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Dive into the research topics where David Aragão is active.

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Featured researches published by David Aragão.


Nature | 2011

Structure and function of an irreversible agonist-β 2 adrenoceptor complex

Daniel M. Rosenbaum; Cheng Zhang; Joseph A. Lyons; Ralph Holl; David Aragão; Daniel H. Arlow; Sã̧ren G F Rasmussen; Hee Jung Choi; Brian T. DeVree; Roger K. Sunahara; Pil Seok Chae; Samuel H. Gellman; Ron O. Dror; David E. Shaw; William I. Weis; Martin Caffrey; Peter Gmeiner; Brian K. Kobilka

G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are eukaryotic integral membrane proteins that modulate biological function by initiating cellular signalling in response to chemically diverse agonists. Despite recent progress in the structural biology of GPCRs, the molecular basis for agonist binding and allosteric modulation of these proteins is poorly understood. Structural knowledge of agonist-bound states is essential for deciphering the mechanism of receptor activation, and for structure-guided design and optimization of ligands. However, the crystallization of agonist-bound GPCRs has been hampered by modest affinities and rapid off-rates of available agonists. Using the inactive structure of the human β2 adrenergic receptor (β2AR) as a guide, we designed a β2AR agonist that can be covalently tethered to a specific site on the receptor through a disulphide bond. The covalent β2AR-agonist complex forms efficiently, and is capable of activating a heterotrimeric G protein. We crystallized a covalent agonist-bound β2AR–T4L fusion protein in lipid bilayers through the use of the lipidic mesophase method, and determined its structure at 3.5 Å resolution. A comparison to the inactive structure and an antibody-stabilized active structure (companion paper) shows how binding events at both the extracellular and intracellular surfaces are required to stabilize an active conformation of the receptor. The structures are in agreement with long-timescale (up to 30 μs) molecular dynamics simulations showing that an agonist-bound active conformation spontaneously relaxes to an inactive-like conformation in the absence of a G protein or stabilizing antibody.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

MX1: a bending‐magnet crystallography beamline serving both chemical and macromolecular crystallography communities at the Australian Synchrotron

Nathan Cowieson; David Aragão; Mark Clift; Daniel J Ericsson; Christine L. Gee; Stephen J. Harrop; Nathan Mudie; Santosh Panjikar; Jason R. Price; Alan Riboldi-Tunnicliffe; Rachel M. Williamson; Tom T. Caradoc-Davies

The macromolecular crystallography beamline MX1 at the Australian Synchrotron is described.


Nature | 2013

Crystal structure of the integral membrane diacylglycerol kinase

Dianfan Li; Joseph A. Lyons; Valerie E. Pye; Lutz Vogeley; David Aragão; Colin P. Kenyon; Syed T. A. Shah; Christine Doherty; Margaret Aherne; Martin Caffrey

Diacylglycerol kinase catalyses the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of diacylglycerol to phosphatidic acid for use in shuttling water-soluble components to membrane-derived oligosaccharide and lipopolysaccharide in the cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria. For half a century, this 121-residue kinase has served as a model for investigating membrane protein enzymology, folding, assembly and stability. Here we present crystal structures for three functional forms of this unique and paradigmatic kinase, one of which is wild type. These reveal a homo-trimeric enzyme with three transmembrane helices and an amino-terminal amphiphilic helix per monomer. Bound lipid substrate and docked ATP identify the putative active site that is of the composite, shared site type. The crystal structures rationalize extensive biochemical and biophysical data on the enzyme. They are, however, at variance with a published solution NMR model in that domain swapping, a key feature of the solution form, is not observed in the crystal structures.


