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Featured researches published by Abhinav Nath.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Protein-induced photophysical changes to the amyloid indicator dye thioflavin T

Leslie S. Wolfe; Matthew F. Calabrese; Abhinav Nath; Dorottya V. Blaho; Andrew D. Miranker; Yong Xiong

The small molecule thioflavin T (ThT) is a defining probe for the identification and mechanistic study of amyloid fiber formation. As such, ThT is fundamental to investigations of serious diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson disease, and type II diabetes. For each disease, a different protein undergoes conformational conversion to a β-sheet rich fiber. The fluorescence of ThT exhibits an increase in quantum yield upon binding these fibers. Despite its widespread use, the structural basis for binding specificity and for the changes to the photophysical properties of ThT remain poorly understood. Here, we report the co-crystal structures of ThT with two alternative states of β-2 microglobulin (β2m); one monomeric, the other an amyloid-like oligomer. In the latter, the dye intercalates between β-sheets orthogonal to the β-strands. Importantly, the fluorophore is bound in such a manner that a photophysically relevant torsion is limited to a range of angles generally associated with low, not high, quantum yield. Quantum mechanical assessment of the fluorophore shows the electronic distribution to be strongly stabilized by aromatic interactions with the protein. Monomeric β2m gives little increase in ThT fluorescence despite showing three fluorophores, at two binding sites, in configurations generally associated with high quantum yield. Our efforts fundamentally extend existing understanding about the origins of amyloid-induced photophysical changes. Specifically, the β-sheet interface that characterizes amyloid acts both sterically and electronically to stabilize the fluorophore’s ground state electronic distribution. By preventing the fluorophore from adopting its preferred excited state configuration, nonradiative relaxation pathways are minimized and quantum yield is increased.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Ligand Binding to Cytochrome P450 3A4 in Phospholipid Bilayer Nanodiscs THE EFFECT OF MODEL MEMBRANES

Abhinav Nath; Yelena V. Grinkova; Stephen G. Sligar; William M. Atkins

The membrane-bound protein cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) is a major drug-metabolizing enzyme. Most studies of ligand binding by CYP3A4 are currently carried out in solution, in the absence of a model membrane. Therefore, there is little information concerning the membrane effects on CYP3A4 ligand binding behavior. Phospholipid bilayer Nanodiscs are a novel model membrane system derived from high density lipoprotein particles, whose stability, monodispersity, and consistency are ensured by their self-assembly. We explore the energetics of four ligands (6-(p-toluidino)-2-naphthalenesulfonic acid (TNS), α-naphthoflavone (ANF), miconazole, and bromocriptine) binding to CYP3A4 incorporated into Nanodiscs. Ligand binding to Nanodiscs was monitored by a combination of environment-sensitive ligand fluorescence and ligand-induced shifts in the fluorescence of tryptophan residues present in the scaffold proteins of Nanodiscs; binding to the CYP3A4 active site was monitored by ligand-induced shifts in the heme Soret band absorbance. The dissociation constants for binding to the active site in CYP3A4-Nanodiscs were 4.0 μm for TNS, 5.8 μm for ANF, 0.45 μm for miconazole, and 0.45 μm for bromocriptine. These values are for CYP3A4 incorporated into a lipid bilayer and are therefore presumably more biologically relevant that those measured using CYP3A4 in solution. In some cases, affinity measurements using CYP3A4 in Nanodiscs differ significantly from solution values. We also studied the equilibrium between ligand binding to CYP3A4 and to the membrane. TNS showed no marked preference for either environment; ANF preferentially bound to the membrane, and miconazole and bromocriptine preferentially bound to the CYP3A4 active site.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

The Conformational Ensembles of α-Synuclein and Tau: Combining Single-Molecule FRET and Simulations

Abhinav Nath; Maria Sammalkorpi; David C. DeWitt; Adam J. Trexler; Shana Elbaum-Garfinkle; Corey S. O’Hern; Elizabeth Rhoades

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are increasingly recognized for their important roles in a range of biological contexts, both in normal physiological function and in a variety of devastating human diseases. However, their structural characterization by traditional biophysical methods, for the purposes of understanding their function and dysfunction, has proved challenging. Here, we investigate the model IDPs α-Synuclein (αS) and tau, that are involved in major neurodegenerative conditions including Parkinsons and Alzheimers diseases, using excluded volume Monte Carlo simulations constrained by pairwise distance distributions from single-molecule fluorescence measurements. Using this, to our knowledge, novel approach we find that a relatively small number of intermolecular distance constraints are sufficient to accurately determine the dimensions and polymer conformational statistics of αS and tau in solution. Moreover, this method can detect local changes in αS and tau conformations that correlate with enhanced aggregation. Constrained Monte Carlo simulations produce ensembles that are in excellent agreement both with experimental measurements on αS and tau and with all-atom, explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations of αS, with much lower configurational sampling requirements and computational expense.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Functional Promiscuity Correlates with Conformational Heterogeneity in A-class Glutathione S-Transferases

