Timothy A. Cross

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Name: Cross, Timothy A.
Organization: Florida State University , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Title: Professor(PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Zhehong Gan, Ivan Hung, Xiaoling Wang, Joana Paulino, Gang Wu, Ilya M. Litvak, Peter L. Gor'kov, William W. Brey, Pietro Lendi, Jeffrey L. Schiano, Mark D. Bird, Iain R. Dixon, Jack Toth, Gregory S. Boebinger, Timothy A. Cross
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2017 Volume 284(Volume 284) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 November 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2017.08.007
•Series-connected hybrid (SCH) magnet at the NHMFL reaches field of 36.1 T.•SCH achieves sub-ppm field homogeneity and stability, enabling 2D NMR.•2D NMR is performed with MAS and oriented protein samples.•High fields improve spectral sensitivity and resolution of quadrupolar nuclei.The National High Magnetic Field Laboratory has brought to field a Series-Connected Hybrid magnet for NMR spectroscopy. As a DC powered magnet it can be operated at fields up to 36.1 T. The series connection between a superconducting outsert and a resistive insert dramatically minimizes the high frequency fluctuations of the magnetic field typically observed in purely resistive magnets. Current-density-grading among various resistive coils was used for improved field homogeneity. The 48 mm magnet bore and 42 mm outer diameter of the probes leaves limited space for conventional shims and consequently a combination of resistive and ferromagnetic shims are used. Field maps corrected for field instabilities were obtained and shimming achieved better than 1 ppm homogeneity over a cylindrical volume of 1 cm diameter and height. The magnetic field is regulated within 0.2 ppm using an external 7Li lock sample doped with paramagnetic MnCl2. The improved field homogeneity and field regulation using a modified AVANCE NEO console enables NMR spectroscopy at 1H frequencies of 1.0, 1.2 and 1.5 GHz. NMR at 1.5 GHz reflects a 50% increase in field strength above the highest superconducting magnets currently available. Three NMR probes have been constructed each equipped with an external lock rf coil for field regulation. Initial NMR results obtained from the SCH magnet using these probes illustrate the very exciting potential of ultra-high magnetic fields.Download high-res image (80KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Anna K. Wright; Paratchata Batsomboon; Jian Dai; Ivan Hung; Huan-Xiang Zhou; Gregory B. Dudley
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 5) pp:1506-1509
Publication Date(Web):January 25, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.5b13129
Rimantadine hydrochloride (α-methyl-1-adamantane-methalamine hydrochloride) is a chiral compound which exerts antiviral activity against the influenza A virus by inhibiting proton conductance of the M2 ion channel. In complex with M2, rimantadine has always been characterized as a racemic mixture. Here, we report the novel enantioselective synthesis of deuterium-labeled (R)- and (S)-rimantadine and the characterization of their protein–ligand interactions using solid-state NMR. Isotropic chemical shift changes strongly support differential binding of the enantiomers to the proton channel. Position restrained simulations satisfying distance restraints from 13C–2H rotational-echo double-resonance NMR show marked differences in the hydrogen-bonding pattern of the two enantiomers at the binding site. Together these results suggest a complex set of interactions between (R)-rimantadine and the M2 proton channel, leading to a higher stability for this enantiomer of the drug in the channel pore.
