I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Angelina R.
Sekirnik
,
Jessica K.
Reynolds
,
Larissa
See
,
Joseph P.
Bluck
,
Amy R.
Scorah
,
Cynthia
Tallant
,
Bernadette
Lee
,
Katarzyna B.
Leszczynska
,
Rachel L.
Grimley
,
R. Ian
Storer
,
Marta
Malattia
,
Sara
Crespillo
,
Sofia
Caria
,
Stephanie
Duclos
,
Ester M.
Hammond
,
Stefan
Knapp
,
Garrett M.
Morris
,
Fernanda
Duarte
,
Philip C.
Biggin
,
Stuart J.
Conway
Open Access
Abstract: TRIM33 is a member of the tripartite motif (TRIM) family of proteins, some of which possess E3 ligase activity and are involved in the ubiquitin-dependent degradation of proteins. Four of the TRIM family proteins, TRIM24 (TIF1α), TRIM28 (TIF1β), TRIM33 (TIF1γ) and TRIM66, contain C-terminal plant homeodomain (PHD) and bromodomain (BRD) modules, which bind to methylated lysine (KMen) and acetylated lysine (KAc), respectively. Here we investigate the differences between the two isoforms of TRIM33, TRIM33α and TRIM33β, using structural and biophysical approaches. We show that the N1039 residue, which is equivalent to N140 in BRD4(1) and which is conserved in most BRDs, has a different orientation in each isoform. In TRIM33β, this residue coordinates KAc, but this is not the case in TRIM33α. Despite these differences, both isoforms show similar affinities for H31–27K18Ac, and bind preferentially to H31–27K9Me3K18Ac. We used this information to develop an AlphaScreen assay, with which we have identified four new ligands for the TRIM33 PHD-BRD cassette. These findings provide fundamental new information regarding which histone marks are recognized by both isoforms of TRIM33 and suggest starting points for the development of chemical probes to investigate the cellular function of TRIM33.
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Sep 2022
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I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Cécile
Exertier
,
Federico
Sebastiani
,
Ida
Freda
,
Elena
Gugole
,
Gabriele
Cerutti
,
Giacomo
Parisi
,
Linda Celeste
Montemiglio
,
Maurizio
Becucci
,
Cristiano
Viappiani
,
Stefano
Bruno
,
Carmelinda
Savino
,
Carlotta
Zamparelli
,
Massimiliano
Anselmi
,
Stefania
Abbruzzetti
,
Giulietta
Smulevich
,
Beatrice
Vallone
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[21741]
Open Access
Abstract: We produced a neuroglobin variant, namely, Ngb CDless, with the excised CDloop- and D-helix, directly joining the C- and E-helices. The CDless variant retained bis-His hexacoordination, and we investigated the role of the CDloop–D-helix unit in controlling the CO binding and structural dynamics by an integrative approach based on X-ray crystallography, rapid mixing, laser flash photolysis, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics simulations. Rapid mixing and laser flash photolysis showed that ligand affinity was unchanged with respect to the wild-type protein, albeit with increased on and off constants for rate-limiting heme iron hexacoordination by the distal His64. Accordingly, resonance Raman spectroscopy highlighted a more open distal pocket in the CO complex that, in agreement with MD simulations, likely involves His64 swinging inward and outward of the distal heme pocket. Ngb CDless displays a more rigid overall structure with respect to the wild type, abolishing the structural dynamics of the CDloop–D-helix hypothesized to mediate its signaling role, and it retains ligand binding control by distal His64. In conclusion, this mutant may represent a tool to investigate the involvement of CDloop–D-helix in neuroprotective signaling in a cellular or animal model.
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Jul 2022
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I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
I24-Microfocus Macromolecular Crystallography
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Ali
Nejatie
,
Elizabeth
Steves
,
Nick
Gauthier
,
Jamie
Baker
,
Jason
Nesbitt
,
Stephen A.
Mcmahon
,
Verena
Oehler
,
Nicholas J.
Thornton
,
Benjamin
Noyovitz
,
Kobra
Khazaei
,
Brock W.
Byers
,
Wesley F.
Zandberg
,
Tracey M.
Gloster
,
Margo M.
Moore
,
Andrew J.
