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Ahmad Salahuddin

Ahmad Salahuddin (7 July 1937 – 26 November 1996) was a biochemist from India and served as a professor of biochemistry and department chairman (1984-1996) at Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) Aligarh, India.[3] He was selected as a Founder Director of Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit at AMU in 1984.[4] He was also noted by a single name as Salahuddin at AMU.

Ahmad Salahuddin
Born(1937-07-07)7 July 1937
Died26 November 1996(1996-11-26) (aged 59)
NationalityIndian
EducationPhD in Chemistry, AMU Aligarh
PhD in biochemistry, Duke University
Alma materAMU Aligarh
Known forHydrophobic effect on native and functional protein
AwardsFulbright Fellowship, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research Fellowship
Scientific career
FieldsBiochemistry, protein chemistry
InstitutionsAMU Aligarh, University of Maryland School of Medicine
Notable studentsFaizan Ahmad[1] Khalid Masood[2]

Early life

Salahuddin was born on 7 July 1937 in town of Jairajpur, District Azamgarh, Uttar Pradesh. His father, Fazlul Bari, was a teacher at the Shibli National College, Azamgarh where he received his early education, and later completed his undergraduate and Master's degrees in 1955 and 1957, respectively, in Chemistry from the Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh.[5] Initially as a research student, he took interest in Physical Chemistry, joining the laboratory of Professor Wahid U. Malik, Department of Chemistry, AMU and was awarded a Ph.D. degree in Chemistry in 1962.[6]

Career

Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, AMU, Aligarh

Starting in 1962, he worked as a lecturer in the Department of Chemistry at AMU. Notably, he was selected for the Fulbright Fellowship program from India while working at the university. As a Fulbright fellow, he worked in the laboratory of Charles Tanford, a protein biochemist at Duke University in the United States from 1964 to 1968. He studied the biochemistry of protein folding and focussed in his career on the folding thermodynamics and kinetics, properties of evasive intermediates and the unfolded states. This was in response to the idea developed by Anfinsen, 4-5 decades ago, about the native structure of the protein that depends on the primary structure i.e. amino acid sequence in linear chain and the pathway to attain the native structure is governed by the same amino acid chain. The formation of the native protein, as a stable, functional, folded in a compact three dimensional globular shape, is agreed to begin by a nucleation process due to interaction firstly between the few neighbourly amino acids as opposed to a search involving interaction between each and every amino acid randomly in the chain, before attaining the native structure.[7] He along with others characterized protein structure experimentally, i.e. measurement of optical rotation, after heat and acid (low pH) treatment. He found that the heat and acid treated model proteins contained residual native ordered structures which were disrupted by treatment with potent denaturant guanidine hydrochloride as shown by steep denaturation curve from the transition of residual native structure to unfolded random coil state for each model protein.[8] He performed equilibrium unfolding studies on ribonuclease protein in guanidine hydrochloride in Tanford's Lab, and the work was found suitable for Ph.D. by Duke University, Durham NC U.S.A in 1968. (Title of his Ph.D. thesis: Thermodynamics of the Denaturation of Ribonuclease by Guanidine Hydrochloride).[9]

Department of Biochemistry, J.N. Medical College, Faculty of Medicine, AMU

In 1968, he returned to AMU and joined the Department of Biochemistry in the Faculty of Medicine as a reader. He taught biochemistry and supervised PhD students, establishing a Protein Research Laboratory in the department.

Establishment of Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit (IBU), Faculty of Medicine, AMU, Aligarh

As a founder director, Salahuddin was present at the foundation ceremony of the new IBU Building on 15 January 1986. The event was inaugurated by Abdus Salam and other university persons as reported by the Times of India:16 Jan 1986 Newspaper.[10] (ref in progress). He performed a critical role toward the establishment of the Interdisciplinary biotechnology Institute for modern Biological and Biotechnological education at Aligarh along with the AMU administration in 1984, which was a notable achievement in the career of Salahuddin. He was recognized as one of the best persons, in the biological science, associated with AMU community, at the time of his selection as a leader and Founder Director of the institute.[11][12] As a result the Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Institute is functioning in fulfilling an educational need of the people of Uttar Pradesh, India.[13]

