Frederick W. Dahlquist

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Name: Dahlquist, Frederick
Organization: University of California , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Title: Professor(PhD)
Co-reporter:Hengjing Yan;Chern Chuang;Andriy Zhugayevych;Sergei Tretiak;Guillermo C. Bazan
Advanced Materials 2015 Volume 27( Issue 11) pp:1908-1911
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201404167
Co-reporter:Nathan D. Kirchhofer, Xiaofen Chen, Enrico Marsili, James J. Sumner, Frederick W. Dahlquist and Guillermo C. Bazan  
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2014 vol. 16(Issue 38) pp:20436-20443
Publication Date(Web):25 Jul 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4CP03197K
Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 was cultivated on lactate with poised graphite electrode acceptors (E = +0.2 V vs. Ag/AgCl) in order to explore the basis for sustained increases in anodic current output following the addition of the lipid-intercalating conjugated oligoelectrolyte (COE), 4,4′-bis(4′-(N,N-bis(6′′-(N,N,N-trimethylammonium)hexyl)amino)-styryl)stilbene tetraiodide (DSSN+). Microbial cultures, which were spiked with DSSN+, exhibit a ∼2.2-fold increase in charge collected, a ∼3.1-fold increase in electrode colonization by S. oneidensis, and a ∼1.7-fold increase in coulombic efficiency from 51 ± 10% to an exceptional 84 ± 7% without obvious toxicity effects. Direct microbial biofilm voltammetry reveals that DSSN+ rapidly and sustainably increases cytochrome-based direct electron transfer and subsequently increases flavin-based mediated electron transfer. Control experiments indicate that DSSN+ does not contribute to the current in the absence of bacteria.
Co-reporter:Xiqing Wang, Pramodh Vallurupalli, Anh Vu, Kwangwoon Lee, Sheng Sun, Wen-Ju Bai, Chun Wu, Hongjun Zhou, Joan-Emma Shea, Lewis E. Kay, and Frederick W. Dahlquist
Biochemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 5) pp:
Publication Date(Web):January 20, 2014
DOI:10.1021/bi4012379
The histidine kinase, CheA, couples environmental stimuli to changes in bacterial swimming behavior, converting a sensory signal to a chemical signal in the cytosol via autophosphorylation. The kinase activity is regulated in the platform of chemotaxis signaling complexes formed by CheW, chemoreceptors, and the regulatory domain of CheA. Our previous computational and mutational studies have revealed that two interdomain linkers play important roles in CheA’s enzymatic activity. Of the two linkers, one that connects the dimerization and ATP binding domains is essential for both basal autophosphorylation and activation of the kinase. However, the mechanistic role of this linker remains unclear, given that it is far from the autophosphorylation reaction center (the ATP binding site). Here we investigate how this interdomain linker is coupled to CheA’s enzymatic activity. Using modern nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques, we find that by interacting with the catalytic domain, the interdomain linker initiates long-range structural and dynamic changes directed toward the catalytic center of the autophosphorylation reaction. Subsequent biochemical assays define the functional relevance of these NMR-based observations. These findings extend our understanding of the chemotaxis signal transduction pathway.
Co-reporter:Xiqing Wang ; Chun Wu ; Anh Vu ; Joan-Emma Shea
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 39) pp:16107-16110
Publication Date(Web):September 19, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja3056694
A two-component signal transduction pathway underlies the phenomenon of bacterial chemotaxis that allows bacteria to modulate their swimming behavior in response to environmental stimuli. The dimeric five-domain histidine kinase, CheA, plays a central role in the pathway, converting sensory signals to a chemical signal via trans-autophosphorylation between the P1 and P4 domains. This autophosphorylation is regulated via the networked interactions among the P5 domain of CheA, CheW, and chemoreceptors. Despite a wealth of structural information about these components and their interactions, the key question of how the kinase activity of the catalytic P4 domain is regulated by the signal received from the regulatory P5 domain remains poorly understood. We performed replica exchange molecular dynamics simulations on the CheA kinase core and found that while individual domains maintained their structural fold, these domains exhibited a variety of interdomain orientations due to two interdomain linkers. A partially populated conformation that adopts an interdomain arrangement is suitable for building a functional ternary complex. An allosteric network derived from this structural model implies critical roles for two linkers in CheA’s activity. The biochemical and biological functions of these linkers were assigned via a series of biochemical and genetic assays that show the P4–P5 linker controls the activation of CheA and the P3–P4 linker controls both the basal autophosphorylation activity and the activation of CheA. These results reveal the functional dependence between the two linkers and the essential role of the linkers in passing signal information from one domain to another.
