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Dive into the research topics where Anshul Bhardwaj is active.

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Featured researches published by Anshul Bhardwaj.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

A Minimal Nuclear Localization Signal (NLS) in Human Phospholipid Scramblase 4 That Binds Only the Minor NLS-binding Site of Importin α1

Kaylen Lott; Anshul Bhardwaj; Peter J. Sims; Gino Cingolani

Importin α1 can bind classical nuclear localization signals (NLSs) in two NLS-binding sites, known as “major” and “minor.” The major site is located between ARM repeats 2–4, whereas the minor site spans ARM 7–8. In this study, we have characterized the cellular localization of human phospholipid scramblase 4 (hPLSCR4), a member of the phospholipid scramblase protein family. We identified a minimal NLS in hPLSCR4 (273GSIIRKWN280) that contains only two basic amino acids. This NLS is both necessary for nuclear localization of hPLSCR4 in transfected HeLa cells and sufficient for nuclear import of a non-diffusible cargo in permeabilized cells. Mutation of only one of the two basic residues, Arg277, correlates with loss of nuclear localization, suggesting this amino acid plays a key role in nuclear transport. Crystallographic analysis of mammalian importin α1 in complex with the hPLSCR4-NLS reveals this minimal NLS binds specifically and exclusively to the minor binding site of importin α. These data provide the first structural and functional evidence of a novel NLS-binding mode in importin α1 that uses only the minor groove as the exclusive site for nuclear import of nonclassical cargos.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

The Importin β Binding Domain Modulates the Avidity of Importin β for the Nuclear Pore Complex

Kaylen Lott; Anshul Bhardwaj; Gregory Mitrousis; Nelly Panté; Gino Cingolani

Importin β mediates active passage of cellular substrates through the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Adaptors such as importin α and snurportin associate with importin β via an importin β binding (IBB) domain. The intrinsic structural flexibility of importin β allows its concerted interactions with IBB domains, phenylalanine-glycine nucleoporins, and the GTPase Ran during transport. In this paper, we provide evidence that the nature of the IBB domain modulates the affinity of the import complex for the NPC. In permeabilized cells, importin β imports a cargo fused to the snurportin IBB (sIBB) with ∼70% reduced energy requirement as compared with the classical importin α IBB. At the molecular level, this is explained by ∼200-fold reduced affinity of importin β for Nup62, when bound to the sIBB. Consistently, in vivo, the importin β·sIBB complex has greatly reduced persistence inside the central channel of the NPC. We propose that by controlling the degree of strain in the tertiary structure of importin β, the IBB domain modulates the affinity of the import complex for nucleoporins, thus dictating its persistence inside the NPC.


Protein Science | 2008

Foldon‐guided self‐assembly of ultra‐stable protein fibers

Anshul Bhardwaj; Nancy Walker-Kopp; Stephan Wilkens; Gino Cingolani

A common objective in protein engineering is the enhancement of the thermodynamic properties of recombinant proteins for possible applications in nanobiotechnology. The performance of proteins can be improved by the rational design of chimeras that contain structural elements with the desired properties, thus resulting in a more effective exploitation of protein folds designed by nature. In this paper, we report the design and characterization of an ultra‐stable self‐refolding protein fiber, which rapidly reassembles in solution after denaturation induced by harsh chemical treatment or high temperature. This engineered protein fiber was constructed on the molecular framework of bacteriophage P22 tail needle gp26, by fusing its helical core to the foldon domain of phage T4 fibritin. Using protein engineering, we rationally permuted the foldon upstream and downstream from the gp26 helical core and characterized gp26‐foldon chimeras by biophysical analysis. Our data demonstrate that one specific protein chimera containing the foldon immediately downstream from the gp26 helical core, gp26(1‐140)‐F, displays the highest thermodynamic and structural stability and refolds spontaneously in solution following denaturation. The gp26‐foldon chimeric fiber remains stable in 6.0 M guanidine hydrochloride, or at 80°C, rapidly refolds after denaturation, and has both N and C termini accessible for chemical/biological modification, thereby representing an ideal platform for the design of self‐assembling nanoblocks.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2014

Architecture of viral genome-delivery molecular machines

Anshul Bhardwaj; Adam S. Olia; Gino Cingolani

From the abyss of the ocean to the human gut, bacterial viruses (or bacteriophages) have colonized all ecosystems of the planet earth and evolved in sync with their bacterial hosts. Over 95% of bacteriophages have a tail that varies greatly in length and complexity. The tail complex interrupts the icosahedral capsid symmetry and provides both an entry for viral genome-packaging during replication and an exit for genome-ejection during infection. Here, we review recent progress in deciphering the structure, assembly and conformational dynamics of viral genome-delivery tail machines. We focus on the bacteriophages P22 and T7, two well-studied members of the Podoviridae family that use short, non-contractile tails to infect Gram-negative bacteria. The structure of specialized tail fibers and their putative role in host anchoring, cell-surface penetration and genome-ejection is discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Atomic Structure of Bacteriophage Sf6 Tail Needle Knob

