Sarangan Ravichandran
Science Applications International Corporation
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Featured researches published by Sarangan Ravichandran.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Jianxin Shi; Xiaohong R. Yang; Bari J. Ballew; Melissa Rotunno; Donato Calista; Maria Concetta Fargnoli; Paola Ghiorzo; Brigitte Bressac-de Paillerets; Eduardo Nagore; M.-F. Avril; Neil E. Caporaso; Mary L. McMaster; Michael Cullen; Zhaoming Wang; Xijun Zhang; William Bruno; Lorenza Pastorino; Paola Queirolo; Jose Banuls-Roca; Zaida García-Casado; Amaury Vaysse; Hamida Mohamdi; Yasser Riazalhosseini; Mario Foglio; Fanélie Jouenne; Xing Hua; Paula L. Hyland; Jinhu Yin; Haritha Vallabhaneni; Weihang Chai
Although CDKN2A is the most frequent high-risk melanoma susceptibility gene, the underlying genetic factors for most melanoma-prone families remain unknown. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified a rare variant that arose as a founder mutation in the telomere shelterin gene POT1 (chromosome 7, g.124493086C>T; p.Ser270Asn) in five unrelated melanoma-prone families from Romagna, Italy. Carriers of this variant had increased telomere lengths and numbers of fragile telomeres, suggesting that this variant perturbs telomere maintenance. Two additional rare POT1 variants were identified in all cases sequenced in two separate Italian families, one variant per family, yielding a frequency for POT1 variants comparable to that for CDKN2A mutations in this population. These variants were not found in public databases or in 2,038 genotyped Italian controls. We also identified two rare recurrent POT1 variants in US and French familial melanoma cases. Our findings suggest that POT1 is a major susceptibility gene for familial melanoma in several populations.
Cytokine & Growth Factor Reviews | 2009
Ram Savan; Sarangan Ravichandran; Jack R. Collins; Masahiro Sakai; Howard A. Young
Interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), being the hallmark of the T-cell T(H)1 response, has been extensively studied with respect to its expression and regulation of immune function. This gene has been extensively characterized in many mammalian species, making it one of the most widely cloned immunoregulatory genes. Recently, the gene has been identified in avian and piscine species and we have identified the gene in the frog genome. Based on these identified DNA sequences, we have constructed an evolutionary history of IFN-gamma that shows this molecule can be traced back more than 450 million years ago. Our analysis shows that type II interferon (IFN-gamma) function evolved before the tetrapod-fish split, a finding that contrasts earlier studies showing its origins in tetrapods. The IFN-gamma gene has undergone a further duplication event in teleosts after the tetrapod-fish split suggesting a specific-evolutionary adaptation in fish. The analyses of IFN-gamma, IL-22 and IL-26 genomic region in mammals, chicken, frog and fish reveal an evolutionary conservation of the loci and several regulatory elements controlling IFN-gamma gene transcription. Furthermore, across the vertebrata, the first intron of IFN-gamma gene contains a polymorphic microsatellite that has been closely correlated with disease susceptibility. Comparative-modeling of IFN-gamma structure revealed differences among the representative species but with an overall conservation of the fold, dimer interface and some interactions with the receptor. The structural and functional conservation of IFN-gamma suggests the presence of an innate, natural killer (NK) like response or even an adaptive T(H)1 immune response in lower vertebrates.
Oncogene | 2004
Gareth C. Davies; Seth Ettenberg; Ashley O. Coats; Mark Mussante; Sarangan Ravichandran; Jack R. Collins; Marion M. Nau; Stan Lipkowitz
Cbl proteins are ubiquitin protein ligases, which ubiquitinate activated tyrosine kinases and target them for degradation. Both c-Cbl and Cbl-b have an ubiquitin associated (UBA) domain at their C-terminal end. We observed that high molecular weight ubiquitinated proteins constitutively coimmunoprecipitated with transfected and endogenous Cbl-b, but not c-Cbl. The binding site for these ubiquitinated proteins was mapped to the UBA domain of Cbl-b (UBAb). GST-fusion proteins containing the UBAb interacted with ubiquitinated proteins and polyubiquitin chains in vitro, whereas those containing the UBA domain of c-Cbl (UBAc) did not. The UBAb had a much greater affinity for polyubiquitin chains than for monoubiquitin. Analysis of the UBAb and UBAc demonstrate that the affinity for ubiquitin is determined by multiple amino-acid differences between the two domains. Overexpression of the UBAb, but not overexpression of the UBAc, inhibited a variety of ubiquitin-mediated processes such as degradation of ubiquitinated proteins (i.e. EGFR, Mdm-2, and Siah-1). This in vivo result is consistent with the differences in ubiquitin binding observed in vitro between the UBAb and UBAc. This difference in ubiquitin-binding may reflect distinct regulatory functions of c-Cbl and Cbl-b.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2009
Ruin Moaddel; Sarangan Ravichandran; F. Bighi; Rika Yamaguchi; Irving W. Wainer
The human organic cation transporter‐1 (hOCT1) is a polyspecific transporter that plays a role in drug distribution, metabolism and excretion. Previous studies have demonstrated that hOCT1 binding can be stereoselective, but the mechanism for stereochemical recognition has not been described. The purpose of this study was to develop a pharmacophore model to describe stereoselective binding to hOCT1.
