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Dive into the research topics where Brett K. Kaiser is active.

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Featured researches published by Brett K. Kaiser.


Nature | 2007

Disulphide-isomerase-enabled shedding of tumour-associated NKG2D ligands

Brett K. Kaiser; Daesong Yim; I-Ting Chow; Segundo Gonzalez; Zhenpeng Dai; Henning H. Mann; Roland K. Strong; Veronika Groh; Thomas Spies

Tumour-associated ligands of the activating NKG2D (natural killer group 2, member D; also called KLRK1) receptor—which are induced by genotoxic or cellular stress—trigger activation of natural killer cells and co-stimulation of effector T cells, and may thus promote resistance to cancer. However, many progressing tumours in humans counter this anti-tumour activity by shedding the soluble major histocompatibility complex class-I-related ligand MICA, which induces internalization and degradation of NKG2D and stimulates population expansions of normally rare NKG2D+CD4+ T cells with negative regulatory functions. Here we show that on the surface of tumour cells, MICA associates with endoplasmic reticulum protein 5 (ERp5; also called PDIA6 or P5), which, similar to protein disulphide isomerase, usually assists in the folding of nascent proteins inside cells. Pharmacological inhibition of thioreductase activity and ERp5 gene silencing revealed that cell-surface ERp5 function is required for MICA shedding. ERp5 and membrane-anchored MICA form transitory mixed disulphide complexes from which soluble MICA is released after proteolytic cleavage near the cell membrane. Reduction of the seemingly inaccessible disulphide bond in the membrane-proximal α3 domain of MICA must involve a large conformational change that enables proteolytic cleavage. These results uncover a molecular mechanism whereby domain-specific deconstruction regulates MICA protein shedding, thereby promoting tumour immune evasion, and identify surface ERp5 as a strategic target for therapeutic intervention.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Interactions between NKG2x Immunoreceptors and HLA-E Ligands Display Overlapping Affinities and Thermodynamics

Brett K. Kaiser; Fariba Barahmand-pour; Wendy Paulsene; Scott Medley; Daniel E. Geraghty; Roland K. Strong

The NKG2x/CD94 family of C-type lectin-like immunoreceptors (x = A, B, C, E, and H) mediates surveillance of MHC class Ia cell surface expression, often dysregulated during infection or tumorigenesis, by recognizing the MHC class Ib protein HLA-E that specifically presents peptides derived from class Ia leader sequences. In this study, we determine the affinities and interaction thermodynamics between three NKG2x/CD94 receptors (NKG2A, NKG2C, and NKG2E) and complexes of HLA-E with four representative peptides. Inhibitory NKG2A/CD94 and activating NKG2E/CD94 receptors bind HLA-E with indistinguishable affinities, but with significantly higher affinities than the activating NKG2C/CD94 receptor. Despite minor sequence differences, the peptide presented by HLA-E significantly influenced the affinities; HLA-E allelic differences had no effect. These results reveal important constraints on the integration of opposing activating and inhibitory signals driving NK cell effector functions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Structural basis for NKG2A/CD94 recognition of HLA-E

