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Dive into the research topics where Yancho Devedjiev is active.

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Featured researches published by Yancho Devedjiev.


Structure | 2000

Crystal Structure of the Human Acyl Protein Thioesterase I from a Single X-Ray Data Set to 1.5 Å

Yancho Devedjiev; Zbigniew Dauter; Sergey R. Kuznetsov; Teresa L. Z. Jones; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

BACKGROUND Many proteins undergo posttranslational modifications involving covalent attachment of lipid groups. Among them is palmitoylation, a dynamic, reversible process that affects trimeric G proteins and Ras and constitutes a regulatory mechanism for signal transduction pathways. Recently, an acylhydrolase previously identified as lysophospholipase has been shown to function as an acyl protein thioesterase, which catalyzes depalmitoylation of Galpha proteins as well as Ras. Its amino acid sequence suggested that the protein is evolutionarily related to neutral lipases and other thioesterases, but direct structural information was not available. RESULTS We have solved the crystal structure of the human putative Galpha-regulatory protein acyl thioesterase (hAPT1) with a single data set collected from a crystal containing the wild-type protein. The phases were calculated to 1.8 A resolution based on anomalous scattering from Br(-) ions introduced in the cryoprotectant solution in which the crystal was soaked for 20 s. The model was refined against data extending to a resolution of 1.5 A to an R factor of 18.6%. The enzyme is a member of the ubiquitous alpha/beta hydrolase family, which includes other acylhydrolases such as the palmitoyl protein thioesterase (PPT1). CONCLUSIONS The human APT1 is closely related to a previously described carboxylesterase from Pseudomonas fluorescens. The active site contains a catalytic triad of Ser-114, His-203, and Asp-169. Like carboxylesterase, hAPT1 appears to be dimeric, although the mutual disposition of molecules in the two dimers differs. Unlike carboxylesterase, the substrate binding pocket and the active site of hAPT1 are occluded by the dimer interface, suggesting that the enzyme must dissociate upon interaction with substrate.


Structure | 2003

PDZ Tandem of Human Syntenin: Crystal Structure and Functional Properties

Beom Sik Kang; David R. Cooper; Filip Jelen; Yancho Devedjiev; Urszula Derewenda; Zbigniew Dauter; Jacek Otlewski; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

Syntenin, a 33 kDa protein, interacts with several cell membrane receptors and with merlin, the product of the causal gene for neurofibromatosis type II. We report a crystal structure of the functional fragment of human syntenin containing two canonical PDZ domains, as well as binding studies for full-length syntenin, the PDZ tandem, and isolated PDZ domains. We show that the functional properties of syntenin are a result of independent interactions with target peptides, and that each domain is able to bind peptides belonging to two different classes: PDZ1 binds peptides from classes I and III, while PDZ2 interacts with classes I and II. The independent binding of merlin by PDZ1 and syndecan-4 by PDZ2 provides direct evidence for the coupling of syndecan-mediated signaling to actin regulation by merlin.


Proteins | 2005

B. subtilis ykuD protein at 2.0 A resolution: insights into the structure and function of a novel, ubiquitous family of bacterial enzymes.

Jakub Bielnicki; Yancho Devedjiev; Urszula Derewenda; Zbigniew Dauter; Andrzej Joachimiak; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

The crystal structure of the product of the Bacillus subtilis ykuD gene was solved by the multiwavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) method and refined using data to 2.0 Å resolution. The ykuD protein is a representative of a distinctly prokaryotic and ubiquitous family found among both pathogenic and nonpathogenic Gram‐positive and Gram‐negative bacteria. The deduced amino acid sequence reveals the presence of an N‐terminal LysM domain, which occurs among enzymes involved in cell wall metabolism, and a novel, putative catalytic domain with a highly conserved His/Cys‐containing motif of hitherto unknown structure. As the wild‐type protein did not crystallize, a double mutant was designed (Lys117Ala/Gln118Ala) to reduce excess surface conformational entropy. As expected, the structure of the LysM domain is similar to the NMR structure reported for an analogous domain from Escherichia coli murein transglycosylase MltD. The molecular model also shows that the 112‐residue‐long C‐terminal domain has a novel tertiary fold consisting of a β‐sandwich with two mixed sheets, one containing five strands and the other, six strands. The two β‐sheets form a cradle capped by an α‐helix. This domain contains a putative catalytic site with a tetrad of invariant His123, Gly124, Cys139, and Arg141. The stereochemistry of this active site shows similarities to peptidotransferases and sortases, and suggests that the enzymes of the ykuD family may play an important role in cell wall biology. Proteins 2006.


