Publications by authors named "Ninian Blackburn"

Metallochaperones are small proteins that shuttle essential metal ions such as Cu selectively to their cellular targets. CusF has unusual Cu(I) coordination, bound by two methionines, one histidine and a capping tryptophan residue, W44. Here we compare the CO binding reactivity of the wild type (WT) protein and its W44A, F, and M variants.

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The copper chaperone for Sod1 (Ccs) is a metallochaperone that plays a multifaceted role in the maturation of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (Sod1). The Ccs mutation RW was identified in an infant with fatal neurological abnormalities. Based on a comprehensive structural and functional analysis, we developed the first data-driven model for RW-related pathogenic phenotypes.

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Peptidylglycine monooxygenase is a copper-dependent enzyme that catalyzes C-alpha hydroxylation of glycine extended pro-peptides, a critical post-translational step in peptide hormone processing. The canonical mechanism posits that dioxygen binds at the mononuclear M-center to generate a Cu(II)-superoxo species capable of H atom abstraction from the peptidyl substrate, followed by long-range electron tunneling from the CuH center. Recent crystallographic and biochemical data have challenged this mechanism, suggesting instead that an "open-to-closed" transition brings the copper centers closer, allowing reactivity within a binuclear intermediate.

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Cupredoxins are widely occurring copper-binding proteins with a typical Greek-key beta barrel fold. They are generally described as electron carriers that rely on a T1 copper centre coordinated by four ligands provided by the folded polypeptide. The discovery of novel cupredoxins demonstrates the high diversity of this family, with variations in terms of copper-binding ligands, copper centre geometry, redox potential, as well as biological function.

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Radical -adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) enzymes leverage the properties of one or more iron- and sulfide-containing metallocenters to catalyze complex and radical-mediated transformations. By far the most populous superfamily of radical SAM enzymes are those that, in addition to a 4Fe-4S cluster that binds and activates the SAM cofactor, also bind one or more additional auxiliary clusters (ACs) of largely unknown catalytic significance. In this report we examine the role of ACs in two RS enzymes, PapB and Tte1186, that catalyze formation of thioether cross-links in ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs).

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Peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM) is essential for the biosynthesis of many neuroendocrine peptides via a copper-dependent hydroxylation of a glycine-extended pro-peptide. The "canonical" mechanism requires the transfer of two electrons from one mononuclear copper (CuH, H-site) to a second mononuclear copper (CuM, M-site) which is the site of oxygen binding and catalysis. In most crystal structures the copper centers are separated by 11 Å of disordered solvent, but recent work has established that a PHM variant H108A forms a closed conformer in the presence of citrate with a reduced Cu-Cu site separation of ~4 Å.

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Peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM) is essential for the posttranslational amidation of neuroendocrine peptides. An important aspect of the PHM mechanism is the complete coupling of oxygen reduction to substrate hydroxylation, which implies no oxygen reactivity of the fully reduced enzyme in the absence of peptidyl substrates. As part of studies aimed at investigating this feature of the PHM mechanism, we explored pre-steady-state kinetics using chemical quench (CQ) and rapid freeze-quench (RFQ) studies of the fully reduced ascorbate-free PHM enzyme.

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An important question is whether consensus mechanisms for copper monooxygenase enzymes such as peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM) and dopamine β-monooxygenase (DBM) generated via computational and spectroscopic approaches account for important experimental observations. We examine this question in the light of recent crystallographic and QMMM reports which suggest that alternative mechanisms involving an open to closed conformational cycle may be more representative of a number of experimental findings that remain unaccounted for in the canonical mononuclear mechanisms. These include (i) the almost negligible reactivity of the catalytic copper site (CuM) with oxygen in the absence of substrate, (ii) the carbonyl chemistry and in particular the substrate-induced activation exemplified by the lowered CO stretching frequency, (iii) the peroxide shunt chemistry which demands an intermediate that facilitates equilibrium between a Cu(II)-peroxo state and a Cu(I)-dioxygen state, and (iv) clear evidence for both closed and open conformational states in both PHM and DBM.