Co-reporter:Huan-Xiang Zhou;Ivan Hung;Nabanita Das;Jian Dai;Malini Rajagopalan
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 2 ) pp:E119-E126
Publication Date(Web):2015-01-13
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1415908112
The 93-residue transmembrane protein CrgA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a central component of the divisome, a large macromolecular machine responsible for cell division. Through interactions with multiple other components including FtsZ, FtsQ, FtsI (PBPB), PBPA, and CwsA, CrgA facilitates the recruitment of the proteins essential for peptidoglycan synthesis to the divisome and stabilizes the divisome. CrgA is predicted to have two transmembrane helices. Here, the structure of CrgA was determined in a liquid–crystalline lipid bilayer environment by solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Oriented-sample data yielded orientational restraints, whereas magic-angle spinning data yielded interhelical distance restraints. These data define a complete structure for the transmembrane domain and provide rich information on the conformational ensembles of the partially disordered N-terminal region and interhelical loop. The structure of the transmembrane domain was refined using restrained molecular dynamics simulations in an all-atom representation of the same lipid bilayer environment as in the NMR samples. The two transmembrane helices form a left-handed packing arrangement with a crossing angle of 24° at the conserved Gly39 residue. This helix pair exposes other conserved glycine and alanine residues to the fatty acyl environment, which are potential sites for binding CrgA’s partners such as CwsA and FtsQ. This approach combining oriented-sample and magic-angle spinning NMR spectroscopy in native-like lipid bilayers with restrained molecular dynamics simulations represents a powerful tool for structural characterization of not only isolated membrane proteins, but their complexes, such as those that form macromolecular machines.
Co-reporter:Dylan T. Murray, James Griffin, and Timothy A. Cross
Biochemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 15) pp:
Publication Date(Web):March 25, 2014
DOI:10.1021/bi500144h
For small helical membrane proteins, their structures are highly sensitive to their environment, and solid state NMR is a structural technique that can characterize these membrane proteins in native-like lipid bilayers and proteoliposomes. To date, a systematic method by which to evaluate the effect of the solubilizing detergent on proteoliposome preparations for solid state NMR of membrane proteins has not been presented in the literature. A set of experiments are presented aimed at determining the conditions most amenable to dialysis mediated reconstitution sample preparation. A membrane protein from M. tuberculosis is used to illustrate the method. The results show that a detergent that stabilizes the most protein is not always ideal and sometimes cannot be removed by dialysis. By focusing on the lipid and protein binding properties of the detergent, proteoliposome preparations can be readily produced, which provide double the signal-to-noise ratios for both the oriented sample and magic angle spinning solid state NMR. The method will allow more membrane protein drug targets to be structurally characterized in lipid bilayer environments.
Co-reporter:D.T. Murray, I. Hung, T.A. Cross
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2014 240() pp: 34-44
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2013.12.014
Co-reporter:Timothy A. Cross, Vindana Ekanayake, Joana Paulino, Anna Wright
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2014 239() pp: 100-109
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2013.12.006
Co-reporter:Timothy A. Cross;Dylan T. Murray;Anthony Watts
European Biophysics Journal 2013 Volume 42( Issue 10) pp:731-755
Publication Date(Web):2013 October
DOI:10.1007/s00249-013-0925-x
Evidence that membrane proteins respond conformationally and functionally to their environment is growing. Structural models, by necessity, have been characterized in preparations where the protein has been removed from its native environment. Different structural methods have used various membrane mimetics that have recently included lipid bilayers as a more native-like environment. Structural tools applied to lipid bilayer-embedded integral proteins are informing us about important generic characteristics of how membrane proteins respond to the lipid environment as compared with their response to other nonlipid environments. Here, we review the current status of the field, with specific reference to observations of some well-studied α-helical membrane proteins, as a starting point to aid the development of possible generic principles for model refinement.
Co-reporter:Thach V. Can ; Mukesh Sharma ; Ivan Hung ; Peter L. Gor’kov ; William W. Brey
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 22) pp:9022-9025
Publication Date(Web):May 22, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja3004039
As a small tetrameric helical membrane protein, the M2 proton channel structure is highly sensitive to its environment. As a result, structural data from a lipid bilayer environment have proven to be essential for describing the conductance mechanism. While oriented sample solid-state NMR has provided a high-resolution backbone structure in lipid bilayers, quaternary packing of the helices and many of the side-chain conformations have been poorly restrained. Furthermore, the quaternary structural stability has remained a mystery. Here, the isotropic chemical shift data and interhelical cross peaks from magic angle spinning solid-state NMR of a liposomal preparation strongly support the quaternary structure of the transmembrane helical bundle as a dimer-of-dimers structure. The data also explain how the tetrameric stability is enhanced once two charges are absorbed by the His37 tetrad prior to activation of this proton channel. The combination of these two solid-state NMR techniques appears to be a powerful approach for characterizing helical membrane protein structure.
