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Dive into the research topics where Amanda Miguel is active.

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Featured researches published by Amanda Miguel.


Science | 2017

GTPase activity-coupled treadmilling of the bacterial tubulin FtsZ organizes septal cell wall synthesis

Xinxing Yang; Zhixin Lyu; Amanda Miguel; Ryan McQuillen; Kerwyn Casey Huang; Jie Xiao

Coordinating cell wall synthesis and cell division Most bacteria are protected by peptidoglycan cell walls, which must be remodeled to split the cell. Cell division requires the tubulin homolog FtsZ, a highly conserved cytoskeletal polymer that specifies the future site of division. Bisson-Filho et al. and Yang et al. found that the dynamic treadmilling of FtsZ filaments controls both the location and activity of the associated cell wall synthetic enzymes. This creates discrete sites of cell wall synthesis that circle around the division plane to divide the cell. Science, this issue p. 739, p. 744 The bacterial tubulin FtsZ uses guanosine triphosphate hydrolysis to power treadmilling, organizing processive synthesis of the septal cell wall. The bacterial tubulin FtsZ is the central component of the cell division machinery, coordinating an ensemble of proteins involved in septal cell wall synthesis to ensure successful constriction. How cells achieve this coordination is unknown. We found that in Escherichia coli cells, FtsZ exhibits dynamic treadmilling predominantly determined by its guanosine triphosphatase activity. The treadmilling dynamics direct the processive movement of the septal cell wall synthesis machinery but do not limit the rate of septal synthesis. In FtsZ mutants with severely reduced treadmilling, the spatial distribution of septal synthesis and the molecular composition and ultrastructure of the septal cell wall were substantially altered. Thus, FtsZ treadmilling provides a mechanism for achieving uniform septal cell wall synthesis to enable correct polar morphology.


Nature Communications | 2015

The bacterial tubulin FtsZ requires its intrinsically disordered linker to direct robust cell wall construction

Kousik Sundararajan; Amanda Miguel; Samantha M. Desmarais; Elizabeth L. Meier; Kerwyn Casey Huang; Erin D. Goley

The bacterial GTPase FtsZ forms a cytokinetic ring at midcell, recruits the division machinery, and orchestrates membrane and peptidoglycan cell wall invagination. However, the mechanism for FtsZ regulation of peptidoglycan metabolism is unknown. The FtsZ GTPase domain is separated from its membrane-anchoring C-terminal conserved (CTC) peptide by a disordered C-terminal linker (CTL). Here, we investigate CTL function in Caulobacter crescentus. Strikingly, production of FtsZ lacking the CTL (ΔCTL) is lethal: cells become filamentous, form envelope bulges, and lyse, resembling treatment with β-lactam antibiotics. This phenotype is produced by FtsZ polymers bearing the CTC and a CTL shorter than 14 residues. Peptidoglycan synthesis still occurs downstream of ΔCTL, however cells expressing ΔCTL exhibit reduced peptidoglycan crosslinking and longer glycan strands than wildtype. Importantly, midcell proteins are still recruited to sites of ΔCTL assembly. We propose that FtsZ regulates peptidoglycan metabolism through a CTL-dependent mechanism that extends beyond simple protein recruitment.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Disruption of lipid homeostasis in the Gram-negative cell envelope activates a novel cell death pathway

Holly A. Sutterlin; Handuo Shi; Kerrie L. May; Amanda Miguel; Somya Khare; Kerwyn Casey Huang; Thomas J. Silhavy

Significance The cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria contains two membranes and a cell wall located in the aqueous compartment between them. The outer membrane (OM) functions as a barrier that contributes to antibiotic resistance. We describe a dominant mutation in a gene for an OM lipoprotein that leads to cell death under starvation conditions in medium with limited cation concentrations. We show that death occurs not by rapid cell lysis but by a previously uncharacterized mechanism involving flow of material from the inner membrane to the OM that results in rupture of the inner membrane and the slow leakage of cytoplasmic contents. Our study highlights the vital need for balanced synthesis across the Gram-negative envelope and may empower the development of new therapeutics. Gram-negative bacteria balance synthesis of the outer membrane (OM), cell wall, and cytoplasmic contents during growth via unknown mechanisms. Here, we show that a dominant mutation (designated mlaA*, maintenance of lipid asymmetry) that alters MlaA, a lipoprotein that removes phospholipids from the outer leaflet of the OM of Escherichia coli, increases OM permeability, lipopolysaccharide levels, drug sensitivity, and cell death in stationary phase. Surprisingly, single-cell imaging revealed that death occurs after protracted loss of OM material through vesiculation and blebbing at cell-division sites and compensatory shrinkage of the inner membrane, eventually resulting in rupture and slow leakage of cytoplasmic contents. The death of mlaA* cells was linked to fatty acid depletion and was not affected by membrane depolarization, suggesting that lipids flow from the inner membrane to the OM in an energy-independent manner. Suppressor analysis suggested that the dominant mlaA* mutation activates phospholipase A, resulting in increased levels of lipopolysaccharide and OM vesiculation that ultimately undermine the integrity of the cell envelope by depleting the inner membrane of phospholipids. This novel cell-death pathway suggests that balanced synthesis across both membranes is key to the mechanical integrity of the Gram-negative cell envelope.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

High-throughput, Highly Sensitive Analyses of Bacterial Morphogenesis Using Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography.

