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Dive into the research topics where Colin Correnti is active.

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Featured researches published by Colin Correnti.


Nature | 2014

Proof of principle for epitope-focused vaccine design

Bruno E. Correia; John T. Bates; Rebecca Loomis; Gretchen Baneyx; Christopher Carrico; Joseph G. Jardine; Peter B. Rupert; Colin Correnti; Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy; Vinayak Vittal; Mary J. Connell; Eric Stevens; Alexandria Schroeter; Man Chen; Skye MacPherson; Andreia M. Serra; Yumiko Adachi; Margaret A. Holmes; Yuxing Li; Rachel E. Klevit; Barney S. Graham; Richard T. Wyatt; David Baker; Roland K. Strong; James E. Crowe; Philip R. Johnson; William R. Schief

Vaccines prevent infectious disease largely by inducing protective neutralizing antibodies against vulnerable epitopes. Several major pathogens have resisted traditional vaccine development, although vulnerable epitopes targeted by neutralizing antibodies have been identified for several such cases. Hence, new vaccine design methods to induce epitope-specific neutralizing antibodies are needed. Here we show, with a neutralization epitope from respiratory syncytial virus, that computational protein design can generate small, thermally and conformationally stable protein scaffolds that accurately mimic the viral epitope structure and induce potent neutralizing antibodies. These scaffolds represent promising leads for the research and development of a human respiratory syncytial virus vaccine needed to protect infants, young children and the elderly. More generally, the results provide proof of principle for epitope-focused and scaffold-based vaccine design, and encourage the evaluation and further development of these strategies for a variety of other vaccine targets, including antigenically highly variable pathogens such as human immunodeficiency virus and influenza.


Nature | 2016

Accurate de novo design of hyperstable constrained peptides.

Gaurav Bhardwaj; Vikram Khipple Mulligan; Christopher D. Bahl; Jason Gilmore; Peta J. Harvey; Olivier Cheneval; Garry W. Buchko; Surya V. S. R. K. Pulavarti; Quentin Kaas; Alexander Eletsky; Po-Ssu Huang; William Johnsen; Per Greisen; Gabriel J. Rocklin; Yifan Song; Thomas W. Linsky; Andrew M. Watkins; Stephen A. Rettie; Xianzhong Xu; Lauren Carter; Richard Bonneau; James M. Olson; Colin Correnti; Thomas Szyperski; David J. Craik; David Baker

Naturally occurring, pharmacologically active peptides constrained with covalent crosslinks generally have shapes that have evolved to fit precisely into binding pockets on their targets. Such peptides can have excellent pharmaceutical properties, combining the stability and tissue penetration of small-molecule drugs with the specificity of much larger protein therapeutics. The ability to design constrained peptides with precisely specified tertiary structures would enable the design of shape-complementary inhibitors of arbitrary targets. Here we describe the development of computational methods for accurate de novo design of conformationally restricted peptides, and the use of these methods to design 18–47 residue, disulfide-crosslinked peptides, a subset of which are heterochiral and/or N–C backbone-cyclized. Both genetically encodable and non-canonical peptides are exceptionally stable to thermal and chemical denaturation, and 12 experimentally determined X-ray and NMR structures are nearly identical to the computational design models. The computational design methods and stable scaffolds presented here provide the basis for development of a new generation of peptide-based drugs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Mammalian Siderophores, Siderophore-binding Lipocalins, and the Labile Iron Pool

Colin Correnti; Roland K. Strong

Bacteria use tight-binding, ferric-specific chelators called siderophores to acquire iron from the environment and from the host during infection; animals use proteins such as transferrin and ferritin to transport and store iron. Recently, candidate compounds that could serve endogenously as mammalian siderophore equivalents have been identified and characterized through associations with siderocalin, the only mammalian siderophore-binding protein currently known. Siderocalin, an antibacterial protein, acts by sequestering iron away from infecting bacteria as siderophore complexes. Candidate endogenous siderophores include compounds that only effectively transport iron as ternary complexes with siderocalin, explaining pleiotropic activities in normal cellular processes and specific disease states.


