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Dive into the research topics where Zoltán Kóta is active.

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Featured researches published by Zoltán Kóta.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2003

Functional significance of the lipid-protein interface in photosynthetic membranes

Tibor Páli; Győző Garab; LászlóI. Horváth; Zoltán Kóta

The functional significance of the lipid-protein interface in photosynthetic membranes, mainly in thylakoids, is reviewed with emphasis on membrane structure and dynamics. The lipid-protein interface is identified primarily by the restricted molecular dynamics of its lipids as compared with the dynamics in the bulk lipid phase of the membrane. In a broad sense, lipid-protein interfaces comprise solvation shell lipids that are weakly associated with the hydrophobic surface of transmembrane proteins but also include lipids that are strongly and specifically bound to membrane proteins or protein assemblies. The relation between protein-associated lipids and the overall fluidity of the thylakoid membrane is discussed. Spin label electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy has been identified as the technique of choice to characterize the protein solvation shell in its highly dynamic nature; biochemical and direct structural methods have revealed an increasing number of protein-bound lipids. The structural and functional roles of these protein-bound lipids are mustered, but in most cases they remain to be determined. As suggested by recent data, the interaction of the non-bilayer-forming lipid, monogalactosyldyacilglycerol (MGDG), with the main light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein complexes of photosystem-II (LHCII), the most abundant lipid and membrane protein components on earth, play multiple structural and functional roles in developing and mature thylakoid membranes. A brief outlook to future directions concludes this review.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Protein assembly and heat stability in developing thylakoid membranes during greening

Zoltán Kóta; László Horváth; Magdolna Droppa; Gábor Horváth; Tibor Farkas; Tibor Páli

The development of the thylakoid membrane was studied during illumination of dark-grown barley seedlings by using biochemical methods, and Fourier transform infrared and spin label electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic techniques. Correlated, gross changes in the secondary structure of membrane proteins, conformation, composition, and dynamics of lipid acyl chains, SDS/PAGE pattern, and thermally induced structural alterations show that greening is accompanied with the reorganization of membrane protein assemblies and the protein–lipid interface. Changes in overall membrane fluidity and noncovalent protein–lipid interactions are not monotonic, despite the monotonic accumulation of chlorophyll, LHCII [light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding (polypeptides) associated with photosystem II] apoproteins, and 18:3 fatty acids that follow a similar time course with highest rates between 12–24 h of greening. The 18:3 fatty acid content increases 2.8-fold during greening. This appears to both compensate for lipid immobilization by membrane proteins and facilitate packing of larger protein assemblies. The increase in the amount of protein-solvating immobile lipids, which reaches a maximum at 12 h, is caused by 40% decrease in the membranous mean diameter of protein assemblies at constant protein/lipid mass ratio. Alterations in the SDS/PAGE pattern are most significant between 6–24 h. The size of membrane protein assemblies increases ≈4.5-fold over the 12–48-h period, likely caused by the 2-fold gain in LHCII apoproteins. The thermal stability of thylakoid membrane proteins increases monotonically, as detected by an increasing temperature of partial protein unfolding during greening. Our data suggest that a structural coupling between major protein and lipid components develops during greening. This protein–lipid interaction is required for the development and protection of thylakoid membrane protein assemblies.


Biophysical Journal | 2004

Orientation and Lipid-Peptide Interactions of Gramicidin A in Lipid Membranes: Polarized Attenuated Total Reflection Infrared Spectroscopy and Spin-Label Electron Spin Resonance

