Yuchuan Zheng
University of Science and Technology of China
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Featured researches published by Yuchuan Zheng.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Zhenming Du; Yuchuan Zheng; Melissa Patterson; Yangzhong Liu; Chunyu Wang
Protein splicing is a robust multistep posttranslational process catalyzed by inteins. In the Mtu RecA intein, a conserved block-F aspartate (D422) coordinates different steps in protein splicing, but the precise mechanism is unclear. Solution NMR shows that D422 has a strikingly high pK(a) of 6.1, two units above the normal pK(a) of aspartate. The elevated pK(a) of D422 is coupled to the depressed pK(a) of another active-site residue, the block-A cysteine (C1). A C1A mutation lowers the D422 pK(a) to normal, while a D422G mutation increases the C1 pK(a) from 7.5 to 8.5. The pK(a) coupling and NMR structure determination demonstrate that protonated D422 serves as a hydrogen bond donor to stabilize the C1 thiolate and promote the N-S acyl shift, the first step of protein splicing. Additionally, in vivo splicing assays with mutations of D422 to Glu, Cys, and Ser show that the deprotonated aspartate is essential for splicing, most likely by deprotonating and activating the downstream nucleophile in transesterification, the second step of protein splicing. We propose that the sequential protonation and deprotonation of the D422 side chain is the coordination mechanism for the first two steps of protein splicing.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Liyun Zhang; Yuchuan Zheng; Brian P. Callahan; Marlene Belfort; Yangzhong Liu
Mycobacterium tuberculosis harbors three protein splicing elements, called inteins, in critical genes and their protein products. Post-translational removal of the inteins occurs autocatalytically and is required for function of the respective M. tuberculosis proteins. Inteins are therefore potential targets for antimycobacterial agents. In this work, we report that the splicing activity of the intein present in the RecA recombinase of M. tuberculosis is potently inhibited by the anticancer drug cisplatin (cis-diamminedichloro-platinum(II)). This previously unrecognized activity of cisplatin was established using both an in vitro intein splicing assay, which yielded an IC50 of ∼2 μm, and a genetic reporter for intein splicing in Escherichia coli. Testing of related platinum(II) complexes indicated that the inhibition activity is highly structure-dependent, with cisplatin exhibiting the best inhibitory effect. Finally, we report that cisplatin is toxic toward M. tuberculosis with a minimum inhibitory concentration of ∼40 μm, and in genetic experiments conducted with the related Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérrin (BCG) strain, we show that cisplatin toxicity can be mitigated by intein overexpression. We propose that cisplatin inhibits intein activity by modifying at least one conserved cysteine residue that is required for splicing. Together these results identify a novel active site inhibitor of inteins and validate inteins as viable targets for small molecule inhibition in mycobacteria.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010
Liyun Zhang; Ning Xiao; Yan Pan; Yuchuan Zheng; Zhiyun Pan; Zhaofeng Luo; Xiaolong Xu; Yangzhong Liu
Protein splicing is a unique post-translational process in which an intein excises itself from a precursor with the concomitant ligation of flanking sequences. The binding of zinc to intein inhibits protein splicing reversibly and EDTA relieves the inhibition. Copper was found to inhibit protein trans splicing; however, the recovery of intein splicing required both EDTA and TCEP, suggesting a different inhibition mechanism for copper compared to zinc. In this work, we have investigated the binding properties and inhibition effects of copper ions on the RecA intein from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Both Cu(+) and Cu(2+) exhibited high binding affinity to inteins, while different binding sites were identified. Cu(2+) coordinates to Cys1, the key residue involved in the mechanism of protein splicing, however, Cu(+) does not coordinate to cysteine. An in vitro inhibition assay indicated that monovalent Cu(+) demonstrates reversible inhibition to protein splicing, and the inhibitory efficiency is comparable to Zn(2+). Redox reaction between Cu(2+) and cysteine in inteins were observed and the rate constants were determined. The results suggested a dual role for Cu(2+) in the inhibition of intein splicing: strong coordination of Cu(2+) to key residues (including Cys1) in the intein, and subsequent oxidation of Cys1, the residue required for the N-->S acyl shift step in protein splicing. A kinetic study suggested that the coordination could be the major cause of inhibition effect of Cu(2+) initially, whereas the redox reaction could play an additional role in inhibition at a later stage.
