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Query: UMLS:C0276640 (TEM)
20,729 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In some inhibitor-resistant TEM-derived beta-lactamases, Met-69 is substituted by Leu, Ile or Val. Residue 69 is located in a region of strong structural constraints, at the beginning of H2 alpha-helix, and in the vicinity of B3 and B4 beta-strands. Analysis of the three-dimensional structure of TEM-1 beta-lactamase suggests that alteration of the substrate-binding site can be produced by changes of the size of residue 69 side chain. Met-69 was substituted by alanine or glycine in TEM-Bs beta-lactamase (a TEM-1-related enzyme) using site-directed mutagenesis. The minimum inhibitory concentrations of the mutants compared with the wild-type revealed an increased susceptibility to beta-lactamase inhibitor-beta-lactam combinations and to first-generation cephalosporins. Comparing the Met69Ala and Met69Gly beta-lactamases with TEM-Bs, K(m) constants of the mutants showed an increased affinity for most beta-lactams but the kcat for most substrates did not change substantially. Mutants also demonstrated lower IC50 for the three inhibitors (clavulanic acid, tazobactam and sulbactam). The two substitutions of the residue 69 by alanine and glycine had a noticeable effect on K(m) values of TEM-Bs beta-lactamase, and on affinity for beta-lactamase inhibitors.
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PMID:Substitution of Met-69 by Ala or Gly in TEM-1 beta-lactamase confer an increased susceptibility to clavulanic acid and other inhibitors. 1205 44

The hydrolysis of beta-lactam antibiotics by class A beta-lactamases is a common cause of bacterial resistance to these agents. The beta-lactamase inhibitory protein (BLIP) is able to bind and inhibit several class A beta-lactamases, including TEM-1 beta-lactamase and SME-1 beta-lactamase. Although the TEM-1 and SME-1 enzymes share 33% amino acid sequence identity and a similar fold, they differ substantially in surface electrostatic properties and the conformation of a loop-helix region that BLIP binds. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis was performed to identify the residues on BLIP that contribute to its binding affinity for each of these enzymes. The results indicate that the sequence requirements for binding are similar for both enzymes with most of the binding free energy provided by two patches of aromatic residues on the surface of BLIP. Polar residues such as several serines in the interface do not make significant contributions to affinity for either enzyme. In addition, the specificity of binding is significantly altered by mutation of two charged residues, Glu73 and Lys74, that are buried in the structure of the TEM-1.BLIP complex as well as by residues located on two loops that insert into the active site pocket. Based on the results, a E73A/Y50A double mutant was constructed that exhibited a 220,000-fold change in binding specificity for the TEM-1 versus SME-1 enzymes.
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PMID:Determinants of binding affinity and specificity for the interaction of TEM-1 and SME-1 beta-lactamase with beta-lactamase inhibitory protein. 1293 2

Use of a dialkoxysilane-containing, condensable alanine amphiphile with a cleavable hexadecyl ester tail (1) as a "lizard" template for sol-gel synthesis results in the formation of a mesoporous silicate (2) whose channels are filled with an organic group of the template. Treatment of 2 with aqueous HCl allows selective cleavage of the ester moiety to leave nanochannels (3) whose surface is densely covered with alanine-CO2H. According to XRD and TEM, 2, on conversion into 3, can preserve its regular hexagonal structure. 3 displays a clear N2 adsorption/desorption isotherm with a BET surface area of 536 m2 g-1. 3 can also adsorb a basic guest such as NH3 up to 0.7 mmol g-1, which is 7 times greater than that observed for mesoporous silica obtained by calcination of 2.
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PMID:A condensable amphiphile with a cleavable tail as a "Lizard" template for the sol-gel synthesis of functionalized mesoporous silica. 1474 44

beta-Lactamase inhibitory protein (BLIP) binds and inhibits a diverse collection of class A beta-lactamases at a wide range of affinities. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis was previously performed to identify the amino acid sequence requirements of BLIP for inhibiting TEM-1 beta-lactamase and SME-1 beta-lactamase. Two hotspots of binding energy, one from each domain of BLIP, were identified (Zhang, Z., and Palzkill, T. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 45706-45712). This study has been extended to examine the amino acid sequence requirements of BLIP for binding to the SHV-1 beta-lactamase, which is a poor binding substrate (Ki= 1.1 microm), and the Bacillus anthracis Bla1 enzyme (Ki= 2.5 nm). The two hotspots previously identified as important for binding TEM-1 and SME-1 beta-lactamase were also found to be important for binding Bla1. The hotspot from the second domain of BLIP, however, does not make substantial contributions to SHV-1 binding. This may explain why BLIP binds to SHV-1 beta-lactamase with much weaker affinity than to the other three enzymes. Three regions, including two loops that insert into the active pocket of TEM-1 beta-lactamase and the Glu-73-Lys-74 buried charge motif, exhibit strikingly different effects on the binding affinity of BLIP toward the various enzymes when mutated and, therefore, act as specificity determinants. Analysis of double mutants of BLIP that combine specificity-determining residues suggests that these residues contribute to the poor affinity between the second domain of BLIP and SHV-1 beta-lactamase.
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PMID:Dissecting the protein-protein interface between beta-lactamase inhibitory protein and class A beta-lactamases. 1528 34

