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

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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Fisher.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

A Sialyltransferase Mutant with Decreased Donor Hydrolysis and Reduced Sialidase Activities for Directly Sialylating Lewisx

Go Sugiarto; Kam Lau; Jingyao Qu; Yanhong Li; Sunghyuk Lim; Shengmao Mu; James B. Ames; Andrew J. Fisher; Xi Chen

Glycosyltransferases are important catalysts for enzymatic and chemoenzymatic synthesis of complex carbohydrates and glycoconjugates. The glycosylation efficiencies of wild-type glycosyltransferases vary considerably when different acceptor substrates are used. Using a multifunctional Pasteurella multocida sialyltransferase 1 (PmST1) as an example, we show here that the sugar nucleotide donor hydrolysis activity of glycosyltransferases contributes significantly to the low yield of glycosylation when a poor acceptor substrate is used. With a protein crystal structure-based rational design, we generated a single mutant (PmST1 M144D) with decreased donor hydrolysis activity without significantly affecting its α2-3-sialylation activity when a poor fucose-containing acceptor substrate was used. The single mutant also has a drastically decreased α2-3-sialidase activity. X-ray and NMR structural studies revealed that unlike the wild-type PmST1, which changes to a closed conformation once a donor binds, the M144D mutant structure adopts an open conformation even in the presence of the donor substrate. The PmST1 M144D mutant with decreased donor hydrolysis and reduced sialidase activity has been used as a powerful catalyst for efficient chemoenzymatic synthesis of complex sialyl Lewis(x) antigens containing different sialic acid forms. This work sheds new light on the effect of donor hydrolysis activity of glycosyltransferases on glycosyltransferase-catalyzed reactions and provides a novel strategy to improve glycosyltransferase substrate promiscuity by decreasing its donor hydrolysis activity.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2016

Structures of human ADAR2 bound to dsRNA reveal base-flipping mechanism and basis for site selectivity

Melissa M Matthews; Justin M. Thomas; Yuxuan Zheng; Kiet Tran; Kelly J. Phelps; Anna I Scott; Jocelyn Havel; Andrew J. Fisher; Peter A. Beal

Adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADARs) are editing enzymes that convert adenosine to inosine in duplex RNA, a modification reaction with wide-ranging consequences in RNA function. Understanding of the ADAR reaction mechanism, the origin of editing-site selectivity, and the effect of mutations is limited by the lack of high-resolution structural data for complexes of ADARs bound to substrate RNAs. Here we describe four crystal structures of the human ADAR2 deaminase domain bound to RNA duplexes bearing a mimic of the deamination reaction intermediate. These structures, together with structure-guided mutagenesis and RNA-modification experiments, explain the basis of the ADAR deaminase domains dsRNA specificity, its base-flipping mechanism, and its nearest-neighbor preferences. In addition, we identified an ADAR2-specific RNA-binding loop near the enzyme active site, thus rationalizing differences in selectivity observed between different ADARs. Finally, our results provide a structural framework for understanding the effects of ADAR mutations associated with human disease.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Structure of the biliverdin radical intermediate in phycocyanobilin:ferredoxin oxidoreductase identified by high-field EPR and DFT.

Stefan Stoll; Alexander Gunn; Marcin Brynda; Wesley Sughrue; Amanda C. Kohler; Andrew Ozarowski; Andrew J. Fisher; J. Clark Lagarias; R. David Britt

The cyanobacterial enzyme phycocyanobilin:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PcyA) catalyzes the two-step four-electron reduction of biliverdin IXalpha to phycocyanobilin, the precursor of biliprotein chromophores found in phycobilisomes. It is known that catalysis proceeds via paramagnetic radical intermediates, but the structure of these intermediates and the transfer pathways for the four protons involved are not known. In this study, high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy of frozen solutions and single crystals of the one-electron reduced protein-substrate complex of two PcyA mutants D105N from the cyanobacteria Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and Nostoc sp. PCC7120 are examined. Detailed analysis of Synechocystis D105N mutant spectra at 130 and 406 GHz reveals a biliverdin radical with a very narrow g tensor with principal values 2.00359(5), 2.00341(5), and 2.00218(5). Using density-functional theory (DFT) computations to explore the possible protonation states of the biliverdin radical, it is shown that this g tensor is consistent with a biliverdin radical where the carbonyl oxygen atoms on both the A and the D pyrrole rings are protonated. This experimentally confirms the reaction mechanism recently proposed (Tu, et al. Biochemistry 2007, 46, 1484).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Structural insights into membrane targeting by the flagellar calcium-binding protein (FCaBP), a myristoylated and palmitoylated calcium sensor in Trypanosoma cruzi.