Co-reporter:Guoya Mo, Hongjun Zhou, Tetsuya Kawamura, and Frederick W. Dahlquist
Biochemistry 2012 Volume 51(Issue 18) pp:3786-3798
Publication Date(Web):April 11, 2012
DOI:10.1021/bi300147m
In the bacterial chemotaxis two-component signaling system, the histidine-containing phosphotransfer domain (the “P1” domain) of CheA receives a phosphoryl group from the catalytic domain (P4) of CheA and transfers it to the cognate response regulator (RR) CheY, which is docked by the P2 domain of CheA. Phosphorylated CheY then diffuses into the cytoplasm and interacts with the FliM moiety of the flagellar motors, thereby modulating the direction of flagellar rotation. Structures of various histidine phosphotransfer domains (HPt) complexed with their cognate RR domains have been reported. Unlike the Escherichia coli chemotaxis system, however, these systems lack the additional domains dedicated to binding to the response regulators, and the interaction of an HPt domain with an RR domain in the presence of such a domain has not been examined on a structural basis. In this study, we used modern nuclear magnetic resonance techniques to construct a model for the interaction of the E. coli CheA P1 domain (HPt) and CheY (RR) in the presence of the CheY-binding domain, P2. Our results indicate that the presence of P2 may lead to a slightly different relative orientation of the HPt and RR domains versus those seen in such complex structures previously reported.
Co-reporter:Robert Levenson, Hongjun Zhou, and Frederick W. Dahlquist
Biochemistry 2012 Volume 51(Issue 25) pp:
Publication Date(Web):June 6, 2012
DOI:10.1021/bi3004582
The binding of the soluble cytoplasmic protein FliG to the transmembrane protein FliF is one of the first interactions in the assembly of the bacterial flagellum. Once established, this interaction is integral in keeping the flagellar cytoplasmic ring, responsible for both transmission of torque and control of the rotational direction of the flagellum, anchored to the central transmembrane ring on which the flagellum is assembled. Here we isolate and characterize the interaction between the N-terminal domain of Thermotoga maritima FliG (FliGN) and peptides corresponding to the conserved C-terminal portion of T. maritima FliF. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and other techniques, we show that the last ∼40 amino acids of FliF (FliFC) interact strongly (upper bound Kd in the low nanomolar range) with FliGN. The formation of this complex causes extensive conformational changes in FliGN. We find that T. maritima FliGN is homodimeric in the absence of the FliFC peptide but forms a heterodimeric complex with the peptide, and we show that this same change in oligomeric state occurs in full-length T. maritima FliG, as well. We relate previously observed phenotypic effects of FliFC mutations to our direct observation of binding. Lastly, on the basis of NMR data, we propose that the primary interaction site for FliFC is located on a conserved hydrophobic patch centered along helix 1 of FliGN. These results provide new detailed information about the bacterial flagellar motor and support efforts to understand the cytoplasmic ring’s precise molecular structure and mechanism of rotational switching.
Co-reporter:Hongjun Zhou, Matthew M. Purdy, Frederick W. Dahlquist and Norbert O. Reich
Biochemistry 2009 Volume 48(Issue 33) pp:
Publication Date(Web):July 6, 2009
DOI:10.1021/bi900502g
Enzymatic sequence-specific DNA modification involves multiple poorly understood intermediates. DNA methyltransferases like M.HhaI initially bind nonspecific DNA and then selectively bind and modify a unique sequence. High-resolution NMR was used to map conformational changes occurring in M.HhaI upon binding nonspecific DNA, a one base pair altered noncognate DNA sequence, and both hemimethylated and unmethylated cognate DNA sequences. Comparisons with previous NMR studies of the apoenzyme and enzyme−cofactor complex provide snapshots of the pathway to sequence-specific complex formation. Dramatic chemical shift perturbations reaching many distal sites within the protein are detected with cognate DNA, while much smaller changes are observed upon nonspecific and noncognate DNA binding. A cooperative rather than stepwise transition from a nonspecific to a cognate complex is revealed. Furthermore, switching from unmethylated to hemimethylated cognate DNA involves detectable protein conformational changes 20−30 Å away from the methyl group, indicating high protein sensitivity and plasticity to DNA modification.
