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Dive into the research topics where Bertram Canagarajah is active.

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Featured researches published by Bertram Canagarajah.


Cell | 2004

Structural Mechanism for Lipid Activation of the Rac-Specific GAP, β2-Chimaerin

Bertram Canagarajah; Federico Coluccio Leskow; Jonathan Yew Seng Ho; Harald Mischak; Layla F. Saidi; Marcelo G. Kazanietz; James H. Hurley

The lipid second messenger diacylglycerol acts by binding to the C1 domains of target proteins, which translocate to cell membranes and are allosterically activated. Here we report the crystal structure at 3.2 A resolution of one such protein, beta2-chimaerin, a GTPase-activating protein for the small GTPase Rac, in its inactive conformation. The structure shows that in the inactive state, the N terminus of beta2-chimaerin protrudes into the active site of the RacGAP domain, sterically blocking Rac binding. The diacylglycerol and phospholipid membrane binding site on the C1 domain is buried by contacts with the four different regions of beta2-chimaerin: the N terminus, SH2 domain, RacGAP domain, and the linker between the SH2 and C1 domains. Phospholipid binding to the C1 domain triggers the cooperative dissociation of these interactions, allowing the N terminus to move out of the active site and thereby activating the enzyme.


Cell | 2013

Structural Basis for Recruitment and Activation of the AP-1 Clathrin Adaptor Complex by Arf1.

Xuefeng Ren; Ginny G. Farías; Bertram Canagarajah; Juan S. Bonifacino; James H. Hurley

AP-1 is a clathrin adaptor complex that sorts cargo between the trans-Golgi network and endosomes. AP-1 recruitment to these compartments requires Arf1-GTP. The crystal structure of the tetrameric core of AP-1 in complex with Arf1-GTP, together with biochemical analyses, shows that Arf1 activates cargo binding by unlocking AP-1. Unlocking is driven by two molecules of Arf1 that bridge two copies of AP-1 at two interaction sites. The GTP-dependent switch I and II regions of Arf1 bind to the N terminus of the β1 subunit of one AP-1 complex, while the back side of Arf1 binds to the central part of the γ subunit trunk of a second AP-1 complex. A third Arf1 interaction site near the N terminus of the γ subunit is important for recruitment, but not activation. These observations lead to a model for the recruitment and activation of AP-1 by Arf1.


Structure | 2012

Solution structure of the ESCRT-I and -II supercomplex: implications for membrane budding and scission.

Evzen Boura; Bartosz Różycki; Hoi Sung Chung; Dawn Z. Herrick; Bertram Canagarajah; David S. Cafiso; William A. Eaton; Gerhard Hummer; James H. Hurley

The ESCRT-I and ESCRT-II supercomplex induces membrane buds that invaginate into the lumen of endosomes, a process central to the lysosomal degradation of ubiquitinated membrane proteins. The solution conformation of the membrane-budding ESCRT-I-II supercomplex from yeast was refined against small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET), and double electron-electron resonance (DEER) spectra. These refinements yielded an ensemble of 18 ESCRT-I-II supercomplex structures that range from compact to highly extended. The crescent shapes of the ESCRT-I-II supercomplex structures provide the basis for a detailed mechanistic model, in which ESCRT-I-II stabilizes membrane buds and coordinates cargo sorting by lining the pore of the nascent bud necks. The hybrid refinement used here is general and should be applicable to other dynamic multiprotein assmeblies.


Protein Science | 2013

The clathrin adaptor complexes as a paradigm for membrane‐associated allostery

Bertram Canagarajah; Xuefeng Ren; Juan S. Bonifacino; James H. Hurley

The clathrin‐associated adaptor protein (AP) complexes AP‐1 and AP‐2 are two members of a family of heterotetrameric assemblies that connect transmembrane protein cargo to vesicular coats. Cargo binding by AP‐1 is activated by the small GTPase Arf1, while AP‐2 is activated by the phosphoinositide PI(4,5)P2. The structures of both AP‐1 and AP‐2 have been determined in their locked and unlocked conformations. The structures show how different activators use different mechanisms to trigger similar large scale conformational rearrangements. The details of these mechanisms show how membrane docking and allosteric activation of AP complexes are intimately connected.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2002

