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Dive into the research topics where Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere is active.

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Featured researches published by Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere.


Trends in Immunology | 2013

Calreticulin in the immune system: ins and outs.

Malini Raghavan; Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Larry Robert Peters; Natasha Del Cid

Calreticulin is a calcium-binding chaperone that has several functions in the immune response. In the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), calreticulin facilitates the folding of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules and their assembly factor tapasin, thereby influencing antigen presentation to cytotoxic T cells. Although calreticulin is normally ER-resident, it is found at the cell surface of living cancer cells and dying cells. Here, calreticulin promotes cellular phagocytic uptake. In tumor vaccine models, drugs that induce cell surface calreticulin confer enhanced tumor protection in an extracellular calreticulin-dependent manner. Much remains to be understood about the roles of calreticulin in these distinct functions. Further investigations are important towards advancing basic knowledge of glycoprotein-folding pathways, and towards developing new cancer therapeutic strategies.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2013

Neuropathy target esterase (NTE): overview and future

Rudy J. Richardson; Nichole D. Hein; Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; John K. Fink; G. F. Makhaeva

Neuropathy target esterase (NTE) was discovered by M.K. Johnson in his quest for the entity responsible for the striking and mysterious paralysis brought about by certain organophosphorus (OP) esters. His pioneering work on OP neuropathy led to the view that the biochemical lesion consisted of NTE that had undergone OP inhibition and aging. Indeed, nonaging NTE inhibitors failed to produce disease but protected against neuropathy from subsequently administered aging inhibitors. Thus, inhibition of NTE activity was not the culprit; rather, formation of an abnormal protein was the agent of the disorder. More recently, however, Paul Glynn and colleagues showed that whereas conventional knockout of the NTE gene was embryonic lethal, conditional knockout of central nervous system NTE produced neurodegeneration, suggesting to these authors that the absence of NTE rather than its presence in some altered form caused disease. We now know that NTE is the 6th member of a 9-protein family called patatin-like phospholipase domain-containing proteins, PNPLA1-9. Mutations in the catalytic domain of NTE (PNPLA6) are associated with a slowly developing disease akin to OP neuropathy and hereditary spastic paraplegia called NTE-related motor neuron disorder (NTE-MND). Furthermore, the NTE protein from affected individuals has altered enzymological characteristics. Moreover, closely related PNPLA7 is regulated by insulin and glucose. These seemingly disparate findings are not necessarily mutually exclusive, but we need to reconcile recent genetic findings with the historical body of toxicological data indicating that inhibition and aging of NTE are both necessary in order to produce neuropathy from exposure to certain OP compounds. Solving this mystery will be satisfying in itself, but it is also an enterprise likely to pay dividends by enhancing our understanding of the physiological and pathogenic roles of the PNPLA family of proteins in neurological health and disease, including a potential role for NTE in diabetic neuropathy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Calreticulin is a thermostable protein with distinct structural responses to different divalent cation environments

Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Ari Gafni; Malini Raghavan

Calreticulin is a soluble calcium-binding chaperone of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) that is also detected on the cell surface and in the cytosol. Calreticulin contains a single high affinity calcium-binding site within a globular domain and multiple low affinity sites within a C-terminal acidic region. We show that the secondary structure of calreticulin is remarkably thermostable at a given calcium concentration. Rather than corresponding to complete unfolding events, heat-induced structural transitions observed for calreticulin relate to tertiary structural changes that expose hydrophobic residues and reduce protein rigidity. The thermostability and the overall secondary structure content of calreticulin are impacted by the divalent cation environment, with the ER range of calcium concentrations enhancing stability, and calcium-depleting or high calcium environments reducing stability. Furthermore, magnesium competes with calcium for binding to calreticulin and reduces thermostability. The acidic domain of calreticulin is an important mediator of calcium-dependent changes in secondary structure content and thermostability. Together, these studies indicate interactions between the globular and acidic domains of calreticulin that are impacted by divalent cations. These interactions influence the structure and stability of calreticulin, and are likely to determine the multiple functional activities of calreticulin in different subcellular environments.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2010

Kinetics and mechanism of inhibition of serine esterases by fluorinated aminophosphonates.

