Alan M. Sandercock
University of Cambridge
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Featured researches published by Alan M. Sandercock.
Nature Protocols | 2008
Brandon T. Ruotolo; Justin L. P. Benesch; Alan M. Sandercock; Suk Joon Hyung; Carol V. Robinson
Here we describe a detailed protocol for both data collection and interpretation with respect to ion mobility–mass spectrometry analysis of large protein assemblies. Ion mobility is a technique that can separate gaseous ions based on their size and shape. Specifically, within this protocol, we cover general approaches to data interpretation, methods of predicting whether specific model structures for a given protein assembly can be separated by ion mobility, and generalized strategies for data normalization and modeling. The protocol also covers basic instrument settings and best practices for both observation and detection of large noncovalent protein complexes by ion mobility–mass spectrometry.
Science | 2005
Brandon T. Ruotolo; Kevin Giles; Iain Campuzano; Alan M. Sandercock; Robert Harold Bateman; Carol V. Robinson
We have examined the architecture of a protein complex in the absence of bulk water. By determining collision cross sections of assemblies of the trp RNA binding protein, TRAP, we established that the 11-membered ring topology of the complex can be maintained within a mass spectrometer. We also found that the binding of tryptophan enhances the stability of the ring structure and that addition of a specific RNA molecule increases the size of the complex and prevents structural collapse. These results provide definitive evidence that protein quaternary structure can be maintained in the absence of bulk water and highlight the potential of ion mobility separation for defining shapes of heterogeneous macromolecular assemblies.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Min Zhou; Alan M. Sandercock; Christopher S. Fraser; Gabriela Ridlova; Elaine Stephens; Matthew R. Schenauer; Theresa Yokoi-Fong; Daniel Barsky; Julie A. Leary; John W. B. Hershey; Jennifer A. Doudna; Carol V. Robinson
The eukaryotic initiation factor 3 (eIF3) plays an important role in translation initiation, acting as a docking site for several eIFs that assemble on the 40S ribosomal subunit. Here, we use mass spectrometry to probe the subunit interactions within the human eIF3 complex. Our results show that the 13-subunit complex can be maintained intact in the gas phase, enabling us to establish unambiguously its stoichiometry and its overall subunit architecture via tandem mass spectrometry and solution disruption experiments. Dissociation takes place as a function of ionic strength to form three stable modules eIF3(c:d:e:l:k), eIF3(f:h:m), and eIF3(a:b:i:g). These modules are linked by interactions between subunits eIF3b:c and eIF3c:h. We confirmed our interaction map with the homologous yeast eIF3 complex that contains the five core subunits found in the human eIF3 and supplemented our data with results from immunoprecipitation. These results, together with the 27 subcomplexes identified with increasing ionic strength, enable us to define a comprehensive interaction map for this 800-kDa species. Our interaction map allows comparison of free eIF3 with that bound to the hepatitis C virus internal ribosome entry site (HCV-IRES) RNA. We also compare our eIF3 interaction map with related complexes, containing evolutionarily conserved protein domains, and reveal the location of subunits containing RNA recognition motifs proximal to the decoding center of the 40S subunit of the ribosome.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Precious G. Motshwene; Martin C. Moncrieffe; Jorg Gunter Grossmann; Cheng C. Kao; Murali Ayaluru; Alan M. Sandercock; Carol V. Robinson; Eicke Latz
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) mediate responses to pathogen-associated molecules as part of the vertebrate innate immune response to infection. Receptor dimerization is coupled to downstream signal transduction by the recruitment of a post-receptor complex containing the adaptor protein MyD88 and the IRAK protein kinases. In this work, we show that the death domains of human MyD88 and IRAK-4 assemble into closed complexes having unusual stoichiometries of 7:4 and 8:4, the Myddosome. Formation of the Myddosome is likely to be a key event for TLR4 signaling in vivo as we show here that pathway activation requires that the receptors cluster into lipid rafts. Taken together, these findings indicate that TLR activation causes the formation of a highly oligomeric signaling platform analogous to the death-inducing signaling complex of the Fas receptor pathway.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2006
Sam Li; Alan M. Sandercock; Paul T. Conduit; Carol V. Robinson; Roger Williams; John V. Kilmartin
