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Dive into the research topics where David S. King is active.

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Featured researches published by David S. King.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Addition of a photocrosslinking amino acid to the genetic code of Escherichia coli

Jason W. Chin; Andrew B. Martin; David S. King; Lei Wang; Peter G. Schultz

Benzophenones are among the most useful photocrosslinking agents in biology. We have evolved an orthogonal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase/tRNA pair that makes possible the in vivo incorporation of p-benzoyl-l-phenylalanine into proteins in Escherichia coli in response to the amber codon, TAG. This unnatural amino acid was incorporated with high translational efficiency and fidelity into the dimeric protein glutathione S-transferase. Irradiation resulted in efficient crosslinking (>50%) of the protein subunits. This methodology may prove useful for discovering and defining protein interactions in vitro and in vivo.


Nature | 2012

Phase transitions in the assembly of multivalent signalling proteins

Pilong Li; Sudeep Banjade; Hui-Chun Cheng; Soyeon Kim; Baoyu Chen; Liang Guo; Marc C. Llaguno; Javoris Hollingsworth; David S. King; Salman F. Banani; Paul S. Russo; Qiu Xing Jiang; B. Tracy Nixon; Michael K. Rosen

Cells are organized on length scales ranging from ångström to micrometres. However, the mechanisms by which ångström-scale molecular properties are translated to micrometre-scale macroscopic properties are not well understood. Here we show that interactions between diverse synthetic, multivalent macromolecules (including multi-domain proteins and RNA) produce sharp liquid–liquid-demixing phase separations, generating micrometre-sized liquid droplets in aqueous solution. This macroscopic transition corresponds to a molecular transition between small complexes and large, dynamic supramolecular polymers. The concentrations needed for phase transition are directly related to the valency of the interacting species. In the case of the actin-regulatory protein called neural Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) interacting with its established biological partners NCK and phosphorylated nephrin, the phase transition corresponds to a sharp increase in activity towards an actin nucleation factor, the Arp2/3 complex. The transition is governed by the degree of phosphorylation of nephrin, explaining how this property of the system can be controlled to regulatory effect by kinases. The widespread occurrence of multivalent systems suggests that phase transitions may be used to spatially organize and biochemically regulate information throughout biology.


Nature | 2013

Identification of a candidate therapeutic autophagy-inducing peptide

Sanae Shoji-Kawata; Rhea Sumpter; Matthew J Leveno; Grant R. Campbell; Zhongju Zou; Lisa N. Kinch; Angela D. Wilkins; Qihua Sun; Kathrin Pallauf; Donna A. MacDuff; Carlos Huerta; Herbert W. Virgin; J. Bernd Helms; Ruud Eerland; Sharon A. Tooze; Ramnik J. Xavier; Deborah J. Lenschow; Ai Yamamoto; David S. King; Olivier Lichtarge; Nick V. Grishin; Stephen A. Spector; Dora Kaloyanova; Beth Levine

The lysosomal degradation pathway of autophagy has a crucial role in defence against infection, neurodegenerative disorders, cancer and ageing. Accordingly, agents that induce autophagy may have broad therapeutic applications. One approach to developing such agents is to exploit autophagy manipulation strategies used by microbial virulence factors. Here we show that a peptide, Tat–beclin 1—derived from a region of the autophagy protein, beclin 1, which binds human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 Nef—is a potent inducer of autophagy, and interacts with a newly identified negative regulator of autophagy, GAPR-1 (also called GLIPR2). Tat–beclin 1 decreases the accumulation of polyglutamine expansion protein aggregates and the replication of several pathogens (including HIV-1) in vitro, and reduces mortality in mice infected with chikungunya or West Nile virus. Thus, through the characterization of a domain of beclin 1 that interacts with HIV-1 Nef, we have developed an autophagy-inducing peptide that has potential efficacy in the treatment of human diseases.


Nature | 2006

Spider toxins activate the capsaicin receptor to produce inflammatory pain

Jan Siemens; Sharleen Zhou; Rebecca Piskorowski; Tetsuro Nikai; Ellen A. Lumpkin; Allan I. Basbaum; David S. King; David Julius

Bites and stings from venomous creatures can produce pain and inflammation as part of their defensive strategy to ward off predators or competitors. Molecules accounting for lethal effects of venoms have been extensively characterized, but less is known about the mechanisms by which they produce pain. Venoms from spiders, snakes, cone snails or scorpions contain a pharmacopoeia of peptide toxins that block receptor or channel activation as a means of producing shock, paralysis or death. We examined whether these venoms also contain toxins that activate (rather than inhibit) excitatory channels on somatosensory neurons to produce a noxious sensation in mammals. Here we show that venom from a tarantula that is native to the West Indies contains three inhibitor cysteine knot (ICK) peptides that target the capsaicin receptor (TRPV1), an excitatory channel expressed by sensory neurons of the pain pathway. In contrast with the predominant role of ICK toxins as channel inhibitors, these previously unknown ‘vanillotoxins’ function as TRPV1 agonists, providing new tools for understanding mechanisms of TRP channel gating. Some vanillotoxins also inhibit voltage-gated potassium channels, supporting potential similarities between TRP and voltage-gated channel structures. TRP channels can now be included among the targets of peptide toxins, showing that animals, like plants (for example, chilli peppers), avert predators by activating TRP channels on sensory nerve fibres to elicit pain and inflammation.