G. F. Makhaeva; Alexey Yu. Aksinenko; V. B. Sokolov; I. I. Baskin; V. A. Palyulin; N. S. Zefirov; Nichole D. Hein; Jeff W. Kampf; Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Rudy J. Richardson

This paper reviews previously published data and presents new results to address the hypothesis that fluorinated aminophosphonates (FAPs), (RO)(2)P(O)C(CF(3))(2)NHS(O)(2)C(6)H(5), R=alkyl, inhibit serine esterases by scission of the P-C bond. Kinetics studies demonstrated that FAPs are progressive irreversible inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase (AChE, EC 3.1.1.7.), butyrylcholinesterase (BChE, EC 3.1.1.8.), carboxylesterase (CaE, EC 3.1.1.1.), and neuropathy target esterase (NTE, EC 3.1.1.5.), consistent with P-C bond breakage. Chemical reactivity experiments showed that diMe-FAP and diEt-FAP react with water to yield the corresponding dialkylphosphates and (CF(3))(2)CHNHS(O)(2)C(6)H(5), indicating lability of the P-C bond. X-ray crystallography of diEt-FAP revealed an elongated (and therefore weaker) P-C bond (1.8797 (13)A) compared to P-C bonds in dialkylphosphonates lacking alpha-CF(3) groups (1.805-1.822A). Semi-empirical and non-empirical molecular modeling of diEt-FAP and (EtO)(2)P(O)C(CH(3))(2)NHS(O)(2)C(6)H(5) (diEt-AP), which lacks CF(3) groups, indicated lengthening and destabilization of the P-C bond in diEt-FAP compared to diEt-AP. Active site peptide adducts formed by reacting diEt-FAP with BChE and diBu-FAP with NTE catalytic domain (NEST) were identified using peptide mass mapping with mass spectrometry (MS). Mass shifts (mean+/-SE, average mass) for peaks corresponding to active site peptides with diethylphosphoryl and monoethylphosphoryl adducts on BChE were 136.1+/-0.1 and 108.0+/-0.1Da, respectively. Corresponding mass shifts for dibutylphosphoryl and monobutylphosphoryl adducts on NEST were 191.8+/-0.2 and 135.5+/-0.1Da, respectively. Each of these values was statistically identical to the theoretical mass shift for each dialkylphosphoryl and monoalkylphosphoryl species. The MS results demonstrate that inhibition of BChE and NEST by FAPs yields dialkylphosphoryl and monoalkylphosphoryl adducts, consistent with phosphorylation via P-C bond cleavage and aging by net dealkylation. Taken together, predictions from enzyme kinetics, chemical reactivity, X-ray crystallography, and molecular modeling were confirmed by MS and support the hypothesis that FAPs inhibit serine esterases via scission of the P-C bond.


Hayes' Handbook of Pesticide Toxicology (Third Edition) | 2010

Neuropathy Target Esterase

Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Rudy J. Richardson

Publisher Summary This chapter deals with neuropathy target esterase (NTE). Human NTE is now known as patatin-like phospholipase domain-containing protein-6 because of the homology of its catalytic domain to patatin, a lipid acyl hydrolase found in potatoes and other plants. It is also cataloged as a lysophospholipase due to its hydrolysis of lysophosphatidylcholine to glycerophosphocholine, but its precise physiological and pathogenic roles have not been firmly established. The protein was first identified in hen brain as the target for initiation of OPIDN by neuropathic OP compounds. NTE is commonly assayed as the activity toward the nonphysiological substrate PV that is resistant to preincubation with nonneuropathic paraoxon and sensitive to neuropathic mipafox. Extensive structure–activity relationships demonstrated that NTE inhibitors fell into two functional categories: neuropathic and nonneuropathic. The essential difference between neuropathic and nonneuropathic NTE inhibitors is that neuropathic inhibitors are capable of undergoing the aging reaction, whereby the NTE–OP conjugate undergoes net dealkylation/dearylation or deprotonation to yield a negatively charged phosphyl group covalently bonded to the active site serine. Because initiation of OPIDN appears to require aging of NTE rather than mere inhibition of its activity, it has been thought that aged NTE operates through a toxic gain-of-function mechanism, possibly by acting as a spurious phosphorylation signal to trigger a proactive axonopathic process akin to Wallerian degeneration. Conventional and conditional knockout experiments have shown NTE to be essential for the development and maintenance of various cells and tissues, including large neurons in the hippocampus and cerebellum. Although the model provides an alternative to the toxic gain-of-function hypothesis of aged NTE, further research is needed to decide between the options or to determine that they are not mutually exclusive and that both mechanisms may be operating.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Glycan-Dependent and Independent Interactions Contribute to Cellular Substrate Recruitment by Calreticulin

Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Syed Monem Rizvi; Malini Raghavan

