Rajaram Swaminathan
Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati
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Featured researches published by Rajaram Swaminathan.
Biophysical Journal | 1994
Rajaram Swaminathan; G. Krishnamoorthy; N. Periasamy
The picosecond time-resolved fluorescence decay data of nine single-tryptophan (trp) proteins and two multi-trp proteins in their native and denatured states were analyzed by the maximum entropy method (MEM). In the denatured state (6 M guanidine hydrochloride) a majority of the single-trp proteins show bimodal (at 25 degrees C) and trimodal (at 85 degrees C) distributions with similar patterns and similar values for average lifetimes. In the native state of the proteins the lifetime distributions were bimodal or trimodal. These results (multimodal distributions) are contradictory to the unimodal Lorentzian distribution of lifetimes reported for some proteins in the native and denatured states. MEM analysis gives a unimodal distribution of lifetimes only when the signal-to-noise ratio is poor in the time-resolved fluorescence decay data. The unimodal distribution model is therefore not realistic for proteins in the native and denatured states. The fluorescence decay components of the bi- or trimodal distribution are associated with the rotamer structures of the indole moiety when the protein is in the random coil state.
Advances in Protein Chemistry | 2011
Rajaram Swaminathan; Vijay Kumar Ravi; Satish Kumar; Mattaparthi Venkata Satish Kumar; Nividh Chandra
Ever since lysozyme was discovered by Fleming in 1922, this protein has emerged as a model for investigations on protein structure and function. Over the years, several high-resolution structures have yielded a wealth of structural data on this protein. Extensive studies on folding of lysozyme have shown how different regions of this protein dynamically interact with one another. Data is also available from numerous biotechnological studies wherein lysozyme has been employed as a model protein for recovering active recombinant protein from inclusion bodies using small molecules like l-arginine. A variety of conditions have been developed in vitro to induce fibrillation in hen lysozyme. They include (a) acidic pH at elevated temperature, (b) concentrated solutions of ethanol, (c) moderate concentrations of guanidinium hydrochloride at moderate temperature, and (d) alkaline pH at room temperature. This review aims to bring together similarities and differences in aggregation mechanisms, morphology of aggregates, and related issues that arise using the different conditions mentioned above to improve our understanding. The alkaline pH condition (pH 12.2), discovered and studied extensively in our lab, shall receive special attention. More than a decade ago, it was revealed that mutations in human lysozyme can cause accumulation of large quantities of amyloid in liver, kidney, and other regions of gastrointestinal tract. Understanding the mechanism of lysozyme aggregation will probably have therapeutic implications for the treatment of systemic nonneuropathic amyloidosis. Numerous studies have begun to focus attention on inhibition of lysozyme aggregation using antibody or small molecules. The enzymatic activity of lysozyme presents a convenient handle to quantify the native population of lysozyme in a sample where aggregation has been inhibited. The rich information available on lysozyme coupled with the multiple conditions that have been successful in inducing/inhibiting its aggregation in vitro makes lysozyme an ideal model protein to investigate amyloidogenesis.
Biochemical Journal | 2008
Satish Kumar; Vijay Kumar Ravi; Rajaram Swaminathan
The early intermediates in the protein aggregation pathway, the elusive soluble aggregates, play a pivotal role in growth and maturation of ordered aggregates such as amyloid fibrils. Blocking the growth of soluble oligomers is an effective strategy to inhibit aggregation. To decipher the molecular mechanisms and develop better strategies to arrest aggregation, it is imperative to understand how the size, molecular dynamics, activity and growth kinetics of soluble aggregates are affected when aggregation is inhibited. With this objective, in the present study we have investigated the influence of additives such as SDS, CTAB (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) and DTT (dithiothreitol) on the slow aggregation of HEWL (hen eggwhite lysozyme) at pH 12.2. For this purpose, techniques such as steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of covalently labelled dansyl probe, gel-filtration chromatography, estimation of free thiol groups, thioflavin T and ANS (8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid) fluorescence, CD and atomic-force microscopy were employed to monitor the soluble oligomers over a period spanning 30 days. The results of the present study reveal that: (i) the spontaneous formation of soluble aggregates is irreversible and abolishes activity; (ii) the initial growth of aggregates (0-24 h) is promoted by a gradual increase in the exposure of hydrophobic surfaces; (iii) subsequently intermolecular disulfide bonds are critical for the assembly and stability of aggregates; (iv) the tight molecular packing inside large aggregates which contributed to slow (approximately 5 ns) and restricted segmental motion of dansyl probe was clearly loosened up in the presence of additives, enabling fast (1-2 ns) and free motion (unlike DTT, the size of lysozyme complexes with surfactants, was large, due to a conglomeration of proteins and surfactants); (v) the aggregates show reduced helical content compared with native lysozyme, except in the presence of SDS; and (vi) DTT was more potent than SDS/CTAB in arresting the growth of aggregates.
