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Viegas, Aldino, Natercia F. Bras, Nuno M. F. S. A. Cerqueira, Pedro Alexandrino Fernandes, Jose A. M. Prates, Carlos M. G. A. Fontes, Marta Bruix, Maria Joao Romao, Ana Luisa Carvalho, Maria Joao Ramos, Anjos L. Macedo, and Eurico J. Cabrita. "Molecular determinants of ligand specificity in family 11 carbohydrate binding modules - an NMR, X-ray crystallography and computational chemistry approach." Febs Journal. 275 (2008): 2524-2535. Abstract
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Viegas, Aldino, Joao Sardinha, Filipe Freire, Daniel F. Duarte, Ana L. Carvalho, Carlos M. G. A. Fontes, Maria J. Romao, Anjos L. Macedo, and Eurico J. Cabrita. "Solution structure, dynamics and binding studies of a family 11 carbohydrate-binding module from Clostridium thermocellum (CtCBM11)." The Biochemical journal. 451 (2013): 289-300.Website
Viciosa, M. T., N. T. Correia, M. Salmeron Sanchez, AL Carvalho, MJ Romao, J. L. Gomez Ribelles, and M. Dionisio. "Real-Time Monitoring of Molecular Dynamics of Ethylene Glycol Dimethacrylate Glass Former." Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 113 (2009): 14209-14217. Abstract
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Trovão, Filipa, Viviana G. Correia, Frederico M. Lourenço, Diana O. Ribeiro, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Angelina S. Palma, and Benedita A. Pinheiro. "The structure of a Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron carbohydrate-binding module provides new insight into the recognition of complex pectic polysaccharides by the human microbiome." (2023): 100084. AbstractWebsite

TheBacteroides thetaiotaomicronhas developed a consortium of enzymes capable of overcoming steric constraints and degrading, in a sequential manner, the complex rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II) polysaccharide. BT0996 protein acts in the initial stages of the RGII depolymerisation, where its two catalytic modules remove the terminal monosaccharides from RG-II side chains A and B. BT0996 is modular and has three putative carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) for which the roles in the RG-II degradation are unknown. Here, we present the characterisation of themoduleat the C-terminal domain, which we designated BT0996C. The high-resolution structure obtained by X-ray crystallography reveals that the protein displays a typical β-sandwich fold with structural similarity to CBMs assigned to families 6 and 35. The distinctive features are: 1) the presence of several charged residues at the BT0996-C surface creating a large, broad positive lysine-rich patch that encompasses the putative binding site; and 2) the absence of the highly conserved binding-site signatures observed in CBMs from families 6 and 35, such as region A tryptophan and region C asparagine. These findings hint at a binding mode of BT0996-C not yet observed in its homologues. In line with this, carbohydrate microarrays and microscale thermophoresis show the ability of BT0996-C to bind α1-4-linked polygalacturonic acid, and that electrostatic interactions are essential for the recognition of the anionic polysaccharide. The results support the hypothesis that BT0996-C may have evolved to potentiate the action of BT0996 catalytic modules on the complex structure of RG-II by binding to the polygalacturonic acid backbone sequence.

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Silva, José Malanho, Linda Cerofolini, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Enrico Ravera, Marco Fragai, Giacomo Parigi, Anjos L. Macedo, Carlos F. G. C. Geraldes, and Claudio Luchinat. "Elucidating the concentration-dependent effects of thiocyanate binding to carbonic anhydrase." 244 (2023): 112222. AbstractWebsite