Nature | 2001

Selectivity of chromatin-remodelling cofactors for ligand-activated transcription

Bryan Lemon; Carla Inouye; David S. King; Robert Tjian

An array of regulatory protein and multi-subunit cofactors has been identified that directs eukaryotic gene transcription. However, establishing the specific functions of various related cofactors has been difficult owing to the limitations inherent in assaying transcription in animals and cells indirectly. Here we describe, using an integrated chromatin-dependent reconstituted transcription reaction, the purification and identification of a multi-subunit cofactor (PBAF) that is necessary for ligand-dependent transactivation by nuclear hormone receptors. A highly related cofactor, human SWI/SNF, and the ISWI-containing chromatin-remodelling complex ACF both fail to potentiate transcription. We also show that transcriptional activation mediated by nuclear hormone receptors requires TATA-binding protein (TBP)-associated factors (TAFs) as well as the multi-subunit cofactors ARC/CRSP. These studies demonstrate functional selectivity amongst highly related complexes involved in gene regulation and help define a more complete set of factors and cofactors required to activate transcription.


Cell | 2012

A Ribosome-Bound Quality Control Complex Triggers Degradation of Nascent Peptides and Signals Translation Stress

Onn Brandman; Jacob Stewart-Ornstein; Daisy Wong; Adam G. Larson; Christopher C. Williams; Gene-Wei Li; Sharleen Zhou; David S. King; Peter S. Shen; Jimena Weibezahn; Joshua G. Dunn; Silvi Rouskin; Toshifumi Inada; Adam Frost; Jonathan S. Weissman

The conserved transcriptional regulator heat shock factor 1 (Hsf1) is a key sensor of proteotoxic and other stress in the eukaryotic cytosol. We surveyed Hsf1 activity in a genome-wide loss-of-function library in Saccaromyces cerevisiae as well as ~78,000 double mutants and found Hsf1 activity to be modulated by highly diverse stresses. These included disruption of a ribosome-bound complex we named the Ribosome Quality Control Complex (RQC) comprising the Ltn1 E3 ubiquitin ligase, two highly conserved but poorly characterized proteins (Tae2 and Rqc1), and Cdc48 and its cofactors. Electron microscopy and biochemical analyses revealed that the RQC forms a stable complex with 60S ribosomal subunits containing stalled polypeptides and triggers their degradation. A negative feedback loop regulates the RQC, and Hsf1 senses an RQC-mediated translation-stress signal distinctly from other stresses. Our work reveals the range of stresses Hsf1 monitors and elucidates a conserved cotranslational protein quality control mechanism.


Nature | 2011

A heteromeric Texas coral snake toxin targets acid-sensing ion channels to produce pain

Christopher J. Bohlen; Alexander T. Chesler; Reza Sharif-Naeini; Katalin F. Medzihradszky; Sharleen Zhou; David S. King; Elda E. Sánchez; Alma L. Burlingame; Allan I. Basbaum; David Julius

Natural products that elicit discomfort or pain represent invaluable tools for probing molecular mechanisms underlying pain sensation. Plant-derived irritants have predominated in this regard, but animal venoms have also evolved to avert predators by targeting neurons and receptors whose activation produces noxious sensations. As such, venoms provide a rich and varied source of small molecule and protein pharmacophores that can be exploited to characterize and manipulate key components of the pain-signalling pathway. With this in mind, here we perform an unbiased in vitro screen to identify snake venoms capable of activating somatosensory neurons. Venom from the Texas coral snake (Micrurus tener tener), whose bite produces intense and unremitting pain, excites a large cohort of sensory neurons. The purified active species (MitTx) consists of a heteromeric complex between Kunitz- and phospholipase-A2-like proteins that together function as a potent, persistent and selective agonist for acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs), showing equal or greater efficacy compared with acidic pH. MitTx is highly selective for the ASIC1 subtype at neutral pH; under more acidic conditions (pH < 6.5), MitTx massively potentiates (>100-fold) proton-evoked activation of ASIC2a channels. These observations raise the possibility that ASIC channels function as coincidence detectors for extracellular protons and other, as yet unidentified, endogenous factors. Purified MitTx elicits robust pain-related behaviour in mice by activation of ASIC1 channels on capsaicin-sensitive nerve fibres. These findings reveal a mechanism whereby snake venoms produce pain, and highlight an unexpected contribution of ASIC1 channels to nociception.