Bennet
Abstract: Sialidases catalyze the release of sialic acid from the terminus of glycan chains. We previously characterized the sialidase from the opportunistic fungal pathogen, Aspergillus fumigatus, and showed that it is a Kdnase. That is, this enzyme prefers 3-deoxy-d-glycero-d-galacto-non-2-ulosonates (Kdn glycosides) as the substrate compared to N-acetylneuraminides (Neu5Ac). Here, we report characterization and crystal structures of putative sialidases from two other ascomycete fungal pathogens, Aspergillus terreus (AtS) and Trichophyton rubrum (TrS). Unlike A. fumigatus Kdnase (AfS), hydrolysis with the Neu5Ac substrates was negligible for TrS and AtS; thus, TrS and AtS are selective Kdnases. The second-order rate constant for hydrolysis of aryl Kdn glycosides by AtS is similar to that by AfS but 30-fold higher by TrS. The structures of these glycoside hydrolase family 33 (GH33) enzymes in complex with a range of ligands for both AtS and TrS show subtle changes in ring conformation that mimic the Michaelis complex, transition state, and covalent intermediate formed during catalysis. In addition, they can aid identification of important residues for distinguishing between Kdn and Neu5Ac substrates. When A. fumigatus, A. terreus, and T. rubrum were grown in chemically defined media, Kdn was detected in mycelial extracts, but Neu5Ac was only observed in A. terreus or T. rubrum extracts. The C8 monosaccharide 3-deoxy-d-manno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo) was also identified in A. fumigatus and T. rubrum samples. A fluorescent Kdn probe was synthesized and revealed the localization of AfS in vesicles at the cell surface.
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Nov 2021
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I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[12579]
Open Access
Abstract: Natural products and their analogues are often challenging to synthesize due to their complex scaffolds and embedded functional groups. Solely relying on engineering the biosynthesis of natural products may lead to limited compound diversity. Integrating synthetic biology with synthetic chemistry allows rapid access to much more diverse portfolios of xenobiotic compounds, which may accelerate the discovery of new therapeutics. As a proof-of-concept, by supplementing an Escherichia coli strain expressing the violacein biosynthesis pathway with 5-bromo-tryptophan in vitro or tryptophan 7-halogenase RebH in vivo, six halogenated analogues of violacein or deoxyviolacein were generated, demonstrating the promiscuity of the violacein biosynthesis pathway. Furthermore, 20 new derivatives were generated from 5-brominated violacein analogues via the Suzuki–Miyaura cross-coupling reaction directly using the crude extract without prior purification. Herein we demonstrate a flexible and rapid approach to access a diverse chemical space that can be applied to a wide range of natural product scaffolds.
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Oct 2021
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I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Alex
Macpherson
,
James R.
Birtley
,
Robert J.
Broadbridge
,
Kevin
Brady
,
Monika-Sarah E. D.
Schulze
,
Yalan
Tang
,
Callum
Joyce
,
Kenneth
Saunders
,
Gregory
Bogle
,
John
Horton
,
Sebastian
Kelm
,
Richard D.
Taylor
,
Richard J.
Franklin
,
Matthew D.
Selby
,
Maisem
Laabei
,
Toska
Wonfor
,
Adam
Hold
,
Phil
Stanley
,
Douangsone
Vadysirisack
,
Jiye
Shi
,
Jean
Van Den Elsen
,
Alastair D. G.
Lawson
Open Access
Abstract: Cysteine-rich knob domains found in the ultralong complementarity determining regions of a subset of bovine antibodies are capable of functioning autonomously as 3–6 kDa peptides. While they can be expressed recombinantly in cellular systems, in this paper we show that knob domains are also readily amenable to a chemical synthesis, with a co-crystal structure of a chemically synthesized knob domain in complex with an antigen showing structural equivalence to the biological product. For drug discovery, following the immunization of cattle, knob domain peptides can be synthesized directly from antibody sequence data, combining the power and diversity of the bovine immune repertoire with the ability to rapidly incorporate nonbiological modifications. We demonstrate that, through rational design with non-natural amino acids, a paratope diversity can be massively expanded, in this case improving the efficacy of an allosteric peptide. As a potential route to further improve stability, we also performed head-to-tail cyclizations, exploiting the proximity of the N and C termini to synthesize functional, fully cyclic antibody fragments. Lastly, we highlight the stability of knob domains in plasma and, through pharmacokinetic studies, use palmitoylation as a route to extend the plasma half-life of knob domains in vivo. This study presents an antibody-derived medicinal chemistry platform, with protocols for solid-phase synthesis of knob domains, together with the characterization of their molecular structures, in vitro pharmacology, and pharmacokinetics.
