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Dive into the research topics where Corie Ralston is active.

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Featured researches published by Corie Ralston.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2004

Suite of three protein crystallography beamlines with single superconducting bend magnet as the source.

Alastair A. MacDowell; Richard Celestre; Malcolm R. Howells; Wayne R. McKinney; James Krupnick; Daniella Cambie; Edward E. Domning; Robert M. Duarte; Nicholas Kelez; D. Plate; Carl W. Cork; Thomas Earnest; Jeffery Dickert; George Meigs; Corie Ralston; James M. Holton; Thomas C. Alber; James M. Berger; David A. Agard; Howard A. Padmore

At the Advanced Light Source, three protein crystallography beamlines have been built that use as a source one of the three 6 T single-pole superconducting bending magnets (superbends) that were recently installed in the ring. The use of such single-pole superconducting bend magnets enables the development of a hard X-ray program on a relatively low-energy 1.9 GeV ring without taking up insertion-device straight sections. The source is of relatively low power but, owing to the small electron beam emittance, it has high brightness. X-ray optics are required to preserve the brightness and to match the illumination requirements for protein crystallography. This was achieved by means of a collimating premirror bent to a plane parabola, a double-crystal monochromator followed by a toroidal mirror that focuses in the horizontal direction with a 2:1 demagnification. This optical arrangement partially balances aberrations from the collimating and toroidal mirrors such that a tight focused spot size is achieved. The optical properties of the beamline are an excellent match to those required by the small protein crystals that are typically measured. The design and performance of these new beamlines are described.


Science | 2015

A 12 Å carotenoid translocation in a photoswitch associated with cyanobacterial photoprotection

Ryan L. Leverenz; Markus Sutter; Adjélé Wilson; Sayan Gupta; Adrien Thurotte; Céline Bourcier de Carbon; Christopher J. Petzold; Corie Ralston; François Perreau; Diana Kirilovsky; Cheryl A. Kerfeld

Protection from too much light Photosynthetic organisms protect themselves from too much light using pigment photoswitches that absorb excess energy. Leverenz et al. analyzed the structure of an active, energy-dissipating form of the orange carotenoid protein (OCP) from a cyanobacterium. When activated by excess light, OCP moves its hydrophobic carotenoid pigment 12 Å within the protein to accommodate nonphotochemical quenching by the broader photosynthetic antenna complex. Science, this issue p. 1463 Large-scale pigment movement accompanies photoactivation of the orange carotenoid protein. Pigment-protein and pigment-pigment interactions are of fundamental importance to the light-harvesting and photoprotective functions essential to oxygenic photosynthesis. The orange carotenoid protein (OCP) functions as both a sensor of light and effector of photoprotective energy dissipation in cyanobacteria. We report the atomic-resolution structure of an active form of the OCP consisting of the N-terminal domain and a single noncovalently bound carotenoid pigment. The crystal structure, combined with additional solution-state structural data, reveals that OCP photoactivation is accompanied by a 12 angstrom translocation of the pigment within the protein and a reconfiguration of carotenoid-protein interactions. Our results identify the origin of the photochromic changes in the OCP triggered by light and reveal the structural determinants required for interaction with the light-harvesting antenna during photoprotection.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Crystal structures of a group II chaperonin reveal the open and closed states associated with the protein folding cycle

Jose H. Pereira; Corie Ralston; Nicholai R. Douglas; Daniel W. Meyer; Kelly M. Knee; Daniel R. Goulet; Jonathan King; Judith Frydman; Paul D. Adams

Chaperonins are large protein complexes consisting of two stacked multisubunit rings, which open and close in an ATP-dependent manner to create a protected environment for protein folding. Here, we describe the first crystal structure of a group II chaperonin in an open conformation. We have obtained structures of the archaeal chaperonin from Methanococcus maripaludis in both a peptide acceptor (open) state and a protein folding (closed) state. In contrast with group I chaperonins, in which the equatorial domains share a similar conformation between the open and closed states and the largest motions occurs at the intermediate and apical domains, the three domains of the archaeal chaperonin subunit reorient as a single rigid body. The large rotation observed from the open state to the closed state results in a 65% decrease of the folding chamber volume and creates a highly hydrophilic surface inside the cage. These results suggest a completely distinct closing mechanism in the group II chaperonins as compared with the group I chaperonins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Local and global structural drivers for the photoactivation of the orange carotenoid protein

Sayan Gupta; Ryan L. Leverenz; Kulyash Zhumadilova; Emily G. Pawlowski; Christopher J. Petzold; Kelly K. Lee; Corie Ralston; Cheryl A. Kerfeld