Nature | 2012

Structural insights into electron transfer in caa3-type cytochrome oxidase

Joseph A. Lyons; David Aragão; Orla Slattery; Tewfik Soulimane; Martin Caffrey

Cytochrome c oxidase is a member of the haem copper oxidase superfamily (HCO). HCOs function as the terminal enzymes in the respiratory chain of mitochondria and aerobic prokaryotes, coupling molecular oxygen reduction to transmembrane proton pumping. Integral to the enzyme’s function is the transfer of electrons from cytochrome c to the oxidase via a transient association of the two proteins. Electron entry and exit are proposed to occur from the same site on cytochrome c. Here we report the crystal structure of the caa3-type cytochrome oxidase from Thermus thermophilus, which has a covalently tethered cytochrome c domain. Crystals were grown in a bicontinuous mesophase using a synthetic short-chain monoacylglycerol as the hosting lipid. From the electron density map, at 2.36 Å resolution, a novel integral membrane subunit and a native glycoglycerophospholipid embedded in the complex were identified. Contrary to previous electron transfer mechanisms observed for soluble cytochrome c, the structure reveals the architecture of the electron transfer complex for the fused cupredoxin/cytochrome c domain, which implicates different sites on cytochrome c for electron entry and exit. Support for an alternative to the classical proton gate characteristic of this HCO class is presented.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Crystallizing Transmembrane Peptides in Lipidic Mesophases

Nicole Höfer; David Aragão; Martin Caffrey

Structure determination of membrane proteins by crystallographic means has been facilitated by crystallization in lipidic mesophases. It has been suggested, however, that this so-called in meso method, as originally implemented, would not apply to small protein targets having </=4 transmembrane crossings. In our study, the hypothesis that the inherent flexibility of the mesophase would enable crystallogenesis of small proteins was tested using a transmembrane pentadecapeptide, linear gramicidin, which produced structure-grade crystals. This result suggests that the in meso method should be considered as a viable means for high-resolution structure determination of integral membrane peptides, many of which are predicted to be coded for in the human genome.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2012

Harvesting and Cryo-cooling Crystals of Membrane Proteins Grown in Lipidic Mesophases for Structure Determination by Macromolecular Crystallography

Dianfan Li; Coilín Boland; David Aragão; Kilian Walsh; Martin Caffrey

An important route to understanding how proteins function at a mechanistic level is to have the structure of the target protein available, ideally at atomic resolution. Presently, there is only one way to capture such information as applied to integral membrane proteins (Figure 1), and the complexes they form, and that method is macromolecular X-ray crystallography (MX). To do MX diffraction quality crystals are needed which, in the case of membrane proteins, do not form readily. A method for crystallizing membrane proteins that involves the use of lipidic mesophases, specifically the cubic and sponge phases1-5, has gained considerable attention of late due to the successes it has had in the G protein-coupled receptor field6-21 (www.mpdb.tcd.ie). However, the method, henceforth referred to as the in meso or lipidic cubic phase method, comes with its own technical challenges. These arise, in part, due to the generally viscous and sticky nature of the lipidic mesophase in which the crystals, which are often micro-crystals, grow. Manipulating crystals becomes difficult as a result and particularly so during harvesting22,23. Problems arise too at the step that precedes harvesting which requires that the glass sandwich plates in which the crystals grow (Figure 2)24,25 are opened to expose the mesophase bolus, and the crystals therein, for harvesting, cryo-cooling and eventual X-ray diffraction data collection. The cubic and sponge mesophase variants (Figure 3) from which crystals must be harvested have profoundly different rheologies4,26. The cubic phase is viscous and sticky akin to a thick toothpaste. By contrast, the sponge phase is more fluid with a distinct tendency to flow. Accordingly, different approaches for opening crystallization wells containing crystals growing in the cubic and the sponge phase are called for as indeed different methods are required for harvesting crystals from the two mesophase types. Protocols for doing just that have been refined and implemented in the Membrane Structural and Functional Biology (MS&FB) Group, and are described in detail in this JoVE article (Figure 4). Examples are given of situations where crystals are successfully harvested and cryo-cooled. We also provide examples of cases where problems arise that lead to the irretrievable loss of crystals and describe how these problems can be avoided. In this article the Viewer is provided with step-by-step instructions for opening glass sandwich crystallization wells, for harvesting and for cryo-cooling crystals of membrane proteins growing in cubic and in sponge phases.


Nature Communications | 2015

Ternary Structure Reveals Mechanism of a Membrane Diacylglycerol Kinase.

