Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri
University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Michael F. Mesleh; Alexander A. Nevzorov; Stanley J. Opella
The atomic resolution structure of fd coat protein determined by solid-state NMR spectroscopy of magnetically aligned filamentous bacteriophage particles differs from that previously determined by x-ray fiber diffraction. Most notably, the 50-residue protein is not a single curved helix, but rather is a nearly ideal straight helix between residues 7 and 38, where there is a distinct kink, and then a straight helix with a different orientation between residues 39 and 49. Residues 1–5 have been shown to be mobile and unstructured, and proline 6 terminates the helix. The structure of the coat protein in virus particles, in combination with the structure of the membrane-bound form of the same protein in bilayers, also recently determined by solid-state NMR spectroscopy, provides insight into the viral assembly process. In addition to their roles in molecular biology and biotechnology, the filamentous bacteriophages continue to serve as model systems for the development of experimental methods for determining the structures of proteins in biological supramolecular assemblies. New NMR results include the complete sequential assignment of the two-dimensional polarization inversion spin-exchange at the magic angle spectrum of a uniformly 15N-labeled 50-residue protein in a 1.6 × 107 Da particle in solution, and the calculation of the three-dimensional structure of the protein from orientational restraints with an accuracy equivalent to an rms deviation of ≈1Å.
Annual Review of Physical Chemistry | 2008
Stanley J. Opella; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Sang Ho Park
Filamentous bacteriophages serve as model systems for the development and implementation of spectroscopic methods suitable for biological supramolecular assemblies. Not only are their coat proteins small and readily prepared in the laboratory, but they also have two primary roles as membrane proteins and as the principal structural element of the virus particles. As a bacterial system, they are readily labeled with stable isotopes, and this has opened possibilities for the many nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies described in this review. In particular, solid-state NMR of aligned samples has been used to determine the three-dimensional structures of both the membrane-bound forms of coat proteins in phospholipid bilayers and structural forms in virus particles, which has led to an analysis of the assembly mechanism for virus particles as they are extruded through the cell membrane.
Proteins | 2010
Mario Tyago Murakami; Mauricio Luis Sforça; Jorge Luiz Neves; Joice Helena Paiva; Mariane Noronha Domingues; André Luiz Araújo Pereira; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Celso Eduardo Benedetti
Many plant pathogenic bacteria rely on effector proteins to suppress defense and manipulate host cell mechanisms to cause disease. The effector protein PthA modulates the host transcriptome to promote citrus canker. PthA possesses unusual protein architecture with an internal region encompassing variable numbers of near‐identical tandem repeats of 34 amino acids termed the repeat domain. This domain mediates protein–protein and protein–DNA interactions, and two polymorphic residues in each repeat unit determine DNA specificity. To gain insights into how the repeat domain promotes protein–protein and protein–DNA contacts, we have solved the structure of a peptide corresponding to 1.5 units of the PthA repeat domain by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and carried out small‐angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS) and spectroscopic studies on the entire 15.5‐repeat domain of PthA2 (RD2). Consistent with secondary structure predictions and circular dichroism data, the NMR structure of the 1.5‐repeat peptide reveals three α‐helices connected by two turns that fold into a tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR)‐like domain. The NMR structure corroborates the theoretical TPR superhelix predicted for RD2, which is also in agreement with the elongated shape of RD2 determined by SAXS. Furthermore, RD2 undergoes conformational changes in a pH‐dependent manner and upon DNA interaction, and shows sequence similarities to pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR), a nucleic acid‐binding motif structurally related to TPR. The results point to a model in which the RD2 structure changes its compactness as it embraces the DNA with the polymorphic diresidues facing the interior of the superhelix oriented toward the nucleotide bases. Proteins 2010.
Biochemical Journal | 2012
Camila R. Santos; Joice Helena Paiva; Mauricio L. Sforça; Jorge Luiz Neves; Rodrigo Z. Navarro; Junio Cota; Patrícia K. Akao; Zaira B. Hoffmam; Andreia Navarro Meza; Juliana Helena Costa Smetana; Maria Luiza C. Nogueira; Igor Polikarpov; José Xavier-Neto; Fabio M. Squina; Richard John Ward; Roberto Ruller; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Mario Tyago Murakami
Cellulases participate in a number of biological events, such as plant cell wall remodelling, nematode parasitism and microbial carbon uptake. Their ability to depolymerize crystalline cellulose is of great biotechnological interest for environmentally compatible production of fuels from lignocellulosic biomass. However, industrial use of cellulases is somewhat limited by both their low catalytic efficiency and stability. In the present study, we conducted a detailed functional and structural characterization of the thermostable BsCel5A (Bacillus subtilis cellulase 5A), which consists of a GH5 (glycoside hydrolase 5) catalytic domain fused to a CBM3 (family 3 carbohydrate-binding module). NMR structural analysis revealed that the Bacillus CBM3 represents a new subfamily, which lacks the classical calcium-binding motif, and variations in NMR frequencies in the presence of cellopentaose showed the importance of polar residues in the carbohydrate interaction. Together with the catalytic domain, the CBM3 forms a large planar surface for cellulose recognition, which conducts the substrate in a proper conformation to the active site and increases enzymatic efficiency. Notably, the manganese ion was demonstrated to have a hyper-stabilizing effect on BsCel5A, and by using deletion constructs and X-ray crystallography we determined that this effect maps to a negatively charged motif located at the opposite face of the catalytic site.
