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Dive into the research topics where Afua Nyarko is active.

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Featured researches published by Afua Nyarko.


Biochemistry | 2004

The Intermediate Chain of Cytoplasmic Dynein Is Partially Disordered and Gains Structure upon Binding to Light-Chain LC8 †

Afua Nyarko; Michael Hare; Thomas S. Hays; Elisar Barbar

The N-terminal domain of dynein intermediate chain, IC(1-289), is highly disordered, but upon binding to dynein light-chain LC8, it undergoes a significant conformational change to a more ordered structure. Using circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy, we demonstrate that the change in conformation is due to an increase in the helical structure and to enhanced compactness in the environment of tryptophan 161. An increase in helical structure and compactness is also observed with trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), a naturally occurring osmolyte used here as a probe to identify regions with a propensity for induced folding. Global protection of IC(1-289) from protease digestion upon LC8 binding was localized to a segment that includes residues downstream of the LC8-binding site. Several smaller constructs of IC(1-289) containing the LC8-binding site and one of the predicted helix or coiled-coil segments were made. IC(1-143) shows no increase in helical structure upon binding, while IC(114-260) shows an increase in helical structure similar to what is observed with IC(1-289). Binding of IC(114-260) to LC8 was monitored by fluorescence and native gel electrophoresis and shows saturation of binding, a stoichiometry of 1:1, and moderate binding affinity. The induced folding of IC(1-289) upon LC8 binding suggests that LC8 could act through the intermediate chain to facilitate dynein assembly or regulate cargo-binding interactions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Potential role for phosphorylation in differential regulation of the assembly of dynein light chains

Yujuan Song; Gregory Benison; Afua Nyarko; Thomas S. Hays; Elisar Barbar

The homodimeric light chains LC8 and Tctex-1 are integral parts of the microtubule motor cytoplasmic dynein, as they directly associate with dynein intermediate chain IC and various cellular cargoes. These light chains appear to regulate assembly of the dynein complex by binding to and promoting dimerization of IC. In addition, both LC8 and Tctex-1 play roles in signaling, apoptosis, and neuronal development that are independent of their function in dynein, but it is unclear how these various activities are modulated. Both light chains undergo specific phosphorylation, and here we present biochemical and NMR analyses of phosphomimetic mutants that indicate how phosphorylation may regulate light chain function. For both LC8 and Tctex-1, phosphorylation promotes dissociation from IC while retaining their binding activity with other non-dynein proteins. Although LC8 and Tctex-1 are homologs having a common fold, their reduced affinity for IC upon phosphorylation arises by different mechanisms. In the case of Tctex-1, phosphorylation directly masks the IC binding site at the dimer interface, whereas for LC8, phosphorylation dissociates the dimer and indirectly eliminates the binding site. This modulation of the monomer-dimer equilibrium by phosphorylation provides a novel mechanism for discrimination among LC8 binding partners.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

A network of assembly factors is involved in remodeling rRNA elements during preribosome maturation

Jochen Baßler; Helge Paternoga; Iris Holdermann; Matthias Thoms; Sander Granneman; Clara Barrio-Garcia; Afua Nyarko; Woonghee Lee; Gunter Stier; Sarah A. Clark; Daniel Schraivogel; Martina Kallas; Roland Beckmann; David Tollervey; Elisar Barbar; Irmi Sinning; Ed Hurt

The assembly factor heterodimer Rsa4–Nsa2 binds to the preribosome and transmits remodeling energy from the force-generating ATPase Rea1 to facilitate relocation of ribosomal RNA elements during ribosome maturation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Light Chain-dependent Self-association of Dynein Intermediate Chain

