Rybarska J
Jagiellonian University Medical College
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Featured researches published by Rybarska J.
Biopolymers | 1998
Marek Skowronek; Barbara Stopa; Leszek Konieczny; Rybarska J; Barbara Piekarska; Edward Szneler; G. Bakalarski; Irena Roterman
The supramolecular organization of Congo Red molecules was studied to approach an understanding of the unusual complexation characteristics associated with the liquid crystalline nature of this dye. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and nmr data indicate that Congo Red assembly arrangements differ in water and salt solutions. Compact, highly ordered material with a distinct melting transition is created, but not below 0.3% sodium chloride concentration. The twist in the assembly arrangement of Congo Red molecules, caused in water by repulsion, decreases when the charges are shielded, allowing for more overlapping of the naphthalene rings and their engagement in stacking interaction. The crystallization transition observed in DSC analysis of Congo Red fast-assembled by cooling in salt solutions indicates that the formation of compact crystalline mesophase material is a time-consuming process in which coplanarity and a highly ordered organization must be achieved. Two different superposition variants, called “direct” and “reversed” here, were considered fundamental to compact Congo Red organization. They correspond to optimal face-to-face ring stackings, and are formed by simple direct translation or alternative imposition of reversed (180° rotated) molecules, respectively. In NaCl solution (2.8%) there is a significant downfield chemical shift alteration of the nmr signal related to proton 8, which is in the naphthalene ring on the side opposite to the charged sulfonic group. It was associated selectively with the transition of Congo Red to compact form. This effect confirms the close approach of the sulfonic groups and proton 8, and indicates that formation of the reversed arrangement is favored in the Congo Red supramolecular organization. Molecular dynamics simulation based on AMBER 4.1 force field and analysis of electrostatic field densities around the molecule were used for comparative modeling. Molecular dynamics (150 ps) were simulated for two eight-molecule micelle models constructed to reflect direct and reversed arrangements of Congo Red molecules. Although both versions generally preserved their initial assembly structure in the simulations, the reversed version proved more stable. The proximity of the sulfonic group and proton 8, confirmed by computer analysis, explains the correlation between the formation of Congo Red micellar organization and the distinct shift alteration related to this proton, as found by nmr.
Biochimie | 1996
B. Pierkarska; Marek Skowronek; Rybarska J; Barbara Stopa; Irena Roterman; Leszek Konieczny
Disruption of tertiary interaction makes a protein accessible to penetration by different small molecular compounds. Their interaction may stabilize the altered protein conformation. Congo red is proposed here as a stabilizer of the molten globule state and also of highly reversible intermediates in the transition from native to molten state. Human immunoglobulin lambda light chain (dimer) was used. Two protein-Congo red complexes were found after heating lambda chain in the presence of Congo red. They differed in the amount of attached dye molecules. The binding of dye was interpreted as a two-step dye penetration process involving the peripheral parts of the protein in the first step (at lower temperatures). It was concluded that the liquid crystal properties of Congo red enable it to form specific complexes with proteins, which have become accessible to penetration by ligands after global or local disruption of tertiary interaction. This dye may thus be used as a stabilizer of unfolding intermediates in the step preceding the molten globule state.
Biopolymers | 2001
Barbara Piekarska; Leszek Konieczny; Rybarska J; Barbara Stopa; Grzegorz Zemanek; Edward Szneler; Marcin Król; Nowak M; Irena Roterman
Moderate heating (40–50°C) of immunoglobulins makes them accessible for binding with Congo Red and some related highly associated dyes. The binding is specific and involves supramolecular dye ligands presenting ribbon‐like micellar bodies. The L chain λ dimer, which upon heating disclosed the same binding requirement with respect to supramolecular dye ligands, was used in this work to identify the site of their attachment. Two clearly defined dye–protein (L λ chain) complexes arise upon heating, here called complex I and complex II. The first is formed at low temperatures (up to 40–45°C) and hence by a still native protein, while the formation of the second one is associated with domain melting above 55°C. They contain 4 and 8 dye molecules bound per L chain monomer, respectively. Complex I also forms efficiently at high dye concentration even at ambient temperature. Complex I and its formation was the object of the present studies. Three structural events that could make the protein accessible to penetration by the large dye ligand were considered to occur in L chains upon heating: local polypeptide chain destabilization, VL‐VL domain incoherence, and protein melting. Of these three possibilities, local low‐energy structural alteration was found to correlate best with the formation of complex I. It was identified as decreased packing stability of the N‐terminal polypeptide chain fragment, which as a result made the V domain accessible for dye penetration. The 19‐amino acid N‐terminal fragment becomes susceptible to proteolytic cleavage after being replaced by the dye at its packing locus. Its splitting from the dye–protein complex was proved by amino acid sequence analysis. The emptied packing locus, which becomes the site that holds the dye, is bordered by strands of amino acids numbered 74–80 and 105–110, as shown by model analysis. The character of the temperature‐induced local polypeptide chain destabilization and its possible role in intramolecular antibody signaling is discussed.
Biochimie | 1997
Barbara Stopa; Leszek Konieczny; Barbara Piekarska; Irena Roterman; Rybarska J; Marek Skowronek
A correlation was found between the ability of dyes (ANS, bis-ANS, Congo red, Evans blue) to form self-associated supramolecular structures in water and their tendency to form complexes with proteins. The self-association ability of dyes was measured as the resistance of a molecular sieve to their penetration. Quantitative evaluation of dye-protein interaction involved measuring the effect of dye on antibodies that agglutinate sheep red blood cells. Enhancement of agglutination by dye was assumed to represent its protein complexation ability. The results confirm that, relative to monomers, self-associated ligands also have altered protein binding properties.