Nature Biotechnology | 2002

An efficient system for the evolution of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase specificity

Stephen William Santoro; Lei Wang; Brad Herberich; David S. King; Peter G. Schultz

A variety of strategies to incorporate unnatural amino acids into proteins have been pursued, but all have limitations with respect to technical accessibility, scalability, applicability to in vivo studies, or site specificity of amino acid incorporation. The ability to selectively introduce unnatural functional groups into specific sites within proteins, in vivo, provides a potentially powerful approach to the study of protein function and to large-scale production of novel proteins. Here we describe a combined genetic selection and screen that allows the rapid evolution of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase substrate specificity. Our strategy involves the use of an “orthogonal” aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase and tRNA pair that cannot interact with any of the endogenous synthetase–tRNA pairs in Escherichia coli. A chloramphenicol-resistance (Cmr) reporter is used to select highly active synthetase variants, and an amplifiable fluorescence reporter is used together with fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) to screen for variants with the desired change in amino acid specificity. Both reporters are contained within a single genetic construct, eliminating the need for plasmid shuttling and allowing the evolution to be completed in a matter of days. Following evolution, the amplifiable fluorescence reporter allows visual and fluorimetric evaluation of synthetase activity and selectivity. Using this system to explore the evolvability of an amino acid binding pocket of a tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, we identified three new variants that allow the selective incorporation of amino-, isopropyl-, and allyl-containing tyrosine analogs into a desired protein. The new enzymes can be used to produce milligram-per-liter quantities of unnatural amino acid–containing protein in E. coli.


Protein Science | 2005

High yield bacterial expression of active c-Abl and c-Src tyrosine kinases.

Markus A. Seeliger; Matthew A. Young; M. Nidanie Henderson; Patricia Pellicena; David S. King; Arnold M. Falick; John Kuriyan

The Abl and Src tyrosine kinases are key signaling proteins that are of considerable interest as drug targets in cancer and many other diseases. The regulatory mechanisms that control the activity of these proteins are complex, and involve large‐scale conformational changes in response to phosphorylation and other modulatory signals. The success of the Abl inhibitor imatinib in the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia has shown the potential of kinase inhibitors, but the rise of drug resistance in patients has also shown that drugs with alternative modes of binding to the kinase are needed. The detailed understanding of mechanisms of protein–drug interaction and drug resistance through biophysical methods demands a method for the production of active protein on the milligram scale. We have developed a bacterial expression system for the kinase domains of c‐Abl and c‐Src, which allows for the quick expression and purification of active wild‐type and mutant kinase domains by coexpression with the YopH tyrosine phosphatase. This method makes practical the use of isotopic labeling of c‐Abl and c‐Src for NMR studies, and is also applicable for constructs containing the SH2 and SH3 domains of the kinases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Characterization of a family of endogenous neuropeptide ligands for the G protein-coupled receptors GPR7 and GPR8

Hirokazu Tanaka; Tetsuo Yoshida; Norimasa Miyamoto; Toshiyuki Motoike; Hiroshi Kurosu; Kenji Shibata; Akihiro Yamanaka; S. Clay Williams; James A. Richardson; Natsuko Tsujino; Mary G. Garry; Michael R. Lerner; David S. King; Brian F. O'Dowd; Takeshi Sakurai; Masashi Yanagisawa

GPR7 and GPR8 are orphan G protein-coupled receptors that are highly similar to each other. These receptors are expressed predominantly in brain, suggesting roles in central nervous system function. We have purified an endogenous peptide ligand for GPR7 from bovine hypothalamus extracts. This peptide, termed neuropeptide B (NPB), has a C-6-brominated tryptophan residue at the N terminus. It binds and activates human GPR7 or GPR8 with median effective concentrations (EC50) of 0.23 nM and 15.8 nM, respectively. In situ hybridization shows distinct localizations of the prepro-NPB mRNA in mouse brain, i.e., in paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, hippocampus, and several nuclei in midbrain and brainstem. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of NPB in mice induces hyperphagia during the first 2 h, followed by hypophagia. Intracerebroventricular injection of NPB produces analgesia to s.c. formalin injection in rats. Through EST database searches, we identified a putative paralogous peptide. This peptide, termed neuropeptide W (NPW), also has an N-terminal tryptophan residue. Synthetic human NPW binds and activates human GPR7 or GPR8 with EC50 values of 0.56 nM and 0.51 nM, respectively. The expression of NPW mRNA in mouse brain is confined to specific nuclei in midbrain and brainstem. These findings suggest diverse physiological functions of NPB and NPW in the central nervous system, acting as endogenous ligands on GPR7 and/or GPR8.

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Peter G. Schultz

Scripps Research Institute

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Sharleen Zhou

University of California

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Tom Alber

University of California

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David Julius

University of California

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Lei Wang

University of California

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