Anthony W. Fitzpatrick
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Anthony W. Fitzpatrick.
Science | 2007
Tuomas P. J. Knowles; Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Sarah Meehan; Helen R. Mott; Michele Vendruscolo; Christopher M. Dobson; Mark E. Welland
Protein molecules have the ability to form a rich variety of natural and artificial structures and materials. We show that amyloid fibrils, ordered supramolecular nanostructures that are self-assembled from a wide range of polypeptide molecules, have rigidities varying over four orders of magnitude, and constitute a class of high-performance biomaterials. We elucidate the molecular origin of fibril material properties and show that the major contribution to their rigidity stems from a generic interbackbone hydrogen-bonding network that is modulated by variable side-chain interactions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Galia T. Debelouchina; Marvin J. Bayro; Daniel K. Clare; Marc A. Caporini; Vikram S. Bajaj; Christopher P. Jaroniec; Luchun Wang; Vladimir Ladizhansky; Shirley A. Müller; Cait E. MacPhee; Christopher A. Waudby; Helen R. Mott; Alfonso De Simone; Tuomas P. J. Knowles; Helen R. Saibil; Michele Vendruscolo; Elena V. Orlova; Robert G. Griffin; Christopher M. Dobson
The cross-β amyloid form of peptides and proteins represents an archetypal and widely accessible structure consisting of ordered arrays of β-sheet filaments. These complex aggregates have remarkable chemical and physical properties, and the conversion of normally soluble functional forms of proteins into amyloid structures is linked to many debilitating human diseases, including several common forms of age-related dementia. Despite their importance, however, cross-β amyloid fibrils have proved to be recalcitrant to detailed structural analysis. By combining structural constraints from a series of experimental techniques spanning five orders of magnitude in length scale—including magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, X-ray fiber diffraction, cryoelectron microscopy, scanning transmission electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy—we report the atomic-resolution (0.5 Å) structures of three amyloid polymorphs formed by an 11-residue peptide. These structures reveal the details of the packing interactions by which the constituent β-strands are assembled hierarchically into protofilaments, filaments, and mature fibrils.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Andrew J. Baldwin; Tuomas P. J. Knowles; Gian Gaetano Tartaglia; Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Glyn L. Devlin; Sarah L. Shammas; Christopher A. Waudby; Maria F. Mossuto; Sarah Meehan; Sally L. Gras; John Christodoulou; Spencer J. Anthony-Cahill; Paul D. Barker; Michele Vendruscolo; Christopher M. Dobson
An experimental determination of the thermodynamic stabilities of a series of amyloid fibrils reveals that this structural form is likely to be the most stable one that protein molecules can adopt even under physiological conditions. This result challenges the conventional assumption that functional forms of proteins correspond to the global minima in their free energy surfaces and suggests that living systems are conformationally as well as chemically metastable.
Nature | 2017
Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Benjamin Falcon; Shaoda He; Alexey G. Murzin; Garib Murshudov; Holly J. Garringer; R. Anthony Crowther; Bernardino Ghetti; Michel Goedert; Sjors H.W. Scheres
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common neurodegenerative disease, and there are no mechanism-based therapies. The disease is defined by the presence of abundant neurofibrillary lesions and neuritic plaques in the cerebral cortex. Neurofibrillary lesions comprise paired helical and straight tau filaments, whereas tau filaments with different morphologies characterize other neurodegenerative diseases. No high-resolution structures of tau filaments are available. Here we present cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) maps at 3.4–3.5 Å resolution and corresponding atomic models of paired helical and straight filaments from the brain of an individual with Alzheimer’s disease. Filament cores are made of two identical protofilaments comprising residues 306–378 of tau protein, which adopt a combined cross-β/β-helix structure and define the seed for tau aggregation. Paired helical and straight filaments differ in their inter-protofilament packing, showing that they are ultrastructural polymorphs. These findings demonstrate that cryo-EM allows atomic characterization of amyloid filaments from patient-derived material, and pave the way for investigation of a range of neurodegenerative diseases.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Christopher A. Waudby; Carlo Camilloni; Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Lisa D. Cabrita; Christopher M. Dobson; Michele Vendruscolo; John Christodoulou
α-Synuclein is a small protein strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease and related neurodegenerative disorders. We report here the use of in-cell NMR spectroscopy to observe directly the structure and dynamics of this protein within E. coli cells. To improve the accuracy in the measurement of backbone chemical shifts within crowded in-cell NMR spectra, we have developed a deconvolution method to reduce inhomogeneous line broadening within cellular samples. The resulting chemical shift values were then used to evaluate the distribution of secondary structure populations which, in the absence of stable tertiary contacts, are a most effective way to describe the conformational fluctuations of disordered proteins. The results indicate that, at least within the bacterial cytosol, α-synuclein populates a highly dynamic state that, despite the highly crowded environment, has the same characteristics as the disordered monomeric form observed in aqueous solution.
