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Dive into the research topics where P. R. Pokkuluri is active.

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Featured researches published by P. R. Pokkuluri.


Amyloid | 1999

Tertiary structure of human lambda 6 light chains.

P. R. Pokkuluri; Alan Solomon; Deborah T. Weiss; Fred J. Stevens; Marianne Schiffer

AL amyloidosis is a disease process characterized by the pathologic deposition of monoclonal light chains in tissue. To date, only limited information has been obtained on the molecular features that render such light chains amyloidogenic. Although protein products of the major human V kappa and V lambda gene families have been identified in AL deposits, one particular subgroup--lambda 6--has been found to be preferentially associated with this disease. Notably, the variable region of lambda 6 proteins (V lambda 6) has distinctive primary structural features including the presence in the third framework region (FR3) of two additional amino acid residues that distinguish members of this subgroup from other types of light chains. However, the structural consequences of these alterations have not been elucidated. To determine if lambda 6 proteins possess unique tertiary structural features, as compared to light chains of other V lambda subgroups, we have obtained x-ray diffraction data on crystals prepared from two recombinant V lambda 6 molecules. These components, isolated from a bacterial expression system, were generated from lambda 6-related cDNAs cloned from bone marrow-derived plasma cells from a patient (Wil) who had documented AL amyloidosis and another (Jto) with multiple myeloma and tubular cast nephropathy, but no evident fibrillar deposits. The x-ray crystallographic analyses revealed that the two-residue insertion located between positions 68 and 69 (not between 66 and 67 as previously surmised) extended an existing loop region that effectively increased the surface area adjacent to the first complementarity determining region (CDR1). Further, an unusual interaction between the Arg 25 and Phe 2 residues commonly found in lambda 6 molecules was noted. However, the structures of V lambda 6 Wil and Jto also differed from each other, as evidenced by the presence in the latter of certain ionic and hydrophobic interactions that we posit increased protein stability and thus prevented amyloid formation.


Proteins | 2011

Structure of the catalytic domain of glucuronoyl esterase Cip2 from Hypocrea jecorina

P. R. Pokkuluri; N. E. C. Duke; Stephen J. Wood; Michael A. Cotta; Xin-Liang Li; Peter Biely; Marianne Schiffer

The structure of the catalytic domain of glucuronoyl esterase Cip2 from the fungus H. jecorina was determined at a resolution of 1.9 Å. This is the first structure of the newly established carbohydrate esterase family 15. The structure has revealed the residues Ser278-His411-Glu301 present in a triad arrangement as the active site. Ser278 is present in the novel consensus sequence GCSRXG reported earlier in the members of CE-15 family. The active site is exposed on the surface of the protein which has implications for the ability of the enzyme to hydrolyze ester bonds of large substrates. Efforts are underway to obtain crystals of Cip2_GE complexed with inhibitor and synthetic substrates. The activity of the glucuronoyl esterase could play a significant role in plant biomass degradation as its expected role is to separate the lignin from hemicelluloses by hydrolysis of the ester bond between 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronic acid moieties of glucuronoxylans and aromatic alcohols of lignin.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Increasing Protein Stability by Polar Surface Residues: Domain-Wide Consequences of Interactions Within a Loop

