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Dive into the research topics where S. Ramaswamy is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Ramaswamy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Isolation of an endotoxin–MD-2 complex that produces Toll-like receptor 4-dependent cell activation at picomolar concentrations

Theresa L. Gioannini; Athmane Teghanemt; DeSheng Zhang; Nathan P. Coussens; Wendie Dockstader; S. Ramaswamy; Jerrold Weiss

Host proinflammatory responses to minute amounts of endotoxins derived from many Gram-negative bacteria require the interaction of lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP), CD14, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and MD-2. Optimal sensitivity to endotoxin requires an ordered series of endotoxin–protein and protein–protein interactions. At substoichiometric concentrations, LBP facilitates delivery of endotoxin aggregates to soluble CD14 (sCD14) to form monomeric endotoxin–sCD14 complexes. Subsequent interactions of endotoxin–sCD14 with TLR4 and/or MD-2 have not been specifically defined. This study reports the purification of a stable, monomeric, bioactive endotoxin–MD-2 complex generated by treatment of endotoxin–sCD14 with recombinant MD-2. Efficient generation of this complex occurred at picomolar concentrations of endotoxin and nanogram per milliliter doses of MD-2 and required presentation of endotoxin to MD-2 as a monomeric endotoxin–CD14 complex. TLR4-dependent delivery of endotoxin to human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells and cell activation at picomolar concentrations of endotoxin occurred with the purified endotoxin–MD-2 complex, but not with purified endotoxin aggregates with or without LBP and/or sCD14. The presence of excess MD-2 inhibited delivery of endotoxin–MD-2 to HEK/TLR4 cells and cell activation. These findings demonstrate that TLR4-dependent activation of host cells by picomolar concentrations of endotoxin occurs by sequential interaction and transfer of endotoxin to LBP, CD14, and MD-2 and simultaneous engagement of endotoxin and TLR4 by MD-2.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Characterization of the N-acetyl-5-neuraminic acid binding site of the extracytoplasmic solute receptor (SiaP) of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae strain 2019

Jason W. Johnston; Nathan P. Coussens; Simon Allen; Jon C. D. Houtman; Keith H. Turner; Anthony Zaleski; S. Ramaswamy; Bradford W. Gibson; Michael A. Apicella

Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae is an opportunistic human pathogen causing otitis media in children and chronic bronchitis and pneumonia in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The outer membrane of nontypeable H. influenzae is dominated by lipooligosaccharides (LOS), many of which incorporate sialic acid as a terminal nonreducing sugar. Sialic acid has been demonstrated to be an important factor in the survival of the bacteria within the host environment. H. influenzae is incapable of synthesizing sialic acid and is dependent on scavenging free sialic acid from the host environment. To achieve this, H. influenzae utilizes a tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic transporter. In this study, we characterize the binding site of the extracytoplasmic solute receptor (SiaP) from nontypeable H. influenzae strain 2019. A crystal structure of N-acetyl-5-neuraminic acid (Neu5Ac)-bound SiaP was determined to 1.4Å resolution. Thermodynamic characterization of Neu5Ac binding shows this interaction is enthalpically driven with a substantial unfavorable contribution from entropy. This is expected because the binding of SiaP to Neu5Ac is mediated by numerous hydrogen bonds and has several buried water molecules. Point mutations targeting specific amino acids were introduced in the putative binding site. Complementation with the mutated siaP constructs resulted either in full, partial, or no complementation, depending on the role of specific residues. Mass spectrometry analysis of the O-deacylated LOS of the R127K point mutation confirmed the observation of reduced incorporation of Neu5Ac into the LOS. The decreased ability of H. influenzae to import sialic acid had negative effects on resistance to complement-mediated killing and viability of biofilms in vitro, confirming the importance of sialic acid transport to the bacterium.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Structural basis for regioselectivity and stereoselectivity of product formation by naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase.

