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Mishra, Rajesh
Publications (6 of 6) Show all publications
Hammarström, P., Ali, M. M., Mishra, R., Salagic, B., Svensson, S., Tengvall, P. & Lundström, I. (2011). An Auto-Catalytic Surface for Conformational Replication of Amyloid Fibrils-Genesis of an Amyloid World?. Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere, 41(4), 373-383
Open this publication in new window or tab >>An Auto-Catalytic Surface for Conformational Replication of Amyloid Fibrils-Genesis of an Amyloid World?
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2011 (English)In: Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere, ISSN 0169-6149, E-ISSN 1573-0875, Vol. 41, no 4, p. 373-383Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Amyloid fibrils are composed of self assembled stacked peptide or protein molecules folded and trapped in a stable cross-beta-sheet conformation. The amyloid fibrillation mechanism represents an intriguing self-catalyzed process rendering replication of a molecular conformational memory of interest for prebiotic chemistry. Herein we describe how a solid surface can be rendered auto-catalytic for fibrillation of a protein solution. We have discovered that a hydrophobic silicon or glass surface can be made to continuously fibrillate solutions of insulin monomers under stressed conditions (pH 1.6, 65 degrees C). It was found that the surface acts as a platform for the formation of nascent seeds that induce fibril replication on and at the surface. This autocatalytic effect stems from a layer a few insulin molecules thick representing an oligomeric layer of misfolded, conformationally trapped, insulin molecules that rapidly through epitaxial growth catalyze the rate determining step (nucleation) during fibril replication. This autocatalytic layer is generated by the protein-solid surface interaction and conformational changes of the adsorbed protein during exposure at the air-water interface. The resulting autocatalytic surface thus both initiates local conformational molecular self-replication and acts as a reservoir for fibril seeds budding off into solution spreading fibril replication entities to the surrounding medium. The possibility of catalysis of the conformational replication process by minute amounts of nucleation sites located on a recruiting surface can evade the issue of dramatic concentration dependence of amyloidogenesis.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Springer Verlag (Germany), 2011
Keywords
Amyloid, Molecular replication, Self-assembly, Origin of life
National Category
Engineering and Technology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-75743 (URN)10.1007/s11084-010-9230-1 (DOI)000300367300007 ()
Note
Funding Agencies|Swedish Research Council||Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation||Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research||Available from: 2012-03-09 Created: 2012-03-09 Last updated: 2018-04-25
Mishra, R., Sjölander, D. & Hammarström, P. (2011). Spectroscopic characterization of diverse amyloid fibrils in vitro by the fluorescent dye Nile red. MOLECULAR BIOSYSTEMS, 7(4), 1232-1240
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Spectroscopic characterization of diverse amyloid fibrils in vitro by the fluorescent dye Nile red