Co-reporter:Hao Dong, Mukesh Sharma, Huan-Xiang Zhou, and Timothy A. Cross
Biochemistry 2012 Volume 51(Issue 24) pp:4779-4789
Publication Date(Web):May 31, 2012
DOI:10.1021/bi300090x
Among the growing number of membrane protein structures in the Protein Data Bank, there are many transmembrane domains that appear to be native-like; at the same time, there are others that appear to have less than complete native-like character. Hence, there is an increasing need for validation tools that distinguish native-like from non-native-like structures. Membrane mimetics used in protein structural characterizations differ in numerous physicochemical properties from native membranes and provide many opportunities for introducing non-native-like features into membrane protein structures. One possible approach for validating membrane protein structures is based on the use of glycine residues in transmembrane domains. Here, we have reviewed the membrane protein structure database and identified a set of benchmark proteins that appear to be native-like. In these structures, conserved glycine residues rarely face the lipid interstices, and many of them participate in close helix–helix packing. Glycine-based validation allowed the identification of non-native-like features in several membrane proteins and also shows the potential for verifying the native-like character for numerous other membrane protein structures.
Co-reporter:Yimin Miao;Huajun Qin;Dr. Riqiang Fu;Dr. Mukesh Sharma;Thach V. Can;Dr. Ivan Hung;Dr. Sorin Luca;Peter L. Gor'kov;Dr. William W. Brey;Dr. Timothy A. Cross
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2012 Volume 51( Issue 33) pp:8383-8386
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201204666
Co-reporter:Yimin Miao;Huajun Qin;Dr. Riqiang Fu;Dr. Mukesh Sharma;Thach V. Can;Dr. Ivan Hung;Dr. Sorin Luca;Peter L. Gor'kov;Dr. William W. Brey;Dr. Timothy A. Cross
Angewandte Chemie 2012 Volume 124( Issue 33) pp:8508-8511
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201204666
Co-reporter:Dylan T. Murray, Yuanting Lu, T.A. Cross, J.R. Quine
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2011 Volume 210(Issue 1) pp:82-89
Publication Date(Web):May 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2011.02.012
Mathematical questions related to determining the structure of a protein from NMR orientational restraints are discussed. The protein segment is a kinked alpha helix modeled as a regular alpha helix in which two adjacent torsion angles have been varied from their ideal values. Varying these torsion angles breaks the helix into two regular helical segments joined at a kink. The problem is to find the torsion angles at the kink from the relationship of the helical segments to the direction of the magnetic field.Graphical abstractA kinked alpha helix. Left: View down the axis of the first straight helix segment. The circle in the figure is the cylinder containing the nitrogens on the first helix. Right: Side view.Research highlights► SSNMR orientational restraints from PISEMA are used to find the structure of a kinked alpha helix. ► For use with orientational restraints, a mathematical model of a kinked alpha helix is presented. ► Orientation of helix segments with respect to B determines torsion angles at the residue between. ► Helix rotation and tilt angles from ssNMR used to determine torsion angle pair in kinked helix.
Co-reporter:Mukesh Sharma;Myunggi Yi;Hao Dong;Huajun Qin;Emily Peterson;David D. Busath;Huan-Xiang Zhou
Science 2010 Volume 330(Issue 6003) pp:509-512
Publication Date(Web):22 Oct 2010
DOI:10.1126/science.1191750
Co-reporter:Timothy A Cross
Nature Structural and Molecular Biology 2009 16(12) pp:1207-1209
Publication Date(Web):2009-12-01
DOI:10.1038/nsmb1209-1207
Flu viruses package essential functions into a small integral membrane protein known as M2. Such small membrane proteins represent major challenges for structural biology. A new study presented in this issue details the structure and functions of the influenza B M2 protein through the use of functional domain–specific solution NMR spectroscopy.Influenza B is a substantial component of the annual mix of seasonal flu viruses. One of the essential proteins in this virus is BM2, a small membrane protein with a single transmembrane helix that, as a tetramer, forms a proton channel1.