Daniel J. Ferraro; Adam Okerlund; Jonathan C. Mowers; S. Ramaswamy

Rieske oxygenase (RO) systems are two- and three-component enzyme systems that catalyze the formation of cis-dihydrodiols from aromatic substrates. Degradation of pollutants in contaminated soil and generation of chiral synthons have been the major foci of RO research. Substrate specificity and product regio- and stereoselectivity have been shown to vary between individual ROs. While directed evolution methods for altering RO function have been successful in the past, rational engineering of these enzymes still poses a challenge due to the lack of structural understanding. Here we examine the structural changes induced by mutation of Phe-352 in naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase from Pseudomonas sp. strain NCIB 9816-4 (NDO-O(9816-4)). Structures of the Phe-352-Val mutant in native form and in complex with phenanthrene and anthracene, along with those of wild-type NDO-O(9816-4) in complex with phenanthrene, anthracene, and 3-nitrotoluene, are presented. Phenanthrene was shown to bind in a different orientation in the Phe-352-Val mutant active site from that in the wild type, while anthracene was found to bind in similar positions in both enzymes. Two orientations of 3-nitrotoluene were observed, i.e., a productive and a nonproductive orientation. These orientations help explain why NDO-O(9816-4) forms different products from 3-nitrotoluene than those made from nitrobenzene dioxygenase. Comparison of these structures among themselves and with other known ROs bound to substrates reveals that the orientation of substrate binding at the active site is the primary determinant of product regio- and stereoselectivity.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2014

In vivo crystallography at X-ray free-electron lasers: the next generation of structural biology?

François-Xavier Gallat; Naohiro Matsugaki; Nathan P. Coussens; Koichiro J. Yagi; Marion Boudes; Tetsuya Higashi; Daisuke Tsuji; Yutaka Tatano; Mamoru Suzuki; Eiichi Mizohata; Kensuke Tono; Yasumasa Joti; Takashi Kameshima; Jaehyun Park; Changyong Song; Takaki Hatsui; Makina Yabashi; Eriko Nango; Kohji Itoh; Fasséli Coulibaly; Stephen S. Tobe; S. Ramaswamy; Barbara Stay; So Iwata; Leonard M. G. Chavas

The serendipitous discovery of the spontaneous growth of protein crystals inside cells has opened the field of crystallography to chemically unmodified samples directly available from their natural environment. On the one hand, through in vivo crystallography, protocols for protein crystal preparation can be highly simplified, although the technique suffers from difficulties in sampling, particularly in the extraction of the crystals from the cells partly due to their small sizes. On the other hand, the extremely intense X-ray pulses emerging from X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) sources, along with the appearance of serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) is a milestone for radiation damage-free protein structural studies but requires micrometre-size crystals. The combination of SFX with in vivo crystallography has the potential to boost the applicability of these techniques, eventually bringing the field to the point where in vitro sample manipulations will no longer be required, and direct imaging of the crystals from within the cells will be achievable. To fully appreciate the diverse aspects of sample characterization, handling and analysis, SFX experiments at the Japanese SPring-8 angstrom compact free-electron laser were scheduled on various types of in vivo grown crystals. The first experiments have demonstrated the feasibility of the approach and suggest that future in vivo crystallography applications at XFELs will be another alternative to nano-crystallography.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014

Bacterial periplasmic sialic acid-binding proteins exhibit a conserved binding site

Thanuja Gangi Setty; Christine Cho; Sowmya Govindappa; Michael A. Apicella; S. Ramaswamy

Structure–function studies of sialic acid-binding proteins from F. nucleatum, P. multocida, V. cholerae and H. influenzae reveal a conserved network of hydrogen bonds involved in conformational change on ligand binding.


IUCrJ | 2016

Structure of a heterogeneous, glycosylated, lipid-bound, in vivo-grown protein crystal at atomic resolution from the viviparous cockroach Diploptera punctata

Sanchari Banerjee; Nathan P. Coussens; François-Xavier Gallat; Nitish Sathyanarayanan; Jandhyam Srikanth; Koichiro J. Yagi; James S. S. Gray; Stephen S. Tobe; Barbara Stay; Leonard M. G. Chavas; S. Ramaswamy

This article presents the features and structures of protein crystals naturally grown in vivo within developing embryos of the only known viviparous cockroach, D. punctata. This study reveals the heterogeneous nature of the crystalline protein with respect to amino-acid sequence, glycosylation and bound fatty acid at atomic resolution.


