology, molecular mass and pore-forming properties of the isolated porin was found to be closer to those of OmpC porin from E. coli than OmpF porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis. The value of the most probable conductivity of OmpC porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis (0.18 pS) in BLM corresponded to the conductivity of the native trimer of this protein. Using CD spectroscopy, the porins investigated were shown to belong to the β-structured proteins. Data of the primary structure and intrinsic protein fluorescence revealed essential differences in localization and microenvironment of tryptophan residues in the porins investigated. Participation of external loops L2 and L6 in the formation of the antigenic structure of OmpC porin from Y. pseudotuberculosis was demonstrated. On the basis of crystal structure of osmoporin from Klebsiella pneumoniae, three-dimensional models of the monomer and trimer of the Y. pseudotuberculosis porin were obtained. Using Web server AGGRESCAN, the localization of protein structure sites with the increased aggregation capability (hot spots) has been deter-mined. It turned out that some of these zones localize in the region of intramonomeric contacts in the porin trimer; however, a large part of them is located on the external surface of the β-barrel. The process of thermal denaturation has been studied and the melting points of the porins were determined. It was found that significant changes in the microenvironment of the indole fluorophores (especially tryptophan residues of spectral class I) took place in the process of the thermodenaturation of the proteins. These changes preceded the irreversible conformational transition observed for the E. coli porin at 77°C and for the Y. pseudotuberculosis porin at 70°C.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Tatyana I. Rokitskaya; Elena A. Kotova; Gennadiy A. Naberezhnykh; V. A. Khomenko; Vladimir I. Gorbach; Alexander M. Firsov; Elena Zelepuga; Yuri N. Antonenko; O. D. Novikova
To gain a mechanistic insight in the functioning of the OmpF-like porin from Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (YOmpF), we compared the effect of pH variation on the ion channel activity of the protein in planar lipid bilayers and its binding to lipid membranes. The behavior of YOmpF channels upon acidification was similar to that previously described for Escherichia coli OmpF. In particular, a decrease in pH of the bathing solution resulted in a substantial reduction of YOmpF single channel conductance, accompanied by the emergence of subconductance states. Similar subconductance substates were elicited by the addition of lysophosphatidylcholine. This observation, made with porin channels for the first time, pointed to the relevance of lipid-protein interactions, in particular, the lipid curvature stress, to the appearance of subconductance states at acidic pH. Binding of YOmpF to membranes displayed rather modest dependence on pH, whereas the channel-forming potency of the protein tremendously decreased upon acidification.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2014
O. V. Sidorova; V. A. Khomenko; O. Yu. Portnyagina; G. N. Likhatskaya; T. I. Vakorina; N. Yu. Kim; D. K. Chistyulin; T. F. Solov’eva; O. D. Novikova
Recombinant mutant OmpF porins from Yersinia pseudotuberculosis outer membrane were obtained using site-directed mutagenesis. Here we used four OmpF mutants where single extracellular loops L1, L4, L6, and L8 were deleted one at a time. The proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli at levels comparable to full-sized recombinant OmpF porin and isolated from the inclusion bodies. Purified trimers of the mutant porins were obtained after dialysis and consequent ion-exchange chromatography. Changes in molecular and spatial structure of the mutants obtained were studied using SDS-PAGE and optical spectroscopy (circular dichroism and intrinsic protein fluorescence). Secondary and tertiary structure of the mutant proteins was found to have some features in comparison with that of the full-sized recombinant OmpF. As shown by bilayer lipid membrane technique, the pore-forming activity of purified mutant porins was identical to OmpF porin isolated from the bacterial outer membrane. Lacking of the external loops mentioned above influenced significantly upon the antigenic structure of the porin as demonstrated using ELISA.