Co-reporter:Richard C. Page;Conggang Li;Fei Philip Gao;Jian Hu
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry 2007 Volume 45(Issue S1) pp:S2-S11
Publication Date(Web):19 DEC 2007
DOI:10.1002/mrc.2077

Membrane protein structure and function is critically dependent on the surrounding environment. Consequently, utilizing a membrane mimetic that adequately models the native membrane environment is essential. A range of membrane mimetics are available but none generates a better model of native aqueous, interfacial, and hydrocarbon core environments than synthetic lipid bilayers. Transmembrane α-helices are very stable in lipid bilayers because of the low water content and low dielectric environment within the bilayer hydrocarbon core that strengthens intrahelical hydrogen bonds and hinders structural rearrangements within the transmembrane helices. Recent evidence from solid-state NMR spectroscopy illustrates that transmembrane α-helices, both in peptides and full-length proteins, appear to be highly uniform based on the observation of resonance patterns in PISEMA spectra. Here, we quantitate for the first time through simulations what we mean by highly uniform structures. Indeed, helices in transmembrane peptides appear to have backbone torsion angles that are uniform within ± 4° . While individual helices can be structurally stable due to intrahelical hydrogen bonds, interhelical interactions within helical bundles can be weak and nonspecific, resulting in multiple packing arrangements. Some helical bundles have the capacity through their amino acid composition for hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions to stabilize the interhelical conformations and solid-state NMR data is shown here for both of these situations. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy is unique among the techniques capable of determining three-dimensional structures of proteins in that it provides the ability to characterize structurally the membrane proteins at very high resolution in liquid crystalline lipid bilayers. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Co-reporter:Conggang Li, Yiming Mo, Jun Hu, Eduard Chekmenev, Changlin Tian, Fei Philip Gao, Riqiang Fu, Peter Gor’kov, William Brey, Timothy A. Cross
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2006 Volume 180(Issue 1) pp:51-57
Publication Date(Web):May 2006
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2006.01.013
Sample instability during solid-state NMR experiments frequently arises due to RF heating in aligned samples of hydrated lipid bilayers. A new, simple approach for estimating sample temperature is used to show that, at 9.4 T, sample heating depends mostly on 1H decoupling power rather than on 15N irradiation in PISEMA experiments. Such heating for different sample preparations, including lipid composition, salt concentration and hydration level was assessed and the hydration level was found to be the primary parameter correlated with sample heating. The contribution to RF heating from the dielectric loss appears to be dominant under our experimental conditions. The heat generated by a single scan was approximately calculated from the Q values of the probe, to be a 1.7 °C elevation per single pulse sequence iteration under typical sample conditions. The steady-state sample temperature during PISEMA experiments can be estimated based on the method presented here, which correlates the loss factor with the temperature rise induced by the RF heating of the sample.
Co-reporter:Jun Hu;Riqiang Fu;Katsuyuki Nishimura;Li Zhang;Huan-Xiang Zhou;David D. Busath;Viksita Vijayvergiya;
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2006 103(18) pp:6865-6870
Publication Date(Web):April 21, 2006
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0601944103
The heart of the H+ conductance mechanism in the homotetrameric M2 H+ channel from influenza A is a set of four histidine side chains. Here, we show that protonation of the third of these imidazoles coincides with acid activation of this transmembrane channel and that, at physiological pH, the channel is closed by two imidazole–imidazolium dimers, each sharing a low-barrier hydrogen bond. This unique construct succeeds in distributing a pair of charges over four rings and many atoms in a low dielectric environment to minimize charge repulsion. These dimers form with identical pKas of 8.2 ± 0.2, suggesting cooperative H+ binding and clearly illustrating high H+ affinity for this channel. The protonation behavior of the histidine side chains has been characterized by using solid-state NMR spectroscopy on the M2 transmembrane domain in fully hydrated lipid bilayers where the tetrameric backbone structure is known. Furthermore, electrophysiological measurements of multichannel and single-channel experiments confirm that these protein constructs are functional.
