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Dive into the research topics where Bradley J. Hintze is active.

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Featured researches published by Bradley J. Hintze.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

The crystal structure of Mtr4 reveals a novel arch domain required for rRNA processing

Ryan N. Jackson; A. Alejandra Klauer; Bradley J. Hintze; Howard Robinson; Ambro van Hoof; Sean J. Johnson

The essential RNA helicase, Mtr4, performs a critical role in RNA processing and degradation as an activator of the nuclear exosome. The molecular basis for this vital function is not understood and detailed analysis is significantly limited by the lack of structural data. In this study, we present the crystal structure of Mtr4. The structure reveals a new arch‐like domain that is specific to Mtr4 and Ski2 (the cytosolic homologue of Mtr4). In vivo and in vitro analyses demonstrate that the Mtr4 arch domain is required for proper 5.8S rRNA processing, and suggest that the arch functions independently of canonical helicase activity. In addition, extensive conservation along the face of the putative RNA exit site highlights a potential interface with the exosome. These studies provide a molecular framework for understanding fundamental aspects of helicase function in exosome activation, and more broadly define the molecular architecture of Ski2‐like helicases.


Protein Science | 2018

MolProbity: More and better reference data for improved all-atom structure validation

Christopher J. Williams; Jeffrey J. Headd; Nigel W. Moriarty; Michael G. Prisant; Lizbeth L. Videau; Lindsay N. Deis; Vishal Verma; Daniel A. Keedy; Bradley J. Hintze; Vincent B. Chen; Swati Jain; Steven M. Lewis; W. Bryan Arendall; Jack Snoeyink; Paul D. Adams; Simon C. Lovell; Jane S. Richardson; David C. Richardson

This paper describes the current update on macromolecular model validation services that are provided at the MolProbity website, emphasizing changes and additions since the previous review in 2010. There have been many infrastructure improvements, including rewrite of previous Java utilities to now use existing or newly written Python utilities in the open‐source CCTBX portion of the Phenix software system. This improves long‐term maintainability and enhances the thorough integration of MolProbity‐style validation within Phenix. There is now a complete MolProbity mirror site at http://molprobity.manchester.ac.uk. GitHub serves our open‐source code, reference datasets, and the resulting multi‐dimensional distributions that define most validation criteria. Coordinate output after Asn/Gln/His “flip” correction is now more idealized, since the post‐refinement step has apparently often been skipped in the past. Two distinct sets of heavy‐atom‐to‐hydrogen distances and accompanying van der Waals radii have been researched and improved in accuracy, one for the electron‐cloud‐center positions suitable for X‐ray crystallography and one for nuclear positions. New validations include messages at input about problem‐causing format irregularities, updates of Ramachandran and rotamer criteria from the million quality‐filtered residues in a new reference dataset, the CaBLAM Cα‐CO virtual‐angle analysis of backbone and secondary structure for cryoEM or low‐resolution X‐ray, and flagging of the very rare cis‐nonProline and twisted peptides which have recently been greatly overused. Due to wide application of MolProbity validation and corrections by the research community, in Phenix, and at the worldwide Protein Data Bank, newly deposited structures have continued to improve greatly as measured by MolProbitys unique all‐atom clashscore.


Proteins | 2016

Molprobity's ultimate rotamer-library distributions for model validation.

Bradley J. Hintze; Steven M. Lewis; Jane S. Richardson; David C. Richardson

Here we describe the updated MolProbity rotamer‐library distributions derived from an order‐of‐magnitude larger and more stringently quality‐filtered dataset of about 8000 (vs. 500) protein chains, and we explain the resulting changes and improvements to model validation as seen by users. To include only side‐chains with satisfactory justification for their given conformation, we added residue‐specific filters for electron‐density value and model‐to‐density fit. The combined new protocol retains a million residues of data, while cleaning up false‐positive noise in the multi‐ χ datapoint distributions. It enables unambiguous characterization of conformational clusters nearly 1000‐fold less frequent than the most common ones. We describe examples of local interactions that favor these rare conformations, including the role of authentic covalent bond‐angle deviations in enabling presumably strained side‐chain conformations. Further, along with favored and outlier, an allowed category (0.3–2.0% occurrence in reference data) has been added, analogous to Ramachandran validation categories. The new rotamer distributions are used for current rotamer validation in MolProbity and PHENIX, and for rotamer choice in PHENIX model‐building and refinement. The multi‐dimensional χ distributions and Top8000 reference dataset are freely available on GitHub. These rotamers are termed “ultimate” because data sampling and quality are now fully adequate for this task, and also because we believe the future of conformational validation should integrate side‐chain with backbone criteria. Proteins 2016; 84:1177–1189.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

New insights into Hoogsteen base pairs in DNA duplexes from a structure-based survey

Huiqing Zhou; Bradley J. Hintze; Isaac J. Kimsey; Bharathwaj Sathyamoorthy; Shan Yang; Jane S. Richardson; Hashim M. Al-Hashimi