2011 (English)In: MOLECULAR BIOSYSTEMS, ISSN 1742-206X, Vol. 7, no 4, p. 1232-1240Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The fluorescence of Nile red (9-diethylamino-5H-benzophenoxazine-5-one) is quenched in aqueous solutions but shows augmented fluorescence in hydrophobic environments. Nile red fluorescence was blue shifted and strongly augmented in the presence of various amyloid fibrils assayed under acidic as well as neutral pH conditions. Fibrils grown from lysozyme and insulin (at pH 1.6 and 65 degrees C), transthyretin (TTR) fibrils grown from the acid unfolded monomer (pH 2.0, 21 degrees C) or from the dissociated tetramer starting from native protein under less acidic conditions (pH 4.4, 37 degrees C) were detected. Nile red was also successfully employed in detecting A beta 1-42 and human prion protein (PrP90-231) amyloid fibrils grown at neutral pH. Nile red was amyloid fibril specific and did not fluoresce appreciably in the presence of the monomeric precursor proteins. Stokes shifts of the wavelength maximum of Nile red bound to various fibrils were different (ranging from 615 nm to 638 nm) indicating sensitivity to the tertiary structure in its respective binding sites of different amyloid proteins. A polarity assay using ethanol-water mixtures and pure octanol ranging from dielectric constants between 10 and 70 showed a linear correlation of Nile red Stokes shift and allowed assignment of amyloid fibril binding site polarity. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer between Thioflavin T (ThT) and Nile red was proven to be efficient and co-staining was employed to discriminate between conformational isoforms of A beta 1-42 amyloid fibrils grown under agitated and quiescent conditions. This paper demonstrates the complementary use of this fluorometric method for conformational typing of amyloid structures.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011
National Category
Engineering and Technology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-67157 (URN)10.1039/c0mb00236d (DOI)000288329300031 ()
Available from: 2011-04-01 Created: 2011-04-01 Last updated: 2018-04-25
Moparthi, S. B., Fristedt, R., Mishra, R., Almstedt, K., Karlsson, M., Hammarström, P. & Carlsson, U. (2010). Chaperone activity of Cyp18 through hydrophobic condensation that enables rescue of transient misfolded molten globule intermediates. Biochemistry, 49(6), 1137-1145
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Chaperone activity of Cyp18 through hydrophobic condensation that enables rescue of transient misfolded molten globule intermediates
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2010 (English)In: Biochemistry, ISSN 0006-2960, E-ISSN 1520-4995, Vol. 49, no 6, p. 1137-1145Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The single-domain cyclophilin 18 (Cyp18) has long been known to function as a peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPI) and was proposed by us to also function as a chaperone [Freskgård, P.-O., Bergenhem, N., Jonsson, B.-H., Svensson, M., and Carlsson, U. (1992) Science 258, 466−468]. Later several multidomain PPIs were demonstrated to work as both a peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase and a chaperone. However, the chaperone ability of Cyp18 has been debated. In this work, we add additional results that show that Cyp18 can both accelerate the rate of refolding and increase the yield of native protein during the folding reaction, i.e., function as both a folding catalyst and a chaperone. Refolding experiments were performed using severely destabilized mutants of human carbonic anhydrase II under conditions where the unfolding reaction is significant and a larger fraction of a more destabilized variant populates molten globule-like intermediates during refolding. A correlation of native state protein stability of the substrate protein versus Cyp18 chaperone activity was demonstrated. The induced correction of misfolded conformations by Cyp18 likely functions through rescue from misfolding of transient molten globule intermediates. ANS binding data suggest that the interaction by Cyp18 leads to an early stage condensation of accessible hydrophobic portions of the misfolding-prone protein substrate during folding. The opposite effect was observed for GroEL known as an unfoldase at early stages of refolding. The chaperone effect of Cyp18 was also demonstrated for citrate synthase, suggesting a general chaperone effect of this PPI.

