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Dive into the research topics where Osman Mirza is active.

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Featured researches published by Osman Mirza.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Dominant Epitopes and Allergic Cross-Reactivity: Complex Formation Between a Fab Fragment of a Monoclonal Murine IgG Antibody and the Major Allergen from Birch Pollen Bet v 1

Osman Mirza; Anette Henriksen; H. Ipsen; Jørgen Nedergaard Larsen; M. Wissenbach; Michael D. Spangfort; Michael Gajhede

The symptoms characteristic of allergic hypersensitivity are caused by the release of mediators, i.e., histamine, from effector cells such as basophils and mast cells. Allergens with more than one B cell epitope cross-link IgE Abs bound to high affinity FcεRI receptors on mast cell surfaces leading to aggregation and subsequent mediator release. Thus, allergen-Ab complexes play a crucial role in the cascade leading to the allergic response. We here report the structure of a 1:1 complex between the major birch pollen allergen Bet v 1 and the Fab fragment from a murine monoclonal IgG1 Ab, BV16, that has been solved to 2.9 Å resolution by x-ray diffraction. The mAb is shown to inhibit the binding of allergic patients’ IgE to Bet v 1, and the allergen-IgG complex may therefore serve as a model for the study of allergen-IgE interactions relevant in allergy. The size of the BV16 epitope is 931 Å2 as defined by the Bet v 1 Ab interaction surface. Molecular interactions predicted to occur in the interface are likewise in agreement with earlier observations on Ag-Ab complexes. The epitope is formed by amino acids that are conserved among major allergens from related species within the Fagales order. In combination with a surprisingly high inhibitory capacity of BV16 with respect to allergic patients’ serum IgE binding to Bet v 1, these observations provide experimental support for the proposal of dominant IgE epitopes located in the conserved surface areas. This model will facilitate the development of new and safer vaccines for allergen immunotherapy in the form of mutated allergens.


Proteins | 2001

Major venom allergen of yellow jackets, Ves v 5: Structural characterization of a pathogenesis-related protein superfamily

Anette Henriksen; Te P. King; Osman Mirza; Rafael I. Monsalve; Kåre Meno; H. Ipsen; Jørgen Nedergaard Larsen; Michael Gajhede; Michael D. Spangfort

Ves v 5 is one of three major allergens found in yellow‐jacket venom: phospholipase A1 (Ves v 1), hyaluronidase (Ves v 2), and antigen 5 (Ves v 5). Ves v 5 is related by high amino acid sequence identity to pathogenesis‐related proteins including proteins from mammals, reptiles, insects, fungi, and plants. The crystal structure of Ves v 5 has been solved and refined to a resolution of 1.9 Å. The majority of residues conserved between the pathogenesis‐related proteins can be rationalized in terms of hydrogen bonding patterns and hydrophobic interactions defining an α‐β‐α sandwich core structure. A small number of consensus residues are solvent exposed (including two adjacent histidines) and located in an elongated cavity that forms a putative active site. The site has no structural resemblance to previously characterized enzymes. Homologous antigen 5s from a large number of different yellow jackets, hornets, and paper wasps are known and patients show varying extents of cross‐reactivity to the related antigen 5s. The structure of Ves v 5 allows a detailed analysis of the epitopes that may participate in antigenic cross‐reactivity, findings that are useful for the development of a vaccine for treatment of insect allergy. Proteins 2001;45:438–448.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Dominating IgE-Binding Epitope of Bet v 1, the Major Allergen of Birch Pollen, Characterized by X-ray Crystallography and Site-Directed Mutagenesis

Michael D. Spangfort; Osman Mirza; H. Ipsen; R.J.Joost van Neerven; Michael Gajhede; Jørgen Nedergaard Larsen

Specific allergy vaccination is an efficient treatment for allergic disease; however, the development of safer vaccines would enable a more general use of the treatment. Determination of molecular structures of allergens and allergen-Ab complexes facilitates epitope mapping and enables a rational approach to the engineering of allergen molecules with reduced IgE binding. In this study, we describe the identification and modification of a human IgE-binding epitope based on the crystal structure of Bet v 1 in complex with the BV16 Fab′ fragment. The epitope occupies ∼10% of the molecular surface area of Bet v 1 and is clearly conformational. A synthetic peptide representing a sequential motif in the epitope (11 of 16 residues) did not inhibit the binding of mAb BV16 to Bet v 1, illustrating limitations in the use of peptides for B cell epitope characterization. The single amino acid substitution, Glu45-Ser, was introduced in the epitope and completely abolished the binding of mAb BV16 to the Bet v 1 mutant within a concentration range 1000-fold higher than wild type. The mutant also showed up to 50% reduction in the binding of human polyclonal IgE, demonstrating that glutamic acid 45 is a critical amino acid also in a major human IgE-binding epitope. By solving the three-dimensional crystal structure of the Bet v 1 Glu45-Ser mutant, it was shown that the change in immunochemical activity is directly related to the Glu45-Ser substitution and not to long-range structural alterations or collapse of the Bet v 1 mutant tertiary structure.