The unfolding of proteins and protein-protein interaction

Salahuddin supervised students on in vitro protein folding thermodynamics and kinetics. The denaturation of egg white ovalbumin, as a model protein, was followed by measuring changes in the properties of UV absorption spectrum and viscosity of protein induced by guanidine hydrochloride. The transition of ovalbumin from native (N) in the absence of denaturant to the denatured protein in random coil structure (D) proceeded in a narrow range of denaturant concentration; 100% (D) existed at high guanidine hydrochloride. The protein unfolding and refolding equilibrium in guanidine hydrochloride was consistent with two state transition, i.e. N—>D, at room temperature. Transition was associated with a negative free energy change in the favour of native structure,N, as opposed to denatured D. The transition in Guanidine hydrochloride was dependent on temperature and native structure was favoured at relatively higher than lower temperatures. The refolding kinetics was consistent with the two state transition. As protein folds these hydrophobic surfaces coalesce and water is exclude, the ordered water molecules become disordered and return to the bulk solvent. The resulting increase in the water molecules' entropy is the thermodynamic driving force i.e. the hydrophobic effect on the stability of native ovalbumin in this study.[14]

The random coil proteins in 6M guanine hydrochloride were characterized by intrinsic viscosity measurements. The viscosity of ovalbumin in the absence of guanidine hydrochloride was low, 3.55 mL/g. However, viscosity in aqueous solution containing 6 M guanidine hydrochloride (and Beta mercaptoethanol) was 37 mL/g, much higher than the native protein. The latter observation is similar to a structure of linear polypeptide chain characteristic to the number of amino acid residues and calculated end to end distance as a result of the loss of native structure in ovalbumin. The complete transition of native protein to unfolded protein in aqueous buffer, pH 7, requires high concentration of guanidine hydrochloride, which influences the water structure as a result of interaction between amino acids in the protein and water molecules, from disordered water with high entropy in its absence, to an ordered water with low entropy in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride. This low entropy driven force associated with unfolding of protein by guanidine hydrochloride albeit some energy generated from hydrogen bonding is very weak, as compared to entropy driven protein folding or stabilization by hydrophobic effect in aqueous solution. It is unlikely that ovalbumin in 6 M guanidine contains any directional long range interactions between the amino acids; it possibly behaves as a nascent polypeptide chain in a random coil conformation.[15]

As opposed to ovalbumin, the denaturation of egg white ovomucoid protein did not proceed in a single step but occurred in two steps; the transition at low denaturant was associated with a globular protein structure with less unfolded random coil structure, and at high denaturant concentration protein existed in random coil structure, N—>X–>D.[16] The reversible folding and unfolding at each step follows a two state transition pattern. As ovomucoid is a domain containing protein, the prediction is that the kinetics of the refolding of D to intermediate stable X will be faster whereas the refolding of X to N may follow a slower kinetic in guanidine hydrochloride. The folding thermodynamic and kinetic studies on domains of Bovine serum albumin showed two state transition in denaturants, whereas the parental bovine serum albumin denaturation proceeded with detection of stable intermediate.[17] These studies are taken to suggest the stable intermediates with native ordered structures may exist on the protein folding pathway. It was not clear earlier that the stable intermediates, elusive in nature, could be studied as the folding of nascent polypeptide chains translated in the presence of interacting factors at ribosomes. The genetics/or biology of factors such as chaperones are thought to help find the mechanism of protein folding in wild type cells; defects in the correct folding of protein(s) in cells are now helpful in linking diseases.[18]

Egg white ovalbumin and anti ovalbumin antibody system was established in his lab, and was used to study the in vitro protein-protein interaction. The main finding was that the hydrophobic effect was the stabilizing force in the antigen and antibody reaction.[19]

Studies on enzymes

Salahuddin's team also studied enzyme systems under native states and additionally some of the mammalian enzymes were successfully purified in his lab. This included buffalo muscle aldolase, an enzyme involved in glycolytic pathway with substrate preference comparable to an aldolase prepared from a known eukaryotic species, rabbit muscle;[20] Cathepsin purification, substrate specificity and the critical role of sulfhydryl group that was compatible with in vivo function reported for known proteins.[21]

