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Topic:Structural Biology

Structural biology in the context of equine research involves the study of the molecular architecture and dynamics of biological macromolecules within horses. This field focuses on understanding the three-dimensional structures of proteins, nucleic acids, and complexes, and how these structures influence biological function and interactions. Techniques such as X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and cryo-electron microscopy are commonly employed to elucidate these structures. In horses, structural biology can provide insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying various physiological processes and diseases, potentially informing the development of targeted therapies and interventions. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the structural characterization of equine biomolecules and their implications for equine health and disease management.
Water stabilizes an alternate turn conformation in horse heart myoglobin.
Scientific reports    April 13, 2023   Volume 13, Issue 1 6094 doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-32821-z
Bronstein A, Marx A.Comparison of myoglobin structures reveals that protein isolated from horse heart consistently adopts an alternate turn conformation in comparison to its homologues. Analysis of hundreds of high-resolution structures discounts crystallization conditions or the surrounding amino acid protein environment as explaining this difference, that is also not captured by the AlphaFold prediction. Rather, a water molecule is identified as stabilizing the conformation in the horse heart structure, which immediately reverts to the whale conformation in molecular dynamics simulations excluding that structur...
The Structural Biology of Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus, an Emerging Viral Threat.
Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland)    July 31, 2021   Volume 10, Issue 8 973 doi: 10.3390/pathogens10080973
Hasan SS, Dey D, Singh S, Martin M.Alphaviruses are arboviruses that cause arthritis and encephalitis in humans. Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus (EEEV) is a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus that is implicated in severe encephalitis in humans with high mortality. However, limited insights are available into the fundamental biology of EEEV and residue-level details of its interactions with host proteins. In recent years, outbreaks of EEEV have been reported mainly in the United States, raising concerns about public safety. This review article summarizes recent advances in the structural biology of EEEV based mainly on single-par...
Structural Biology of the Arterivirus nsp11 Endoribonucleases.
Journal of virology    December 16, 2016   Volume 91, Issue 1 doi: 10.1128/JVI.01309-16
Zhang M, Li X, Deng Z, Chen Z, Liu Y, Gao Y, Wu W, Chen Z.Endoribonuclease (NendoU) is unique and conserved as a major genetic marker in nidoviruses that infect vertebrate hosts. Arterivirus nonstructural protein 11 (nsp11) was shown to have NendoU activity and play essential roles in the viral life cycle. Here, we report three crystal structures of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) and equine arteritis virus (EAV) nsp11 mutants. The structures of arterivirus nsp11 contain two conserved compact domains: the N-terminal domain (NTD) and C-terminal domain (CTD). The structures of PRRSV and EAV endoribonucleases are similar and ...
On the mineral core of ferritin-like proteins: structural and magnetic characterization.
Nanoscale    December 17, 2015   Volume 8, Issue 2 1088-1099 doi: 10.1039/c5nr04446d
García-Prieto A, Alonso J, Muñoz D, Marcano L, Abad Díaz de Cerio A, Fernández de Luis R, Orue I, Mathon O, Muela A, Fdez-Gubieda ML.It is generally accepted that the mineral core synthesized by ferritin-like proteins consists of a ferric oxy-hydroxide mineral similar to ferrihydrite in the case of horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) and an oxy-hydroxide-phosphate phase in plant and prokaryotic ferritins. The structure reflects a dynamic process of deposition and dissolution, influenced by different biological, chemical and physical variables. In this work we shed light on this matter by combining a structural (High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy (HRTEM) and Fe K-edge X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS)) and a magneti...
Molecular dynamic simulations reveal the structural determinants of Fatty Acid binding to oxy-myoglobin.
PloS one    June 1, 2015   Volume 10, Issue 6 e0128496 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128496
Chintapalli SV, Bhardwaj G, Patel R, Shah N, Patterson RL, van Rossum DB, Anishkin A, Adams SH.The mechanism(s) by which fatty acids are sequestered and transported in muscle have not been fully elucidated. A potential key player in this process is the protein myoglobin (Mb). Indeed, there is a catalogue of empirical evidence supporting direct interaction of globins with fatty acid metabolites; however, the binding pocket and regulation of the interaction remains to be established. In this study, we employed a computational strategy to elucidate the structural determinants of fatty acids (palmitic & oleic acid) binding to Mb. Sequence analysis and docking simulations with a horse (E...
Structural and biochemical insights into the V/I505T mutation found in the EIAV gp45 vaccine strain.
Retrovirology    March 21, 2014   Volume 11 26 doi: 10.1186/1742-4690-11-26
Du J, Wang X, Ma J, Wang J, Qin Y, Zhu C, Liu F, Shao Y, Zhou J, Qiao W, Liu X.The equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) is a lentivirus of the Retrovirus family, which causes persistent infection in horses often characterized by recurrent episodes of high fever. It has a similar morphology and life cycle to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Its transmembrane glycoprotein, gp45 (analogous to gp41 in HIV), mediates membrane fusion during the infection. However, the post-fusion conformation of EIAV gp45 has not yet been determined. EIAV is the first member of the lentiviruses for which an effective vaccine has been successfully developed. The attenuated vaccine strai...
