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Dive into the research topics where Bryan F. Shaw is active.

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Featured researches published by Bryan F. Shaw.


Protein Science | 2012

Abnormal SDS‐PAGE migration of cytosolic proteins can identify domains and mechanisms that control surfactant binding

Yunhua Shi; Richard A. Mowery; Jonathan D. Ashley; Michelle Hentz; Alejandro J. Ramirez; Basar Bilgicer; Hilda Slunt-Brown; David R. Borchelt; Bryan F. Shaw

The amino acid substitution or post‐translational modification of a cytosolic protein can cause unpredictable changes to its electrophoretic mobility during SDS‐PAGE. This type of “gel shifting” has perplexed biochemists and biologists for decades. We identify a mechanism for “gel shifting” that predominates among a set of ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) mutant hSOD1 (superoxide dismutase) proteins, post‐translationally modified hSOD1 proteins, and homologous SOD1 proteins from different organisms. By first comparing how 39 amino acid substitutions throughout hSOD1 affected SDS‐PAGE migration, we found that substitutions that caused gel shifting occurred within a single polyacidic domain (residues ∼80–101), and were nonisoelectric. Substitutions that decreased the net negative charge of domain 80–101 increased migration; only one substitution increased net negative charge and slowed migration. Capillary electrophoresis, circular dichroism, and size exclusion chromatography demonstrated that amino acid substitutions increase migration during SDS‐PAGE by promoting the binding of three to four additional SDS molecules, without significantly altering the secondary structure or Stokes radius of hSOD1‐SDS complexes. The high negative charge of domain 80–101 is required for SOD1 gel shifting: neutralizing the polyacidic domain (via chimeric mouse‐human SOD1 fusion proteins) inhibited amino acid substitutions from causing gel shifting. These results demonstrate that the pattern of gel shifting for mutant cytosolic proteins can be used to: (i) identify domains in the primary structure that control interactions between denatured cytosolic proteins and SDS and (ii) identify a predominant chemical mechanism for the interaction (e.g., hydrophobic vs. electrostatic).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Detergent-insoluble Aggregates Associated with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis in Transgenic Mice Contain Primarily Full-length, Unmodified Superoxide Dismutase-1

Bryan F. Shaw; Herman Lelie; Armando Durazo; Aram M. Nersissian; Guillan Xu; Pik K. Chan; Edith Butler Gralla; Ashutosh Tiwari; Lawrence J. Hayward; David R. Borchelt; Joan Selverstone Valentine; Julian P. Whitelegge

Determining the composition of aggregated superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) species associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), especially with respect to co-aggregated proteins and post-translational modifications, could identify cellular or biochemical factors involved in the formation of these aggregates and explain their apparent neurotoxicity. The results of mass spectrometric and shotgun-proteomic analyses of SOD1-containing aggregates isolated from spinal cords of symptomatic transgenic ALS mice using two different isolation strategies are presented, including 1) resistance to detergent extraction and 2) size exclusion-coupled anti-SOD1 immunoaffinity chromatography. Forty-eight spinal cords from three different ALS-SOD1 mutant mice were analyzed, namely G93A, G37R, and the unnatural double mutant H46R/H48Q. The analysis consistently revealed that the most abundant proteins recovered from aggregate species were full-length unmodified SOD1 polypeptides. Although aggregates from some spinal cord samples contained trace levels of highly abundant proteins, such as vimentin and neurofilament-3, no proteins were consistently found to co-purify with mutant SOD1 in stoichiometric quantities. The results demonstrate that the principal protein in the high molecular mass aggregates whose appearance correlates with symptoms of the disease is the unmodified, full-length SOD1 polypeptide.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Local Unfolding in a Destabilized, Pathogenic Variant of Superoxide Dismutase 1 Observed with H/D Exchange and Mass Spectrometry

Bryan F. Shaw; Armando Durazo; Aram M. Nersissian; Julian P. Whitelegge; Kym F. Faull; Joan Selverstone Valentine

Hydrogen exchange monitored by mass spectrometry has been used to study the structural behavior of the pathogenic A4V variant of superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) in the metal-free (apo) form. Mass spectrometric data revealed that in the disulfide-intact (S-S) form, the A4V variant is destabilized at residues 50-53, in the disulfide subloop of the dimer interface, but many other regions of the A4V protein exhibited hydrogen exchange properties identical to that of the wild type protein. Additionally, mass spectrometry revealed that A4V apoSOD1S-S undergoes slow localized unfolding in a large segment of the β-barrel that included β3, β4, and loops II and III. In the disulfide-reduced form, A4V apoSOD1 exchanged like a “random coil” polypeptide at 20 °C and began to populate folded states at 4 °C. These local and global unfolding events could facilitate intermolecular protein-protein interactions that cause the aggregation or neurotoxicity of A4V SOD1.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Metal-free Superoxide Dismutase-1 and Three Different Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Variants Share a Similar Partially Unfolded β-Barrel at Physiological Temperature

