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Dive into the research topics where Ambrose R. Cole is active.

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Featured researches published by Ambrose R. Cole.


Nature Communications | 2012

Structure of a bacterial voltage-gated sodium channel pore reveals mechanisms of opening and closing

Emily C. McCusker; Claire Bagnéris; Claire E. Naylor; Ambrose R. Cole; Nazzareno D'Avanzo; Colin G. Nichols; B. A. Wallace

Sodium-gated ion channels open and close in response to the flow of ions. Here, McCusker et al. report the open structure of a sodium-gated ion channel pore from a bacterial homologue, and show, by comparison with the closed structure, that the movement of a C-terminal helix is sufficient to open the channel.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004

Clostridium Perfringens Epsilon-Toxin Shows Structural Similarity to the Pore-Forming Toxin Aerolysin

Ambrose R. Cole; Michel Popoff; David S. Moss; Richard W. Titball; Ajit K. Basak

ε-Toxin from Clostridium perfringens is a lethal toxin. Recent studies suggest that the toxin acts via an unusually potent pore-forming mechanism. Here we report the crystal structure of ε-toxin, which reveals structural similarity to aerolysin from Aeromonas hydrophila. Pore-forming toxins can change conformation between soluble and transmembrane states. By comparing the two toxins, we have identified regions important for this transformation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Molecular architecture and functional analysis of NetB, a pore-forming toxin from Clostridium perfringens

Christos G. Savva; P. Fernandes da Costa; Monika Bokori-Brown; Claire E. Naylor; Ambrose R. Cole; David S. Moss; Richard W. Titball; Ajit K. Basak

Background: Clostridium perfringens toxin NetB is a key factor in avian necrotic enteritis. Results: NetB forms heptameric pores structurally similar to Staphylococcus aureus toxins but lacks a phosphocholine binding pocket. NetB activity is enhanced by cholesterol. Conclusion: NetB has distinct binding specificity, and cholesterol may act as a receptor. Significance: The structure of NetB will facilitate development of control measures against necrotic enteritis. NetB is a pore-forming toxin produced by Clostridium perfringens and has been reported to play a major role in the pathogenesis of avian necrotic enteritis, a disease that has emerged due to the removal of antibiotics in animal feedstuffs. Here we present the crystal structure of the pore form of NetB solved to 3.9 Å. The heptameric assembly shares structural homology to the staphylococcal α-hemolysin. However, the rim domain, a region that is thought to interact with the target cell membrane, shows sequence and structural divergence leading to the alteration of a phosphocholine binding pocket found in the staphylococcal toxins. Consistent with the structure we show that NetB does not bind phosphocholine efficiently but instead interacts directly with cholesterol leading to enhanced oligomerization and pore formation. Finally we have identified conserved and non-conserved amino acid positions within the rim loops that significantly affect binding and toxicity of NetB. These findings present new insights into the mode of action of these pore-forming toxins, enabling the design of more effective control measures against necrotic enteritis and providing potential new tools to the field of bionanotechnology.


Structure | 2012

Structural and Functional Integration of the PLCγ Interaction Domains Critical for Regulatory Mechanisms and Signaling Deregulation

Tom D. Bunney; Diego Esposito; Corine Mas-Droux; Ekatarina Lamber; Rhona W. Baxendale; Marta Martins; Ambrose R. Cole; Dmitri I. Svergun; Paul C. Driscoll; Matilda Katan

Summary Multidomain proteins incorporating interaction domains are central to regulation of cellular processes. The elucidation of structural organization and mechanistic insights into many of these proteins, however, remain challenging due to their inherent flexibility. Here, we describe the organization and function of four interaction domains in PLCγ1 using a combination of structural biology and biochemical approaches. Intramolecular interactions within the regulatory region center on the cSH2 domain, the only domain that also interacts with the PLC-core. In the context of fibroblast growth-factor receptor signaling, the coordinated involvement of nSH2 and cSH2 domains mediates efficient phosphorylation of PLCγ1 resulting in the interruption of an autoinhibitory interface by direct competition and, independently, dissociation of PLCγ1 from the receptor. Further structural insights into the autoinhibitory surfaces provide a framework to interpret gain-of-function mutations in PLCγ isoforms linked to immune disorders and illustrate a distinct mechanism for regulation of PLC activity by common interaction domains.


