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Featured researches published by Chiung-Wen Chang.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2016

Structural Biology and Regulation of Protein Import into the Nucleus

Mary Christie; Chiung-Wen Chang; Gergely Róna; Kate Smith; Alastair G. Stewart; Agnes A. S. Takeda; Marcos R.M. Fontes; Murray Stewart; Beáta G. Vértessy; Jade K. Forwood; Bostjan Kobe

Proteins are translated in the cytoplasm, but many need to access the nucleus to perform their functions. Understanding how these nuclear proteins are transported through the nuclear envelope and how the import processes are regulated is therefore an important aspect of understanding cell function. Structural biology has played a key role in understanding the molecular events during the transport processes and their regulation, including the recognition of nuclear targeting signals by the corresponding receptors. Here, we review the structural basis of the principal nuclear import pathways and the molecular basis of their regulation. The pathways involve transport factors that are members of the β-karyopherin family, which can bind cargo directly (e.g., importin-β, transportin-1, transportin-3, importin-13) or through adaptor proteins (e.g., importin-α, snurportin-1, symportin-1), as well as unrelated transport factors such as Hikeshi, involved in the transport of heat-shock proteins, and NTF2, involved in the transport of RanGDP. Solenoid proteins feature prominently in these pathways. Nuclear transport factors recognize nuclear targeting signals on the cargo proteins, including the classical nuclear localization signals, recognized by the adaptor importin-α, and the PY nuclear localization signals, recognized by transportin-1. Post-translational modifications, particularly phosphorylation, constitute key regulatory mechanisms operating in these pathways.


Traffic | 2013

Distinctive Conformation of Minor Site‐Specific Nuclear Localization Signals Bound to Importin‐α

Chiung-Wen Chang; Rafael M. Couñago; Simon J. Williams; Mikael Bodén; Bostjan Kobe

Nuclear localization signals (NLSs) contain one or two clusters of basic residues and are recognized by the import receptor importin‐α. There are two NLS‐binding sites (major and minor) on importin‐α and the major NLS‐binding site is considered to be the primary binding site. Here, we used crystallographic and biochemical methods to investigate the binding between importin‐α and predicted ‘minor site‐specific’ NLSs: four peptide library‐derived peptides, and the NLS from mouse RNA helicase II/Guα. The crystal structures reveal that these atypical NLSs indeed preferentially bind to the minor NLS‐binding site. Unlike previously characterized NLSs, the C‐terminal residues of these NLSs form an α‐helical turn, stabilized by internal H‐bond and cation‐π interactions between the aromatic residues from the NLSs and the positively charged residues from importin‐α. This helical turn sterically hinders binding at the major NLS‐binding site, explaining the minor‐site preference. Our data suggest the sequence RXXKR[K/X][F/Y/W]XXAF as the optimal minor NLS‐binding site‐specific motif, which may help identify novel proteins with atypical NLSs.


The Plant Cell | 2012

Crystal Structure of Rice Importin-α and Structural Basis of Its Interaction with Plant-Specific Nuclear Localization Signals

Chiung-Wen Chang; Rafael M. Couñago; Simon J. Williams; Mikael Bodén; Bostjan Kobe

A combination of crystallography, interaction analysis, and nuclear import assays demonstrates a distinct mode of autoinhibition in rice importin- α1a and the binding of plant-specific nuclear localization signals (NLSs) to its minor NLS binding site. In the classical nucleocytoplasmic import pathway, nuclear localization signals (NLSs) in cargo proteins are recognized by the import receptor importin-α. Importin-α has two separate NLS binding sites (the major and the minor site), both of which recognize positively charged amino acid clusters in NLSs. Little is known about the molecular basis of the unique features of the classical nuclear import pathway in plants. We determined the crystal structure of rice (Oryza sativa) importin-α1a at 2-Å resolution. The structure reveals that the autoinhibitory mechanism mediated by the importin-β binding domain of importin-α operates in plants, with NLS-mimicking sequences binding to both minor and major NLS binding sites. Consistent with yeast and mammalian proteins, rice importin-α binds the prototypical NLS from simian virus 40 large T-antigen preferentially at the major NLS binding site. We show that two NLSs, previously described as plant specific, bind to and are functional with plant, mammalian, and yeast importin-α proteins but interact with rice importin-α more strongly. The crystal structures of their complexes with rice importin-α show that they bind to the minor NLS binding site. By contrast, the crystal structures of their complexes with mouse (Mus musculus) importin-α show preferential binding to the major NLS binding site. Our results reveal the molecular basis of a number of features of the classical nuclear transport pathway specific to plants.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011