Afua Nyarko; Elisar Barbar

Dynein light chains are bivalent dimers that bind two copies of dynein intermediate chain IC to form a cargo attachment subcomplex. The interaction of light chain LC8 with the natively disordered N-terminal domain of IC induces helix formation at distant IC sites in or near a region predicted to form a coiled-coil. This fostered the hypothesis that LC8 binding promotes IC self-association to form a coiled-coil or other interchain helical structure. However, recent studies show that the predicted coiled-coil sequence partially overlaps the light chain LC7 recognition sequence on IC, raising questions about the apparently contradictory effects of LC8 and LC7. Here, we use NMR and fluorescence quenching to localize IC self-association to residues within the predicted coiled-coil that also correspond to helix 1 of the LC7 recognition sequence. LC8 binding promotes IC self-association of helix 1 from each of two IC chains, whereas LC7 binding reverses self-association by incorporating the same residues into two symmetrical, but distant, helices of the LC7-IC complex. Isothermal titration experiments confirm the distinction of LC8 enhancement of IC self-association and LC7 binding effects. When all three light chains are bound, IC self-association is shifted to another region. Such flexibility in association modes may function in maintaining a stable and versatile light chain-intermediate chain assembly under changing cellular conditions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Multiple Recognition Motifs in Nucleoporin Nup159 Provide a Stable and Rigid Nup159-Dyn2 Assembly

Afua Nyarko; Yujuan Song; Jiří Nováček; Lukáš Žídek; Elisar Barbar

Background: Nucleoporin Nup159 has multiple recognition motifs for Dyn2, the yeast ortholog of LC8. Results: Nup159 is intrinsically disordered and binds Dyn2 cooperatively at five of the six recognition motifs. Conclusion: Initial binding aligns two Nup chains in a bivalent scaffold; motifs 5 and 6 underlie rigidity. Significance: Multiple recognition sites provide entropy/enthalpy balance to a stable yet entropically unfavorable rigid complex. Dyn2 is the yeast ortholog of the molecular hub LC8, which binds disordered proteins and promotes their self-association and higher order assembly. Dyn2 is proposed to dimerize and stabilize the Nup82-Nsp1-Nup159 complex of the nuclear pore assembly through its interaction with nucleoporin Nup159. Nup159 has six LC8 recognition motifs separated by short linkers. NMR experiments reported here show that the Dyn2 binding domain of Nup159 is intrinsically disordered and that binding of one equivalent of Dyn2 dimer aligns two Nup159 chains along the full Dyn2 binding domain to form a bivalent scaffold that promotes binding of other Dyn2 dimers. Isothermal titration calorimetry of Dyn2 binding to Nup constructs of increasing lengths determine that the third LC8 recognition motifs does not bind Dyn2. A new approach to identifying active LC8 recognition motifs based on NMR-detected β-sheet propensities is presented. Isothermal titration calorimetry experiments also show that, due to unfavorable entropy changes, a Nup-Dyn2 complex with three Dyn2 dimers is more stable than the wild-type complex with five Dyn2 dimers. The calorimetric results argue that, from a thermodynamics perspective, only three Dyn2 dimers are needed for optimal stability and suggest that the evolutionary adaptation of multiple tandem LC8 recognition motifs imparts to the complex other properties such as rigidity and a kink in the rod-like structure. These findings extend the repertoire of functions of intrinsically disordered protein to fine-tuning and versatile assembly of higher order macromolecular complexes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Intrinsic Disorder in Dynein Intermediate Chain Modulates Its Interactions with NudE and Dynactin