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Sep 2021
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I24-Microfocus Macromolecular Crystallography
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Viktor
Mojr
,
Mohammad
Roghanian
,
Hedvig
Tamman
,
Duy Dinh
Do Pham
,
Magdalena
Petrová
,
Radek
Pohl
,
Hiraku
Takada
,
Katleen
Van Nerom
,
Hanna
Ainelo
,
Julien
Caballero-Montes
,
Steffi
Jimmy
,
Abel
Garcia-Pino
,
Vasili
Hauryliuk
,
Dominik
Rejman
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[23248]
Abstract: While alarmone nucleotides guanosine-3′,5′-bisdiphosphate (ppGpp) and guanosine-5′-triphosphate-3′-diphosphate (pppGpp) are archetypical bacterial second messengers, their adenosine analogues ppApp (adenosine-3′,5′-bisdiphosphate) and pppApp (adenosine-5′-triphosphate-3′-diphosphate) are toxic effectors that abrogate bacterial growth. The alarmones are both synthesized and degraded by the members of the RelA-SpoT Homologue (RSH) enzyme family. Because of the chemical and enzymatic liability of (p)ppGpp and (p)ppApp, these alarmones are prone to degradation during structural biology experiments. To overcome this limitation, we have established an efficient and straightforward procedure for synthesizing nonhydrolysable (p)ppNuNpp analogues starting from 3′-azido-3′-deoxyribonucleotides as key intermediates. To demonstrate the utility of (p)ppGNpp as a molecular tool, we show that (i) as an HD substrate mimic, ppGNpp competes with ppGpp to inhibit the enzymatic activity of human MESH1 Small Alarmone Hyrolase, SAH; and (ii) mimicking the allosteric effects of (p)ppGpp, (p)ppGNpp acts as a positive regulator of the synthetase activity of long ribosome-associated RSHs Rel and RelA. Finally, by solving the structure of the N-terminal domain region (NTD) of T. thermophilus Rel complexed with pppGNpp, we show that as an HD substrate mimic, the analogue serves as a bona fide orthosteric regulator that promotes the same intra-NTD structural rearrangements as the native substrate.
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Sep 2021
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I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[19248]
Open Access
Abstract: Antimycins are anticancer compounds produced by a hybrid nonribosomal peptide synthetase/polyketide synthase (NRPS/PKS) pathway. The biosynthesis of these compounds is well characterized, with the exception of the standalone β-ketoreductase enzyme AntM that is proposed to catalyze the reduction of the C8 carbonyl of the antimycin scaffold. Inactivation of antM and structural characterization suggested that rather than functioning as a post-PKS tailoring enzyme, AntM acts upon the terminal biosynthetic intermediate while it is tethered to the PKS acyl carrier protein. Mutational analysis identified two amino acid residues (Tyr185 and Phe223) that are proposed to serve as checkpoints controlling substrate access to the AntM active site. Aromatic checkpoint residues are conserved in uncharacterized standalone β-ketoreductases, indicating that they may also act concomitantly with synthesis of the scaffold. These data provide novel mechanistic insights into the functionality of standalone β-ketoreductases and will enable their reprogramming for combinatorial biosynthesis.
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Jun 2021
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I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Sabrina R.
Mackinnon
,
Tobias
Krojer
,
William R.
Foster
,
Laura
Diaz-Saez
,
Manshu
Tang
,
Kilian V. M.
Huber
,
Frank
Von Delft
,
Kent
Lai
,
Paul
Brennan
,
Gustavo
Arruda Bezerra
,
Wyatt W.
