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Dive into the research topics where Chi-Fon Chang is active.

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Featured researches published by Chi-Fon Chang.


FEBS Letters | 2005

The dimer interface of the SARS coronavirus nucleocapsid protein adapts a porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus-like structure

Chung Ke Chang; Shih Che Sue; Tsan Hung Yu; Chiu Min Hsieh; Cheng Kun Tsai; Yen Chieh Chiang; Shin Jye Lee; Hsin Hao Hsiao; Wen-Jin Wu; Chi-Fon Chang; Tai Huang Huang

We have employed NMR to investigate the structure of SARS coronavirus nucleocapsid protein dimer. We found that the secondary structure of the dimerization domain consists of five α helices and a β‐hairpin. The dimer interface consists of a continuous four‐stranded β‐sheet superposed by two long α helices, reminiscent of that found in the nucleocapsid protein of porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus. Extensive hydrogen bond formation between the two hairpins and hydrophobic interactions between the β‐sheet and the α helices render the interface highly stable. Sequence alignment suggests that other coronavirus may share the same structural topology.


Biophysical Journal | 2005

Folding of the Protein Domain hbSBD

Maksim Kouza; Chi-Fon Chang; Shura Hayryan; Tsan Hung Yu; Mai Suan Li; Tai Huang Huang; Chin-Kun Hu

The folding of the alpha-helix domain hbSBD of the mammalian mitochondrial branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase complex is studied by the circular dichroism technique in absence of urea. Thermal denaturation is used to evaluate various thermodynamic parameters defining the equilibrium unfolding, which is well described by the two-state model with the folding temperature T(F) = 317.8 +/- 1.95 K and the enthalpy change DeltaH(G) = 19.67 +/- 2.67 kcal/mol. The folding is also studied numerically using the off-lattice coarse-grained Go model and the Langevin dynamics. The obtained results, including the population of the native basin, the free-energy landscape as a function of the number of native contacts, and the folding kinetics, also suggest that the hbSBD domain is a two-state folder. These results are consistent with the biological function of hbSBD in branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase.


research in computational molecular biology | 2005

RIBRA–an error-tolerant algorithm for the NMR backbone assignment problem

Kuen-Pin Wu; Jia Ming Chang; Jun Bo Chen; Chi-Fon Chang; Wen-Jin Wu; Tai Huang Huang; Ting-Yi Sung; Wen-Lian Hsu

We develop an iterative relaxation algorithm, called RIBRA, for NMR protein backbone assignment. RIBRA applies nearest neighbor and weighted maximum independent set algorithms to solve the problem. To deal with noisy NMR spectral data, RIBRA is executed in an iterative fashion based on the quality of spectral peaks. We first produce spin system pairs using the spectral data without missing peaks, then the data group with one missing peak, and finally, the data group with two missing peaks. We test RIBRA on two real NMR datasets: hb-SBD and hbLBD, and perfect BMRB data (with 902 proteins) and four synthetic BMRB data which simulate four kinds of errors. The accuracy of RIBRA on hbSBD and hbLBD are 91.4% and 83.6%, respectively. The average accuracy of RIBRA on perfect BMRB datasets is 98.28%, and 98.28%, 95.61%, 98.16% and 96.28% on four kinds of synthetic datasets, respectively.


Antiviral Research | 2014

The SARS coronavirus nucleocapsid protein - Forms and functions

Chung Ke Chang; Ming-Hon Hou; Chi-Fon Chang; Chwan-Deng Hsiao; Tai Huang Huang

Abstract The nucleocapsid phosphoprotein of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV N protein) packages the viral genome into a helical ribonucleocapsid (RNP) and plays a fundamental role during viral self-assembly. It is a protein with multifarious activities. In this article we will review our current understanding of the N protein structure and its interaction with nucleic acid. Highlights of the progresses include uncovering the modular organization, determining the structures of the structural domains, realizing the roles of protein disorder in protein–protein and protein–nucleic acid interactions, and visualizing the ribonucleoprotein (RNP) structure inside the virions. It was also demonstrated that N-protein binds to nucleic acid at multiple sites with a coupled-allostery manner. We propose a SARS-CoV RNP model that conforms to existing data and bears resemblance to the existing RNP structures of RNA viruses. The model highlights the critical role of modular organization and intrinsic disorder of the N protein in the formation and functions of the dynamic RNP capsid in RNA viruses. This paper forms part of a symposium in Antiviral Research on “From SARS to MERS: 10years of research on highly pathogenic human coronaviruses.”


FEBS Letters | 2013

Molecular mechanism of oxidation-induced TDP-43 RRM1 aggregation and loss of function

Chung Ke Chang; Ming hui Chiang; Elsie Khai Woon Toh; Chi-Fon Chang; Tai Huang Huang

RRM2 and RRM2 bind by molecular sieving (View Interaction: 1, 2)


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Molecular Structure of Amyloid Fibrils Formed by Residues 127 to 147 of the Human Prion Protein

Ni‐Shian Lin; John Ching‐Hao Chao; Hsin‐Mei Cheng; Fang-Chieh Chou; Chi-Fon Chang; Yun-Ru Chen; Yu-Jen Chang; Shing-Jong Huang; Jerry C. C. Chan

Amyloid fibrils are filamentous and insoluble forms of peptides or proteins. Proline has long been considered to be incompatible with the cross-beta structural motif of amyloid fibrils. On the basis of solid-state NMR spectroscopy data, we present a structural model of an in-register parallel beta sheet for the amyloid fibrils formed from a human prion protein fragment, huPrP(127-47). We have developed a simple solid-state NMR spectroscopy technique to identify solvent-protected backbone amide protons in a H/D exchange experiment without disaggregating the amyloid fibrils, from which we find that proline residue P(137) does not disrupt the beta-sheet structure from G(127) to G(142). We suggest that the resultant kink at P(137) generates a twist between adjacent peptide strands to maintain hydrogen bonding in the beta-sheet regions flanking the P(137) residue. Although proline can be well integrated into the cross-beta structure of amyloid fibrils, the kink formed at the position of the proline residue will considerably weaken the hydrogen bonding between the neighboring strands, especially when the mutation site is near the central region of a beta sheet.