Structure | 2003

Molecular Roots of Degenerate Specificity in Syntenin'S Pdz2 Domain: Reassessment of the Pdz Recognition Paradigm

Beom Sik Kang; David R. Cooper; Yancho Devedjiev; Urszula Derewenda; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

Crystal structures of the PDZ2 domain of the scaffolding protein syntenin, both unbound and in complexes with peptides derived from C termini of IL5 receptor (alpha chain) and syndecan, reveal the molecular roots of syntenins degenerate specificity. Three distinct binding sites (S(0), S(-1), and S(-2)), with affinities for hydrophobic side chains, function in a combinatorial way: S(-1) and S(-2) act together to bind syndecan, while S(0) and S(-1) are involved in the binding of IL5Ralpha. Neither mode of interaction is consistent with the prior classification scheme, which defined the IL5Ralpha interaction as class I (-S/T-X-phi) and the syndecan interaction as class II (-phi-X-phi). These results, in conjunction with other emerging structural data on PDZ domains, call for a revision of their classification and of the existing model of their mechanism.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2002

The structure of the FERM domain of merlin, the neurofibromatosis type 2 gene product

Beom Sik Kang; David R. Cooper; Yancho Devedjiev; Urszula Derewenda; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

Neurofibromatosis type 2 is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by central nervous system tumors. The cause of the disease has been traced to mutations in the gene coding for a protein that is alternately called merlin or schwannomin and is a member of the ERM family (ezrin, radixin and moesin). The ERM proteins link the cytoskeleton to the cell membrane either directly through integral membrane proteins or indirectly through membrane-associated proteins. In this paper, the expression, purification, crystallization and crystal structure of the N-terminal domain of merlin are described. The crystals exhibit the symmetry of space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with two molecules in the asymmetric unit. The recorded diffraction pattern extends to 1.8A resolution. The structure was solved by the molecular-replacement method and the model was refined to a conventional R value of 19.3% (R(free) = 22.7%). The N-terminal domain of merlin closely resembles those described for the corresponding domains in moesin and radixin and exhibits a cloverleaf architecture with three distinct subdomains. The structure allows a better rationalization of the impact of selected disease-causing mutations on the integrity of the protein.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2002

The impact of Glu→Ala and Glu→Asp mutations on the crystallization properties of RhoGDI: the structure of RhoGDI at 1.3 Å resolution

Agnieszka Mateja; Yancho Devedjiev; Daniel Krowarsch; Kenton L. Longenecker; Zbigniew Dauter; Jacek Otlewski; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

It is hypothesized that surface residues with high conformational entropy, specifically lysines and glutamates, impede protein crystallization. In a previous study using a model system of Rho-specific guanine nucleotide dissociation inhibitor (RhoGDI), it was shown that mutating Lys residues to Ala results in enhanced crystallizability, particularly when clusters of lysines are targeted. It was also shown that one of these mutants formed crystals that yielded diffraction to 2.0 A, a significant improvement on the wild-type protein crystals. In the current paper, an analysis of the impact of surface mutations replacing Glu residues with Ala or Asp on the stability and crystallization properties of RhoGDI is presented. The Glu-->Ala (Asp) mutants are generally more likely to produce crystals of the protein than the wild-type and in one case the resulting crystals yielded a diffraction pattern to 1.2 A resolution. This occurs in spite of the fact that mutating surface Glu residues almost invariably affects the proteins stability, as illustrated by the reduced deltaG between folded and unfolded forms measured by isothermal equilibrium denaturation. The present study strongly supports the notion that rational surface mutagenesis can be an effective tool in overcoming problems stemming from the proteins recalcitrance to crystallization and may also yield dramatic improvements in crystal quality.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

The impact of Lys→Arg surface mutations on the crystallization of the globular domain of RhoGDI

Jan Czepas; Yancho Devedjiev; Daniel Krowarsch; Urszula Derewenda; Jacek Otlewski; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

The potential of rational surface mutagenesis for enhanced protein crystallization is being probed in an ongoing effort. In previous work, it was hypothesized that residues with high conformational entropy such as Glu and Lys are suitable targets for surface mutagenesis, as they are rarely incorporated in crystal contacts or protein-protein interfaces. Previous experiments using Lys-->Ala, Glu-->Ala and Glu-->Asp mutants confirmed that mutated proteins were more likely to crystallize. In the present paper, the usefulness of Lys-->Arg mutations is studied. Several mutations of the globular domain of human RhoGDI were generated, including the single mutants K105R, K113R, K127R, K138R and K141R, the double mutants K(98,99)R and K(199,200)R and the triple mutants K(98,99,105)R and K(135,138,141)R. It is shown that Lys-->Arg mutants are more likely to crystallize than the wild-type protein, although not as likely as Lys-->Ala mutants. Out of the nine mutants tested, five produced diffracting crystals, including the K(199,200)R double mutant, which crystallized in a new space group and exceeded by approximately 1.0 A the resolution of the diffraction of the wild-type crystal. Major crystal contacts in the new lattice were created by the mutated epitope.