Many proteins naturally carry metal centers, with a large share of them being in the active sites of several enzymes. Paramagnetic effects are a powerful source of structural information and, therefore, if the native metal is paramagnetic, or it can be functionally substituted with a paramagnetic one, paramagnetic effects can be used to study the metal sites, as well as the overall structure of the protein. One notable example is cobalt(II) substitution for zinc(II) in carbonic anhydrase. In this manuscript we investigate the effects of sodium thiocyanate on the chemical environment of the metal ion of the human carbonic anhydrase II. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) titration of the cobalt(II) protein with thiocyanate shows that the EPR spectrum changes from A-type to C-type on passing from 1:1 to 1:1000-fold ligand excess. This indicates the occurrence of a change in the electronic structure, which may reflect a sizable change in the metal coordination environment in turn caused by a modification of the frozen solvent glass. However, paramagnetic nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data indicate that the metal coordination cage remains unperturbed even in 1:1000-fold ligand excess. This result proves that the C-type EPR spectrum observed at large ligand concentration should be ascribed to the low temperature at which EPR measurements are performed, which impacts on the structure of the protein when it is destabilized by a high concentration of a chaotropic agent.

Santos-Silva, T., J. Trincao, AL Carvalho, C. Bonifacio, F. Auchere, I. Moura, JJG Moura, and MJ Romao. "Superoxide reductase from the syphilis spirochete Treponema pallidum: crystallization and structure determination using soft X-rays." Acta Crystallographica Section F-Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications. 61 (2005): 967-970. Abstract
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Santos-Silva, T., J. Trincao, AL Carvalho, C. Bonifacio, F. Auchere, P. Raleiras, I. Moura, JJG Moura, and MJ Romao. "The first crystal structure of class III superoxide reductase from Treponema pallidum." Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry. 11 (2006): 548-558. Abstract
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dos Santos, Raquel, Maria João Romão, Ana Cecília A. Roque, and Ana Luísa Carvalho. "Magnetic particles used in a new approach for designed protein crystallization." CrystEngComm. 23 (2021): 1083-1090. AbstractWebsite

After more than one hundred and thirty thousand protein structures determined by X-ray crystallography{,} the challenge of protein crystallization for 3D structure determination remains. In the quest for additives for efficient protein crystallization{,} inorganic materials emerge as an alternative. Magnetic particles (MPs) are versatile inorganic materials{,} easy to use{,} modify and manipulate in a wide range of biological assays. The potential of using functionalised MPs as crystallization chaperones for protein crystallization was shown in this work. MPs with distinct coatings were rationally designed to promote protein crystallization by affinity-triggered heterogeneous nucleation. Hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) and trypsin{,} were crystallized in the presence of MPs either bare or coated with a polysaccharide (chitin) or a protein (casein){,} respectively. The addition of MPs was characterized in terms of bound protein to the MPs{,} crystal morphology{,} time-lapse of crystal emergence{,} crystallization yield fold change and crystal diffraction quality for structure determination. The MPs additives have shown to bind to the respective target protein{,} and to promote nucleation and crystal growth without compromising crystal morphology. On the other hand{,} MPs addition led to faster detectable crystal emergence and up to 13 times higher crystallization yield{,} addressing some the challenges in protein crystallization{,} the main bottleneck of macromolecular crystallography. Structure determination of the protein crystallized in the presence of MPs revealed that the structural characteristics of the protein remained unchanged{,} as shown by the superposition with PDB annotated proteins. Moreover{,} and unlike most reported cases{,} it was possible to exclude the inhibitor benzamidine during trypsin crystallisation{,} which is a remarkable result opening new prospects in enzyme engineering and drug design. Our results show that MPs coated with affinity ligands to target proteins can be used as controlled and tailor-made crystallization inducers.

dos Santos, Raquel, Inês Iria, Ana M. Manuel, Ana P. Leandro, Catarina A. C. Madeira, Joao Goncalves, Ana Luísa Carvalho, and Ana Cecília Roque. "Magnetic Precipitation: A New Platform for Protein Purification." Biotechnology JournalBiotechnology Journal. n/a.n/a (2020): 2000151. AbstractWebsite

