Search Results Heading

MBRLSearchResults

mbrl.module.common.modules.added.book.to.shelf
Title added to your shelf!
View what I already have on My Shelf.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to add the title to your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
    Done
    Filters
    Reset
  • Discipline
      Discipline
      Clear All
      Discipline
  • Is Peer Reviewed
      Is Peer Reviewed
      Clear All
      Is Peer Reviewed
  • Item Type
      Item Type
      Clear All
      Item Type
  • Subject
      Subject
      Clear All
      Subject
  • Year
      Year
      Clear All
      From:
      -
      To:
  • More Filters
25 result(s) for "Hellinga, Homme W."
Sort by:
Structural evidence for the rare tautomer hypothesis of spontaneous mutagenesis
Even though high-fidelity polymerases copy DNA with remarkable accuracy, some base-pair mismatches are incorporated at low frequency, leading to spontaneous mutagenesis. Using high-resolution X-ray crystallographic analysis of a DNA polymerase that catalyzes replication in crystals, we observe that a C{bullet}A mismatch can mimic the shape of cognate base pairs at the site of incorporation. This shape mimicry enables the mismatch to evade the error detection mechanisms of the polymerase, which would normally either prevent mismatch incorporation or promote its nucleolytic excision. Movement of a single proton on one of the mismatched bases alters the hydrogen-bonding pattern such that a base pair forms with an overall shape that is virtually indistinguishable from a canonical, Watson-Crick base pair in double-stranded DNA. These observations provide structural evidence for the rare tautomer hypothesis of spontaneous mutagenesis, a long-standing concept that has been difficult to demonstrate directly.
Interplay of catalysis, fidelity, threading, and processivity in the exo- and endonucleolytic reactions of human exonuclease I
Human exonuclease 1 (hExo1) is a member of the RAD2/XPG structure-specific 5′-nuclease superfamily. Its dominant, processive 5′–3′ exonuclease and secondary 5′-flap endonuclease activities participate in various DNA repair, recombination, and replication processes. A single active site processes both recessed ends and 5′-flap substrates. By initiating enzyme reactions in crystals, we have trapped hExo1 reaction intermediates that reveal structures of these substrates before and after their exo- and endonucleolytic cleavage, as well as structures of uncleaved, unthreaded, and partially threaded 5′ flaps. Their distinctive 5′ ends are accommodatedby a small, mobile arch in the active site that binds recessed ends at its base and threads 5′ flaps through a narrow aperture within its interior. A sequence of successive, interlocking conformational changes guides the two substrate types into a shared reaction mechanism that catalyzes their cleavage by an elaborated variant of the two-metal, in-line hydrolysis mechanism. Coupling of substrate-dependent arch motions to transition-state stabilization suppresses inappropriate or premature cleavage, enhancing processing fidelity. The striking reduction in flap conformational entropy is catalyzed, in part, by arch motions and transient binding interactions between the flap and unprocessed DNA strand. At the end of the observed reaction sequence, hExo1 resets without relinquishing DNA binding, suggesting a structural basis for its processivity.
Chromophore carbonyl twisting in fluorescent biosensors encodes direct readout of protein conformations with multicolor switching
Fluorescent labeling of proteins is a powerful tool for probing structure-function relationships with many biosensing applications. Structure-based rules for systematically designing fluorescent biosensors require understanding ligand-mediated fluorescent response mechanisms which can be challenging to establish. We installed thiol-reactive derivatives of the naphthalene-based fluorophore Prodan into bacterial periplasmic glucose-binding proteins. Glucose binding elicited paired color exchanges in the excited and ground states of these conjugates. X-ray structures and mutagenesis studies established that glucose-mediated color switching arises from steric interactions that couple protein conformational changes to twisting of the Prodan carbonyl relative to its naphthalene plane. Mutations of residues contacting the carbonyl can optimize color switching by altering fluorophore conformational equilibria in the apo and glucose-bound proteins. A commonly accepted view is that Prodan derivatives report on protein conformations via solvatochromic effects due to changes in the dielectric of their local environment. Here we show that instead Prodan carbonyl twisting controls color switching. These insights enable structure-based biosensor design by coupling ligand-mediated protein conformational changes to internal chromophore twists through specific steric interactions between fluorophore and protein. Fluorescent labeling of proteins by fluorophore Prodan is a useful tool to measure protein conformational changes via color switching, however, structure-based rules that predict where to emplace fluorophores that elicit robust fluorescent responses are challenging to establish. Here, the authors investigate mutated glucose-binding proteins labeled with Prodan derivatives, and uncover a mechanism for Prodan ligand-mediated color switching that enables structure-based biosensor design using specific steric interactions between fluorophore and protein.
