Publications by authors named "Alex Zelter"

Previously, we reconstituted a minimal functional kinetochore from recombinant proteins that was capable of transmitting force from dynamic microtubules to nucleosomes containing the centromere-specific histone variant Cse4 (Hamilton et al. 2020). This work revealed two paths of force transmission through the inner kinetochore: through Mif2 and through the Okp1/Ame1 complex (OA).

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Article Synopsis
  • This study identifies the formation of covalent protein adducts from drug metabolism as significant risk factors for adverse drug reactions and cytochrome P450 enzyme inactivation.
  • It introduces a novel liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) approach to detect low abundance drug-protein adducts in human liver microsomes, using raloxifene as a model.
  • The findings reveal adducts in multiple proteins, including CYP enzymes, and suggest that some adducts may be harmless, providing a framework for better understanding the human adductome related to drug exposure.
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Centrosomes are the principal microtubule-organizing centers of the cell and play an essential role in mitotic spindle function. Centrosome biogenesis is achieved by strict control of protein acquisition and phosphorylation prior to mitosis. Defects in this process promote fragmentation of pericentriolar material culminating in multipolar spindles and chromosome missegregation.

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BRCA1/BARD1 is a tumor suppressor E3 ubiquitin (Ub) ligase with roles in DNA damage repair and in transcriptional regulation. BRCA1/BARD1 RING domains interact with nucleosomes to facilitate mono-ubiquitylation of distinct residues on the C-terminal tail of histone H2A. These enzymatic domains constitute a small fraction of the heterodimer, raising the possibility of functional chromatin interactions involving other regions such as the BARD1 C-terminal domains that bind nucleosomes containing the DNA damage signal H2A K15-Ub and H4 K20me0, or portions of the expansive intrinsically disordered regions found in both subunits.

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Forcing budding yeast to chromatinize their DNA with human histones manifests an abrupt fitness cost. We previously proposed chromosomal aneuploidy and missense mutations as two potential modes of adaptation to histone humanization. Here, we show that aneuploidy in histone-humanized yeasts is specific to a subset of chromosomes that are defined by their centromeric evolutionary origins but that these aneuploidies are not adaptive.

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  • Fragmentation ion spectral analysis is a key technique in proteomics for studying protein interactions and structures, and Kojak version 2.0 is an updated tool designed for identifying cross-linked peptides from these analyses.
  • The new version includes improved algorithms, better scoring metrics, support for cleavable cross-linkers, and the ability to identify cross-links in specific protein structures, making it more versatile in experimental setups.
  • Kojak 2.0 integrates with the Trans-Proteomic Pipeline for additional analytical tools and remains open-source and compatible across multiple platforms.
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RING-between-RING (RBR) E3 ligases mediate ubiquitin transfer through an obligate E3-ubiquitin thioester intermediate prior to substrate ubiquitination. Although RBRs share a conserved catalytic module, substrate recruitment mechanisms remain enigmatic, and the relevant domains have yet to be identified for any member of the class. Here we characterize the interaction between the auto-inhibited RBR, HHARI (AriH1), and its target protein, 4EHP, using a combination of XL-MS, HDX-MS, NMR, and biochemical studies.

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Accurate mitosis requires kinetochores to make persistent, load-bearing attachments to dynamic microtubule tips, thereby coupling chromosome movements to tip growth and shortening. This tip-coupling behavior depends on the conserved Ndc80 complex and, in budding yeast, on the Dam1 complex, which bind each other directly via three distinct interacting regions. The functional relevance of these multiple interactions was mysterious.

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Drugs are often metabolized to reactive intermediates that form protein adducts. Adducts can inhibit protein activity, elicit immune responses, and cause life-threatening adverse drug reactions. The masses of reactive metabolites are frequently unknown, rendering traditional mass spectrometry-based proteomics approaches incapable of adduct identification.

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Microtubule (MT) nucleation is regulated by the γ-tubulin ring complex (γTuRC), conserved from yeast to humans. In , γTuRC is composed of seven identical γ-tubulin small complex (γTuSC) sub-assemblies, which associate helically to template MT growth. γTuRC assembly provides a key point of regulation for the MT cytoskeleton.

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Accurate segregation of chromosomes to daughter cells is a critical aspect of cell division. It requires the kinetochores on duplicated chromosomes to biorient, attaching to microtubules from opposite poles of the cell. Bioriented attachments come under tension, while incorrect attachments lack tension and must be released to allow proper attachments to form.

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The number of publications in the field of chemical cross-linking combined with mass spectrometry (XL-MS) to derive constraints for protein three-dimensional structure modeling and to probe protein-protein interactions has increased during the last years. As the technique is now becoming routine for in vitro and in vivo applications in proteomics and structural biology there is a pressing need to define protocols as well as data analysis and reporting formats. Such consensus formats should become accepted in the field and be shown to lead to reproducible results.

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Proxl is an open-source web application for sharing, visualizing, and analyzing bottom-up protein cross-linking mass spectrometry data and results. Proxl's core features include comparing data sets, structural analysis, customizable and interactive data visualizations, access to all underlying mass spectrometry data, and quality-control tools. All features of Proxl are designed to be independent of specific cross-linker chemistry or software analysis pipelines.