Distinct fibro-vascular arrangements in the periodontal ligament of the horse.
Archives of oral biology    December 8, 2004   Volume 50, Issue 4 439-447 doi: 10.1016/j.archoralbio.2004.10.001
Staszyk C, Gasse H.The periodontal ligament (PDL) of the hypsodont cheek teeth of the horse meets specific requirements of tooth support: (1) to fix the tooth; (2) to withstand pressure and tension during the laterolateral mastication movement; (3) to restore the original tooth position. These requirements are assumed to be met by the periodontal collagen fiber apparatus and by the vascular system. Distinct fibro-vascular arrangements are described here in order to reveal the structural prerequisites for these distinct functions. Methods: Specimens from nine horses were processed for (1) collagen labeling with f...
Stabilization of protein by replacement of a fluctuating loop: structural analysis of a chimera of bovine alpha-lactalbumin and equine lysozyme.
Biochemistry    November 13, 2002   Volume 41, Issue 46 13807-13813 doi: 10.1021/bi020360u
Tada M, Kobashigawa Y, Mizuguchi M, Miura K, Kouno T, Kumaki Y, Demura M, Nitta K, Kawano K.Equine lysozyme is a calcium-binding lysozyme and an evolutional intermediate between non-calcium binding c-type lysozyme and alpha-lactalbumin. We constructed a chimeric protein by substituting the fluctuating loop of bovine alpha-lactalbumin with the D-helix of equine lysozyme. The substitution affects the protection factors not only in the fluctuating loop but also in the antiparallel beta-sheet, the A- and B-helices, and the loop between the B-helix and the beta-sheet. Amide protons in these regions of the chimera are more protected from exchange than are those of bovine alpha-lactalbumin....
Comparative structural and functional studies of avian and mammalian hemoglobins.
Acta biochimica Polonica    October 5, 2002   Volume 49, Issue 2 459-470 
Ajloo D, Moosavi-Movahedi AA, Sadeghi M, Gharibi H.Thermal stabilities of chicken, grey lag goose (Anser anser), turkey as avian hemoglobins (Hbs); and human, bovine, sheep and horse as mammalian Hbs in hemolysate form were investigated and compared with oxygen affinities taken from literature. The thermal stability was obtained from thermal profiles using temperature scanning spectrophotometry. The buffer conditions were 50 mM Tris, pH 7.2, and 1 mM EDTA. The average of the inverse temperature transitions, average hydrophobicity, total van der Waals volume, partial molal volume and hydration potential were calculated by computational methods....
Thermal unfolding of monomeric and dimeric beta-lactoglobulins.
European journal of biochemistry    October 19, 2001   Volume 268, Issue 20 5439-5448 doi: 10.1046/j.0014-2956.2001.02484.x
Fessas D, Iametti S, Schiraldi A, Bonomi F.The thermal stabilities of dimeric bovine beta-lactoglobulin and monomeric equine beta-lactoglobulin were investigated at neutral pH by means of differential scanning calorimetry, circular dichroism, tryptophan fluorescence, and by binding of an hydrophobic probe. Differential scanning calorimetry showed the presence of two structural domains with different thermal stabilities in both proteins. Thermodynamic analysis of the calorimetric signal revealed that the two domains unfold independently according to a mechanism where an equilibrium step is followed by an irreversible transition. The spe...
Independent nucleation and heterogeneous assembly of structure during folding of equine lysozyme.
Journal of molecular biology    June 17, 1999   Volume 289, Issue 4 1055-1073 doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.2741
Morozova-Roche LA, Jones JA, Noppe W, Dobson CM.The refolding of equine lysozyme from guanidinium chloride has been studied using hydrogen exchange pulse labelling in conjunction with NMR spectroscopy and stopped flow optical methods. The stopped flow optical experiments indicate that extensive hydrophobic collapse occurs rapidly after the initiation of refolding. Pulse labelling experiments monitoring nearly 50 sites within the protein have enabled the subsequent formation of native-like structure to be followed in considerable detail. They reveal that an intermediate having persistent structure within three of the four helices of the alph...
A myoglobin variant with a polar substitution in a conserved hydrophobic cluster in the heme binding pocket.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    August 15, 1997   Volume 1341, Issue 1 1-13 doi: 10.1016/s0167-4838(97)00064-2
Maurus R, Overall CM, Bogumil R, Luo Y, Mauk AG, Smith M, Brayer GD.Well-ordered internal amino acids can contribute significantly to the stability of proteins. To investigate the importance of the hydrophobic packing interface between helices G and H in the proximal heme pocket of horse heart myoglobin, the highly conserved amino acid, Leu104, was substituted with asparagine, a polar amino acid of similar size. The Leu104Asn mutant protein and its recombinant wild-type horse heart myoglobin counterpart were expressed from synthetic genes in Escherichia coli. Thermal denaturation of these two recombinant myoglobins, as studied by measurement of circular dichro...