Background: We investigated the different modes of calreticulin-substrate binding. Results: Calreticulin binds glycosylated and nonglycosylated proteins with similar affinities but distinct kinetics and P-domain conformations. Conclusion: Successful substrate recruitment by calreticulin requires glycan and P-domain-dependent interactions. Significance: Elucidation of the distinct modes of calreticulin binding to substrate glycan and polypeptide components and their combined contributions to substrate recruitment in cells. Calreticulin is an endoplasmic reticulum chaperone with specificity for monoglucosylated glycoproteins. Calreticulin also inhibits precipitation of nonglycosylated proteins and thus contains generic protein-binding sites, but their location and contributions to substrate folding are unknown. We show that calreticulin binds glycosylated and nonglycosylated proteins with similar affinities but distinct interaction kinetics. Although both interactions involve the glycan-binding site or its vicinity, the arm-like proline-rich (P-) domain of calreticulin contributes to binding non/deglycosylated proteins. Correspondingly, ensemble FRET spectroscopy measurements indicate that glycosylated and nonglycosylated proteins induce “open” and “closed” P-domain conformations, respectively. The co-chaperone ERp57 influences substrate-binding kinetics and induces a closed P-domain conformation. Together with analysis of the interactions of calreticulin with cellular proteins, these findings indicate that the recruitment of monoglucosylated proteins to calreticulin is kinetically driven, whereas the P-domain and co-chaperone contribute to stable substrate binding. Substrate sequestration in the cleft between the glycan-binding site and P-domain is a likely mechanism for calreticulin-assisted protein folding.


Journal of Immunology | 2016

The C-Terminal Acidic Region of Calreticulin Mediates Phosphatidylserine Binding and Apoptotic Cell Phagocytosis

Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Sukhmani Bedi; David Huynh; Malini Raghavan

Calreticulin is a calcium-binding chaperone that is normally localized in the endoplasmic reticulum. Calreticulin is detectable on the surface of apoptotic cells under some apoptosis-inducing conditions, where it promotes the phagocytosis and immunogenicity of dying cells. However, the precise mechanism by which calreticulin, a soluble protein, localizes to the outer surface of the plasma membrane of dying cells is unknown, as are the molecular mechanisms that are relevant to calreticulin-induced cellular phagocytosis. Calreticulin comprises three distinct structural domains: a globular domain, an extended arm-like P-domain, and a C-terminal acidic region containing multiple low-affinity calcium binding sites. We show that calreticulin, via its C-terminal acidic region, preferentially interacts with phosphatidylserine (PS) compared with other phospholipids and that this interaction is calcium dependent. Additionally, exogenous calreticulin binds apoptotic cells via a higher-affinity calcium-dependent mode that is acidic region dependent. Exogenous calreticulin also binds live cells, including macrophages, via a second, lower-affinity P-domain and globular domain–dependent, but calcium-independent binding mode that likely involves its generic polypeptide binding site. Truncation constructs lacking the acidic region or arm-like P-domain of calreticulin are impaired in their abilities to induce apoptotic cell phagocytosis by murine peritoneal macrophages. Taken together, the results of this investigation provide the first molecular insights into the phospholipid binding site of calreticulin as a key anchor point for the cell surface expression of calreticulin on apoptotic cells. These findings also support a role for calreticulin as a PS-bridging molecule that cooperates with other PS-binding factors to promote the phagocytosis of apoptotic cells.


Handbook of Toxicology of Chemical Warfare Agents (Second Edition) | 2015

Neuropathy Target Esterase as a Biomarker and Biosensor of Delayed Neuropathic Agents

Rudy J. Richardson; R. Mark Worden; Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Nichole D. Hein; John K. Fink; G. F. Makhaeva

Delayed neuropathic (DN) agents are defined here as organophosphorus (OP) compounds that produce OP compound–induced delayed neurotoxicity (OPIDN). This syndrome involves distal sensorimotor degeneration of long, large-diameter axons in peripheral nerves and spinal cord with associated sensory deficits and paralysis typically occurring within 1–4 weeks after exposure. Mechanistic studies indicate that inhibition and aging of more than 70% of neuropathy target esterase (NTE) in neural tissue correlates with development of OPIDN and that acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is not involved. The neuropathic potential of an OP compound can be assessed by its relative inhibitory potency (RIP) against AChE versus NTE. By the convention used in this chapter, a high RIP value indicates that the compound will produce cholinergic toxicity rather than OPIDN. Lymphocyte and platelet NTE can be used as biomarkers of exposure to DN compounds, and human recombinant NTE esterase domain (NEST) has been incorporated into a biosensor for these agents.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Regulation of calreticulin–major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I interactions by ATP

Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Jessica K. Gagnon; Karunesh Arora; Charles L. Brooks; Malini Raghavan

Significance Calreticulin mutants that disrupt ATP binding are shown to prolong cellular MHC class I interactions with calreticulin and with the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). To our knowledge, no previous studies have implicated a role for endoplasmic reticulum (ER) luminal ATP as a determinant of MHC class I assembly complex dynamics. These studies also reveal a role for the ATP–calreticulin interaction in broadly regulating the binding of calreticulin to cellular substrates. Because a large number of cell surface and secreted glycoproteins are calreticulin/calnexin substrates, these studies have broad significance toward understanding the cellular mechanisms of protein quality control. The MHC class I peptide loading complex (PLC) facilitates the assembly of MHC class I molecules with peptides, but factors that regulate the stability and dynamics of the assembly complex are largely uncharacterized. Based on initial findings that ATP, in addition to MHC class I-specific peptide, is able to induce MHC class I dissociation from the PLC, we investigated the interaction of ATP with the chaperone calreticulin, an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) luminal, calcium-binding component of the PLC that is known to bind ATP. We combined computational and experimental measurements to identify residues within the globular domain of calreticulin, in proximity to the high-affinity calcium-binding site, that are important for high-affinity ATP binding and for ATPase activity. High-affinity calcium binding by calreticulin is required for optimal nucleotide binding, but both ATP and ADP destabilize enthalpy-driven high-affinity calcium binding to calreticulin. ATP also selectively destabilizes the interaction of calreticulin with cellular substrates, including MHC class I molecules. Calreticulin mutants that affect ATP or high-affinity calcium binding display prolonged associations with monoglucosylated forms of cellular MHC class I, delaying MHC class I dissociation from the PLC and their transit through the secretory pathway. These studies reveal central roles for ATP and calcium binding as regulators of calreticulin–substrate interactions and as key determinants of PLC dynamics.


Toxicological Sciences | 2012

Mixed inhibition of adenosine deaminase activity by 1,3-dinitrobenzene: A Model for understanding cell-selective neurotoxicity in chemically-induced energy deprivation syndromes in brain

Yipei Wang; Xin Liu; Brandon Schneider; Elaina A. Zverina; Kristen Russ; Sanjeeva J. Wijeyesakere; Carol A. Fierke; Rudy J. Richardson; Martin A. Philbert

Astrocytes are acutely sensitive to 1,3-dinitrobenzene (1,3-DNB) while adjacent neurons are relatively unaffected, consistent with other chemically-induced energy deprivation syndromes. Previous studies have investigated the role of astrocytes in protecting neurons from hypoxia and chemical injury via adenosine release. Adenosine is considered neuroprotective, but it is rapidly removed by extracellular deaminases such as adenosine deaminase (ADA). The present study tested the hypothesis that ADA is inhibited by 1,3-DNB as a substrate mimic, thereby preventing adenosine catabolism. ADA was inhibited by 1,3-DNB with an IC(50) of 284 μM, Hill slope, n = 4.8 ± 0.4. Native gel electrophoresis showed that 1,3-DNB did not denature ADA. Furthermore, adding Triton X-100 (0.01-0.05%, wt/vol), Nonidet P-40 (0.0015-0.0036%, wt/vol), or bovine serum albumin (0.05 mg/ml or changing [ADA] (0.2 and 2 nM) did not substantially alter the 1,3-DNB IC(50) value. Likewise, dynamic light scattering showed no particle formation over a (1,3-DNB) range of 149-1043 μM. Kinetics revealed mixed inhibition with 1,3-DNB binding to ADA (K(I) = 520 ± 100 μM, n = 1 ± 0.6) and the ADA-adenosine complex (K(IS) = 262 ± 7 μM, n = 6 ± 0.6, indicating positive cooperativity). In accord with the kinetics, docking predicted binding of 1,3-DNB to the active site and three peripheral sites. In addition, exposure of DI TNC-1 astrocytes to 10-500 μM 1,3-DNB produced concentration-dependent increases in extracellular adenosine at 24 h. Overall, the results demonstrate that 1,3-DNB is a mixed inhibitor of ADA and may thus lead to increases in extracellular adenosine. The finding may provide insights to guide future work on chemically-induced energy deprivation.

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G. F. Makhaeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. B. Sokolov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ari Gafni

University of Michigan

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