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Dive into the research topics where Sergei Pletnev is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergei Pletnev.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Structural Basis for Phototoxicity of the Genetically Encoded Photosensitizer KillerRed

Sergei Pletnev; Nadya G. Gurskaya; Nadya V. Pletneva; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Dmitriy M. Chudakov; Vladimir I. Martynov; Vladimir O. Popov; M. V. Kovalchuk; Alexander Wlodawer; Zbigniew Dauter; Vladimir Z. Pletnev

KillerRed is the only known fluorescent protein that demonstrates notable phototoxicity, exceeding that of the other green and red fluorescent proteins by at least 1,000-fold. KillerRed could serve as an instrument to inactivate target proteins or to kill cell populations in photodynamic therapy. However, the nature of KillerRed phototoxicity has remained unclear, impeding the development of more phototoxic variants. Here we present the results of a high resolution crystallographic study of KillerRed in the active fluorescent and in the photobleached non-fluorescent states. A unique and striking feature of the structure is a water-filled channel reaching the chromophore area from the end cap of the β-barrel that is probably one of the key structural features responsible for phototoxicity. A study of the structure-function relationship of KillerRed, supported by structure-based, site-directed mutagenesis, has also revealed the key residues most likely responsible for the phototoxic effect. In particular, Glu68 and Ser119, located adjacent to the chromophore, have been assigned as the primary trigger of the reaction chain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

A Crystallographic Study of Bright Far-Red Fluorescent Protein mKate Reveals pH-induced cis-trans Isomerization of the Chromophore.

Sergei Pletnev; Dmitry Shcherbo; Dmitry M. Chudakov; Nadezhda Pletneva; Ekaterina M. Merzlyak; Alexander Wlodawer; Zbigniew Dauter; Vladimir Pletnev

The far-red fluorescent protein mKate (λex, 588 nm; λem, 635 nm; chromophore-forming triad Met63-Tyr64-Gly65), originating from wild-type red fluorescent progenitor eqFP578 (sea anemone Entacmaea quadricolor), is monomeric and characterized by the pronounced pH dependence of fluorescence, relatively high brightness, and high photostability. The protein has been crystallized at a pH ranging from 2 to 9 in three space groups, and four structures have been determined by x-ray crystallography at the resolution of 1.75–2.6Å. The pH-dependent fluorescence of mKate has been shown to be due to reversible cis-trans isomerization of the chromophore phenolic ring. In the non-fluorescent state at pH 2.0, the chromophore of mKate is in the trans-isomeric form. The weakly fluorescent state of the protein at pH 4.2 is characterized by a mixture of trans and cis isomers. The chromophore in a highly fluorescent state at pH 7.0/9.0 adopts the cis form. Three key residues, Ser143, Leu174, and Arg197 residing in the vicinity of the chromophore, have been identified as being primarily responsible for the far-red shift in the spectra. A group of residues consisting of Val93, Arg122, Glu155, Arg157, Asp159, His169, Ile171, Asn173, Val192, Tyr194, and Val216, are most likely responsible for the observed monomeric state of the protein in solution.


BMC Structural Biology | 2005

A model of the ternary complex of interleukin-10 with its soluble receptors

Sergei Pletnev; Eugenia Magracheva; Alexander Wlodawer; Alexander Zdanov

BackgroundInterleukin-10 (IL-10) is a cytokine whose main biological function is to suppress the immune response by induction of a signal(s) leading to inhibition of synthesis of a number of cytokines and their cellular receptors. Signal transduction is initiated upon formation of a ternary complex of IL-10 with two of its receptor chains, IL-10R1 and IL-10R2, expressed on the cell membrane. The affinity of IL-10R1 toward IL-10 is very high, which allowed determination of the crystal structure of IL-10 complexed with the extracellular/soluble domain of IL-10R1, while the affinity of IL-10R2 toward either IL-10 or IL-10/sIL-10R1 complex is quite low. This so far has prevented any attempts to obtain structural information about the ternary complex of IL-10 with its receptor chains.ResultsStructures of the second soluble receptor chain of interleukin-10 (sIL-10R2) and the ternary complex of IL-10/sIL-10R1/sIL-10R2 have been generated by homology modeling, which allowed us to identify residues involved in ligand-receptor and receptor-receptor interactions.ConclusionThe previously experimentally determined structure of the intermediate/binary complex IL-10/sIL-10R1 is the same in the ternary complex. There are two binding sites for the second receptor chain on the surface of the IL-10/sIL-10R1 complex, involving both IL-10 and sIL-10R1. Most of the interactions are hydrophilic in nature, although each interface includes two internal hydrophobic clusters. The distance between C-termini of the receptor chains is 25 Å, which is common for known structures of ternary complexes of other cytokines. The structure is likely to represent the biologically active signaling complex of IL-10 with its receptor on the surface of the cell membrane.


