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Dive into the research topics where Paula Leandro is active.

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Featured researches published by Paula Leandro.


Microbiology | 2008

The lytic cassette of mycobacteriophage Ms6 encodes an enzyme with lipolytic activity.

Filipa Gil; Maria João Catalão; José Moniz-Pereira; Paula Leandro; Michael R. McNeil; Madalena Pimentel

dsDNA bacteriophages use the dual system endolysin-holin to achieve lysis of their bacterial host. In addition to these two essential genes, some bacteriophages encode additional proteins within their lysis module. In this report, we describe the activity of a protein encoded by gene lysB from the mycobacteriophage Ms6. lysB is localized within the lysis cassette, between the endolysin gene (lysA) and the holin gene (hol). Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence of LysB revealed the presence of a conserved motif (Gly-Tyr-Ser-Gln-Gly) characteristic of enzymes with lipolytic activity. A blast search within the sequences of protein databases revealed significant similarities to other putative proteins that are encoded by mycobacteriophages only, indicating that LysB and those proteins may be specific to their mycobacterial hosts. A screening for His(6)-LysB activity on esterase and lipase substrates confirmed the lipolytic activity. Examination of the kinetic parameters of recombinant His(6)-LysB for the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl esters indicated that although this protein could use a wide range of chain length substrates (C(4)-C(18)), it presents a higher affinity for p-nitrophenyl esters of longer chain length (C(16) and C(18)). Using p-nitrophenyl butyrate as a substrate, the enzyme showed optimal activity at 23 degrees C and pH 7.5-8.0. Activity was increased in the presence of Ca(2+) and Mn(2+). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first description of a protein with lipolytic activity encoded within a bacteriophage.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Population genetics of hyperphenylalaninaemia resulting from phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency in Portugal.

Isabel Rivera; Paula Leandro; Uta Lichter-Konecki; I Tavares de Almeida; Maria Celeste Lechner

In order to elucidate the molecular basis of phenylketonuria (PKU) in Portugal, a detailed study of the Portuguese mutant phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) genes was performed. A total of 222 mutant alleles from 111 PKU families were analysed for 26 mutations and restriction fragment length polymorphismlvariable number tandem repeat (RFLP/VNTR) haplotypes. It was possible to characterise 55% of the mutant alleles, in which 14 different mutations (R261Q, V388M, IVS10nt-11, I65T, P281L, R252W, R158Q, L348V, Y414C, L311P, Y198fsdel22bp, R408W, R270K, and R261X) and three polymorphisms (Q232Q, V245V, and L385L) were identified. A total of 14 different haplotypes were observed, with a high prevalence of haplotype 1 among mutant and normal alleles. The results reported in this study show considerable genetic heterogeneity in the Portuguese PKU population, as has also been described for other southern European populations.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

NO· Binds Human Cystathionine β-synthase Quickly and Tightly

João B. Vicente; Henrique G. Colaço; Marisa I.S. Mendes; Paolo Sarti; Paula Leandro; Alessandro Giuffrè

Background: The H2S-generating human enzyme cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) is inhibited by NO• and CO. Results: NO• binds to the ferrous heme in human CBS much more quickly than CO and much more tightly than currently thought. Conclusion: Results support the physiological role of NO• in CBS regulation. Significance: CBS may integrate the cross-talk among NO•, CO, and H2S, major modulators in human (patho)physiology. The hexa-coordinate heme in the H2S-generating human enzyme cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) acts as a redox-sensitive regulator that impairs CBS activity upon binding of NO• or CO at the reduced iron. Despite the proposed physiological relevance of this inhibitory mechanism, unlike CO, NO• was reported to bind at the CBS heme with very low affinity (Kd = 30–281 μm). This discrepancy was herein reconciled by investigating the NO• reactivity of recombinant human CBS by static and stopped-flow UV-visible absorption spectroscopy. We found that NO• binds tightly to the ferrous CBS heme, with an apparent Kd ≤0.23 μm. In line with this result, at 25 °C, NO• binds quickly to CBS (kon ∼ 8 × 103 m−1 s−1) and dissociates slowly from the enzyme (koff ∼ 0.003 s−1). The observed rate constants for NO• binding were found to be linearly dependent on [NO•] up to ∼ 800 μm NO•, and >100-fold higher than those measured for CO, indicating that the reaction is not limited by the slow dissociation of Cys-52 from the heme iron, as reported for CO. For the first time the heme of human CBS is reported to bind NO• quickly and tightly, providing a mechanistic basis for the in vivo regulation of the enzyme by NO•. The novel findings reported here shed new light on CBS regulation by NO• and its possible (patho)physiological relevance, enforcing the growing evidence for an interplay among the gasotransmitters NO•, CO, and H2S in cell signaling.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Phenylketonuria as a protein misfolding disease: The mutation pG46S in phenylalanine hydroxylase promotes self-association and fibril formation.