Structural genomics and signaling domains

James H. Hurley; D. Eric Anderson; Bridgette M. Beach; Bertram Canagarajah; Yew Seng Jonathan Ho; Eudora Jones; Greg Miller; Saurav Misra; Matt Pearson; Layla F. Saidi; Silke Suer; Ray Trievel; Yosuke Tsujishita

Many novel signal transduction domains are being identified in the wake of genome sequencing projects and improved sensitivity in homology-detection techniques. The functions of these domains are being discovered by hypothesis-driven experiments and structural genomics approaches. This article reviews the recent highlights of research on modular signaling domains, and the relative contributions and limitations of the various approaches being used.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Dynamics of cholesterol exchange in the oxysterol binding protein family.

Bertram Canagarajah; Gerhard Hummer; William A. Prinz; James H. Hurley

The oxysterol-binding protein-related protein (ORP) family is essential to sterol transfer and sterol-dependent signal transduction in eukaryotes. The crystal structure of one ORP family member, yeast Osh4, is known in apo and sterol-bound states. In the bound state, a 29 residue N-terminal lid region covers the opening of the cholesterol-binding tunnel, preventing cholesterol exchange. Equilibrium and steered molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of Osh4 were carried out to characterize the mechanism of cholesterol exchange. While most of the structural core was stable during the simulations, the lid was partly opened in the apo equilibrium MD simulation. Helix alpha 7, which undergoes the largest conformational change in the crystallized bound and apo states, is conformationally coupled to the opening of the lid. The movement of alpha 7 helps create a docking site for donor or acceptor membranes in the open state. In the steered MD simulations of cholesterol dissociation, we observed complete opening of the lid covering the cholesterol-binding tunnel. Cholesterol was found to exit the binding pocket in a step-wise process involving (i) the breaking of water-mediated hydrogen bonds and van der Waals contacts within the binding pocket, (ii) opening of the lid covering the binding pocket, and (iii) breakage of transient cholesterol contacts with the rim of the pocket and hydrophobic residues on the interior face of the lid.


Nature Communications | 2013

Coordinated activation of the Rac-GAP β2-chimaerin by an atypical proline-rich domain and diacylglycerol

Alvaro Gutierrez-Uzquiza; Francheska Colón-González; Thomas A. Leonard; Bertram Canagarajah; HongBin Wang; Bruce J. Mayer; James H. Hurley; Marcelo G. Kazanietz

Chimaerins, a family of GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) for the small G-protein Rac, have been implicated in development, neuritogenesis, and cancer. These Rac-GAPs are regulated by the lipid second messenger diacylglycerol (DAG) generated by tyrosine-kinases such as the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Here we identify an atypical Pro-rich motif in chimaerins that binds to the adaptor protein Nck1. Unlike most Nck1 partners, chimaerins bind to the third SH3 domain of Nck1. This association is mediated by electrostatic interactions of basic residues within the Pro-rich motif with acidic clusters in the SH3 domain. EGF promotes the binding of β2-chimaerin to Nck1 in the cell periphery in a DAG-dependent manner. Moreover, β2-chimaerin translocation to the plasma membrane and its peripheral association with Rac1 requires Nck1. Our studies underscore a coordinated mechanism for β2-chimaerin activation that involves lipid interactions via the C1 domain and protein-protein interactions via the N-terminal Pro-rich region.


Developmental Cell | 2017

BTBD18 Regulates a Subset of piRNA-Generating Loci through Transcription Elongation in Mice

Liquan Zhou; Bertram Canagarajah; Yangu Zhao; Boris Baibakov; Keizo Tokuhiro; Dragan Maric; Jurrien Dean

PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs essential for animal germ cell development. Despite intense investigation of post-transcriptional processing, chromatin regulators for piRNA biogenesis in mammals remain largely unexplored. Here we document that BTBD18 is a pachytene nuclear protein in mouse testes that occupies a subset of pachytene piRNA-producing loci. Ablation of Btbd18 in mice disrupts piRNA biogenesis, prevents spermiogenesis, and results in male sterility. Transcriptome profiling, chromatin accessibility, and RNA polymerase II occupancy demonstrate that BTBD18 facilitates expression of pachytene piRNA precursors by promoting transcription elongation. Thus, our study identifies BTBD18 as a specific controller for transcription activation through RNA polymerase II elongation at a subset of genomic piRNA loci.


