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result(s) for
"Markina, Nadezhda M."
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An improved pathway for autonomous bioluminescence imaging in eukaryotes
by
Boldyreva, Daria I.
,
Hoang, Trish T.
,
Babenko, Vladislav V.
in
631/1647/1511
,
631/61/338/552
,
Animals
2024
The discovery of the bioluminescence pathway in the fungus
Neonothopanus nambi
enabled engineering of eukaryotes with self-sustained luminescence. However, the brightness of luminescence in heterologous hosts was limited by performance of the native fungal enzymes. Here we report optimized versions of the pathway that enhance bioluminescence by one to two orders of magnitude in plant, fungal and mammalian hosts, and enable longitudinal video-rate imaging.
Improvements to the fully genetically encoded
Neonothopanus
nambi
bioluminescence pathway enhance autobioluminescence by up to two orders of magnitude in plants and other species, enabling novel applications of bioluminescence imaging in biology.
Journal Article
Triple Reporter Assay: A Non-Overlapping Luciferase Assay for the Measurement of Complex Macromolecular Regulation in Cancer Cells Using a New Mushroom Luciferase–Luciferin Pair
2023
This study demonstrates the development of a humanized luciferase imaging reporter based on a recently discovered mushroom luciferase (Luz) from Neonothopanus nambi. In vitro and in vivo assessments showed that human-codon-optimized Luz (hLuz) has significantly higher activity than native Luz in various cancer cell types. The potential of hLuz in non-invasive bioluminescence imaging was demonstrated by human tumor xenografts subcutaneously and by the orthotopic lungs xenograft in immunocompromised mice. Luz enzyme or its unique 3OH-hispidin substrate was found to be non-cross-reacting with commonly used luciferase reporters such as Firefly (FLuc2), Renilla (RLuc), or nano-luciferase (NLuc). Based on this feature, a non-overlapping, multiplex luciferase assay using hLuz was envisioned to surpass the limitation of dual reporter assay. Multiplex reporter functionality was demonstrated by designing a new sensor construct to measure the NF-κB transcriptional activity using hLuz and utilized in conjunction with two available constructs, p53-NLuc and PIK3CA promoter-FLuc2. By expressing these constructs in the A2780 cell line, we unveiled a complex macromolecular regulation of high relevance in ovarian cancer. The assays performed elucidated the direct regulatory action of p53 or NF-κB on the PIK3CA promoter. However, only the multiplexed assessment revealed further complexities as stabilized p53 expression attenuates NF-κB transcriptional activity and thereby indirectly influences its regulation on the PIK3CA gene. Thus, this study suggests the importance of live cell multiplexed measurement of gene regulatory function using more than two luciferases to address more realistic situations in disease biology.
Journal Article
Systematic Comparison of Plant Promoters in Nicotiana spp. Expression Systems
by
Palkina, Kseniia A.
,
Sarkisyan, Karen S.
,
Bugaeva, Evgenia N.
in
Biotechnology
,
Carbenicillin
,
Cell culture
2022
We report a systematic comparison of 19 plant promoters and 20 promoter-terminator combinations in two expression systems: agroinfiltration in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves, and Nicotiana tabacum BY-2 plant cell packs. The set of promoters tested comprised those not present in previously published work, including several computationally predicted synthetic promoters validated here for the first time. The expression of EGFP driven by different promoters varied by more than two orders of magnitude and was largely consistent between two tested Nicotiana systems. We confirmed previous reports of significant modulation of expression by terminators, as well as synergistic effects of promoters and terminators. Additionally, we observed non-linear effects of gene dosage on expression level. The dataset presented here can inform the design of genetic constructs for plant engineering and transient expression assays.
Journal Article
Therapeutic Potential of Hispidin—Fungal and Plant Polyketide
by
Palkina, Kseniia A.
,
Ipatova, Daria A.
,
Markina, Nadezhda M.
in
antioxidant
,
Antioxidants
,
Apoptosis
2021
There is a large number of bioactive polyketides well-known for their anticancer, antibiotic, cholesterol-lowering, and other therapeutic functions, and hispidin is among them. It is a highly abundant secondary plant and fungal metabolite, which is investigated in research devoted to cancer, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular, neurodegenerative, and viral diseases. This review summarizes over 20 years of hispidin studies of its antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic, antiviral, and anti-cancer cell activity.
Journal Article
Plants with genetically encoded autoluminescence
by
Chepurnyh, Tatiana V
,
Bubyrev, Andrey I
,
Fakhranurova Liliia I
in
Acids
,
Bioluminescence
,
Biosynthesis
2020
Autoluminescent plants engineered to express a bacterial bioluminescence gene cluster in plastids have not been widely adopted because of low light output. We engineered tobacco plants with a fungal bioluminescence system that converts caffeic acid (present in all plants) into luciferin and report self-sustained luminescence that is visible to the naked eye. Our findings could underpin development of a suite of imaging tools for plants.Luminescence is engineered in whole plants, without an exogenous substrate, using a fungal gene cluster.
Journal Article
Domain Truncation in Hispidin Synthase Orthologs from Non-Bioluminescent Fungi Does Not Lead to Hispidin Biosynthesis
by
Palkina, Kseniia A.