Journal of Chemical Sciences | 1996
Rajaram Swaminathan; N. Periasamy
Maximum entropy method (MEM) was used for resolving multiple decay components in synthetic and experimental time-resolved fluorescence decay. The distribution of lifetimes is unimodal or multimodal and there is a one-to-one correspondence between the results of MEM and discrete exponential analysis. The distribution is symmetric in log(τ) space and approximately Gaussian. The width of the distribution is sensitive to several factors related to the experimental or analysis conditions, such as the peak count, discretization in τ space, completeness of decay and theχ2 stopping criterion. Therefore, the width of the distribution cannot be a useful indicator of the extent of heterogeneity of lifetimes in a sample of a complex biological system.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Chinnapaka Somaiah; Atul Kumar; Darilang Mawrie; Amit Sharma; Suraj Dasharath Patil; Jina Bhattacharyya; Rajaram Swaminathan; Bithiah Grace Jaganathan
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) can differentiate into several cell types and are desirable candidates for cell therapy and tissue engineering. However, due to poor cell survival, proliferation and differentiation in the patient, the therapy outcomes have not been satisfactory. Although several studies have been done to understand the conditions that promote proliferation, differentiation and migration of MSC in vitro and in vivo, still there is no clear understanding on the effect of non-cellular bio molecules. Of the many factors that influence the cell behavior, the immediate cell microenvironment plays a major role. In this context, we studied the effect of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in controlling cell survival, proliferation, migration and directed MSC differentiation. We found that collagen promoted cell proliferation, cell survival under stress and promoted high cell adhesion to the cell culture surface. Increased osteogenic differentiation accompanied by high active RHOA (Ras homology gene family member A) levels was exhibited by MSC cultured on collagen. In conclusion, our study shows that collagen will be a suitable matrix for large scale production of MSC with high survival rate and to obtain high osteogenic differentiation for therapy.
FEBS Letters | 2006
Lopamudra Homchaudhuri; Satish Kumar; Rajaram Swaminathan
The onset of hen egg white lysozyme aggregation on exposure to alkaline pH of 12.2 and subsequent slow growth of soluble lysozyme aggregates (at 298 K) was directly monitored by steady‐state and time‐resolved fluorescence anisotropy of covalently attached dansyl probe over a period of 24 h. The rotational correlation time accounting for tumbling of lysozyme in solution (40 μM) increased from ∼3.6 ns (in pH 7) to ∼40 ns on exposure to pH 12.2 over a period of 6 h and remained stable thereafter. The growth of aggregates was strongly concentration dependent, irreversible after 60 min and inhibited by the presence of 0.9 M l‐arginine in the medium. The day old aggregates were resistant to denaturation by 6 M guanidine · HCl. Our results reveal slow segmental motion of the dansyl probe in day old aggregates in the absence of l‐arginine (0.9 M), but a much faster motion in its presence, when growth of aggregates is halted.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Vijay Kumar Ravi; Tulsi Swain; Nividh Chandra; Rajaram Swaminathan
Protein aggregation leading to formation of amyloid fibrils is a symptom of several diseases like Alzheimer’s, type 2 diabetes and so on. Elucidating the poorly understood mechanism of such phenomena entails the difficult task of characterizing the species involved at each of the multiple steps in the aggregation pathway. It was previously shown by us that spontaneous aggregation of hen-eggwhite lysozyme (HEWL) at room temperature in pH 12.2 is a good model to study aggregation. Here in this paper we investigate the growth kinetics, structure, function and dynamics of multiple intermediate species populating the aggregation pathway of HEWL at pH 12.2. The different intermediates were isolated by varying the HEWL monomer concentration in the 300 nM—0.12 mM range. The intermediates were characterized using techniques like steady-state and nanosecond time-resolved fluorescence, atomic force microscopy and dynamic light scattering. Growth kinetics of non-fibrillar HEWL aggregates were fitted to the von Bertalanffy equation to yield a HEWL concentration independent rate constant (k = (6.6±0.6)×10−5 s−1). Our results reveal stepwise changes in size, molecular packing and enzymatic activity among growing HEWL aggregates consistent with an isodesmic aggregation model. Formation of disulphide bonds that crosslink the monomers in the aggregate appear as a unique feature of this aggregation. AFM images of multiple amyloid fibrils emanating radially from amorphous aggregates directly confirmed that on-pathway fibril formation was feasible under isodesmic polymerization. The isolated HEWL aggregates are revealed as polycationic protein nanoparticles that are robust at neutral pH with ability to take up non-polar molecules like ANS.