1H-NMR study of inter-segmental hydrogen bonds in sperm whale and horse apomyoglobins.
European journal of biochemistry    January 15, 1997   Volume 243, Issue 1-2 292-298 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1997.0292a.x
Yamamoto Y.NMR signals for HisB5 N(delta)H and HisEF5 N(epsilon)H protons of sperm whale and horse apomyoglobins were assigned and compared with the corresponding signals of the holoproteins in terms of pH and temperature dependence behaviors of their shifts and line widths in order to gain insight into structural difference between the apoproteins and the holoproteins. Since these protons are involved in internal hydrogen bonds at the interfaces between the B helix and the GH corner and between the EF corner and the H helix, local structures of the interfaces in these proteins have been inferred from th...
Influence of glycerol on the structure and stability of ferric horse heart myoglobin: a SAXS and circular dichroism study.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    June 7, 1996   Volume 1295, Issue 1 51-58 doi: 10.1016/0167-4838(96)00010-6
Barteri M, Gaudiano MC, Santucci R.The influence of glycerol on the structural properties of Fe(III)-horse heart myoglobin has been investigated by absorbance, CD and SR-SAXS spectroscopy. The results obtained indicate that both the tertiary and the secondary (alpha-helix) conformations of the protein are influenced by glycerol; in particular, an increase of approx. 8% in helical content was observed. Further, analysis of both the acid- and guanidine-induced denaturation transitions points to a glycerol-induced decreased stability of the tertiary structure; conversely, the alpha-helix conformation is found to be stabilized by t...
Structural investigation of the complexation properties between horse spleen apoferritin and metalloporphyrins.
Proteins    March 1, 1996   Volume 24, Issue 3 314-321 doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0134(199603)24:3<314::AID-PROT4>3.0.CO;2-G
Michaux MA, Dautant A, Gallois B, Granier T, d'Estaintot BL, Précigoux G.Crystallographic studies of L-chain horse spleen apoferritin (HSF) co-crystallized with Pt-hematoporphyrin IX and Snprotoporphyrin IX have brought significant new insights into structure-function relationships in ferritins. Interactions of HSF with porphyrins are discussed. Structural results show that the nestling properties into HSF are dependent on the porphyrin moiety. (Only protoporphyrin IX significantly interacts with the protein, whereas hematoporphyrin IX does not.) These studies additionally point out the L-chain HSF ability to demetalate metalloporphyrins, a result which is of impor...
Structural relaxation and nonexponential kinetics of CO-binding to horse myoglobin. Multiple flash photolysis experiments.
Biophysical journal    June 1, 1993   Volume 64, Issue 6 1833-1842 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(93)81554-6
Post F, Doster W, Karvounis G, Settles M.The geminate recombination kinetics of CO-myoglobin strongly deviates from single exponential behavior in contrast to what is expected for unimolecular reactions (1). At low temperatures, this result was attributed to slowly exchanging conformational states which differ substantially in barrier height for ligand binding. Above 160 K the kinetics apparently slow down with temperature increase. Agmon and Hopfield (2) explain this result in terms of structural relaxation perpendicular to the reaction coordinate, which enhances the activation energy. In their model, structural relaxation homogeniz...
Unfolding pathway of myoglobin. Evidence for a multistate process.
Biochemistry    August 30, 1983   Volume 22, Issue 18 4165-4170 doi: 10.1021/bi00287a001
Bismuto E, Colonna G, Irace G.The free energy of unfolding of horse myoglobin has been calculated from the denaturation pattern induced by guanidine hydrochloride as well as by acid. The delta GH2O, i.e., the value in the absence of denaturant obtained by using the two-state transition model, was found to be 25% lower than that determined from the acid denaturation pattern, i.e., 12.0 kcal/mol, although the extent of protein denaturation produced by acid was much lower. The amount of helical structure surviving the acid-induced conformational change was estimated to be 50% of that present in the native protein, and it coul...
Helix packing and subunit conformation in horse spleen apoferritin.
Nature    November 20, 1980   Volume 288, Issue 5788 298-300 doi: 10.1038/288298a0
Clegg GA, Stansfield RF, Bourne PE, Harrison PM.An electron density map of horse spleen apoferritin at 0.28-nm (2.8 A) resolution and its preliminary interpretation have been described previously. Rigorous examination of this and newer maps at the same nominal resolution but calculated from more extensive data sets, including model building in a Richards' comparator, now allows us to report on structural features in more detail. We list inter-helical angles within and between neighbouring subunits, and describe a new short region of inter-subunit anti-parallel pleated sheet. A short section of electron density not properly accounted for in ...
The structure of horse methaemoglobin at 2-0 A resolution.
Journal of molecular biology    August 15, 1977   Volume 114, Issue 3 385-414 doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(77)90256-x
Ladner RC, Heidner EJ, Perutz MF.No abstract available