Anshul Bhardwaj; Ian J. Molineux; Sherwood Casjens; Gino Cingolani

Podoviridae are double-stranded DNA bacteriophages that use short, non-contractile tails to adsorb to the host cell surface. Within the tail apparatus of P22-like phages, a dedicated fiber known as the “tail needle” likely functions as a cell envelope-penetrating device to promote ejection of viral DNA inside the host. In Sf6, a P22-like phage that infects Shigella flexneri, the tail needle presents a C-terminal globular knob. This knob, absent in phage P22 but shared in other members of the P22-like genus, represents the outermost exposed tip of the virion that contacts the host cell surface. Here, we report a crystal structure of the Sf6 tail needle knob determined at 1.0 Å resolution. The structure reveals a trimeric globular domain of the TNF fold structurally superimposable with that of the tail-less phage PRD1 spike protein P5 and the adenovirus knob, domains that in both viruses function in receptor binding. However, P22-like phages are not known to utilize a protein receptor and are thought to directly penetrate the host surface. At 1.0 Å resolution, we identified three equivalents of l-glutamic acid (l-Glu) bound to each subunit interface. Although intimately bound to the protein, l-Glu does not increase the structural stability of the trimer nor it affects its ability to self-trimerize in vitro. In analogy to P22 gp26, we suggest the tail needle of phage Sf6 is ejected through the bacterial cell envelope during infection and its C-terminal knob is threaded through peptidoglycan pores formed by glycan strands.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Atomic Structure of GRK5 Reveals Distinct Structural Features Novel for G Protein-coupled Receptor Kinases.

Konstantin E. Komolov; Anshul Bhardwaj; Jeffrey L. Benovic

Background: GRK5 is implicated in several human pathologies, but relatively little is known about its structure and function. Results: High resolution crystal structures of human GRK5 with AMP-PNP and sangivamycin were determined. Conclusion: GRK5 is found in a partially closed state with its kinase domain C-tail forming novel interactions with nucleotide and the N-lobe. Significance: The GRK5 structure provides important insight into its function. G protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) are members of the protein kinase A, G, and C families (AGC) and play a central role in mediating G protein-coupled receptor phosphorylation and desensitization. One member of the family, GRK5, has been implicated in several human pathologies, including heart failure, hypertension, cancer, diabetes, and Alzheimer disease. To gain mechanistic insight into GRK5 function, we determined a crystal structure of full-length human GRK5 at 1.8 Å resolution. GRK5 in complex with the ATP analog 5′-adenylyl β,γ-imidodiphosphate or the nucleoside sangivamycin crystallized as a monomer. The C-terminal tail (C-tail) of AGC kinase domains is a highly conserved feature that is divided into three segments as follows: the C-lobe tether, the active-site tether (AST), and the N-lobe tether (NLT). This domain is fully resolved in GRK5 and reveals novel interactions with the nucleotide and N-lobe. Similar to other AGC kinases, the GRK5 AST is an integral part of the nucleotide-binding pocket, a feature not observed in other GRKs. The AST also mediates contact between the kinase N- and C-lobes facilitating closure of the kinase domain. The GRK5 NLT is largely displaced from its previously observed position in other GRKs. Moreover, although the autophosphorylation sites in the NLT are >20 Å away from the catalytic cleft, they are capable of rapid cis-autophosphorylation suggesting high mobility of this region. In summary, we provide a snapshot of GRK5 in a partially closed state, where structural elements of the kinase domain C-tail are aligned to form novel interactions to the nucleotide and N-lobe not previously observed in other GRKs.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Tip of the Tail Needle Affects the Rate of DNA Delivery by Bacteriophage P22

Justin C. Leavitt; Lasha Gogokhia; Eddie B. Gilcrease; Anshul Bhardwaj; Gino Cingolani; Sherwood R. Casjens

The P22-like bacteriophages have short tails. Their virions bind to their polysaccharide receptors through six trimeric tailspike proteins that surround the tail tip. These short tails also have a trimeric needle protein that extends beyond the tailspikes from the center of the tail tip, in a position that suggests that it should make first contact with the host’s outer membrane during the infection process. The base of the needle serves as a plug that keeps the DNA in the virion, but role of the needle during adsorption and DNA injection is not well understood. Among the P22-like phages are needle types with two completely different C-terminal distal tip domains. In the phage Sf6-type needle, unlike the other P22-type needle, the distal tip folds into a “knob” with a TNF-like fold, similar to the fiber knobs of bacteriophage PRD1 and Adenovirus. The phage HS1 knob is very similar to that of Sf6, and we report here its crystal structure which, like the Sf6 knob, contains three bound L-glutamate molecules. A chimeric P22 phage with a tail needle that contains the HS1 terminal knob efficiently infects the P22 host, Salmonella enterica, suggesting the knob does not confer host specificity. Likewise, mutations that should abrogate the binding of L-glutamate to the needle do not appear to affect virion function, but several different other genetic changes to the tip of the needle slow down potassium release from the host during infection. These findings suggest that the needle plays a role in phage P22 DNA delivery by controlling the kinetics of DNA ejection into the host.