Co-reporter:R. Fu, W.W. Brey, K. Shetty, P. Gor’kov, S. Saha, J.R. Long, S.C. Grant, E.Y. Chekmenev, J. Hu, Z. Gan, M. Sharma, F. Zhang, T.M. Logan, R. Brüschweller, A. Edison, A. Blue, I.R. Dixon, W.D. Markiewicz, T.A. Cross
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2005 Volume 177(Issue 1) pp:1-8
Publication Date(Web):November 2005
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2005.07.013
Access to an ultra-wide bore (105 mm) 21.1 T magnet makes possible numerous advances in NMR spectroscopy and MR imaging, as well as novel applications. This magnet was developed, designed, manufactured and tested at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and on July 21, 2004 it was energized to 21.1 T. Commercial and unique homebuilt probes, along with a standard commercial NMR console have been installed and tested with many science applications to develop this spectrometer as a user facility. Solution NMR of membrane proteins with enhanced resolution, new pulse sequences for solid state NMR taking advantage of narrowed proton linewidths, and enhanced spatial resolution and contrast leading to improved animal imaging have been documented. In addition, it is demonstrated that spectroscopy of single site 17O labeled macromolecules in a hydrated lipid bilayer environment can be recorded in a remarkably short period of time. 17O spectra of aligned samples show the potential for using this data for orientational restraints and for characterizing unique details of cation binding properties to ion channels. The success of this NHMFL magnet illustrates the potential for using a similar magnet design as an outsert for high temperature superconducting insert coils to achieve an NMR magnet with a field >25 T.
Co-reporter:Jian Hu, Huajun Qin, Fei Philip Gao, Timothy A. Cross
Protein Expression and Purification (November 2011) Volume 80(Issue 1) pp:34-40
Publication Date(Web):1 November 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.pep.2011.06.001
Obtaining enough membrane protein in native or native-like status is still a challenge in membrane protein structure biology. Maltose binding protein (MBP) has been widely used as a fusion partner in improving membrane protein production. In the present work, a systematic assessment on the application of mature MBP (mMBP) for membrane protein overexpression and purification was performed on 42 membrane proteins, most of which showed no or poor expression level in membrane fraction fused with an N-terminal Histag. It was found that most of the small membrane proteins were overexpressed in the native membrane of Escherichia coli when using mMBP. In addition, the proteolysis of the fusions were performed on the membrane without solubilization with detergents, leading to the development of an efficient protocol to directly purify the target membrane proteins from the membrane fraction through a one-step affinity chromatography. Our results indicated that mMBP is an excellent fusion partner for overexpression, membrane targeting and purification of small membrane proteins. The present expression and purification method may be a good solution for the large scale preparation of small membrane proteins in structural and functional studies.Highlights► Efficient expression of small helical membrane proteins with a mature MBP fusion in E. coli membranes. ► Positively charged tags (not necessarily His tags) on the N-terminus enhances expression of small helical membrane proteins. ► The mMBP fusion works best for helical membrane proteins having ⩽3 transmembrane helices and <20 kDa molecular weight. ► Frequently, one-step purification can be achieved using Ni2+–NTA chromatography following cleavage of the fusion protein.
