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Dive into the research topics where Andrew J. Dingley is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Dingley.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Hydramacin-1, Structure and Antibacterial Activity of a Protein from the Basal Metazoan Hydra

Sascha Jung; Andrew J. Dingley; René Augustin; Friederike Anton-Erxleben; Mareike Stanisak; Christoph Gelhaus; Thomas Gutsmann; Malte U. Hammer; Rainer Podschun; Alexandre M. J. J. Bonvin; Matthias Leippe; Thomas C. G. Bosch; Joachim Grötzinger

Hydramacin-1 is a novel antimicrobial protein recently discovered during investigations of the epithelial defense of the ancient metazoan Hydra. The amino acid sequence of hydramacin-1 shows no sequence homology to any known antimicrobial proteins. Determination of the solution structure revealed that hydramacin-1 possesses a disulfide bridge-stabilized αβ motif. This motif is the common scaffold of the knottin protein fold. The structurally closest relatives are the scorpion oxin-like superfamily. Within this superfamily hydramacin-1 establishes a new family of proteins that all share antimicrobial activity. Hydramacin-1 is potently active against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria including multi-resistant human pathogenic strains. It leads to aggregation of bacteria as an initial step of its bactericidal mechanism. Aggregated cells are connected via electron-dense contacts and adopt a thorn apple-like morphology. Analysis of the hydramacin-1 structure revealed an unusual distribution of amino acid side chains on the surface. A belt of positively charged residues is sandwiched by two hydrophobic areas. Based on this characteristic surface feature and on biophysical analysis of protein-membrane interactions, we propose a model that describes the aggregation effect exhibited by hydramacin-1.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1999

A doublet-separated sensitivity-enhanced HSQC for the determination of scalar and dipolar one-bond J-couplings.

Florence Cordier; Andrew J. Dingley; Stephan Grzesiek

A simple, sensitivity-enhanced HSQC experiment is described which separates the upfield and downfield components in the indirect dimension into different subspectra. The sequence is similar to the generalized TROSY scheme; however, decoupling of the X-nucleus is used during detection. A detailed analysis of relaxation effects, precision and sensitivity of the method is presented. The approach is demonstrated in a two-dimensional water flip-back 1H- 15N HSQC which measures 1JHN splittings in isotropic and oriented samples of ubiquitin and the hepatitis C protease. The results are in excellent agreement with splittings obtained from a conventional 1H-coupled HSQC.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The structure of the interleukin-15 alpha receptor and its implications for ligand binding.

Inken Lorenzen; Andrew J. Dingley; Yannick Jacques; Joachim Grötzinger

Interleukin (IL)-15 is a member of the small four α-helix bundle family of cytokines. IL-15 was discovered by its ability to mimic IL-2-mediated T-cell proliferation. Both cytokines share the β and γ receptor chains of the IL-2 receptor for signal transduction. However, in addition, they target specific α chain receptors IL-15Rα and IL-2Rα, respectively. The exceptionally high affinity binding of IL-15 to IL-15Rα is mediated by its sushi domain. Here we present the solution structure of the IL-15Rα sushi domain solved by NMR spectroscopy and a model of its complex with IL-15. The model shows that, rather than the familiar hydrophobic forces dominating the interaction interface between cytokines and their cognate receptors, the interaction between the IL-15 and IL-15Rα complex involves a large network of ionic interactions. This type of interaction explains the exceptionally high affinity of the IL-15·IL-15Rα complex, which is essential for the biological effects of this important cytokine and which is not observed in other cytokine/cytokine receptor complexes.


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2010

Caenopore-5: the three-dimensional structure of an antimicrobial protein from Caenorhabditis elegans.