In vitro lectin and carbohydrate interactions; membrane proteins and receptors

Briefly, Salahuddin had a long term goal of studying lectins and cell membrane proteins. Two lectins i.e., a plant based Concanavalin A,[22] and lectins from mammalian sources i.e. liver were purified in native states and molecular characterization including carbohydrate binding specificity was established in his lab.[23] Cell surface receptor specific to goat immunoglobulin G was characterized in vitro studies in his lab.[24]

Allosteric protein

Salahuddin served as visiting associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA from 1975 to 1976: He worked on human hemoglobin which is an allosteric protein. Allosteric effectors usually bind to both deoxy-Hb and carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO), albeit at different sites, leading to a lowered oxygen affinity. The manner in which these effectors impact oxygen binding is unclear and may involve changes in structure. It is noted that Salahuddin and his group suggested conformational changes in HbCO and CO-ligated/3-chain tetramers from the observation of unusually steep oxygen saturation/pH curves obtained for the binding of allosteric effector benzene hexacarboxylate to ligated hemoglobin.[25]

Honours

Honours included: President of Society of Biological Chemists SBC (India) from the period 1989-1990;[26] Member of the Editorial Board of Indian Journal of Biochemistry and Biophysics(1985-1988); Member of Protein Society, Bethesda, USA(1995-1997); Member of the New York Academy of Science, New York(1995-1996); Member of the Executive Committee of the Society of Biological Chemists, India(1974-1975); Member of the Executive committee of Indian Biophysical Society, India (1991-1993); Member of the Guha Research Conference, India (1987-1992); and Member of the Society of Sigma Xi (USA).

See also

(author/or cited)

  • A.Salahudin (1984). "Proline peptide isomerization and protein folding". Journal of Biosciences. 6 (4): 349–355. doi:10.1007/BF02703893. S2CID 25069435.
  • Charles Tanford (1968), "Protein denaturation" (PDF), Advances in Protein Chemistry, 23: 121–282, doi:10.1016/S0065-3233(08)60401-5, ISBN 9780120342235, PMID 4882248
  • Chen Y, Ding F, Nie H, Serohijos AW, Sharma S, Wilcox KC, Yin S, Dokholyan NV. (2008). "Protein folding: then and now". Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics. 469 (1): 4–19. doi:10.1016/j.abb.2007.05.014. PMC 2173875. PMID 17585870.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