One of the trends in downstream processing comprises the use of ?anything-but-chromatography? methods to overcome the current downfalls of standard packed-bed chromatography. Precipitation and magnetic separation are two techniques already proven to accomplish protein purification from complex media, yet never used in synergy. With the aim to capture antibodies directly from crude extracts, a new approach combining precipitation and magnetic separation was developed and named as affinity magnetic precipitation. A precipitation screening, based on the Hofmeister series, and a commercial precipitation kit were tested with affinity magnetic particles to assess the best condition for antibody capture from human serum plasma and clarified cell supernatant. The best conditions were obtained when using PEG3350 as precipitant at 4°C for 1h, reaching 80% purity and 50% recovery of polyclonal antibodies from plasma, and 99% purity with 97% recovery yield of anti-TNFα mAb from cell supernatants. These results show that the synergetic use of precipitation and magnetic separation can represent an alternative for the efficient capture of antibodies. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved

dos Santos, Raquel, Ana Luísa Carvalho, and Cecília A. A. Roque. "Renaissance of protein crystallization and precipitation in biopharmaceuticals purification." Biotechnology Advances (2017): -. AbstractWebsite

Abstract The current chromatographic approaches used in protein purification are not keeping pace with the increasing biopharmaceutical market demand. With the upstream improvements, the bottleneck shifted towards the downstream process. New approaches rely in Anything But Chromatography methodologies and revisiting former techniques with a bioprocess perspective. Protein crystallization and precipitation methods are already implemented in the downstream process of diverse therapeutic biological macromolecules, overcoming the current chromatographic bottlenecks. Promising work is being developed in order to implement crystallization and precipitation in the purification pipeline of high value therapeutic molecules. This review focuses in the role of these two methodologies in current industrial purification processes, and highlights their potential implementation in the purification pipeline of high value therapeutic molecules, overcoming chromatographic holdups.

Santarsia, Sabrina, Ana Sofia Grosso, Filipa Trovão, Jesús Jiménez-Barbero, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Cristina Nativi, and Filipa Marcelo. "Molecular recognition of a Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen mimetic targeting human galectin-3." ChemMedChem. Aug 9. doi: 10.1002/cmdc.201800525. [Epub ahead of print] (2018). AbstractWebsite

Overexpression of the Thomsen-Friedenreich (TF) antigen in cell membrane proteins occurs in 90% of adenocarcinomas. Additionally, the binding of the TF-antigen to human galectin-3 (Gal-3), also frequently overexpressed in malignancy, promotes cancer progression and metastasis. In this context, structures that interfere with this specific interaction display the potential to prevent cancer metastasis. Herein, a multidisciplinary approach, combining the optimized synthesis of a TF-antigen mimetic with NMR, X-ray crystallography methods and isothermal titration calorimetry assays has been employed to unravel the molecular structural details that govern the Gal-3/TF-mimetic interaction. The TF-mimetic presents a binding affinity for Gal-3 similar to the TF-natural antigen and retains the binding epitope and the bioactive conformation observed for the native antigen. Furthermore, from a thermodynamic perspective a decrease in the enthalpic contribution was observed for the Gal-3/TF-mimetic complex, however this behaviour is compensated by a favourable entropy gain. From a structural perspective, these results establish our TF-mimetic as a scaffold to design multivalent solutions to potentially interfere with Gal-3 aberrant interactions and likely be used to hamper Gal-3-mediated cancer cells adhesion and metastasis.

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Romero, A., MJ Romao, P. F. Varela, I. Kolln, JM Dias, AL Carvalho, L. Sanz, E. TopferPetersen, and JJ Calvete. "The crystal structures of two spermadhesins reveal the CUB domain fold." Nature Structural Biology. 4 (1997): 783-788. Abstract

Spermadhesins, 12,000-14,000 M-r mammalian proteins, include lectins involved in sperm-egg binding and display a single CUB domain architecture. We report the crystal structures of porcine seminal plasma PSP-I/PSP-II, a heterodimer of two glycosylated spermadhesins. and bovine aSFP at 2.4 Angstrom and 1.9 Angstrom resolution respectively.