Co-reporter:A. Korepanova, J.D. Moore, H.B. Nguyen, Y. Hua, T.A. Cross, F. Gao
Protein Expression and Purification (May 2007) Volume 53(Issue 1) pp:24-30
Publication Date(Web):1 May 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.pep.2006.11.022
Sixteen of 22 low molecular weight integral membrane proteins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis with previously poor or undetectable levels of expression were expressed in Escherichia coli as fusions with both the maltose binding protein (MBP) and a His8-tag. Sixty-eight percent of targeted proteins were expressed in high yield (>30 mg/L) in soluble and/or inclusion body form. Thrombin cleavage of the MBP fusion protein was successful for 10 of 13 proteins expressed as soluble proteins and for three proteins expressed only as inclusion bodies. The use of autoinduction growth media increased yields over Luria-Bertani (LB) growth media in 75% of the expressed proteins. Expressing integral membrane proteins with yields suitable for structural studies from a set of previously low and non-expressing proteins proved highly successful upon attachment of the maltose binding protein as a fusion tag.
Co-reporter:Mukesh Sharma, Conggang Li, David D. Busath, Huan-Xiang Zhou, Timothy A. Cross
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes (February 2011) Volume 1808(Issue 2) pp:538-546
Publication Date(Web):February 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.bbamem.2010.07.015
Co-reporter:Conggang Li, Huajun Qin, Fei Philip Gao, Timothy A. Cross
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes (December 2007) Volume 1768(Issue 12) pp:
Publication Date(Web):December 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.bbamem.2007.08.025
Membrane protein function within the membrane interstices is achieved by mechanisms that are not typically available to water-soluble proteins. The whole balance of molecular interactions that stabilize three-dimensional structure in the membrane environment is different from that in an aqueous environment. As a result interhelical interactions are often dominated by non-specific van der Waals interactions permitting dynamics and conformational heterogeneity in these interfaces. Here, solid-state NMR data of the transmembrane domain of the M2 protein from influenza A virus are used to exemplify such conformational plasticity in a tetrameric helical bundle. Such data lead to very high resolution structural restraints that can identify both subtle and substantial structural differences associated with various states of the protein. Spectra from samples using two different preparation protocols, samples prepared in the presence and absence of amantadine, and spectra as a function of pH are used to illustrate conformational plasticity.
Co-reporter:Jian Hu, Huajun Qin, Mukesh Sharma, Timothy A. Cross, Fei Philip Gao
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes (April 2008) Volume 1778(Issue 4) pp:
Publication Date(Web):April 2008
DOI:10.1016/j.bbamem.2007.12.024
Due to their high hydrophobicity, it is a challenge to obtain high yields of transmembrane peptides for structural and functional characterization. In the present work, a robust method is developed for the expression, purification and reconstitution of transmembrane peptides, especially for those containing conserved methionines. By using a truncated and mutated glutathione-S-transferase construct as the carrier protein and hydroxylamine (which specifically cleaves the peptide bond between Asn and Gly) as the cleavage reagent, 10 mg of the first transmembrane helix of CorA, a Mg2+ transporter from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, can be conveniently obtained with high purity from 1 L of M9 minimal media under optimized conditions. The biophysical properties of the peptide were studied by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and the results show that this CorA peptide is well folded in detergent micelles and the secondary structure is very similar to that in recent crystal structures. In addition, this CorA construct is oligomeric in perfluoro-octanoic acid micelles. The compatibility with the transmembrane peptides containing conserved methionines, the high yield and the simple process make the present method competitive with other commonly used methods to produce such peptides for structural and functional studies.
Co-reporter:Richard C. Page, Sanguk Kim, Timothy A. Cross
Structure (7 May 2008) Volume 16(Issue 5) pp:787-797
Publication Date(Web):7 May 2008
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2008.02.018
The environment and unique balance of molecular forces within lipid bilayers has a profound impact upon the structure, dynamics, and function of membrane proteins. We describe the biophysical foundations for the remarkable uniformity of many transmembrane helices that result from the molecular interactions within lipid bilayers. In fact, the characteristic uniformity of transmembrane helices leads to unique spectroscopic opportunities allowing for φ,ψ torsion angles to be mapped directly onto solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) PISEMA spectra. Results from spectral simulations, the solid state NMR-derived structure of the influenza A M2 proton channel transmembrane domain, and high-resolution crystal structures of 27 integral membrane proteins demonstrate that transmembrane helices tend to be more uniform than previously thought. The results are discussed through the definition of a preferred range of backbone ϕ,ψ torsion angles for transmembrane α helices and are presented with respect to improving biophysical characterizations of integral membrane proteins.