Yue
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[18145]
Abstract: Classic galactosemia is caused by loss-of-function mutations in
galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (GALT) that lead to toxic
accumulation of its substrate, galactose-1-phosphate. One proposed therapy
is to inhibit the biosynthesis of galactose-1-phosphate, catalyzed by
galactokinase 1 (GALK1). Existing inhibitors of human GALK1 (hGALK1)
are primarily ATP-competitive with limited clinical utility to date. Here, we
determined crystal structures of hGALK1 bound with reported ATP-
competitive inhibitors of the spiro-benzoxazole series, to reveal their binding
mode in the active site. Spurred by the need for additional chemotypes of
hGALK1 inhibitors, desirably targeting a nonorthosteric site, we also
performed crystallography-based screening by soaking hundreds of hGALK1
crystals, already containing active site ligands, with fragments from a custom library. Two fragments were found to bind close to the ATP binding site, and a further eight were found in a hotspot distal from the active site, highlighting the strength of this method in identifying previously uncharacterized allosteric sites. To generate inhibitors of improved potency and selectivity targeting the newly identified binding hotspot, new compounds were designed by merging overlapping fragments. This yielded two micromolar inhibitors of hGALK1 that were not competitive with respect to either substrate (ATP or galactose) and demonstrated good selectivity over hGALK1 homologues, galactokinase 2 and mevalonate kinase. Our findings are therefore the first to demonstrate inhibition of hGALK1 from an allosteric site, with potential for further development of potent and selective inhibitors to provide novel therapeutics for classic galactosemia.
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Mar 2021
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I24-Microfocus Macromolecular Crystallography
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Open Access
Abstract: Protein–protein interaction (PPI) networks are fundamental for cellular processes. Small-molecule PPI enhancers have been shown to be powerful tools to fundamentally study PPIs and as starting points for potential new therapeutics. Yet, systematic approaches for their discovery are not widely available, and the design prerequisites of “molecular glues” are poorly understood. Covalent fragment-based screening can identify chemical starting points for these enhancers at specific sites in PPI interfaces. We recently reported a mass spectrometry-based disulfide-trapping (tethering) approach for a cysteine residue in the hub protein 14–3–3, an important regulator of phosphorylated client proteins. Here, we invert the strategy and report the development of a functional read-out for systematic identification of PPI enhancers based on fluorescence anisotropy (FA-tethering) with the reactive handle now on a client-derived peptide. Using the DNA-binding domain of the nuclear receptor Estrogen Related Receptor gamma (ERRγ), we target a native cysteine positioned at the 14–3–3 PPI interface and identify several fragments that form a disulfide bond to ERRγ and stabilize the complex up to 5-fold. Crystallography indicates that fragments bind in a pocket comprised of 14–3–3 and the ERRγ phosphopeptide. FA-tethering presents a streamlined methodology to discover molecular glues for protein complexes.
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Nov 2020
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I03-Macromolecular Crystallography
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Emil
Johansson
,
Rémi
Caraballo
,
Nitesh
Mistry
,
Georg
Zocher
,
Weixing
Qian
,
C. David
Andersson
,
Daniel L.
Hurdiss
,
Naresh
Chandra
,
Rebecca
Thompson
,
Lars
Frängsmyr
,
Thilo
Stehle
,
Niklas
Arnberg
,
Mikael
Elofsson
Open Access
Abstract: Coxsackievirus A24 variant (CVA24v) and human adenovirus 37 (HAdV-37) are leading causative agents of the severe and highly contagious ocular infections acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis and epidemic keratoconjunctivitis, respectively. Currently, neither vaccines nor antiviral agents are available for treating these diseases, which affect millions of individuals worldwide. CVA24v and HAdV-37 utilize sialic acid as attachment receptors facilitating entry into host cells. Previously, we and others have shown that derivatives based on sialic acid are effective in preventing HAdV-37 binding and infection of cells. Here, we designed and synthesized novel pentavalent sialic acid conjugates and studied their inhibitory effect against CVA24v and HAdV-37 binding and infection of human corneal epithelial cells. The pentavalent conjugates are the first reported inhibitors of CVA24v infection, and proved efficient in blocking HAdV-37 binding. Taken together, the pentavalent conjugates presented here form a basis for the development of general inhibitors of these highly contagious ocular pathogens.
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Aug 2020
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