Journal of Computer-aided Molecular Design | 2004
Marcin Król; Tomasz Borowski; Irena Roterman; Barbara Piekarska; Barbara Stopa; Rybarska J; Leszek Konieczny
Congo red, a diazo dye widely used in medical diagnosis, is known to form supramolecular systems in solution. Such a supramolecular system may interact with various proteins. In order to examine the nature of such complexes empirical force field parameters for the Congo red molecule were developed. The parametrization of bonding terms closely followed the methodology used in the development of the charmm22 force field, except for the calculation of charges. Point charges were calculated from a fit to a quantum mechanically derived electrostatic potential using the CHELP-BOW method. Obtained parameters were tested in a series of molecular dynamics simulations of both a single molecule and a micelle composed of Congo red molecules. It is shown that newly developed parameters define a stable minimum on the hypersurface of the potential energy and crystal and ab initio geometries and rotational barriers are well reproduced. Furthermore, rotations around C-N bonds are similar to torsional vibrations observed in crystals of diphenyl-diazene, which confirms that the flexibility of the molecule is correct. Comparison of results obtained from micelles molecular dynamics simulations with experimental data shows that the thermal dependence of micelle creation is well reproduced.
Mini-reviews in Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Anna Jagusiak; Leszek Konieczny; Marcin Król; Piotr E. Marszalek; Barbara Piekarska; Piotr Piwowar; Irena Roterman; Rybarska J; Barbara Stopa; Grzegorz Zemanek
Micellar structures formed by self-assembling Congo red molecules bind to proteins penetrating into functionrelated unstable packing areas. Here, we have used Congo red - a supramolecular protein ligand to investigate how the intramolecular structural changes that take place in antibodies following antigen binding lead to complement activation. According to our findings, Congo red binding significantly enhances the formation of antigen-antibody complexes. As a result, even low-affinity transiently binding antibodies can participate in immune complexes in the presence of Congo red, although immune complexes formed by these antibodies fail to trigger the complement cascade. This indicates that binding of antibodies to the antigen may not, by itself, fulfill the necessary conditions to generate the signal which triggers effector activity. These findings, together with the results of molecular dynamics simulation studies, enable us to conclude that, apart from the necessary assembling of antibodies, intramolecular structural changes generated by strains which associate high- affinity bivalent antibody fitting to antigen determinants are also required to cross the complement activation threshold.
Archive | 2018
Rybarska J; Barbara Piekarska; Barbara Stopa; Grzegorz Zemanek; Leszek Konieczny; Irena Roterman
The standard substrate complexation mechanism engages natural binding sites. In contrast, supramolecular structures may form complexes with proteins by penetrating in regions which are either naturally unstable or become temporarily accessible due to structural rearrangements related to the protein’s function. This may result in enhancement of irreversible processes (e.g. immune complexation or complement activation) or inhibition of reversible processes (e.g. enzymatic catalysis). Only ribbon-like supramolecular structures may form complexes with proteins. Having anchored itself inside the protein, the supramolecular ligand is protected against environmental factors such as changes in pH. This type of interaction represents a unique, nonstandard phenomenon in the context of proteomics.
Archive | 2018
J. Natkaniec; Anna Jagusiak; Rybarska J; Tomasz Gosiewski; Jolanta Kaszuba-Zwoińska; Małgorzata Bulanda
The antimicrobial activity of metal ions, especially silver ions, has been known since ancient times. Consequently, finding an accessible, cheap and efficient carrier of metal ions remains an important challenge in molecular biology. The supramolecular system presented in this chapter consists of a mixture of Congo red and Titan yellow molecules forming a supramolecular ligand which is a potent complexing agent of silver ions. Delivery of ions in complex with supramolecular dye is advantageous due to the reduced toxicity. In addition, the use of Congo red provides selective action and – thanks to increased solubility – facilitates efficient dispersion of the carrier dye and excretion from the organism.
Archive | 2018
Anna Jagusiak; Rybarska J; Barbara Piekarska; Barbara Stopa; Leszek Konieczny
Supramolecular Congo red has been used to validate long-lasting theories regarding intramolecular signaling in antibodies and its relation to activation of the complement system. Strong enhancement of antigen-antibody complexation resulting from the binding of supramolecular ligands enables also polyclonal antibodies having intermediate affinity to trigger complement cascade apart of high affinity antibody fraction. This would not have been possible in the absence of Congo red. The property of antibodies provides specifically their ability to trigger the complement system allowed when sufficient structural strain is produced by antigen complexation provides an evidence of intramolecular signaling.
Archive | 2018
Grzegorz Zemanek; Anna Jagusiak; Rybarska J; Piotr Piwowar; Katarzyna Chłopaś; Irena Roterman
Self-assembled organic compounds which form ribbon-like micellar clusters may attach themselves to proteins, penetrating in areas of low stability. Such complexation involves regions other than the protein’s natural binding site. The supramolecular ligand adheres to beta folds or random coils which become susceptible to complexation as a result of function-related structural changes – e.g. antibodies engaged in immune complexes or acute phase proteins. However, even seemingly unsusceptible helical proteins may bind Congo red if they include chameleon sequences (short peptide fragments capable of adopting different secondary conformations depending on environmental conditions). Examples of such proteins include hemoglobin and albumin. Complexation of supramolecular Congo red is often associated with increased fluorescence, indicating breakdown of ligand micelles in the complex. This phenomenon may be used in diagnostic tests.