Significance The orange carotenoid protein (OCP) is critical for the antenna-associated energy-dissipation mechanism of cyanobacteria under high light conditions. We show that light activation causes a global conformation change, the complete separation of the two domains of the OCP. Such a conformational change has been postulated to be a prerequisite for interaction with the antenna. We also identify local structural changes in residue solvent accessibility and roles for structural water molecules in activation of the OCP. By combining small-angle scattering, hydrogen-deuterium exchange, and X-ray hydroxyl radical footprinting studies, we were able to construct a model of the structural changes during the activation of the OCP with an unprecedented level of detail. Photoprotective mechanisms are of fundamental importance for the survival of photosynthetic organisms. In cyanobacteria, the orange carotenoid protein (OCP), when activated by intense blue light, binds to the light-harvesting antenna and triggers the dissipation of excess captured light energy. Using a combination of small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), X-ray hydroxyl radical footprinting, circular dichroism, and H/D exchange mass spectrometry, we identified both the local and global structural changes in the OCP upon photoactivation. SAXS and H/D exchange data showed that global tertiary structural changes, including complete domain dissociation, occur upon photoactivation, but with alteration of secondary structure confined to only the N terminus of the OCP. Microsecond radiolytic labeling identified rearrangement of the H-bonding network associated with conserved residues and structural water molecules. Collectively, these data provide experimental evidence for an ensemble of local and global structural changes, upon activation of the OCP, that are essential for photoprotection.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

Mechanism of nucleotide sensing in group II chaperonins.

Jose H. Pereira; Corie Ralston; Nicholai R. Douglas; Ramya Kumar; Tom Lopez; Ryan P. McAndrew; Kelly M. Knee; Jonathan King; Judith Frydman; Paul D. Adams

Group II chaperonins mediate protein folding in an ATP‐dependent manner in eukaryotes and archaea. The binding of ATP and subsequent hydrolysis promotes the closure of the multi‐subunit rings where protein folding occurs. The mechanism by which local changes in the nucleotide‐binding site are communicated between individual subunits is unknown. The crystal structure of the archaeal chaperonin from Methanococcus maripaludis in several nucleotides bound states reveals the local conformational changes associated with ATP hydrolysis. Residue Lys‐161, which is extremely conserved among group II chaperonins, forms interactions with the γ‐phosphate of ATP but shows a different orientation in the presence of ADP. The loss of the ATP γ‐phosphate interaction with Lys‐161 in the ADP state promotes a significant rearrangement of a loop consisting of residues 160–169. We propose that Lys‐161 functions as an ATP sensor and that 160–169 constitutes a nucleotide‐sensing loop (NSL) that monitors the presence of the γ‐phosphate. Functional analysis using NSL mutants shows a significant decrease in ATPase activity, suggesting that the NSL is involved in timing of the protein folding cycle.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Siderocalin-mediated recognition, sensitization, and cellular uptake of actinides.

Benjamin E. Allred; Peter B. Rupert; Stacey Gauny; Dahlia D. An; Corie Ralston; Manuel Sturzbecher-Hoehne; Roland K. Strong; Rebecca J. Abergel

Significance The release of actinides in the environment, particularly after a nuclear power plant accident or the potential use of a radiological dispersal device, is a public health threat, as all actinides are radioactive and will trigger damage once internalized by the human body. The biological chemistry of actinide metal ions is largely unknown and new approaches to the understanding of pathways underlying contamination are needed. This work identifies a new mammalian pathway for the intracellular delivery of the radioactive toxic metal ions that are actinides, through the protein siderocalin. Spectroscopic tools, including X-ray diffraction and luminescence, provided insights on the coordination of these metal ions, which is crucial to devise new strategies for decontamination. Synthetic radionuclides, such as the transuranic actinides plutonium, americium, and curium, present severe health threats as contaminants, and understanding the scope of the biochemical interactions involved in actinide transport is instrumental in managing human contamination. Here we show that siderocalin, a mammalian siderophore-binding protein from the lipocalin family, specifically binds lanthanide and actinide complexes through molecular recognition of the ligands chelating the metal ions. Using crystallography, we structurally characterized the resulting siderocalin–transuranic actinide complexes, providing unprecedented insights into the biological coordination of heavy radioelements. In controlled in vitro assays, we found that intracellular plutonium uptake can occur through siderocalin-mediated endocytosis. We also demonstrated that siderocalin can act as a synergistic antenna to sensitize the luminescence of trivalent lanthanide and actinide ions in ternary protein–ligand complexes, dramatically increasing the brightness and efficiency of intramolecular energy transfer processes that give rise to metal luminescence. Our results identify siderocalin as a potential player in the biological trafficking of f elements, but through a secondary ligand-based metal sequestration mechanism. Beyond elucidating contamination pathways, this work is a starting point for the design of two-stage biomimetic platforms for photoluminescence, separation, and transport applications.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2014

Development of a microsecond X-ray protein footprinting facility at the Advanced Light Source.