Biochemistry | 2013

Atomic structure of dual-specificity phosphatase 26, a novel p53 phosphatase.

Ravi K. Lokareddy; Anshul Bhardwaj; Gino Cingolani

Regulation of p53 phosphorylation is critical to control its stability and biological activity. Dual-specificity phosphatase 26 (DUSP26) is a brain phosphatase highly overexpressed in neuroblastoma, which has been implicated in dephosphorylating phospho-Ser20 and phospho-Ser37 in the p53 transactivation domain. In this paper, we report the 1.68 Å crystal structure of a catalytically inactive mutant (Cys152Ser) of DUSP26 lacking the first 60 N-terminal residues (ΔN60-C/S-DUSP26). This structure reveals the architecture of a dual-specificity phosphatase domain related in structure to Vaccinia virus VH1. DUSP26 adopts a closed conformation of the protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)-binding loop, which results in an unusually shallow active site pocket and buried catalytic cysteine. A water molecule trapped inside the PTP-binding loop makes close contacts both with main chain and with side chain atoms. The hydrodynamic radius (R(H)) of ΔN60-C/S-DUSP26 measured from velocity sedimentation analysis (R(H) ∼ 22.7 Å) and gel filtration chromatography (R(H) ∼ 21.0 Å) is consistent with an ∼18 kDa globular monomeric protein. Instead in crystal, ΔN60-C/S-DUSP26 is more elongated (R(H) ∼ 37.9 Å), likely because of the extended conformation of C-terminal helix α9, which swings away from the phosphatase core to generate a highly basic surface. As in the case of phosphatase MKP-4, we propose that a substrate-induced conformational change, possibly involving rearrangement of helix α9 with respect to the phosphatase core, allows DUSP26 to adopt a catalytically active conformation. The structural characterization of DUSP26 presented in this paper provides the first atomic insight into this disease-associated phosphatase.


Biochemistry | 2010

Conformational selection in the recognition of the snurportin importin beta binding domain by importin beta.

Anshul Bhardwaj; Gino Cingolani

The structural flexibility of beta-karyopherins is critical to mediate the interaction with transport substrates, nucleoporins, and the GTPase Ran. In this paper, we provide structural evidence that the molecular recognition of the transport adaptor snurportin by importin beta follows the population selection mechanism. We have captured two drastically different conformations of importin beta bound to the snurportin importin beta binding domain trapped in the same crystallographic asymmetric unit. We propose the population selection may be a general mechanism used by beta-karyopherins to recognize transport substrates.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

An Evolutionarily Conserved Family of Virion Tail Needles Related to Bacteriophage P22 gp26: Correlation between Structural Stability and Length of the α-Helical Trimeric Coiled Coil

Anshul Bhardwaj; Nancy Walker-Kopp; Sherwood Casjens; Gino Cingolani

Bacteriophages of the Podoviridae family use short noncontractile tails to inject their genetic material into Gram-negative bacteria. In phage P22, the tail contains a thin needle, encoded by the phage gene 26, which is essential both for stabilization and for ejection of the packaged viral genome. Bioinformatic analysis of the N-terminal domain of gp26 (residues 1-60) led us to identify a family of genes encoding putative homologues of the tail needle gp26. To validate this idea experimentally and to explore their diversity, we cloned the gp26-like gene from phages HK620, Sf6 and HS1, and characterized these gene products in solution. All gp26-like factors contain an elongated alpha-helical coiled-coil core consisting of repeating, adjacent trimerization heptads and form trimeric fibers with length ranging between about 240 to 300 A. gp26 tail needles display a high level of structural stability in solution, with T(m) (temperature of melting) between 85 and 95 degrees C. To determine how the structural stability of these phage fibers correlates with the length of the alpha-helical core, we investigated the effect of insertions and deletions in the helical core. In the P22 tail needle, we identified an 85-residue-long helical domain, termed MiCRU (minimal coiled-coil repeat unit), that can be inserted in-frame inside the gp26 helical core, preserving the straight morphology of the fiber. Likewise, we were able to remove three quarters of the helical core of the HS1 tail needle, minimally decreasing the stability of the fiber. We conclude that in the gp26 family of tail needles, structural stability increases nonlinearly with the length of the alpha-helical core. Thus, the overall stability of these bacteriophage fibers is not solely dependent on the number of trimerization repeats in the alpha-helical core.

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Gino Cingolani

Thomas Jefferson University

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Adam S. Olia

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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Nancy Walker-Kopp

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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Adam Ertel

Thomas Jefferson University

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Adam P. Dicker

Thomas Jefferson University

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Alex Haber

Thomas Jefferson University

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Ankoor Roy

Thomas Jefferson University

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Ettickan Boopathi

University of Pennsylvania

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