Programmable Ligand Detection System in Plants through a Synthetic Signal Transduction Pathway
There is an unmet need to monitor human and natural environments for substances that are intentionally or unintentionally introduced. A long-sought goal is to adapt plants to sense and respond to specific substances for use as environmental monitors. Computationally re-designed periplasmic binding proteins (PBPs) provide a means to design highly sensitive and specific ligand sensing capabilities in receptors. Input from these proteins can be linked to gene expression through histidine kinase (HK) mediated signaling. Components of HK signaling systems are evolutionarily conserved between bacteria and plants. We previously reported that in response to cytokinin-mediated HK activation in plants, the bacterial response regulator PhoB translocates to the nucleus and activates transcription. Also, we previously described a plant visual response system, the de-greening circuit, a threshold sensitive reporter system that produces a visual response which is remotely detectable and quantifiable. We describe assembly and function of a complete synthetic signal transduction pathway in plants that links input from computationally re-designed PBPs to a visual response. To sense extracellular ligands, we targeted the computational re-designed PBPs to the apoplast. PBPs bind the ligand and develop affinity for the extracellular domain of a chemotactic protein, Trg. We experimentally developed Trg fusions proteins, which bind the ligand-PBP complex, and activate intracellular PhoR, the HK cognate of PhoB. We then adapted Trg-PhoR fusions for function in plants showing that in the presence of an external ligand PhoB translocates to the nucleus and activates transcription. We linked this input to the de-greening circuit creating a detector plant. Our system is modular and PBPs can theoretically be designed to bind most small molecules. Hence our system, with improvements, may allow plants to serve as a simple and inexpensive means to monitor human surroundings for substances such as pollutants, explosives, or chemical agents.
Conversion of a Maltose Receptor into a Zinc Biosensor by Computational Design
We have demonstrated that it is possible to radically change the specificity of maltose binding protein by converting it into a zinc sensor using a rational design approach. In this new molecular sensor, zinc binding is transduced into a readily detected fluorescence signal by use of an engineered conformational coupling mechanism linking ligand binding to reporter group response. An iterative progressive design strategy led to the construction of variants with increased zinc affinity by combining binding sites, optimizing the primary coordination sphere, and exploiting conformational equilibria. Intermediates in the design series show that the adaptive process involves both introduction and optimization of new functions and removal of adverse vestigial interactions. The latter demonstrates the importance of the rational design approach in uncovering cryptic phenomena in protein function, which cannot be revealed by the study of naturally evolved systems.
Picomole-scale characterization of protein stability and function by quantitative cysteine reactivity
The Gibbs free energy difference between native and unfolded states (\"stability\") is one of the fundamental characteristics of a protein. By exploiting the thermodynamic linkage between ligand binding and stability, interactions of a protein with small molecules, nucleic acids, or other proteins can be detected and quantified. Determination of protein stability can therefore provide a universal monitor of biochemical function. Yet, the use of stability measurements as a functional probe is underutilized, because such experiments traditionally require large amounts of protein and special instrumentation. Here we present the quantitative cysteine reactivity (QCR) technique to determine protein stabilities rapidly and accurately using only picomole quantities of material and readily accessible laboratory equipment. We demonstrate that QCR-derived stabilities can be used to measure ligand binding over a wide range of ligand concentrations and affinities. We anticipate that this technique will have broad applications in high-throughput protein engineering experiments and functional genomics.