Nature Communications | 2016

Specifically modified Env immunogens activate B-cell precursors of broadly neutralizing HIV-1 antibodies in transgenic mice.

Andrew T. McGuire; Matthew D. Gray; Pia Dosenovic; Alexander D. Gitlin; Natalia T. Freund; John Petersen; Colin Correnti; William Johnsen; Robert Kegel; Andrew B. Stuart; Jolene Glenn; Michael S. Seaman; William R. Schief; Roland K. Strong; Michel C. Nussenzweig; Leonidas Stamatatos

VRC01-class broadly neutralizing HIV-1 antibodies protect animals from experimental infection and could contribute to an effective vaccine response. Their predicted germline forms (gl) bind Env inefficiently, which may explain why they are not elicited by HIV-1 Env-immunization. Here we show that an optimized Env immunogen can engage multiple glVRC01-class antibodies. Furthermore, this immunogen activates naive B cells expressing the human germline heavy chain of 3BNC60, paired with endogenous mouse light chains in vivo. To address whether it activates B cells expressing the fully humanized gl3BNC60 B-cell receptor (BCR), we immunized mice carrying both the heavy and light chains of gl3BNC60. B cells expressing this BCR display an autoreactive phenotype and fail to respond efficiently to soluble forms of the optimized immunogen, unless it is highly multimerized. Thus, specifically designed Env immunogens can activate naive B cells expressing human BCRs corresponding to precursors of broadly neutralizing HIV-1 antibodies even when the B cells display an autoreactive phenotype.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Siderocalin/Lcn2/NGAL/24p3 does not drive apoptosis through gentisic acid mediated iron withdrawal in hematopoietic cell lines.

Colin Correnti; Vera Richardson; Allyson K. Sia; Ashok D. Bandaranayake; Mario Ruiz; Yohan Suryo Rahmanto; Žaklina Kovačević; Matthew C. Clifton; Margaret A. Holmes; Brett K. Kaiser; Jonathan Barasch; Kenneth N. Raymond; Des R. Richardson; Roland K. Strong

Siderocalin (also lipocalin 2, NGAL or 24p3) binds iron as complexes with specific siderophores, which are low molecular weight, ferric ion-specific chelators. In innate immunity, siderocalin slows the growth of infecting bacteria by sequestering bacterial ferric siderophores. Siderocalin also binds simple catechols, which can serve as siderophores in the damaged urinary tract. Siderocalin has also been proposed to alter cellular iron trafficking, for instance, driving apoptosis through iron efflux via BOCT. An endogenous siderophore composed of gentisic acid (2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid) substituents was proposed to mediate cellular efflux. However, binding studies reported herein contradict the proposal that gentisic acid forms high-affinity ternary complexes with siderocalin and iron, or that gentisic acid can serve as an endogenous siderophore at neutral pH. We also demonstrate that siderocalin does not induce cellular iron efflux or stimulate apoptosis, questioning the role siderocalin plays in modulating iron metabolism.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Autoreactivity and Exceptional CDR Plasticity (but Not Unusual Polyspecificity) Hinder Elicitation of the Anti-HIV Antibody 4E10

Kathryn A. K. Finton; Kevin Larimore; H. Benjamin Larman; Della Friend; Colin Correnti; Peter B. Rupert; Stephen J. Elledge; Philip D. Greenberg; Roland K. Strong