Hoogsteen (HG) base pairs (bps) provide an alternative pairing geometry to Watson–Crick (WC) bps and can play unique functional roles in duplex DNA. Here, we use structural features unique to HG bps (syn purine base, HG hydrogen bonds and constricted C1′–C1′ distance across the bp) to search for HG bps in X-ray structures of DNA duplexes in the Protein Data Bank. The survey identifies 106 A•T and 34 G•C HG bps in DNA duplexes, many of which are undocumented in the literature. It also uncovers HG-like bps with syn purines lacking HG hydrogen bonds or constricted C1′–C1′ distances that are analogous to conformations that have been proposed to populate the WC-to-HG transition pathway. The survey reveals HG preferences similar to those observed for transient HG bps in solution by nuclear magnetic resonance, including stronger preferences for A•T versus G•C bps, TA versus GG steps, and also suggests enrichment at terminal ends with a preference for 5′-purine. HG bps induce small local perturbations in neighboring bps and, surprisingly, a small but significant degree of DNA bending (∼14°) directed toward the major groove. The survey provides insights into the preferences and structural consequences of HG bps in duplex DNA.


Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology | 2018

Model validation: local diagnosis, correction and when to quit

Jane S. Richardson; Christopher J. Williams; Bradley J. Hintze; Vincent B. Chen; Michael G. Prisant; Lizbeth L. Videau; David C. Richardson

An overview is provided of current crystallographic model validation of proteins and RNA, both foundations and criteria, at all resolution ranges, together with advice on how to correct specific types of problems and when you should not try so hard that you are overfitting.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2017

Mismodeled purines: implicit alternates and hidden Hoogsteens

Bradley J. Hintze; Jane S. Richardson; David C. Richardson

Hoogsteen base pairs are seen in DNA crystal structures, but only rarely. This study tests whether Hoogsteens or other syn purines are either under-modeled or over-modeled, which are known problems for rare conformations. Candidate purines needing a syn/anti 180° flip were identified by diagnostic patterns of difference electron-density peaks. Manual inspection narrowed 105 flip candidates to 20 convincing cases, all at ≤2.7 Å resolution. Rebuilding and refinement confirmed that 14 of these were authentic purine flips. Seven examples are modeled as Watson-Crick base pairs but should be Hoogsteens (commonest at duplex termini), and three had the opposite issue. Syn/anti flips were also needed for some single-stranded purines. Five of the 20 convincing cases arose from an unmodeled alternate duplex running in the opposite direction. These are in semi-palindromic DNA sequences bound by a homodimeric protein and show flipped-purine-like difference peaks at residues where the palindrome is imperfect. This study documents types of incorrect modeling which are worth avoiding. However, the primary conclusions are that such mistakes are infrequent, the bias towards fitting anti purines is very slight, and the occurrence rate of Hoogsteen base pairs in DNA crystal structures remains unchanged from earlier estimates at ∼0.3%.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2010

ResDe: a new tool for visual definition of distance restraints for crystallographic refinement

Bradley J. Hintze; Sean J. Johnson

Manually defined distance restraints can be useful during structure refinement, particularly in low-resolution refinement where the additional restraints are needed to maintain appropriate stereochemical geometry. A large number of restraints are often required when refining macromolecular structures. Currently, restraint definition requires manual editing of a text file, which can be a daunting task when working with a large number of restraints. ResDe (Restraint Definer) is a suite of Python-based tools that allows the user to quickly define and edit restraints using the PyMOL graphical interface.


bioRxiv | 2018

Cis-nonPro Peptides: Genuine Occurrences and their Functional Roles

Christopher J. Williams; Lizbeth L. Videau; Bradley J. Hintze; David C. Richardson; Jane S. Richardson

Cis-nonPro peptides, a very rare feature in protein structures, are of considerable importance for two opposite reasons. On one hand, their genuine occurrences are mostly found at sites critical to biological function, from the active sites of carbohydrate enzymes to rare adjacent-residue disulfide bonds. On the other hand, a cis-nonPro can easily be misfit into weak or ambiguous electron density, which has led to a high incidence of unjustified cis-nonPro over the last decade. This paper uses the greatly expanded crystallographic data and newly stringent quality-filtering to identify the genuine occurrences and survey both individual examples and broad patterns of their functionality. The accompanying paper describes the problem of cis-nonPro over-use, including its causes, validation, and correction. We explain the procedure developed to identify genuine cis-nonPro examples with almost no false positives, including the new observation that peptides with a glycine on one side or the other need extra care to avoid mis-assignment as cis-nonPro. We then survey a sample of the varied functional roles and structural contexts of cis-nonPro, emphasizing aspects not previously covered systematically: the preferred occurrence at β-strand ends in TIM barrel structures, the concentration of occurrence in proteins that process, bind, or contain carbohydrates, and the resulting complications in defining a simple occurrence frequency.


Archive | 2015

SURVEY AND SUMMARY New insights into Hoogsteen base pairs in DNA duplexes from a structure-based survey

Huiqing Zhou; Bradley J. Hintze; Isaac J. Kimsey; Bharathwaj Sathyamoorthy; Shan Yang; Jane S. Richardson; Hashim M. Al-Hashimi


Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2014

Hidden Hoogsteens in the Data

Bradley J. Hintze; Huiqing Zhou; Hashim M. Al-Hashimi; David C. Richardson; Jane S. Richardson

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