Chemistry & Biology | 2015

Molecular Basis of Spectral Diversity in Near-Infrared Phytochrome-Based Fluorescent Proteins

Daria M. Shcherbakova; Mikhail Baloban; Sergei Pletnev; Vladimir N. Malashkevich; Hui Xiao; Zbigniew Dauter; Vladislav V. Verkhusha

Near-infrared fluorescent proteins (NIR FPs) engineered from bacterial phytochromes (BphPs) are the probes of choice for deep-tissue imaging. Detection of several processes requires spectrally distinct NIR FPs. We developed an NIR FP, BphP1-FP, which has the most blue-shifted spectra and the highest fluorescence quantum yield among BphP-derived FPs. We found that these properties result from the binding of the biliverdin chromophore to a cysteine residue in the GAF domain, unlike natural BphPs and other BphP-based FPs. To elucidate the molecular basis of the spectral shift, we applied biochemical, structural and mass spectrometry analyses and revealed the formation of unique chromophore species. Mutagenesis of NIR FPs of different origins indicated that the mechanism of the spectral shift is general and can be used to design multicolor NIR FPs from other BphPs. We applied pairs of spectrally distinct point cysteine mutants to multicolor cell labeling and demonstrated that they perform well in model deep-tissue imaging.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

A structural basis for reversible photoswitching of absorbance spectra in red fluorescent protein rsTagRFP.

Sergei Pletnev; Fedor V. Subach; Zbigniew Dauter; Alexander Wlodawer; Vladislav V. Verkhusha

rsTagRFP is the first monomeric red fluorescent protein (FP) with reversibly photoswitchable absorbance spectra. The switching is realized by irradiation of rsTagRFP with blue (440 nm) and yellow (567 nm) light, turning the protein fluorescence ON and OFF, respectively. It is perhaps the most useful probe in this color class that has yet been reported. Because of the photoswitchable absorbance, rsTagRFP can be used as an acceptor in photochromic Förster resonance energy transfer. Yellow FPs, YPet and mVenus, are demonstrated to be excellent photochromic Förster resonance energy transfer donors for the rsTagRFP acceptor in its fusion constructs. Analysis of X-ray structures has shown that photoswitching of rsTagRFP is accompanied by cis-trans isomerization and protonation/deprotonation of the chromophore, with the deprotonated cis- and protonated trans-isomers corresponding to its ON and OFF states, respectively. Unlike in other photoswitchable FPs, both conformers of rsTagRFP chromophore are essentially coplanar. Two other peculiarities of the rsTagRFP chromophore are an essentially hydrophobic environment of its p-hydroxyphenyl site and the absence of direct hydrogen bonding between this moiety and the protein scaffold. The influence of the immediate environment on rsTagRFP chromophore was probed by site-directed mutagenesis. Residues Glu145 and His197 were found to participate in protonation/deprotonation of the chromophore accompanying the photoswitching of rsTagRFP fluorescence, whereas residues Met160 and Leu174 were shown to spatially restrict chromophore isomerization, favoring its radiative decay.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2009

Rotational order-disorder structure of fluorescent protein FP480

Sergei Pletnev; Kateryna Morozova; Vladislav V. Verkhusha; Zbigniew Dauter

In the last decade, advances in instrumentation and software development have made crystallography a powerful tool in structural biology. Using this method, structural information can now be acquired from pathological crystals that would have been abandoned in earlier times. In this paper, the order-disorder (OD) structure of fluorescent protein FP480 is discussed. The structure is composed of tetramers with 222 symmetry incorporated into the lattice in two different ways, namely rotated 90 degrees with respect to each other around the crystal c axis, with tetramer axes coincident with crystallographic twofold axes. The random distribution of alternatively oriented tetramers in the crystal creates a rotational OD structure with statistically averaged I422 symmetry, although the presence of very weak and diffuse additional reflections suggests that the randomness is only approximate.


Protein Science | 2011

Crystallographic study of red fluorescent protein eqFP578 and its far-red variant Katushka reveals opposite pH-induced isomerization of chromophore.

Nadya V. Pletneva; Vladimir Z. Pletnev; Irina I. Shemiakina; Dmitriy M. Chudakov; Igor Artemyev; Alexander Wlodawer; Zbigniew Dauter; Sergei Pletnev

The wild type red fluorescent protein eqFP578 (from sea anemone Entacmaea quadricolor, λex = 552 nm, λem = 578 nm) and its bright far‐red fluorescent variant Katushka (λex = 588 nm, λem = 635 nm) are characterized by the pronounced pH dependence of their fluorescence. The crystal structures of eqFP578f (eqFP578 with two point mutations improving the protein folding) and Katushka have been determined at the resolution ranging from 1.15 to 1.85 Å at two pH values, corresponding to low and high level of fluorescence. The observed extinguishing of fluorescence upon reducing pH in eqFP578f and Katushka has been shown to be accompanied by the opposite trans‐cis and cis‐trans chromophore isomerization, respectively. Asn143, Ser158, His197 and Ser143, Leu174, and Arg197 have been shown to stabilize the respective trans and cis fluorescent states of the chromophores in eqFP578f and Katushka at higher pH. The cis state has been suggested as being primarily responsible for the observed far‐red shift of the emission maximum of Katushka relative to that of eqFP578f.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012

Structural basis for bathochromic shift of fluorescence in far-red fluorescent proteins eqFP650 and eqFP670