The broadly-neutralizing anti-HIV antibody 4E10 recognizes an epitope in the membrane-proximal external region of the HIV envelope protein gp41. Previous attempts to elicit 4E10 by vaccination with envelope-derived or reverse-engineered immunogens have failed. It was presumed that the ontogeny of 4E10-equivalent responses was blocked by inherent autoreactivity and exceptional polyreactivity. We generated 4E10 heavy-chain knock-in mice, which displayed significant B cell dysregulation, consistent with recognition of autoantigen/s by 4E10 and the presumption that tolerance mechanisms may hinder the elicitation of 4E10 or 4E10-equivalent responses. Previously proposed candidate 4E10 autoantigens include the mitochondrial lipid cardiolipin and a nuclear splicing factor, 3B3. However, using carefully-controlled assays, 4E10 bound only weakly to cardiolipin-containing liposomes, but also bound negatively-charged, non-cardiolipin-containing liposomes comparably poorly. 4E10/liposome binding was predominantly mediated by electrostatic interactions rather than presumed hydrophobic interactions. The crystal structure of 4E10 free of bound ligands showed a dramatic restructuring of the combining site, occluding the HIV epitope binding site and revealing profound flexibility, but creating an electropositive pocket consistent with non-specific binding of phospholipid headgroups. These results strongly suggested that antigens other than cardiolipin mediate 4E10 autoreactivity. Using a synthetic peptide library spanning the human proteome, we determined that 4E10 displays limited and focused, but unexceptional, polyspecificity. We also identified a novel autoepitope shared by three ER-resident inositol trisphosphate receptors, validated through binding studies and immunohistochemistry. Tissue staining with 4E10 demonstrated reactivity consistent with the type 1 inositol trisphosphate receptor as the most likely candidate autoantigen, but is inconsistent with splicing factor 3B3. These results demonstrate that 4E10 recognition of liposomes competes with MPER recognition and that HIV antigen and autoepitope recognition may be distinct enough to permit eliciting 4E10-like antibodies, evading autoimmunity through directed engineering. However, 4E10 combining site flexibility, exceptional for a highly-matured antibody, may preclude eliciting 4E10 by conventional immunization strategies.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Daedalus: a robust, turnkey platform for rapid production of decigram quantities of active recombinant proteins in human cell lines using novel lentiviral vectors

Ashok D. Bandaranayake; Colin Correnti; Byoung Y. Ryu; Michelle Brault; Roland K. Strong; David J. Rawlings

A key challenge for the academic and biopharmaceutical communities is the rapid and scalable production of recombinant proteins for supporting downstream applications ranging from therapeutic trials to structural genomics efforts. Here, we describe a novel system for the production of recombinant mammalian proteins, including immune receptors, cytokines and antibodies, in a human cell line culture system, often requiring <3 weeks to achieve stable, high-level expression: Daedalus. The inclusion of minimized ubiquitous chromatin opening elements in the transduction vectors is key for preventing genomic silencing and maintaining the stability of decigram levels of expression. This system can bypass the tedious and time-consuming steps of conventional protein production methods by employing the secretion pathway of serum-free adapted human suspension cell lines, such as 293 Freestyle. Using optimized lentiviral vectors, yields of 20–100 mg/l of correctly folded and post-translationally modified, endotoxin-free protein of up to ~70 kDa in size, can be achieved in conventional, small-scale (100 ml) culture. At these yields, most proteins can be purified using a single size-exclusion chromatography step, immediately appropriate for use in structural, biophysical or therapeutic applications.


FEBS Journal | 2013

Lipid‐binding properties of human ApoD and Lazarillo‐related lipocalins: functional implications for cell differentiation