P. R. Pokkuluri; Rosemarie Raffen; Lynda Dieckman; C. Boogaard; Fred J. Stevens; Marianne Schiffer

We have examined the influence of surface hydrogen bonds on the stability of proteins by studying the effects of mutations of human immunoglobulin light chain variable domain (V(L)). In addition to the variants Y27dD, N28F, and T94H of protein kappa IV Len that were previously described, we characterized mutants M4L, L27cN, L27cQ, and K39T, double mutant M4L/Y27dD, and triple mutant M4L/Y27dD/T94H. The triple mutant had an enhanced thermodynamic stability of 4.2 kcal/mol. We determined the structure of the triple mutant by x-ray diffraction and correlated the changes in stability due to the mutations with changes in the three-dimensional structure. Y27dD mutant had increased stability of Len by 2.7 kcal/mol, a large value for a single mutation. Asp27d present in CDR1 formed hydrogen bonds with the side-chain and main-chain atoms within the loop. In the case of the K39T mutant, which reduces stability by 2 kcal/mol, Lys39 in addition to forming a hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen of a neighboring loop may also favorably influence the surface electrostatics of the molecule. We showed that hydrogen bonds between residues in surface loops can add to the overall stability of the V(L) domains. The contribution to stability is further increased if the surface residue makes more than one hydrogen bond or if it forms a hydrogen bond between neighboring turns or loops separated from each other in the amino acid sequence. Based on our experiments we suggest that stabilization of proteins might be systematically accomplished by introducing additional hydrogen bonds on the surface. These substitutions are more straightforward to predict than core-packing interactions and can be selected to avoid affecting the proteins function.


Protein Science | 2013

Insight into the sporulation phosphorelay: Crystal structure of the sensor domain of Bacillus subtilis histidine kinase, KinD†‡

Ruiying Wu; Minyi Gu; Rosemarie Wilton; Gyorgy Babnigg; Youngchang Kim; P. R. Pokkuluri; Hendrik Szurmant; Andrzej Joachimiak; Marianne Schiffer

The Bacillus subtilis KinD signal‐transducing histidine kinase is a part of the sporulation phosphorelay known to regulate important developmental decisions such as sporulation and biofilm formation. We have determined crystal structures of the extracytoplasmic sensing domain of KinD, which was copurified and crystallized with a pyruvate ligand. The structure of a ligand‐binding site mutant was also determined; it was copurified and crystallized with an acetate ligand. The structure of the KinD extracytoplasmic segment is similar to that of several other sensing domains of signal transduction proteins and is composed of tandem Per‐Arnt‐Sim (PAS)‐like domains. The KinD ligand‐binding site is located on the membrane distal PAS‐like domain and appears to be highly selective; a single mutation, R131A, abolishes pyruvate binding and the mutant binds acetate instead. Differential scanning fluorimetry, using a variety of monocarboxylic and dicarboxylic acids, identified pyruvate, propionate, and butyrate but not lactate, acetate, or malate as KinD ligands. A recent report found that malate induces biofilm formation in a KinD‐dependent manner. It was suggested that malate might induce a metabolic shift and increased secretion of the KinD ligand of unknown identity. The structure and binding assays now suggests that this ligand is pyruvate and/or other small monocarboxylic acids. In summary, this study gives a first insight into the identity of a molecular ligand for one of the five phosphorelay kinases of B. subtilis.


Protein Science | 2009

Factors contributing to decreased protein stability when aspartic acid residues are in β-sheet regions

P. R. Pokkuluri; Minyi Gu; X. Cai; Rosemarie Raffen; Fred J. Stevens; Marianne Schiffer

Asp residues are significantly under represented in β‐sheet regions of proteins, especially in the middle of β‐strands, as found by a number of studies using statistical, modeling, or experimental methods. To further understand the reasons for this under representation of Asp, we prepared and analyzed mutants of a β‐domain. Two Gln residues of the immunoglobulin light‐chain variable domain (VL) of protein Len were replaced with Asp, and then the effects of these changes on protein stability and protein structure were studied. The replacement of Q38D, located at the end of a β‐strand, and that of Q89D, located in the middle of a β‐strand, reduced the stability of the parent immunoglobulin VL domain by 2.0 kcal/mol and 5.3 kcal/mol, respectively. Because the Q89D mutant of the wild‐type VL‐Len domain was too unstable to be expressed as a soluble protein, we prepared the Q89D mutant in a triple mutant background, VL‐Len M4L/Y27dD/T94H, which was 4.2 kcal/mol more stable than the wild‐type VL‐Len domain. The structures of mutants VL‐Len Q38D and VL‐Len Q89D/M4L/Y27dD/T94H were determined by X‐ray diffraction at 1.6 Å resolution. We found no major perturbances in the structures of these Q→D mutant proteins relative to structures of the parent proteins. The observed stability changes have to be accounted for by cumulative effects of the following several factors: (1) by changes in main‐chain dihedral angles and in side‐chain rotomers, (2) by close contacts between some atoms, and, most significantly, (3) by the unfavorable electrostatic interactions between the Asp side chain and the carbonyls of the main chain. We show that the Asn side chain, which is of similar size but neutral, is less destabilizing. The detrimental effect of Asp within a β‐sheet of an immunoglobulin‐type domain can have very serious consequences. A somatic mutation of a β‐strand residue to Asp could prevent the expression of the domain both in vitro and in vivo, or it could contribute to the pathogenic potential of the protein in vivo.