FEBS Letters | 2002

NMR studies of the hydrogen bonds involving the catalytic triad of Escherichia coli thioesterase/protease I

Sergiy I. Tyukhtenko; Alexandra V. Litvinchuk; Chi-Fon Chang; Ruey-Jyh Leu; Jei-Fu Shaw; Tai Huang Huang

Escherichia coli thioesterase/protease I (TEP‐I) is a lipolytic enzyme of the serine protease superfamily with Ser10, Asp154 and His157 as the catalytic triad residues. Based on comparison of the low‐field 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of two mutants (S10G and S12G) and two transition state analogue complexes we have assigned the exchangeable proton resonances at 16.3 ppm, 14.3 ppm, and 12.8 ppm at pH 3.5 to His157‐Nδ1H, Ser10‐OγH and His157‐Nϵ2H, respectively. Thus, the presence of a strong Asp154–His157 hydrogen bond in free TEP‐I was observed. However, Ser10‐OγH was shown to form a H‐bond with a residue other than His157‐Nϵ2.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Three-Dimensional Structure of Human NLRP10/PYNOD Pyrin Domain Reveals a Homotypic Interaction Site Distinct from Its Mouse Homologue

Ming-Yuan Su; Chiao-I Kuo; Chi-Fon Chang; Chung-I Chang

NLRPs (Nucleotide-binding domain, leucine-rich repeat and pyrin domain containing proteins) are a family of pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) that sense intracellular microbial components and endogenous stress signals. NLRP10 (also known as PYNOD) is a unique NLRP member characterized by a lack of the putative ligand-binding leucine-rich repeat domain. Recently, human NLRP10 has been shown to inhibit the self-association of ASC into aggregates and ASC-mediated procaspase-1 processing. However, such activities are not found in mouse NLRP10. Here we report the solution structure and dynamics of human NLRP10 pyrin domain (PYD), whose helix H3 and loop H2–H3 adopt a conformation distinct from those of mouse NLRP10. Docking studies show that human and mouse NLRP10 PYDs may interact differently with ASC PYD. These results provide a possible structural explanation for the contrasting effect of NLRP10 on ASC aggregation in human cells versus mouse models. Finally, we also provide evidence that in human NLRP10 the PYD domain may not interact with the NOD domain to regulate its intrinsic nucleotide hydrolysis activity.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Temperature-Dependent Structural Changes of Parkinson's Alpha-Synuclein Reveal the Role of Pre-Existing Oligomers in Alpha-Synuclein Fibrillization

Winny Ariesandi; Chi-Fon Chang; Tseng-Erh Chen; Yun-Ru Chen

Amyloid fibrils of α-synuclein are the main constituent of Lewy bodies deposited in substantial nigra of Parkinsons disease brains. α-Synuclein is an intrinsically disordered protein lacking compact secondary and tertiary structures. To enhance the understanding of its structure and function relationship, we utilized temperature treatment to study α-synuclein conformational changes and the subsequent effects. We found that after 1 hr of high temperature pretreatment, >80°C, α-synuclein fibrillization was significantly inhibited. However, the temperature melting coupled with circular dichroism spectra showed that α-synuclein was fully reversible and the NMR studies showed no observable structural changes of α-synuclein after 95°C treatment. By using cross-linking and analytical ultracentrifugation, rare amount of pre-existing α-synuclein oligomers were found to decrease after the high temperature treatment. In addition, a small portion of C-terminal truncation of α-synuclein also occurred. The reduction of pre-existing oligomers of α-synuclein may contribute to less seeding effect that retards the kinetics of amyloid fibrillization. Overall, our results showed that the pre-existing oligomeric species is a key factor contributing to α-synuclein fibrillization. Our results facilitate the understanding of α-synuclein fibrillization.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2012

A compact high-speed mechanical sample shuttle for field-dependent high-resolution solution NMR

Ching Yu Chou; Minglee Chu; Chi-Fon Chang; Tai Huang Huang

Analysis of NMR relaxation data has provided significant insight on molecular dynamic, leading to a more comprehensive understanding of macromolecular functions. However, traditional methodology allows relaxation measurements performed only at a few fixed high fields, thus severely restricting their potential for extracting more complete dynamic information. Here we report the design and performance of a compact high-speed servo-mechanical shuttle assembly adapted to a commercial 600 MHz high-field superconducting magnet. The assembly is capable of shuttling the sample in a regular NMR tube from the center of the magnet to the top (fringe field ∼0.01 T) in 100 ms with no loss of sensitivity other than that due to intrinsic relaxation. The shuttle device can be installed by a single experienced user in 30 min. Excellent 2D-(15)N-HSQC spectra of (u-(13)C, (15)N)-ubiquitin with relaxation at low fields (3.77 T) and detection at 14.1T were obtained to illustrate its utility in R(1) measurements of macromolecules at low fields. Field-dependent (13)C-R(1) data of (3,3,3-d)-alanine at various field strengths were determined and analyzed to assess CSA and (1)H-(13)C dipolar contributions to the carboxyl (13)C-R(1).

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Chun-Hua Hsu

National Taiwan University

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Hsien-Bin Huang

National Chung Cheng University

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Shing-Jong Huang

National Taiwan University

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Ta-Hsien Lin

Taipei Veterans General Hospital

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