Afua Nyarko; Yujuan Song; Elisar Barbar

Background: NudE and dynactin regulate dynein through their interaction with the intermediate chain subunit (IC). Results: NudE binds one region of the bi-segmental IC binding footprint of p150Glued to form a heterotetrameric complex. Conclusion: NudE and p150Glued bind IC with similar affinity but with distinct binding modes. Significance: These distinct binding modes elucidate crucial new insight into dynein regulation. The functional diversity of cytoplasmic dynein is in part attributed to multiple interactions between noncatalytic dynein subunits and an array of regulatory proteins. This study focuses on the interaction between the dynein intermediate chain subunit (IC) and a dynein regulator protein (NudE). We use isothermal titration calorimetry and NMR spectroscopy to map their interacting sections to their respective N-terminal domains, which are predicted to form dimeric coiled-coils. Interestingly, the specific residues within IC that interact with NudE are a subset of the bi-segmental binding region reported for p150Glued, a subunit of the dynein activator protein dynactin. Although the IC binding domains of both NudE and p150Glued form dimeric coiled-coils and bind IC at a common site, we observe distinct binding modes for each regulatory protein: 1) NudE binds region 1 of the bi-segmental binding footprint of p150Glued, whereas p150Glued requires regions 1 and 2 to match the binding affinity of NudE with region 1 alone. 2) Compared with unbound IC, NudE-bound IC shows a slight increase in flexibility in region 2, in contrast to the increase in ordered structure observed for p150Glued-bound IC (Morgan, J. L., Song, Y., and Barbar, E. (2011) J. Biol. Chem. 286, 39349–39359). 3) Although NudE has a higher affinity for the common binding segment on IC, when all three proteins are in solution, IC preferentially binds p150Glued. These results underscore the importance of a bi-segmental binding region of IC and disorder in region 2 and flanking linkers in selecting which regulatory protein binds IC.


Biophysical Chemistry | 2011

Conformational dynamics promote binding diversity of dynein light chain LC8

Afua Nyarko; Justin Hall; Andrea Hall; Michael Hare; Joachim Kremerskothen; Elisar Barbar

A highly conserved and ubiquitous protein known as LC8 binds over twenty different partners, characteristic of a molecular hub (Barbar, 2008 Biochemistry, 47, 503-508). Structural studies of LC8 complexes with binding partners having diverse recognition sequences show that the same binding groove of LC8 accommodates the various binding motifs. Here we use thermodynamics and dynamics measurements of LC8 complexes to group LC8 binding partners in two categories: those whose binding is enthalpically driven and those that are entropically favored. Peptides that are enthalpically driven completely silence the millisecond-microsecond relaxation signal, suggesting a significant rigidifying of the binding groove, while peptides in the entropically favored group exhibit the same conformational dynamics as the free protein, suggesting that the peptide sits loosely in the binding groove and so retains flexibility of the groove, and presumably of the bound peptide. The inherent disorder in the LC8 binding groove and in LC8 binding partners allows both types of binding, accounts for the lack of a conserved recognition consensus motif and underlies the binding specificity and broad selectivity observed in LC8 binding.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Solution NMR Structures of Pyrenophora tritici-repentis ToxB and Its Inactive Homolog Reveal Potential Determinants of Toxin Activity

Afua Nyarko; Kiran Kumar Singarapu; Melania Figueroa; Viola A. Manning; Iovanna Pandelova; Thomas J. Wolpert; Lynda M. Ciuffetti; Elisar Barbar

Background: ToxB is a proteinaceous toxin but its homolog toxb has no toxic activity. Results: Both adopt a β-sandwich fold stabilized by two disulfide bonds but differ in the dynamics of one sandwich half. Conclusion: Toxicity is correlated with decreased compactness, increased flexibility, and polymorphism in an active site loop. Significance: ToxB activity depends on interplay between internal dynamics and interactions with putative targets. Pyrenophora tritici-repentis Ptr ToxB (ToxB) is a proteinaceous host-selective toxin produced by Pyrenophora tritici-repentis (P. tritici-repentis), a plant pathogenic fungus that causes the disease tan spot of wheat. One feature that distinguishes ToxB from other host-selective toxins is that it has naturally occurring homologs in non-pathogenic P. tritici-repentis isolates that lack toxic activity. There are no high-resolution structures for any of the ToxB homologs, or for any protein with >30% sequence identity, and therefore what underlies activity remains an open question. Here, we present the NMR structures of ToxB and its inactive homolog Ptr toxb. Both proteins adopt a β-sandwich fold comprising three strands in each half that are bridged together by two disulfide bonds. The inactive toxb, however, shows higher flexibility localized to the sequence-divergent β-sandwich half. The absence of toxic activity is attributed to a more open structure in the vicinity of one disulfide bond, higher flexibility, and residue differences in an exposed loop that likely impacts interaction with putative targets. We propose that activity is regulated by perturbations in a putative active site loop and changes in dynamics distant from the site of activity. Interestingly, the new structures identify AvrPiz-t, a secreted avirulence protein produced by the rice blast fungus, as a structural homolog to ToxB. This homology suggests that fungal proteins involved in either disease susceptibility such as ToxB or resistance such as AvrPiz-t may have a common evolutionary origin.


Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2015

Polybivalency and Disordered Proteins in Ordering Macromolecular Assemblies

Elisar Barbar; Afua Nyarko

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are prevalent in macromolecular assemblies and are thought to mediate protein recognition in complex regulatory processes and signaling pathways. The formation of a polybivalent scaffold is a key process by which IDPs drive early steps in macromolecular assemblies. Three intrinsically disordered proteins, IC, Swallow and Nup159, are core components, respectively, of cytoplasmic dynein, bicoid mRNA localization apparatus, and nuclear pore complexes. In all three systems, the hub protein LC8 recognizes on the IDP, short linear motifs that are fully disordered in the apo form, but adopt a β-strand when bound to LC8. The IDP/LC8 complex forms a bivalent scaffold primed to bind additional bivalent ligands. Scaffold formation also promotes self-association and/or higher order organization of the IDP components at a site distant from LC8 binding. Rigorous thermodynamic analyses imply that association of additional bivalent ligands is driven by entropic effects where the first binding event is weak but subsequent binding of additional ligands occurs with higher affinity. Here, we review specific examples of macromolecular assemblies in which polybivalency of aligned IDP duplexes not only enhances binding affinity and results in formation of a stable complex but also compensates unfavorable steric and enthalpic interactions. We propose that polybivalent scaffold assembly involving IDPs and LC8-like proteins is a general process in the cell biology of a class of multi-protein structures that are stable yet fine-tuned for diverse cellular requirements.


Biochemistry | 2013

Structural Features of LC8-Induced Self-Association of Swallow

Ariam I. Kidane; Yujuan Song; Afua Nyarko; Justin Hall; Michael Hare; Frank Löhr; Elisar Barbar

Cell functions depend on the collective activity of protein networks within which a few proteins, called hubs, participate in a large number of interactions. Dynein light chain LC8, first discovered as a subunit of the motor protein dynein, is considered to have a role broader than that of dynein, and its participation in diverse systems fits the description of a hub. Among its partners is Swallow with which LC8 is essential for proper localization of bicoid mRNA at the anterior cortex of Drosophila oocytes. Why LC8 is essential in this process is not clear, but emerging evidence suggests that LC8 functions by promoting self-association and/or structural organization of its diverse binding partners. This work addresses the energetics and structural features of LC8-induced Swallow self-association distant from LC8 binding. Mutational design based on a hypothetical helical wheel, intermonomer nuclear Overhauser effects assigned to residues expected at interface positions, and circular dichroism spectral characteristics indicate that the LC8-promoted dimer of Swallow is a coiled coil. Secondary chemical shifts and (15)N backbone relaxation identify the boundaries and distinguishing structural features of the coiled coil. Thermodynamic analysis of Swallow polypeptides designed to decouple self-association from LC8 binding reveals that the higher binding affinity of the engineered bivalent Swallow is of purely entropic origin and that the linker separating the coiled coil from the LC8 binding site remains disordered. We speculate that the LC8-promoted coiled coil is critical for bicoid mRNA localization because it favors structural organization of Swallow, which except for the central LC8-promoted coiled coil is primarily disordered.

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Michael Hare

University of Minnesota

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Yujuan Song

Oregon State University

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Justin Hall

Oregon State University

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P.A. Karplus

Oregon State University

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Frank Löhr

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Andrea Hall

Oregon State University

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