Justyna Mysliwy; Andrew J. Dingley; Mareike Stanisak; Sascha Jung; Inken Lorenzen; Thomas Roeder; Matthias Leippe; Joachim Grötzinger

The caenopore-5 protein encoded by the spp-5 gene is one of the 33 caenopores identified in Caenorhabditis elegans and is a pore-forming peptide which plays an important role in the elimination of Escherichia coli ingested by the worm. Thus, caenopore-5 appears to contribute to the nutrition of the worm while simultaneously protecting the organism against pathogens. Here, three-dimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy was used to solve the solution structure of caenopore-5. The NMR data revealed that two conformers of caenopore-5 exist in solution which differ by the isomerization of the peptide bond of Pro-81. The overall structure of the two caenopore-5 conformers consists of five amphiphatic helices connected by three disulfide bonds. The five helices are arranged in a folded leaf which is the characteristic signature of the SAPLIP family. The structure presented here is the first of an effector protein of the defensive system elucidated for the well-known model organism C. elegans.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2013

Identification of key residues involved in adrenomedullin binding to the AM1 receptor

Harriet A. Watkins; Maggie Au; Romel Bobby; Jk Archbold; N Abdul-Manan; Jm Moore; Martin Middleditch; Geoffrey M. Williams; Margaret A. Brimble; Andrew J. Dingley; Deborah Hay

Adrenomedullin (AM) is a peptide hormone whose receptors are members of the class B GPCR family. They comprise a heteromer between the GPCR, the calcitonin receptor‐like receptor and one of the receptor activity‐modifying proteins 1–3. AM plays a significant role in angiogenesis and its antagonist fragment AM22–52 can inhibit blood vessel and tumour growth. The mechanism by which AM interacts with its receptors is unknown.


Biochemistry | 2009

Making sense of a missense mutation: characterization of MutT2, a Nudix hydrolase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and the G58R mutant encoded in W-Beijing strains of M. tuberculosis.

Nicole J. Moreland; Caroline Charlier; Andrew J. Dingley; Edward N. Baker; J. Shaun Lott

Recent polymorphism analyses of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains have identified missense mutations unique to the W-Beijing lineage in genes belonging to the Nudix hydrolase superfamily. This study investigates the structure and function of one of these Nudix hydrolases, MutT2, and examines the effect that the W-Beijing mutation (G58R) has on enzyme characteristics. MutT2 has a preference for cytidine triphosphates, and although the G58R mutation does not alter nucleotide specificity, it reduces the proteins affinity for divalent cations. The K(D) of free Mg(2+) is 79-fold higher for the G58R mutant (3.30 +/- 0.19 mM) compared with that for the wild-type (41.7 +/- 1.4 microM). Circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements show that while the mutation does not perturb the overall structure of the protein, protein stability is significantly compromised by the presence of the arginine with DeltaG (H(2)O), the free-energy of unfolding, being reduced by 2.48 kcal mol(-1) in the G58R mutant. Homology modeling of MutT2 shows that Gly-58 is in close proximity (10.8 A) to the Mg(2+) binding site formed by the highly conserved Nudix box residues and hydrogen bonds with Ala-54 in the preceding alpha-helix. This may explain the increased divalent cation requirement and decreased stability observed when an arginine is substituted for glycine at this position. A role for MutT2 in the regulation of cytidine-triphosphates available for nucleotide-dependent reactions is postulated, and the impact that the G58R mutation may have on these reactions is discussed.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2009

Cell-free synthesis and combinatorial selective 15N-labeling of the cytotoxic protein amoebapore A from Entamoeba histolytica

Yang Xun; Pierre Tremouilhac; Colm Carraher; Christoph Gelhaus; Kiyoshi Ozawa; Gottfried Otting; Nicholas E. Dixon; Matthias Leippe; Joachim Grötzinger; Andrew J. Dingley; Andrew V. Kralicek

Amoebapore A is a pore-forming protein produced by the pathogenic parasite Entamoeba histolytica, which causes human amoebic dysentery. The pore-forming activity of amoebapore A is regulated by pH-dependent dimerization, a prerequisite for membrane insertion and pore formation. Understanding of these important processes has been hampered by the cytotoxicity of amoebapore A, which prevents the production of this protein in cell-based expression systems. In this study, a protocol for the cell-free production of active recombinant amoebapore A is presented. Protein yields of approximately 500 microg/ml of cell-free reaction were achieved. Recombinant amoebapore A was purified using a three-step procedure. To facilitate the structural characterization of the dimeric and pore forms, we adapted the cell-free system to isotope label amoebapore A for NMR studies. The preliminary assignment of a 2D 1H-15N HSQC spectrum of a uniformly 13C/15N-labeled sample was achieved using a combinatorial selective 15N-labeling approach coupled with available 1H(N) chemical shift data, resulting in the unambiguous assignment of resonances from 55 of the 77 residues. To confirm these results and obtain the full sequence-specific assignments of the 2D 1H-15N HSQC spectrum, a 3D HNCA spectrum was recorded. These assignment data will be used to aid the characterization of amoebapore A dimer formation and membrane insertion.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Structure and function of a unique pore-forming protein from a pathogenic acanthamoeba.

