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Dive into the research topics where Alfredo J. Guerra is active.

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Featured researches published by Alfredo J. Guerra.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

The Metalloregulatory Zinc Site in Streptococcus pneumoniae AdcR, a Zinc-activated MarR Family Repressor

Hermes Reyes-Caballero; Alfredo J. Guerra; Faith E. Jacobsen; Krystyna M. Kazmierczak; Darin M. Cowart; Uma Mahendra Kumar Koppolu; Robert A. Scott; Malcolm E. Winkler; David P. Giedroc

Streptococcus pneumoniae D39 AdcR (adhesin competence repressor) is the first metal-sensing member of the MarR (multiple antibiotic resistance repressor) family to be characterized. Expression profiling with a ΔadcR strain grown in liquid culture (brain-heart infusion) under microaerobic conditions revealed upregulation of 13 genes, including adcR and adcCBA, encoding a high-affinity ABC uptake system for zinc, and genes encoding cell-surface zinc-binding pneumococcal histidine triad (Pht) proteins and AdcAII (Lmb, laminin binding). The ΔadcR, H108Q and H112Q adcR mutant allelic strains grown in 0.2 mM Zn(II) exhibit a slow-growth phenotype and an approximately twofold increase in cell-associated Zn(II). Apo- and Zn(II)-bound AdcR are homodimers in solution and binding to a 28-mer DNA containing an adc operator is strongly stimulated by Zn(II) with K(DNA-Zn)=2.4 × 10(8) M(-1) (pH 6.0, 0.2 M NaCl, 25 °C). AdcR binds two Zn(II) per dimer, with stepwise Zn(II) affinities K(Zn1) and K(Zn2) of ≥10(9) M(-1) at pH 6.0 and ≥10(12) M(-1) at pH 8.0, and one to three lower affinity Zn(II) depending on the pH. X-ray absorption spectroscopy of the high-affinity site reveals a pentacoordinate N/O complex and no cysteine coordination, the latter finding corroborated by wild type-like functional properties of C30A AdcR. Alanine substitution of conserved residues His42 in the DNA-binding domain, and His108 and His112 in the C-terminal regulatory domain, abolish high-affinity Zn(II) binding and greatly reduce Zn(II)-activated binding to DNA. NMR studies reveal that these mutants adopt the same folded conformation as dimeric wild type apo-AdcR, but fail to conformationally switch upon Zn(II) binding. These studies implicate His42, His108 and H112 as metalloregulatory zinc ligands in S. pneumoniae AdcR.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Crystal Structure of the Zinc-dependent MarR Family Transcriptional Regulator AdcR in the Zn(II)-bound State

Alfredo J. Guerra; Charles E. Dann; David P. Giedroc

Streptococcus pneumoniae adhesin competence regulator (AdcR), the first metal-dependent member of the multiple antibiotic resistance regulator (MarR) family of proteins, represses the transcription of a high-affinity zinc-specific uptake transporter, a group of surface antigen zinc-binding pneumococcal histidine triad proteins (PhtA, PhtB, PhtD, and PhtE), and an AdcA homologue (AdcAII). The 2.0 Å resolution structure of Zn(II)-bound AdcR reveals a highly helical two-fold-symmetric dimer with two distinct metal-binding sites per protomer. Zn(II) is tetrahedrally coordinated by E24, H42, H108, and H112 in what defines the primary sensing site in AdcR. Site 2 is a tetracoordinate site whose function is currently unknown. NMR methyl group perturbation experiments reveal that Zn(II) drives a global change in the structure of apo-AdcR that stabilizes a conformation that is compatible with DNA binding. This co-repression mechanism is unprecedented in MarR transcriptional regulators.


Toxins | 2017

Structural Features of Apicomplexan Pore-Forming Proteins and Their Roles in Parasite Cell Traversal and Egress

Alfredo J. Guerra; Vern B. Carruthers

Apicomplexan parasites cause diseases, including malaria and toxoplasmosis, in a range of hosts, including humans. These intracellular parasites utilize pore-forming proteins that disrupt host cell membranes to either traverse host cells while migrating through tissues or egress from the parasite-containing vacuole after replication. This review highlights recent insight gained from the newly available three-dimensional structures of several known or putative apicomplexan pore-forming proteins that contribute to cell traversal or egress. These new structural advances suggest that parasite pore-forming proteins use distinct mechanisms to disrupt host cell membranes at multiple steps in parasite life cycles. How proteolytic processing, secretion, environment, and the accessibility of lipid receptors regulate the membranolytic activities of such proteins is also discussed.