Protein Science | 2001

Structure of soybean seed coat peroxidase: A plant peroxidase with unusual stability and haem-apoprotein interactions

Anette Henriksen; Osman Mirza; C Indiani; Kaare Teilum; Giulietta Smulevich; Karen G. Welinder; Michael Gajhede

Soybean seed coat peroxidase (SBP) is a peroxidase with extraordinary stability and catalytic properties. It belongs to the family of class III plant peroxidases that can oxidize a wide variety of organic and inorganic substrates using hydrogen peroxide. Because the plant enzyme is a heterogeneous glycoprotein, SBP was produced recombinant in Escherichia coli for the present crystallographic study. The three‐dimensional structure of SBP shows a bound tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane molecule (TRIS). This TRIS molecule has hydrogen bonds to active site residues corresponding to the residues that interact with the small phenolic substrate ferulic acid in the horseradish peroxidase C (HRPC):ferulic acid complex. TRIS is positioned in what has been described as a secondary substrate‐binding site in HRPC, and the structure of the SBP:TRIS complex indicates that this secondary substrate‐binding site could be of functional importance. SBP has one of the most solvent accessible δ‐meso haem edge (the site of electron transfer from reducing substrates to the enzymatic intermediates compound I and II) so far described for a plant peroxidase and structural alignment suggests that the volume of Ile74 is a factor that influences the solvent accessibility of this important site. A contact between haem C8 vinyl and the sulphur atom of Met37 is observed in the SBP structure. This interaction might affect the stability of the haem group by stabilisation/delocalisation of the porphyrin π‐cation of compound I.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Structural rearrangements of sucrose phosphorylase from Bifidobacterium adolescentis during sucrose conversion.

Osman Mirza; Lars Kobberoee Skov; Desiree Sprogøe; L.A.M. van den Broek; G. Beldman; Jette S. Kastrup; M. Gajhede

The reaction mechanism of sucrose phosphorylase from Bifidobacterium adolescentis (BiSP) was studied by site-directed mutagenesis and x-ray crystallography. An inactive mutant of BiSP (E232Q) was co-crystallized with sucrose. The structure revealed a substrate-binding mode comparable with that seen in other related sucrose-acting enzymes. Wild-type BiSP was also crystallized in the presence of sucrose. In the dimeric structure, a covalent glucosyl intermediate was formed in one molecule of the BiSP dimer, and after hydrolysis of the glucosyl intermediate, a β-d-glucose product complex was formed in the other molecule. Although the overall structure of the BiSP-glucosyl intermediate complex is similar to that of the BiSP(E232Q)-sucrose complex, the glucose complex discloses major differences in loop conformations. Two loops (residues 336-344 and 132-137) in the proximity of the active site move up to 16 and 4Å, respectively. On the basis of these findings, we have suggested a reaction cycle that takes into account the large movements in the active-site entrance loops.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Fumarate reductase and succinate oxidase activity of Escherichia coli complex II homologs are perturbed differently by mutation of the flavin binding domain.

Elena Maklashina; Tina M. Iverson; Yelizaveta Sher; Violetta Kotlyar; Juni Andréll; Osman Mirza; Janette M. Hudson; Fraser A. Armstrong; Richard A. Rothery; Joel H. Weiner; Gary Cecchini

The Escherichia coli complex II homologues succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR, SdhCDAB) and menaquinol:fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR, FrdABCD) have remarkable structural homology at their dicarboxylate binding sites. Although both SQR and QFR can catalyze the interconversion of fumarate and succinate, QFR is a much better fumarate reductase, and SQR is a better succinate oxidase. An exception to the conservation of amino acids near the dicarboxylate binding sites of the two enzymes is that there is a Glu (FrdA Glu-49) near the covalently bound FAD cofactor in most QFRs, which is replaced with a Gln (SdhA Gln-50) in SQRs. The role of the amino acid side chain in enzymes with Glu/Gln/Ala substitutions at FrdA Glu-49 and SdhA Gln-50 has been investigated in this study. The data demonstrate that the mutant enzymes with Ala substitutions in either QFR or SQR remain functionally similar to their wild type counterparts. There were, however, dramatic changes in the catalytic properties when Glu and Gln were exchanged for each other in QFR and SQR. The data show that QFR and SQR enzymes are more efficient succinate oxidases when Gln is in the target position and a better fumarate reductase when Glu is present. Overall, structural and catalytic analyses of the FrdA E49Q and SdhA Q50E mutants suggest that coulombic effects and the electronic state of the FAD are critical in dictating the preferred directionality of the succinate/fumarate interconversions catalyzed by the complex II superfamily.


Biochemistry | 2008

The Structure of the Complex between a Branched Pentasaccharide and Thermobacillus Xylanilyticus Gh-51 Arabinofuranosidase Reveals Xylan-Binding Determinants and Induced Fit.

