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Featured researches published by Anthony R. Clarke.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Location and properties of metal-binding sites on the human prion protein

Graham S. Jackson; Ian R. Murray; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Nicholas Gibbs; Jonathan P. Waltho; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge

Although a functional role in copper binding has been suggested for the prion protein, evidence for binding at affinities characteristic of authentic metal-binding proteins has been lacking. By presentation of copper(II) ions in the presence of the weak chelator glycine, we have now characterized two high-affinity binding sites for divalent transition metals within the human prion protein. One is in the N-terminal octapeptide-repeat segment and has a Kd for copper(II) of 10−14 M, with other metals (Ni2+, Zn2+, and Mn2+) binding three or more orders of magnitude more weakly. However, NMR and fluorescence data reveal a previously unreported second site around histidines 96 and 111, a region of the molecule known to be crucial for prion propagation. The Kd for copper(II) at this site is 4 × 10−14 M, whereas nickel(II), zinc(II), and manganese(II) bind 6, 7, and 10 orders of magnitude more weakly, respectively, regardless of whether the protein is in its oxidized α-helical (α-PrP) or reduced β-sheet (β-PrP) conformation. A role for prion protein (PrP) in copper metabolism or transport seems likely and disturbance of this function may be involved in prion-related neurotoxicity.


Nature Cell Biology | 1999

Strain-specific prion-protein conformation determined by metal ions

Jonathan D. F. Wadsworth; Andrew F. Hill; Susan Joiner; Graham Stuart Jackson; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge

In animals infected with a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, or prion disease, conformational isomers (known as PrPSc proteins) of the wild-type, host-encoded cellular prion protein (PrPC) accumulate. The infectious agents, prions, are composed mainly of these conformational isomers, with distinct prion isolates or strains being associated with different PrPSc conformations and patterns of glycosylation. Here we show that two different human PrPSc types, seen in clinically distinct subtypes of classical Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease, can be interconverted in vitro by altering their metal-ion occupancy. The dependence of PrPSc conformation on the binding of copper and zinc represents a new mechanism for post-translational modification of PrP and for the generation of multiple prion strains, with widespread implications for both the molecular classification and the pathogenesis of prion diseases in humans and animals.


Nature | 2011

Prion propagation and toxicity in vivo occur in two distinct mechanistic phases

Malin K. Sandberg; Huda Al-Doujaily; Bernadette Sharps; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge

Mammalian prions cause fatal neurodegenerative conditions including Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease in humans and scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy in animals. Prion infections are typically associated with remarkably prolonged but highly consistent incubation periods followed by a rapid clinical phase. The relationship between prion propagation, generation of neurotoxic species and clinical onset has remained obscure. Prion incubation periods in experimental animals are known to vary inversely with expression level of cellular prion protein. Here we demonstrate that prion propagation in brain proceeds via two distinct phases: a clinically silent exponential phase not rate-limited by prion protein concentration which rapidly reaches a maximal prion titre, followed by a distinct switch to a plateau phase. The latter determines time to clinical onset in a manner inversely proportional to prion protein concentration. These findings demonstrate an uncoupling of infectivity and toxicity. We suggest that prions themselves are not neurotoxic but catalyse the formation of such species from PrPC. Production of neurotoxic species is triggered when prion propagation saturates, leading to a switch from autocatalytic production of infectivity (phase 1) to a toxic (phase 2) pathway.


Nature Communications | 2011

Interaction between prion protein and toxic amyloid β assemblies can be therapeutically targeted at multiple sites

Darragh B. Freir; Andrew J. Nicoll; Igor Klyubin; Silvia Panico; Jessica M. Mc Donald; Emmanuel Risse; Emmanuel A. Asante; Mark A. Farrow; Richard B. Sessions; Helen R. Saibil; Anthony R. Clarke; Michael J. Rowan; Dominic M. Walsh; John Collinge

A role for PrP in the toxic effect of oligomeric forms of Aβ, implicated in Alzheimers disease (AD), has been suggested but remains controversial. Here we show that PrP is required for the plasticity-impairing effects of ex vivo material from human AD brain and that standardized Aβ-derived diffusible ligand (ADDL) preparations disrupt hippocampal synaptic plasticity in a PrP-dependent manner. We screened a panel of anti-PrP antibodies for their ability to disrupt the ADDL–PrP interaction. Antibodies directed to the principal PrP/Aβ-binding site and to PrP helix-1, were able to block Aβ binding to PrP suggesting that the toxic Aβ species are of relatively high molecular mass and/or may bind multiple PrP molecules. Two representative and extensively characterized monoclonal antibodies directed to these regions, ICSM-35 and ICSM-18, were shown to block the Aβ-mediated disruption of synaptic plasticity validating these antibodies as candidate therapeutics for AD either individually or in combination.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