Sayan Gupta; Richard Celestre; Christopher J. Petzold; Mark R. Chance; Corie Ralston

X-ray footprinting (XF) is an important structural biology tool used to determine macromolecular conformations and dynamics of both nucleic acids and proteins in solution on a wide range of timescales. With the impending shut-down of the National Synchrotron Light Source, it is ever more important that this tool continues to be developed at other synchrotron facilities to accommodate XF users. Toward this end, a collaborative XF program has been initiated at the Advanced Light Source using the white-light bending-magnet beamlines 5.3.1 and 3.2.1. Accessibility of the microsecond time regime for protein footprinting is demonstrated at beamline 5.3.1 using the high flux density provided by a focusing mirror in combination with a micro-capillary flow cell. It is further reported that, by saturating samples with nitrous oxide, the radiolytic labeling efficiency is increased and the imprints of bound versus bulk water can be distinguished. These results both demonstrate the suitability of the Advanced Light Source as a second home for the XF experiment, and pave the way for obtaining high-quality structural data on complex protein samples and dynamics information on the microsecond timescale.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

Chelation and stabilization of berkelium in oxidation state + IV

Gauthier J.-P. Deblonde; Manuel Sturzbecher-Hoehne; Peter B. Rupert; Dahlia D. An; Marie-Claire Illy; Corie Ralston; Jiri Brabec; Wibe A. de Jong; Roland K. Strong; Rebecca J. Abergel

Berkelium (Bk) has been predicted to be the only transplutonium element able to exhibit both +III and +IV oxidation states in solution, but evidence of a stable oxidized Bk chelate has so far remained elusive. Here we describe the stabilization of the heaviest 4+ ion of the periodic table, under mild aqueous conditions, using a siderophore derivative. The resulting Bk(IV) complex exhibits luminescence via sensitization through an intramolecular antenna effect. This neutral Bk(IV) coordination compound is not sequestered by the protein siderocalin-a mammalian metal transporter-in contrast to the negatively charged species obtained with neighbouring trivalent actinides americium, curium and californium (Cf). The corresponding Cf(III)-ligand-protein ternary adduct was characterized by X-ray diffraction analysis. Combined with theoretical predictions, these data add significant insight to the field of transplutonium chemistry, and may lead to innovative Bk separation and purification processes.


Structure | 2010

Structure of Yeast Regulatory Subunit: A Glimpse into the Evolution of PKA Signaling

Jimena Rinaldi; Jian Wu; Jie Yang; Corie Ralston; Banumathi Sankaran; Silvia Moreno; Susan S. Taylor

The major cAMP receptors in eukaryotes are the regulatory (R) subunits of PKA, an allosteric enzyme conserved in fungi through mammals. While mammals have four R-subunit genes, Saccharomyces cerevisiae has only one, Bcy1. To achieve a molecular understanding of PKA activation in yeast and to explore the evolution of cyclic-nucleotide binding (CNB) domains, we solved the structure of cAMP-bound Bcy1(168-416). Surprisingly, the relative orientation of the two CNB domains in Bcy1 is very different from mammalian R-subunits. This quaternary structure is defined primarily by a fungi-specific sequence in the hinge between the αB/αC helices of the CNB-A domain. The unique interface between the two CNB domains in Bcy1 defines the allosteric mechanism for cooperative activation of PKA by cAMP. Some interface motifs are isoform-specific while others, although conserved, play surprisingly different roles in each R-subunit. Phylogenetic analysis shows that structural differences in Bcy1 are shared by fungi of the subphylum Saccharomycotina.


Methods | 2016

Probing the structure of ribosome assembly intermediates in vivo using DMS and hydroxyl radical footprinting

Ryan M. Hulscher; Jen Bohon; Mollie C. Rappé; Sayan Gupta; Rhijuta D’Mello; Michael Sullivan; Corie Ralston; Mark R. Chance; Sarah A. Woodson

The assembly of the Escherichia coli ribosome has been widely studied and characterized in vitro. Despite this, ribosome biogenesis in living cells is only partly understood because assembly is coupled with transcription, modification and processing of the pre-ribosomal RNA. We present a method for footprinting and isolating pre-rRNA as it is synthesized in E. coli cells. Pre-rRNA synthesis is synchronized by starvation, followed by nutrient upshift. RNA synthesized during outgrowth is metabolically labeled to facilitate isolation of recent transcripts. Combining this technique with two in vivo RNA probing methods, hydroxyl radical and DMS footprinting, allows the structure of nascent RNA to be probed over time. Together, these can be used to determine changes in the structures of ribosome assembly intermediates as they fold in vivo.

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Sayan Gupta

Case Western Reserve University

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Mark R. Chance

Case Western Reserve University

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Paul D. Adams

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jonathan King

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jun Feng

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Dahlia D. An

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jen Bohon

Case Western Reserve University

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Jose H. Pereira

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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