25 research outputs found

    Fluorine substitutions in an antigenic peptide selectively modulate T cell receptor binding in a minimally perturbing manner

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    T cell receptor (TCR) recognition of antigenic peptides bound and presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules forms the basis of the cellular immune response to pathogens and cancer. TCRs bind peptide/MHC molecules weakly and with fast kinetics, features which have hindered detailed biophysical studies of these interactions. Modified peptides resulting in enhanced TCR binding could help overcome these challenges. Further, there is considerable interest in using modified peptides with enhanced TCR binding as the basis for clinical vaccines. Here, we studied how fluorine substitutions in an antigenic peptide can selectively impact TCR recognition. Using a structure-guided design approach, we found that fluorination of the HTLV-1 Tax11-19 peptide (Tax) enhanced binding by the Tax-specific TCR A6, yet weakened binding by the Tax-specific TCR B7. The changes in affinity were consistent with crystallographic structures and fluorine chemistry, and with A6, independent of other substitutions in the interface. Peptide fluorination thus provides a means to selectively modulate TCR binding affinity without significantly perturbing peptide composition or structure. Lastly, in probing the mechanism of fluorineā€™s effect on TCR binding, our data were most consistent with fluorineā€™s unique ā€œpolar hydrophobicity,ā€ a finding which should impact other attempts to alter molecular recognition with fluorine

    Contractility parameters of human -cardiac myosin with the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation R403Q show loss of motor function

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    Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most frequently occurring inherited cardiovascular disease. It is caused by mutations in genes encoding the force-generating machinery of the cardiac sarcomere, including human ?-cardiac myosin. We present a detailed characterization of the most debated HCM-causing mutation in human ?-cardiac myosin, R403Q. Despite numerous studies, most performed with nonhuman or noncardiac myosin, there is no consensus about the mechanism of action of this mutation on the function of the enzyme. We use recombinant human ?-cardiac myosin and new methodologies to characterize in vitro contractility parameters of the R403Q myosin compared to wild type. We extend our studies beyond pure actin filaments to include the interaction of myosin with regulated actin filaments containing tropomyosin and troponin. We find that, with pure actin, the intrinsic force generated by R403Q is ~15% lower than that generated by wild type. The unloaded velocity is, however, ~10% higher for R403Q myosin, resulting in a load-dependent velocity curve that has the characteristics of lower contractility at higher external loads compared to wild type. With regulated actin filaments, there is no increase in the unloaded velocity and the contractility of the R403Q myosin is lower than that of wild type at all loads. Unlike that with pure actin, the actin-activated adenosine triphosphatase activity for R403Q myosin with Ca2+-regulated actin filaments is ~30% lower than that for wild type, predicting a lower unloaded duty ratio of the motor. Overall, the contractility parameters studied fit with a loss of human ?-cardiac myosin contractility as a result of the R403Q mutation

    T cell receptor cross-reactivity directed by antigen-dependent tuning of peptide-MHC molecular flexibility

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    Tell mediated immunity requires T cell receptor (TCR) cross-reactivity, the mechanisms behind which remain incompletely elucidated. The Ī±Ī² TCR A6 recognizes both the Tax (LLFGYPVYV) and Tel1p (MLWGYLQYV) peptides presented by the human class I MHC molecule HLA-A2. Here we found that although the two ligands are ideal structural mimics, they form substantially different interfaces with A6, with conformational differences in the peptide, the TCR, and unexpectedly, the MHC molecule. The differences between the Tax and Tel1p ternary complexes could not be predicted from the free peptide-MHC structures and are inconsistent with a traditional induced-fit mechanism. Instead, the differences were attributable to peptide and MHC molecular motion present in Tel1p-HLA-A2 but absent in Tax-HLA-A2. Differential ā€œtuningā€ of the dynamic properties of HLA-A2 by the Tax and Tel1p peptides thus facilitates cross-recognition and impacts how structural diversity can be presented to and accommodated by receptors of the immune system

    Effects of troponin T cardiomyopathy mutations on the calcium sensitivity of the regulated thin filament and the actomyosin cross-bridge kinetics of human Ī²-cardiac myosin.

