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Dive into the research topics where Chae Un Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Chae Un Kim.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Entrapment of carbon dioxide in the active site of carbonic anhydrase II

John F. Domsic; Balendu Sankara Avvaru; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; David N. Silverman; Robert McKenna

The visualization at near atomic resolution of transient substrates in the active site of enzymes is fundamental to fully understanding their mechanism of action. Here we show the application of using CO2-pressurized, cryo-cooled crystals to capture the first step of CO2 hydration catalyzed by the zinc-metalloenzyme human carbonic anhydrase II, the binding of substrate CO2, for both the holo and the apo (without zinc) enzyme to 1.1Å resolution. Until now, the feasibility of such a study was thought to be technically too challenging because of the low solubility of CO2 and the fast turnover to bicarbonate by the enzyme (Liang, J. Y., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 87, 3675–3679). These structures provide insight into the long hypothesized binding of CO2 in a hydrophobic pocket at the active site and demonstrate that the zinc does not play a critical role in the binding or orientation of CO2. This method may also have a much broader implication for the study of other enzymes for which CO2 is a substrate or product and for the capturing of transient substrates and revealing hydrophobic pockets in proteins.


Biochemistry | 2010

A short, strong hydrogen bond in the active site of human carbonic anhydrase II.

Balendu Sankara Avvaru; Chae Un Kim; Katherine H. Sippel; Sol M. Gruner; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; David N. Silverman; Robert McKenna

The crystal structure of human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) obtained at 0.9 A resolution reveals that a water molecule, termed deep water, Dw, and bound in a hydrophobic pocket of the active site forms a short, strong hydrogen bond with the zinc-bound solvent molecule, a conclusion based on the observed oxygen-oxygen distance of 2.45 A. This water structure has similarities with hydrated hydroxide found in crystals of certain inorganic complexes. The energy required to displace Dw contributes in significant part to the weak binding of CO(2) in the enzyme-substrate complex, a weak binding that enhances k(cat) for the conversion of CO(2) into bicarbonate. In addition, this short, strong hydrogen bond is expected to contribute to the low pK(a) of the zinc-bound water and to promote proton transfer in catalysis.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2005

High-pressure cooling of protein crystals without cryoprotectants.

Chae Un Kim; Raphael Kapfer; Sol M. Gruner

Flash-cooling of protein crystals is the best known method to effectively mitigate radiation damage in macromolecular crystallography. To prevent physical damage to crystals upon cooling, suitable cryoprotectants must usually be found, a process that is time-consuming and in some cases unsuccessful. A method is described to cool protein crystals in high-pressure helium gas without the need for penetrative cryoprotectants. The method involves mounting protein crystals from the native mother liquor in a cryoloop with a droplet of oil, pressurizing the crystal to 200 MPa in He gas, cooling the crystal under pressure and then releasing the pressure. The crystal is then removed from the apparatus under liquid nitrogen and handled thereafter like a normal cryocooled crystal. Results are presented from three representative proteins. Dramatic improvement in diffraction quality in terms of resolution and mosaicity was observed in all cases. A mechanism for the pressure cooling is proposed involving high-density amorphous (HDA) ice which is produced at high pressure and is metastable at room pressure and 110 K.


Cell | 2006

The RCK domain of the KtrAB K+ transporter: multiple conformations of an octameric ring.

Ronald A. Albright; José-Luís Vazquez Ibar; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner; João H. Morais-Cabral

The KtrAB ion transporter is a complex of the KtrB membrane protein and KtrA, an RCK domain. RCK domains regulate eukaryotic and prokaryotic membrane proteins involved in K(+) transport. Conflicting functional models have proposed two different oligomeric arrangements for RCK domains, tetramer versus octamer. Our results for the KtrAB RCK domain clearly show an octamer in solution and in the crystal. We determined the structure of this protein in three different octameric ring conformations that resemble the RCK-domain octamer observed in the MthK potassium channel but show striking differences in size and symmetry. We present experimental evidence for the association between one RCK octameric ring and two KtrB membrane proteins. These results provide insights into the quaternary organization of the KtrAB transporter and its mechanism of activation and show that the RCK-domain octameric ring model is generally applicable to other ion-transport systems.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Evidence for liquid water during the high-density to low-density amorphous ice transition

Chae Un Kim; Buz Barstow; Mark W. Tate; Sol M. Gruner

Polymorphism of water has been extensively studied, but controversy still exists over the phase transition between high-density amorphous (HDA) and low-density amorphous (LDA) ice. We report the phase behavior of HDA ice inside high-pressure cryocooled protein crystals. Using X-ray diffraction, we demonstrate that the intermediate states in the temperature range from 80 to 170 K can be reconstructed as a linear combination of HDA and LDA ice, suggesting a first-order transition. We found evidence for a liquid state of water during the ice transition based on the protein crystallographic data. These observations open the possibility that the HDA ice induced by high-pressure cryocooling is a genuine glassy form of high-density liquid.