References

  1. ^ Ahmad, Faizan (5 August 2022). "Protein stability [determination] problems". Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences. 9: 880358. doi:10.3389/fmolb.2022.880358. PMC 9388781. PMID 35992266.
  2. ^ Khalid Masood (1983). "Studies on the Structure and Function of membranes of Nematohelminths: A Thesis Submitted to the Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh in the Partial Fulfilment for the Degree of Master of Philosophy in Biochemistry" (PDF). p. Acknowledgments.
  3. ^ AMU Aligarh "List of Former Chairpersons - Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit | AMU".
  4. ^ "Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit, Aligarh". p. About IBU.
  5. ^ Salahuddin (1) Fazlul Bari (2) 7.7.1937..(10) Jairajpur, Azamgarh "Aligarh Muslim University Alumni Directory". 2019. p. S696-698.
  6. ^ Anonymous, Salahuddin (1962). Physico chemical studies on the interaction of metals and their hydrous oxide sols with proteins. Department of Chemistry Aligarh Muslim University (Ph.D. thesis). hdl:10603/57378.
  7. ^ Anfinsen CB (1973). "Principles that govern the folding of protein chains". Science. 181 (4096): 223–230. Bibcode:1973Sci...181..223A. doi:10.1126/science.181.4096.223. PMID 4124164.
  8. ^ Evidence for residual structure in acid and heat denatured proteins, by Aune, KC, Salahuddin A, Zarlingo, MH and Tanford C. Department of Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Centre NC 27706 USA
  9. ^ Ahmad Salahuddin and Charles Tanford (1970). "Thermodynamics of the denaturation of ribonuclease by guanidine hydrochloride". Biochemistry. 9 (6): 1342–1347. doi:10.1021/bi00808a007. PMID 5461481.
  10. ^ [newspaper (Times of India 16 Jan 1986.jpg]
  11. ^ "Acceptance of alternative ways of thinking and mutual respect are "India's natural way of life": President Kovind". Business Standard. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  12. ^ "The last session was dedicated to Late Prof Ahmad Salahuddin, Founder Director, IBU as Professor A Salahuddin Oration". Aligarh Muslim University. AMU News. 3 January 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  13. ^ "Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit".
  14. ^ F. Ahmad and A. Salahuddin (1976). "Reversible unfolding of the major fraction of ovalbumin by guanidine hydrochloride". Biochemistry. 15 (23): 5168–5175. doi:10.1021/bi00668a034. PMID 4855653.
  15. ^ Ansari AA, Ahmad R, Salahuddin A. (1972). "The native and denatured states of ovalbumin". Biochemical Journal. 126 (2): 447–8. doi:10.1042/bj1260447. PMC 1178394. PMID 501085.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Baig MA. and Salahuddin A. (1978). "Occurrence and characterization of stable intermediate state(s) in the unfolding of ovomucoid by guanidine Hydrochloride". Biochemical Journal. 171 (1): 89–97. doi:10.1042/bj1710089. PMC 1184137. PMID 646827.
  17. ^ M.Y. Khan and A. Salahuddin (1984). "Lack of N→F transition in the N-terminal fragment (domain I and II) of bovine serum albumin". European Journal of Biochemistry. 141 (3): 473–5. doi:10.1111/j.1432-1033.1984.tb08216.x. PMID 6745254. S2CID 6451000.
  18. ^ Botao Liu, Crystal S Conn, and Shu-Bing Qian (2012). "Viewing folding of nascent polypeptide chains from ribosomes Expert Rev Proteomics". Expert Review of Proteomics. 9 (6): 579–581. doi:10.1586/epr.12.57. PMC 3971927. PMID 23256666.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ Ansari AA, Salahuddin A. (1973). "Effects of pH, ionic strength and temperature on the ovalbuminanti-ovalbumin precipitin reaction". Immunology. 25 (3): 377–83. PMC 1423065. PMID 4742047.
  20. ^ Pasha, S. T.; Salahuddin, A. (1977). "Isolation of buffalo muscle aldolase and comparison of its properties with those of rabbit muscle aldolase". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Enzymology. 483 (2): 435–442. doi:10.1016/0005-2744(77)90071-7. PMID 19072.
  21. ^ Salahuddin, A.; Siddiqui, F. A.; Salahuddin, P. (1996). "Isolation, purification and properties of cathepsin B from buffalo liver". Indian Journal of Biochemistry & Biophysics. 33 (4): 292–297. PMID 8936819.
  22. ^ A. Waseem and A. Salahuddin (1983). "Anomalous temperature dependence of the specific interaction of Concanavalin A with multivalent ligand-Dextrin". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology. 746 (1–2): 65–71. doi:10.1016/0167-4838(83)90011-0. PMID 19455757.
  23. ^ Ali Najma and Salahuddin A (1989). "Isolation and characterization of soluble beta galactoside-binding lectins from mammalian liver". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects. 992 (1): 30–34. doi:10.1016/0304-4165(89)90046-9. PMID 2752036.
  24. ^ Hajela K, Salahuddin A. (1988). "Binding of immunoglobulin G to peripheral blood lymphocytes". Immunology Letters. 19 (2): 159–62. doi:10.1016/0165-2478(88)90136-8. PMID 2976735.
  25. ^ A. Salahuddin and E. Bucci (1976). "Conformational aspects of the interaction of polyanions with ligended beta chains of human hemoglobin". Biochemistry. 15 (16): 3399–3405. doi:10.1021/bi00661a001. PMID 952864.
  26. ^ "Society of Biological Chemists (India)(1930-2011)" (PDF). p. 16.

