Asli Ertekin
Rutgers University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Asli Ertekin.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Oliver F. Lange; Paolo Rossi; Nikolaos G. Sgourakis; Yifan Song; Hsiau Wei Lee; James M. Aramini; Asli Ertekin; Rong Xiao; Thomas B. Acton; Gaetano T. Montelione; David Baker
We have developed an approach for determining NMR structures of proteins over 20 kDa that utilizes sparse distance restraints obtained using transverse relaxation optimized spectroscopy experiments on perdeuterated samples to guide RASREC Rosetta NMR structure calculations. The method was tested on 11 proteins ranging from 15 to 40 kDa, seven of which were previously unsolved. The RASREC Rosetta models were in good agreement with models obtained using traditional NMR methods with larger restraint sets. In five cases X-ray structures were determined or were available, allowing comparison of the accuracy of the Rosetta models and conventional NMR models. In all five cases, the Rosetta models were more similar to the X-ray structures over both the backbone and side-chain conformations than the “best effort” structures determined by conventional methods. The incorporation of sparse distance restraints into RASREC Rosetta allows routine determination of high-quality solution NMR structures for proteins up to 40 kDa, and should be broadly useful in structural biology.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Javed A. Khan; G. V. T. Swapna; Asli Ertekin; Robert M. Krug; Liang Tong; Gaetano T. Montelione
Influenza A viruses cause a highly contagious respiratory disease in humans and are responsible for periodic widespread epidemics with high mortality rates. The influenza A virus NS1 protein (NS1A) plays a key role in countering host antiviral defense and in virulence. The 73-residue N-terminal domain of NS1A (NS1A-(1–73)) forms a symmetric homodimer with a unique six-helical chain fold. It binds canonical A-form double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). Mutational inactivation of this dsRNA binding activity of NS1A highly attenuates virus replication. Here, we have characterized the unique structural features of the dsRNA binding surface of NS1A-(1–73) using NMR methods and describe the 2.1-Å x-ray crystal structure of the corresponding dsRNA binding domain from human influenza B virus NS1B-(15–93). These results identify conserved dsRNA binding surfaces on both NS1A-(1–73) and NS1B-(15–93) that are very different from those indicated in earlier “working models” of the complex between dsRNA and NS1A-(1–73). The combined NMR and crystallographic data reveal highly conserved surface tracks of basic and hydrophilic residues that interact with dsRNA. These tracks are structurally complementary to the polyphosphate backbone conformation of A-form dsRNA and run at an ∼45° angle relative to the axes of helices α2/α2′. At the center of this dsRNA binding epitope, and common to NS1 proteins from influenza A and B viruses, is a deep pocket that includes both hydrophilic and hydrophobic amino acids. This pocket provides a target on the surface of the NS1 protein that is potentially suitable for the development of antiviral drugs targeting both influenza A and B viruses.
Proteins | 2009
Seema Sharma; Haiyan Zheng; Yuanpeng J. Huang; Asli Ertekin; Yoshitomo Hamuro; Paolo Rossi; Roberto Tejero; Thomas B. Acton; Rong Xiao; Mei Jiang; Li Zhao; Li Chung Ma; G. V. T. Swapna; James M. Aramini; Gaetano T. Montelione
Disordered or unstructured regions of proteins, while often very important biologically, can pose significant challenges for resonance assignment and three‐dimensional structure determination of the ordered regions of proteins by NMR methods. In this article, we demonstrate the application of 1H/2H exchange mass spectrometry (DXMS) for the rapid identification of disordered segments of proteins and design of protein constructs that are more suitable for structural analysis by NMR. In this benchmark study, DXMS is applied to five NMR protein targets chosen from the Northeast Structural Genomics project. These data were then used to design optimized constructs for three partially disordered proteins. Truncated proteins obtained by deletion of disordered N‐ and C‐terminal tails were evaluated using 1H‐15N HSQC and 1H‐15N heteronuclear NOE NMR experiments to assess their structural integrity. These constructs provide significantly improved NMR spectra, with minimal structural perturbations to the ordered regions of the protein structure. As a representative example, we compare the solution structures of the full length and DXMS‐based truncated construct for a 77‐residue partially disordered DUF896 family protein YnzC from Bacillus subtilis, where deletion of the disordered residues (ca. 40% of the protein) does not affect the native structure. In addition, we demonstrate that throughput of the DXMS process can be increased by analyzing mixtures of up to four proteins without reducing the sequence coverage for each protein. Our results demonstrate that DXMS can serve as a central component of a process for optimizing protein constructs for NMR structure determination. Proteins 2009.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
James M. Aramini; Julie L. Tubbs; Sreenivas Kanugula; Paolo Rossi; Asli Ertekin; Melissa Maglaqui; Keith Hamilton; Colleen Ciccosanti; Mei Jiang; Rong Xiao; Ta Tsen Soong; Burkhard Rost; Thomas B. Acton; John K. Everett; Anthony E. Pegg; John A. Tainer; Gaetano T. Montelione
Alkyltransferase-like proteins (ATLs) are a novel class of DNA repair proteins related to O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferases (AGTs) that tightly bind alkylated DNA and shunt the damaged DNA into the nucleotide excision repair pathway. Here, we present the first structure of a bacterial ATL, from Vibrio parahaemolyticus (vpAtl). We demonstrate that vpAtl adopts an AGT-like fold and that the protein is capable of tightly binding to O6-methylguanine-containing DNA and disrupting its repair by human AGT, a hallmark of ATLs. Mutation of highly conserved residues Tyr23 and Arg37 demonstrate their critical roles in a conserved mechanism of ATL binding to alkylated DNA. NMR relaxation data reveal a role for conformational plasticity in the guanine-lesion recognition cavity. Our results provide further evidence for the conserved role of ATLs in this primordial mechanism of DNA repair.