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Normal physiology relies on the precise coordination of intracellular signaling pathways that respond to nutrient availability to balance cell growth and cell death. The canonical mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway consists of the RAF-MEK-ERK signaling cascade and represents one of the most well-defined axes within eukaryotic cells to promote cell proliferation, which underscores its frequent mutational activation in human cancers. Our recent studies illuminated a function for the redox-active micronutrient copper (Cu) as an intracellular mediator of signaling by connecting Cu to the amplitude of mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling via a direct interaction between Cu and the kinases MEK1 and MEK2.

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Cu centers perform efficient long-range electron transfer. The electronic structure of native Cu sites can be described by a double-potential well with a dominant σ* ground state in fast equilibrium with a less populated π ground state. Here, we report a Cu mutant in which a lysine was introduced in the axial position.

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The M centers of the mononuclear monooxygenases peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM) and dopamine β-monooxygenase bind and activate dioxygen en route to substrate hydroxylation. Recently, we reported the rational design of a protein-based model in which the CusF metallochaperone was repurposed via a His to Met mutation to act as a structural and spectroscopic biomimic. The PHM M site exhibits a number of unusual attributes, including a HisMet ligand set, a fluxional Cu(I)-S(Met) bond, tight binding of exogenous ligands CO and N, and complete coupling of oxygen reduction to substrate hydroxylation even at extremely low turnover rates.

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The enzyme [FeFe]-hydrogenase (HydA1) contains a unique 6-iron cofactor, the H-cluster, that has unusual ligands to an Fe-Fe binuclear subcluster: CN, CO, and an azadithiolate (adt) ligand that provides 2 S bridges between the 2 Fe atoms. In cells, the H-cluster is assembled by a collection of 3 maturases: HydE and HydF, whose roles aren't fully understood, and HydG, which has been shown to construct a [Fe(Cys)(CO)(CN)] organometallic precursor to the binuclear cluster. Here, we report the in vitro assembly of the H-cluster in the absence of HydG, which is functionally replaced by adding a synthetic [Fe(Cys)(CO)(CN)] carrier in the maturation reaction.

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The radical SAM enzyme HydG generates CO- and CN-containing Fe complexes that are involved in the bioassembly of the [FeFe] hydrogenase active cofactor, the H-cluster. HydG contains a unique 5Fe-4S cluster in which the fifth "dangler" Fe and the coordinating cysteine molecule have both been shown to be essential for its function. Here, we demonstrate that this dangler Fe can be replaced with Ni or Co and that the cysteine can be replaced with selenocysteine.

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Mononuclear copper monooxygenases peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM) and dopamine β-monooxygenase (DBM) catalyze the hydroxylation of high energy C-H bonds utilizing a pair of chemically distinct copper sites (CuH and CuM) separated by 11 Å. In earlier work, we constructed single-site PHM variants that were designed to allow the study of the M- and H-centers independently in order to place their reactivity sequentially along the catalytic pathway. More recent crystallographic studies suggest that these single-site variants may not be truly representative of the individual active sites.

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CusCBAF represents an important class of bacterial efflux pump exhibiting selectivity towards Cu(I) and Ag(I). The complex is comprised of three proteins: the CusA transmembrane pump, the CusB soluble adaptor protein, and the CusC outer-membrane pore, and additionally requires the periplasmic metallochaperone CusF. Here we used spectroscopic and kinetic tools to probe the mechanism of copper transfer between CusF and CusB using selenomethionine labeling of the metal-binding Met residues coupled to RFQ-XAS at the Se and Cu edges.

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The structures of metalloproteins that use redox-active metals for catalysis are usually exquisitely folded in a way that they are prearranged to accept their metal cofactors. Peptidylglycine α-hydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM) is a dicopper enzyme that catalyzes hydroxylation of the α-carbon of glycine-extended peptides for the formation of des-glycine amidated peptides. Here, we present the structures of apo-PHM and of mutants of one of the copper sites (H107A, H108A, and H172A) determined in the presence and absence of citrate.