PLOS Computational Biology | 2011
Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Tuomas P. J. Knowles; Christopher A. Waudby; Michele Vendruscolo; Christopher M. Dobson
Identifying the forces that drive proteins to misfold and aggregate, rather than to fold into their functional states, is fundamental to our understanding of living systems and to our ability to combat protein deposition disorders such as Alzheimers disease and the spongiform encephalopathies. We report here the finding that the balance between hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions is different for proteins in the processes of folding to their native states and misfolding to the alternative amyloid structures. We find that the minima of the protein free energy landscape for folding and misfolding tend to be respectively dominated by hydrophobic and by hydrogen bonding interactions. These results characterise the nature of the interactions that determine the competition between folding and misfolding of proteins by revealing that the stability of native proteins is primarily determined by hydrophobic interactions between side-chains, while the stability of amyloid fibrils depends more on backbone intermolecular hydrogen bonding interactions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Sang Tae Park; Ahmed H. Zewail
Amyloid is an important class of proteinaceous material because of its close association with protein misfolding disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and type II diabetes. Although the degree of stiffness of amyloid is critical to the understanding of its pathological and biological functions, current estimates of the rigidity of these β-sheet–rich protein aggregates range from soft (108 Pa) to hard (1010 Pa) depending on the method used. Here, we use time-resolved 4D EM to directly and noninvasively measure the oscillatory dynamics of freestanding, self-supporting amyloid beams and their rigidity. The dynamics of a single structure, not an ensemble, were visualized in space and time by imaging in the microscope an amyloid–dye cocrystal that, upon excitation, converts light into mechanical work. From the oscillatory motion, together with tomographic reconstructions of three studied amyloid beams, we determined the Young modulus of these highly ordered, hydrogen-bonded β-sheet structures. We find that amyloid materials are very stiff (109 Pa). The potential biological relevance of the deposition of such a highly rigid biomaterial in vivo are discussed.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Giovanni M. Vanacore; Ahmed H. Zewail
Significance The biomechanics of amyloid underlies its function in living organisms. We use four-dimensional electron microscopy to systematically dissect the nanoscale origins of amyloid elasticity by measuring the bond stiffnesses of the intermolecular forces stabilizing each of its three characteristic packing interfaces. We find amyloid to have a pronounced mechanical anisotropy with longitudinal, hydrogen bonding 20 times stiffer than transverse, amphiphilic, and electrostatic interactions. Such strongly anisotropic elastic properties are likely to give rise to length-dependent mechanical behavior with short fibrils possessing significantly different material properties than longer fibrils. This is of great importance in understanding fibril–membrane interactions and fragmentation mechanisms, both of which are thought to play a crucial role in the spread of amyloid diseases. The amyloid state of polypeptides is a stable, highly organized structural form consisting of laterally associated β-sheet protofilaments that may be adopted as an alternative to the functional, native state. Identifying the balance of forces stabilizing amyloid is fundamental to understanding the wide accessibility of this state to peptides and proteins with unrelated primary sequences, various chain lengths, and widely differing native structures. Here, we use four-dimensional electron microscopy to demonstrate that the forces acting to stabilize amyloid at the atomic level are highly anisotropic, that an optimized interbackbone hydrogen-bonding network within β-sheets confers 20 times more rigidity on the structure than sequence-specific sidechain interactions between sheets, and that electrostatic attraction of protofilaments is only slightly stronger than these weak amphiphilic interactions. The potential biological relevance of the deposition of such a highly anisotropic biomaterial in vivo is discussed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Ulrich J. Lorenz; Giovanni M. Vanacore; Ahmed H. Zewail
Cryo-electron microscopy is a form of transmission electron microscopy that has been used to determine the 3D structure of biological specimens in the hydrated state and with high resolution. We report the development of 4D cryo-electron microscopy by integrating the fourth dimension, time, into this powerful technique. From time-resolved diffraction of amyloid fibrils in a thin layer of vitrified water at cryogenic temperatures, we were able to detect picometer movements of protein molecules on a nanosecond time scale. Potential future applications of 4D cryo-electron microscopy are numerous, and some are discussed here.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Birgit Strodel; Anthony W. Fitzpatrick; Michele Vendruscolo; Christopher M. Dobson; David J. Wales
We employ constant-temperature and replica exchange molecular dynamics to survey the free energy landscape of the ccbeta peptide using a united-atom potential and an implicit solvent representation. Starting from the experimental coiled-coil structure we observe alpha to beta conversion on increasing the temperature, in agreement with experiment. Various beta-sheet trimers are identified as free energy minima, including one that closely resembles the amyloid beta-sheet model previously proposed from experimental data. We characterize two alternative pathways leading to beta-sheets. The first proceeds via direct alpha to beta conversion without dissociation of the trimer, and the second can be classified as a dissociation/reassociation pathway.