Pramana | 2008
Manish Agrawal; S. B. Santra; Rajat Anand; Rajaram Swaminathan
The cytoplasm of a living cell is crowded with several macromolecules of different shapes and sizes. Molecular diffusion in such a medium becomes anomalous due to the presence of macromolecules and diffusivity is expected to decrease with increase in macromolecular crowding. Moreover, many cellular processes are dependent on molecular diffusion in the cell cytosol. The enzymatic reaction rate has been shown to be affected by the presence of such macromolecules. A simple numerical model is proposed here based on percolation and diffusion in disordered systems to study the effect of macromolecular crowding on the enzymatic reaction rates. The model qualitatively explains some of the experimental observations.
Langmuir | 2014
Ashish Kumar Thokchom; Rajaram Swaminathan; Anugrah Singh
Evaporation-induced particle deposition patterns like coffee rings provide easy visual identification that is beneficial for developing inexpensive and simple diagnostic devices for detecting pathogens. In this study, the effect of chemotaxis on such pattern formation has been realized experimentally in drying droplets of bacterial suspensions. We have investigated the velocity field, concentration profile, and deposition pattern in the evaporating droplet of Escherichia coli suspension in the presence and absence of nutrients. Flow visualization experiments using particle image velocimetry (PIV) were carried out with E. coli bacteria as biological tracer particles. Experiments were conducted for suspensions of motile (live) as well as nonmotile (dead) bacteria. In the absence of any nutrient gradient like sugar on the substrate, both types of bacterial suspension showed two symmetric convection cells and a ring like deposition of particles after complete evaporation. Interestingly, the droplet containing live bacterial suspension showed a different velocity field when the sugar was placed at the base of the droplet. This can be attributed to the chemoattractant nature of the sugar, which induced chemotaxis among live bacteria targeted toward the nutrient site. Deposition of the suspended bacteria was also displaced toward the nutrient site as the evaporation proceeded. Our experiments demonstrate that both velocity fields and concentration patterns can be altered by chemotaxis to modify the pattern formation in evaporating droplet containing live bacteria. These results highlight the role of bacterial chemotaxis in modifying coffee ring patterns.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014
Aditya Iyer; Anil Chandra; Rajaram Swaminathan
BACKGROUND Tagging a luminescent quantum dot (QD) with a biological like enzyme (Enz) creates value-added entities like quantum dot-enzyme bioconjugates (QDEnzBio) that find utility as sensors to detect glucose or beacons to track enzymes in vivo. For such applications, it is imperative that the enzyme remains catalytically active while the quantum dot is luminescent in the bioconjugate. A critical feature that dictates this is the quantum dot-enzyme linkage chemistry. Previously such linkages have put constraints on polypeptide chain dynamics or hindered substrate diffusion to active site, seriously undermining enzyme catalytic activity. In this work we address this issue using avidin-biotin linkage chemistry together with a flexible spacer to conjugate enzyme to quantum dot. METHODS The catalytic activity of three biotinylated hydrolytic enzymes, namely, hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL), alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was investigated post-conjugation to streptavidin linked quantum dot for multiple substrate concentrations and varying degrees of biotinylation. RESULTS We demonstrate that all enzymes retain full catalytic activity in the quantum dot-enzyme bioconjugates in comparison to biotinylated enzyme alone. However, unlike alkaline phosphatase and acetylcholinesterase, the catalytic activity of hen egg white lysozyme was observed to be increasingly susceptible to ionic strength of medium with rising level of biotinylation. This susceptibility was attributed to arise from depletion of positive charge from lysine amino groups after biotinylation. CONCLUSIONS We reasoned that avidin-biotin linkage in the presence of a flexible seven atom spacer between biotin and enzyme poses no constraints to enzyme structure/dynamics enabling retention of full enzyme activity. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Overall our results demonstrate for the first time that streptavidin-biotin chemistry can yield quantum dot enzyme bioconjugates that retain full catalytic activity as native enzyme.
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Mattaparthi Venkata Satish Kumar
Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati
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