Computational Design of Receptors for an Organophosphate Surrogate of the Nerve Agent Soman
We report the computational design of soluble protein receptors for pinacolyl methyl phosphonic acid (PMPA), the predominant hydrolytic product of the nerve agent soman. Using recently developed computational protein design techniques, the ligand-binding pockets of two periplasmic binding proteins, glucose-binding protein and ribose-binding protein, were converted to bind PMPA instead of their cognate sugars. The designs introduce 9-12 mutations in the parent proteins. Twelve of 20 designs tested exhibited PMPA-dependent changes in emission intensity of a fluorescent reporter with affinities between 45 nM and 10 μM. The contributions to ligand binding by individual residues were determined in two designs by alanine-scanning mutagenesis, and are consistent with the molecular models. These results demonstrate that designed receptors with radically altered binding specificities and affinities that rival or exceed those of the parent proteins can be successfully predicted. The designs vary in parent scaffold, sequence diversity, and orientation of docked ligand, suggesting that the number of possible solutions to the design problem is large and degenerate. This observation has implications for the genesis of biological function by random processes. The designed receptors reported here may have utility in the development of fluorescent biosensors for monitoring nerve agents.
Engineering key components in a synthetic eukaryotic signal transduction pathway
Signal transduction underlies how living organisms detect and respond to stimuli. A goal of synthetic biology is to rewire natural signal transduction systems. Bacteria, yeast, and plants sense environmental aspects through conserved histidine kinase (HK) signal transduction systems. HK protein components are typically comprised of multiple, relatively modular, and conserved domains. Phosphate transfer between these components may exhibit considerable cross talk between the otherwise apparently linear pathways, thereby establishing networks that integrate multiple signals. We show that sequence conservation and cross talk can extend across kingdoms and can be exploited to produce a synthetic plant signal transduction system. In response to HK cross talk, heterologously expressed bacterial response regulators, PhoB and OmpR, translocate to the nucleus on HK activation. Using this discovery, combined with modification of PhoB (PhoB‐VP64), we produced a key component of a eukaryotic synthetic signal transduction pathway. In response to exogenous cytokinin, PhoB‐VP64 translocates to the nucleus, binds a synthetic PlantPho promoter, and activates gene expression. These results show that conserved‐signaling components can be used across kingdoms and adapted to produce synthetic eukaryotic signal transduction pathways. Synopsis Signal transduction underlies how living organisms detect and respond to environmental stimuli. Synthetic biology aims to better understand natural signal transduction systems and also rewire them to produce controllable outputs. Bacteria have an array of HK or two‐component signal transduction systems that are involved in perceiving environmental conditions and eliciting responses (Wolanin et al , 2002 ). In plants, HK systems are involved in hormone perception and response, notably cytokinins (Guo and Ecker, 2004 ; Chen et al , 2005 ; Ferreira and Kieber, 2005 ). HK signaling proceeds through a phospho‐relay between protein components that are typically modular and conserved across different kingdoms. The high degree of sequence conservation among these proteins has allowed functional assays to be developed for plant HKs in bacteria and yeast (Urao et al , 1999 ; Suzuki et al , 2001 ). The presence of the eukaryotic nuclear membrane constitutes a major difference between HK signaling in bacteria and plants. Plant HK components involved in signal transduction are found in different parts of the cell, for example membrane‐localized HKs, and cytoplasmic and nuclear‐localized Arabidopsis RRs. Some components, such as Hpt proteins, are re‐distributed from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in response to the HK phosphorylation signal. Cross talk between components of HK signaling is known to occur (Hass et al , 2004 ). To test whether conserved bacterial HK components are able to functionally interact with plant HK components, we expressed the E. coli RRs, PhoB and OmpR, in Arabidopsis