Aaron J. Wolfe
Syracuse University
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Featured researches published by Aaron J. Wolfe.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2010
Robert Bikwemu; Aaron J. Wolfe; X. Xing; Liviu Movileanu
The transport of polypeptides through nanopores is a key process in biology and medical biotechnology. Despite its critical importance, the underlying kinetics of polypeptide translocation through protein nanopores is not yet comprehensively understood. Here, we present a simple two-barrier, one-well kinetic model for the translocation of short positively charged polypeptides through a single transmembrane protein nanopore that is equipped with negatively charged rings, simply called traps. We demonstrate that the presence of these traps within the interior of the nanopore dramatically alters the free energy landscape for the partitioning of the polypeptide into the nanopore interior, as revealed by significant modifications in the activation free energies required for the transitions of the polypeptide from one state to the other. Our kinetic model permits the calculation of the relative and absolute exit frequencies of the short cationic polypeptides through either opening of the nanopore. Moreover, this approach enabled quantitative assessment of the kinetics of translocation of the polypeptides through a protein nanopore, which is strongly dependent on several factors, including the nature of the translocating polypeptide, the position of the traps, the strength of the polypeptide-attractive trap interactions and the applied transmembrane voltage.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2015
Adam R. Blanden; Xin Yu; Aaron J. Wolfe; John A. Gilleran; David J. Augeri; Ryan S. O’Dell; Eric C. Olson; S. David Kimball; Thomas J. Emge; Liviu Movileanu; Darren R. Carpizo; Stewart N. Loh
p53 is a Zn2+-dependent tumor suppressor inactivated in >50% of human cancers. The most common mutation, R175H, inactivates p53 by reducing its affinity for the essential zinc ion, leaving the mutant protein unable to bind the metal in the low [Zn2+]free environment of the cell. The exploratory cancer drug zinc metallochaperone-1 (ZMC1) was previously demonstrated to reactivate this and other Zn2+-binding mutants by binding Zn2+ and buffering it to a level such that Zn2+ can repopulate the defective binding site, but how it accomplishes this in the context of living cells and organisms is unclear. In this study, we demonstrated that ZMC1 increases intracellular [Zn2+]free by functioning as a Zn2+ ionophore, binding Zn2+ in the extracellular environment, diffusing across the plasma membrane, and releasing it intracellularly. It raises intracellular [Zn2+]free in cancer (TOV112D) and noncancer human embryonic kidney cell line 293 to 15.8 and 18.1 nM, respectively, with half-times of 2–3 minutes. These [Zn2+]free levels are predicted to result in ∼90% saturation of p53-R175H, thus accounting for its observed reactivation. This mechanism is supported by the X-ray crystal structure of the [Zn(ZMC1)2] complex, which demonstrates structural and chemical features consistent with those of known metal ionophores. These findings provide a physical mechanism linking zinc metallochaperone-1 in both in vitro and in vivo activities and define the remaining critical parameter necessary for developing synthetic metallochaperones for clinical use.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
Jiaming Liu; Aaron J. Wolfe; Elif Eren; Jagamya Vijayaraghavan; Mridhu Indic; Bert van den Berg; Liviu Movileanu
To achieve the uptake of small, water-soluble nutrients, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a pathogenic Gram-negative bacterium, employs substrate-specific channels located within its outer membrane. In this paper, we present a detailed description of the single-channel characteristics of six members of the outer membrane carboxylate channel D (OccD) subfamily. Recent structural studies showed that the OccD proteins share common features, such as a closely related, monomeric, 18-stranded β-barrel conformation and large extracellular loops, which are folded back into the channel lumen. Here, we report that the OccD proteins displayed single-channel activity with a unitary conductance covering an unusually broad range, between 20 and 670pS, as well as a diverse gating dynamics. Interestingly, we found that cation selectivity is a conserved trait among all members of the OccD subfamily, bringing a new distinction between the members of the OccD subfamily and the anion-selective OccK channels. Conserved cation selectivity of the OccD channels is in accord with an increased specificity and selectivity of these proteins for positively charged, carboxylate-containing substrates.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Aaron J. Wolfe; Mohammad M. Mohammad; Avinash Kumar Thakur; Liviu Movileanu
One persistent challenge in membrane protein design is accomplishing extensive modifications of proteins without impairing their functionality. A truncation derivative of the ferric hydroxamate uptake component A (FhuA), which featured the deletion of the 160-residue cork domain and five large extracellular loops, produced the conversion of a non-conductive, monomeric, 22-stranded β-barrel protein into a large-conductance protein pore. Here, we show that this redesigned β-barrel protein tolerates an extensive alteration in the internal surface charge, encompassing 25 negative charge neutralizations. By using single-molecule electrophysiology, we noted that a commonality of various truncation FhuA protein pores was the occurrence of 33% blockades of the unitary current at very high transmembrane potentials. We determined that these current transitions were stimulated by their interaction with an external cationic polypeptide, which occurred in a fashion dependent on the surface charge of the pore interior as well as the polypeptide characteristics. This study shows promise for extensive engineering of a large monomeric β-barrel protein pore in molecular biomedical diagnosis, therapeutics, and biosensor technology.