Romao, MJ, I. Kolln, JM Dias, AL Carvalho, A. Romero, P. F. Varela, L. Sanz, E. Topfer-Petersen, and JJ Calvete. "Crystal structure of acidic seminal fluid protein (aSFP) at 1.9 angstrom resolution: a bovine polypeptide of the spermadhesin family." Journal of Molecular Biology. 274 (1997): 650-660. Abstract

We report the three-dimensional crystal structure of acidic seminal fluid protein (aSFP), a 12.9 kDa poly-peptide of the spermadhesin family isolated from bovine seminal plasma, solved by the multiple isomorphous replacement method and refined with data to 1.9 Angstrom resolution with a final R-factor of 17.3%. aSFP is built by a single CUB domain architecture, a 100 to 110 amino-acid-residue extracellular module found in 16 functionally diverse proteins. The structure of aSFP reveals that the CUB domain displays a beta-sandwich topology organised into two 5-stranded beta-sheets, each of which contain two parallel and four antiparallel strands. The structure of aSFP is almost identical to that of porcine spermadhesins PSP-I and PSP-II, which in turn show limited structural similarity with jellyroll topologies of certain virus capsid proteins. Essentially, topologically conserved residues in these proteins are those internal amino acids forming the hydrophobic core of the CUB and the jellyroll domains, suggesting their importance in maintaining the integrity of these protein folds, On the other hand, the structure of aSFP shows structural features that are unique to this protein and which may provide a structural ground for understanding the distinct biological properties of different members of the spermadhesin protein family. (C) 1997 Academic Press Limited.

Ribeiro, Diana O., Aldino Viegas, Virgínia M. R. Pires, João Medeiros-Silva, Pedro Bule, Wengang Chai, Filipa Marcelo, Carlos M. G. A. Fontes, Eurico J. Cabrita, Angelina S. Palma, and Ana Luísa Carvalho. "Molecular basis for the preferential recognition of β1,3-1,4-glucans by the family 11 carbohydrate-binding module from Clostridium thermocellum." The FEBS Journal. 287 (2020): 2723-2743. AbstractWebsite

Understanding the specific molecular interactions between proteins and β1,3-1,4-mixed-linked d-glucans is fundamental to harvest the full biological and biotechnological potential of these carbohydrates and of proteins that specifically recognize them. The family 11 carbohydrate-binding module from Clostridium thermocellum (CtCBM11) is known for its binding preference for β1,3-1,4-mixed-linked over β1,4-linked glucans. Despite the growing industrial interest of this protein for the biotransformation of lignocellulosic biomass, the molecular determinants of its ligand specificity are not well defined. In this report, a combined approach of methodologies was used to unravel, at a molecular level, the ligand recognition of CtCBM11. The analysis of the interaction by carbohydrate microarrays and NMR and the crystal structures of CtCBM11 bound to β1,3-1,4-linked glucose oligosaccharides showed that both the chain length and the position of the β1,3-linkage are important for recognition, and identified the tetrasaccharide Glcβ1,4Glcβ1,4Glcβ1,3Glc sequence as a minimum epitope required for binding. The structural data, along with site-directed mutagenesis and ITC studies, demonstrated the specificity of CtCBM11 for the twisted conformation of β1,3-1,4-mixed-linked glucans. This is mediated by a conformation–selection mechanism of the ligand in the binding cleft through CH-π stacking and a hydrogen bonding network, which is dependent not only on ligand chain length, but also on the presence of a β1,3-linkage at the reducing end and at specific positions along the β1,4-linked glucan chain. The understanding of the detailed mechanism by which CtCBM11 can distinguish between linear and mixed-linked β-glucans strengthens its exploitation for the design of new biomolecules with improved capabilities and applications in health and agriculture. Database Structural data are available in the Protein Data Bank under the accession codes 6R3M and 6R31.

Ribeiro, Diana O., Benedita A. Pinheiro, Ana Luisa Carvalho, and Angelina S. Palma. "Targeting protein-carbohydrate interactions in plant cell-wall biodegradation: the power of carbohydrate microarrays." Carbohydrate Chemistry: Chemical and Biological Approaches Volume 43. Vol. 43. The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2018. 159-176. Abstract

The plant cell-wall is constituted by structurally diverse polysaccharides. The biodegradation of these is a crucial process for life sustainability. Cellulolytic microorganisms are highly efficient in this process by assembling modular architectures of carbohydrate-active enzymes with appended non-catalytic carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). Carbohydrate microarrays offer high-throughput and sensitive tools for uncovering carbohydrate-binding specificities of CBMs{,} which is pivotal to understand the function of these modules in polysaccharide biodegradation mechanisms. Features of this technology will be here briefly reviewed with highlights of microarray approaches to study plant-carbohydrates and CBM-carbohydrate interactions{,} along with an overview of plant polysaccharides and microorganisms strategies for their recognition.