External links


ahmad, salahuddin, this, article, orphan, other, articles, link, please, introduce, links, this, page, from, related, articles, find, link, tool, suggestions, september, 2022, july, 1937, november, 1996, biochemist, from, india, served, professor, biochemistry. This article is an orphan as no other articles link to it Please introduce links to this page from related articles try the Find link tool for suggestions September 2022 Ahmad Salahuddin 7 July 1937 26 November 1996 was a biochemist from India and served as a professor of biochemistry and department chairman 1984 1996 at Aligarh Muslim University AMU Aligarh India 3 He was selected as a Founder Director of Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit at AMU in 1984 4 He was also noted by a single name as Salahuddin at AMU Ahmad SalahuddinBorn 1937 07 07 7 July 1937Azamgarh Uttar Pradesh IndiaDied26 November 1996 1996 11 26 aged 59 Aligarh Uttar Pradesh IndiaNationalityIndianEducationPhD in Chemistry AMU AligarhPhD in biochemistry Duke UniversityAlma materAMU AligarhKnown forHydrophobic effect on native and functional proteinAwardsFulbright Fellowship Council of Scientific and Industrial Research FellowshipScientific careerFieldsBiochemistry protein chemistryInstitutionsAMU Aligarh University of Maryland School of MedicineNotable studentsFaizan Ahmad 1 Khalid Masood 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Chemistry Department Faculty of Science AMU Aligarh 2 2 Department of Biochemistry J N Medical College Faculty of Medicine AMU 2 3 Establishment of Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit IBU Faculty of Medicine AMU Aligarh 2 4 The unfolding of proteins and protein protein interaction 2 5 Studies on enzymes 2 6 In vitro lectin and carbohydrate interactions membrane proteins and receptors 2 7 Allosteric protein 3 Honours 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditSalahuddin was born on 7 July 1937 in town of Jairajpur District Azamgarh Uttar Pradesh His father Fazlul Bari was a teacher at the Shibli National College Azamgarh where he received his early education and later completed his undergraduate and Master s degrees in 1955 and 1957 respectively in Chemistry from the Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh Uttar Pradesh 5 Initially as a research student he took interest in Physical Chemistry joining the laboratory of Professor Wahid U Malik Department of Chemistry AMU and was awarded a Ph D degree in Chemistry in 1962 6 Career EditChemistry Department Faculty of Science AMU Aligarh Edit Starting in 1962 he worked as a lecturer in the Department of Chemistry at AMU Notably he was selected for the Fulbright Fellowship program from India while working at the university As a Fulbright fellow he worked in the laboratory of Charles Tanford a protein biochemist at Duke University in the United States from 1964 to 1968 He studied the biochemistry of protein folding and focussed in his career on the folding thermodynamics and kinetics properties of evasive intermediates and the unfolded states This was in response to the idea developed by Anfinsen 4 5 decades ago about the native structure of the protein that depends on the primary structure i e amino acid sequence in linear chain and the pathway to attain the native structure is governed by the same amino acid chain The formation of the native protein as a stable functional folded in a compact three dimensional globular shape is agreed to begin by a nucleation process due to interaction firstly between the few neighbourly amino acids as opposed to a search involving interaction between each and every amino acid randomly in the chain before attaining the native structure 7 He along with others characterized protein structure experimentally i e measurement of optical rotation after heat and acid low pH treatment He found that the heat and acid treated model proteins contained residual native ordered structures which were disrupted by treatment with potent denaturant guanidine hydrochloride as shown by steep denaturation curve from the transition of residual native structure to unfolded random coil state for each model protein 8 He performed equilibrium unfolding studies on ribonuclease protein in guanidine hydrochloride in Tanford s Lab and the work was found suitable for Ph D by Duke University Durham NC U S A in 1968 Title of his Ph D thesis Thermodynamics of the Denaturation of Ribonuclease by Guanidine Hydrochloride 9 Department of Biochemistry J N Medical College Faculty of Medicine AMU Edit In 1968 he returned to AMU