The Human Papillomavirus (HPV) 16 E2 Protein Induces Apoptosis in the Absence of Other HPV Proteins and via a p53-dependent Pathway

Kj Webster; Jl Parish; Maya J. Pandya; Peter Lesley Stern; Anthony R. Clarke; Kevin Gaston

The human papillomavirus (HPV) E2 protein regulates viral gene expression and is also required for viral replication. HPV-transformed cells often contain chromosomally integrated copies of the HPV genome in which the viral E2 gene is disrupted. We have shown previously that re-expression of the HPV 16 E2 protein in HPV 16-transformed cells results in cell death via apoptosis. Here we show that the HPV 16 E2 protein can induce apoptosis in both HPV-transformed and non-HPV-transformed cell lines. E2-induced apoptosis is abrogated by a trans-dominant negative mutant of p53 or by overexpression of the HPV 16 E6 protein, but is increased by overexpression of wild-type p53. We show that mutations that block the DNA binding activity of E2 do not impair the ability of this protein to induce apoptosis. In contrast, removal of both N-terminal domains from the E2 dimer completely blocks E2-induced cell death. Heterodimers formed between wild-type E2 and N-terminally deleted E2 proteins also fail to induce cell death. Our data suggest that neither the DNA binding activity of E2 nor other HPV proteins are required for the induction of apoptosis by E2 and that E2-induced cell death occurs via a p53-dependent pathway.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

Structural mobility of the human prion protein probed by backbone hydrogen exchange.

Llp Hosszu; Baxter Nj; Graham Stuart Jackson; Aisling Power; Anthony R. Clarke; Jonathan P. Waltho; C. J. Craven; Collinge J

Prions, the causative agents of Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD) in humans and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and scrapie in animals, are principally composed of PrPSc, a conformational isomer of cellular prion protein (PrPC). The propensity of PrPC to adopt alternative folds suggests that there may be an unusually high proportion of alternative conformations in dynamic equilibrium with the native state. However, the rates of hydrogen/deuterium exchange demonstrate that the conformation of human PrPC is not abnormally plastic. The stable core of PrPC has extensive contributions from all three α-helices and shows protection factors equal to the equilibrium constant for the major unfolding transition. A residual, hyper-stable region is retained upon unfolding, and exchange analysis identifies this as a small nucleus of ~10 residues around the disulfide bond. These results show that the most likely route for the conversion of PrPC to PrPSc is through a highly unfolded state that retains, at most, only this small nucleus of structure, rather than through a highly organized folding intermediate.


Biochemical Journal | 2008

Detection and characterization of proteinase K-sensitive disease-related prion protein with thermolysin

Sabrina Cronier; Nathalie Gros; M. Howard Tattum; Graham S. Jackson; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge; Jonathan D. F. Wadsworth

Disease-related PrPSc [pathogenic PrP (prion protein)] is classically distinguished from its normal cellular precursor, PrPC(cellular PrP) by its detergent insolubility and partial resistance to proteolysis. Although molecular diagnosis of prion disease has historically relied upon detection of protease-resistant fragments of PrPSc using PK (proteinase K), it is now apparent that a substantial fraction of disease-related PrP is destroyed by this protease. Recently, thermolysin has been identified as a complementary tool to PK, permitting isolation of PrPSc in its full-length form. In the present study, we show that thermolysin can degrade PrPC while preserving both PK-sensitive and PK-resistant isoforms of disease-related PrP in both rodent and human prion strains. For mouse RML (Rocky Mountain Laboratory) prions, the majority of PK-sensitive disease-related PrP isoforms do not appear to contribute significantly to infectivity. In vCJD (variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease), the human counterpart of BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), up to 90% of total PrP present in the brain resists degradation with thermolysin, whereas only ∼15% of this material resists digestion by PK. Detection of PK-sensitive isoforms of disease-related PrP using thermolysin should be useful for improving diagnostic sensitivity in human prion diseases.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Multiple folding pathways for heterologously expressed human prion protein