Structure | 2002

Molecular Basis of Mitomycin C Resistance in Streptomyces: Structure and Function of the MRD Protein

T.W. Martin; Zbigniew Dauter; Yancho Devedjiev; Peter J. Sheffield; Filip Jelen; Min He; David H. Sherman; Jacek Otlewski; Zygmunt S. Derewenda; Urszula Derewenda

Mitomycin C (MC) is a potent anticancer agent. Streptomyces lavendulae, which produces MC, protects itself from the lethal effects of the drug by expressing several resistance proteins. One of them (MRD) binds MC and functions as a drug exporter. We report the crystal structure of MRD and its complex with an MC metabolite, 1,2-cis-1-hydroxy-2,7-diaminomitosene, at 1.5 A resolution. The drug is sandwiched by pi-stacking interactions of His-38 and Trp-108. MRD is a dimer. The betaalphabetabetabeta fold of the MRD molecule is reminiscent of methylmalonyl-CoA epimerase, bleomycin resistance proteins, glyoxalase I, and extradiol dioxygenases. The location of the binding site is identical to the ones in evolutionarily related enzymes, suggesting that the protein may have been recruited from a different metabolic pathway.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

Preliminary crystallographic analysis of the complex of the human GTPase Rhoa with the DH/PH tandem of PDZ-RhoGEF

Arkadiusz Oleksy; Holly Barton; Yancho Devedjiev; Michael D. Purdy; Urszula Derewenda; Jacek Otlewski; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

PDZ-containing RhoGEF (PDZ-RhoGEF) is a multidomain protein composed of 1522 amino acids that belongs to the guanine nucleotide exchange factors family (GEF) active on Rho GTPases. It is highly specific for RhoA and is thought to transduce signals from Galpha(12/13)-coupled receptors to the RhoA-dependent regulatory cascades. The protein shows high sequence homology to LARG, p115-RhoGEF and Drosophila DRhoGEF2. The exchange reaction is catalyzed by a DH domain, which is directly downstream of a PH domain in all known Rho-specific GEFs. The DH/PH tandem of PDZ-RhoGEF and C-terminally truncated RhoA were overexpressed in Escherichia coli as TEV protease-cleavable fusion proteins containing GST and a hexahistidine tag at the N-termini, respectively. The nucleotide-free DH/PH-RhoA complex was purified by gel filtration and crystallized. The crystals belong to space group P2(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 88.6, b = 119.0, c = 91.5 A, beta = 114.7 degrees.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

Harvesting the high-hanging fruit: the structure of the YdeN gene product from Bacillus subtilis at 1.8 Å resolution

Izabela Janda; Yancho Devedjiev; David R. Cooper; Maksymilian Chruszcz; Urszula Derewenda; Aleksandra Gabrys; Wladek Minor; Andrzej Joachimiak; Zygmunt S. Derewenda

High-throughput (HT) protein crystallography is severely impeded by the relatively low success rate of protein crystallization. Proteins whose structures are not solved in the HT pipeline owing to attrition in any phase of the project are referred to as the high-hanging fruit, in contrast to those proteins that yielded good-quality crystals and crystal structures, which are referred to as low-hanging fruit. It has previously been shown that proteins that do not crystallize in the wild-type form can have their surfaces engineered by site-directed mutagenesis in order to create patches of low conformational entropy that are conducive to forming intermolecular interactions. The application of this method to selected proteins from the Bacillus subtilis genome which failed to crystallize in the HT mode is now reported. In this paper, the crystal structure of the product of the YdeN gene is reported. Of three prepared double mutants, i.e. E124A/K127A, E167A/E169A and K88A/Q89A, the latter gave high-quality crystals and the crystal structure was solved by SAD at 1.8 angstroms resolution. The protein is a canonical alpha/beta hydrolase, with an active site that is accessible to solvent.

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Zbigniew Dauter

Argonne National Laboratory

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Beom Sik Kang

Kyungpook National University

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Andrzej Joachimiak

Argonne National Laboratory

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