Charles M. Stevens
Simon Fraser University
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Featured researches published by Charles M. Stevens.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009
Charles M. Stevens; Tara L. Winstone; Raymond J. Turner; Mark Paetzel
The redox enzyme maturation proteins play an essential role in the proofreading and membrane targeting of protein substrates to the twin-arginine translocase. Functionally, the most thoroughly characterized redox enzyme maturation protein to date is Escherichia coli DmsD (EcDmsD). Herein, we present the X-ray crystal structure of the monomeric form of the EcDmsD refined to 2.0 A resolution, with clear electron density present for each of its 204 amino acid residues. The structural data presented here complement the biochemical data previously generated regarding the function of these twin-arginine translocase leader peptide binding chaperone proteins. Docking and molecular dynamics simulation experiments were used to provide a proposed model for how this chaperone is able to recognize the leader peptide of its substrate DmsA. The interactions observed in the model are in agreement with previous biochemical data and suggest intimate interactions between the conserved twin-arginine motif of the leader peptide of E. coli DmsA and the most conserved regions on the surface of EcDmsD.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Alison Yueh Li; Charles M. Stevens; Bo Liang; Kaveh Rayani; Sean C. Little; Jonathan P. Davis; Glen F. Tibbits
The Ca2+ binding properties of the FHC-associated cardiac troponin C (cTnC) mutation L29Q were examined in isolated cTnC, troponin complexes, reconstituted thin filament preparations, and skinned cardiomyocytes. While higher Ca2+ binding affinity was apparent for the L29Q mutant in isolated cTnC, this phenomenon was not observed in the cTn complex. At the level of the thin filament in the presence of phosphomimetic TnI, L29Q cTnC further reduced the Ca2+ affinity by 27% in the steady-state measurement and increased the Ca2+ dissociation rate by 20% in the kinetic studies. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest that L29Q destabilizes the conformation of cNTnC in the presence of phosphomimetic cTnI and potentially modulates the Ca2+ sensitivity due to the changes of the opening/closing equilibrium of cNTnC. In the skinned cardiomyocyte preparation, L29Q cTnC increased Ca2+ sensitivity in a highly sarcomere length (SL)-dependent manner. The well-established reduction of Ca2+ sensitivity by phosphomimetic cTnI was diminished by 68% in the presence of the mutation and it also depressed the SL-dependent increase in myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity. This might result from its modified interaction with cTnI which altered the feedback effects of cross-bridges on the L29Q cTnC-cTnI-Tm complex. This study demonstrates that the L29Q mutation alters the contractility and the functional effects of the phosphomimetic cTnI in both thin filament and single skinned cardiomyocytes and importantly that this effect is highly sarcomere length dependent.
Genome Biology and Evolution | 2016
Christine E. Genge; Charles M. Stevens; William S. Davidson; Gurpreet Singh; D. Peter Tieleman; Glen F. Tibbits
Gene duplication results in extra copies of genes that must coevolve with their interacting partners in multimeric protein complexes. The cardiac troponin (Tn) complex, containing TnC, TnI, and TnT, forms a distinct functional unit critical for the regulation of cardiac muscle contraction. In teleost fish, the function of the Tn complex is modified by the consequences of differential expression of paralogs in response to environmental thermal challenges. In this article, we focus on the interaction between TnI and TnC, coded for by genes that have independent evolutionary origins, but the co-operation of their protein products has necessitated coevolution. In this study, we characterize functional divergence of TnC and TnI paralogs, specifically the interrelated roles of regulatory subfunctionalization and structural subfunctionalization. We determined that differential paralog transcript expression in response to temperature acclimation results in three combinations of TnC and TnI in the zebrafish heart: TnC1a/TnI1.1, TnC1b/TnI1.1, and TnC1a/TnI1.5. Phylogenetic analysis of these highly conserved proteins identified functionally divergent residues in TnI and TnC. The structural and functional effect of these Tn combinations was modeled with molecular dynamics simulation to link divergent sites to changes in interaction strength. Functional divergence in TnI and TnC were not limited to the residues involved with TnC/TnI switch interaction, which emphasizes the complex nature of Tn function. Patterns in domain-specific divergent selection and interaction energies suggest that substitutions in the TnI switch region are crucial to modifying TnI/TnC function to maintain cardiac contraction with temperature changes. This integrative approach introduces Tn as a model of functional divergence that guides the coevolution of interacting proteins.
