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Dive into the research topics where Olga V. Bocharova is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga V. Bocharova.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Amyloid fibrils of mammalian prion protein are highly toxic to cultured cells and primary neurons

Vera Novitskaya; Olga V. Bocharova; Igor B. Bronstein; Ilia V. Baskakov

A growing body of evidence indicates that small, soluble oligomeric species generated from a variety of proteins and peptides rather than mature amyloid fibrils are inherently highly cytotoxic. Here, we show for the first time that mature amyloid fibrils produced from full-length recombinant mammalian prion protein (rPrP) were highly toxic to cultured cells and primary hippocampal and cerebella neurons. Fibrils induced apoptotic cell death in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The toxic effect of fibrils was comparable with that exhibited by soluble small β-oligomers generated from the same protein. Fibrils prepared from insulin were not toxic, suggesting that the toxic effect was not solely due to the highly polymeric nature of the fibrillar form. The cell death caused by rPrP fibrils or β-oligomers was substantially reduced when expression of endogenous PrPC was down-regulated by small interfering RNAs. In opposition to the β-oligomer and amyloid fibrils of rPrP, the monomeric α-helical form of rPrP stimulated neurite out-growth and survival of neurons. These studies illustrated that both soluble β-oligomer and amyloid fibrils of the prion protein are intrinsically toxic and confirmed that endogenously expressed PrPC is required for mediating the toxicity of abnormally folded external PrP aggregates.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2010

Recombinant prion protein induces a new transmissible prion disease in wild-type animals

Natallia Makarava; Gabor G. Kovacs; Olga V. Bocharova; Regina Savtchenko; Irina Alexeeva; Herbert Budka; Robert G. Rohwer; Ilia V. Baskakov

Prion disease is a neurodegenerative malady, which is believed to be transmitted via a prion protein in its abnormal conformation (PrPSc). Previous studies have failed to demonstrate that prion disease could be induced in wild-type animals using recombinant prion protein (rPrP) produced in Escherichia coli. Here, we report that prion infectivity was generated in Syrian hamsters after inoculating full-length rPrP that had been converted into the cross-β-sheet amyloid form and subjected to annealing. Serial transmission gave rise to a disease phenotype with highly unique clinical and neuropathological features. Among them were the deposition of large PrPSc plaques in subpial and subependymal areas in brain and spinal cord, very minor lesioning of the hippocampus and cerebellum, and a very slow progression of disease after onset of clinical signs despite the accumulation of large amounts of PrPSc in the brain. The length of the clinical duration is more typical of human and large animal prion diseases, than those of rodents. Our studies establish that transmissible prion disease can be induced in wild-type animals by inoculation of rPrP and introduce a valuable new model of prion diseases.


Protein Science | 2005

Synthetic prions generated in vitro are similar to a newly identified subpopulation of PrPSc from sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.

Olga V. Bocharova; Leonid Breydo; Vadim V. Salnikov; Andrew C. Gill; Ilia V. Baskakov

In recent studies, the amyloid form of recombinant prion protein (PrP) encompassing residues 89–230 (rPrP 89‐230) produced in vitro induced transmissible prion disease in mice. These studies showed that unlike “classical” PrPSc produced in vivo, the amyloid fibrils generated in vitro were more proteinase‐K sensitive. Here we demonstrate that the amyloid form contains a proteinase K‐resistant core composed only of residues 152/153–230 and 162–230. The PK‐resistant fragments of the amyloid form are similar to those observed upon PK digestion of a minor subpopulation of PrPSc recently identified in patients with sporadic Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease (CJD). Remarkably, this core is sufficient for self‐propagating activity in vitro and preserves a β‐sheet‐rich fibrillar structure. Full‐length recombinant PrP 23‐230, however, generates two subpopulations of amyloid in vitro: One is similar to the minor subpopulation of PrPSc, and the other to classical PrPSc. Since no cellular factors or templates were used for generation of the amyloid fibrils in vitro, we speculate that formation of the subpopulation of PrPSc with a short PK‐resistant C‐terminal region reflects an intrinsic property of PrP rather than the influence of cellular environments and/or cofactors. Our work significantly increases our understanding of the biochemical nature of prion infectious agents and provides a fundamental insight into the mechanisms of prions biogenesis.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Spatial Structure of the Transmembrane Domain Heterodimer of ErbB1 and ErbB2 Receptor Tyrosine Kinases