and joined the Department of Biochemistry in the Faculty of Medicine as a reader He taught biochemistry and supervised PhD students establishing a Protein Research Laboratory in the department Establishment of Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit IBU Faculty of Medicine AMU Aligarh Edit As a founder director Salahuddin was present at the foundation ceremony of the new IBU Building on 15 January 1986 The event was inaugurated by Abdus Salam and other university persons as reported by the Times of India 16 Jan 1986 Newspaper 10 ref in progress He performed a critical role toward the establishment of the Interdisciplinary biotechnology Institute for modern Biological and Biotechnological education at Aligarh along with the AMU administration in 1984 which was a notable achievement in the career of Salahuddin He was recognized as one of the best persons in the biological science associated with AMU community at the time of his selection as a leader and Founder Director of the institute 11 12 As a result the Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Institute is functioning in fulfilling an educational need of the people of Uttar Pradesh India 13 The unfolding of proteins and protein protein interaction Edit Salahuddin supervised students on in vitro protein folding thermodynamics and kinetics The denaturation of egg white ovalbumin as a model protein was followed by measuring changes in the properties of UV absorption spectrum and viscosity of protein induced by guanidine hydrochloride The transition of ovalbumin from native N in the absence of denaturant to the denatured protein in random coil structure D proceeded in a narrow range of denaturant concentration 100 D existed at high guanidine hydrochloride The protein unfolding and refolding equilibrium in guanidine hydrochloride was consistent with two state transition i e N gt D at room temperature Transition was associated with a negative free energy change in the favour of native structure N as opposed to denatured D The transition in Guanidine hydrochloride was dependent on temperature and native structure was favoured at relatively higher than lower temperatures The refolding kinetics was consistent with the two state transition As protein folds these hydrophobic surfaces coalesce and water is exclude the ordered water molecules become disordered and return to the bulk solvent The resulting increase in the water molecules entropy is the thermodynamic driving force i e the hydrophobic effect on the stability of native ovalbumin in this study 14 The random coil proteins in 6M guanine hydrochloride were characterized by intrinsic viscosity measurements The viscosity of ovalbumin in the absence of guanidine hydrochloride was low 3 55 mL g However viscosity in aqueous solution containing 6 M guanidine hydrochloride and Beta mercaptoethanol was 37 mL g much higher than the native protein The latter observation is similar to a structure of linear polypeptide chain characteristic to the number of amino acid residues and calculated end to end distance as a result of the loss of native structure in ovalbumin The complete transition of native protein to unfolded protein in aqueous buffer pH 7 requires high concentration of guanidine hydrochloride which influences the water structure as a result of interaction between amino acids in the protein and water molecules from disordered water with high entropy in its absence to an ordered water with low entropy in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride This low entropy driven force associated with unfolding of protein by guanidine hydrochloride albeit some energy generated from hydrogen bonding is very weak as compared to entropy driven protein folding or stabilization by hydrophobic effect in aqueous solution It is unlikely that ovalbumin in 6 M guanidine contains any directional long range interactions between the amino acids it possibly behaves as a nascent polypeptide chain in a random coil conformation 15 As opposed to ovalbumin the denaturation of egg white ovomucoid protein did not proceed in a single step but occurred in two steps the transition at low denaturant was associated with a globular protein structure with less unfolded random coil structure and at high denaturant concentration protein existed in random coil structure N gt X gt D 16 The reversible folding and unfolding at each step follows a two state transition pattern As ovomucoid is a domain containing protein the prediction is that the kinetics of the refolding of D to intermediate stable X will be