Matthias Michalek; Frank D. Sönnichsen; Rainer Wechselberger; Andrew J. Dingley; Chien-Wen Hung; Annika Kopp; Hans Wienk; Maren Simanski; Rosa Herbst; Inken Lorenzen; Francine Marciano-Cabral; Christoph Gelhaus; Thomas Gutsmann; Andreas Tholey; Joachim Grötzinger; Matthias Leippe

Human pathogens often produce soluble protein toxins that generate pores inside membranes, resulting in the death of target cells and tissue damage. In pathogenic amoebae, this has been exemplified with amoebapores of the enteric protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica. Here we characterize acanthaporin, to our knowledge the first pore-forming toxin to be described from acanthamoebae, which are free-living, bacteria-feeding, unicellular organisms that are opportunistic pathogens of increasing importance and cause severe and often fatal diseases. We isolated acanthaporin from extracts of virulent Acanthamoeba culbertsoni by tracking its pore-forming activity, molecularly cloned the gene of its precursor and recombinantly expressed the mature protein in bacteria. Acanthaporin was cytotoxic for human neuronal cells and exerted antimicrobial activity against a variety of bacterial strains by permeabilizing their membranes. The tertiary structures of acanthaporins active monomeric form and inactive dimeric form, both solved by NMR spectroscopy, revealed a currently unknown protein fold and a pH-dependent trigger mechanism of activation.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2008

NMR Analysis of Viral Protein Structures

Andrew J. Dingley; Inken Lorenzen; Joachim Grötzinger

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a powerful tool to study the three-dimensional structure of proteins and nucleic acids at atomic resolution. Since the NMR data can be recorded in solution, conditions such as pH, salt concentration, and temperature can be adjusted so as to closely mimic the biomacromolecules natural milieu. In addition to structure determination, NMR applications can investigate time-dependent phenomena, such as dynamic features of the biomacromolecules, reaction kinetics, molecular recognition, or protein folding. The advent of higher magnetic field strengths, new technical developments, and the use of either uniform or selective isotopic labeling techniques, currently allows NMR users the opportunity to investigate the tertiary structure of biomacromolecules of approximately 50 kDa. This chapter will outline the basic protocol for structure determination of proteins by NMR spectroscopy. In general, there are four main stages: (i) preparation of a homogeneous protein sample, (ii) the recording of the NMR data sets, (iii) assignment of the spectra to each NMR observable atom in the protein, and (iv) generation of structures using computer software and the correctly assigned NMR data.


ChemBioChem | 2015

Chemical Synthesis of A Pore-Forming Antimicrobial Protein, Caenopore-5, by Using Native Chemical Ligation at a Glu-Cys Site

Karima Medini; Paul W. R. Harris; Kiel Hards; Andrew J. Dingley; Gregory M. Cook; Margaret A. Brimble

The 2014 report from the World Health Organization (WHO) on antimicrobial resistance revealed an alarming rise in antibiotic resistance all around the world. Unlike classical antibiotics, with the exception of a few species, no acquired resistance towards antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) has been reported. Therefore, AMPs represent leads for the development of novel antibiotics. Caenopore‐5 is constitutively expressed in the intestine of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and is a pore‐forming AMP. The protein (82 amino acids) was successfully synthesised by using Boc solid‐phase peptide synthesis and native chemical ligation. No γ‐linked by‐product was observed despite the use of a C‐terminal Glu‐thioester. The folding of the synthetic protein was confirmed by 1H NMR spectroscopy and circular dichroism and compared with data recorded for recombinant caenopore‐5. The permeabilisation activities of the protein and of shortened analogues were evaluated.

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Dieter Willbold

University of Düsseldorf

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Romel Bobby

University of Auckland

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