Publications by authors named "James Whisstock"

Article Synopsis
  • Patients with Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM) experience symptoms like cytopenias, fatigue, and bleeding, often exacerbated by therapeutics like Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitors (BTKis).
  • A study analyzed hemostatic dysfunction in WM patients, comparing samples from untreated patients, those on BTKis, and healthy donors, using various blood tests to assess platelet function and clotting potential.
  • Results showed that WM patients had decreased platelet reticulation, slower thrombin generation, and impaired hemostatic function due to high levels of IgM, indicating serious disturbances in blood coagulation despite receiving treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two series of macrocyclic inhibitors addressing the S1 pocket and the prime site of the fibrinolytic serine protease plasmin have been developed. In the first series, a P1 tranexamoyl residue was coupled to 4-aminophenylalanine in P1' position, which provided moderately potent inhibitors with inhibition constants around 1 μM. In the second series, a substituted biphenylalanine was incorporated as P1' residue leading to approximately 1000-fold stronger plasmin inhibitors, the best compounds possess subnanomolar inhibition constants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plasminogen (Plg), the zymogen of plasmin (Plm), is a glycoprotein involved in fibrinolysis and a wide variety of other physiological processes. Plg dysregulation has been implicated in a range of diseases. Classically, human Plg is categorized into two types, supposedly having different functional features, based on the presence (type I) or absence (type II) of a single N-linked glycan.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plasminogen (Plg) is the inactive form of plasmin (Plm) that exists in two major glycoforms, referred to as glycoforms I and II (GI and GII). In the circulation, Plg assumes an activation-resistant "closed" conformation via interdomain interactions and is mediated by the lysine binding site (LBS) on the kringle (KR) domains. These inter-domain interactions can be readily disrupted when Plg binds to lysine/arginine residues on protein targets or free L-lysine and analogues.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Perforin is a pore-forming protein whose normal function enables cytotoxic T and natural killer (NK) cells to kill virus-infected and transformed cells. Conversely, unwanted perforin activity can also result in auto-immune attack, graft rejection and aberrant responses to pathogens. Perforin is critical for the function of the granule exocytosis cell death pathway and is therefore a target for drug development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

"Reagentless" immunosensors are emerging to address the challenge of practical and sensitive detection of important biomarkers in real biological samples without the need for multistep assays and user intervention, with applications ranging from research tools to point-of-care diagnostics. Selective target binding to an affinity reagent is detected and reported in one step without the need for washing or additional reporters. In this study, we used a structure-guided approach to identify a mutation site in an antibody fragment for the polarity-dependent fluorophore, Anap, such that upon binding of the protein target cardiac troponin I, the Anap-labeled antibody would produce a detectable and dose-dependent shift in emission wavelength.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper introduces OpenFIBSEM, a universal API to control Focused Ion Beam Scanning Electron Microscopes (FIBSEM). OpenFIBSEM aims to improve the programmability and automation of electron microscopy workflows in structural biology research. The API is designed to be cross-platform, composable, and extendable: allowing users to use any portion of OpenFIBSEM to develop or integrate with other software tools.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Conjugative DNA transfer is a major factor in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance and virulence genes. In the Gram-positive pathogen Clostridium perfringens, the majority of conjugative plasmids share the conserved tcp locus that governs the assembly of the transfer system. Here, we describe multiple structures of the coupling protein TcpA, an essential ATPase that is suggested to provide the mechanical force to propel the DNA through the transfer apparatus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two series of macrocyclic plasmin inhibitors with a C-terminal benzylamine group were synthesized. The substitution of the N-terminal phenylsulfonyl group of a previously described inhibitor provided two analogues with sub-nanomolar inhibition constants. Both compounds possess a high selectivity against all other tested trypsin-like serine proteases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Membrane Attack Complex (MAC) is responsible for forming large β-barrel channels in the membranes of pathogens, such as gram-negative bacteria. Off-target MAC assembly on endogenous tissue is associated with inflammatory diseases and cancer. Accordingly, a human C5b-9 specific antibody, aE11, has been developed that detects a neoepitope exposed in C9 when it is incorporated into the C5b-9 complex, but not present in the plasma native C9.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The zinc-dependent metalloprotease meprin α is predominantly expressed in the brush border membrane of proximal tubules in the kidney and enterocytes in the small intestine and colon. In normal tissue homeostasis meprin α performs key roles in inflammation, immunity, and extracellular matrix remodelling. Dysregulated meprin α is associated with acute kidney injury, sepsis, urinary tract infection, metastatic colorectal carcinoma, and inflammatory bowel disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