Keywords
Chaperone, carbonic anhydrase, citrate synthase, peptidyl‐prolyl cis/trans isomerase, proline isomerase, cyclophilin
National Category
Natural Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-51602 (URN)10.1021/bi901997q (DOI)20070121 (PubMedID)
Available from: 2009-11-09 Created: 2009-11-09 Last updated: 2018-04-25Bibliographically approved
Hammarström, P., Ali Malik, M., Mishra, R., Svensson, S., Tengvall, P. & Lundström, I. (2008). A catalytic surface for amyloid fibril formation. Journal of Physics, Conference Series, 100
Open this publication in new window or tab >>A catalytic surface for amyloid fibril formation
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2008 (English)In: Journal of Physics, Conference Series, ISSN 1742-6588, E-ISSN 1742-6596, Vol. 100Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

A hydrophobic surface incubated in a solution of protein molecules (insulin monomers) was made into a catalytic surface for amyloid fibril formation by repeatedly incubate, rinse and dry the surface. The present contribution describes how this unexpected transformation occurred and its relation to rapid fibrillation of insulin solutions in contact with the surface. A tentative model of the properties of the catalytic surface is given, corroborated by ellipsometric measurements of the thickness of the organic layer on the surface and by atomic force microscopy. The surfaces used were spontaneously oxidized silicon made hydrophobic through treatment in dichlorodimethylsilane.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Institute of Physics (IoP), 2008
National Category
Engineering and Technology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-58432 (URN)10.1088/1742-6596/100/5/052039 (DOI)000275655200135 ()
Available from: 2010-08-12 Created: 2010-08-11 Last updated: 2018-04-25
Mishra, R., Olofsson, L., Karlsson, M., Carlsson, U., Nicholls, I. A. & Hammarström, P. (2008). A conformationally isoformic thermophilic protein with high kinetic unfolding barriers. Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences (CMLS), 65(5), 827-839
Open this publication in new window or tab >>A conformationally isoformic thermophilic protein with high kinetic unfolding barriers
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2008 (English)In: Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences (CMLS), ISSN 1420-682X, E-ISSN 1420-9071, Vol. 65, no 5, p. 827-839Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The basis for the stability of thermophilic proteins is of fundamental interest for extremophile biology. We investigated the folding and unfolding processes of the homotetrameric Thermoanaerobacter brockii alcohol dehydrogenase (TBADH). TBADH subunits were 4.8 kcal/mol less stable towards guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) unfolding compared to urea, indicating ionic modulation of TBADH stability. Strongly denaturing conditions promoted mono-exponential unfolding kinetics with linear dependence on denaturant concentration. Here TBADH unfolded >40-fold slower when extrapolated from urea as compared to GdmCl unfolding. A marked unfolding hysteresis was shown when comparing refolding and unfolding in urea. An unusual biphasic unfolding trajectory with an exceptionally slow phase at intermediate concentrations of GdmCl and urea was also observed. We advocate that TBADH forms two distinctly different tetrameric isoforms, and likely an ensemble of native states. This unusual supramolecular folding behavior has been shown responsible for formation of amyloidotic yeast prion strains and can have functional importance for TBADH. © 2008 Birkhaueser.

National Category
Natural Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-43773 (URN)10.1007/s00018-008-7517-4 (DOI)74765 (Local ID)74765 (Archive number)74765 (OAI)
Available from: 2009-10-10 Created: 2009-10-10 Last updated: 2018-04-25
Mishra, R., Sörgjerd, K., Nyström, S., Nordigården, A., Chiu, Y.-J. & Hammarström, P. (2007). Lysozyme Amyloidogenesis Is Accelerated by Specific Nicking and Fragmentation but Decelerated by Intact Protein Binding and Conversion. Journal of Molecular Biology, 366(3), 1029-1044
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Lysozyme Amyloidogenesis Is Accelerated by Specific Nicking and Fragmentation but Decelerated by Intact Protein Binding and Conversion
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2007 (English)In: Journal of Molecular Biology, ISSN 0022-2836, E-ISSN 1089-8638, Vol. 366, no 3, p. 1029-1044Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

We have revisited the well-studied heat and acidic amyloid fibril formation pathway (pH 1.6, 65 °C) of hen egg-white lysozyme (HEWL) to map the barriers of the misfolding and amyloidogenesis pathways. A comprehensive kinetic mechanism is presented where all steps involving protein hydrolysis, fragmentation, assembly and conversion into amyloid fibrils are accounted for. Amyloid fibril formation of lysozyme has multiple kinetic barriers. First, HEWL unfolds within minutes, followed by irreversible steps of partial acid hydrolysis affording a large amount of nicked HEWL, the 49-101 amyloidogenic fragment and a variety of other species over 5-40 h. Fragmentation forming the 49-101 fragment is a requirement for efficient amyloid fibril formation, indicating that it forms the rate-determining nucleus. Nicked full-length HEWL is recruited efficiently into amyloid fibrils in the fibril growth phase or using mature fibrils as seeds, which abolished the lag phase completely. Mature amyloid fibrils of HEWL are composed mainly of nicked HEWL in the early equilibrium phase but go through a "fibril shaving" process, affording fibrils composed of the 49-101 fragment and 53-101 fragment during more extensive maturation (incubation for longer than ten days). Seeding of the amyloid fibril formation process using sonicated mature amyloid fibrils accelerates the fibril formation process efficiently, however, addition of intact full-length lysozyme at the end of the lag phase slows the rate of amyloidogenesis. The intact full-length protein, in contrast to nicked lysozyme, slows fibril formation due to its slow conversion into the amyloid fold, probably due to inclusion of the non-amyloidogenic 1-48/102-129 portion of HEWL in the fibrils, which can function as a "molecular bumper" stalling further growth. © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

National Category
Natural Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-41994 (URN)10.1016/j.jmb.2006.11.084 (DOI)59513 (Local ID)59513 (Archive number)59513 (OAI)
Available from: 2009-10-10 Created: 2009-10-10 Last updated: 2019-11-08
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