Konstantin S. Mineev; Eduard V. Bocharov; Yulia Pustovalova; Olga V. Bocharova; Vladimir Chupin; Alexander S. Arseniev

Growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases of the ErbB family play a significant role in vital cellular processes and various cancers. During signal transduction across plasma membrane, ErbB receptors are involved in lateral homodimerization and heterodimerization with proper assembly of their extracellular single-span transmembrane (TM) and cytoplasmic domains. The ErbB1/ErbB2 heterodimer appears to be the strongest and most potent inducer of cellular transformation and mitogenic signaling compared to other ErbB homodimers and heterodimers. Spatial structure of the heterodimeric complex formed by TM domains of ErbB1 and ErbB2 receptors embedded into lipid bicelles was obtained by solution NMR. The ErbB1 and ErbB2 TM domains associate in a right-handed alpha-helical bundle through their N-terminal double GG4-like motif T(648)G(649)X(2)G(652)A(653) and glycine zipper motif T(652)X(3)S(656)X(3)G(660), respectively. The described heterodimer conformation is believed to support the juxtamembrane and kinase domain configuration corresponding to the receptor active state. The capability for multiple polar interactions, along with hydrogen bonding between TM segments, correlates with the observed highest affinity of the ErbB1/ErbB2 heterodimer, implying an important contribution of the TM helix-helix interaction to signal transduction.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Annealing Prion Protein Amyloid Fibrils at High Temperature Results in Extension of a Proteinase K-resistant Core

Olga V. Bocharova; Natallia Makarava; Leonid Breydo; Maighdlin Anderson; Vadim V. Salnikov; Ilia V. Baskakov

Amyloids are highly ordered, rigid β-sheet-rich structures that appear to have minimal dynamic flexibility in individual polypeptide chains. Here, we demonstrate that substantial conformational rearrangements occur within mature amyloid fibrils produced from full-length mammalian prion protein. The rearrangement results in a substantial extension of a proteinase K-resistant core and is accompanied by an increase in the β-sheet-rich conformation. The conformational rearrangement was induced in the presence of low concentrations of Triton X-100 either by brief exposure to 80 °C or, with less efficacy, by prolonged incubation at 37 °C at pH 7.5 and is referred to here as “annealing.” Upon annealing, amyloid fibrils acquired a proteinase K-resistant core identical to that found in bovine spongiform encephalopathy-specific scrapie-associated prion protein. Annealing was also observed when amyloid fibrils were exposed to high temperatures in the absence of detergent but in the presence of brain homogenate. These findings suggest that the amyloid fibrils exist in two conformationally distinct states that are separated by a high energy barrier and that yet unknown cellular cofactors may facilitate transition of the fibrils into thermodynamically more stable state. Our studies provide new insight into the complex behavior of prion polymerization and highlight the annealing process, a previously unknown step in the evolution of amyloid structures.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Probing the Conformation of the Prion Protein within a Single Amyloid Fibril Using a Novel Immunoconformational Assay

Vera Novitskaya; Natallia Makarava; Anne Bellon; Olga V. Bocharova; Igor B. Bronstein; R. Anthony Williamson; Ilia V. Baskakov

The coexistence of multiple strains or subtypes of the disease-related isoform of prion protein (PrP) in natural isolates, together with the observed conformational heterogeneity of PrP amyloid fibrils generated in vitro, indicates the importance of probing the conformation of single particles within heterogeneous samples. Using an array of PrP-specific antibodies, we report the development of a novel immunoconformational assay. Uniquely, application of this new technology allows the conformation of multimeric PrP within a single fibril or particle to be probed without pretreatment of the sample with proteinase K. Using amyloid fibrils prepared from full-length recombinant PrP, we demonstrated the utility of this assay to define (i) PrP regions that are surface-exposed or buried, (ii) the susceptibility of defined PrP regions to GdnHCl-induced denaturation, and (iii) the conformational heterogeneity of PrP fibrils as measured for either the entire fibrillar population or for individual fibrils. Specifically, PrP regions 159–174 and 224–230 were shown to be buried and were the most resistant to denaturation. The 132–156 segment of PrP was found to be cryptic under native conditions and solvent-exposed under partially denaturing conditions, whereas the region 95–105 was solvent-accessible regardless of the solvent conditions. Remarkably, a subfraction of fibrils showed immunoreactivity to PrPSc-specific antibodies designated as IgGs 89–112 and 136–158. The immunoreactivity of the conformational epitopes was reduced upon exposure to partially denaturing conditions. Unexpectedly, PrPSc -specific antibodies revealed conformational polymorphisms even within individual fibrils. Our studies provide valuable new insight into fibrillar substructure and offer a new tool for probing the conformation of single PrP fibrils.