Armando Durazo; Bryan F. Shaw; Madhuri Chattopadhyay; Kym F. Faull; Aram M. Nersissian; Joan Selverstone Valentine; Julian P. Whitelegge

The structure and unfolding of metal-free (apo) human wild-type SOD1 and three pathogenic variants of SOD1 (A4V, G93R, and H48Q) that cause familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis have been studied with amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange and mass spectrometry. The results indicate that a significant proportion of each of these proteins exists in solution in a conformation in which some strands of the β-barrel (i.e. β2) are well protected from exchange at physiological temperature (37 °C), whereas other strands (i.e. β3 and β4) appear to be unprotected from hydrogen/deuterium exchange. Moreover, the thermal unfolding of these proteins does not result in the uniform incorporation of deuterium throughout the polypeptide but involves the local unfolding of different residues at different temperatures. Some regions of the proteins (i.e. the “Greek key” loop, residues 104–116) unfold at a significantly higher temperature than other regions (i.e. β3 and β4, residues 21–53). Together, these results show that human wild-type apo-SOD1 and variants have a partially unfolded β-barrel at physiological temperature and unfold non-cooperatively.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Pathway for unfolding of ubiquitin in sodium dodecyl sulfate, studied by capillary electrophoresis.

Grégory F. Schneider; Bryan F. Shaw; Andrew L. Lee; Emanuel Carillho; George M. Whitesides

This paper characterizes the complexes formed by a small protein, ubiquitin (UBI), and a negatively charged surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), using capillary electrophoresis (CE), circular dichroism (CD), and amide hydrogen-deuterium exchange (HDX; as monitored by mass spectroscopy, MS). Capillary electrophoresis of complexes of UBI and SDS, at apparent equilibrium, at concentrations of SDS ranging from sub-micellar and sub-denaturing to micellar and denaturing, revealed multiple complexes of UBI and SDS of the general composition UBI-SDS(n). Examination of electrophoretic mobilities of complexes of UBI and SDS as a function of the concentration of SDS provided a new way to characterize the interaction of this protein with SDS and established key characteristics of this system: e.g., the reversibility of the formation of the complexes, their approximate chemical compositions, and the pathway of SDS binding to UBI. The work identified, in addition to SDS-saturated UBI, at least six groups of complexes of UBI with SDS, within which four groups were populated with complexes of distinct stoichiometries: UBI-SDS(approximately 11), UBI-SDS(approximately 25), UBI-SDS(approximately 33), and UBI-SDS(approximately 42). CD spectroscopy and amide HDX of the UBI-SDS(n) complexes suggested that many of the UBI-SDS(n) complexes (n > 11) have greater alpha-helical content than native UBI. Capillary electrophoresis provides a level of detail about interactions of proteins and SDS that has not previously been accessible, and CE is an analytical and biophysical method for studies of interactions of proteins and surfactants that is both convenient and practical. This study sheds light on the formation of the enigmatic protein-SDS complexes formed during SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and brings a new tool to the study of proteins and detergents.


Biomaterials | 2013

Selective photocrosslinking of functional ligands to antibodies via the conserved nucleotide binding site.

Nathan J. Alves; Matthew M. Champion; Jared F. Stefanick; Michael W. Handlogten; Demetri T. Moustakas; Yunhua Shi; Bryan F. Shaw; Rudolph M. Navari; Tanyel Kiziltepe; Basar Bilgicer