Samantha M. Desmarais; Carolina Tropini; Amanda Miguel; Felipe Cava; Russell D. Monds; Miguel A. de Pedro; Kerwyn Casey Huang

Background: HPLC enables quantification of bacterial cell-wall composition, yet systematic studies across strains, species, and chemical perturbations are lacking. Results: UPLC coupled to computational modeling enables submicroliter injection volumes, and was applied to systematic analysis of several Gram-negative species. Conclusion: Composition is largely decoupled from morphology, although large interspecies differences were evident. Significance: UPLC and automated analysis accelerate discovery regarding peptidoglycan and physiology. The bacterial cell wall is a network of glycan strands cross-linked by short peptides (peptidoglycan); it is responsible for the mechanical integrity of the cell and shape determination. Liquid chromatography can be used to measure the abundance of the muropeptide subunits composing the cell wall. Characteristics such as the degree of cross-linking and average glycan strand length are known to vary across species. However, a systematic comparison among strains of a given species has yet to be undertaken, making it difficult to assess the origins of variability in peptidoglycan composition. We present a protocol for muropeptide analysis using ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) and demonstrate that UPLC achieves resolution comparable with that of HPLC while requiring orders of magnitude less injection volume and a fraction of the elution time. We also developed a software platform to automate the identification and quantification of chromatographic peaks, which we demonstrate has improved accuracy relative to other software. This combined experimental and computational methodology revealed that peptidoglycan composition was approximately maintained across strains from three Gram-negative species despite taxonomical and morphological differences. Peptidoglycan composition and density were maintained after we systematically altered cell size in Escherichia coli using the antibiotic A22, indicating that cell shape is largely decoupled from the biochemistry of peptidoglycan synthesis. High-throughput, sensitive UPLC combined with our automated software for chromatographic analysis will accelerate the discovery of peptidoglycan composition and the molecular mechanisms of cell wall structure determination.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2015

Variations in the Binding Pocket of an Inhibitor of the Bacterial Division Protein FtsZ across Genotypes and Species

Amanda Miguel; Jen Hsin; Tianyun Liu; Grace W. Tang; Russ B. Altman; Kerwyn Casey Huang

The recent increase in antibiotic resistance in pathogenic bacteria calls for new approaches to drug-target selection and drug development. Targeting the mechanisms of action of proteins involved in bacterial cell division bypasses problems associated with increasingly ineffective variants of older antibiotics; to this end, the essential bacterial cytoskeletal protein FtsZ is a promising target. Recent work on its allosteric inhibitor, PC190723, revealed in vitro activity on Staphylococcus aureus FtsZ and in vivo antimicrobial activities. However, the mechanism of drug action and its effect on FtsZ in other bacterial species are unclear. Here, we examine the structural environment of the PC190723 binding pocket using PocketFEATURE, a statistical method that scores the similarity between pairs of small-molecule binding sites based on 3D structure information about the local microenvironment, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We observed that species and nucleotide-binding state have significant impacts on the structural properties of the binding site, with substantially disparate microenvironments for bacterial species not from the Staphylococcus genus. Based on PocketFEATURE analysis of MD simulations of S. aureus FtsZ bound to GTP or with mutations that are known to confer PC190723 resistance, we predict that PC190723 strongly prefers to bind Staphylococcus FtsZ in the nucleotide-bound state. Furthermore, MD simulations of an FtsZ dimer indicated that polymerization may enhance PC190723 binding. Taken together, our results demonstrate that a drug-binding pocket can vary significantly across species, genetic perturbations, and in different polymerization states, yielding important information for the further development of FtsZ inhibitors.


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Conformational Properties of Kinesin's Neck Linker Across Species

Jason Doornenbal; Intisar Shaheed; Amanda Miguel; David Ando; Ajay Gopinathan

Kinesin I, a homodimeric motor protein facilitates the movement of cellular cargo and vesicles toward the membrane, using microtubules as a bridge. Kinesin contains a short disordered neck linker region between the motor head and ordered stalk. The flexibility of the neck linker is a key parameter that governs the overall properties of the kinesin stepping mechanism. However, to date, our knowledge about the molecular structure and dynamics of this region remains incomplete. In order to explore its mechanical properties and propensity for preferred conformations, we conducted 1 microsecond implicit solvent molecular dynamic simulations using Gromacs with the AMBER force field. We analyzed the overall twist angle of the neck linker as a function of time and found that the twist angle distribution is bimodal indicating that the neck linker may have two preferred conformations. To determine the generality of this result, we ran simulations on disordered neck linker regions from multiple species including fruit fly, human and mouse and found that this appeared to be a generic feature of the kinesin I neck linker region.


Cell | 2017

A Periplasmic polymer curves vibrio cholerae and promotes pathogenesis

Thomas M. Bartlett; Benjamin P. Bratton; Amit Duvshani; Amanda Miguel; Ying Sheng; Nicholas R. Martin; Jeffrey Nguyen; Alexandre Persat; Samantha M. Desmarais; Michael S. VanNieuwenhze; Kerwyn Casey Huang; Jun Zhu; Joshua W. Shaevitz; Zemer Gitai


Cell systems | 2016

Mechanical Genomics Identifies Diverse Modulators of Bacterial Cell Stiffness

George K. Auer; Timothy K. Lee; Manohary Rajendram; Spencer Cesar; Amanda Miguel; Kerwyn Casey Huang; Douglas B. Weibel


Nature | 2018

The outer membrane is an essential load-bearing element in Gram-negative bacteria

Enrique R. Rojas; Gabriel Billings; Pascal D. Odermatt; George K. Auer; Lillian Zhu; Amanda Miguel; Fred Chang; Douglas B. Weibel; Julie A. Theriot; Kerwyn Casey Huang


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Variation in the Binding Pocket of an Inhibitor of the Bacterial Division Protein FtsZ Across Genotypes, Nucleotide States, and Species

Amanda Miguel; Jen Hsin; Tianyun Liu; Grace W. Tang; Russ B. Altman; Kerwyn Casey Huang

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Douglas B. Weibel

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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George K. Auer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Joshua L. Phillips

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Robert L. Wang

University of California

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