Centrins are calmodulin-like proteins present in centrosomes and yeast spindle pole bodies (SPBs) and have essential functions in their duplication. The Saccharomyces cerevisiae centrin, Cdc31p, binds Sfi1p on multiple conserved repeats; both proteins localize to the SPB half-bridge, where the new SPB is assembled. The crystal structures of Sfi1p–centrin complexes containing several repeats show Sfi1p as an α helix with centrins wrapped around each repeat and similar centrin–centrin contacts between each repeat. Electron microscopy (EM) shadowing of an Sfi1p–centrin complex with 15 Sfi1 repeats and 15 centrins bound showed filaments 60 nm long, compatible with all the Sfi1 repeats as a continuous α helix. Immuno-EM localization of the Sfi1p N and C termini showed Sfi1p–centrin filaments spanning the length of the half-bridge with the Sfi1p N terminus at the SPB. This suggests a model for SPB duplication where the half-bridge doubles in length by association of the Sfi1p C termini, thereby providing a new Sfi1p N terminus to initiate SPB assembly.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Monique Gangloff; Ayaluru Murali; Jin Xiong; Christopher J. Arnot; Alexander N.R. Weber; Alan M. Sandercock; Carol V. Robinson; Robert T. Sarisky; Andreas Holzenburg; Cheng Kao
The Drosophila Toll receptor, which functions in both embryonic patterning and innate immunity to fungi and Gram-positive bacteria, is activated by a dimeric cytokine ligand, Spätzle (Spz). Previous studies have suggested that one Spz cross-links two Toll receptor molecules to form an activated complex. Here we report electron microscopy structures of the Toll ectodomain in the absence and presence of Spz. Contrary to expectations, Spz does not directly cross-link two Toll ectodomains. Instead, Spz binding at the N-terminal end of Toll predominantly induces the formation of a 2:2 complex, with two sites of interaction between the ectodomain chains, one located near to the N terminus of the solenoid and the other between the C-terminal juxtamembrane sequences. Moreover, Toll undergoes a ligand-induced conformational change, becoming more tightly curved than in the apo form. The unexpected 2:2 complex was confirmed by mass spectrometry under native conditions. These results suggest that activation of Toll is an allosteric mechanism induced by an end-on binding mode of its ligand Spz.
Chemistry & Biology | 2015
Anargyros Politis; Carla Schmidt; Elina Tjioe; Alan M. Sandercock; Keren Lasker; Yuliya Gordiyenko; Daniel Russel; Andrej Sali; Carol V. Robinson
Summary Describing, understanding, and modulating the function of the cell require elucidation of the structures of macromolecular assemblies. Here, we describe an integrative method for modeling heteromeric complexes using as a starting point disassembly pathways determined by native mass spectrometry (MS). In this method, the pathway data and other available information are encoded as a scoring function on the positions of the subunits of the complex. The method was assessed on its ability to reproduce the native contacts in five benchmark cases with simulated MS data and two cases with real MS data. To illustrate the power of our method, we purified the yeast initiation factor 3 (eIF3) complex and characterized it by native MS and chemical crosslinking MS. We established substoichiometric binding of eIF5 and derived a model for the five-subunit eIF3 complex, at domain level, consistent with its role as a scaffold for other initiation factors.
Chemical Communications | 2001
Tsung-Lin Li; Oliver W. Choroba; Elizabeth H. Charles; Alan M. Sandercock; Dudley H. Williams; Jonathan B. Spencer
ORF22 from the chloroeremomycin gene cluster has been cloned, expressed and characterised as a hydroxymandelate oxidase (HmO) that is involved in the formation of both (S)-4-hydroxyphenylglycine and (S)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine.
Proteins | 2009
Kazuki Kurimoto; Kanako Kuwasako; Alan M. Sandercock; Satoru Unzai; Carol V. Robinson; Yutaka Muto; Shigeyuki Yokoyama
The human AU RNA binding protein/enoyl‐Coenzyme A hydratase (AUH) is a 3‐hydroxy‐3‐methylglutaconyl‐CoA dehydratase in the leucine degradation pathway. It also possesses an RNA‐binding activity to AUUU repeats, which involves no known conserved RNA‐binding domains and is seemingly unrelated to the enzymatic activity. In this study, we performed mass spectrometric analyses to elucidate the oligomeric states of AUH in the presence and absence of RNA. With a short RNA (AUUU) or without RNA, AUH mainly exists as a trimer in solution. On the other hand, the AUH trimer dimerizes upon binding to one molecule of a long RNA containing 24 repeats of the AUUU motif, (AUUU)24A. AUH was crystallized with the long RNA. Although the RNA was disordered in the crystalline lattice, the AUH structure was determined as an asymmetric dimer of trimers with a kink in the alignment of the trimer axes, resulting in the formation of two clefts with significantly different sizes. Proteins 2009.
Archive | 2007
Alan M. Sandercock; Carol V. Robinson
Since the discovery over a decade ago that noncovalent protein–ligand interactions could be maintained in the gas phase of a mass spectrometer, the technique has been applied with great success to a number of problems in structural biology. These developments arose directly from the development in the late 1980s of ‘‘soft’’ methods of ionizing samples without fragmentation, and in particular electrospray ionization (ESI) (Fenn et al., 1989). Mass spectrometry has now been applied to the study of a growing range of complexes, reaching molecular masses of megadaltons (MDa) in the case of ribosomes (Rostom et al., 2000; Hanson et al., 2003, 2004; Hanson and Robinson, 2004; Videler et al., 2005).