Co-reporter:Frantz L. Jean-Francois, Jian Dai, Lu Yu, Alissa Myrick, ... Timothy A. Cross
Journal of Molecular Biology (23 January 2014) Volume 426(Issue 2) pp:436-446
Publication Date(Web):23 January 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2013.10.014
•Can MgtR, a Salmonella peptide, be a lead for drug development against tuberculosis?•Structure determined for MgtR in lipid bilayers by solid-state NMR spectroscopy.•NMR and EPR evidence obtained for MgtR binding to Mtb virulence factor MgtC.•Model for MgtR/MgtC complex refined using structural restraints in lipid bilayers.•Binding to MgtC may allow MgtR to inhibit M. tuberculosis growth.MgtR, a highly hydrophobic peptide expressed in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, inhibits growth in macrophages through binding to the membrane protein MgtC that has been identified as essential for replication in macrophages. While the Mycobacterium tuberculosis MgtC is highly homologous to its S. Typhi analogue, there does not appear to be an Mtb homologue for MgtR, raising significant pharmacological interest in this system. Here, solid-state NMR and EPR spectroscopy in lipid bilayer preparations were used to demonstrate the formation of a heterodimer between S. Typhi MgtR and the transmembrane helix 4 of Mtb MgtC. Based on the experimental restraints, a structural model of this heterodimer was developed using computational techniques. The result is that MgtR appears to be ideally situated in the membrane to influence the functionality of MgtC.Download high-res image (101KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Frances Separovic, J. Antoinette Killian, Myriam Cotten, David D. Busath, Timothy A. Cross
Biophysical Journal (20 April 2011) Volume 100(Issue 8) pp:2073-2074
Publication Date(Web):20 April 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2011.02.058
Co-reporter:Jun Hu, Tom Asbury, Srisairam Achuthan, Conggang Li, Richard Bertram, Jack R. Quine, Riqiang Fu, Timothy A. Cross
Biophysical Journal (15 June 2007) Volume 92(Issue 12) pp:
Publication Date(Web):15 June 2007
DOI:10.1529/biophysj.106.090183
Amantadine is known to block the M2 proton channel of the Influenza A virus. Here, we present a structure of the M2 trans-membrane domain blocked with amantadine, built using orientational constraints obtained from solid-state NMR polarization-inversion-spin-exchange-at-the-magic-angle experiments. The data indicates a kink in the monomer between two helical fragments having 20° and 31° tilt angles with respect to the membrane normal. This monomer structure is then used to construct a plausible model of the tetrameric amantadine-blocked M2 trans-membrane channel. The influence of amantadine binding through comparative cross polarization magic-angle spinning spectra was also observed. In addition, spectra are shown of the amantadine-resistant mutant, S31N, in the presence and absence of amantadine.
Co-reporter:Conggang Li, Myunggi Yi, Jun Hu, Huan-Xiang Zhou, Timothy A. Cross
Biophysical Journal (15 February 2008) Volume 94(Issue 4) pp:
Publication Date(Web):15 February 2008
DOI:10.1529/biophysj.107.112482
The interactions of 15N-labeled amantadine, an antiinfluenza A drug, with DMPC bilayers were investigated by solid-state NMR and by a 12.6-ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. The drug was found to assume a single preferred orientation and location when incorporated in these bilayers. The experimental and MD computational results demonstrate that the long axis of amantadine is on average parallel to the bilayer normal, and the amine group is oriented toward the headgroups of the lipid bilayers. The localization of amantadine was determined by paramagnetic relaxation and by the MD simulation showing that amantadine is within the interfacial region and that the amine interacts with the lipid headgroup and glycerol backbone, while the hydrocarbon portion of amantadine interacts with the glycerol backbone and much of the fatty acyl chain as it wraps underneath the drug. The lipid headgroup orientation changes on drug binding as characterized by the anisotropy of 31P chemical shielding and 14N quadrupolar interactions and by the MD simulation.
