Publications by authors named "Jason W Cooley"

It has long been known that the alteration of protein side chains that occlude or expose the heme cofactor to water can greatly affect the stability of the oxyferrous heme state. Here, we demonstrate that the rate of dynamically driven water penetration into the core of an artificial oxygen transport protein also correlates with oxyferrous state lifetime by reducing global dynamics, without altering the structure of the active site, via the simple linking of the two monomers in a homodimeric artificial oxygen transport protein using a glycine-rich loop. The tethering of these two helices does not significantly affect the active site structure, pentacoordinate heme-binding affinity, reduction potential, or gaseous ligand affinity.

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Intramembrane-cleaving proteases (I-CLiPs) activate pools of single-pass helical membrane protein signaling precursors that are key in the physiology of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Proteases typically cleave peptide bonds within extended or flexible regions of their substrates, and thus the mechanism underlying the ability of I-CLiPs to hydrolyze the presumably α-helical transmembrane domain (TMD) of these membrane proteins is unclear. Using deep-ultraviolet resonance Raman spectroscopy in combination with isotopic labeling, we show that although predominantly in canonical α-helical conformation, the TMD of the established I-CLiP substrate Gurken displays 3-helical geometry.

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Type-1 copper proteins participate in redox reactions and biological catalysis. Significant variation exists within the electronic structure of type-1 copper sites, producing both blue and green proteins. Classical, "blue" sites have been extensively studied, but "green" sites have been poorly characterized.

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Melittin, the main hemolytic component of honeybee venom, is unfolded in an aqueous environment and folds into an α-helical conformation in a lipid environment. Membrane fluidity is known to affect the activity and structure of melittin. By combining two structurally sensitive optical methods, circular dichroism (CD) and deep-ultraviolet resonance Raman spectroscopy (dUVRR), we have identified distinct structural fluctuations in melittin correlated with increased and decreased 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine bilayer fluidities.

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The β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide is derived from the transmembrane (TM) helix of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and has been shown to interact with membrane surfaces. To understand better the role of peptide-membrane interactions in cell death and ultimately in Alzheimer's disease, a better understanding of how membrane characteristics affect the binding, solvation, and secondary structure of Aβ is needed. Employing a combination of circular dichroism and deep-UV resonance Raman spectroscopies, Aβ(25-40) was found to fold spontaneously upon association with anionic lipid bilayers.

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Despite their presence in many aspects of biology, the study of membrane proteins lags behind that of their soluble counterparts. Improving structural analysis of membrane proteins is essential. Deep-UV resonance Raman (DUVRR) spectroscopy is an emerging technique in this area and has demonstrated sensitivity to subtle structural transitions and changes in protein environment.

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The metal sites of electron transfer proteins are tuned for function. The type 1 copper site is one of the most utilized metal sites in electron transfer reactions. This site can be tuned by the protein environment from +80 mV to +680 mV in typical type 1 sites.

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Early structures of the cytochrome bc1 complex revealed heterogeneity in the position of the soluble portion of the Rieske iron sulfur protein subunit, implicating a movement of this domain during function. Subsequent biochemical and biophysical works have firmly established that the motion of this subunit acts in the capacity of a conformationally assisted electron transfer step during the already complicated catalytic mechanism described within the modified version of Peter Mitchells Q cycle. How the movement of this subunit is initiated or how the frequency of its motion is controlled as a function of other steps during the catalysis remain topics of debate within the active research communities.

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The molten globule state can aide in the folding of a protein to a functional structure and is loosely defined as an increase in structural disorder with conservation of the ensemble secondary structure content. Simultaneous observation of persistent secondary structure content with increased disorder has remained experimentally problematic. As a consequence, modeling how the molten globule state remains stable and how it facilitates proper folding remains difficult due to a lack of amenable spectroscopic techniques to characterize this class of partially unfolded proteins.

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Carrier-type molecular ionophores, such as the cyclic dodecadepsipeptide valinomycin, often must undergo structural changes during the binding and transport of a cation across the lipid membrane. Observing the structural fluctuations that occur during this process experimentally has proven extremely difficult due to the complexities of spectroscopic analysis of protein structure/dynamics in native lipid bilayer environments. Currently, our understanding of how valinomycin selectively transports ions across membranes is derived from atomic structures solved of the cyclic macromolecule solvated in various organic solvents and complimentary in silico dynamics experiments.

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Classical strategies for structure analysis of proteins interacting with a lipid phase typically correlate ensemble secondary structure content measurements with changes in the spectroscopic responses of localized aromatic residues or reporter molecules to map regional solvent environments. Deep-UV resonance Raman (DUVRR) spectroscopy probes the vibrational modes of the peptide backbone itself, is very sensitive to the ensemble secondary structures of a protein, and has been shown to be sensitive to the extent of solvent interaction with the peptide backbone [ Wang , Y. , Purrello , R.