Brett K. Kaiser; Juan C. Pizarro; Julie Kerns; Roland K. Strong

The NKG2x/CD94 (x = A, C, E) natural killer-cell receptors perform an important role in immunosurveillance by binding to HLA-E complexes that exclusively present peptides derived from MHC class I leader sequences, thereby monitoring MHC class I expression. We have determined the crystal structure of the NKG2A/CD94/HLA-E complex at 4.4-Å resolution, revealing two critical aspects of this interaction. First, the C-terminal region of the peptide, which displays the most variability among class I leader sequences, interacts entirely with CD94, the invariant component of these receptors. Second, residues 167–170 of NKG2A/C account for the ≈6-fold-higher affinity of the inhibitory NKG2A/CD94 receptor compared to its activating NKG2C/CD94 counterpart. These residues do not contact HLA-E or peptide directly but instead form part of the heterodimer interface with CD94. An evolutionary analysis across primates reveals that whereas CD94 is evolving under purifying selection, both NKG2A and NKG2C are evolving under positive selection. Specifically, residues at the CD94 interface have evolved under positive selection, suggesting that the evolution of these genes is driven by an interaction with pathogen-derived ligands. Consistent with this possibility, we show that NKG2C/CD94, but not NKG2A/CD94, weakly but specifically binds to the CMV MHC-homologue UL18. Thus, the evolution of the NKG2x/CD94 family of receptors has likely been shaped both by the need to bind the invariant HLA-E ligand and the need to avoid subversion by pathogen-derived decoys.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Fatty aldehydes in cyanobacteria are a metabolically flexible precursor for a diversity of biofuel products.

Brett K. Kaiser; Michael Carleton; Jason W. Hickman; Cameron Miller; David W. Lawson; Mark Budde; Paul Warrener; Angel Paredes; Srinivas Mullapudi; Patricia Navarro; F R Cross; James M. Roberts

We describe how pathway engineering can be used to convert a single intermediate derived from lipid biosynthesis, fatty aldehydes, into a variety of biofuel precursors including alkanes, free fatty acids and wax esters. In cyanobacteria, long-chain acyl-ACPs can be reduced to fatty aldehydes, and then decarbonylated to alkanes. We discovered a cyanobacteria class-3 aldehyde-dehydrogenase, AldE, that was necessary and sufficient to instead oxidize fatty aldehyde precursors into fatty acids. Overexpression of enzymes in this pathway resulted in production of 50 to 100 fold more fatty acids than alkanes, and the fatty acids were secreted from the cell. Co-expression of acyl-ACP reductase, an alcohol-dehydrogenase and a wax-ester-synthase resulted in a third fate for fatty aldehydes: conversion to wax esters, which accumulated as intracellular lipid bodies. Conversion of acyl-ACP to fatty acids using endogenous cyanobacterial enzymes may allow biofuel production without transgenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Siderocalin/Lcn2/NGAL/24p3 does not drive apoptosis through gentisic acid mediated iron withdrawal in hematopoietic cell lines.

Colin Correnti; Vera Richardson; Allyson K. Sia; Ashok D. Bandaranayake; Mario Ruiz; Yohan Suryo Rahmanto; Žaklina Kovačević; Matthew C. Clifton; Margaret A. Holmes; Brett K. Kaiser; Jonathan Barasch; Kenneth N. Raymond; Des R. Richardson; Roland K. Strong

Siderocalin (also lipocalin 2, NGAL or 24p3) binds iron as complexes with specific siderophores, which are low molecular weight, ferric ion-specific chelators. In innate immunity, siderocalin slows the growth of infecting bacteria by sequestering bacterial ferric siderophores. Siderocalin also binds simple catechols, which can serve as siderophores in the damaged urinary tract. Siderocalin has also been proposed to alter cellular iron trafficking, for instance, driving apoptosis through iron efflux via BOCT. An endogenous siderophore composed of gentisic acid (2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid) substituents was proposed to mediate cellular efflux. However, binding studies reported herein contradict the proposal that gentisic acid forms high-affinity ternary complexes with siderocalin and iron, or that gentisic acid can serve as an endogenous siderophore at neutral pH. We also demonstrate that siderocalin does not induce cellular iron efflux or stimulate apoptosis, questioning the role siderocalin plays in modulating iron metabolism.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

Selection for functional diversity drives accumulation of point mutations in Dr adhesins of Escherichia coli.