Sergei Pletnev; Nadya V. Pletneva; Ekaterina A. Souslova; Dmitry M. Chudakov; Sergey Lukyanov; Alexander Wlodawer; Zbigniew Dauter; Vladimir Z. Pletnev

The crystal structures of the far-red fluorescent proteins (FPs) eqFP650 (λ(ex)(max)/λ(em)(max) 592/650 nm) and eqFP670 (λ(ex)(max)/λ(em)(max) 605/670 nm), the successors of the far-red FP Katushka (λ(ex)(max)/λ(em)(max) 588/635 nm), have been determined at 1.8 and 1.6 Å resolution, respectively. An examination of the structures demonstrated that there are two groups of changes responsible for the bathochromic shift of excitation/emission bands of these proteins relative to their predecessor. The first group of changes resulted in an increase of hydrophilicity at the acylimine site of the chromophore due to the presence of one and three water molecules in eqFP650 and eqFP670, respectively. These water molecules provide connection of the chromophore with the protein scaffold via hydrogen bonds causing an ~15 nm bathochromic shift of the eqFP650 and eqFP670 emission bands. The second group of changes observed in eqFP670 arises from substitution of both Ser143 and Ser158 by asparagines. Asn143 and Asn158 of eqFP670 are hydrogen bonded with each other, as well as with the protein scaffold and with the p-hydroxyphenyl group of the chromophore, resulting in an additional ~20 nm bathochromic shift of the eqFP670 emission band as compared to eqFP650. The role of the observed structural changes was verified by mutagenesis.


Bioorganicheskaia khimiia | 2007

Three-dimensional structure of yellow fluorescent protein zYFP538 from Zoanthus sp. at the resolution 1.8 Å

Nadya V. Pletneva; Sergei Pletnev; Dmitry M. Chudakov; T. V. Tikhonova; Vladimir O. Popov; Vladimir I. Martynov; A. Wlodawer; Zbigniew Dauter; Vladimir Z. Pletnev

The three-dimensional structure of yellow fluorescent proteins zYFP538 (zFP538) from the button polyp Zoanthus sp. was determined at a resolution of 1.8 Å by X-ray analysis. The monomer of zYFP538 adopts a structure characteristic of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) family, a β-barrel formed from 11 antiparallel β segments and one internal α helix with a chromophore embedded into it. Like the TurboGFP, the β-barrel of zYFP538 contains a water-filled pore leading to the chromophore Tyr67 residue, which presumably provides access of molecular oxygen necessary for the maturation process. The post-translational modification of the chromophore-forming triad Lys66-Tyr67-Gly68 results in a tricyclic structure consisting of a five-membered imidazolinone ring, a phenol ring of the Tyr67 residue, and an additional six-membered tetrahydropyridine ring. The chromophore formation is completed by cleavage of the protein backbone at the Cα-N bond of Lys66. It was suggested that the energy conflict between the buried positive charge of the intact Lys66 side chain in the hydrophobic pocket formed by the Ile44, Leu46, Phe65, Leu204 and Leu219 side chains is the most probable trigger that induces the transformation of the bicyclic green form to the tricyclic yellow form. A stereochemical analysis of the contacting surfaces at the intratetramer interfaces helped reveal a group of conserved key residues responsible for the oligomerization. Along with others, these residues should be taken into account in designing monomeric forms suitable for practical application as markers of proteins and cell organelles.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2006

Structure of a red fluorescent protein from Zoanthus, zRFP574, reveals a novel chromophore

Nadezhda Pletneva; Sergei Pletnev; T. V. Tikhonova; Vladimir L. Popov; Vladimir I. Martynov; Vladimir Z. Pletnev

The three-dimensional structure of the red fluorescent protein (RFP) zRFP574 from the button polyp Zoanthus sp. (two dimers per asymmetric unit, 231 x 4 amino acids) has been determined at 2.4 A resolution in space group C222(1). The crystal structure, refined to a crystallographic R factor of 0.203 (R(free) = 0.249), adopts the beta-barrel fold composed of 11 strands similar to that of the yellow fluorescent protein zYFP538. The zRFP574 chromophore, originating from the protein sequence Asp66-Tyr67-Gly68, has a two-ring structure typical of GFP-like proteins. The bond geometry of residue 66 shows the strong tendency of the corresponding C(alpha) atom to sp(2) hybridization as a consequence of N-acylimine bond formation. The zRFP574 chromophore contains the 65-66 cis-peptide bond characteristic of red fluorescent proteins. The chromophore phenolic ring adopts a cis conformation coplanar with the imidazolinone ring. The crystallographic study has revealed an unexpected chemical feature of the internal chromophore. A decarboxylated side chain of the chromophore-forming residue Asp66 has been observed in the structure. This additional post-translational modification is likely to play a key role in the bathochromic shift of the zRFP574 spectrum.

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Zbigniew Dauter

Argonne National Laboratory

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Alexander Wlodawer

National Institutes of Health

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Nadya V. Pletneva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Vladislav V. Verkhusha

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Daria M. Shcherbakova

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Dmitry M. Chudakov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Konstantin A. Lukyanov

Nizhny Novgorod State Medical Academy

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