João Leandro; Nina Simonsen; Jaakko Saraste; Paula Leandro; Torgeir Flatmark

The missense mutation pG46S in the regulatory (R) domain of human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPAH), associated with a severe form of phenylketonuria, generates a misfolded protein which is rapidly degraded on expression in HEK293 cells. When overexpressed as a MBP-G46S fusion protein, soluble and fully active tetrameric/dimeric forms are assembled and recovered in a metastable conformational state. When MBP is cleaved off, G46S undergoes a conformational change and self-associates with a lag phase and an autocatalytic growth phase (tetramers≫dimers), as determined by light scattering. The self-association is controlled by pH, ionic strength, temperature, protein concentration and the phosphorylation state of Ser16; the net charge of the protein being a main modulator of the process. A superstoichiometric amount of WT dimers revealed a 2-fold enhancement of the rate of G46S dimer self-association. Electron microscopy demonstrates the formation of higher-order oligomers and linear polymers of variable length, partly as a branching network, and partly as individual long and twisted fibrils (diameter ~145-300Å). The heat-shock proteins Hsp70/Hsp40, Hsp90 and a proposed pharmacological PAH chaperone (3-amino-2-benzyl-7-nitro-4-(2-quinolyl)-1,2-dihydroisoquinolin-1-one) partly inhibit the self-association process. Our data indicate that the G46S mutation results in a N-terminal extension of α-helix 1 which perturbs the wild-type α-β sandwich motif in the R-domain and promotes new intermolecular contacts, self-association and non-amyloid fibril formation. The metastable conformational state of G46S as a MBP fusion protein, and its self-association propensity when released from MBP, may represent a model system for the study of other hPAH missense mutations characterized by misfolded proteins.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Heterotetrameric forms of human phenylalanine hydroxylase: Co-expression of wild-type and mutant forms in a bicistronic system

João Leandro; Paula Leandro; Torgeir Flatmark

Hybrid forms of human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPAH) mutants have been found to present catalytic activities lower than predicted from the individual recombinant forms, indicating that interallelic complementation could be a major determinant of the metabolic phenotype of compound heterozygous phenylketonuric (PKU) patients. To provide a molecular explanation for interallelic complementation we have here developed a bicistronic expression system and a purification strategy to obtain isolated hPAH heteromeric forms. On co-expression of WT-hPAH (~50% tetramer; ~10% dimer) and the N- and C-terminally truncated form ΔN102/ΔC24-hPAH (~80% dimer) no heterodimers were recovered. Moreover, by co-expression of WT-hPAH and the N-terminally truncated form ΔN102-hPAH (~95% tetramer), heterotetramers, as a result of an assembly of two different homodimers, were isolated. The recovered (WT)/(ΔN102)-hPAH heterotetramers revealed a catalytic activity deviating significantly from that calculated by averaging the respective recombinant homotetrameric forms. The heterotetramer assembly also results in conformational changes in the WT-hPAH protomer, as detected by trypsin limited proteolysis. The finding that the presence of two homodimers with different kinetic parameters influences the properties of the resulting heterotetrameric protein indicates that the dimers exhibit interactions which are transmitted across the assembled tetramer. The bicistronic expression system developed here allowed the isolation of hybrid forms that exhibit negative interallelic complementation, and may represent a model system for studying the molecular pathogenic mechanisms of PAH gene mutations in compound heterozygous PKU patients, providing the rationale to understand the observed inconsistencies both in genotype/phenotype correlations and in the response to BH(4) supplementation.