Co-reporter:Jun Hu, Riqiang Fu, Timothy A. Cross
Biophysical Journal (1 July 2007) Volume 93(Issue 1) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 July 2007
DOI:10.1529/biophysj.106.102103
The M2 proton channel plays a vital role in the life cycle of the influenza A virus. His37, the key residue in the M2 transmembrane domain (M2-TMD), plays a central role in the proton conductance mechanism. The anti-influenza drug, amantadine, inhibits the channel activity through binding to the pore of the M2 channel. The nuclear spin relaxation data and polarization inversion spin exchange at the magic angle spectra show that both the polypeptide backbone and His37 side chain are more constrained in the presence of amantadine. Using 15N cross polarization magic-angle spinning NMR spectroscopy, the protonation of His37 of M2-TMD in lipid bilayers was monitored in the absence and presence of amantadine as a function of pH. Binding amantadine lowers the His37pKa values by approximately three orders of magnitude compared with the first pKa of histidine in amantadine-free M2-TMD. Amantadine’s influence on the His37 chemical properties suggests a novel mechanism by which amantadine may inhibit proton conductance.
Co-reporter:Yimin Miao, Riqiang Fu, Huan-Xiang Zhou, Timothy A. Cross
Structure (1 December 2015) Volume 23(Issue 12) pp:2300-2308
Publication Date(Web):1 December 2015
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2015.09.011
•Unique His37 tetrad chemistry in full-length M2 proton channel defines function•His37 imidazolium-imidazole short hydrogen bonds exchange with water•Multiple His37 tetrad conformations reflect heterogeneous tetrameric helix packing•Hydrogen-bond exchange leads to both futile and proton conducting cyclesThe tetrameric M2 protein from influenza A conducts protons into the virus upon acid activation of its His37 tetrad and is a proven drug target. Here, in studies of full-length M2 protein solubilized in native-like liquid-crystalline lipid bilayers, a pH titration monitored by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance revealed a clustering of the first three His37 pKas (6.3, 6.3, and 5.5). When the +2 state of the tetrad accepts a third proton from the externally exposed portion of the channel pore and releases a proton to the internally exposed pore, successful proton conductance is achieved, but more frequently the tetrad accepts and returns the proton to the externally exposed pore, resulting in a futile cycle. Both dynamics and conformational heterogeneity of the His37 tetrad featuring short hydrogen bonds between imidazolium-imidazole pairs are characterized, and the heterogeneity appears to reflect oligomeric helix packing and the extent of transmembrane helical bending around Gly34.Download high-res image (181KB)Download full-size image
Hydrogen cation
(R)-2-VINYL-OXIRANE
(2r,3r,4s,5s,6r)-2-[(2r,3s,4r,5r,6r)-4,5-dihydroxy-2-(hydroxymethyl)-6-nonoxyoxan-3-yl]oxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)oxane-3,4,5-triol
(2R,3S,4S,5R,6R)-2-(Hydroxymethyl)-6-(nonyloxy)tetrahydro-2H-pyran-3,4,5-triol
(Z,Z)-()-(7-oleoyl-4-oxido-10-oxo-3,5,9-trioxa-4-phosphaheptacos-18-enyl)trimethylammonium 4-oxide
Ethanaminium,2-[[(dodecyloxy)hydroxyphosphinyl]oxy]-N,N,N-trimethyl-, inner salt
3,5,8-Trioxa-4-phosphahexacos-17-en-1-aminium,4-hydroxy-N,N,N-trimethyl-9-oxo-7-[[(1-oxohexadecyl)oxy]methyl]-, inner salt,4-oxide, (7R,17Z)-
1-(Adamantan-1-yl)ethanamine