Papillomavirus Research | 2015
Michael Cullen; Joseph F. Boland; Mark Schiffman; Xijun Zhang; Nicolas Wentzensen; Qi Yang; Zigui Chen; Kai Yu; Jason Mitchell; David Roberson; Sara Bass; Laurie Burdette; Moara Machado; Sarangan Ravichandran; Brian T. Luke; Mitchell J. Machiela; Mark Andersen; Matt Osentoski; Michael Laptewicz; Sholom Wacholder; Ashlie Feldman; Tina Raine-Bennett; Thomas Lorey; Philip E. Castle; Meredith Yeager; Robert D. Burk; Lisa Mirabello
For unknown reasons, there is huge variability in risk conferred by different HPV types and, remarkably, strong differences even between closely related variant lineages within each type. HPV16 is a uniquely powerful carcinogenic type, causing approximately half of cervical cancer and most other HPV-related cancers. To permit the large-scale study of HPV genome variability and precancer/cancer, starting with HPV16 and cervical cancer, we developed a high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) whole-genome method. We designed a custom HPV16 AmpliSeq™ panel that generated 47 overlapping amplicons covering 99% of the genome sequenced on the Ion Torrent Proton platform. After validating with Sanger, the current “gold standard” of sequencing, in 89 specimens with concordance of 99.9%, we used our NGS method and custom annotation pipeline to sequence 796 HPV16-positive exfoliated cervical cell specimens. The median completion rate per sample was 98.0%. Our method enabled us to discover novel SNPs, large contiguous deletions suggestive of viral integration (OR of 27.3, 95% CI 3.3–222, P=0.002), and the sensitive detection of variant lineage coinfections. This method represents an innovative high-throughput, ultra-deep coverage technique for HPV genomic sequencing, which, in turn, enables the investigation of the role of genetic variation in HPV epidemiology and carcinogenesis.
Peptides | 2005
Teresa Duda; Venkateswar Venkataraman; Sarangan Ravichandran; Rameshwar K. Sharma
ATP is an obligatory agent for the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and the type C natriuretic peptide (CNP) signaling of their respective receptor guanylate cyclases, ANF-RGC and CNP-RGC. Through a common mechanism, it binds to a defined ARM domain of the cyclase, activates the cyclase and transduces the signal into generation of the second messenger cyclic GMP. In this presentation, the authors review the ATP-regulated transduction mechanism and refine the previously simulated three-dimensional ARM model (Duda T, Yadav P, Jankowska A, Venkataraman V, Sharma RK. Three dimensional atomic model and experimental validation for the ATP-regulated module (ARM) of the atrial natriuretic factor receptor guanylate cyclase. Mol Cell Biochem 2000;214:7-14; reviewed in: Sharma RK, Yadav P, Duda T. Allosteric regulatory step and configuration of the ATP-binding pocket in atrial natriuretic factor receptor guanylate cyclase transduction mechanism. Can J Physiol Pharmacol 2001;79: 682-91; Sharma RK. Evolution of the membrane guanylate cyclase transduction system. Mol Cell Biochem 2002;230:3-30). The model depicts the ATP-binding dependent configurational changes in the ARM and supports the concept that in the first step, ATP partially activates the cyclase and primes it for the subsequent transduction steps, resulting in full activation of the cyclase.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2013
Nagendra S. Singh; Sarangan Ravichandran; Darrell D. Norton; Sebastian D. Fugmann; Ruin Moaddel
SIRT6 is a histone deacetylase that has been proposed as a potential therapeutic target for metabolic disorders and the prevention of age-associated diseases. Thus the identification of compounds that modulate SIRT6 activity could be of great therapeutic importance. We have previously reported on the identification of quercetin and vitexin as SIRT6 inhibitors, using SIRT6-coated magnetic beads. In this study, we have immobilized SIRT6 onto the surface of an open tubular capillary and characterized the quercetin binding site using frontal displacement chromatography. Structurally related flavonoids were tested for their activity on SIRT6, including apigenin, naringenin, luteolin, and kaempferol. In addition to obtaining their binding activity using frontal affinity chromatographic techniques, we also ranked the compounds based on their ability to displace quercetin. The data suggest that a single displacement curve is representative of the enzymatic activity of the tested ligand. In addition, using the inhibition data obtained in this study, we developed a preliminary pharmacophore model that confirmed the experimental data.