Jennifer N. Wingard; Jane Ladner; Murugendra Vanarotti; Andrew J. Fisher; Howard Robinson; Kathryn T. Buchanan; David M. Engman; James B. Ames

The flagellar calcium-binding protein (FCaBP) of the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi is targeted to the flagellar membrane where it regulates flagellar function and assembly. As a first step toward understanding the Ca2+-induced conformational changes important for membrane-targeting, we report here the x-ray crystal structure of FCaBP in the Ca2+-free state determined at 2.2Å resolution. The first 17 residues from the N terminus appear unstructured and solvent-exposed. Residues implicated in membrane targeting (Lys-19, Lys-22, and Lys-25) are flanked by an exposed N-terminal helix (residues 26-37), forming a patch of positive charge on the protein surface that may interact electrostatically with flagellar membrane targets. The four EF-hands in FCaBP each adopt a “closed conformation” similar to that seen in Ca2+-free calmodulin. The overall fold of FCaBP is closest to that of grancalcin and other members of the penta EF-hand superfamily. Unlike the dimeric penta EF-hand proteins, FCaBP lacks a fifth EF-hand and is monomeric. The unstructured N-terminal region of FCaBP suggests that its covalently attached myristoyl group at the N terminus may be solvent-exposed, in contrast to the highly sequestered myristoyl group seen in recoverin and GCAP1. NMR analysis demonstrates that the myristoyl group attached to FCaBP is indeed solvent-exposed in both the Ca2+-free and Ca2+-bound states, and myristoylation has no effect on protein structure and folding stability. We propose that exposed acyl groups at the N terminus may anchor FCaBP to the flagellar membrane and that Ca2+-induced conformational changes may control its binding to membrane-bound protein targets.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Click Modification of RNA at Adenosine: Structure and Reactivity of 7-Ethynyl- and 7-Triazolyl-8-aza-7-deazaadenosine in RNA.

Kelly J. Phelps; José M. Ibarra-Soza; Kiet Tran; Andrew J. Fisher; Peter A. Beal

Ribonucleoside analogues bearing terminal alkynes, including 7-ethynyl-8-aza-7-deazaadenosine (7-EAA), are useful for RNA modification applications. However, although alkyne- and triazole-bearing ribonucleosides are in widespread use, very little information is available on the impact of these modifications on RNA structure. By solving crystal structures for RNA duplexes containing these analogues, we show that, like adenosine, 7-EAA and a triazole derived from 7-EAA base pair with uridine and are well-accommodated within an A-form helix. We show that copper-catalyzed azide/alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) reactions with 7-EAA are sensitive to the RNA secondary structure context, with single-stranded sites reacting faster than duplex sites. 7-EAA and its triazole products are recognized in RNA template strands as adenosine by avian myoblastosis virus reverse transcriptase. In addition, 7-EAA in RNA is a substrate for an active site mutant of the RNA editing adenosine deaminase, ADAR2. These studies extend our understanding of the impact of these novel nucleobase analogues and set the stage for their use in probing RNA structure and metabolism.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2002

Crystallization and low-resolution structure of an effector-caspase/P35 complex: similarities and differences to an initiator-caspase/P35 complex

Michael J. Eddins; Donna Lemongello; Paul D. Friesen; Andrew J. Fisher

The aspartate-specific caspases play a pivotal role in the execution of programmed cell death and therefore constitute important targets for the control of apoptosis. Upon ectopic expression, baculovirus P35 inhibits apoptosis in phylogenetically diverse organisms by suppressing the proteolytic activity of the cellular caspases in a cleavage-dependent mechanism. After cleavage by caspase, the P35 fragments remain bound to the target caspase, forming an inhibitory complex that sequesters the caspase from further activity. Crystals of a complex between P35 and Sf-caspase-1, an insect effector-caspase, were grown. A 5.2 A resolution structure of this inhibitory complex was determined by molecular-replacement methods. The structure reveals few regions of interaction between the two proteins, much like that observed in the structure of the recently solved human initiator-caspase/P35 complex. In the effector-caspase/P35 complex structure presented here, the P35 molecule shifts towards a loop that is conserved in effector caspases but absent in initiator caspase. This shift could strengthen interactions between the two proteins and may explain the preference of P35 for inhibiting effector-caspases.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Recognition of duplex RNA by the deaminase domain of the RNA editing enzyme ADAR2

Kelly J. Phelps; Kiet Tran; Tristan Eifler; Anna I. Erickson; Andrew J. Fisher; Peter A. Beal

Adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADARs) hydrolytically deaminate adenosines (A) in a wide variety of duplex RNAs and misregulation of editing is correlated with human disease. However, our understanding of reaction selectivity is limited. ADARs are modular enzymes with multiple double-stranded RNA binding domains (dsRBDs) and a catalytic domain. While dsRBD binding is understood, little is known about ADAR catalytic domain/RNA interactions. Here we use a recently discovered RNA substrate that is rapidly deaminated by the isolated human ADAR2 deaminase domain (hADAR2-D) to probe these interactions. We introduced the nucleoside analog 8-azanebularine (8-azaN) into this RNA (and derived constructs) to mechanistically trap the protein–RNA complex without catalytic turnover for EMSA and ribonuclease footprinting analyses. EMSA showed that hADAR2-D requires duplex RNA and is sensitive to 2′-deoxy substitution at nucleotides opposite the editing site, the local sequence and 8-azaN nucleotide positioning on the duplex. Ribonuclease V1 footprinting shows that hADAR2-D protects ∼23 nt on the edited strand around the editing site in an asymmetric fashion (∼18 nt on the 5′ side and ∼5 nt on the 3′ side). These studies provide a deeper understanding of the ADAR catalytic domain–RNA interaction and new tools for biophysical analysis of ADAR–RNA complexes.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

Janus: Prediction and Ranking of Mutations Required for Functional Interconversion of Enzymes

Trevor A. Addington; Robert W. Mertz; Justin B. Siegel; James Thompson; Andrew J. Fisher; Vladimir Filkov; Nicholas M. Fleischman; Alisa A. Suen; Chensong Zhang; Michael D. Toney

Identification of residues responsible for functional specificity in enzymes is a challenging and important problem in protein chemistry. Active-site residues are generally easy to identify, but residues outside the active site are also important to catalysis and their identities and roles are more difficult to determine. We report a method based on analysis of multiple sequence alignments, embodied in our program Janus, for predicting mutations required to interconvert structurally related but functionally distinct enzymes. Conversion of aspartate aminotransferase into tyrosine aminotransferase is demonstrated and compared to previous efforts. Incorporation of 35 predicted mutations resulted in an enzyme with the desired substrate specificity but low catalytic activity. A single round of DNA back-shuffling with wild-type aspartate aminotransferase on this variant generated mutants with tyrosine aminotransferase activities better than those previously realized from rational design or directed evolution. Methods such as this, coupled with computational modeling, may prove invaluable in furthering our understanding of enzyme catalysis and engineering.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Ground-state electronic destabilization via hyperconjugation in aspartate aminotransferase.

Wait R. Griswold; Joan Nieto Castro; Andrew J. Fisher; Michael D. Toney

Binding isotope effects for l-aspartate reacting with the inactive K258A mutant of PLP-dependent aspartate aminotransferase to give a stable external aldimine intermediate are reported. They provide direct evidence for electronic ground-state destabilization via hyperconjugation. The smaller equilibrium isotope effect with deazaPLP-reconstituted K258A indicates that the pyridine nitrogen plays an important role in labilizing the Cα-H bond.


FEBS Letters | 2014

Crystal structures of sialyltransferase from Photobacterium damselae.

Nhung Huynh; Yanhong Li; Hai Yu; Shengshu Huang; Kam Lau; Xi Chen; Andrew J. Fisher

Sialyltransferase structures fall into either GT‐A or GT‐B glycosyltransferase fold. Some sialyltransferases from the Photobacterium genus have been shown to contain an additional N‐terminal immunoglobulin (Ig)‐like domain. Photobacterium damselae α2–6‐sialyltransferase has been used efficiently in enzymatic and chemoenzymatic synthesis of α2–6‐linked sialosides. Here we report three crystal structures of this enzyme. Two structures with and without a donor substrate analog CMP‐3F(a)Neu5Ac contain an immunoglobulin (Ig)‐like domain and adopt the GT‐B sialyltransferase fold. The binary structure reveals a non‐productive pre‐Michaelis complex, which are caused by crystal lattice contacts that prevent the large conformational changes. The third structure lacks the Ig‐domain. Comparison of the three structures reveals small inherent flexibility between the two Rossmann‐like domains of the GT‐B fold.

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Irwin H. Segel

University of California

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Xi Chen

University of California

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Ian J. MacRae

Scripps Research Institute

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Peter A. Beal

University of California

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Hai Yu

University of California

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Eissa Hanna

University of California

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Eric Lansdon

University of California

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