faster whereas the refolding of X to N may follow a slower kinetic in guanidine hydrochloride The folding thermodynamic and kinetic studies on domains of Bovine serum albumin showed two state transition in denaturants whereas the parental bovine serum albumin denaturation proceeded with detection of stable intermediate 17 These studies are taken to suggest the stable intermediates with native ordered structures may exist on the protein folding pathway It was not clear earlier that the stable intermediates elusive in nature could be studied as the folding of nascent polypeptide chains translated in the presence of interacting factors at ribosomes The genetics or biology of factors such as chaperones are thought to help find the mechanism of protein folding in wild type cells defects in the correct folding of protein s in cells are now helpful in linking diseases 18 Egg white ovalbumin and anti ovalbumin antibody system was established in his lab and was used to study the in vitro protein protein interaction The main finding was that the hydrophobic effect was the stabilizing force in the antigen and antibody reaction 19 Studies on enzymes Edit Salahuddin s team also studied enzyme systems under native states and additionally some of the mammalian enzymes were successfully purified in his lab This included buffalo muscle aldolase an enzyme involved in glycolytic pathway with substrate preference comparable to an aldolase prepared from a known eukaryotic species rabbit muscle 20 Cathepsin purification substrate specificity and the critical role of sulfhydryl group that was compatible with in vivo function reported for known proteins 21 In vitro lectin and carbohydrate interactions membrane proteins and receptors Edit Briefly Salahuddin had a long term goal of studying lectins and cell membrane proteins Two lectins i e a plant based Concanavalin A 22 and lectins from mammalian sources i e liver were purified in native states and molecular characterization including carbohydrate binding specificity was established in his lab 23 Cell surface receptor specific to goat immunoglobulin G was characterized in vitro studies in his lab 24 Allosteric protein Edit Salahuddin served as visiting associate professor University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore USA from 1975 to 1976 He worked on human hemoglobin which is an allosteric protein Allosteric effectors usually bind to both deoxy Hb and carboxyhemoglobin HbCO albeit at different sites leading to a lowered oxygen affinity The manner in which these effectors impact oxygen binding is unclear and may involve changes in structure It is noted that Salahuddin and his group suggested conformational changes in HbCO and CO ligated 3 chain tetramers from the observation of unusually steep oxygen saturation pH curves obtained for the binding of allosteric effector benzene hexacarboxylate to ligated hemoglobin 25 Honours EditHonours included President of Society of Biological Chemists SBC India from the period 1989 1990 26 Member of the Editorial Board of Indian Journal of Biochemistry and Biophysics 1985 1988 Member of Protein Society Bethesda USA 1995 1997 Member of the New York Academy of Science New York 1995 1996 Member of the Executive Committee of the Society of Biological Chemists India 1974 1975 Member of the Executive committee of Indian Biophysical Society India 1991 1993 Member of the Guha Research Conference India 1987 1992 and Member of the Society of Sigma Xi USA See also Edit author or cited A Salahudin 1984 Proline peptide isomerization and protein folding Journal of Biosciences 6 4 349 355 doi 10 1007 BF02703893 S2CID 25069435 Charles Tanford 1968 Protein denaturation PDF Advances in Protein Chemistry 23 121 282 doi 10 1016 S0065 3233 08 60401 5 ISBN 9780120342235 PMID 4882248 Chen Y Ding F Nie H Serohijos AW Sharma S Wilcox KC Yin S Dokholyan NV 2008 Protein folding then and now Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 469 1 4 19 doi 10 1016 j abb 2007 05 014 PMC 2173875 PMID 17585870 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link References Edit Ahmad Faizan 5 August 2022 Protein stability determination problems Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences 9 880358 doi 10 3389 fmolb 2022 880358 PMC 9388781 PMID 35992266 Khalid Masood 1983 Studies on the Structure and Function of membranes of Nematohelminths A Thesis Submitted to the Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh in the Partial Fulfilment for the Degree of Master of Philosophy in Biochemistry PDF p Acknowledgments AMU Aligarh List