Structural Basis of Importin-α-Mediated Nuclear Transport for Ku70 and Ku80

Agnes A. S. Takeda; Andrea C. de Barros; Chiung-Wen Chang; Bostjan Kobe; Marcos R.M. Fontes

Ku70 and Ku80 form a heterodimeric complex involved in multiple nuclear processes. This complex plays a key role in DNA repair due to its ability to bind DNA double-strand breaks and facilitate repair by the nonhomologous end-joining pathway. Ku70 and Ku80 have been proposed to contain bipartite and monopartite nuclear localization sequences (NLSs), respectively, that allow them to be translocated to the nucleus independently of each other via the classical importin-α (Impα)/importin-β-mediated nuclear import pathway. To determine the structural basis of the recognition of Ku70 and Ku80 proteins by Impα, we solved the crystal structures of the complexes of Impα with the peptides corresponding to the Ku70 and Ku80 NLSs. Our structural studies confirm the binding of the Ku80 NLS as a classical monopartite NLS but reveal an unexpected binding mode for Ku70 NLS with only one basic cluster bound to the receptor. Both Ku70 and Ku80 therefore contain monopartite NLSs, and sequences outside the basic cluster make favorable interactions with Impα, suggesting that this may be a general feature in monopartite NLSs. We show that the Ku70 NLS has a higher affinity for Impα than the Ku80 NLS, consistent with more extensive interactions in its N-terminal region. The prospect of nuclear import of Ku70 and Ku80 independently of each other provides a powerful regulatory mechanism for the function of the Ku70/Ku80 heterodimer and independent functions of the two proteins.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Structural basis of thiol-based regulation of formaldehyde detoxification in H. influenzae by a MerR regulator with no sensor region

Rafael M. Couñago; Nathan H. Chen; Chiung-Wen Chang; Karrera Y. Djoko; Alastair G. McEwan; Bostjan Kobe

Pathogenic bacteria such as Haemophilus influenzae, a major cause of lower respiratory tract diseases, must cope with a range of electrophiles generated in the host or by endogenous metabolism. Formaldehyde is one such compound that can irreversibly damage proteins and DNA through alkylation and cross-linking and interfere with redox homeostasis. Its detoxification operates under the control of HiNmlR, a protein from the MerR family that lacks a specific sensor region and does not bind metal ions. We demonstrate that HiNmlR is a thiol-dependent transcription factor that modulates H. influenzae response to formaldehyde, with two cysteine residues (Cys54 and Cys71) identified to be important for its response against a formaldehyde challenge. We obtained crystal structures of HiNmlR in both the DNA-free and two DNA-bound forms, which suggest that HiNmlR enhances target gene transcription by twisting of operator DNA sequences in a two-gene operon containing overlapping promoters. Our work provides the first structural insights into the mechanism of action of MerR regulators that lack sensor regions.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Structural and Biochemical Analysis of a Single Amino-Acid Mutant of WzzBSF That Alters Lipopolysaccharide O-Antigen Chain Length in Shigella flexneri.

Chiung-Wen Chang; Elizabeth Ngoc Hoa Tran; Daniel J. Ericsson; Lachlan W. Casey; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Friederike Benning; Renato Morona; Bostjan Kobe

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a surface polymer of Gram-negative bacteria, helps bacteria survive in different environments and acts as a virulence determinant of host infection. The O-antigen (Oag) component of LPS exhibits a modal chain-length distribution that is controlled by polysaccharide co-polymerases (PCPs). The molecular basis of the regulation of Oag chain-lengths remains unclear, despite extensive mutagenesis and structural studies of PCPs from Escherichia coli and Shigella. Here, we identified a single mutation (A107P) of the Shigella flexneri WzzBSF, by a random mutagenesis approach, that causes a shortened Oag chain-length distribution in bacteria. We determined the crystal structures of the periplasmic domains of wild-type WzzBSF and the A107P mutant. Both structures form a highly similar open trimeric assembly in the crystals, and show a similar tendency to self-associate in solution. Binding studies by bio-layer interferometry reveal cooperative binding of very short (VS)-core-plus-O-antigen polysaccharide (COPS) to the periplasmic domains of both proteins, but with decreased affinity for the A107P mutant. Our studies reveal that subtle and localized structural differences in PCPs can have dramatic effects on LPS chain-length distribution in bacteria, for example by altering the affinity for the substrate, which supports the role of the structure of the growing Oag polymer in this process.