Biochemistry | 2014

Multimerization of solution-state proteins by tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin.

Oleksandr Kokhan; Nina Ponomarenko; P. R. Pokkuluri; Marianne Schiffer; David M. Tiede

Surface binding and interactions of anionic porphyins bound to cationic proteins have been studied for nearly three decades and are relevant as models for protein surface molecular recognition and photoinitiated electron transfer. However, interpretation of data in nearly all reports explicitly or implicitly assumed interaction of porphyrin with monodisperse proteins in solutions. In this report, using small-angle X-ray scattering with solution phase samples, we demonstrate that horse heart cytochrome (cyt) c, triheme cytochrome c7 PpcA from Geobacter sulfurreducens, and hen egg lysozyme multimerize in the presence of zinc tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (ZnTPPS). Multimerization of cyt c showed a pH dependence with a stronger apparent binding affinity under alkaline conditions and was weakened in the presence of a high salt concentration. Ferric-cyt c formed complexes larger than those formed by ferro-cyt c. Free base TPPS and FeTPPS facilitated formation of complexes larger than those of ZnTPPS. No increase in protein aggregation state for cationic proteins was observed in the presence of cationic porphyrins. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations of cyt c and PpcA with free base TPPS corroborated X-ray scattering results and revealed a mechanism by which the tetrasubstituted charged porphyrins serve as bridging ligands nucleating multimerization of the complementarily charged protein. The final aggregation products suggest that multimerization involves a combination of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions. The results demonstrate an overlooked complexity in the design of multifunctional ligands for protein surface recognition.


BMC Biochemistry | 2014

Protein expression, characterization and activity comparisons of wild type and mutant DUSP5 proteins

Jaladhi Nayak; Adam Gastonguay; Marat R. Talipov; Padmanabhan Vakeel; Elise A. Span; Kelsey S. Kalous; Raman G. Kutty; Davin R. Jensen; P. R. Pokkuluri; Daniel S. Sem; Rajendra Rathore; Ramani Ramchandran

BackgroundThe mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) pathway is critical for cellular signaling, and proteins such as phosphatases that regulate this pathway are important for normal tissue development. Based on our previous work on dual specificity phosphatase-5 (DUSP5), and its role in embryonic vascular development and disease, we hypothesized that mutations in DUSP5 will affect its function.ResultsIn this study, we tested this hypothesis by generating full-length glutathione-S-transferase-tagged DUSP5 and serine 147 proline mutant (S147P) proteins from bacteria. Light scattering analysis, circular dichroism, enzymatic assays and molecular modeling approaches have been performed to extensively characterize the protein form and function. We demonstrate that both proteins are active and, interestingly, the S147P protein is hypoactive as compared to the DUSP5 WT protein in two distinct biochemical substrate assays. Furthermore, due to the novel positioning of the S147P mutation, we utilize computational modeling to reconstruct full-length DUSP5 and S147P to predict a possible mechanism for the reduced activity of S147P.ConclusionTaken together, this is the first evidence of the generation and characterization of an active, full-length, mutant DUSP5 protein which will facilitate future structure-function and drug development-based studies.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2008

Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of the glucuronoyl esterase catalytic domain from Hypocrea jecorina

S. J. Wood; Xin-Liang Li; Michael A. Cotta; Peter Biely; N. E. C. Duke; Marianne Schiffer; P. R. Pokkuluri

The catalytic domain of the glucuronoyl esterase from Hypocrea jecorina (anamorph Trichoderma reesei) was overexpresssed, purified and crystallized by the sitting-drop vapor-diffusion method using 1.4 M sodium/potassium phosphate pH 6.9. The crystals belonged to space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) and X-ray diffraction data were collected to 1.9 A resolution. This is the first enzyme with glucoronoyl esterase activity to be crystallized; its structure will be valuable in lignocellulose-degradation research.


Journal of Structural and Functional Genomics | 2012

Pitfalls in the interpretation of structural changes in mutant proteins from crystal structures

P. R. Pokkuluri; X. Yang; Yuri Y. Londer; Marianne Schiffer

PpcA is a small protein with 71 residues that contains three covalently bound hemes. The structures of single mutants at residue 58 have shown larger deviations in another part of the protein molecule than at the site of the mutation. Closer examination of the crystal packing has revealed the origin of this unexpected structural change. The site of mutation is within Van der Waals distance from another protein molecule related by a crystallographic twofold axis within the crystal. The structural changes occurred at or near the mutation site have led to a slight adjustment of the surface residues in contact. The observed deviations between the native and the mutant molecular structures are derived from the new crystal packing even though the two crystals are essentially isomorphous. Without careful consideration of the crystal lattice a non-expert looking at only the coordinates deposited in the Protein Data Bank could draw erroneous conclusion that mutation in one part of the molecule affected the structure of the protein in a distant part of the molecule.


Chemical Physics | 2003

Lysine substitutions near photoactive cofactors in the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center have opposite effects on the rate of triplet energy transfer

Zachary S. Morris; Deborah K. Hanson; P. R. Pokkuluri; David G. Mets; Aaron N. Hata; Oleg G. Poluektov; Marion C. Thurnauer; Marianne Schiffer; Philip D. Laible

Rates of triplet energy transfer have been investigated by time-resolved pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy in mutant photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from both Rhodobacter (R.) sphaeroides and R. capsulatus. Mutant RCs of both species harbor lysines in place of native residues of the L subunit at position 178 or 181 near monomeric bacteriochlorophyll BB. Analysis of kinetic measurements acquired throughout a range of temperatures demonstrated an increased rate of triplet transfer in the L178Ser ! Lys (‘‘L178K’’) mutant RCs and a decreased rate in the L181Phe ! Lys (‘‘L181K’’) mutant RCs from both species relative to their respective wild types. Activation energies extracted from Arrhenius plots suggest that triplet transfer in the L178K mutant RC is nearly isoenergetic with wild-type transfer while triplet transfer in the L181K mutant RC requires significantly less activation energy. This latter finding is counter to the observation of slower triplet transfer in the L181K mutant RC. Preliminary structural data offer evidence for direct ligation between the L181 lysine side chain and the central magnesium of BB, but the side chain of L178K is disordered. Our spectroscopic data suggest that these lysine substitutions elicit opposing changes in the relative geometric orientation of BB and that subtle changes in the protein environment can have dramatic and opposing effects on the rates of the photoprotective triplet energy transfer reaction. 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Marianne Schiffer

Argonne National Laboratory

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Fred J. Stevens

Argonne National Laboratory

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N. E. C. Duke

Argonne National Laboratory

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Yuri Y. Londer

Argonne National Laboratory

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Rosemarie Raffen

Argonne National Laboratory

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X. Cai

Argonne National Laboratory

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X. Yang

Argonne National Laboratory

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Andrzej Joachimiak

Argonne National Laboratory

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David M. Tiede

Argonne National Laboratory

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Deborah K. Hanson

Argonne National Laboratory

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