C. Jason Wong
University of Connecticut
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Publication
Featured researches published by C. Jason Wong.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009
Laurie A. Heinicke; C. Jason Wong; Jeffrey W. Lary; Subba Rao Nallagatla; Amy Diegelman-Parente; Xiaofeng Zheng; James L. Cole; Philip C. Bevilacqua
The double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-activated protein kinase [protein kinase R (PKR)] plays a major role in the innate immune response in humans. PKR binds dsRNA non-sequence specifically and requires a minimum of 15-bp dsRNA for one protein to bind and 30-bp dsRNA to induce protein dimerization and activation by autophosphorylation. PKR phosphorylates eukaryotic initiation factor 2alpha, a translation initiation factor, resulting in the inhibition of protein synthesis. We investigated the mechanism of PKR activation by an RNA hairpin with a number of base pairs intermediate between these 15- to 30-bp limits: human immunodeficiency virus type 1 transactivation-responsive region (TAR) RNA, a 23-bp hairpin with three bulges that is known to dimerize. TAR monomers and dimers were isolated from native gels and assayed for RNA and protein dimerization to test whether RNA dimerization affects PKR dimerization and activation. To modulate the extent of dimerization, we included TAR mutants with different secondary features. Native gel mixing experiments and analytical ultracentrifugation indicate that TAR monomers bind one PKR monomer and that TAR dimers bind two or three PKRs, demonstrating that RNA dimerization drives the binding of multiple PKR molecules. Consistent with functional dimerization of PKR, TAR dimers activated PKR while TAR monomers did not, and RNA dimers with fewer asymmetrical secondary-structure defects, as determined by enzymatic structure mapping, were more potent activators. Thus, the secondary-structure defects in the TAR RNA stem function as antideterminants to PKR binding and activation. Our studies support that dimerization of a 15- to 30-bp hairpin RNA, which effectively doubles its length, is a key step in driving activation of PKR and provide a model for how RNA folding can be related to human disease.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
Eric Anderson; Willythssa S. Pierre-Louis; C. Jason Wong; Jeffrey W. Lary; James L. Cole
Protein kinase R (PKR) is an interferon-induced kinase that plays a pivotal role in the innate immunity pathway. PKR is activated to undergo autophosphorylation upon binding to double-stranded RNAs or RNAs that contain duplex regions. Activated PKR phosphorylates the α subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2, thereby inhibiting protein synthesis. PKR is also activated by heparin, a highly sulfated glycosaminoglycan. We have used biophysical methods to define the mechanism of PKR activation by heparin. Heparins as short as hexasaccharide bind strongly to PKR and activate autophosphorylation. In contrast to double-stranded RNA, heparin activates PKR by binding to the kinase domain. Analytical ultracentrifugation measurements support a thermodynamic linkage model where heparin binding allosterically enhances PKR dimerization, thereby activating the kinase. These results indicate that PKR can be activated by small molecules and represents a viable target for the development of novel antiviral agents.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Katherine Launer-Felty; C. Jason Wong; Ahmed Wahid; Graeme L. Conn; James L. Cole
Protein kinase R (PKR) is an interferon-induced kinase that plays a pivotal role in the innate immunity pathway for defense against viral infection. PKR is activated to undergo autophosphorylation upon binding to RNAs that contain duplex regions. Activated PKR phosphorylates the α-subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2, thereby inhibiting protein synthesis in virus-infected cells. Viruses have evolved diverse PKR-inhibitory strategies to evade the antiviral response. Adenovirus encodes virus-associated RNA I (VAI), a highly structured RNA inhibitor that binds PKR but fails to activate. We have characterized the stoichiometry and affinity of PKR binding to define the mechanism of PKR inhibition by VAI. Sedimentation velocity and isothermal titration calorimetry measurements indicate that PKR interactions with VAI are modulated by Mg(2+). Two PKR monomers bind in the absence of Mg(2+), but a single monomer binds in the presence of divalent ion. Known RNA activators of PKR are capable of binding multiple PKR monomers to allow the kinase domains to come into close proximity and thus enhance dimerization. We propose that VAI acts as an inhibitor of PKR because it binds and sequesters a single PKR in the presence of divalent cation.