Biophysical Journal | 2002
Gianluigi Veglia; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Che Ma; Stanley J. Opella
Deuterium/hydrogen exchange factors (chi) were measured for the backbone amide sites of the membrane-bound forms of the 50-residue fd coat protein and the 23-residue magainin2 peptide in lipid micelles by solution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. By combining kinetic and thermodynamic effects, deuterium/hydrogen exchange factors overcome the principal limitations encountered in the measurements of kinetic protection factors and thermodynamic fractionation factors for membrane proteins. The magnitudes of the exchange factors can be correlated with the structure and topology of membrane-associated polypeptides. In fd coat protein, residues in the transmembrane helix have exchange factors that are substantially smaller than those in the amphipathic surface helix or the loop connecting the two helices. For the amphipathic helical peptide, magainin2, the exchange factors of residues exposed to the solvent are appreciably larger than those that face the hydrocarbon portion of membrane bilayers. These examples demonstrate that deuterium/hydrogen exchange factors can be measured by solution NMR spectroscopy and used to identify residues in transmembrane helices as well as to determine the polarity of amphipathic helices in membrane proteins.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Alexandre W. Bisson-Filho; Karen F. Discola; Patricia Castellen; Valdir Blasios; Alexandre Martins; Mauricio Luis Sforça; Wanius Garcia; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Harold P. Erickson; Andréa Dessen; Frederico J. Gueiros-Filho
Significance Division of bacteria is executed by a contractile ring whose cytoskeletal framework is FtsZ (filamentation temperature-sensitive Z), a protein evolutionarily related to eukaryotic tubulin. The FtsZ ring is made of filaments of head-to-tail FtsZ subunits but its architecture and the rules governing its assembly are still poorly known. Here we show that MciZ, an inhibitor of FtsZ ring formation, functions by capping the minus end of FtsZ filaments. Capping by MciZ makes FtsZ filaments shorter than normal, likely by blocking filament annealing; this represents fundamental information to understand how FtsZ filaments grow and shrink, and attain their normal size. The powerful inhibition of Z-ring assembly by MciZ also suggests that an FtsZ ring cannot form from filaments smaller than a certain size. Cytoskeletal structures are dynamically remodeled with the aid of regulatory proteins. FtsZ (filamentation temperature-sensitive Z) is the bacterial homolog of tubulin that polymerizes into rings localized to cell-division sites, and the constriction of these rings drives cytokinesis. Here we investigate the mechanism by which the Bacillus subtilis cell-division inhibitor, MciZ (mother cell inhibitor of FtsZ), blocks assembly of FtsZ. The X-ray crystal structure reveals that MciZ binds to the C-terminal polymerization interface of FtsZ, the equivalent of the minus end of tubulin. Using in vivo and in vitro assays and microscopy, we show that MciZ, at substoichiometric levels to FtsZ, causes shortening of protofilaments and blocks the assembly of higher-order FtsZ structures. The findings demonstrate an unanticipated capping-based regulatory mechanism for FtsZ.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Annelize Zambon Barbosa Aragão; Maria Luiza C. Nogueira; Daniela C. Granato; Fernando M. Simabuco; Rodrigo Vargas Honorato; Zaira Hoffman; Sami Yokoo; Francisco R.M. Laurindo; Fabio M. Squina; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Paulo Sergio Lopes de Oliveira; Nicholas E. Sherman; Adriana Franco Paes Leme
Background: The identification of potential interaction partners for TACE could be instrumental in understanding the regulation of TACE activity. Results: Trx-1 interacts with the cytoplasmic domain of ADAM17. Conclusion: Trx-1 regulates ADAM17 activity. Significance: The data suggest a negative ADAM17 regulation in the HB-EGF shedding model. ADAM17, which is also known as TNFα-converting enzyme, is the major sheddase for the EGF receptor ligands and is considered to be one of the main proteases responsible for the ectodomain shedding of surface proteins. How a membrane-anchored proteinase with an extracellular catalytic domain can be activated by inside-out regulation is not completely understood. We characterized thioredoxin-1 (Trx-1) as a partner of the ADAM17 cytoplasmic domain that could be involved in the regulation of ADAM17 activity. We induced the overexpression of the ADAM17 cytoplasmic domain in HEK293 cells, and ligands able to bind this domain were identified by MS after protein immunoprecipitation. Trx-1 was also validated as a ligand of the ADAM17 cytoplasmic domain and full-length ADAM17 recombinant proteins by immunoblotting, immunolocalization, and solid phase binding assay. In addition, using nuclear magnetic resonance, it was shown in vitro that the titration of the ADAM17 cytoplasmic domain promotes changes in the conformation of Trx-1. The MS analysis of the cross-linked complexes showed cross-linking between the two proteins by lysine residues. To further evaluate the functional role of Trx-1, we used a heparin-binding EGF shedding cell model and observed that the overexpression of Trx-1 in HEK293 cells could decrease the activity of ADAM17, activated by either phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate or EGF. This study identifies Trx-1 as a novel interaction partner of the ADAM17 cytoplasmic domain and suggests that Trx-1 is a potential candidate that could be involved in ADAM17 activity regulation.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1999