Analytical Chemistry | 2017
Aaron J. Wolfe; Yi-Ching Hsueh; Adam R. Blanden; Mohammad M. Mohammad; Bach Pham; Avinash Kumar Thakur; Stewart N. Loh; Min Chen; Liviu Movileanu
Understanding how membrane proteins interact with detergents is of fundamental and practical significance in structural and chemical biology as well as in nanobiotechnology. Current methods for inspecting protein-detergent complex (PDC) interfaces require high concentrations of protein and are of low throughput. Here, we describe a scalable, spectroscopic approach that uses nanomolar protein concentrations in native solutions. This approach, which is based on steady-state fluorescence polarization (FP) spectroscopy, kinetically resolves the dissociation of detergents from membrane proteins and protein unfolding. For satisfactorily solubilizing detergents, at concentrations much greater than the critical micelle concentration (CMC), the fluorescence anisotropy was independent of detergent concentration. In contrast, at detergent concentrations comparable with or below the CMC, the anisotropy readout underwent a time-dependent decrease, showing a specific and sensitive protein unfolding signature. Functionally reconstituted membrane proteins into a bilayer membrane confirmed predictions made by these FP-based determinations with respect to varying refolding conditions. From a practical point of view, this 96-well analytical approach will facilitate a massively parallel assessment of the PDC interfacial interactions under a fairly broad range of micellar and environmental conditions. We expect that these studies will potentially accelerate research in membrane proteins pertaining to their extraction, solubilization, stabilization, and crystallization, as well as reconstitution into bilayer membranes.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Aaron J. Wolfe; Jack Fredrick Gugel; Min Chen; Liviu Movileanu
Gradual dissociation of detergent molecules from water-insoluble membrane proteins culminates in protein aggregation. However, the time-dependent trajectory of this process remains ambiguous because the signal-to-noise ratio of most spectroscopic and calorimetric techniques is drastically declined by the presence of protein aggregates in solution. We show that by using steady-state fluorescence polarization (FP) spectroscopy the dissociation of the protein-detergent complex (PDC) can be inspected in real time at detergent concentrations below the critical micelle concentration. This article provides experimental evidence of the coexistence of two distinct phases of the dissociations of detergent monomers from membrane proteins. We first noted a slow detergent predesolvation process, which was accompanied by a relatively modest change in the FP anisotropy, suggesting a small number of dissociated detergent monomers from the proteomicelles. This predesolvation phase was followed by a fast detergent desolvation process, which was highlighted by a major alteration in the FP anisotropy. The durations and rates of these phases were dependent on both the detergent concentration and the interfacial PDC interactions. Further development of this approach might lead to the creation of a new semiquantitative method for the assessment of the kinetics of association and dissociation of proteomicelles.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2018
Aaron J. Wolfe; Jack Fredrick Gugel; Min Chen; Liviu Movileanu
Interactions of a membrane protein with a detergent micelle represent a fundamental process with practical implications in structural and chemical biology. Quantitative assessment of the kinetics of protein-detergent complex (PDC) interactions has always been challenged by complicated behavior of both membrane proteins and solubilizing detergents in aqueous phase. Here, we show the kinetic reads of the desorption of maltoside-containing detergents from β-barrel membrane proteins. Using steady-state fluorescence polarization (FP) anisotropy measurements, we recorded real-time, specific signatures of the PDC interactions. The results of these measurements were used to infer the model-dependent rate constants of association and dissociation of the proteomicelles. Remarkably, the kinetics of the PDC interactions depend on the overall protein charge despite the nonionic nature of the detergent monomers. In the future, this approach might be employed for high-throughput screening of kinetic fingerprints of different membrane proteins stabilized in micelles that contain mixtures of various detergents.