Dianfan Li; Phillip J. Stansfeld; Mark S. P. Sansom; Aaron Keogh; Lutz Vogeley; Nicole Howe; Joseph A. Lyons; David Aragão; Petra Fromme; Raimund Fromme; Shibom Basu; Ingo Grotjohann; Christopher Kupitz; Kimberley Rendek; Uwe Weierstall; Nadia A. Zatsepin; Vadim Cherezov; Wei Liu; Sateesh Bandaru; Niall J. English; Cornelius Gati; Anton Barty; Oleksandr Yefanov; Henry N. Chapman; Kay Diederichs; Marc Messerschmidt; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; M. Marvin Seibert; Martin Caffrey

Diacylglycerol kinase catalyses the ATP-dependent conversion of diacylglycerol to phosphatidic acid in the plasma membrane of Escherichia coli. The small size of this integral membrane trimer, which has 121 residues per subunit, means that available protein must be used economically to craft three catalytic and substrate-binding sites centred about the membrane/cytosol interface. How nature has accomplished this extraordinary feat is revealed here in a crystal structure of the kinase captured as a ternary complex with bound lipid substrate and an ATP analogue. Residues, identified as essential for activity by mutagenesis, decorate the active site and are rationalized by the ternary structure. The γ-phosphate of the ATP analogue is positioned for direct transfer to the primary hydroxyl of the lipid whose acyl chain is in the membrane. A catalytic mechanism for this unique enzyme is proposed. The active site architecture shows clear evidence of having arisen by convergent evolution.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014

Operation of the Australian Store.Synchrotron for macromolecular crystallography

Grischa R. Meyer; David Aragão; Nathan Mudie; Tom T. Caradoc-Davies; Sheena McGowan; Philip Bertling; David Groenewegen; Stevan Quenette; Charles S. Bond; Ashley M. Buckle; Steve G. Androulakis

The Store.Synchrotron service, a fully functional, cloud computing-based solution to raw X-ray data archiving and dissemination at the Australian Synchrotron, is described.


Scientific Reports | 2017

The mechanism of catalysis by type-II NADH:quinone oxidoreductases

James N. Blaza; Hannah R. Bridges; David Aragão; Elyse A. Dunn; Adam Heikal; Gregory M. Cook; Yoshio Nakatani; Judy Hirst

Type II NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (NDH-2) is central to the respiratory chains of many organisms. It is not present in mammals so may be exploited as an antimicrobial drug target or used as a substitute for dysfunctional respiratory complex I in neuromuscular disorders. NDH-2 is a single-subunit monotopic membrane protein with just a flavin cofactor, yet no consensus exists on its mechanism. Here, we use steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics combined with mutagenesis and structural studies to determine the mechanism of NDH-2 from Caldalkalibacillus thermarum. We show that the two substrate reactions occur independently, at different sites, and regardless of the occupancy of the partner site. We conclude that the reaction pathway is determined stochastically, by the substrate/product concentrations and dissociation constants, and can follow either a ping-pong or ternary mechanism. This mechanistic versatility provides a unified explanation for all extant data and a new foundation for the development of therapeutic strategies.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2011

Fast fluorescence techniques for crystallography beamlines.

Sergey Stepanov; Mark Hilgart; Derek W. Yoder; O. Makarov; Michael Becker; Ruslan Sanishvili; Craig M. Ogata; Nagarajan Venugopalan; David Aragão; Martin Caffrey; Janet L. Smith; Robert F. Fischetti

This paper reports on several developments of X-ray fluorescence techniques for macromolecular crystallography recently implemented at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and National Cancer Institute beamlines at the Advanced Photon Source. These include (i) three-band on-the-fly energy scanning around absorption edges with adaptive positioning of the fine-step band calculated from a coarse pass; (ii) on-the-fly X-ray fluorescence rastering over rectangular domains for locating small and invisible crystals with a shuttle-scanning option for increased speed; (iii) fluorescence rastering over user-specified multi-segmented polygons; and (iv) automatic signal optimization for reduced radiation damage of samples.

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