Microbial Biotechnology | 2018

Automation aided optimization of cloning, expression and purification of enzymes of the bacterial sialic acid catabolic and sialylation pathways enzymes for structural studies

Sneha Ganapayya Bairy; Lakshmi Narayanan Gopalan; Thanuja Gangi Setty; Sathya Srinivasachari; Lavanyaa Manjunath; Jay Prakash Kumar; Sai Rohit Guntupalli; Sucharita Bose; Vinod Nayak; Swagatha Ghosh; Nitish Sathyanarayanan; Rhawnie Caing-Carlsson; Weixiao Y. Wahlgren; Rosmarie Friemann; S. Ramaswamy; Muniasamy Neerathilingam

The process of obtaining a well‐expressing, soluble and correctly folded constructs can be made easier and quicker by automating the optimization of cloning, expression and purification. While there are many semiautomated pipelines available for cloning, expression and purification, there is hardly any pipeline that involves complete automation. Here, we achieve complete automation of all the steps involved in cloning and in vivo expression screening. This is demonstrated using 18 genes involved in sialic acid catabolism and the surface sialylation pathway. Our main objective was to clone these genes into a His‐tagged Gateway vector, followed by their small‐scale expression optimization in vivo. The constructs that showed best soluble expression were then selected for purification studies and scaled up for crystallization studies. Our technique allowed us to quickly find conditions for producing significant quantities of soluble proteins in Escherichia coli, their large‐scale purification and successful crystallization of a number of these proteins. The method can be implemented in other cases where one needs to screen a large number of constructs, clones and expression vectors for successful recombinant production of functional proteins.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2017

Crystal structure of N-acetylmannosamine kinase from Fusobacterium nucleatum

Rhawnie Caing-Carlsson; Parveen Goyal; Amit Sharma; Swagatha Ghosh; Thanuja Gangi Setty; Rachel A. North; Rosmarie Friemann; S. Ramaswamy

The enzyme N-acetylmannosamine kinase (NanK) catalyzes the second step of the bacterial sialic acid catabolic pathway. Here, the structure of F. nucleatum NanK is presented at 2.23u2005Å resolution.


Journal of the Indian Institute of Science | 2018

The New Era of Microcrystallography

Sanchari Banerjee; Pierre Montaville; Leonard M. G. Chavas; S. Ramaswamy

The function of a protein dictates its physical state in a cell. Evolution has imparted selection pressure on proteins to maximize their function and minimize cell death. Most of the proteins exist in their soluble form inside or outside the cells. However, a small fraction of proteins in the total protein pool crystallizes with functional consequence. These in vivo-grown protein crystals perform a diversity of functions, ranging from food storage to defense. Sometimes limited by the volume of the cells and the cellular concentration of proteins, these crystals are very small in size. Hence, it has been difficult to carry out conventional X-ray crystallography on these crystals. With the advent of microcrystallography, it is now possible to study the structures of these tiny crystals. In this review, some of the diverse examples of in vivo crystals and the new approaches towards microcrystallography are summarized.


IUCrJ | 2017

One enzyme, many reactions: structural basis for the various reactions catalyzed by naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase

Daniel J. Ferraro; Adam Okerlund; Eric N Brown; S. Ramaswamy

Rieske nonheme iron oxygenases often catalyze different reactions when different substrates bind to them. From the structures of complexes of naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase with substrates that result in different types of products, it is shown that the binding orientation of the substrate not only dictates regioselectivity and stereospecificity, but also determines the type of reaction that is catalyzed.

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Nathan P. Coussens

National Institutes of Health

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Daniel J. Ferraro

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Adam Okerlund

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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