Graham Stuart Jackson; Andrew F. Hill; Catherine Joseph; Laszlo L. P. Hosszu; Aisling Power; Jonathan P. Waltho; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge

Human PrP (residues 91-231) expressed in Escherichia coli can adopt several conformations in solution depending on pH, redox conditions and denaturant concentration. Oxidised PrP at neutral pH, with the disulphide bond intact, is a soluble monomer which contains 47% alpha-helix and corresponds to PrPC. Denaturation studies show that this structure has a relatively small, solvent-excluded core and unfolds to an unstructured state in a single, co-operative transition with a DeltaG for folding of -5.6 kcal mol-1. The unfolding behaviour is sensitive to pH and at 4.0 or below the molecule unfolds via a stable folding intermediate. This equilibrium intermediate has a reduced helical content and aggregates over several hours. When the disulphide bond is reduced the protein adopts different conformations depending upon pH. At neutral pH or above, the reduced protein has an alpha-helical fold, which is identical to that observed for the oxidised protein. At pH 4 or below, the conformation rearranges to a fold that contains a high proportion of beta-sheet structure. In the reduced state the alpha- and beta-forms are slowly inter-convertible whereas when oxidised the protein can only adopt an alpha-conformation in free solution. The data we present here shows that the human prion protein can exist in multiple conformations some of which are known to be capable of forming fibrils. The precise conformation that human PrP adopts and the pathways for unfolding are dependent upon solvent conditions. The conditions we examined are within the range that a protein may encounter in sub-cellular compartments and may have implications for the mechanism of conversion of PrPC to PrPSc in vivo. Since the conversion of PrPC to PrPSc is accompanied by a switch in secondary structure from alpha to beta, this system provides a useful model for studying major structural rearrangements in the prion protein.


Nature Communications | 2011

Rapid cell-surface prion protein conversion revealed using a novel cell system

Rob Goold; S. Rabbanian; L. Sutton; Ralph Andre; P. Arora; J. Moonga; Anthony R. Clarke; Giampietro Schiavo; Parmjit S. Jat; John Collinge; Sarah J. Tabrizi

Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders with unique transmissible properties. The infectious and pathological agent is thought to be a misfolded conformer of the prion protein. Little is known about the initial events in prion infection because the infecting prion source has been immunologically indistinguishable from normal cellular prion protein (PrPC). Here we develop a unique cell system in which epitope-tagged PrPC is expressed in a PrP knockdown (KD) neuroblastoma cell line. The tagged PrPC, when expressed in our PrP-KD cells, supports prion replication with the production of bona fide epitope-tagged infectious misfolded PrP (PrPSc). Using this epitope-tagged PrPSc, we study the earliest events in cellular prion infection and PrP misfolding. We show that prion infection of cells is extremely rapid occurring within 1 min of prion exposure, and we demonstrate that the plasma membrane is the primary site of prion conversion.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Crystal Structure of Human Prion Protein Bound to a Therapeutic Antibody.

Svetlana V. Antonyuk; Clare R. Trevitt; Richard W. Strange; Graham S. Jackson; D. Sangar; Mark Batchelor; Sarah Cooper; C. Fraser; Samantha Jones; T. Georgiou; A. Khalili-Shirazi; Anthony R. Clarke; S. Samar Hasnain; John Collinge

Prion infection is characterized by the conversion of host cellular prion protein (PrPC) into disease-related conformers (PrPSc) and can be arrested in vivo by passive immunization with anti-PrP monoclonal antibodies. Here, we show that the ability of an antibody to cure prion-infected cells correlates with its binding affinity for PrPC rather than PrPSc. We have visualized this interaction at the molecular level by determining the crystal structure of human PrP bound to the Fab fragment of monoclonal antibody ICSM 18, which has the highest affinity for PrPC and the highest therapeutic potency in vitro and in vivo. In this crystal structure, human PrP is observed in its native PrPC conformation. Interactions between neighboring PrP molecules in the crystal structure are mediated by close homotypic contacts between residues at position 129 that lead to the formation of a 4-strand intermolecular β-sheet. The importance of this residue in mediating protein–protein contact could explain the genetic susceptibility and prion strain selection determined by polymorphic residue 129 in human prion disease, one of the strongest common susceptibility polymorphisms known in any human disease.

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