Co-reporter:Anh Vu, Xiqing Wang, Hongjun Zhou, Frederick W. Dahlquist
Journal of Molecular Biology (27 January 2012) Volume 415(Issue 4) pp:759-767
Publication Date(Web):27 January 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2011.11.043
The basic structural unit of the signaling complex in bacterial chemotaxis consists of the chemotaxis kinase CheA, the coupling protein CheW, and chemoreceptors. These complexes play an important role in regulating the kinase activity of CheA and in turn controlling the rotational bias of the flagellar motor. Although individual three-dimensional structures of CheA, CheW, and chemoreceptors have been determined, the interaction between chemoreceptor and CheW is still unclear. We used nuclear magnetic resonance to characterize the interaction modes of chemoreceptor and CheW from Thermotoga maritima. We find that chemoreceptor binding surface is located near the highly conserved tip region of the N-terminal helix of the receptor, whereas the binding interface of CheW is placed between the β-strand 8 of domain 1 and the β-strands 1 and 3 of domain 2. The receptor–CheW complex shares a similar binding interface to that found in the “trimer-of-dimers” oligomer interface seen in the crystal structure of cytoplasmic domains of chemoreceptors from Escherichia coli. Based on the association constants inferred from fast exchange chemical shifts associated with receptor–CheW titrations, we estimate that CheW binds about four times tighter to its first binding site of the receptor dimer than to its second binding site. This apparent anticooperativity in binding may reflect the close proximity of the two CheW binding surfaces near the receptor tip or further, complicating the events at this highly conserved region of the receptor. This work describes the first direct observation of the interaction between chemoreceptor and CheW.Download high-res image (68KB)Download full-size imageHighlights► Demonstration of the CheW binding site on the chemotaxis receptor. ► Demonstration of the chemotaxis receptor binding site on CheW. ► CheW binds to chemotaxis receptor with apparent negative cooperativity.
Co-reporter:Tetsuya Kawamura, Lisa Uyen K. Le, Hongjun Zhou, Frederick W. Dahlquist
Journal of Molecular Biology (26 January 2007) Volume 365(Issue 4) pp:1130-1142
Publication Date(Web):26 January 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2006.10.066
Pyelonephritis-associated pili (pap) allow uropathogenic Escherichia coli to bind to epithelial cells and play an important role in urinary tract infection. Expression of pap is controlled by a phase-variation mechanism, based on the two distinct heritable states that are the result of adenine N6-methylation in either of the two GATC sequences in its regulatory region. The methylation status of these two sequences is sensed by the action of two proteins, Lrp and PapI, and they play a central role in determining pap gene expression in both phase-ON and phase-OFF cells. We used modern NMR techniques to determine the solution structure and backbone dynamics of PapI. We found its overall fold resembles closely that of the winged helix-turn-helix family of DNA-binding proteins. We determined that PapI possesses its own DNA-binding activity, albeit non-sequence-specific, independent of Lrp. PapI appears to bind to DNA with a Kd in the 10 μM range. Possible mechanisms by which PapI might participate in the regulation of the pap operon are discussed in light of these new findings.
Co-reporter:Collin M. Dyer, Armand S. Vartanian, Hongjun Zhou, Frederick W. Dahlquist
Journal of Molecular Biology (24 April 2009) Volume 388(Issue 1) pp:71-84
Publication Date(Web):24 April 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2009.02.004
The high-resolution structures of nearly all the proteins that comprise the bacterial flagellar motor switch complex have been solved; yet a clear picture of the switching mechanism has not emerged. Here, we used NMR to characterize the interaction modes and solution properties of a number of these proteins, including several soluble fragments of the flagellar motor proteins FliM and FliG, and the response-regulator CheY. We find that activated CheY, the switch signal, binds to a previously unidentified region of FliM, adjacent to the FliM–FliM interface. We also find that activated CheY and FliG bind with mutual exclusivity to this site on FliM, because their respective binding surfaces partially overlap. These data support a model of CheY-driven motor switching wherein the binding of activated CheY to FliM displaces the carboxy-terminal domain of FliG (FliGC) from FliM, modulating the FliGC–MotA interaction, and causing the motor to switch rotational sense as required for chemotaxis.
Co-reporter:Xiqing Wang, Anh Vu, Kwangwoon Lee, Frederick W. Dahlquist
Journal of Molecular Biology (14 September 2012) Volume 422(Issue 2) pp:282-290
Publication Date(Web):14 September 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2012.05.023
In bacterial chemotaxis, transmembrane chemoreceptors, the CheA histidine kinase, and the CheW coupling protein assemble into signaling complexes that allow bacteria to modulate their swimming behavior in response to environmental stimuli. Among the protein–protein interactions in the ternary complex, CheA–CheW and CheW–receptor interactions were studied previously, whereas CheA–receptor interaction has been less investigated. Here, we characterize the CheA–receptor interaction in Thermotoga maritima by NMR spectroscopy and validate the identified receptor binding site of CheA in Escherichia coli chemotaxis. We find that CheA interacts with a chemoreceptor in a manner similar to that of CheW, and the receptor binding site of CheA's regulatory domain is homologous to that of CheW. Collectively, the receptor binding sites in the CheA–CheW complex suggest that conformational changes in CheA are required for assembly of the CheA–CheW–receptor ternary complex and CheA activation.Download high-res image (306KB)Download full-size imageResearch Highlights► CheA, CheW, and chemoreceptors form chemotaxis signaling complexes. ► CheA interacts with a chemoreceptor in a manner similar to that of CheW. ► The receptor binding site of CheA's regulatory domain is homologous to that of CheW. ► Receptor binding sites suggest conformational changes in CheA during CheA activation.