of Former Chairpersons Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit AMU Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit Aligarh p About IBU Salahuddin 1 Fazlul Bari 2 7 7 1937 10 Jairajpur Azamgarh Aligarh Muslim University Alumni Directory 2019 p S696 698 Anonymous Salahuddin 1962 Physico chemical studies on the interaction of metals and their hydrous oxide sols with proteins Department of Chemistry Aligarh Muslim University Ph D thesis hdl 10603 57378 Anfinsen CB 1973 Principles that govern the folding of protein chains Science 181 4096 223 230 Bibcode 1973Sci 181 223A doi 10 1126 science 181 4096 223 PMID 4124164 Evidence for residual structure in acid and heat denatured proteins by Aune KC Salahuddin A Zarlingo MH and Tanford C Department of Biochemistry Duke University Medical Centre NC 27706 USA https web archive org web 20190712182255 http www jbc org content 242 19 4486 full pdf Ahmad Salahuddin and Charles Tanford 1970 Thermodynamics of the denaturation of ribonuclease by guanidine hydrochloride Biochemistry 9 6 1342 1347 doi 10 1021 bi00808a007 PMID 5461481 newspaper Times of India 16 Jan 1986 jpg Acceptance of alternative ways of thinking and mutual respect are India s natural way of life President Kovind Business Standard 7 March 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2022 The last session was dedicated to Late Prof Ahmad Salahuddin Founder Director IBU as Professor A Salahuddin Oration Aligarh Muslim University AMU News 3 January 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit F Ahmad and A Salahuddin 1976 Reversible unfolding of the major fraction of ovalbumin by guanidine hydrochloride Biochemistry 15 23 5168 5175 doi 10 1021 bi00668a034 PMID 4855653 Ansari AA Ahmad R Salahuddin A 1972 The native and denatured states of ovalbumin Biochemical Journal 126 2 447 8 doi 10 1042 bj1260447 PMC 1178394 PMID 501085 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Baig MA and Salahuddin A 1978 Occurrence and characterization of stable intermediate state s in the unfolding of ovomucoid by guanidine Hydrochloride Biochemical Journal 171 1 89 97 doi 10 1042 bj1710089 PMC 1184137 PMID 646827 M Y Khan and A Salahuddin 1984 Lack of N F transition in the N terminal fragment domain I and II of bovine serum albumin European Journal of Biochemistry 141 3 473 5 doi 10 1111 j 1432 1033 1984 tb08216 x PMID 6745254 S2CID 6451000 Botao Liu Crystal S Conn and Shu Bing Qian 2012 Viewing folding of nascent polypeptide chains from ribosomes Expert Rev Proteomics Expert Review of Proteomics 9 6 579 581 doi 10 1586 epr 12 57 PMC 3971927 PMID 23256666 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ansari AA Salahuddin A 1973 Effects of pH ionic strength and temperature on the ovalbuminanti ovalbumin precipitin reaction Immunology 25 3 377 83 PMC 1423065 PMID 4742047 Pasha S T Salahuddin A 1977 Isolation of buffalo muscle aldolase and comparison of its properties with those of rabbit muscle aldolase Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA Enzymology 483 2 435 442 doi 10 1016 0005 2744 77 90071 7 PMID 19072 Salahuddin A Siddiqui F A Salahuddin P 1996 Isolation purification and properties of cathepsin B from buffalo liver Indian Journal of Biochemistry amp Biophysics 33 4 292 297 PMID 8936819 A Waseem and A Salahuddin 1983 Anomalous temperature dependence of the specific interaction of Concanavalin A with multivalent ligand Dextrin Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology 746 1 2 65 71 doi 10 1016 0167 4838 83 90011 0 PMID 19455757 Ali Najma and Salahuddin A 1989 Isolation and characterization of soluble beta galactoside binding lectins from mammalian liver Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA General Subjects 992 1 30 34 doi 10 1016 0304 4165 89 90046 9 PMID 2752036 Hajela K Salahuddin A 1988 Binding of immunoglobulin G to peripheral blood lymphocytes Immunology Letters 19 2 159 62 doi 10 1016 0165 2478 88 90136 8 PMID 2976735 A Salahuddin and E Bucci 1976 Conformational aspects of the interaction of polyanions with ligended beta chains of human hemoglobin Biochemistry 15 16 3399 3405 doi 10 1021 bi00661a001 PMID 952864 Society of Biological Chemists India 1930 2011 PDF p 16 External links EditOfficial website AMU Ahmad Salahuddin https pubmed ncbi nlm nih gov term 22Salahuddin A 22 5BAuthor 5D This article needs additional or more specific categories Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles September 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php 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