Protein Expression and Purification | 2012
Charles M. Stevens; Mark Paetzel
We present a method for the purification of the 45 residue long leader peptide of Escherichia coli dimethyl sulfoxide reductase subunit A (DmsA(L)), a substrate of the twin arginine translocase, by co-expressing the leader peptide with its specific chaperone protein, DmsD. The peptide can be isolated from the soluble DmsA(L)/DmsD complex or conveniently from the lysate pellet fraction. The recombinant leader peptide is functionally intact as the peptide/chaperone complex can be reconstituted from purified DmsA(L) and DmsD. A construct with DmsA(L) fused to the N-terminus of DmsD (DmsA(L)-DmsD fusion) was created to further explore the properties of the leader peptide-chaperone interactions. Analytical size-exclusion chromatography in-line with multi-angle light scattering reveals that the DmsA(L)-DmsD fusion construct forms a dimer wherein each protomer binds the neighboring leader peptide. A model of this homodimeric interaction is presented.
Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2017
Laura J. Dewar; Miguel Alcaide; Daniel Fornika; Luisa D’Amato; Sanam Shafaatalab; Charles M. Stevens; Thambirajah Balachandra; Susan M. Phillips; Shubhayan Sanatani; Ryan D. Morin; Glen F. Tibbits
Background— Inherited arrhythmia syndromes are responsible for a significant portion of autopsy-negative sudden unexpected death (SUD) cases, but molecular autopsy used to identify potentially causal variants is not routinely included in SUD investigations. We collaborated with a medical examiners office to assist in finding a diagnosis for their autopsy-negative child SUD cases. Methods and Results— 191 child SUD cases (<5 years of age) were selected for analyses. Our next generation sequencing panel incorporated 38 inherited arrhythmia syndrome candidate genes and another 33 genes not previously investigated for variants that may underlie SUDY pathophysiology. Overall, we identified 11 potentially causal disease-associated variants in 12 cases, for an overall yield of 6.3%. We also identified 31 variants of uncertain significance in 36 cases and 16 novel variants predicted to be pathogenic in silico in 15 cases. The disease-associated variants were reported to the medical examiner to notify surviving relatives and recommend clinical assessment. Conclusions— We have identified variants that may assist in the diagnosis of at least 6.3% of autopsy-negative child SUD cases and reduce risk of future SUD in surviving relatives. We recommend a cautious approach to variant interpretation. We also suggest inclusion of cardiomyopathy genes as well as other candidate SUD genes in molecular autopsy analyses.
Biochemistry | 2008
Catherine S. Chan; Tara L. Winstone; Limei Chang; Charles M. Stevens; Matthew L. Workentine; Haiming Li; Ying Wei; Mary Jo Ondrechen; Mark Paetzel; Raymond J. Turner
Biomolecular Nmr Assignments | 2013
Charles M. Stevens; Mark Okon; Lawrence P. McIntosh; Mark Paetzel
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Charles M. Stevens; Kaveh Rayani; Christine E. Genge; Gurpreet Singh; Bo Liang; Janine M. Roller; Cindy Li; Alison Yueh Li; D. Peter Tieleman; Filip Van Petegem; Glen F. Tibbits
Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2017
Laura J. Dewar; Miguel Alcaide; Daniel Fornika; Luisa D’Amato; Sanam Shafaatalab; Charles M. Stevens; Thambirajah Balachandra; Susan M. Phillips; Shubhayan Sanatani; Ryan D. Morin; Glen F. Tibbits
Journal of Chemical Education | 2007
Charles M. Stevens; Dylan M. Silver; Brad Behm; Raymond J. Turner; Michael G. Surette