Zoltán Kóta; Tibor Páli; Derek Marsh

Gramicidin A was incorporated at a peptide/lipid ratio of 1:10 mol/mol in aligned bilayers of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC), phosphatidylserine (DMPS), phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG), and phosphatidylethanolamine (DMPE), from trifluoroethanol. Orientations of the peptide and lipid chains were determined by polarized attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy. Lipid-peptide interactions with gramicidin A in DMPC bilayers were studied with different spin-labeled lipid species by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. In DMPC membranes, the orientation of the lipid chains is comparable to that in the absence of peptide, in both gel and fluid phases. In gel-phase DMPC, the effective tilt of the peptide exceeds that of the lipid chains, but in the fluid phase both are similar. For gramicidin A in DMPS, DMPG, and DMPE, the degree of orientation of the peptide and lipid chains is less than in DMPC. In the fluid phase of DMPS, DMPG, and DMPE, gramicidin A is also less well oriented than are the lipid chains. In DMPE especially, gramicidin A is largely disordered. In DMPC membranes, three to four lipids per monomer experience direct motional restriction on interaction with gramicidin A. This is approximately half the number of lipids expected to contact the intramembranous perimeter of the gramicidin A monomer. A selectivity for certain negatively charged lipids is found in the interaction with gramicidin A in DMPC. These results are discussed in terms of the integration of gramicidin A channels in lipid bilayers, and of the interactions of lipids with integral membrane proteins.


Biochemistry | 2008

Incorporation of transmembrane peptides from the vacuolar H+-ATPase in phospholipid membranes: spin-label electron paramagnetic resonance and polarized infrared spectroscopy.

Zoltán Kóta; Tibor Páli; Neil Dixon; Terry P. Kee; Michael A. Harrison; John B. C. Findlay; Malcolm E. Finbow; Derek Marsh

Peptides were designed that are based on candidate transmembrane sequences of the V o-sector from the vacuolar H (+)-ATPase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Spin-label EPR studies of lipid-protein interactions were used to characterize the state of oligomerization, and polarized IR spectroscopy was used to determine the secondary structure and orientation, of these peptides in lipid bilayer membranes. Peptides corresponding to the second and fourth transmembrane domains (TM2 and TM4) of proteolipid subunit c (Vma3p) and of the putative seventh transmembrane domain (TM7) of subunit a (Vph1p) are wholly, or predominantly, alpha-helical in membranes of dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine. All three peptides self-assemble into oligomers of different sizes, in which the helices are differently inclined with respect to the membrane normal. The coassembly of rotor (Vma3p TM4) and stator (Vph1p TM7) peptides, which respectively contain the glutamate and arginine residues essential to proton transport by the rotary ATPase mechanism, is demonstrated from changes in the lipid interaction stoichiometry and helix orientation. Concanamycin, a potent V-ATPase inhibitor, and a 5-(2-indolyl)-2,4-pentadienoyl inhibitor that exhibits selectivity for the osteoclast subtype, interact with the membrane-incorporated Vma3p TM4 peptide, as evidenced by changes in helix orientation; concanamycin additionally interacts with Vph1p TM7, suggesting that both stator and rotor elements contribute to the inhibitor site within the membrane. Comparison of the peptide behavior in lipid bilayers is made with membranous subunit c assemblies of the 16-kDa proteolipid from Nephrops norvegicus, which can substitute functionally for Vma3p in S. cerevisiae.


Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2003

Onium-decavanadate ion-pair complexes as catalysts in the oxidation of hydrocarbons by O2

László J. Csányi; Károly Jáky; György Dombi; Ferenc Evanics; Gergely Dezső; Zoltán Kóta

Abstract The catalysed oxidations of hydrocarbons were found to involve radicals and to be inhibited effectively by phenolic scavengers. The dependences of the activities of the catalysts on their concentrations are explained by the structural changes in the inverse micelles, from the first small spherical associates through an open-layered more active structure, which finally folds back by forming a hollow spherical closed structure, with a fall in the rate. The 51 V NMR spectral behaviour of the ion-pair catalysts and the colour changes in the solutions are discussed. The decavanadate structure is not destroyed entirely during the catalysed oxidation, in spite of the partial reduction of the V(V) centres and some structural deformations. The essential role of water and the influence of the products of oxidation by O 2 on the courses of the reactions are also discussed.