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Metallochaperones are a diverse family of trafficking molecules that provide metal ions to protein targets for use as cofactors. The copper chaperone for superoxide dismutase (Ccs1) activates immature copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (Sod1) by delivering copper and facilitating the oxidation of the Sod1 intramolecular disulfide bond. Here, we present structural, spectroscopic, and cell-based data supporting a novel copper-induced mechanism for Sod1 activation.

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The present study uses CO as a surrogate for oxygen to probe how substrate binding triggers oxygen activation in peptidylglycine monooygenase (PHM). Infrared stretching frequencies (ν(C ≡ O)) of the carbonyl (CO) adducts of copper proteins are sensitive markers of Cu(I) coordination and are useful in probing oxygen reactivity because the electronic properties of O and CO are similar. The carbonyl chemistry has been explored using PHM WT and a number of active site variants in the absence and presence of peptidyl substrates.

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Type 1 copper (T1Cu) proteins are electron transfer (ET) proteins involved in many important biological processes. While the effects of changing primary and secondary coordination spheres in the T1Cu ET function have been extensively studied, few report has explored the effect of the overall protein structural perturbation on active site configuration or reduction potential of the protein, even though the protein scaffold has been proposed to play a critical role in enforcing the entatic or "rack-induced" state for ET functions. We herein report circular permutation of azurin by linking the N- and C-termini and creating new termini in the loops between 1 and 2 β strands or between 3 and 4 β strands.

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S-Nitrosothiols are known as reagents for NO storage and transportation and as regulators in many physiological processes. Although the S-nitrosylation catalysed by haem proteins is well known, no direct evidence of S-nitrosylation in copper proteins has been reported. Here, we report reversible insertion of NO into a copper-thiolate bond in an engineered copper centre in Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin by rational design of the primary coordination sphere and tuning its reduction potential by deleting a hydrogen bond in the secondary coordination sphere.

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Cuproproteins such as PHM and DBM mature in late endosomal vesicles of the mammalian secretory pathway where changes in vesicle pH are employed for sorting and post-translational processing. Colocation with the P1B-type ATPase ATP7A suggests that the latter is the source of copper and supports a mechanism where selectivity in metal transfer is achieved by spatial colocation of partner proteins in their specific organelles or vesicles. In previous work we have suggested that a lumenal loop sequence located between trans-membrane helices TM1 and TM2 of the ATPase, and containing five histidines and four methionines, acts as an organelle-specific chaperone for metallation of the cuproproteins.

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Peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM) is a dicopper enzyme that plays a vital role in the amidation of glycine-extended pro-peptides. One of the crucial aspects of its chemistry is the transfer of two electrons from an electron-storing and -transferring site (CuH) to the oxygen binding site and catalytic center (CuM) over a distance of 11 Å during one catalytic turnover event. Here we present our studies of the first electron transfer (ET) step (reductive phase) in wild-type (WT) PHM as well as its variants.

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Biological systems use copper as a redox center in many metalloproteins, where the role of the metal is to cycle between its +1 and +2 oxidation states. This chemistry requires the redox potential to be in a range that can stabilize both Cu(I) and Cu(II) states and often involves protein-derived ligand sets involving mixed histidine-methionine coordination that balance the preferences of both oxidation states. Transport proteins, on the other hand, utilize copper in the Cu(I) state and often contain sites comprised predominately of the cuprophilic residue methionine.

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Encapsulating discrete Gd(3+) chelates in nano-assembled capsules (NACs) is a simple and effective method of preparing an MRI contrast agent capable of delivering a large payload of high relaxivity imaging agent. The preparation of contrast agent containing NACs had previously focussed on preparations incorporating GdDOTP(5-) into the internal aggregate. In this report we demonstrate that other Gd(3+) chelates bearing overall charges as low as 2- can also be used to prepare NACs.

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