Methods in Enzymology | 2011
C. Jason Wong; Katherine Launer-Felty; James L. Cole
PKR is an interferon-induced kinase that plays a pivotal role in the innate immunity pathway for defense against viral infection. PKR is activated to undergo autophosphorylation upon binding to RNAs that contain duplex regions. Some highly structured viral RNAs do not activate and function as PKR inhibitors. In order to define the mechanisms of activation and inhibition of PKR by RNA, it is necessary to characterize the stoichiometries, affinities, and free energy couplings governing the assembly of the relevant complexes. We have found sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation to be particularly useful in the study of PKR-RNA interactions. Here, we describe protocols for designing and analyzing sedimentation velocity experiments that are generally applicable to studies of protein-nucleic acid interactions. Initially, velocity data obtained at multiple protein:RNA ratios are analyzed using the dc/dt methods to define the association model and to test whether the system is kinetically limited. The sedimentation velocity data obtained at multiple loading concentrations are then globally fitted to this model to determine the relevant association constants. The frictional ratios of the complexes are calculated using the fitted sedimentation coefficients to determine whether the hydrodynamic properties are physically reasonable. We demonstrate the utility of this approach using examples from our studies of PKR interactions with simple dsRNAs, the HIV TAR RNA, and the VAI RNA from adenovirus.
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Katherine Launer-Felty; C. Jason Wong; James L. Cole
Protein kinase R (PKR) is activated by dsRNA produced during virus replication and plays a major role in the innate immunity response to virus infection. In response, viruses have evolved multiple strategies to evade PKR. Adenovirus virus-associated RNA-I (VAI) is a short, noncoding transcript that functions as an RNA decoy to sequester PKR in an inactive state. VAI consists of an apical stem-loop, a highly structured central domain, and a terminal stem. Chemical probing and mutagenesis demonstrate that the central domain is stabilized by a pseudoknot. A structural model of VAI was obtained from constraints derived from chemical probing and small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements. VAI adopts a flat, extended conformation with the apical and terminal stems emanating from a protuberance in the center. This model reveals how the apical stem and central domain assemble to produce an extended duplex that is precisely tuned to bind a single PKR monomer with high affinity, thereby inhibiting activation of PKR by viral dsRNA.
Biophysical Journal | 2011
Katherine Launer-Felty; C. Jason Wong; Ahmed M. Wahid; Graeme L. Conn; James L. Cole
Protein kinase R (PKR) is a component of the innnate immunity pathway that is activated by dsRNA to undergo dimerization and autophosphorylation. Adenovirus virus-associated RNA I (VA I) is a short, non-coding transcript that functions to inhibit the activity of PKR in the host cell by acting as an RNA decoy. VA I contains three domains: an apical stem-loop, a central domain, and a terminal stem. Previous work suggests that PKR binding is localized to the apical stem and central domain regions. We have characterized the PKR binding stoichiometry and affinity using sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation and isothermal titration calorimetry. Although two PKR molecules clearly bind to VA I in the absence of divalent ion, only one PKR binds in the presence of Mg2+ and the binding affinity is reduced by about 20-fold. In contrast, PKR binding to regular dsRNAs is not strongly affected by divalent ion. Thus, Mg2+ may be required for VA I to fold. Interestingly, we do not detect large structural changes in the RNA by small angle X-ray scattering upon addition of Mg2+. Removal of the VA I terminal stem does not affect PKR binding affinity or inhibition. PKR binds more strongly to the highly- structured, viral RNA relative to a simple dsRNA with a length comparable to the apical stem or to the isolated apical stem itself, indicating that PKR specifically recognizes the central domain. Our data indicate that VA I inhibits PKR because it binds tightly but does not foster PKR dimerization in the presence of Mg2+.
RNA | 2016
Christopher B. Mayo; C. Jason Wong; Prisma Lopez; Jeffrey W. Lary; James L. Cole
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Katherine Launer-Felty; C. Jason Wong; James L. Cole
Biophysical Journal | 2011
C. Jason Wong; James L. Cole
Biophysical Journal | 2011
Eric Anderson; Willythssa S. Pierre-Louis; C. Jason Wong; Jeffrey W. Lary; James L. Cole