Journal of Molecular Structure | 1999

Fourier transform infrared and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic studies of thylakoid membranes

Zoltán Kóta; Balázs Szalontai; Magdolna Droppa; Gábor Horváth; Tibor Páli

Abstract Changes in both structure and dynamics of thylakoid membranes exposed to heat stress during greening of etiolated barley seedlings were studied using complementary spectroscopic techniques. FTIR spectra of thylakoid membranes were analyzed in the Amide I and the symmetric CH2 stretching vibration regions providing data on protein secondary structures and lipid acyl chain conformations, respectively. The partitioning of 2,2,6,6,-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO) and chain dynamics of 5-(4′,4′-dimethyloxazolidine-N-oxyl)stearic acid (5-SASL) spin labels in thylakoid membranes were measured using EPR spectroscopy. Both proteins and lipids responded to heat stress with major structural changes around 40°C and 50°C, at any stages of greening, which can be related to the dissociation of the light harvesting complexes and the exclusion of non-bilayer-forming lipids from the membrane, respectively. Greening was found to be a multistage process concerning both mobility, packing density and conformation of lipid fatty acyl chains as well as protein secondary structure, with correlated events during illumination.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2017

Biotin and glutathione targeting of solid nanoparticles to cross human brain endothelial cells

Szilvia Veszelka; Mária Mészáros; Loránd Kiss; Zoltán Kóta; Tibor Páli; Zsófia Hoyk; Zsolt Bozsó; Lívia Fülöp; András Tóth; Gábor Rákhely; Mária A. Deli

BACKGROUND The blood-brain barrier restricts drug penetration to the central nervous system. Targeted nanocarriers are new potential tools to increase the brain entry of drugs. Ligands of endogenous transporters of the blood-brain barrier can be used as targeting vectors for brain delivery of nanoparticles. OBJECTIVE We tested biotin-labeled solid nanoparticles for the first time and compared to biotinylated glutathione- labeled nanoparticles in brain endothelial cells. METHOD Neutravidin coated fluorescent polystyrene nanoparticles were derivatized with biotin and biotinylated glutathione. As a human in vitro blood-brain barrier model hCMEC/D3 brain endothelial cells were used. Cell viability by MTT test, uptake and transfer of the nanoparticles across the endothelial monolayers were measured. The uptake of the nanoparticles was visualized by confocal microscopy. RESULTS The tested nanoparticles caused no change in cell viability. The uptake of biotin- and glutathione-labeled nanoparticles by brain endothelial cells was time-dependent and significantly higher compared to non-labeled nanoparticles. The penetration of the glutathione-labeled nanoparticles across the endothelial monolayer was higher than the biotin-targeted ones. Biotin- and glutathione-targeted nanoparticles were visualized in hCMEC/D3 cells. We verified that hCMEC/D3 express mRNA for sodium-dependent multivitamin transporter (SMVT/SLC5A6) responsible for the blood-brain barrier transport of biotin. CONCLUSION Biotin as a ligand increased the uptake and the transfer of nanoparticles across brain endothelial cells. Biotinylated glutathione could further increase nanoparticle permeability through endothelial monolayers supporting its use as a brain targeting vector.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Studying lipid-protein interactions with electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of spin-labeled lipids