Protein Science | 2013

Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin H149A mutant as a platform for receptor binding studies.

Monika Bokori-Brown; Maria C. Kokkinidou; Christos G. Savva; Sérgio P. Fernandes da Costa; Claire E. Naylor; Ambrose R. Cole; David S. Moss; Ajit K. Basak; Richard W. Titball

Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin (Etx) is a pore‐forming toxin responsible for a severe and rapidly fatal enterotoxemia of ruminants. The toxin is classified as a category B bioterrorism agent by the U.S. Government Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), making work with recombinant toxin difficult. To reduce the hazard posed by work with recombinant Etx, we have used a variant of Etx that contains a H149A mutation (Etx‐H149A), previously reported to have reduced, but not abolished, toxicity. The three‐dimensional structure of H149A prototoxin shows that the H149A mutation in domain III does not affect organisation of the putative receptor binding loops in domain I of the toxin. Surface exposed tyrosine residues in domain I of Etx‐H149A (Y16, Y20, Y29, Y30, Y36 and Y196) were mutated to alanine and mutants Y30A and Y196A showed significantly reduced binding to MDCK.2 cells relative to Etx‐H149A that correlated with their reduced cytotoxic activity. Thus, our study confirms the role of surface exposed tyrosine residues in domain I of Etx in binding to MDCK cells and the suitability of Etx‐H149A for further receptor binding studies. In contrast, binding of all of the tyrosine mutants to ACHN cells was similar to that of Etx‐H149A, suggesting that Etx can recognise different cell surface receptors. In support of this, the crystal structure of Etx‐H149A identified a glycan (β‐octyl‐glucoside) binding site in domain III of Etx‐H149A, which may be a second receptor binding site. These findings have important implications for developing strategies designed to neutralise toxin activity.


Structure | 2014

Crystal structure of the human, FIC-domain containing protein HYPE and implications for its functions.

Tom D. Bunney; Ambrose R. Cole; Malgorzata Broncel; Diego Esposito; Edward W. Tate; Matilda Katan

Summary Protein AMPylation, the transfer of AMP from ATP to protein targets, has been recognized as a new mechanism of host-cell disruption by some bacterial effectors that typically contain a FIC-domain. Eukaryotic genomes also encode one FIC-domain protein, HYPE, which has remained poorly characterized. Here we describe the structure of human HYPE, solved by X-ray crystallography, representing the first structure of a eukaryotic FIC-domain protein. We demonstrate that HYPE forms stable dimers with structurally and functionally integrated FIC-domains and with TPR-motifs exposed for protein-protein interactions. As HYPE also uniquely possesses a transmembrane helix, dimerization is likely to affect its positioning and function in the membrane vicinity. The low rate of autoAMPylation of the wild-type HYPE could be due to autoinhibition, consistent with the mechanism proposed for a number of putative FIC AMPylators. Our findings also provide a basis to further consider possible alternative cofactors of HYPE and distinct modes of target-recognition.


Vaccine | 2014

Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin mutant Y30A-Y196A as a recombinant vaccine candidate against enterotoxemia

Monika Bokori-Brown; Charlotte A. Hall; Charlotte Vance; Sérgio P. Fernandes da Costa; Christos G. Savva; Claire E. Naylor; Ambrose R. Cole; Ajit K. Basak; David S. Moss; Richard W. Titball

Highlights • Etx mutant Y30A-Y196A showed markedly reduced cytotoxicity towards MDCK.2 cells.• Y30A-Y196A is inactive in mice after intraperitoneal administration.• Y30A-Y196A is able to induce a specific antibody response in rabbits.• Y30A-Y196A polyclonal antibody is able to induce protective immunity in vitro.• Y30A-Y196A could form the basis of a recombinant vaccine against enterotoxemia.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Crystal Structures and Binding Dynamics of Odorant-Binding Protein 3 from two aphid species Megoura viciae and Nasonovia ribisnigri.

Thomas Northey; H. Venthur; F. De Biasio; Francois-Xavier Chauviac; Ambrose R. Cole; K.A. Lisboa Ribeiro Junior; G. Grossi; Patrizia Falabella; Linda M. Field; Nicholas H. Keep; Jing-Jiang Zhou

Aphids use chemical cues to locate hosts and find mates. The vetch aphid Megoura viciae feeds exclusively on the Fabaceae, whereas the currant-lettuce aphid Nasonovia ribisnigri alternates hosts between the Grossulariaceae and Asteraceae. Both species use alarm pheromones to warn of dangers. For N. ribisnigri this pheromone is a single component (E)-β-farnesene but M. viciae uses a mixture of (E)-β-farnesene, (−)-α-pinene, β-pinene, and limonene. Odorant-binding proteins (OBP) are believed to capture and transport such semiochemicals to their receptors. Here, we report the first aphid OBP crystal structures and examine their molecular interactions with the alarm pheromone components. Our study reveals some unique structural features: 1) the lack of an internal ligand binding site; 2) a striking groove in the surface of the proteins as a putative binding site; 3) the N-terminus rather than the C-terminus occupies the site closing off the conventional OBP pocket. The results from fluorescent binding assays, molecular docking and dynamics demonstrate that OBP3 from M. viciae can bind to all four alarm pheromone components and the differential ligand binding between these very similar OBP3s from the two aphid species is determined mainly by the direct π-π interactions between ligands and the aromatic residues of OBP3s in the binding pocket.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Chaperone-mediated native folding of a β-scorpion toxin in the periplasm of Escherichia coli

Andrias O. O'Reilly; Ambrose R. Cole; Jose L. S. Lopes; Angelika Lampert; B. A. Wallace

Background Animal neurotoxin peptides are valuable probes for investigating ion channel structure/function relationships and represent lead compounds for novel therapeutics and insecticides. However, misfolding and aggregation are common outcomes when toxins containing multiple disulfides are expressed in bacteria. Methods The β-scorpion peptide toxin Bj-xtrIT from Hottentotta judaica and four chaperone enzymes (DsbA, DsbC, SurA and FkpA) were co-secreted into the oxidizing environment of the Escherichia coli periplasm. Expressed Bj-xtrIT was purified and analyzed by HPLC and FPLC chromatography. Its thermostability was assessed using synchrotron radiation circular dichroism spectroscopy and its crystal structure was determined. Results Western blot analysis showed that robust expression was only achieved when cells co-expressed the chaperones. The purified samples were homogenous and monodisperse and the protein was thermostable. The crystal structure of the recombinant toxin confirmed that it adopts the native disulfide connectivity and fold. Conclusions The chaperones enabled correct folding of the four-disulfide-bridged Bj-xtrIT toxin. There was no apparent sub-population of misfolded Bj-xtrIT, which attests to the effectiveness of this expression method. General significance We report the first example of a disulfide-linked scorpion toxin natively folded during bacterial expression. This method eliminates downstream processing steps such as oxidative refolding or cleavage of a fusion-carrier and therefore enables efficient production of insecticidal Bj-xtrIT. Periplasmic chaperone activity may produce native folding of other extensively disulfide-reticulated proteins including animal neurotoxins. This work is therefore relevant to venomics and studies of a wide range of channels and receptors.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Architecturally diverse proteins converge on an analogous mechanism to inactivate Uracil-DNA glycosylase

Ambrose R. Cole; Sapir Ofer; Ksenia Ryzhenkova; Gediminas Baltulionis; Peter Hornyak; Renos Savva

Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) compromises the replication strategies of diverse viruses from unrelated lineages. Virally encoded proteins therefore exist to limit, inhibit or target UDG activity for proteolysis. Viral proteins targeting UDG, such as the bacteriophage proteins ugi, and p56, and the HIV-1 protein Vpr, share no sequence similarity, and are not structurally homologous. Such diversity has hindered identification of known or expected UDG-inhibitory activities in other genomes. The structural basis for UDG inhibition by ugi is well characterized; yet, paradoxically, the structure of the unbound p56 protein is enigmatically unrevealing of its mechanism. To resolve this conundrum, we determined the structure of a p56 dimer bound to UDG. A helix from one of the subunits of p56 occupies the UDG DNA-binding cleft, whereas the dimer interface forms a hydrophobic box to trap a mechanistically important UDG residue. Surprisingly, these p56 inhibitory elements are unexpectedly analogous to features used by ugi despite profound architectural disparity. Contacts from B-DNA to UDG are mimicked by residues of the p56 helix, echoing the role of ugi’s inhibitory beta strand. Using mutagenesis, we propose that DNA mimicry by p56 is a targeting and specificity mechanism supporting tight inhibition via hydrophobic sequestration.

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Angelika Lampert

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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