Protein Journal | 2008

Modulation of the Activity of Newly Synthesized Human Phenylalanine Hydroxylase Mutant Proteins by Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds

C Nascimento; João Leandro; Isabel Tavares de Almeida; Paula Leandro

Phenylketonuria, the most frequent disorder of amino acid metabolism, is caused by a deficient activity of human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPAH). Rescue of the enzyme activity of several recombinant hPAH mutant forms (I65T, R261Q, R270K and V388M) by low molecular weight compounds namely glycerol, trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) and sodium 4-phenylbutyrate (4-PB) was investigated using a prokaryotic expression model. The studied compounds were added to the culture medium, in a concentration dependent manner, simultaneously to induction of protein expression. Among the tested molecules glycerol and TMAO were able to increase the enzyme activity of the studied mutant proteins. Furthermore, a decrease in aggregates and a recovery of the active tetrameric and dimeric forms were detected. Since the addition of the studied compounds to the medium did not change the expression level of E. Coli molecular chaperones we postulate that glycerol and TMAO rescue results from a direct stabilizing effect of the newly synthesized mutant hPAH enzymes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

S-Adenosyl-L-methionine modulates CO and NO· binding to the human H2S-generating enzyme cystathionine β-synthase

João B. Vicente; Henrique G. Colaço; Paolo Sarti; Paula Leandro; Alessandro Giuffrè

Cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) is a key enzyme in human (patho)physiology with a central role in hydrogen sulfide metabolism. The enzyme is composed of a pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-binding catalytic domain, flanked by the following two domains: a heme-binding N-terminal domain and a regulatory C-terminal domain binding S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet). CO or NO• binding at the ferrous heme negatively modulates the enzyme activity. Conversely, AdoMet binding stimulates CBS activity. Here, we provide experimental evidence for a functional communication between the two domains. We report that AdoMet binding significantly enhances CBS inhibition by CO. Consistently, we observed increased affinity (∼5-fold) and faster association (∼10-fold) of CO to the ferrous heme at physiological AdoMet concentrations. NO• binding to reduced CBS was also enhanced by AdoMet, although to a lesser extent (∼2-fold higher affinity) as compared with CO. Importantly, CO and NO• binding was unchanged by AdoMet in a truncated form of CBS lacking the C-terminal regulatory domain. These unprecedented observations demonstrate that CBS activation by AdoMet puzzlingly sensitizes the enzyme toward inhibition by exogenous ligands, like CO and NO•. This further supports the notion that CBS regulation is a complex process, involving the concerted action of multiple physiologically relevant effectors.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Protein Arginine Methylation Is More Prone to Inhibition by S-Adenosylhomocysteine than DNA Methylation in Vascular Endothelial Cells

Ruben Esse; Monica S. Rocha; Madalena Barroso; Cristina Florindo; Tom Teerlink; Robert M. Kok; Yvo M. Smulders; Isabel Rivera; Paula Leandro; Pieter Koolwijk; Rita Castro; Henk J. Blom; Isabel Tavares de Almeida

Methyltransferases use S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) as methyl group donor, forming S-adenosylhomocysteine (AdoHcy) and methylated substrates, including DNA and proteins. AdoHcy inhibits most methyltransferases. Accumulation of intracellular AdoHcy secondary to Hcy elevation elicits global DNA hypomethylation. We aimed at determining the extent at which protein arginine methylation status is affected by accumulation of intracellular AdoHcy. AdoHcy accumulation in human umbilical vein endothelial cells was induced by inhibition of AdoHcy hydrolase by adenosine-2,3-dialdehyde (AdOx). As a measure of protein arginine methylation status, the levels of monomethylarginine (MMA) and asymmetric and symmetric dimethylated arginine residues (ADMA and SDMA, respectively) in cell protein hydrolysates were measured by HPLC. A 10% decrease was observed at a 2.5-fold increase of intracellular AdoHcy. Western blotting revealed that the translational levels of the main enzymes catalyzing protein arginine methylation, protein arginine methyl transferases (PRMTs) 1 and 5, were not affected by AdoHcy accumulation. Global DNA methylation status was evaluated by measuring 5-methylcytosine and total cytosine concentrations in DNA hydrolysates by LC-MS/MS. DNA methylation decreased by 10% only when intracellular AdoHcy concentration accumulated to 6-fold of its basal value. In conclusion, our results indicate that protein arginine methylation is more sensitive to AdoHcy accumulation than DNA methylation, pinpointing a possible new player in methylation-related pathology.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Lack of Aquaporin 3 in bovine erythrocyte membranes correlates with low glycerol permeation