Biochemistry | 2018
Jennifer R. DeRosa; Brandon S. Moyer; Ellie Lumen; Aaron J. Wolfe; Meegan B. Sleeper; Anthony H. Bianchi; Ashleigh Crawford; Connor McGuigan; Danique Wortel; Cheyanne Fisher; Kelsey Moody; Adam R. Blanden
Antibodies are the most prolific biologics in research and clinical environments because of their ability to bind targets with high affinity and specificity. However, antibodies also carry liabilities. A significant portion of the life-science reproducibility crisis is driven by inconsistent performance of research-grade antibodies, and clinical antibodies are often unstable and require costly cold-chain management to reach their destinations in active form. In biotechnology, antibodies are also limited by difficulty integrating them in many recombinant systems due to their size and structural complexity. A switch to small, stable, sequence-verified binding scaffolds may overcome these barriers. Here we present such a scaffold, RPtag, based on a ribose-binding protein (RBP) from extremophile Caldanaerobacter subterraneus. RPtag binds an optimized peptide with pM affinity, is stable to extreme temperature, pH, and protease treatment, readily refolds after denaturation, is effective in common laboratory applications, was rationally engineered to bind bioactive PDGF-β, and was formulated as a gut-stable orally bioavailable preparation.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
Aaron J. Wolfe; Wei Si; Zhengqi Zhang; Adam R. Blanden; Yi-Ching Hsueh; Jack Fredrick Gugel; Bach Pham; Min Chen; Stewart N. Loh; Sharon Rozovsky; Aleksei Aksimentiev; Liviu Movileanu
Although fundamentally significant in structural, chemical, and membrane biology, the interfacial protein-detergent complex (PDC) interactions have been modestly examined because of the complicated behavior of both detergents and membrane proteins in aqueous phase. Membrane proteins are prone to unproductive aggregation resulting from poor detergent solvation, but the participating forces in this phenomenon remain ambiguous. Here, we show that using rational membrane protein design, targeted chemical modification, and steady-state fluorescence polarization spectroscopy, the detergent desolvation of membrane proteins can be quantitatively evaluated. We demonstrate that depleting the detergent in the sample well produced a two-state transition of membrane proteins between a fully detergent-solvated state and a detergent-desolvated state, the nature of which depended on the interfacial PDC interactions. Using a panel of six membrane proteins of varying hydrophobic topography, structural fingerprint, and charge distribution on the solvent-accessible surface, we provide direct experimental evidence for the contributions of the electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions to the protein solvation properties. Moreover, all-atom molecular dynamics simulations report the major contribution of the hydrophobic forces exerted at the PDC interface. This semiquantitative approach might be extended in the future to include studies of the interfacial PDC interactions of other challenging membrane protein systems of unknown structure. This would have practical importance in protein extraction, solubilization, stabilization, and crystallization.
Biophysical Journal | 2010
Robert Bikwemu; Aaron J. Wolfe; Mohammad M. Mohammad; X. Xing; Liviu Movileanu
Facilitated translocation of proteins through a transmembrane protein pore is a ubiquitous and fundamental process in biology. Protein translocation machineries possess various binding sites within the pore interior, but a clear mechanistic understanding of how the interaction of the polypeptides with the binding site alters the underlying kinetics is still missing. Here, we employed standard protein engineering and single-channel electrical recordings to obtain detailed kinetic information of polypeptide translocation through the staphylococcal α-hemolysin (αHL) transmembrane pore, a robust, tractable, and versatile β-barrel protein. Binding sites comprised of rings of negatively-charged aspartic acid residues, engineered at different positions within the β barrel, produced significant alterations in the functional features pf the protein pore, facilitating the transport of cationic polypeptides from one side of the membrane to the other. The translocation of polypeptides through the engineered protein pore was dependent on the position of the binding site, the length of the polypeptide as well as its hydrophobic index.Acknowledgements. This research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (DMR-0706517 and HRD-0703452) and the National Institutes of Health (R01 GM088403) as well as by the Syracuse Biomaterials Institute (SBI).