FEBS Letters | 2012

Dimeric structure of transmembrane domain of amyloid precursor protein in micellar environment.

Kirill D. Nadezhdin; Olga V. Bocharova; Eduard V. Bocharov; Alexander S. Arseniev

APPjmtm and APPjmtm bind by nuclear magnetic resonance (View interaction).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Site-specific Conformational Studies of Prion Protein (PrP) Amyloid Fibrils Revealed Two Cooperative Folding Domains within Amyloid Structure

Ying Sun; Leonid Breydo; Natallia Makarava; Qingyuan Yang; Olga V. Bocharova; Ilia V. Baskakov

Despite the ability of most proteins to form amyloid, very little is know about amyloid fibril structures and the factors that govern their stability. Using amyloid fibrils produced from full-length prion protein (PrP), we describe a reliable approach for determining both site-specific and global conformational stability of the fibrillar form. To measure site-specific stability, we produced six variants of PrP by replacing the residues at positions 88, 98, 127, 144, 196, and 230 with cysteine, labeled the new cysteines with the fluorescent dye acrylodan, and investigated their conformational status within the amyloid form in guanidine hydrochloride-induced denaturation experiments. We found that the fibrils labeled at positions 127, 144, 196, and 230 displayed cooperative unfolding and showed a very high C½ value similar to that observed for the global unfolding of the amyloid structure. The unfolding at residue 98 was also cooperative; however, it showed a C½ value substantially lower than that of global unfolding, whereas the unfolding of fibrils labeled at residue 88 was non-cooperative. These data illustrate that there are at least two independent cooperative folding domains within the amyloid structure of the full-length PrP. In addition, kinetic experiments revealed only a partial overlap between the region that constituted the fibrillar cross-β core and the regions that were involved in nucleation. This result illustrates that separate PrP regions accounted for the nucleation and for the formation of the conformationally most stable fibrillar core.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Alternative packing of EGFR transmembrane domain suggests that protein–lipid interactions underlie signal conduction across membrane

Eduard V. Bocharov; Dmitry M. Lesovoy; Konstantin V. Pavlov; Yulia Pustovalova; Olga V. Bocharova; Alexander S. Arseniev

The human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) of HER/ErbB receptor tyrosine kinase family mediates a broad spectrum of cellular responses transducing biochemical signals via lateral dimerization in plasma membrane, while inactive receptors can exist in both monomeric and dimeric forms. Recently, the dimeric conformation of the helical single-span transmembrane domains of HER/ErbB employing the relatively polar N-terminal motifs in a fashion permitting proper kinase activation was experimentally determined. Here we describe the EGFR transmembrane domain dimerization via an alternative weakly polar C-terminal motif A(661)xxxG(665) presumably corresponding to the inactive receptor state. During association, the EGFR transmembrane helices undergo a structural adjustment with adaptation of inter-molecular polar and hydrophobic interactions depending upon the surrounding membrane properties that directly affect the transmembrane helix packing. This might imply that signal transduction through membrane and allosteric regulation are inclusively mediated by coupled protein-protein and protein-lipid interactions, elucidating paradoxically loose linkage between ligand binding and kinase activation.


Biochemistry | 2015

The Membrane Mimetic Affects the Spatial Structure and Mobility of EGFR Transmembrane and Juxtamembrane Domains.

Konstantin S. Mineev; Stanislava V. Panova; Olga V. Bocharova; Eduard V. Bocharov; Alexander S. Arseniev

The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is one of the most extensively studied receptor tyrosine kinases, as it is involved in a wide range of cellular processes and severe diseases. Recent works reveal that the single-helix transmembrane domains and cytoplasmic juxtamembrane regions play an important role in the receptor activation process. Here we present the results of our investigation of the spatial structure and mobility of the EGFR transmembrane domain and juxtamembrane regions in various membranelike environments, which shed light on the effects of the membrane physical properties and composition on the behavior of the juxtamembrane domain.

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Leonid Breydo

University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute

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Eduard V. Bocharov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Vadim V. Salnikov

University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute

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Maighdlin Anderson

University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute

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