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

Alteration of citrine structure by hydrostatic pressure explains the accompanying spectral shift

Buz Barstow; Nozomi Ando; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner

A protein molecule is an intricate system whose function is highly sensitive to small external perturbations. However, no examples that correlate protein function with progressive subangstrom structural perturbations have thus far been presented. To elucidate this relationship, we have investigated a fluorescent protein, citrine, as a model system under high-pressure perturbation. The protein has been compressed to produce deformations of its chromophore by applying a high-pressure cryocooling technique. A closely spaced series of x-ray crystallographic structures reveals that the chromophore undergoes a progressive deformation of up to 0.8 Å at an applied pressure of 500 MPa. It is experimentally demonstrated that the structural motion is directly correlated with the progressive fluorescence shift of citrine from yellow to green under these conditions. This protein is therefore highly sensitive to subangstrom deformations and its function must be understood at the subangstrom level. These results have significant implications for protein function prediction and biomolecule design and engineering, because they suggest methods to tune protein function by modification of the protein scaffold.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2013

Structure of a pseudokinase domain switch that controls oncogenic activation of Jak kinases

Angela V. Toms; Anagha Deshpande; Randall McNally; Youngjee Jeong; Julia M. Rogers; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner; Scott B. Ficarro; Jarrod A. Marto; Martin Sattler; James D. Griffin; Michael J. Eck

The V617F mutation in the Jak2 pseudokinase domain causes myeloproliferative neoplasms, and the equivalent mutation in Jak1 (V658F) is found in T-cell leukemias. Crystal structures of wild-type and V658F-mutant human Jak1 pseudokinase reveal a conformational switch that remodels a linker segment encoded by exon 12, which is also a site of mutations in Jak2. This switch is required for V617F-mediated Jak2 activation and possibly for physiologic Jak activation.


Annual review of biophysics | 2011

High-Pressure Protein Crystallography and NMR to Explore Protein Conformations

Marcus D. Collins; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner

High-pressure methods for solving protein structures by X-ray crystallography and NMR are maturing. These techniques are beginning to impact our understanding of thermodynamic and structural features that define not only the proteins native conformation, but also the higher free energy conformations. The ability of high-pressure methods to visualize these mostly unexplored conformations provides new insight into protein function and dynamics. In this review, we begin with a historical discussion of high-pressure structural studies, with an eye toward early results that paved the way to mapping the multiple conformations of proteins. This is followed by an examination of several recent studies that emphasize different strengths and uses of high-pressure structural studies, ranging from basic thermodynamics to the suggestion of high-pressure structural methods as a tool for protein engineering.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Coupling of Pressure-Induced Structural Shifts to Spectral Changes in a Yellow Fluorescent Protein

Buz Barstow; Nozomi Ando; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner

X-ray diffraction analysis of pressure-induced structural changes in the Aequorea yellow fluorescent protein Citrine reveals the structural basis for the continuous fluorescence peak shift from yellow to green that is observed on pressurization. This fluorescence peak shift is caused by a reorientation of the two elements of the Citrine chromophore. This study describes the structural linkages in Citrine that are responsible for the local reorientation of the chromophore. The deformation of the Citrine chromophore is actuated by the differential motion of two clusters of atoms that compose the beta-barrel scaffold of the molecule, resulting in a slight bending of the beta-barrel. The high-pressure structures also show a perturbation of the hydrogen bonding network that stabilizes the excited state of the Citrine chromophore. The perturbation of this network is implicated in the reduction of fluorescence intensity of Citrine. The blue-shift of the Citrine fluorescence spectrum resulting from the bending of the beta-barrel provides structural insight into the transient blue-shifting of isolated yellow fluorescent protein molecules under ambient conditions and suggests mechanisms to alter the time-dependent behavior of Citrine under ambient conditions.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2008

Pressure-induced high-density amorphous ice in protein crystals

Chae Un Kim; Yi-Fan Chen; Mark W. Tate; Sol M. Gruner

Crystal cryocooling has been used in X-ray protein crystallography to mitigate radiation damage during diffraction data collection. However, cryocooling typically increases crystal mosaicity and often requires a time-consuming search for cryoprotectants. A recently developed high-pressure cryocooling method reduces crystal damage relative to traditional cryocooling procedures and eases or eliminates the need to screen for cryoprotectants. It has been proposed that the formation of high-density amorphous (HDA) ice within the protein crystal is responsible for the excellent diffraction quality of the high-pressure cryocooled crystals. This paper reports X-ray data that confirm the presence of HDA ice in the high-pressure cryocooled protein crystallization solution and protein crystals analyzed at ambient pressure. Diffuse scattering with a spacing characteristic of HDA ice is seen at low temperatures. This scattering then becomes characteristic successively to low-density amorphous, cubic and hexagonal ice phases as the temperature is gradually raised from 80 to 230 K, and seems to be highly correlated with the diffraction quality of crystals.

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Jin Kyun Kim

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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