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Production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) induces oxidative damages, decreases cellular energy conversion efficiencies, and induces metabolic diseases in humans. During respiration, cytochrome bc(1) efficiently oxidizes hydroquinone to quinone, but how it performs this reaction without any leak of electrons to O(2) to yield ROS is not understood. Using the bacterial enzyme, here we show that a conserved Tyr residue of the cytochrome b subunit of cytochrome bc(1) is critical for this process.

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The two spatially distant quinone-binding sites of the ubihydroquinone: cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc(1)) complex have been shown to influence one another in some fashion. This transmembrane communication alters cofactor and redox partner binding interactions and could potentially influence the timing or 'concerted' steps involved in the steady-state turnover of the homodimeric enzymes. Yet, despite several lines of evidence corroborating the coupling of the quinone binding active sites to one another, little to no testable hypothesis has been offered to explain how such a "signal" might be transmitted across the presumably rigid hydrophobic domain of the enzyme.

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The ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc(1)) contains two catalytically active domains, termed the hydroquinone oxidation (Q(o)) and quinone reduction (Q(i)) sites, which are distant from each other by over 30 A. Previously, we have reported that binding of inhibitors to the Q(i) site on one (n) side of the energy-transducing membrane changes the local environment of the iron-sulfur (Fe/S) protein subunit residing in the Q(o) site on the other (p) side of the lipid bilayer [Cooley, J. W.

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Photosynthetic (Ps) growth of purple non-sulfur bacteria such as Rhodobacter capsulatus depends on the cyclic electron transfer (ET) between the ubihydroquinone (QH2): cytochrome (cyt) c oxidoreductases (cyt bc1 complex), and the photochemical reaction centers (RC), mediated by either a membrane-bound (cyt c(y)) or a freely diffusible (cyt c2) electron carrier. Previously, we constructed a functional cyt bc1-c(y) fusion complex that supported Ps growth solely relying on membrane-confined ET ( Lee, D.-W.

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The membrane integral ubihydroquinone (QH2): cytochrome (cyt) c oxidoreductase (or the cyt bc1 complex) and its physiological electron acceptor, the membrane-anchored cytochrome cy (cyt cy), are discrete components of photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport chains of purple non-sulfur, facultative phototrophic bacteria of Rhodobacter species. In Rhodobacter capsulatus, it has been observed previously that, depending on the growth condition, absence of the cyt bc1 complex is often correlated with a similar lack of cyt cy (Jenney, F. E.

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The ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (also called complex III, or bc (1) complex), is a multi subunit enzyme encountered in a very broad variety of organisms including uni- and multi-cellular eukaryotes, plants (in their mitochondria) and bacteria. Most bacteria and mitochondria harbor various forms of the bc (1) complex, while plant and algal chloroplasts as well as cyanobacteria contain a homologous protein complex called plastohydroquinone:plastocyanin oxidoreductase or b (6) f complex. Together, these enzyme complexes constitute the superfamily of the bc complexes.

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Multiple instances of low-potential electron-transport pathway inhibitors that affect the structure of the cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex to varying degrees, ranging from changes in hydroquinone (QH(2)) oxidation and cyt c(1) reduction kinetics to proteolytic accessibility of the hinge region of the iron-sulfur-containing subunit (Fe/S protein), have been reported. However, no instance has been documented of any ensuing change on the environment(s) of the [2Fe-2S] cluster. In this work, this issue was addressed in detail by taking advantage of the increased spectral and spatial resolution obtainable with orientation-dependent electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic analysis of ordered membrane preparations.

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Atovaquone is an antiparasitic drug that selectively inhibits electron transport through the parasite mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex and collapses the mitochondrial membrane potential at concentrations far lower than those at which the mammalian system is affected. Because this molecule represents a new class of antimicrobial agents, we seek a deeper understanding of its mode of action. To that end, we employed site-directed mutagenesis of a bacterial cytochrome b, combined with biophysical and biochemical measurements.

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We have previously reported that mutant strains of Rhodobacter capsulatus that have alanine insertions (+nAla mutants) in the hinge region of the iron sulfur (Fe-S) containing subunit of the bc(1) complex have increased redox midpoint potentials (E(m)) for their [2Fe2S] clusters. The alteration of the E(m) in these strains, which contain mutations far from the metal binding site, implied that the local environment of the metal center is indirectly altered by a change in the interaction of this subunit with the hydroquinone oxidizing (Q(o)) site [Darrouzet, E., Valkova-Valchanova, M.

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