Wee Meng Tan; Zhengtian Gu; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Stanley J. Opella
Triple-resonance solid-state NMR spectroscopy is demonstrated to sequentially assign the 13C′ and 15N amide backbone resonances of adjacent residues in an oriented protein sample. The observed 13C′ chemical shift frequency provides an orientational constraint complementary to those measured from the 1H and 15N amide resonances in double-resonance experiments.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Valdir Blasios; Alexandre W. Bisson-Filho; Patricia Castellen; Maria Luiza C. Nogueira; Jefferson Bettini; Rodrigo Vilares Portugal; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Frederico J. Gueiros-Filho
Cell division in bacteria is regulated by proteins that interact with FtsZ and modulate its ability to polymerize into the Z ring structure. The best studied of these regulators is MinC, an inhibitor of FtsZ polymerization that plays a crucial role in the spatial control of Z ring formation. Recent work established that E. coli MinC interacts with two regions of FtsZ, the bottom face of the H10 helix and the extreme C-terminal peptide (CTP). Here we determined the binding site for MinC on Bacillus subtilis FtsZ. Selection of a library of FtsZ mutants for survival in the presence of Min overexpression resulted in the isolation of 13 Min-resistant mutants. Most of the substitutions that gave rise to Min resistance clustered around the H9 and H10 helices in the C-terminal domain of FtsZ. In addition, a mutation in the CTP of B. subtilis FtsZ also produced MinC resistance. Biochemical characterization of some of the mutant proteins showed that they exhibited normal polymerization properties but reduced interaction with MinC, as expected for binding site mutations. Thus, our study shows that the overall architecture of the MinC-FtsZ interaction is conserved in E. coli and B. subtilis. Nevertheless, there was a clear difference in the mutations that conferred Min resistance, with those in B. subtilis FtsZ pointing to the side of the molecule rather than to its polymerization interface. This observation suggests that the mechanism of Z ring inhibition by MinC differs in both species.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Marcos R. Alborghetti; Ariane da Silva Furlan; Júlio César da Silva; Mauricio Luis Sforça; Rodrigo Vargas Honorato; Daniela C. Granato; Deivid Lucas dos Santos Migueleti; Jorge Luiz Neves; Paulo Sergio Lopes de Oliveira; Adriana Franco Paes-Leme; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Iris L. Torriani; Jörg Kobarg
Cytoskeleton and protein trafficking processes, including vesicle transport to synapses, are key processes in neuronal differentiation and axon outgrowth. The human protein FEZ1 (fasciculation and elongation protein zeta 1 / UNC-76, in C. elegans), SCOCO (short coiled-coil protein / UNC-69) and kinesins (e.g. kinesin heavy chain / UNC116) are involved in these processes. Exploiting the feature of FEZ1 protein as a bivalent adapter of transport mediated by kinesins and FEZ1 protein interaction with SCOCO (proteins involved in the same path of axonal growth), we investigated the structural aspects of intermolecular interactions involved in this complex formation by NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance), cross-linking coupled with mass spectrometry (MS), SAXS (Small Angle X-ray Scattering) and molecular modelling. The topology of homodimerization was accessed through NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) studies of the region involved in this process, corresponding to FEZ1 (92-194). Through studies involving the protein in its monomeric configuration (reduced) and dimeric state, we propose that homodimerization occurs with FEZ1 chains oriented in an anti-parallel topology. We demonstrate that the interaction interface of FEZ1 and SCOCO defined by MS and computational modelling is in accordance with that previously demonstrated for UNC-76 and UNC-69. SAXS and literature data support a heterotetrameric complex model. These data provide details about the interaction interfaces probably involved in the transport machinery assembly and open perspectives to understand and interfere in this assembly and its involvement in neuronal differentiation and axon outgrowth.