Molecular Microbiology | 2017

A novel lipoate attachment enzyme is shared by Plasmodium and Chlamydia species

Gustavo A. Afanador; Alfredo J. Guerra; Russell P. Swift; Ryan E. Rodriguez; David Bartee; Krista A. Matthews; Arne Schön; Ernesto Freire; Caren L. Freel Meyers; Sean T. Prigge

Lipoate is an essential cofactor for enzymes that are important for central metabolism and other processes. In malaria parasites, scavenged lipoate from the human host is required for survival. The Plasmodium falciparum mitochondrion contains two enzymes (PfLipL1 and PfLipL2) that are responsible for activating mitochondrial proteins through the covalent attachment of lipoate (lipoylation). Lipoylation occurs via a novel redox‐gated mechanism that remains poorly understood. We show that PfLipL1 functions as a redox switch that determines which downstream proteins will be activated. Based on the lipoate redox state, PfLipL1 either functions as a canonical lipoate ligase or as a lipoate activating enzyme which works in conjunction with PfLipL2. We demonstrate that PfLipL2 is a lipoyltransferase and is a member of a novel clade of lipoate attachment enzymes. We show that a LipL2 enzyme from Chlamydia trachomatis has similar activity, demonstrating conservation between intracellular pathogens from different phylogenetic kingdoms and supporting the hypothesis that an early ancestor of malaria parasites once contained a chlamydial endosymbiont. Redox‐dependent lipoylation may regulate processes such as central metabolism and oxidative defense pathways.


bioRxiv | 2018

Structural basis of Toxoplasma gondii Perforin-Like Protein 1 membrane interaction and activity during egress

Alfredo J. Guerra; Ou Zhang; Constance M. Bahr; My-Hang Huynh; James Delproposto; William Clay Brown; Zdzislaw Wawrzak; Nicole M. Koropatkin; Vern B. Carruthers

Intracellular pathogens must egress from the host cell to continue their infectious cycle. Apicomplexans are a phylum of intracellular protozoans that have evolved members of the membrane attack complex and perforin (MACPF) family of pore forming proteins to disrupt cellular membranes for traversing cells during tissue migration or egress from a replicative vacuole following intracellular reproduction. Previous work showed that the apicomplexan Toxoplasma gondii secretes a perforin-like protein (TgPLP1) that contains a C-terminal Domain (CTD) which is necessary for efficient parasite egress. However, the structural basis for CTD membrane binding and egress competency remained unknown. Here, we present evidence that TgPLP1 CTD prefers binding lipids that are abundant in the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer. Additionally, solving the high-resolution crystal structure of the TgPLP1 APCβ domain within the CTD reveals an unusual double-layered β-prism fold that resembles only one other protein of known structure. Three direct repeat sequences comprise subdomains, with each constituting a wall of the β-prism fold. One subdomain features a protruding hydrophobic loop with an exposed tryptophan at its tip. Spectrophotometric measurements of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence are consistent with insertion of the hydrophobic loop into a target membrane. Using CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing we show that parasite strains bearing mutations in the hydrophobic loop, including alanine substitution of the tip tryptophan, are equally deficient in egress as a strain lacking TgPLP1 altogether. Taken together our findings suggest a crucial role for the hydrophobic loop in anchoring TgPLP1 to the membrane to support its cytolytic activity and egress function. Author Summary Toxoplasma gondii has a complex life cycle that involves active invasion of the host cell, the formation of a replicative compartment, and egress from the replicative niche. T. gondii encodes a pore-forming protein, TgPLP1, that contains a C-terminal domain that is crucial for efficient exit from both the parasite containing vacuole and the host cell. However, the mechanism by which TgPLP1 recognizes and binds to the appropriate membrane is unclear. Here we use a combination of biochemistry, structural biology, and parasitology to identify the a preference of TgPLP1 for specific lipids and show that a loop within the structure of the C-terminal domain inserts into the membrane and is necessary for egress from the parasite containing vacuole. Our study sheds light into the determinants of membrane binding in TgPLP1 which may inform the overall mechanism of pore formation in similar systems