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DNA methylation patterns regulate gene expression programs and are maintained through a highly coordinated process orchestrated by the RING E3 ubiquitin ligase UHRF1. UHRF1 controls DNA methylation inheritance by reading epigenetic modifications to histones and DNA to activate histone H3 ubiquitylation. Here, we find that all five domains of UHRF1, including the previously uncharacterized ubiquitin-like domain (UBL), cooperate for hemi-methylated DNA-dependent H3 ubiquitin ligation.

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Phosphorylation regulates yeast spindle pole body (SPB) duplication and separation and likely regulates microtubule nucleation. We report a phosphoproteomic analysis using tandem mass spectrometry of enriched SPBs for two cell cycle arrests, G1/S and the mitotic checkpoint, expanding on previously reported phosphoproteomic data sets. We present a novel phosphoproteomic state of SPBs arrested in G1/S by a temperature-sensitive mutation, with particular focus on phosphorylation events on the γ-tubulin small complex (γ-TuSC).

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Accurate segregation of chromosomes relies on the force-bearing capabilities of the kinetochore to robustly attach chromosomes to dynamic microtubule tips. The human Ska complex and Ndc80 complex are outer-kinetochore components that bind microtubules and are required to fully stabilize kinetochore-microtubule attachments in vivo. While purified Ska complex tracks with disassembling microtubule tips, it remains unclear whether the Ska complex-microtubule interaction is sufficiently strong to make a significant contribution to kinetochore-microtubule coupling.

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The clearance of retinoic acid (RA) and its metabolites is believed to be regulated by the CYP26 enzymes, but the specific roles of CYP26A1, CYP26B1, and CYP26C1 in clearing active vitamin A metabolites have not been defined. The goal of this study was to establish the substrate specificity of CYP26C1, and determine whether CYP26C1 interacts with cellular retinoic acid binding proteins (CRABPs). CYP26C1 was found to effectively metabolize all- retinoic acid (RA), 9--retinoic acid (9--RA), 13--retinoic acid, and 4-oxo-RA with the highest intrinsic clearance toward 9--RA.

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Arp2/3 complex nucleates branched actin filaments important for cellular motility and endocytosis. WASP family proteins are Arp2/3 complex activators that play multiple roles in branching nucleation, but little is known about the structural bases of these WASP functions, owing to an incomplete understanding of how WASP binds Arp2/3 complex. Recent data show WASP binds two sites, and biochemical and structural studies led to models in which the WASP C segment engages the barbed ends of the Arp3 and Arp2 subunits while the WASP A segment binds the back side of the complex on Arp3.

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Strong kinetochore-microtubule attachments are essential for faithful segregation of sister chromatids during mitosis. The Dam1 and Ndc80 complexes are the main microtubule binding components of the kinetochore. Cooperation between these two complexes enhances kinetochore-microtubule coupling and is regulated by Aurora B kinase.

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Many cancers overexpress one or more of the six human pro-survival BCL2 family proteins to evade apoptosis. To determine which BCL2 protein or proteins block apoptosis in different cancers, we computationally designed three-helix bundle protein inhibitors specific for each BCL2 pro-survival protein. Following in vitro optimization, each inhibitor binds its target with high picomolar to low nanomolar affinity and at least 300-fold specificity.

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Cellular retinoic acid binding proteins (CRABPs) bind all-trans-retinoic acid (atRA) tightly. This study aimed to determine whether atRA is channeled directly to cytochrome P450 (CYP) CYP26B1 by CRABPs, and whether CRABPs interact directly with CYP26B1. atRA bound to CRABPs (holo-CRABP) was efficiently metabolized by CYP26B1.

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ProXL is a Web application and accompanying database designed for sharing, visualizing, and analyzing bottom-up protein cross-linking mass spectrometry data with an emphasis on structural analysis and quality control. ProXL is designed to be independent of any particular software pipeline. The import process is simplified by the use of the ProXL XML data format, which shields developers of data importers from the relative complexity of the relational database schema.

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The microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton plays important roles in many cellular processes. In vivo, MT nucleation is controlled by the γ-tubulin ring complex (γTuRC), a 2.1-MDa complex composed of γ-tubulin small complex (γTuSC) subunits.

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Modeling protein complex structures based on distantly related homologues can be challenging due to poor sequence and structure conservation. Therefore, utilizing even low-resolution experimental data can significantly increase model precision and accuracy. Here, we present models of the two key functional states of the yeast γ-tubulin small complex (γTuSC): one for the low-activity "open" state and another for the higher-activity "closed" state.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cytochrome P450 enzymes CYP26A1 and CYP26B1 are important for metabolizing all-trans retinoic acid but lack crystal structures, making homology models useful for research.
  • The study aimed to characterize how these enzymes bind substrates, compare their active site structures, and confirm their involvement in metabolizing other compounds, particularly tazarotenic acid.
  • Results showed that tazarotenic acid is a substrate for both enzymes, with experimental data supporting their ability to oxidatively metabolize it, and detailed analysis provided insights into their active site volumes.
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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Alex Zelter"

  • - Recent research by Alex Zelter has focused on understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying various cellular processes, particularly relating to drug-protein interactions and cell division, with innovative techniques such as mass spectrometry and cross-linking methods.
  • - One notable finding includes a new workflow combining liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry to detect low-abundance drug-protein adducts, enhancing the ability to study adverse drug reactions and enzyme inactivation in complex biological samples.
  • - Another significant area of exploration has been the dynamics of kinetochore and microtubule interactions during mitosis, revealing critical insights into protein complexes that ensure accurate chromosome segregation, which are essential for maintaining genomic stability.