The conserved nucleotide binding site (NBS), found in the Fab variable domain of all antibody isotypes, remains a not-so-widely known and under-utilized site. Here, we describe a UV photocrosslinking method (UV-NBS) that utilizes the NBS for site-specific covalent functionalization of antibodies, while preserving antibody activity. We identified a small molecule, indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), which has affinity for the NBS (K(d) = 1-8 μM) and can be photocrosslinked to antibodies upon UV energy exposure. By synthesizing their IBA conjugated versions, we have successfully photocrosslinked various types of functional ligands to antibodies at the NBS, including affinity tags (biotin), fluorescent molecules (FITC), peptides (iRGD), and chemotherapeutics (paclitaxel). An optimal UV exposure of 1-2 J/cm(2) yielded the most efficient photocrosslinking and resulted in 1-2 conjugations per antibody, while preserving the antigen binding activity and Fc related functions. Analysis of the photocrosslinked conjugates using western blotting, mass spectrometry, and computational docking simulations demonstrated that the photocrosslinking specifically takes place at the Y/F42 residue in framework region 2 of the antibody light chain. Taken together, the UV-NBS method provides a practical, site-specific, and chemically efficient method to functionalize antibodies with significant implications in diagnostic and therapeutic settings.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Deamidation of asparagine to aspartate destabilizes Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase, accelerates fibrillization, and mirrors ALS-linked mutations.

Yunhua Shi; Nicholas R. Rhodes; Alireza Abdolvahabi; Taylor Kohn; Nathan P. Cook; Angel A. Martí; Bryan F. Shaw

The reactivity of asparagine residues in Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) to deamidate to aspartate remains uncharacterized; its occurrence in SOD1 has not been investigated, and the biophysical effects of deamidation on SOD1 are unknown. Deamidation is, nonetheless, chemically equivalent to Asn-to-Asp missense mutations in SOD1 that cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). This study utilized computational methods to identify three asparagine residues in wild-type (WT) SOD1 (i.e., N26, N131, and N139) that are predicted to undergo significant deamidation (i.e., to >20%) on time scales comparable to the long lifetime (>1 year) of SOD1 in large motor neurons. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to successively substitute these asparagines with aspartate (to mimic deamidation) according to their predicted deamidation rate, yielding: N26D, N26D/N131D, and N26D/N131D/N139D SOD1. Differential scanning calorimetry demonstrated that the thermostability of N26D/N131D/N139D SOD1 is lower than WT SOD1 by ~2-8 °C (depending upon the state of metalation) and <3 °C lower than the ALS mutant N139D SOD1. The triply deamidated analog also aggregated into amyloid fibrils faster than WT SOD1 by ~2-fold (p < 0.008**) and at a rate identical to ALS mutant N139D SOD1 (p > 0.2). A total of 534 separate amyloid assays were performed to generate statistically significant comparisons of aggregation rates among WT and N/D SOD1 proteins. Capillary electrophoresis and mass spectrometry demonstrated that ~23% of N26 is deamidated to aspartate (iso-aspartate was undetectable) in a preparation of WT human SOD1 (isolated from erythrocytes) that has been used for decades by researchers as an analytical standard. The deamidation of asparagine--an analytically elusive, sub-Dalton modification--represents a plausible and overlooked mechanism by which WT SOD1 is converted to a neurotoxic isoform that has a similar structure, instability, and aggregation propensity as ALS mutant N139D SOD1.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

A Non-Chromatographic Method for the Purification of a Bivalently Active Monoclonal IgG Antibody from Biological Fluids

Basar Bilgicer; Samuel W. Thomas; Bryan F. Shaw; George K. Kaufman; Vijay M. Krishnamurthy; Lara A. Estroff; Jerry Yang; George M. Whitesides

This paper describes a method for the purification of monoclonal antibodies (rat anti-2,4-dinitrophenyl IgG: IgG(DNP); and mouse antidigoxin IgG: IgG(Dgn)) from ascites fluid. This procedure (for IgG(DNP)) has three steps: (i) precipitation of proteins heavier than immunoglobulins with ammonium sulfate; (ii) formation of cyclic complexes of IgG(DNP) by causing it to bind to synthetic multivalent haptens containing multiple DNP groups; (iii) selective precipitation of these dimers, trimers, and higher oligomers of the target antibody, followed by regeneration of the free antibody. This procedure separates the targeted antibody from a mixture of antibodies, as well as from other proteins and globulins in a biological fluid. This method is applicable to antibodies with a wide range of monovalent binding constants (0.1 microM to 0.1 nM). The multivalent ligands we used (derivatives of DNP and digoxin) isolated IgG(DNP) and IgG(Dgn) from ascites fluid in yields of >80% and with >95% purity. This technique has two advantages over conventional chromatographic methods for purifying antibodies: (i) it is selective for antibodies with two active Fab binding sites (both sites are required to form the cyclic complexes) over antibodies with one or zero active Fab binding sites; (ii) it does not require chromatographic separation. It has the disadvantage that the structure of the hapten must be compatible with the synthesis of bi- and/or trivalent analogues.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Neutralizing Positive Charges at the Surface of a Protein Lowers Its Rate of Amide Hydrogen Exchange without Altering Its Structure or Increasing Its Thermostability