Natalia Korotkova; Sujay Chattopadhyay; Tami A. Tabata; Viktoria Beskhlebnaya; Vladimir Vigdorovich; Brett K. Kaiser; Roland K. Strong; Daniel E. Dykhuizen; Evgeni V. Sokurenko; Steve L. Moseley

Immune escape is considered to be the driving force behind structural variability of major antigens on the surface of bacterial pathogens, such as fimbriae. In the Dr family of Escherichia coli adhesins, structural and adhesive functions are carried out by the same subunit. Dr adhesins have been shown to bind decay‐accelerating factor (DAF), collagen IV, and carcinoembryonic antigen‐related cell adhesion molecules (CEACAMs). We show that genes encoding Dr adhesins from 100 E. coli strains form eight structural groups with a high level of amino acid sequence diversity between them. However, genes comprising each group differ from each other by only a small number of point mutations. Out of 66 polymorphisms identified within the groups, only three were synonymous mutations, indicating strong positive selection for amino acid replacements. Functional analysis of intragroup variants comprising the Dr haemagglutinin (DraE) group revealed that the point mutations result in distinctly different binding phenotypes, with a tendency of increased affinity to DAF, decreased sensitivity of DAF binding to inhibition by chloramphenicol, and loss of binding capability to collagen, CEACAM3 and CEACAM6. Thus, variability by point mutation of major antigenic proteins on the bacterial surface can be a signature of selection for functional modification.


Structure | 2009

The structure of a bacterial DUF199 / WhiA protein: domestication of an invasive endonuclease

Brett K. Kaiser; Matthew C. Clifton; Betty W. Shen; Barry L. Stoddard

Proteins of the DUF199 family, present in all Gram-positive bacteria and best characterized by the WhiA sporulation control factor in Streptomyces coelicolor, are thought to act as genetic regulators. The crystal structure of the DUF199/WhiA protein from Thermatoga maritima demonstrates that these proteins possess a bipartite structure, in which a degenerate N-terminal LAGLIDADG homing endonuclease (LHE) scaffold is tethered to a C-terminal helix-turn-helix (HTH) domain. The LHE domain has lost those residues critical for metal binding and catalysis, and also displays an extensively altered DNA-binding surface as compared with homing endonucleases. The HTH domain most closely resembles related regions of several bacterial sigma70 factors that bind the -35 regions of bacterial promoters. The structure illustrates how an invasive element might be transformed during evolution into a larger assemblage of protein folds that can participate in the regulation of a complex biological pathway.


Scientific Reports | 2011

DNA recognition and transcriptional regulation by the WhiA sporulation factor

Brett K. Kaiser; Barry L. Stoddard

Sporulation in the filamentous bacteria Streptomyces coelicolor is a tightly regulated process involving aerial hyphae growth, chromosome segregation, septation and spore maturation. Genetic studies have identified numerous genes that regulate sporulation, including WhiA and the sigma factor WhiG. WhiA, which has been postulated to be a transcriptional regulator, contains two regions typically associated with DNA binding: an N-terminal domain similar to LAGLIDADG homing endonucleases, and a C-terminal helix-turn-helix domain. We characterized several in vitro activities displayed by WhiA. It binds at least two sporulation-specific promoters: its own and that of parABp2. DNA binding is primarily driven by its HTH domain, but requires full-length protein for maximum affinity. WhiA transcription is stimulated by WhiG, while the WhiA protein binds directly to WhiG (leading to inhibition of WhiG-dependent transcription). These separate activities, which resemble a possible feedback loop, may help coordinate the closely timed cessation of aerial growth and subsequent spore formation.


Archive | 2013

Modified photosynthetic microorganisms for continuous production of carbon-containing compounds

Jason W. Hickman; James Roberts; Kimberly Marie Kotovic; Cameron Miller; Michael Carleton; Mark Budde; Fred Cross; Brett K. Kaiser; Paul Warrener


Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2015

The structural basis of asymmetry in DNA recognition and catalysis: binding and cleavage by the I-SmaMI meganuclease

Betty W. Shen; Bradley Walker; Abigail R. Lambert; Barry L. Stoddard; Brett K. Kaiser

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Roland K. Strong

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Barry L. Stoddard

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Mark Budde

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Abigail R. Lambert

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Allyson K. Sia

University of California

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Angel Paredes

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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