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    Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) lead to significant cardiovascular morbidity and mortality worldwide. Mutations in the genes encoding the sarcomere, the force-generating unit in the cardiomyocyte, cause familial forms of both HCM and DCM. This study examines two HCM-causing (I79N, E163K) and two DCM-causing (R141W, R173W) mutations in the troponin T subunit of the troponin complex using human Ī²-cardiac myosin. Unlike earlier reports using various myosin constructs, we found that none of these mutations affect the maximal sliding velocities or maximal Ca(2+)-activated ADP release rates involving the thin filament human Ī²-cardiac myosin complex. Changes in Ca(2+) sensitivity using the human myosin isoform do, however, mimic changes seen previously with non-human myosin isoforms. Transient kinetic measurements show that these mutations alter the kinetics of Ca(2+) induced conformational changes in the regulatory thin filament proteins. These changes in calcium sensitivity are independent of active, cycling human Ī²-cardiac myosin

    Structural basis of lipid-droplet localization of 17-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 13

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    Abstract Hydroxysteroid 17-beta-dehydrogenase 13 (HSD17B13) is a hepatic lipid droplet-associated enzyme that is upregulated in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Recently, there have been several reports that predicted loss of function variants in HSD17B13 protect against the progression of steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis with fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Here we report crystal structures of full length HSD17B13 in complex with its NAD+ cofactor, and with lipid/detergent molecules and small molecule inhibitors from two distinct series in the ligand binding pocket. These structures provide insights into a mechanism for lipid droplet-associated proteins anchoring to membranes as well as a basis for HSD17B13 variants disrupting function. Two series of inhibitors interact with the active site residues and the bound cofactor similarly, yet they occupy different paths leading to the active site. These structures provide ideas for structure-based design of inhibitors that may be used in the treatment of liver disease

    Expression of recombinant human Ī²-cardiac S1 and thin filament proteins.

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    <p>(A) <i>Lane 1</i>, an Invitrogen Benchmark Ladder; <i>Lane 2</i>, WT human Ī²-cardiac S1 (āˆ¼120 kDa) with a C-terminal GFP tag and the FLAG-tagged human ventricular essential light chain (ELC) (āˆ¼24 kDa). (B) <i>Lane 1</i>, an Invitrogen Benchmark Ladder; <i>Lane 2</i>, chicken skeletal actin (āˆ¼42 kDa); <i>Lane 3</i>, bovine tropomyosin (Tm; Ī± isoform lower and Ī² isoforms upper, āˆ¼33 kDa); and <i>Lane 4</i>, human cardiac troponin complex (Tn; TnT āˆ¼35 kDa, TnI āˆ¼24 kDa, TnC āˆ¼18 kDa). (C) A model of the troponin complex which is built from partial crystal structures of the human cardiac troponin complex of TnT (green), TnI (blue), and TnC (red) (Adapted from <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0083403#pone.0083403-Manning1" target="_blank">[72]</a>, PDB 1J1E). Mutations are shown in magenta. (D) Human cardiac TnT exons and functional domains <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0083403#pone.0083403-Tardiff1" target="_blank">[16]</a>. HCM-causing mutations are in red and DCM-causing mutations in blue.</p

    Calcium Stimulates Self-Assembly of Protein Kinase C Ī± <i>In Vitro</i>

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    <div><p>Protein kinase C Ī± (PKCĪ±) is a nodal regulator in several intracellular signaling networks. PKCĪ± is composed of modular domains that interact with each other to dynamically regulate spatial-temporal function. We find that PKCĪ± specifically, rapidly and reversibly self-assembles in the presence of calcium <i>in vitro</i>. This phenomenon is dependent on, and can be modulated by an intramolecular interaction between the C1a and C2 protein domains of PKCĪ±. Next, we monitor self-assembly of PKCā€”mCitrine fusion proteins using time-resolved and steady-state homoFRET. HomoFRET between full-length PKCĪ± molecules is observed when in solution with both calcium and liposomes containing either diacylglycerol (DAG) or phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P<sub>2</sub>). Surprisingly, the C2 domain is sufficient to cluster on liposomes containing PI(4,5)P<sub>2</sub>, indicating the C1a domain is not required for self-assembly in this context. We conclude that three distinct clustered states of PKCĪ± can be formed depending on what combination of cofactors are bound, but Ca<sup>2+</sup> is minimally required and sufficient for clustering.</p></div

    Summary of Ca<sup>2+</sup> sensitivity and properties of WT troponin complex at 23Ā°C at various conditions.

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    <p>Mean Ā± SEM.</p><p>n<sub>H</sub> is the Hill coefficient.</p><p><i>n</i>, represents number of individual curves.</p><p>Ratios represent the molar ratio of S1 to thin filament.</p
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