Biomolecular Nmr Assignments | 2008
Zhenming Du; Yangzhong Liu; Yuchuan Zheng; Scott A. McCallum; John T. Dansereau; Victoria Derbyshire; Marlene Belfort; Georges Belfort; Patrick Van Roey; Chunyu Wang
The backbone and side chain resonance assignments of an engineered intein based on Mycobacterium tuberculosis RecA have been determined based on triple-resonance experiments with the uniformly [13C,15N]-labeled protein.
Biochemical Journal | 2014
Qin Wu; Zengqiang Gao; Yong Wei; Guolin Ma; Yuchuan Zheng; Yuhui Dong; Yangzhong Liu
The first crystal trans-structure of a naturally occurring split intein has been determined for the Npu (Nostoc punctiforme PCC73102) DnaE split intein. Guided by this structure, the residues NArg50 and CSer35, well conserved in DnaE split inteins, are identified to be critical in the trans-splicing of Npu DnaE split intein. An in vitro splicing assay demonstrates that NArg50 and CSer35 play synergistic roles in modulating its intein activity. The C-terminal CAsn36 exhibits two orientations of its side chain and interacts with both NArg50 and CSer35 through hydrogen bonding. These interactions likely facilitate the cyclization of asparagine in the course of protein splicing. The mutation of either residue reduces intein activity, and correlates with the low activity of the Ssp (Cyanobacterium synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803) DnaE split intein. On the other hand, NArg50 also forms a hydrogen bond with the highly conserved F-block CAsp17, thus influencing the N-S acyl shift during N-terminal cleavage. Sequence alignments show that residues NArg50 and CSer35 are rather conserved in those split inteins that lack a penultimate histidine residue. The conserved non-catalytic residues of split inteins modulate the efficiency of protein trans-splicing by hydrogen-bond interactions with the catalytic residues at the splice junction.
Nano LIFE | 2014
Yuchuan Zheng; Dechen Xu; Kai-Ju Wei; Daoli Zhao; Pingping Zhu; Yangzhong Liu
The water-soluble fluorescent carbon nanomaterials with low toxicity and high biocompatibility are considered as promising materials for biomedical and sensor applications. Here, we report that a nanosensor system has been developed to simultaneously detect two valence states of iron (Fe2+ and/or Fe3+) in aqueous solution based on fluorescent carbon nanoparticles (FCNs). The nanosensor has high selectivity and sensitivity with a limit of detection (LOD) of 5 μM, which is equivalent to 0.3 mg/L (5.36 μM) of iron in drinking water by United States Environment Protection Agency (US-EPA). Furthermore, a distinguishable color change of solution, from pale yellow to red-brown, can be observed as iron concentration reaching 40 μM, which provides way for fast, visible detection of irons.
Bioscience Reports | 2012
Yuchuan Zheng; Qin Wu; Chunyu Wang; Min‑qun Xu; Yangzhong Liu
Molecular BioSystems | 2009
Liyun Zhang; Yuchuan Zheng; Zhaoyong Xi; Zhaofeng Luo; Xiaolong Xu; Chunyu Wang; Yangzhong Liu
Metallomics | 2018
Yao Tian; Tiantian Fang; Siming Yuan; Yuchuan Zheng; Fabio Arnesano; Giovanni Natile; Yangzhong Liu
European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2017
Siming Yuan; Xin Ding; Yang Cui; Kai-Ju Wei; Yuchuan Zheng; Yangzhong Liu