Bryan F. Shaw; Haribabu Arthanari; Max Narovlyansky; Armando Durazo; Dominique P. Frueh; Andrew Lee; Basar Bilgicer; Steven P. Gygi; Gerhard Wagner; George M. Whitesides

This paper combines two techniques--mass spectrometry and protein charge ladders--to examine the relationship between the surface charge and hydrophobicity of a representative globular protein (bovine carbonic anhydrase II; BCA II) and its rate of amide hydrogen-deuterium (H/D) exchange. Mass spectrometric analysis indicated that the sequential acetylation of surface lysine-ε-NH3(+) groups--a type of modification that increases the net negative charge and hydrophobicity of the surface of BCA II without affecting its secondary or tertiary structure--resulted in a linear decrease in the aggregate rate of amide H/D exchange at pD 7.4, 15 °C. According to analysis with MS, the acetylation of each additional lysine generated between 1.4 and 0.9 additional hydrogens that are protected from H/D exchange during the 2 h exchange experiment at 15 °C, pD 7.4. NMR spectroscopy demonstrated that none of the hydrogen atoms which became protected upon acetylation were located on the side chain of the acetylated lysine residues (i.e., lys-ε-NHCOCH3) but were instead located on amide NHCO moieties in the backbone. The decrease in rate of exchange associated with acetylation paralleled a decrease in thermostability: the most slowly exchanging rungs of the charge ladder were the least thermostable (as measured by differential scanning calorimetry). This observation--that faster rates of exchange are associated with slower rates of denaturation--is contrary to the usual assumptions in protein chemistry. The fact that the rates of H/D exchange were similar for perbutyrated BCA II (e.g., [lys-ε-NHCO(CH2)2CH3]18) and peracetylated BCA II (e.g., [lys-ε-NHCOCH3]18) suggests that the electrostatic charge is more important than the hydrophobicity of surface groups in determining the rate of H/D exchange. These electrostatic effects on the kinetics of H/D exchange could complicate (or aid) the interpretation of experiments in which H/D exchange methods are used to probe the structural effects of non-isoelectric perturbations to proteins (i.e., phosphorylation, acetylation, or the binding of the protein to an oligonucleotide or to another charged ligand or protein).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Insights into the Role of the Unusual Disulfide Bond in Copper-Zinc Superoxide Dismutase

Kevin Sea; Se Hui Sohn; Armando Durazo; Yuewei Sheng; Bryan F. Shaw; Xiaohang Cao; Alexander B. Taylor; Lisa J. Whitson; Stephen P. Holloway; P. John Hart; Diane E. Cabelli; Edith Butler Gralla; Joan Selverstone Valentine

Background: Copper-zinc superoxide dismutase is a rare example of an intracellular protein with a disulfide bond. Results: Disulfide mutant C57S SOD1 has 10% of the enzymatic activity of wild type. Conclusion: The disulfide bond in SOD1 is not required for correct metal binding and enzymatic activity. Significance: The disulfide bond in SOD1 may play a role in SOD1-linked amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The functional and structural significance of the intrasubunit disulfide bond in copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) was studied by characterizing mutant forms of human SOD1 (hSOD) and yeast SOD1 lacking the disulfide bond. We determined x-ray crystal structures of metal-bound and metal-deficient hC57S SOD1. C57S hSOD1 isolated from yeast contained four zinc ions per protein dimer and was structurally very similar to wild type. The addition of copper to this four-zinc protein gave properly reconstituted 2Cu,2Zn C57S hSOD, and its spectroscopic properties indicated that the coordination geometry of the copper was remarkably similar to that of holo wild type hSOD1. In contrast, the addition of copper and zinc ions to apo C57S human SOD1 failed to give proper reconstitution. Using pulse radiolysis, we determined SOD activities of yeast and human SOD1s lacking disulfide bonds and found that they were enzymatically active at ∼10% of the wild type rate. These results are contrary to earlier reports that the intrasubunit disulfide bonds in SOD1 are essential for SOD activity. Kinetic studies revealed further that the yeast mutant SOD1 had less ionic attraction for superoxide, possibly explaining the lower rates. Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells lacking the sod1 gene do not grow aerobically in the absence of lysine, but expression of C57S SOD1 increased growth to 30–50% of the growth of cells expressing wild type SOD1, supporting that C57S SOD1 retained a significant amount of activity.

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Armando Durazo

University of California

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Kym F. Faull

University of California

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