P-Rex (PI(3,4,5)P-dependent Rac exchanger) guanine nucleotide exchange factors potently activate Rho GTPases. P-Rex guanine nucleotide exchange factors are autoinhibited, synergistically activated by Gβγ and PI(3,4,5)P binding and dysregulated in cancer. Here, we use X-ray crystallography, cryogenic electron microscopy and crosslinking mass spectrometry to determine the structural basis of human P-Rex1 autoinhibition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To control infections phagocytes can directly kill invading microbes. Macrophage-expressed gene 1 (Mpeg1), a pore-forming protein sometimes known as perforin-2, is reported to be essential for bacterial killing following phagocytosis. Mice homozygous for the mutant allele Mpeg1 succumb to bacterial infection and exhibit deficiencies in bacterial killing in vitro.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein structure fundamentally underpins the function and processes of numerous biological systems. Fold recognition algorithms offer a sensitive and robust tool to detect structural, and thereby functional, similarities between distantly related homologs. In the era of accurate structure prediction owing to advances in machine learning techniques and a wealth of experimentally determined structures, previously curated sequence databases have become a rich source of biological information.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients with hereditary angioedema (HAE) experience episodes of bradykinin (BK)-induced swelling of skin and mucosal membranes. The most common cause is reduced plasma activity of C1 inhibitor, the main regulator of the proteases plasma kallikrein (PKa) and factor XIIa (FXIIa). Recently, patients with HAE were described with a Lys311 to glutamic acid substitution in plasminogen (Plg), the zymogen of the protease plasmin (Plm).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Macrophages are an ancient blood cell lineage critical for homeostasis and defence against pathogens. Although their numbers were long thought to be sustained solely by haematopoietic organs, it has recently become clear that their proliferation, or self-renewal, also plays a major role. In the Drosophila larva, macrophages undergo a phase of rapid self-renewal, making this an attractive model for elucidating the signals and regulatory mechanisms involved.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neurofibromin (NF1) mutations cause neurofibromatosis type 1 and drive numerous cancers, including breast and brain tumors. NF1 inhibits cellular proliferation through its guanosine triphosphatase-activating protein (GAP) activity against rat sarcoma (RAS). In the present study, cryo-electron microscope studies reveal that the human ~640-kDa NF1 homodimer features a gigantic 30 × 10 nm array of α-helices that form a core lemniscate-shaped scaffold.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Harnessing the immunomodulatory activity of cytokines is a focus of therapies targeting inflammatory disease. The interleukin (IL)-1 superfamily contains pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory members that help orchestrate the immune response in adaptive and innate immunity. Of these molecules, IL-37 has robust anti-inflammatory activity across a range of disease models through inhibition of pro-inflammatory signaling cascades downstream of tumor necrosis factor, IL-1, and toll-like receptor pathways.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The dual-specificity phosphatase PTEN functions as a tumor suppressor by hydrolyzing PI(3,4,5)P to PI(4,5)P to inhibit PI3K-AKT signaling and cellular proliferation. P-Rex2 is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Rho GTPases and can be activated by Gβγ subunits downstream of G protein-coupled receptor signaling and by PI(3,4,5)P downstream of receptor tyrosine kinases. The PTEN:P-Rex2 complex is a commonly mutated signaling node in metastatic cancer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent research in predicting protein secondary structure populations (SSP) based on Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) chemical shifts has helped quantitatively characterise the structural conformational properties of intrinsically disordered proteins and regions (IDP/IDR). Different from protein secondary structure (SS) prediction, the SSP prediction assumes a dynamic assignment of secondary structures that seem correlate with disordered states. In this study, we designed a single-task deep learning framework to predict IDP/IDR and SSP respectively; and multitask deep learning frameworks to allow quantitative predictions of IDP/IDR evidenced by the simultaneously predicted SSP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cryo-Electron Tomography (cryo-ET) is a method that enables resolving the structure of macromolecular complexes directly in the cellular environment. However, sample preparation for Cryo-ET is labour-intensive and can require both cryo-lamella preparation through cryo-Focused Ion Beam (FIB) milling and correlative light microscopy to ensure that the event of interest is present in the lamella. Here, we present an integrated cryo-FIB and light microscope setup called the Photon Ion Electron microscope (PIE-scope) that enables direct and rapid isolation of cellular regions containing protein complexes of interest.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a severe, currently untreatable intestinal disease that predominantly affects preterm infants and is driven by poorly characterized inflammatory pathways. Here, human and murine NEC intestines exhibit an unexpected predominance of type 3/T17 polarization. In murine NEC, pro-inflammatory type 3 NKp46RORγtTbet innate lymphoid cells (ILC3) are 5-fold increased, whereas ILC1 and protective NKp46RORγt ILC3 are obliterated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • MPEG1/Perforin-2 is an ancient protein involved in immune responses, part of a larger superfamily known for forming pores in cell membranes.
  • Loss of MPEG1 increases susceptibility to infections, and its expression is enhanced by proinflammatory signals like TNFα and LPS.
  • Current studies indicate MPEG1 may have a unique mechanism for pore formation that protects host cells while combating infections, highlighting its evolutionary significance and potential in immunology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The serpin, C1-inhibitor (also known as SERPING1), plays a vital anti-inflammatory role in the body by controlling pro-inflammatory pathways such as complement and coagulation. The inhibitor's action is enhanced in the presence of polyanionic cofactors, such as heparin and polyphosphate, by increasing the rate of association with key enzymes such as C1s of the classical pathway of complement. The cofactor binding site of the serpin has never been mapped.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF