Publications by authors named "Carol A Harley"

DNA replication, transcription, and translation in eukaryotic cells occur with decreasing but still high fidelity. In contrast, for the estimated 33% of the human proteome that is inserted as transmembrane (TM) proteins, insertion with a non-functional inverted topology is frequent. Correct topology is essential for function and trafficking to appropriate cellular compartments and is controlled principally by responses to charged residues within 15 residues of the inserted TM domain (TMD); the flank with the higher positive charge remains in the cytosol (inside), following the positive inside rule (PIR).

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The human ERG (hERG) K channel has a crucial function in cardiac repolarization, and mutations or channel block can give rise to long QT syndrome and catastrophic ventricular arrhythmias. The cytosolic assembly formed by the Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) and cyclic nucleotide binding homology (CNBh) domains is the defining structural feature of hERG and related KCNH channels. However, the molecular role of these two domains in channel gating remains unclear.

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The bacterial K homeostasis machinery is widely conserved across bacterial species, and different from that in animals. Dysfunction in components of the machinery has an impact on intracellular turgor, membrane potential, adaptation to changes in both extracellular pH and osmolarity, and in virulence. Using a fluorescence-based liposome flux assay, we have performed a high-throughput screen to identify novel inhibitors of the KtrAB ion channel complex from , a component of the K homeostasis machinery that is also present in many bacterial pathogens.

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The human human ether-à-go-go-related gene (hERG) potassium channel plays a critical role in the repolarization of the cardiac action potential. Changes in hERG channel function underlie long QT syndrome (LQTS) and are associated with cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death. A striking feature of this channel and KCNH channels in general is the presence of an N-terminal Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain.

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Members of the ether-à-go-go (EAG) family of voltage-gated K(+) channels are involved in several pathophysiological diseases, and there has been a great interest in screening for drugs that modulate the activity of these channels. Many drugs have been shown to bind in the pore of these channels, blocking ion flux and causing disease pathology. In this report, we present two independent screening campaigns in which we wanted to identify small molecules that bind to either the intracellular cytoplasmic amino terminal Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain from the human EAG-related gene (ERG) channel or the amino or carboxy terminal globular domains from the mouse EAG1 channel, affecting their interaction.

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KCNH channels form an important family of voltage gated potassium channels. These channels include a N-terminal Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain with unknown function. In other proteins PAS domains are implicated in cellular responses to environmental queues through small molecule binding or involvement in signaling cascades.

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Inherited human long-QT2 syndrome (LQTS) results from mutations in the gene encoding the HERG channel. Several LQT2-associated mutations have been mapped to the amino terminal cytoplasmic Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain of the HERG1a channel subunit. Here we have characterized the trafficking properties of some LQT2-associated PAS domain mutants and analyzed rescue of the trafficking mutants by low temperature (27°C) or by the pore blocker drug E4031.

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Herpes simplex virus (HSV) capsids assemble, mature and package their viral genome in the nucleoplasm. They then exit the nucleus into the cytoplasm, where they acquire their final tegument and envelope. The molecular mechanism of cytoplasmic envelopment is unclear, but evidence suggests that the viral glycoprotein tails play an important role in the recruitment of tegument and capsids at the final envelopment site.

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During Herpes simplex virus envelopment, capsids, tegument polypeptides, and membrane proteins assemble at the site of budding and a cellular lipid bilayer becomes refashioned into a spherical envelope. Though the molecular interactions driving these events are poorly understood, several lines of evidence suggest that associations between envelope protein cytoplasmic tails and tegument polypeptides may play important roles. Consistent with this hypothesis, we show here that a fusion of the cytoplasmic tail of gH with Glutathione-S-Transferase binds to VP16 in a temperature-dependent manner.

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Yeast protein insertion orientation (PIO) mutants were isolated by selecting for growth on sucrose in cells in which the only source of invertase is a C-terminal fusion to a transmembrane protein. Only the fraction with an exocellular C terminus can be processed to secreted invertase and this fraction is constrained to 2-3% by a strong charge difference signal. Identified pio mutants increased this to 9-12%.

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