Liming Hou; Matthew T. Honaker; Laura M. Shireman; Larissa M. Balogh; Arthur G. Roberts; Kei Cheuk Ng; Abhinav Nath; William M. Atkins

The structurally related glutathione S-transferase isoforms GSTA1-1 and GSTA4-4 differ greatly in their relative catalytic promiscuity. GSTA1-1 is a highly promiscuous detoxification enzyme. In contrast, GSTA4-4 exhibits selectivity for congeners of the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal. The contribution of protein dynamics to promiscuity has not been studied. Therefore, hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (H/DX) and fluorescence lifetime distribution analysis were performed with glutathione S-transferases A1-1 and A4-4. Differences in local dynamics of the C-terminal helix were evident as expected on the basis of previous studies. However, H/DX demonstrated significantly greater solvent accessibility throughout most of the GSTA1-1 sequence compared with GSTA4-4. A Phe-111/Tyr-217 aromatic-aromatic interaction in A4-4, which is not present in A1-1, was hypothesized to increase core packing. “Swap” mutants that eliminate this interaction from A4-4 or incorporate it into A1-1 yield H/DX behavior that is intermediate between the wild type templates. In addition, the single Trp-21 residue of each isoform was exploited to probe the conformational heterogeneity at the intrasubunit domain-domain interface. Excited state fluorescence lifetime distribution analysis indicates that this core residue is more conformationally heterogeneous in GSTA1-1 than in GSTA4-4, and this correlates with greater stability toward urea denaturation for GSTA4-4. The fluorescence distribution and urea sensitivity of the mutant proteins were intermediate between the wild type templates. The results suggest that the differences in protein dynamics of these homologs are global. The results suggest also the possible importance of extensive conformational plasticity to achieve high levels of functional promiscuity, possibly at the cost of stability.


Biochemistry | 2010

Quantitative Characterization of the Interactions among c-myc Transcriptional Regulators FUSE, FBP, and FIR

Hsin Hao Hsiao; Abhinav Nath; Chi Yen Lin; Ewa J. Folta-Stogniew; Elizabeth Rhoades; Demetrios T. Braddock

Human c-myc is critical for cell homeostasis and growth but is a potent oncogenic factor if improperly regulated. The c-myc far-upstream element (FUSE) melts into single-stranded DNA upon active transcription, and the noncoding strand FUSE recruits an activator [the FUSE-binding protein (FBP)] and a repressor [the FBP-interacting repressor (FIR)] to fine-tune c-myc transcription in a real-time manner. Despite detailed biological experiments describing this unique mode of transcriptional regulation, quantitative measurements of the physical constants regulating the protein-DNA interactions remain lacking. Here, we first demonstrate that the two FUSE strands adopt different conformations upon melting, with the noncoding strand DNA in an extended, linear form. FBP binds to the linear noncoding FUSE with a dissociation constant in the nanomolar range. FIR binds to FUSE more weakly, having its modest dissociation constants in the low micromolar range. FIR is monomeric under near-physiological conditions but upon binding of FUSE dimerizes into a 2:1 FIR(2)-FUSE complex mediated by the RRMs. In the tripartite interaction, our analysis suggests a stepwise addition of FIR onto an activating FBP-FUSE complex to form a quaternary FIR(2)-FBP-FUSE inhibitory complex. Our quantitative characterization enhances understanding of DNA strand preference and the mechanism of the stepwise complex formation in the FUSE-FBP-FIR regulatory system.


Methods in Enzymology | 2010

Single-Molecule Fluorescence Spectroscopy Using Phospholipid Bilayer Nanodiscs

Abhinav Nath; Adam J. Trexler; Peter Koo; Andrew D. Miranker; William M. Atkins; Elizabeth Rhoades

Nanodiscs are a new class of model membranes that are being used to solubilize and study a range of integral membrane proteins and membrane-associated proteins. Unlike other model membranes, the Nanodisc bilayer is bounded by a scaffold protein coat that confers enhanced stability and a narrow particle size distribution. The bilayer diameter can be precisely controlled by changing the diameter of the protein coat. All these properties make Nanodiscs excellent model membranes for single-molecule fluorescence applications. In this chapter, we describe our work using Nanodiscs to apply total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM), fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS), and Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) to study the integral membrane protein cytochrome P450 3A4 and the peripheral membrane-binding proteins islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) and alpha-synuclein, respectively. The monodisperse size distribution of Nanodiscs enhances control over the oligomeric state of the membrane protein of interest, and facilitates accurate solution-based measurements as well. Nanodiscs also comprise an excellent system to stably immobilize integral membrane proteins in a bilayer without covalent modification, enabling a range of surface-based experiments where accurate localization of the protein of interest is required.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2006