Molecular Plant | 2014

Structural Basis of Interaction of Bipartite Nuclear Localization Signal from Agrobacterium VirD2 with Rice Importin-α

Chiung-Wen Chang; Simon J. Williams; Rafael M. Couñago; Bostjan Kobe

Supplemental Figures, Tables, and AppendicesxDownload (6.98 MB ) Supplemental Figures, Tables, and Appendices


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2013

The distribution of different classes of nuclear localization signals (NLSs) in diverse organisms and the utilization of the minor NLS-binding site inplantnuclear import factor importin-α

Chiung-Wen Chang; Rafael M. Couñago; Simon J. Williams; Mikael Bodén; Bostjan Kobe

The specific recognition between the import receptor importin-α and the nuclear localization signals (NLSs) is crucial to ensure the selective transport of cargoes into the nucleus. NLSs contain 1 or 2 clusters of positively charged amino acids, which usually bind to the major (monopartite NLSs) or both minor and major NLS-binding sites (bipartite NLSs). In our recent study, we determined the structure of importin-α1a from rice (Oryza sativa), and made 2 observations that suggest an increased utilization of the minor NLS-binding site in this protein. First, unlike the mammalian protein, both the major and minor NLS-binding sites are auto-inhibited in the unliganded rice protein. Second, we showed that NLSs of the “plant-specific” class preferentially bind to the minor NLS-binding site of rice importin-α. Here, we show that a distinct group of “minor site-specific” NLSs also bind to the minor site of the rice protein. We further show a greater enrichment of proteins containing these “plant-specific” and “minor site-specific” NLSs in the rice proteome. However, the analysis of the distribution of different classes of NLSs in diverse eukaryotes shows that in all organisms, the minor site-specific NLSs are much less prevalent than the classical monopartite and bipartite NLSs.


Structure | 2018

Structural and Functional Characterization of a Cross-Reactive Dengue Virus Neutralizing Antibody that Recognizes a Cryptic Epitope

Jie Li; Daniel Watterson; Chiung-Wen Chang; Xiaoyan Che; Li X; Daniel J. Ericsson; Li-wen Qiu; Jian-Piao Cai; Jing Chen; Scott R. Fry; Stacey Cheung; Matthew A. Cooper; Paul R. Young; Bostjan Kobe

Understanding the molecular basis of the neutralizing antibody response to dengue virus (DENV) is an essential component in the design and development of effective vaccines and immunotherapeutics. Here we present the structure of a cross-reactive, neutralizing antibody, 3E31, in complex with domain III (DIII) of the DENV envelope (E) protein and reveal a conserved, temperature-sensitive, cryptic epitope on DIII that is not available in any of the known conformations of E on the dengue virion. We observed that 3E31 inhibits E-mediated membrane fusion, suggesting that the antibody is able to neutralize virus through binding an as-yet uncharacterized intermediate conformation of DENV E and sterically block trimer formation. Finally, we show that, unlike cross-reactive fusion peptide-specific antibodies, 3E31 does not promote antibody-dependent enhancement of infection at sub-neutralizing concentrations. Our results highlight the 3E31 epitope on the E protein DIII as a promising target for immunotherapeutics or vaccine design.


Traffic | 2016

Distinctive Conformation of Minor Site-Specific Nuclear Localization Signals Bound to Importin-alpha (vol 14, pg 1144, 2013)

Chiung-Wen Chang; Rafael M. Couñago; Simon J. Williams; Mikael Bodén; Bostjan Kobe

SV40TAg K K R K V 1EJL (12) Guα S R G Q K R S F S K A F G Q 3ZIN (this study) A28 I G R K R G Y S V A F G G 3ZIO (this study) A58 W A G R K R T W R D A F 3ZIP (this study) B6 S S H R K R K F S D A F 3ZIQ (this study) B141 R Q R K R K W S E A F 3ZIR (this study) Nup2p M A K R V A D A Q I... ... ... ... 2C1T (50) hPLSCR4 G S I I R K W N 3Q5U (22) TPX2 G K R K H E... 3KND (23) Nucleoplasmin A V K R P A T K... 3UL1 (15) Bimax2 R R R K R K R E W... 3UKX (15) Class 3 K R X W/F/Y X X A F (21) Class 4 R/P X X K R K/R ^DE (21) Consensus K/R X X K R X F/Y/W X X A F This study

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Bostjan Kobe

University of Queensland

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Mikael Bodén

University of Queensland

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Jian-Piao Cai

Southern Medical University

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Jie Li

Southern Medical University

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Jing Chen

Southern Medical University

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Li X

Southern Medical University

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Li-wen Qiu

Southern Medical University

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