Ribeiro, D. O., F. Bonnardel, A. S. Palma, A. L. M. Carvalho, and S. Perez. "CBMcarb-DB: interface of the three-dimensional landscape of carbohydrate-binding modules." Carbohydrate Chemistry: Chemical and Biological Approaches Volume 46. Eds. Amélia Pilar Rauter, Yves Queneau, and Angelina Sá Palma. Vol. 46. Royal Society of Chemistry, 2024. Abstract

Carbohydrate-binding-modules (CBMs) are discrete auxiliary protein modules with a non-catalytic carbohydrate-binding function and that exhibit a great diversity of binding specificities. CBMcarb-DB is a curated database that classifies the three-dimensional structures of CBM–carbohydrate complexes determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods and solution NMR spectroscopy. We designed the database architecture and the navigation tools to query the database with the Protein Data Bank (PDB), UniProtKB, and GlyTouCan (universal glycan repository) identifiers. Special attention was devoted to describing the bound glycans using simple graphical representation and numerical format for cross-referencing to other glycosciences and functional data databases. CBMcarb-DB provides detailed information on CBMs and their bound oligosaccharides and features their interactions using several open-access applications. We also describe how the curated information provided by CBMcarb-DB can be integrated with AI algorithms of 3D structure prediction, facilitating structure–function studies. Also in this chapter, we discuss the exciting convergence of CBMcarb-DB with the glycan array repository, which serves as a valuable resource for investigating the specific binding interactions between glycans and various biomolecular targets. The interaction of the two fields represents a significant milestone in glycosciences. CBMcarb-DB is freely available at https://cbmdb.glycopedia.eu/ and https://cbmcarb.webhost.fct.unl.pt.

Ribeiro, Diana, Alina Kulakova, Pedro Quaresma, Eulalia Pereira, Cecilia Bonifacio, Maria Joao Romao, Ricardo Franco, and Ana Luisa Carvalho. "Use of Gold Nanoparticles as Additives in Protein Crystallization." Crystal Growth & Design. 14 (2014): 222-227. AbstractWebsite
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Polino, M., H. S. Rho, M. P. Pina, R. Mallada, AL Carvalho, MJ Romão, Isabel Coelhoso, J. G. E. Gardeniers, J. G. Crespo, and Carla A. M. Portugal. "Protein Crystallization in a Microfluidic Contactor with Nafion®117 Membranes." Membranes. 11 (2021). AbstractWebsite

Protein crystallization still remains mostly an empirical science, as the production of crystals with the required quality for X-ray analysis is dependent on the intensive screening of the best protein crystallization and crystal’s derivatization conditions. Herein, this demanding step was addressed by the development of a high-throughput and low-budget microfluidic platform consisting of an ion exchange membrane (117 Nafion® membrane) sandwiched between a channel layer (stripping phase compartment) and a wells layer (feed phase compartment) forming 75 independent micro-contactors. This microfluidic device allows for a simultaneous and independent screening of multiple protein crystallization and crystal derivatization conditions, using Hen Egg White Lysozyme (HEWL) as the model protein and Hg2+ as the derivatizing agent. This microdevice offers well-regulated crystallization and subsequent crystal derivatization processes based on the controlled transport of water and ions provided by the 117 Nafion® membrane. Diffusion coefficients of water and the derivatizing agent (Hg2+) were evaluated, showing the positive influence of the protein drop volume on the number of crystals and crystal size. This microfluidic system allowed for crystals with good structural stability and high X-ray diffraction quality and, thus, it is regarded as an efficient tool that may contribute to the enhancement of the proteins’ crystals structural resolution.