The conserved Class A beta-lactamase active site residue Tyr-105 was substituted by saturation mutagenesis in TEM-1 beta-lactamase from Escherichia coli in order to clarify its role in enzyme activity and in substrate stabilization and discrimination. Minimum inhibitory concentrations were calculated for E. coli cells harboring each Y105X mutant in the presence of various penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics. We found that only aromatic residues as well as asparagine replacements conferred high in vivo survival rates for all substrates tested. At position 105, the small residues alanine and glycine provide weak substrate discrimination as evidenced by the difference in benzylpenicillin hydrolysis relative to cephalothin, two typical penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics. Kinetic analyses of mutants of interest revealed that the Y105X replacements have a greater effect on K(m) than k(cat), highlighting the importance of Tyr-105 in substrate recognition. Finally, by performing a short molecular dynamics study on a restricted set of Y105X mutants of TEM-1, we found that the strong aromatic bias observed at position 105 in Class A beta-lactamases is primarily defined by a structural requirement, selecting planar residues that form a stabilizing wall to the active site. The adopted conformation of residue 105 prevents detrimental steric interactions with the substrate molecule in the active site cavity and provides a rationalization for the strong aromatic bias found in nature at this position among Class A beta-lactamases.
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PMID:Site-saturation mutagenesis of Tyr-105 reveals its importance in substrate stabilization and discrimination in TEM-1 beta-lactamase. 1532 93

Extended spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs) confer bacterial resistance to third-generation cephalosporins, such as cefotaxime and ceftazidime, increasing hospital mortality rates. Whereas these antibiotics are almost impervious to classic beta-lactamases, such as TEM-1, ESBLs have one to four orders greater activity against them. The origins of this activity have been widely studied for the TEM and SHV-type ESBLs, but have received less attention for the CTX-M beta-lactamases, an emerging family that is now the dominant ESBL in several regions. To understand how CTX-M beta-lactamases achieve their remarkable activity, biophysical and structural studies were undertaken. Using reversible, two-state thermal denaturation, it was found that as these enzymes evolve a broader substrate range, they sacrifice stability. Thus, the mutant enzyme CTX-M-16 is eightfold more active against ceftazidime than the pseudo-wild-type CTX-M-14 but is 1.9 kcal/mol less stable. This is consistent with a "stability-activity tradeoff," similar to that observed in the evolution of other resistance enzymes. To investigate the structural basis of enzyme activity and stability, the structures of four CTX-M enzymes were determined by X-ray crystallography. The structures of CTX-M-14, CTX-M-27, CTX-M-9 and CTX-M-16 were determined to 1.10 Angstroms, 1.20 Angstroms, 0.98 Angstroms and 1.74 Angstroms resolution, respectively. The enzyme active sites resemble those of the narrow-spectrum TEM-1 and SHV-1, and not the enlarged sites typical of ESBL mutants such as TEM-52 and TEM-64. Instead, point substitutions leading to specific interactions may be responsible for the improved activity against ceftazidime and cefotaxime, consistent with observations first made for the related Toho-1 enzyme. The broadened substrate range of CTX-M-16 may result from coupled defects in the enzyme's B3 strand, which lines the active site. Substitutions Val231-->Ala and Asp240-->Gly, which convert CTX-M-14 into CTX-M-16, occur at either end of this strand. These defects appear to increase the mobility of B3 based on anisotropic B-factor analyses at ultrahigh resolution, consistent with stability loss and activity gain. The unusually high resolution of these structures that makes such analyses possible also makes them good templates for inhibitor discovery.
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PMID:Atomic resolution structures of CTX-M beta-lactamases: extended spectrum activities from increased mobility and decreased stability. 1581 73