Journal of Molecular Graphics & Modelling | 2014
Sarangan Ravichandran; N. Singh; D. Donnelly; M. Migliore; P. Johnson; C. Fishwick; Brian T. Luke; B. Martin; S. Maudsley; S. D. Fugmann; R. Moaddel
SIRT6 is a histone deacetylase that has been proposed as a potential therapeutic target for metabolic disorders and the prevention of age-associated diseases. We have previously reported on the identification of quercetin and vitexin as SIRT6 inhibitors, and studied structurally related flavonoids including luteolin, kaempferol, apigenin and naringenin. It was determined that the SIRT6 protein remained active after immobilization and that a single frontal displacement could correctly predict the functional activity of the immobilized enzyme. The previous study generated a preliminary pharmacophore for the quercetin binding site on SIRT6, containing 3 hydrogen bond donors and one hydrogen bond acceptor. In this study, we have generated a refined pharmacophore with an additional twelve quercetin analogs. The resulting model had a positive linear behavior between the experimental elution time verses the fit values obtained from the model with a correlation coefficient of 0.8456.
Journal of Chromatography B | 2008
Krzysztof Jozwiak; Ruin Moaddel; Sarangan Ravichandran; Anita Plazinska; Joanna Kozak; Sharvil Patel; Rika Yamaguchi; Irving W. Wainer
The chiral recognition mechanisms responsible for the enantioselective binding on the alpha3beta4 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (alpha3 beta4 nAChR) and human organic cation transporter 1 (hOCT1) have been reviewed. The results indicate that chiral recognition on the alpha3beta4 nAChR is a process involving initial tethering of dextromethorphan and levomethorphan at hydrophobic pockets within the central lumen followed by hydrogen bonding interactions favoring dextromethorphan. The second step is the defining enantioselective step. Studies with the hOCT1 indentified four binding sites within the transporter that participated in chiral recognition. Each of the enantiomers of the compounds used in the study interacted with three of these sites, while (R)-verapamil interacted with all four. Chiral recognition arose from the conformational adjustments required to produce optimum interactions. With respect to the prevailing interaction-based models, the data suggest that chiral recognition is a dynamic process and that the static point-based models should be amended to reflect this.
Haematologica | 2016
Anand Pathak; Katja Seipel; Alexander Pemov; Ramita Dewan; Christina Brown; Sarangan Ravichandran; Brian Luke; Shalabh Suman; Meredith Yeager; Dilys M. Parry; Richard A. Gatti; Neil E. Caporaso; John J. Mulvihill; Lynn R. Goldin; Thomas Pabst; Mary L. McMaster; Douglas R. Stewart
Familial acute myeloid leukemia is rare and linked to germline mutations in RUNX1, GATA2 or CCAAT/enhancer binding protein-α (CEBPA). We re-evaluated a large family with acute myeloid leukemia originally seen at NIH in 1969. We used whole exome sequencing to study this family, and conducted in silico bioinformatics analysis, protein structural modeling and laboratory experiments to assess the impact of the identified CEBPA Q311P mutation. Unlike most previously identified germline mutations in CEBPA, which were N-terminal frameshift mutations, we identified a novel Q311P variant that was located in the C-terminal bZip domain of C/EBPα. Protein structural modeling suggested that the Q311P mutation alters the ability of the CEBPA dimer to bind DNA. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed that the Q311P mu-tant had attenuated binding to DNA, as predicted by the protein modeling. Consistent with these findings, we found that the Q311P mutation has reduced transactivation, consistent with a loss-of-function mutation. From 45 years of follow up, we observed incomplete penetrance (46%) of CEBPA Q311P. This study of a large multi-generational pedigree reveals that a germline mutation in the C-terminal bZip domain can alter the ability of C/EBP-α to bind DNA and reduces transactivation, leading to acute myeloid leukemia.