Polino, Mariella, Ana Luı́sa Carvalho, Lina Juknaitė, Carla A. M. Portugal, Isabel M. Coelhoso, Maria João Romão, and João G. Crespo. "Ion-Exchange Membranes for Stable Derivatization of Protein Crystals." Crystal Growth & DesignCrystal Growth & Design (2017). AbstractWebsite
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Pires, Virgínia M. R., Pedro M. M. Pereira, Joana L. A. Brás, Márcia Correia, Vânia Cardoso, Pedro Bule, Victor D. Alves, Shabir Najmudin, Immacolata Venditto, Luís M. A. Ferreira, Maria João Romão, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Carlos M. G. A. Fontes, and Duarte Miguel Prazeres. "Stability and ligand promiscuity of type A carbohydrate-binding modules are illustrated by the structure of Spirochaeta thermophila StCBM64C." Journal of Biological Chemistry. 292 (2017): 4847-4860. AbstractWebsite

Deconstruction of cellulose, the most abundant plant cell wall polysaccharide, requires the cooperative activity of a large repertoire of microbial enzymes. Modular cellulases contain non-catalytic type A Carbohydrate-Binding Modules (CBMs) that specifically bind to the crystalline regions of cellulose, thus promoting enzyme efficacy through proximity and targeting effects. Although type A CBMs play a critical role in cellulose recycling, their mechanism of action remains poorly understood. Here we produced a library of recombinant CBMs representative of the known diversity of type A modules. The binding properties of 40 CBMs, in fusion with an N-terminal green fluorescence protein (GFP) domain, revealed that type A CBMs possess the ability to recognize different crystalline forms of cellulose and chitin over a wide range of temperatures, pHs and ionic strengths. A Spirochaeta thermophila CBM64, in particular, displayed plasticity in its capacity to bind both crystalline and soluble carbohydrates under a wide range of extreme conditions. The structure of S. thermophila StCBM64C revealed an untwisted, flat, carbohydrate-binding interface comprising the side chains of four tryptophan residues in a coplanar linear arrangement. Significantly, two highly conserved asparagine side chains, each one located between two tryptophan residues, are critical to insoluble and soluble glucan recognition but not to bind xyloglucan. Thus, CBM64 compact structure and its extended and versatile ligand interacting platform illustrates how type A CBMs target their appended plant cell wall degrading enzymes to a diversity of recalcitrant carbohydrates under a wide range of environmental conditions.

Pinheiro, B. A., J. L. A. Bras, S. Najmudin, AL Carvalho, LMA Ferreira, JAM Prates, and CMGA Fontes. "Flexibility and specificity of the cohesin-dockerin interaction: implications for cellulosome assembly and functionality." Biocatalysis and Biotransformation. 30 (2012): 309-315. AbstractWebsite

Cellulosomes are highly elaborate multi-enzyme complexes of Carbohydrate Active enZYmes (CAZYmes) secreted by cellulolytic microorganisms, which very effectively degrade the most abundant polymers on Earth, cellulose and hemicelluloses. Cellulosome assembly requires that a non-catalytic dockerin module found in cellulosomal enzymes binds to one of the various cohesin domains located in a large molecular scaffold called Scaffoldin. A diversity of cohesin -dockerin binding specificities have been described, the combination of which may result in complex plant cell wall degrading systems, maximising the synergy between enzymes in order to improve catalytic efficiency. Structural studies have allowed the spatial flexibility inherent to the cellulosomal system to be determined. Recent progress achieved from the study of the fundamental cohesin and dockerin units involved in cellulosome assembly will be reviewed.