Elisa Campos; Teresa F. Moura; Abel Oliva; Paula Leandro; Graça Soveral

In general, erythrocytes are highly permeable to water, urea and glycerol. However, expression of aquaporin isoforms in erythrocytes appears to be species characteristic. In the present study, human (hRBC) and bovine (bRBC) erythrocytes were chosen for comparative studies due to their significant difference in membrane glycerol permeability. Osmotic water permeability (P(f)) at 23°C was (2.89 ± 0.37) × 10(-2) and (5.12 ± 0.61) × 10(-2)cms(-1) for human and bovine cells, respectively, with similar activation energies for water transport. Glycerol permeability (P(gly)) for human ((1.37 ± 0.26) × 10(-5)cms(-1)) differed in three orders of magnitude from bovine erythrocytes ((5.82 ± 0.37) × 10(-8)cms(-1)) that also showed higher activation energy for glycerol transport. When compared to human, bovine erythrocytes showed a similar expression pattern of AQP1 glycosylated forms on immunoblot analysis, though in slight higher levels, which could be correlated with the 1.5-fold larger P(f) found. However, AQP3 expression was not detectable. Immunofluorescence analysis confirmed the absence of AQP3 expression in bovine erythrocyte membranes. In conclusion, lack of AQP3 in bovine erythrocytes points to the lipid pathway as responsible for glycerol permeation and explains the low glycerol permeability and high E(a) for transport observed in ruminants.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2014

Reduced response of Cystathionine Beta-Synthase (CBS) to S-Adenosylmethionine (SAM): Identification and functional analysis of CBS gene mutations in Homocystinuria patients

Marisa I.S. Mendes; Henrique G. Colaço; Desiree Smith; Ruben Ramos; Ana Pop; Silvy J. M. van Dooren; Isabel Tavares de Almeida; Leo A. J. Kluijtmans; M. Janssen; Isabel Rivera; Gajja S. Salomons; Paula Leandro; Henk J. Blom

A reduced response of cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) to its allosteric activator S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) has been reported to be a cause of CBS dysfunction in homocystinuria patients. In this work we performed a retrospective analysis of fibroblast data from 62 homocystinuria patients and found that 13 of them presented a disturbed SAM activation. Their genotypic background was identified and the corresponding CBS mutant proteins were produced in E. coli. Nine distinct mutations were detected in 22 independent alleles: the novel mutations p.K269del, p.P427L, p.S500L and p.L540Q; and the previously described mutations p.P49L, p.C165Rfs*2, p.I278T, p.R336H and p.D444N. Expression levels and residual enzyme activities, determined in the soluble fraction of E. coli lysates, strongly correlated with the localization of the affected amino acid residue. C-terminal mutations lead to activities in the range of the wild-type CBS and to oligomeric forms migrating faster than tetramers, suggesting an abnormal conformation that might be responsible for the lack of SAM activation. Mutations in the catalytic core were associated with low protein expression levels, decreased enzyme activities and a higher content of high molecular mass forms. Furthermore, the absence of SAM activation found in the patients’ fibroblasts was confirmed for all but one of the characterized recombinant proteins (p.P49L). Our study experimentally supports a deficient regulation of CBS by SAM as a frequently found mechanism in CBS deficiency, which should be considered not only as a valuable diagnostic tool but also as a potential target for the development of new therapeutic approaches in classical homocystinuria.

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João B. Vicente

Spanish National Research Council

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Fv Ventura

University of Amsterdam

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Maria Celeste Lechner

Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência

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S Violante

University of Amsterdam

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