Raymond C. Stevens

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Name: Stevens, Raymond C
Organization: Bridge Institute. , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry
Title: (PhD)
Co-reporter:Minseob Koh, Fariborz Nasertorabi, Gye Won Han, Raymond C. Stevens, and Peter G. Schultz
Journal of the American Chemical Society April 26, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 16) pp:5728-5728
Publication Date(Web):April 17, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b02273
We have engineered the protein interface of the Escherichia coli chorismate mutase (EcCM) homodimer to be dependent on incorporation of a noncanonical amino acid (ncAA) at residue 72. The large hydrophobic amino acid p-benzoyl phenylalanine (pBzF) was substituted for Tyr72, which led to a catalytically inactive protein. A library of five residues (Leu25′, Arg29′, Leu76, Ile80′ and Asp83′) surrounding pBzF72 was generated and subjected to a growth based selection in a chorismate mutase deficient strain. An EcCM variant (Phe25′, pBzF72, Thr76, Gly80′ and Tyr83′) forms a stable homodimer, has catalytic activity similar to the wild type enzyme, and unfolds with a Tm of 53 °C. The X-ray crystal structure reveals a pi–pi stacking and hydrogen bonding interactions that stabilize the new protein interface. The strategy described here should be useful for generating organisms that are dependent on the presence of a ncAA for growth.
Co-reporter:Rajan Lamichhane;Jeffrey J. Liu;Kate L. White;Goran Pljevaljcic;Vsevolod Katritch;David P. Millar;Kurt Wüthrich;Edwin van der Schans
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 46 ) pp:14254-14259
Publication Date(Web):2015-11-17
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1519626112
Binding of extracellular ligands to G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) initiates transmembrane signaling by inducing conformational changes on the cytoplasmic receptor surface. Knowledge of this process provides a platform for the development of GPCR-targeting drugs. Here, using a site-specific Cy3 fluorescence probe in the human β2-adrenergic receptor (β2AR), we observed that individual receptor molecules in the native-like environment of phospholipid nanodiscs undergo spontaneous transitions between two distinct conformational states. These states are assigned to inactive and active-like receptor conformations. Individual receptor molecules in the apo form repeatedly sample both conformations, with a bias toward the inactive conformation. Experiments in the presence of drug ligands show that binding of the full agonist formoterol shifts the conformational distribution in favor of the active-like conformation, whereas binding of the inverse agonist ICI-118,551 favors the inactive conformation. Analysis of single-molecule dwell-time distributions for each state reveals that formoterol increases the frequency of activation transitions, while also reducing the frequency of deactivation events. In contrast, the inverse agonist increases the frequency of deactivation transitions. Our observations account for the high level of basal activity of this receptor and provide insights that help to rationalize, on the molecular level, the widely documented variability of the pharmacological efficacies among GPCR-targeting drugs.
Co-reporter:Sei-hyun Choi;Han Xiao;Sean A. Reed;Peter G. Schultz;Fariborz Nasertorabi;Gye Won Han
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 22 ) pp:6961-6966
Publication Date(Web):2015-06-02
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1507741112
With few exceptions, all living organisms encode the same 20 canonical amino acids; however, it remains an open question whether organisms with additional amino acids beyond the common 20 might have an evolutionary advantage. Here, we begin to test that notion by making a large library of mutant enzymes in which 10 structurally distinct noncanonical amino acids were substituted at single sites randomly throughout TEM-1 β-lactamase. A screen for growth on the β-lactam antibiotic cephalexin afforded a unique p-acrylamido-phenylalanine (AcrF) mutation at Val-216 that leads to an increase in catalytic efficiency by increasing kcat, but not significantly affecting KM. To understand the structural basis for this enhanced activity, we solved the X-ray crystal structures of the ligand-free mutant enzyme and of the deacylation-defective wild-type and mutant cephalexin acyl-enzyme intermediates. These structures show that the Val-216–AcrF mutation leads to conformational changes in key active site residues—both in the free enzyme and upon formation of the acyl-enzyme intermediate—that lower the free energy of activation of the substrate transacylation reaction. The functional changes induced by this mutation could not be reproduced by substitution of any of the 20 canonical amino acids for Val-216, indicating that an expanded genetic code may offer novel solutions to proteins as they evolve new activities.
Co-reporter:Lauren G. Holden;Ling Qin;Irina Kufareva;Chong Wang;Yi Zheng;Chunxia Zhao;Huixian Wu;Gustavo Fenalti;Gye Won Han;Vadim Cherezov;Ruben Abagyan;Tracy M. Handel
Science 2015 Volume 347(Issue 6226) pp:1117-1122
Publication Date(Web):06 Mar 2015
DOI:10.1126/science.1261064

Molecular “go” signals reveal their secrets

Chemokines are proteins that direct how cells move within the body. For instance, chemokines help immune cells locate invading pathogens and ensure that cells position themselves correctly within a developing organ. Cells detect chemokines through G protein–coupled receptors on their surface; however, the molecular details of how these proteins interact remain unclear (see the Perspective by Standfuss). Qin et al. solved the crystal structure of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 bound to the viral chemokine vMIP-II. Burg et al. solved the crystal structure of a viral chemokine receptor bound to the chemokine domain of CX3CL1. Given the role of chemokines in a number of diseases, these results may help in future drug design.

Science, this issue p. 1117, p. 1113; see also p. 1071

Co-reporter:Rebecca L. Miller, Aaron A. Thompson, Claudio Trapella, Remo Guerrini, ... Raymond C. Stevens
Structure (1 December 2015) Volume 23(Issue 12) pp:2291-2299
Publication Date(Web):1 December 2015
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2015.07.024
•A correlation is demonstrated between receptor stability and BRET functional data•Two antagonist-bound crystal structures of the N/OFQ peptide receptor are reported•Docking indicates degenerate binding modes contribute to poor receptor stabilization•A mechanism for antagonist-induced receptor stabilization is proposedUnderstanding the mechanism by which ligands affect receptor conformational equilibria is key in accelerating membrane protein structural biology. In the case of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), we currently pursue a brute-force approach for identifying ligands that stabilize receptors and facilitate crystallogenesis. The nociceptin/orphanin FQ peptide receptor (NOP) is a member of the opioid receptor subfamily of GPCRs for which many structurally diverse ligands are available for screening. We observed that antagonist potency is correlated with a ligand's ability to induce receptor stability (Tm) and crystallogenesis. Using this screening strategy, we solved two structures of NOP in complex with top candidate ligands SB-612111 and C-35. Docking studies indicate that while potent, stabilizing antagonists strongly favor a single binding orientation, less potent ligands can adopt multiple binding modes, contributing to their low Tm values. These results suggest a mechanism for ligand-aided crystallogenesis whereby potent antagonists stabilize a single ligand-receptor conformational pair.
Deltorphin A (9CI)
ICI-118,551
Tetra-(isobutyl)-dialuminium
tetrachloro-μ-ethylenedialuminium
delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol
Aluminum,dichloromethyl-
Diethylaluminum chloride