Peixoto, Daniela, Gabriela Malta, Hugo Cruz, Sónia Barroso, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Luísa M. Ferreira, and Paula S. Branco. "N-Heterocyclic Olefin Catalysis for the Ring Opening of Cyclic Amidine Compounds: A Pathway to the Synthesis of ε-Caprolactam- and γ-Lactam-Derived Amines." The Journal of Organic ChemistryThe Journal of Organic Chemistry (2019). AbstractWebsite
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Palma, A. S., Y. Liu, H. Zhang, Y. Zhang, B. V. McCleary, G. Yu, Q. Huang, L. S. Guidolin, A. E. Ciocchini, A. Torosantucci, D. Wang, AL Carvalho, C. M. Fontes, B. Mulloy, R. A. Childs, T. Feizi, and W. Chai. "Unravelling glucan recognition systems by glycome microarrays using the designer approach and mass spectrometry." Mol Cell Proteomics (2015). AbstractWebsite

Glucans are polymers of D-glucose with differing linkages in linear or branched sequences. They are constituents of microbial and plant cell-walls and involved in important bio-recognition processes including immunomodulation, anti-cancer activities, pathogen virulence and plant cell-wall biodegradation. Translational possibilities for these activities in medicine and biotechnology are considerable. High-throughput micro-methods are needed to screen proteins for recognition of specific glucan sequences as a lead to structure-function studies and their exploitation. We describe construction of a glucome microarray, the first sequence-defined glycome-scale microarray, using a designer approach from targeted ligand-bearing glucans in conjunction with a novel high-sensitivity mass spectrometric sequencing method, as a screening tool to assign glucan recognition motifs. The glucome microarray comprises 153 oligosaccharide probes with high purity, representing major sequences in glucans. The negative-ion electrospray tandem mass spectrometry with collision-induced dissociation was used for complete linkage analysis of gluco-oligosaccharides in linear homo and hetero and branched sequences. The system is validated using antibodies and carbohydrate-binding modules known to target α- or β-glucans in different biological contexts, extending knowledge on their specificities, and applied to reveal new information on glucan recognition by two signalling molecules of the immune system against pathogens: Dectin-1 and DC-SIGN. The sequencing of the glucan oligosaccharides by the MS method and their interrogation on the microarrays provides detailed information on linkage, sequence and chain length requirements of glucan-recognizing proteins, and are a sensitive means of revealing unsuspected sequences in the polysaccharides.

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Outis, Mani, Vitor Rosa, César AT Laia, João Carlos Lima, Sónia Barroso, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Maria José Calhorda, and Teresa Avilés. "Synthesis, Crystal Structure, and DFT Study of Two New Dinuclear Copper(I) Complexes Bearing Ar-BIAN Ligands Functionalized with NO2 Groups." European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry. 2020 (2020): 2900-2911. AbstractWebsite

{Two new bis(aryl-imino)-acenaphthene, Ar-BIAN (Ar = 2

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Nóbrega, Cláudia S., Ana Luísa Carvalho, Maria João Romão, and Sofia R. Pauleta. "Structural Characterization of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Bacterial Peroxidase—Insights into the Catalytic Cycle of Bacterial Peroxidases." International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 24 (2023). AbstractWebsite

Neisseria gonorrhoeae is an obligate human pathogenic bacterium responsible for gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted disease. The bacterial peroxidase, an enzyme present in the periplasm of this bacterium, detoxifies the cells against hydrogen peroxide and constitutes one of the primary defenses against exogenous and endogenous oxidative stress in this organism. The 38 kDa heterologously produced bacterial peroxidase was crystallized in the mixed-valence state, the active state, at pH 6.0, and the crystals were soaked with azide, producing the first azide-inhibited structure of this family of enzymes. The enzyme binds exogenous ligands such as cyanide and azide, which also inhibit the catalytic activity by coordinating the P heme iron, the active site, and competing with its substrate, hydrogen peroxide. The inhibition constants were estimated to be 0.4 ± 0.1 µM and 41 ± 5 mM for cyanide and azide, respectively. Imidazole also binds and inhibits the enzyme in a more complex mechanism by binding to P and E hemes, which changes the reduction potential of the latest heme. Based on the structures now reported, the catalytic cycle of bacterial peroxidases is revisited. The inhibition studies and the crystal structure of the inhibited enzyme comprise the first platform to search and develop inhibitors that target this enzyme as a possible new strategy against N. gonorrhoeae.