A Theoretical Validation of the Substrate Depletion Approach to Determining Kinetic Parameters

Abhinav Nath; William M. Atkins

The substrate depletion approach is an increasingly popular alternative to the traditional method (observing product formation) of determining the kinetic parameters (KM and Vmax) of an enzyme. Obach and Reed-Hagen (Drug Metab Dispos 30:831–837, 2002) used an empirical relationship between substrate depletion rate constants and initial substrate concentration to determine kinetic parameters for a number of cytochrome P450-catalyzed reactions. We present a proof that this relationship can be derived from the Michaelis-Menten equation and, therefore, that kinetic parameters obtained by the substrate depletion approach are equivalent and comparable to those obtained by the traditional product formation approach. Analysis of a simulated data set produced similar kinetic parameters regardless of which approach was used, confirming the theoretical result.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

A Membrane‐Bound Antiparallel Dimer of Rat Islet Amyloid Polypeptide

Abhinav Nath; Andrew D. Miranker; Elizabeth Rhoades

A Membrane-bound Antiparallel Dimer of Rat Islet Amyloid Polypeptide IAPP, an amyloidogenic peptide linked to type 2 diabetes, forms a heterogeneous mixture of membrane-bound oligomers implicated in cytotoxicity and fibril formation. Structural characterization of these species has been a long-standing problem. Here, we examine the structure of a previously unrecognized antiparallel dimer of rat IAPP bound to anionic membrane Nanodiscs, using a novel combination of single-pair FRET and Rosetta model refinement.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Allosteric Effects on Substrate Dissociation from Cytochrome P450 3A4 in Nanodiscs Observed by Ensemble and Single-Molecule Fluorescence Spectroscopy

Abhinav Nath; Peter Koo; Elizabeth Rhoades; William M. Atkins

Cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4 is a major human drug-metabolizing enzyme and displays pharmacologically relevant allosteric kinetics caused by multiple substrate and/or effector binding. Here, in the first single-molecule (SM) fluorescence studies of CYPs, we use total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to measure residence times of the fluorescent dye Nile Red in CYP3A4 incorporated in surface-immobilized lipid Nanodiscs, with and without the effector alpha-naphthoflavone. We find direct evidence that CYP3A4 effectors can decrease substrate off-rates, providing a possible mechanism for effector-mediated enhancement of substrate metabolism. These interesting results highlight the potential of SM methods in studies of CYP allosteric mechanisms.


Journal of Virology | 2014

A Conformational Transition Observed in Single HIV-1 Gag Molecules during In Vitro Assembly of Virus-Like Particles

James B. Munro; Abhinav Nath; Michael Färber; Siddhartha A.K. Datta; Alan Rein; Elizabeth Rhoades; Walther Mothes

ABSTRACT The conformational changes within single HIV-1 Gag molecules that occur during assembly into immature viruses are poorly understood. Using an in vitro assembly assay, it has been proposed that HIV-1 Gag undergoes a conformational transition from a compact conformation in solution to an extended rod-like conformation in virus-like particles (VLPs). Here we used single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) to test this model by directly probing the conformation of single HIV-1 Gag molecules. We demonstrate that monomeric HIV-1 Gag lacking the p6 domain and the N-terminal myristoyl moiety is found in solution predominantly in a compact conformation. Gag in this conformation, and in the presence of nucleic acid, assembles into 30-nm-diameter particles. However, with the addition of inositol hexakisphosphate, Gag adopts a linear conformation and assembles into full-sized ∼100-to-150-nm-diameter VLPs. Parallel fluorescence correlation spectroscopy measurements show that this conformational transition occurs early in the assembly process when Gag oligomers are small, perhaps as early as upon dimerization. Thus, smFRET measurements confirm that HIV-1 Gag transitions from a compact to a linear conformation during the formation of VLPs. Our results are consistent with a model whereby binding of HIV-1 Gag to phosphoinositides at the plasma membrane stabilizes an extended conformation and promotes oligomerization into the radially aligned immature capsid. IMPORTANCE The establishment of single-molecule fluorescence techniques reveals the conformational state of individual HIV-1 Gag molecules prior to and during in vitro assembly into virus-like particles. The data demonstrate that Gag in distinct conformations forms particles with different morphologies. In the compact conformation, in the presence of nucleic acid, Gag forms spherical particles of a diameter of approximately 30 nm. In the extended conformation, Gag forms spherical virus-like particles of approximately 100-nm diameter. The adoption of the extended conformation required the presence of inositol hexakisphosphate in addition to nucleic acid. Our results are consistent with a model whereby binding of HIV-1 Gag to phosphoinositides at the plasma membrane stabilizes an extended conformation and promotes oligomerization into the radially aligned immature capsid.

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Elizabeth Rhoades

University of Pennsylvania

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William M. Atkins

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

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David Ortiz

University of Washington

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John J. Ferrie

University of Pennsylvania

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