Gabriel Paës; Lars Kobberoee Skov; Michael J. O'Donohue; Caroline Rémond; Jette S. Kastrup; Michael Gajhede; Osman Mirza

The crystal structure of the family GH-51 alpha- l-arabinofuranosidase from Thermobacillus xylanilyticus has been solved as a seleno-methionyl derivative. In addition, the structure of an inactive mutant Glu176Gln is presented in complex with a branched pentasaccharide, a fragment of its natural substrate xylan. The overall structure shows the two characteristic GH-51 domains: a catalytic domain that is folded into a (beta/alpha) 8-barrel and a C-terminal domain that displays jelly roll architecture. The pentasaccharide is bound in a groove on the surface of the enzyme, with the mono arabinosyl branch entering a tight pocket harboring the catalytic dyad. Detailed analyses of both structures and comparisons with the two previously determined structures from Geobacillus stearothermophilus and Clostridium thermocellum reveal important details unique to the Thermobacillus xylanilyticus enzyme. In the absence of substrate, the enzyme adopts an open conformation. In the substrate-bound form, the long loop connecting beta-strand 2 to alpha-helix 2 closes the active site and interacts with the substrate through residues His98 and Trp99. The results of kinetic and fluorescence titration studies using mutants underline the importance of this loop, and support the notion of an interaction between Trp99 and the bound substrate. We suggest that the changes in loop conformation are an integral part of the T. xylanilyticus alpha- l-arabinofuranosidase reaction mechanism, and ensure efficient binding and release of substrate.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2000

Arabidopsis thaliana peroxidase N: structure of a novel neutral peroxidase

Osman Mirza; Anette Henriksen; Lars Østergaard; Karen G. Welinder; Michael Gajhede

The structure of the neutral peroxidase from Arabidopsis thaliana (ATP N) has been determined to a resolution of 1.9 A and a free R value of 20.5%. ATP N has the expected characteristic fold of the class III peroxidases, with a C(alpha) r.m.s.d. of 0.82 A when compared with horseradish peroxidase C (HRP C). HRP C is 54% identical to ATP N in sequence. When the structures of four class III plant peroxidases are superimposed, the regions with structural differences are non-randomly distributed; all are located in one half of the molecule. The architecture of the haem pocket of ATP N is very similar to that of HRP C, in agreement with the low small-molecule substrate specificity of all class III peroxidases. The structure of ATP N suggests that the pH dependence of the substrate turnover will differ from that of HRP C owing to differences in polarity of the residues in the substrate-access channel. Since there are fewer hydrogen bonds to haem C17 propionate O atoms in ATP N than in HRP C, it is suggested that ATP N will lose haem more easily than HRP C. Unlike almost all other class III plant peroxidases, ATP N has a free cysteine residue at a similar position to the suggested secondary substrate-binding site in lignin peroxidase.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2000

Crystallization and preliminary X‐ray studies of recombinant amylosucrase from Neisseria polysaccharea

Lars K. Skov; Osman Mirza; Anette Henriksen; G. Potocki De Montalk; M. Remaud-Simeon; P. Sarcabal; R.M Willemot; P. Monsan; Michael Gajhede

Recombinant amylosucrase from Neisseria polysaccharea was crystallized by the vapour-diffusion procedure in the presence of polyethylene glycol 6000. The crystals belong to the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2, with unit-cell parameters a = 95.7, b = 117.2, c = 62.1 A, and diffract to 1.6 A resolution. A p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (pcmbs) derivative has been identified and a selenomethionine-substituted protein has been produced and crystallized.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Ligand binding analyses of the putative peptide transporter YjdL from E. coli display a significant selectivity towards dipeptides

Heidi A. Ernst; Antony Pham; Helle Hald; Jette S. Kastrup; Moazur Rahman; Osman Mirza

Proton-dependent oligopeptide transporters (POTs) are secondary active transporters that couple the inwards translocation of di- and tripeptides to inwards proton translocation. Escherichia coli contains four genes encoding the putative POT proteins YhiP, YdgR, YjdL and YbgH. We have over-expressed the previously uncharacterized YjdL and investigated the peptide specificity by means of uptake inhibition. The IC(50) value for the dipeptide Ala-Ala was measured to 22 mM while Ala-Ala-Ala was not able to inhibit uptake. In addition, IC(50) values of 0.3 mM and 1.5 mM were observed for Ala-Lys and Tyr-Ala, respectively, while the alanyl-extended tripeptides Ala-Lys-Ala, Ala-Ala-Lys, Ala-Tyr-Ala and Tyr-Ala-Ala displayed values of 8, >50, 31 and 31 mM, respectively. These results clearly indicate that unlike most POT members characterized to date, including YdgR and YhiP, YjdL shows significantly higher specificity towards dipeptides.

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Lars K. Skov

University of Copenhagen

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Nanda G. Aduri

University of Copenhagen

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Heidi A. Ernst

University of Copenhagen

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Moazur Rahman

National Institute for Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering

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Helle Hald

University of Copenhagen

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