Protein Science | 2010
Hsiau Wei Lee; Greg Wylie; Sonal Bansal; Xu Wang; Adam W. Barb; Megan A. Macnaughtan; Asli Ertekin; Gaetano T. Montelione; James H. Prestegard
The traditional NMR‐based method for determining oligomeric protein structure usually involves distinguishing and assigning intra‐ and intersubunit NOEs. This task becomes challenging when determining symmetric homo‐dimer structures because NOE cross‐peaks from a given pair of protons occur at the same position whether intra‐ or intersubunit in origin. While there are isotope‐filtering strategies for distinguishing intra from intermolecular NOE interactions in these cases, they are laborious and often prove ineffectual in cases of weak dimers, where observation of intermolecular NOEs is rare. Here, we present an efficient procedure for weak dimer structure determination based on residual dipolar couplings (RDCs), chemical shift changes upon dilution, and paramagnetic surface perturbations. This procedure is applied to the Northeast Structural Genomics Consortium protein target, SeR13, a negatively charged Staphylococcus epidermidis dimeric protein (Kd 3.4 ± 1.4 mM) composed of 86 amino acids. A structure determination for the monomeric form using traditional NMR methods is presented, followed by a dimer structure determination using docking under orientation constraints from RDCs data, and scoring under residue pair potentials and shape‐based predictions of RDCs. Validation using paramagnetic surface perturbation and chemical shift perturbation data acquired on sample dilution is also presented. The general utility of the dimer structure determination procedure and the possible relevance of SeR13 dimer formation are discussed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Asli Ertekin; James M. Aramini; Paolo Rossi; Paul G. Leonard; Haleema Janjua; Rong Xiao; Melissa Maglaqui; Hsiau Wei Lee; James H. Prestegard; Gaetano T. Montelione
Background: CDK2AP1 is a tumor suppressor important in cancer biology. Results: CDK2AP1 forms a four-helix dimeric structure. The disordered N-terminal region contains an IκB kinase ϵ phosphorylation site. Conclusion: The CDK2AP1 dimer does not require a disulfide bond, but the structure is poised for disulfide bond formation. Significance: The three-dimensional structure supports a potential role for disulfide bond formation in functional regulation of CDK2AP1. CDK2AP1 (cyclin-dependent kinase 2-associated protein 1), corresponding to the gene doc-1 (deleted in oral cancer 1), is a tumor suppressor protein. The doc-1 gene is absent or down-regulated in hamster oral cancer cells and in many other cancer cell types. The ubiquitously expressed CDK2AP1 protein is the only known specific inhibitor of CDK2, making it an important component of cell cycle regulation during G1-to-S phase transition. Here, we report the solution structure of CDK2AP1 by combined methods of solution state NMR and amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange measurements with mass spectrometry. The homodimeric structure of CDK2AP1 includes an intrinsically disordered 60-residue N-terminal region and a four-helix bundle dimeric structure with reduced Cys-105 in the C-terminal region. The Cys-105 residues are, however, poised for disulfide bond formation. CDK2AP1 is phosphorylated at a conserved Ser-46 site in the N-terminal “intrinsically disordered” region by IκB kinase ϵ.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2010
Paolo Rossi; G.V.T. Swapna; Yuanpeng J. Huang; James M. Aramini; Clemens Anklin; Kenith Conover; Keith Hamilton; Rong Xiao; Thomas B. Acton; Asli Ertekin; John K. Everett; Gaetano T. Montelione
Biochemistry | 2012
James M. Aramini; Keith Hamilton; Paolo Rossi; Asli Ertekin; Hsiau Wei Lee; Alexander Lemak; Huang Wang; Rong Xiao; Thomas B. Acton; John K. Everett; Gaetano T. Montelione
Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation | 2014
Paolo Rossi; Oliver F. Lange; Nikolaos G. Sgourakis; Yifan Song; Hsiau-Wei Lee; James M. Aramini; Asli Ertekin; Rong Xiao; Thomas B. Acton; David Baker; Gaetano T. Montelione
Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation | 2013
Asli Ertekin; Haleema Janjua; Eitan Kohan; Ritu Shastry; Kari Pederson; James H. Prestegard; Gaetano T. Montelione