Richard Odegrip
Stockholm University
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Featured researches published by Richard Odegrip.
Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2009
Bill Eldridge; R. Neil Cooley; Richard Odegrip; Duncan Mcgregor; Kevin J. FitzGerald; Christopher Ullman
One drawback to the use of peptides as therapeutics has been their susceptibility to proteolysis. Here, we have used an in vitro display technology, CIS display, to enhance the proteolytic resistance of ligand-binding peptides by selection of protecting motifs from a large peptide library. The premise to this selection was that certain linear peptides within a library could form structures capable of preventing the access of proteases to defined cleavage sites without affecting ligand binding. A diverse 12-mer peptide library was inserted between a FLAG epitope motif and a thrombin cleavage site and this construct was fused to the bacterial initiator protein RepA for CIS display selection. After five rounds of selection, protection motifs were isolated that were capable of preventing proteolytic cleavage of the adjacent thrombin site. Some of the selected peptides were also resistant to more promiscuous proteases, such as chymotrypsin and trypsin, which were not used in the selection. The observed resistance to thrombin, trypsin and chymotrypsin translated into increased resistance to plasma proteases in vitro and to an increase in circulating half-lives in rats. This method can be applied to enhancing the in vivo stability of therapeutic peptides.
Journal of Virology | 2000
Richard Odegrip; Stephan Schoen; Elisabeth Haggård-Ljungquist; Kyusung Park; Dhruba K. Chattoraj
ABSTRACT Bacteriophage P2 requires several host proteins for lytic replication, including helicase DnaB but not the helicase loader, DnaC. Some genetic studies have suggested that the loading is done by a phage-encoded protein, P2 B. However, a P2 minichromosome containing only the P2 initiator gene A and a marker gene can be established as a plasmid without requiring the P2 B gene. Here we demonstrate that P2 B associates with DnaB. This was done by using the yeast two-hybrid system in vivo and was confirmed in vitro, where 35S-labeled P2 B bound specifically to DnaB adsorbed to Q Sepharose beads and monoclonal antibodies directed against the His-tagged P2 B protein were shown to coprecipitate the DnaB protein. Finally, P2 B was shown to stabilize the opening of a reporter origin, a reaction that is facilitated by the inactivation of DnaB. In this respect, P2 B was comparable to λ P protein, which is known to be capable of binding and inactivating the helicase while acting as a helicase loader. Even though P2 B has little similarity to other known or predicted helicase loaders, we suggest that P2 B is required for efficient loading of DnaB and that this role, although dispensable for P2 plasmid replication, becomes essential for P2 lytic replication.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2006
Richard Odegrip; Anders S. Nilsson; Elisabeth Haggård-Ljungquist
The P2-like coliphages are highly similar; the structural genes show at least 96% identity. However, at two loci they have genes believed to be horizontally transferred. We show that the genetic content at the second loci, the TO region, contains six completely different sequences with high AT contents and with different open reading frames. The product of one of them exhibits reverse transcriptase activity and blocks infection of phage T5.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2016
Karolin Frykholm; Ronnie P.-A. Berntsson; Magnus Claesson; Laura de Battice; Richard Odegrip; Pål Stenmark; Fredrik Westerlund
The Cox protein from bacteriophage P2 forms oligomeric filaments and it has been proposed that DNA can be wound up around these filaments, similar to how histones condense DNA. We here use fluorescence microscopy to study single DNA–Cox complexes in nanofluidic channels and compare how the Cox homologs from phages P2 and WΦ affect DNA. By measuring the extension of nanoconfined DNA in absence and presence of Cox we show that the protein compacts DNA and that the binding is highly cooperative, in agreement with the model of a Cox filament around which DNA is wrapped. Furthermore, comparing microscopy images for the wild-type P2 Cox protein and two mutants allows us to discriminate between compaction due to filament formation and compaction by monomeric Cox. P2 and WΦ Cox have similar effects on the physical properties of DNA and the subtle, but significant, differences in DNA binding are due to differences in binding affinity rather than binding mode. The presented work highlights the use of single DNA molecule studies to confirm structural predictions from X-ray crystallography. It also shows how a small protein by oligomerization can have great impact on the organization of DNA and thereby fulfill multiple regulatory functions.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2014
Ronnie P.-A. Berntsson; Richard Odegrip; Wilhelmina Sehlén; Karin Skaar; Linda M. Svensson; Tariq Massad; Martin Högbom; Elisabeth Haggård-Ljungquist; Pål Stenmark
The Cox protein from bacteriophage P2 is a small multifunctional DNA-binding protein. It is involved in site-specific recombination leading to P2 prophage excision and functions as a transcriptional repressor of the P2 Pc promoter. Furthermore, it transcriptionally activates the unrelated, defective prophage P4 that depends on phage P2 late gene products for lytic growth. In this article, we have investigated the structural determinants to understand how P2 Cox performs these different functions. We have solved the structure of P2 Cox to 2.4 Å resolution. Interestingly, P2 Cox crystallized in a continuous oligomeric spiral with its DNA-binding helix and wing positioned outwards. The extended C-terminal part of P2 Cox is largely responsible for the oligomerization in the structure. The spacing between the repeating DNA-binding elements along the helical P2 Cox filament is consistent with DNA binding along the filament. Functional analyses of alanine mutants in P2 Cox argue for the importance of key residues for protein function. We here present the first structure from the Cox protein family and, together with previous biochemical observations, propose that P2 Cox achieves its various functions by specific binding of DNA while wrapping the DNA around its helical oligomer.
FEBS Letters | 2017
Robert Gustafsson; Ronnie P. A. Berntsson; Markel Martínez-Carranza; Geniver El Tekle; Richard Odegrip; Eric A. Johnson; Pål Stenmark
Botulinum neurotoxins are highly toxic substances and are all encoded together with one of two alternative gene clusters, the HA or the OrfX gene cluster. Very little is known about the function and structure of the proteins encoded in the OrfX gene cluster, which in addition to the toxin contains five proteins (OrfX1, OrfX2, OrfX3, P47, and NTNH). We here present the structures of OrfX2 and P47, solved to 2.1 and 1.8 Å, respectively. We show that they belong to the TULIP protein superfamily, which are often involved in lipid binding. OrfX1 and OrfX2 were both found to bind phosphatidylinositol lipids.
FEBS Letters | 2015
Karin Skaar; Magnus Claesson; Richard Odegrip; Martin Högbom; Elisabeth Haggård-Ljungquist; Pål Stenmark
Bacteriophage P2 is a temperate phage capable of integrating its DNA into the host genome by site‐specific recombination upon lysogenization. Integration and excision of the phage genome requires P2 integrase, which performs recognition, cleavage and joining of DNA during these processes. This work presents the high‐resolution crystal structure of the catalytic domain of P2 integrase, and analysis of the structure–function relationship of several previously identified non‐functional P2 integrase mutants. The DNA binding area is characterized by a large positively charged patch, harboring key residues. The structure reveals potential for large dimer flexibility, likely essential for rearrangement of DNA strands upon integration and excision of the phage DNA.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Richard Odegrip; David Coomber; Bill Eldridge; Rosemarie Hederer; Philip Kuhlman; Christopher Ullman; Kevin Fitzgerald; Duncan Mcgregor
Archive | 2003
Duncan Mcgregor; Richard Odegrip; Kevin Fitzgerald; Rosemarie Hederer; Bill Eldridge; Chris Ullman; Philip Kuhlman; David Coomber
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001
Richard Odegrip; Elisabeth Haggård-Ljungquist