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Optimization of Dipeptidic Inhibitors of Cathepsin L for Improved Toxoplasma gondii Selectivity and CNS Permeability

Jeffery D. Zwicker; Nicolas A. Diaz; Alfredo J. Guerra; Paul D. Kirchhoff; Bo Wen; Duxin Sun; Vern B. Carruthers; Scott D. Larsen

The neurotropic protozoan Toxoplasma gondii is the second leading cause of death due to foodborne illness in the US, and has been designated as one of five neglected parasitic infections by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Currently, no treatment options exist for the chronic dormant-phase Toxoplasma infection in the central nervous system (CNS). T. gondii cathepsin L (TgCPL) has recently been implicated as a novel viable target for the treatment of chronic toxoplasmosis. In this study, we report the first body of SAR work aimed at developing potent inhibitors of TgCPL with selectivity vs the human cathepsin L. Starting from a known inhibitor of human cathepsin L, and guided by structure-based design, we were able to modulate the selectivity for Toxoplasma vs human CPL by nearly 50-fold while modifying physiochemical properties to be more favorable for metabolic stability and CNS penetrance. The overall potency of our inhibitors towards TgCPL was improved from 2 μM to as low as 110 nM and we successfully demonstrated that an optimized analog 18b is capable of crossing the BBB (0.5 brain/plasma). This work is an important first step toward development of a CNS-penetrant probe to validate TgCPL as a feasible target for the treatment of chronic toxoplasmosis.


Proteins | 2017

Crystal structure of lipoate-bound lipoate ligase 1, LipL1, from Plasmodium falciparum

Alfredo J. Guerra; Gustavo A. Afanador; Sean T. Prigge

Plasmodium falciparum lipoate protein ligase 1 (PfLipL1) is an ATP‐dependent ligase that belongs to the biotin/lipoate A/B protein ligase family (PFAM PF03099). PfLipL1 is the only known canonical lipoate ligase in Pf and functions as a redox switch between two lipoylation routes in the parasite mitochondrion. Here, we report the crystal structure of a deletion construct of PfLipL1 (PfLipL1Δ243‐279) bound to lipoate, and validate the lipoylation activity of this construct in both an in vitro lipoylation assay and a cell‐based lipoylation assay. This characterization represents the first step in understanding the redox dependence of the lipoylation mechanism in malaria parasites. Proteins 2017; 85:1777–1783.


Reference Module in Chemistry, Molecular Sciences and Chemical Engineering#R##N#Comprehensive Inorganic Chemistry II (Second Edition)#R##N#From Elements to Applications | 2013

Metal‐Regulated Gene Expression

Alfredo J. Guerra; David P. Giedroc

The chemistry of transition‐metal ions makes them both essential cofactors to vital processes in the cell as well as a source of reactive oxygen species that can have lethal consequences. The genes encoding proteins that collectively manage cellular metal ion homeostasis are under the transcriptional control of metalloregulatory proteins that harbor metal-specific coordination sites that allosterically regulate operator DNA binding. This chapter reviews recent efforts to understand the protein structure, coordination chemistry, and structural mechanisms of metal-dependent gene expression in prokaryotes and eukaryotes.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2012

Metal site occupancy and allosteric switching in bacterial metal sensor proteins

Alfredo J. Guerra; David P. Giedroc


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

Allosteric inhibition of a zinc-sensing transcriptional repressor: insights into the arsenic repressor (ArsR) family.

Gregory C. Campanello; Zhen Ma; Nicholas E. Grossoehme; Alfredo J. Guerra; Brian P. Ward; Richard D. DiMarchi; Yuzhen Ye; Charles E. Dann; David P. Giedroc

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David P. Giedroc

Indiana University Bloomington

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Sean T. Prigge

Johns Hopkins University

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Charles E. Dann

Indiana University Bloomington

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Faith E. Jacobsen

Indiana University Bloomington

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Krystyna M. Kazmierczak

Indiana University Bloomington

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Malcolm E. Winkler

Indiana University Bloomington

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