Three double hydrophilic block copolymers were used as crystal-growth modifiers of DL-alanine to generate amorphous precursor nanoparticles that undergo subsequent mesoscopic transformation to core-shell mesostructures and hollow tubes with quadratic cross-sections. The growth sequence can be stopped at various stages so that a series of intermediates between amorphous core- and crystalline-shell particles and tubes can be obtained. Time-dependent conductivity, TEM, SEM, and environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) measurements were used to obtain a better understanding of the crystallization process, and a formation mechanism for the generation of the tubes is proposed. Na2SO4, NaCl, and NaNO3 as salts differ in their influence on the crystallization behavior of alanine by changing the solubility of alanine and by decreasing the stability of the intermediate particles. Core-shell mesostructures that formed in the dissolution-recrystallization process were captured as the transformation rate was decreased by the addition of copolymers or salts. Hollow tubes with quadratic cross-sections are the final product of the transformation process.
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PMID:Synthesis of DL-alanine hollow tubes and core-shell mesostructures. 1687

Spider dragline silk with its superlative tensile properties provides an ideal system to study the relationship between morphology and mechanical properties of a structural protein. Accordingly, we synthesized two hybrid multiblock copolymers by condensing poly(alanine) [(Ala)(5)] blocks of the structural proteins (spidroin MaSp1 and MaSp2) of spider dragline silk with different oligomers of isoprene (2200 and 5000 Da) having reactive end groups. The synthetic multiblock polymer displayed similar secondary structure to that of natural spidroin, the peptide segment forming a beta-sheet structure. These multiblock polymers showed a significant solubility in the component solvents. Moreover, the copolymer which contains the short polyisoprene segment would aggregate into a micellar-like structure, as observed by TEM.
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PMID:Synthesis and characterization of multiblock copolymers based on spider dragline silk proteins. 1690 90

We have determined the thermodynamics of binding for the interaction between TEM-1 beta-lactamase and a set of alanine substituted contact residue mutants ofbeta-lactamase-inhibitory protein (BLIP) using isothermal titration calorimetry. The binding enthalpies for these interactions are highly temperature dependent, with negative binding heat capacity changes ranging from -800 to -271 cal mol(-1) K(-1). The isoenthalpic temperatures (at which the binding enthalpy is zero) of these interactions range from 5 to 38 degrees C. The changes in isoenthalpic temperature were used as an indicator of the changes in enthalpy and entropy driving forces, which in turn are related to hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions. A contact residue of BLIP is categorized as a canonical residue if its alanine substitution mutant exhibits a change of isoenthalpic temperature matching the change of hydrophobicity because of the mutation. A contact position exhibiting a change in isoenthalpic temperature that does not match the change in hydrophobicity is categorized as an anti-canonical residue. Our experimental results reveal that the majority of residues where alanine substitution results in a loss of affinity are canonical (7 of 10), and about half of the residues where alanine substitutions have a minor effect are canonical. The interactions between TEM-1beta-lactamase and BLIP canonical contact residues contribute directly to binding free energy, suggesting potential anchoring sites for binding partners. The anti-canonical behavior of certain residues may be the result of mutation-induced modifications such as structural rearrangements affecting contact residue configurations. Structural inspection of BLIP suggests that the Lys(74) side chain electrostatically holds BLIP loop 2 in position to bind to TEM-1 beta-lactamase, explaining a large loss of entropy-driven binding energy of the K74A mutant and the resulting anti-canonical behavior. The anti-canonical behavior of the W150A mutant may also be due to structural rearrangements. Finally, the affinity enhancing effect of the contact residue mutant Y50A may be due to energetic coupling interactions between Asp(49) and His(41).
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PMID:Thermodynamic investigation of the role of contact residues of beta-lactamase-inhibitory protein for binding to TEM-1 beta-lactamase. 1743 Aug 99

The modification of CaCO(3) crystal growth by synthetic L-Ser(PO(3)H(2)) and L-Thr(PO(3)H(2)) containing polypeptides is described. The amino acids Gly, L-Glu, L-Asp, L-Ser, L-Ala, and L-Lys induced rhombohedral calcite with a rough surface. Dipeptides, Xaa-L-Ser(PO(3)H(2)) (Xaa = Gly, L-Glu, L-Asp, L-Ser, L-Ala and L-Lys) induced vaterite crystals in the lower [Ca(2+)]. On the other hand, L-Ser(PO(3)H(2))-containing polypeptides formed spherical vaterite and fibrous calcite. The characteristic helical calcite was found in the presence of copoly[L-Ser(PO(3)H(2))(75)L-Asp(25)] or poly[L-Ser(PO(3)H(2))(3)-L-Asp]. Fibrous calcite, spherical vaterite, and helical calcite crystals were subjected to XRD and EDX analysis. XRD revealed the specific faces of these crystals. EDX spectra and surface analysis visualized the localization of the polypeptides and CaCO(3) components. Together with TEM and SAED data, we propose hypothetical growth mechanisms for the fibrous and helical calcite crystals.
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PMID:Fibrous and helical calcite crystals induced by synthetic polypeptides containing o-phospho-L-serine and o-phospho-L-threonine. 1790 88


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