Co-reporter:Tetsuya Kawamura, Armand S. Vartanian, Hongjun Zhou, Frederick W. Dahlquist
Journal of Molecular Biology (10 June 2011) Volume 409(Issue 3) pp:311-332
Publication Date(Web):10 June 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2011.01.058
The uropathogenic Escherichia coli colonize the host body by attaching themselves to the epithelial cells through the pyelonephritis-associated pili (pap). The expression of the papBA operon is regulated under a reversible phase-variation mechanism, which partitions the population of cells into those that express the pap and others that do not. The two phases of pap expression are the direct consequences of the two distinct DNA-binding modes exhibited by leucine-responsive regulatory protein (Lrp) in the pap promoter region. In the phase-OFF cells, Lrp occupies the binding sites proximal to the transcription start, blocking transcription initiation. In the phase-ON cells, Lrp occupies the binding sites distal to the transcription start and is thought to promote the CAP (catabolite gene activation protein)-directed transcription initiation. Lrp binds to the proximal binding sites more tightly than to the distal sites, and the switching from phase-OFF to phase-ON requires a local co-regulator, PapI. Here, we used PapI and an isolated DNA-binding domain construct of Lrp to show that there is a DNA co-recognition mechanism by which both proteins acquire enhanced affinity to the distal pap site DNA, to which neither of them binds to an appreciable extent without the other. Also, examination of the binding properties of the Lrp DNA-binding domain presented here led us to propose a new sequence alignment of the six pap Lrp-binding sites. New insights into the design of sequences regulating the pap phase variation as revealed by the pap Lrp-binding site sequences are thus defined and discussed.
Co-reporter:Nathan D. Kirchhofer, Xiaofen Chen, Enrico Marsili, James J. Sumner, Frederick W. Dahlquist and Guillermo C. Bazan
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2014 - vol. 16(Issue 38) pp:NaN20443-20443
Publication Date(Web):2014/07/25
DOI:10.1039/C4CP03197K
Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 was cultivated on lactate with poised graphite electrode acceptors (E = +0.2 V vs. Ag/AgCl) in order to explore the basis for sustained increases in anodic current output following the addition of the lipid-intercalating conjugated oligoelectrolyte (COE), 4,4′-bis(4′-(N,N-bis(6′′-(N,N,N-trimethylammonium)hexyl)amino)-styryl)stilbene tetraiodide (DSSN+). Microbial cultures, which were spiked with DSSN+, exhibit a ∼2.2-fold increase in charge collected, a ∼3.1-fold increase in electrode colonization by S. oneidensis, and a ∼1.7-fold increase in coulombic efficiency from 51 ± 10% to an exceptional 84 ± 7% without obvious toxicity effects. Direct microbial biofilm voltammetry reveals that DSSN+ rapidly and sustainably increases cytochrome-based direct electron transfer and subsequently increases flavin-based mediated electron transfer. Control experiments indicate that DSSN+ does not contribute to the current in the absence of bacteria.
Methanesulfonothioicacid, S-[(1-acetyl-2,5-dihydro-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1H-pyrrol-3-yl)methyl] ester
1H-Pyrrol-1-yloxy,2,5-dihydro-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-[[(methylsulfonyl)thio]methyl]-
(2R)-2-[(4Z,7Z,10Z,13Z,16Z,19Z)-docosa-4,7,10,13,16,19-hexaenoyloxy]-3-(hexadecanoyloxy)propyl 2-(trimethylammonio)ethyl phosphate
3,5,9-Trioxa-4-phosphapentacosan-1-aminium,4-hydroxy-N,N,N-trimethyl-10-oxo-7-[[(9Z)-1-oxo-9-hexadecen-1-yl]oxy]-, innersalt, 4-oxide, (7R)-
(R)-2-VINYL-OXIRANE
S-(5'-deoxyadenosin-5'-yl)-L-Homocysteine
LYSOZYME