and found that these proteins respond to phosphate signals from endogenous cytokinin‐mediated HK signaling by accumulating in the plant nucleus (Figure 2 ). This is a remarkable observation given that bacterial cells do not have nuclei and these proteins are not involved in eukaryotic pathogenic infection. We show that translocation into the nucleus cannot readily be explained by passive diffusion of the bacterial RR by making a large fusion protein PhoB‐GFP‐GUS. In E. coli , the RR PhoB is phosphorylated in response to external stimuli resulting in a protein conformational change that uncovers a DNA‐binding domain. This domain has high affinity for a specific DNA sequence, the Pho box. Binding of phospho‐PhoB to Pho boxes results in transcriptional activation of downstream genes (Makino et al , 1989 ; Ellison and McCleary, 2000 ; Blanco et al , 2002 ). We produced a signal‐dependent eukaryotic transcriptional response system by using the properties of PhoB and its cytokinin‐dependent nuclear translocation in plants. PhoB, fused to a eukaryotic transcriptional activation domain (VP64), translocates to the nucleus, binds a synthetic PhoB‐responsive promoter, and activates transcription of the GUS reporter gene in Arabidopsis (Figure 6 ). These results show that conserved‐signaling components can be used across kingdoms and adapted to provide key components of synthetic signal transduction pathways in eukaryotes. Components of bacterial histidine kinase signaling, PhoB and OmpR, show signal‐dependent nuclear translocation in Arabidopsis plants Diffusion cannot readily account for nuclear translocation A partial synthetic signal transduction system is produced by adapting PhoB to function as a eukaryotic transcriptional activator of a synthetic promoter in plants
The Crystal Structure of Human Protein Farnesyltransferase Reveals the Basis for Inhibition by CaaX Tetrapeptides and Their Mimetics
Protein farnesyltransferase (FTase) catalyzes the attachment of a farnesyl lipid group to the cysteine residue located in the C-terminal tetrapeptide of many essential signal transduction proteins, including members of the Ras superfamily. Farnesylation is essential both for normal functioning of these proteins, and for the transforming activity of oncogenic mutants. Consequently FTase is an important target for anti-cancer therapeutics. Several FTase inhibitors are currently undergoing clinical trials for cancer treatment. Here, we present the crystal structure of human FTase, as well as ternary complexes with the TKCVFM hexapeptide substrate, CVFM non-substrate tetrapeptide, and L-739,750 peptidomimetic with either farnesyl diphosphate (FPP), or a nonreactive analogue. These structures reveal the structural mechanism of FTase inhibition. Some CaaX tetrapeptide inhibitors are not farnesylated, and are more effective inhibitors than farnesylated CaaX tetrapeptides. CVFM and L-739,750 are not farnesylated, because these inhibitors bind in a conformation that is distinct from the TKCVFM hexapeptide substrate. This non-substrate binding mode is stabilized by an ion pair between the peptide N terminus and the α-phosphate of the FPP substrate. Conformational mapping calculations reveal the basis for the sequence specificity in the third position of the CaaX motif that determines whether a tetrapeptide is a substrate or non-substrate. The presence of β-branched amino acids in this position prevents formation of the non-substrate conformation; all other aliphatic amino acids in this position are predicted to form the non-substrate conformation, provided their N terminus is available to bind to the FPP α-phosphate. These results may facilitate further development of FTase inhibitors.
Computational Design of a Biologically Active Enzyme
Rational design of enzymes is a stringent test of our understanding of protein chemistry and has numerous potential applications. Here, we present and experimentally validate the computational design of enzyme activity in proteins of known structure. We have predicted mutations that introduce triose phosphate isomerase activity into ribosebinding protein, a receptor that normally lacks enzyme activity. The resulting designs contain 18 to 22 mutations, exhibit$10^5- to 10^6-fold$rate enhancements over the uncatalyzed reaction, and are biologically active, in that they support the growth of Escherichia coli under gluconeogenic conditions. The inherent generality of the design method suggests that many enzymes can be designed by this approach.