,
Sarkisyan, Karen S.
,
Belozerova, Olga A.
in
Bioluminescence
,
Biosynthesis
,
Enzymes
2023
Hispidin is a polyketide found in plants and fungi. In bioluminescent fungi, hispidin serves as a precursor of luciferin and is produced by hispidin synthases. Previous studies revealed that hispidin synthases differ in orthologous polyketide synthases from non-bioluminescent fungi by the absence of two domains with predicted ketoreductase and dehydratase activities. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that the loss of these domains in evolution led to the production of hispidin and the emergence of bioluminescence. We cloned three orthologous polyketide synthases from non-bioluminescent fungi, as well as their truncated variants, and assessed their ability to produce hispidin in a bioluminescence assay in yeast. Interestingly, expression of the full-length enzyme hsPKS resulted in dim luminescence, indicating that small amounts of hispidin are likely being produced as side products of the main reaction. Deletion of the ketoreductase and dehydratase domains resulted in no luminescence. Thus, domain truncation by itself does not appear to be a sufficient step for the emergence of efficient hispidin synthases from orthologous polyketide synthases. At the same time, the production of small amounts of hispidin or related compounds by full-length enzymes suggests that ancestral fungal species were well-positioned for the evolution of bioluminescence.
Journal Article
Method for quantitative analysis of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay at the single cell level
2015
Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a ubiquitous mechanism of degradation of transcripts with a premature termination codon. NMD eliminates aberrant mRNA species derived from sources of genetic variation such as gene mutations, alternative splicing and DNA rearrangements in immune cells. In addition, recent data suggest that NMD is an important mechanism of global gene expression regulation. Here, we describe new reporters to quantify NMD activity at the single cell level using fluorescent proteins of two colors: green TagGFP2 and far-red Katushka. TagGFP2 was encoded by mRNA targeted to either the splicing-dependent or the long 3'UTR-dependent NMD pathway. Katushka was used as an expression level control. Comparison of the fluorescence intensities of cells expressing these reporters and cells expressing TagGFP2 and Katushka from corresponding control NMD-independent vectors allowed for the assessment of NMD activity at the single cell level using fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. The proposed reporter system was successfully tested in several mammalian cell lines and in transgenic
Xenopus
embryos.
Journal Article
Efficient silica synthesis from tetra(glycerol)orthosilicate with cathepsin- and silicatein-like proteins
by
Povarova, Natalia V.
,
Varizhuk, Anna M.
,
Barinov, Nikolay A.
in
101/28
,
38/70
,
631/1647/338/469
2018
Silicateins play a key role in biosynthesis of spicules in marine sponges; they are also capable to catalyze formation of amorphous silica
in vitro
. Silicateins are highly homologous to cathepsins L – a family of cysteine proteases. Molecular mechanisms of silicatein activity remain controversial. Here site-directed mutagenesis was used to clarify significance of selected residues in silica polymerization. A number of mutations were introduced into two sponge proteins – silicatein A1 and cathepsin L from
Latrunculia oparinae
, as well as into human cathepsin L. First direction was alanine scanning of the proposed catalytic residues. Also, reciprocal mutations were introduced at selected positions that differ between cathepsins L and silicateins. Surprisingly, all the wild type and mutant proteins were capable to catalyze amorphous silica formation with a water-soluble silica precursor tetra(glycerol)orthosilicate. Some mutants possessed several-fold enhanced silica-forming activity and can potentially be useful for nanomaterial synthesis applications. Our findings contradict to the previously suggested mechanisms of silicatein action via a catalytic triad analogous to that in cathepsins L. Instead, a surface-templated biosilification by silicateins and related proteins can be proposed.
Journal Article
Author Correction: Plants with genetically encoded autoluminescence
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
Journal Article
Genetically encodable bioluminescent system from fungi
by
Marcet-Houben, Marina
,
Oba, Yuichi
,
Abakumova, Tatiana O.
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animals
,
Biochemistry
2018
Bioluminescence is found across the entire tree of life, conferring a spectacular set of visually oriented functions from attracting mates to scaring off predators. Half a dozen different luciferins, molecules that emit light when enzymatically oxidized, are known. However, just one biochemical pathway for luciferin biosynthesis has been described in full, which is found only in bacteria. Here, we report identification of the fungal luciferase and three other key enzymes that together form the biosynthetic cycle of the fungal luciferin from caffeic acid, a simple and widespread metabolite. Introduction of the identified genes into the genome of the yeast Pichia pastoris along with caffeic acid biosynthesis genes resulted in a strain that is autoluminescent in standard media. We analyzed evolution of the enzymes of the luciferin biosynthesis cycle and found that fungal bioluminescence emerged through a series of events that included two independent gene duplications. The retention of the duplicated enzymes of the luciferin pathway in nonluminescent fungi shows that the gene duplication was followed by functional sequence divergence of enzymes of at least one gene in the biosynthetic pathway and suggests that the evolution of fungal bioluminescence proceeded through several closely related stepping stone nonluminescent biochemical reactions with adaptive roles. The availability of a complete eukaryotic luciferin biosynthesis pathway provides several applications in biomedicine and bioengineering.
Journal Article