Mario Ruiz; Diego Sanchez; Colin Correnti; Roland K. Strong; Maria D. Ganfornina

Lipocalins are a family of proteins characterized by a conserved eight‐stranded β‐barrel structure with a ligand‐binding pocket. They perform a wide range of biological functions and this functional multiplicity must relate to the lipid partner involved. Apolipoprotein D (ApoD) and its insect homologues, Lazarillo (Laz) and neural Lazarillo (NLaz), share common ancestral functions like longevity, stress resistance and lipid metabolism regulation, coexisting with very specialized functions, like courtship behavior. Using tryptophan fluorescence titration, we screened the binding of 15 potential lipid partners for NLaz, ApoD and Laz and uncovered several novel ligands with apparent dissociation constants in the low micromolar range. Retinoic acid (RA), retinol, fatty acids and sphingomyelin are shared ligands. Sterols, however, showed a species‐specific binding pattern: cholesterol did not show strong binding to human ApoD, whereas NLaz and Laz did bind ergosterol. Among the lipocalin‐specific ligands, we found that ApoD selectively binds the endocannabinoid anandamide but not 2‐acylglycerol, and that NLaz binds the pheromone 7‐tricosene, but not 7,11‐heptacosadiene or 11‐cis‐vaccenyl acetate. To test the functional relevance of lipocalin ligand binding at the cellular level, we analyzed the effect of ApoD, Laz and NLaz preloaded with RA on neuronal differentiation. Our results show that ApoD is necessary and sufficient to allow for RA differentiating activity. Both human ApoD and Drosophila NLaz successfully deliver RA to immature neurons, driving neurite outgrowth. We conclude that ApoD, NLaz and Laz bind selectively to a different but overlapping set of lipid ligands. This multispecificity can explain their varied physiological functions.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2013

Siderocalin Outwits the Coordination Chemistry of Vibriobactin, a Siderophore of Vibrio cholerae

Benjamin E. Allred; Colin Correnti; Matthew C. Clifton; Roland K. Strong; Kenneth N. Raymond

The human protein siderocalin (Scn) inhibits bacterial iron acquisition by binding catechol siderophores. Several pathogenic bacteria respond by making stealth siderophores that are not recognized by Scn. Fluvibactin and vibriobactin, respectively of Vibrio fluvialis and Vibrio cholerae , include an oxazoline adjacent to a catechol. This chelating unit binds iron either in a catecholate or a phenolate-oxazoline coordination mode. The latter has been suggested to make vibriobactin a stealth siderophore without directly identifying the coordination mode in relation to Scn binding. We use Scn binding assays with the two siderophores and two oxazoline-substituted analogs and the crystal structure of Fe-fluvibactin:Scn to show that the oxazoline does not prevent Scn binding; hence, vibriobactin is not a stealth siderophore. We show that the phenolate-oxazoline coordination mode is present at physiological pH and is not bound by Scn. However, Scn binding shifts the coordination to the catecholate mode and thereby inactivates this siderophore.


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Ligand binding-dependent functions of the lipocalin NLaz: an in vivo study in Drosophila

Mario Ruiz; Maria D. Ganfornina; Colin Correnti; Roland K. Strong; Diego Sanchez

Lipocalins are small extracellular proteins mostly described as lipid carriers. The Drosophila lipocalin NLaz (neural Lazarillo) modulates the IIS pathway and regulates longevity, stress resistance, and behavior. Here, we test whether a native hydrophobic pocket structure is required for NLaz to perform its functions. We use a point mutation altering the binding pocket (NLazL130R) and control mutations outside NLaz binding pocket. Tryptophan fluorescence titration reveals that NLazL130R loses its ability to bind ergosterol and the pheromone 7(z)‐tricosene but retains retinoic acid binding. Using site‐directed transgenesis in Drosophila, we test the functionality of the ligand binding‐altered lipocalin at the organism level. NLaz‐dependent life span reduction, oxidative stress and starvation sensitivity, aging markers accumulation, and deficient courtship are rescued by overexpression of NLazWT, but not of NLazL130R. Transcriptional responses to aging and oxidative stress show a large set of age‐responsive genes dependent on the integrity of NLaz binding pocket. Inhibition of IIS activity and modulation of oxidative stress and infection‐responsive genes are binding pocket‐dependent processes. Control of energy metabolites on starvation appears to be, however, insensitive to the modification of the NLaz binding pocket.—Ruiz, M., Ganfornina, M. D., Correnti, C., Strong, R. K., and Sanchez, D. Ligand binding‐dependent functions of the lipocalin NLaz: an in vivo study in Drosophila. FASEB J. 28, 1555–1567 (2014). www.fasebj.org

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Roland K. Strong

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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James M. Olson

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Christopher Mehlin

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Emily J. Girard

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Theo Sottero

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Mario Ruiz

Spanish National Research Council

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Andrew J. Mhyre

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Andrew D. Strand

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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