Tibor Páli; Zoltán Kóta

Spin label electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) of lipid-protein interactions reveals crucial features of the structure and assembly of integral membrane proteins. Spin label EPR spectroscopy is the technique of choice to characterize the protein-solvating lipid shell in its highly dynamic nature, because the EPR spectra of lipids that are spin labeled close to the terminal methyl end of their acyl chains display two spectral components, those corresponding to lipids directly contacting the protein and those corresponding to lipids in the bulk fluid bilayer regions of the membrane. In this chapter, typical spin label EPR procedures are presented that allow determination of the stoichiometry of interaction of spin-labeled lipids with the intra-membranous region of membrane proteins or polypeptides, as well as the association constant of the spin-labeled lipid with respect to the host lipid. The lipids giving rise to the so-called immobile spectral component in the EPR spectrum of such samples are identified as the motionally restricted first-shell lipids solvating membrane proteins in biomembranes. Stoichiometry and selectivity are directly related to the structure of the intra-membranous sections of membrane-associated proteins or polypeptides and can be used to study the state of assembly of such proteins in the membrane. Since these characteristics of lipid-protein interactions are discussed in detail in the literature [see Marsh (Eur Biophys J 39:513-525, 2010) for a most recent review], here we focus more on how to spin label model and biomembranes and how to measure and analyze the two-component EPR spectra of spin-labeled lipids in phospholipid bilayers that contain proteins or polypeptides. After a description of how to prepare spin-labeled model and native biological membranes, we present the reader with computational procedures for determining the molar fraction of motionally restricted lipids when both, one, or none of the pure isolated-mobile or immobile-spectral components are available. With these topics, this chapter complements a recent methodological paper [Marsh (Methods 46:83-96, 2008)]. The interpretation of the data is discussed briefly, as well as other relevant and recent spin label EPR techniques for studying lipid-protein interactions, not only from the point of view of lipid chain dynamics.


Archive | 1999

Structural-Functional Organization of Thylakoids in Developing Chloroplasts

Magdolna Droppa; Zoltán Kóta; Tibor Páli; Balázs Szalontai; LászlóI. Horváth; Gábor Horváth

Functional and structural changes of greening thylakoid membranes were investigated by comparing the fluorescence induction characteristics, and the structural organization of thylakoids at the level of lipid structure and protein conformations studied by electron spin resonance (ESR), and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopies.


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2018

Niosomes decorated with dual ligands targeting brain endothelial transporters increase cargo penetration across the blood-brain barrier

Mária Mészáros; Gergő Porkoláb; Lóránd Kiss; Ana Maria Pilbat; Zoltán Kóta; Zoltán Kupihár; Albert Kéri; Gábor Galbács; László Siklós; András Tóth; Lívia Fülöp; Mária Csete; Áron Sipos; Petra Hülper; Péter Sipos; Tibor Páli; Gábor Rákhely; Piroska Szabó-Révész; Mária A. Deli; Szilvia Veszelka

ABSTRACT Nanoparticles targeting transporters of the blood‐brain barrier (BBB) are promising candidates to increase the brain penetration of biopharmacons. Solute carriers (SLC) are expressed at high levels in brain endothelial cells and show a specific pattern at the BBB. The aim of our study was to test glutathione and ligands of SLC transporters as single or dual BBB targeting molecules for nanovesicles. High mRNA expression levels for hexose and neutral amino acid transporting SLCs were found in isolated rat brain microvessels and our rat primary cell based co‐culture BBB model. Niosomes were derivatized with glutathione and SLC ligands glucopyranose and alanine. Serum albumin complexed with Evans blue (67 kDa), which has a very low BBB penetration, was selected as a cargo. The presence of targeting ligands on niosomes, especially dual labeling, increased the uptake of the cargo molecule in cultured brain endothelial cells. This cellular uptake was temperature dependent and could be decreased with a metabolic inhibitor and endocytosis blockers filipin and cytochalasin D. Making the negative surface charge of brain endothelial cells more positive with a cationic lipid or digesting the glycocalyx with neuraminidase elevated the uptake of the cargo after treatment with targeted nanocarriers. Treatment with niosomes increased plasma membrane fluidity, suggesting the fusion of nanovesicles with endothelial cell membranes. Targeting ligands elevated the permeability of the cargo across the BBB in the culture model and in mice, and dual‐ligand decoration of niosomes was more effective than single ligand labeling. Our data indicate that dual labeling with ligands of multiple SLC transporters can potentially be exploited for BBB targeting of nanoparticles. Graphical abstract Figure. No Caption available.

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Tibor Páli

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Balázs Szalontai

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Gábor Horváth

Eötvös Loránd University

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Magdolna Droppa

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Mária A. Deli

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Szilvia Veszelka

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Alajos Bérczi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Ana Maria Pilbat

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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