Development | 2017

Genetic mosaics and time-lapse imaging identify functions of H3.3 residues in mouse oocytes and embryos

Liquan Zhou; Boris Baibakov; Bertram Canagarajah; Bo Xiong; Jurrien Dean

ABSTRACT During development from oocyte to embryo, genetic programs in mouse germ cells are reshaped by chromatin remodeling to orchestrate the onset of development. Epigenetic modifications of specific amino acid residues of core histones and their isoforms can dramatically alter activation and suppression of gene expression. H3.3 is a histone H3 variant that plays essential roles in mouse oocytes and early embryos, but the functional role of individual amino acid residues has been unclear because of technical hurdles. Here, we describe two strategies that successfully investigated the functions of three individual H3.3 residues in oogenesis, cleavage-stage embryogenesis and early development. We first generated genetic mosaic ovaries and blastocysts with stochastic expression of wild-type or mutant H3.3 alleles and showed dominant negative effects of H3.3R26 and H3.3K27 in modulating oogenesis and partitioning cells to the inner cell mass of the early embryo. Time-lapse imaging assays also revealed the essential roles of H3.3K56 in efficient H2B incorporation and paternal pronuclei formation. Application of these strategies can be extended to investigate roles of additional H3.3 residues and has implications for use in other developmental systems. Summary: A mouse model allowing mosaic expression of wild-type or mutant histone H3.3 variants provides insights into the function of specific histone residues during oogenesis and early development.


Nature | 2018

Cryo-EM of the dynamin polymer assembled on lipid membrane

Leopold Kong; Kem A. Sochacki; Huaibin Wang; Shunming Fang; Bertram Canagarajah; Andrew D. Kehr; William J. Rice; Marie-Paule Strub; Justin W. Taraska; Jenny E. Hinshaw

Membrane fission is a fundamental process in the regulation and remodelling of cell membranes. Dynamin, a large GTPase, mediates membrane fission by assembling around, constricting and cleaving the necks of budding vesicles1. Here we report a 3.75 Å resolution cryo-electron microscopy structure of the membrane-associated helical polymer of human dynamin-1 in the GMPPCP-bound state. The structure defines the helical symmetry of the dynamin polymer and the positions of its oligomeric interfaces, which were validated by cell-based endocytosis assays. Compared to the lipid-free tetramer form2, membrane-associated dynamin binds to the lipid bilayer with its pleckstrin homology domain (PHD) and self-assembles across the helical rungs via its guanine nucleotide-binding (GTPase) domain3. Notably, interaction with the membrane and helical assembly are accommodated by a severely bent bundle signalling element (BSE), which connects the GTPase domain to the rest of the protein. The BSE conformation is asymmetric across the inter-rung GTPase interface, and is unique compared to all known nucleotide-bound states of dynamin. The structure suggests that the BSE bends as a result of forces generated from the GTPase dimer interaction that are transferred across the stalk to the PHD and lipid membrane. Mutations that disrupted the BSE kink impaired endocytosis. We also report a 10.1 Å resolution cryo-electron microscopy map of a super-constricted dynamin polymer showing localized conformational changes at the BSE and GTPase domains, induced by GTP hydrolysis, that drive membrane constriction. Together, our results provide a structural basis for the mechanism of action of dynamin on the lipid membrane.A cryo-electron microscopy structure of human dynamin-1 demonstrates conformational changes and sheds light on the fission of membranes during endocytosis.

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James H. Hurley

National Institutes of Health

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Boris Baibakov

National Institutes of Health

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Juan S. Bonifacino

National Institutes of Health

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Jurrien Dean

National Institutes of Health

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Layla F. Saidi

National Institutes of Health

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Liquan Zhou

National Institutes of Health

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Xuefeng Ren

National Institutes of Health

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