David S. Libich
University of Guelph
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Featured researches published by David S. Libich.
Protein Science | 2003
David S. Libich; Christopher M.D Hill; Ian R. Bates; F. Ross Hallett; Souzan Armstrong; Aleksander Siemiarczuk; George Harauz
The effects of deimination (conversion of arginyl to citrullinyl residues) of myelin basic protein (MBP) on its binding to calmodulin (CaM) have been examined. Four species of MBP were investigated: unmodified recombinant murine MBP (rmMBP‐Cit0), an engineered protein with six quasi‐citrullinyl (i.e., glutaminyl) residues per molecule (rmMBP‐qCit6), human component C1 (hMBP‐Cit0), and human component C8 (hMBP‐Cit6), both obtained from a patient with multiple sclerosis (MS). Both rmMBP‐Cit0 and hMBP‐Cit0 bound CaM in a Ca2+‐dependent manner and primarily in a 1:1 stoichiometry, which was verified by dynamic light scattering. Circular dichroic spectroscopy was unable to detect any changes in secondary structure in MBP upon CaM‐binding. Inherent Trp fluorescence spectroscopy and a single‐site binding model were used to determine the dissociation constants: Kd = 144 ± 76 nM for rmMBP‐Cit0, and Kd = 42 ± 15 nM for hMBP‐Cit0. For rmMBP‐qCit6 and hMBP‐Cit6, the changes in fluorescence were suggestive of a two‐site interaction, although the dissociation constants could not be accurately determined. These results can be explained by a local conformational change induced in MBP by deimination, exposing a second binding site with a weaker association with CaM, or by the existence of several conformers of deiminated MBP. Titration with the collisional quencher acrylamide, and steady‐state and lifetime measurements of the fluorescence at 340 nm, showed both dynamic and static components to the quenching, and differences between the unmodified and deiminated proteins that were also consistent with a local conformational change due to deimination.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
David S. Libich; George Harauz
The 18.5 kDa isoform of myelin basic protein (MBP) is the predominant form in adult human central nervous system myelin. It is an intrinsically disordered protein that functions both in membrane adhesion, and as a linker connecting the oligodendrocyte membrane to the underlying cytoskeleton; its specific interactions with calmodulin and SH3-domain containing proteins suggest further multifunctionality in signaling. Here, we have used multidimensional heteronuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study the conformational dependence on environment of the protein in aqueous solution (100 mM KCl) and in a membrane-mimetic solvent (30% TFE-d(2)), particularly to analyze its secondary structure using chemical shift indexing, and to investigate its backbone dynamics using (15)N spin relaxation measurements. Collectively, the data revealed three major segments of the protein with a propensity toward alpha-helicity that was stabilized by membrane-mimetic conditions: T33-D46, V83-T92, and T142-L154 (murine 18.5 kDa sequence numbering). All of these regions corresponded with bioinformatics predictions of ordered secondary structure. The V83-T92 region comprises a primary immunodominant epitope that had previously been shown by site-directed spin labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to be alpha-helical in membrane-reconstituted systems. The T142-L154 segment overlapped with a predicted calmodulin-binding site. Chemical shift perturbation experiments using labeled MBP and unlabeled calmodulin demonstrated a dramatic conformational change in MBP upon association of the two proteins, and were consistent with the C-terminal segment of MBP being the primary binding site for calmodulin.
FEBS Journal | 2006
Christophe Farès; David S. Libich; George Harauz
Using solution NMR spectroscopy, three‐dimensional structures have been obtained for an 18‐residue synthetic polypeptide fragment of 18.5 kDa myelin basic protein (MBP, human residues Q81–T98) under three conditions emulating the proteins natural environment in the myelin membrane to varying degrees: (a) an aqueous solution (100 mm KCl pH 6.5), (b) a mixture of trifluoroethanol (TFE‐d2) and water (30 : 70% v/v), and (c) a dispersion of 100 mm dodecylphosphocholine (DPC‐d38, 1 : 100 protein/lipid molar ratio) micelles. This polypeptide sequence is highly conserved in MBP from mammals, amphibians, and birds, and comprises a major immunodominant epitope (human residues N83–T92) in the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis. In the polypeptide fragment, this epitope forms a stable, amphipathic, α helix under organic and membrane‐mimetic conditions, but has only a partially helical conformation in aqueous solution. These results are consistent with recent molecular dynamics simulations that showed this segment to have a propensity to form a transient α helix in aqueous solution, and with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments that suggested a α‐helical structure when bound to a membrane [I. R. Bates, J. B. Feix, J. M. Boggs & G. Harauz (2004) J Biol Chem, 279, 5757–5764]. The high sensitivity of the epitope structure to its environment is characteristic of intrinsically unstructured proteins, like MBP, and reflects its association with diverse ligands such as lipids and other proteins.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
David S. Libich; Nicolas L. Fawzi; Jinfa Ying; G. Marius Clore
The mechanism whereby the prototypical chaperonin GroEL performs work on substrate proteins has not yet been fully elucidated, hindered by lack of detailed structural and dynamic information on the bound substrate. Previous investigations have produced conflicting reports on the state of GroEL-bound polypeptides, largely due to the transient and dynamic nature of these complexes. Here, we present a unique approach, based on combined analysis of four complementary relaxation-based NMR experiments, to probe directly the “dark” NMR-invisible state of the model, intrinsically disordered, polypeptide amyloid β (Aβ40) bound to GroEL. The four NMR experiments, lifetime line-broadening, dark-state exchange saturation transfer, relaxation dispersion, and small exchange-induced chemical shifts, are dependent in different ways on the overall exchange rates and populations of the free and bound states of the substrate, as well as on residue-specific dynamics and structure within the bound state as reported by transverse magnetization relaxation rates and backbone chemical shifts, respectively. Global fitting of all the NMR data shows that the complex is transient with a lifetime of <1 ms, that binding involves two predominantly hydrophobic segments corresponding to predicted GroEL consensus binding sequences, and that the structure of the bound polypeptide remains intrinsically and dynamically disordered with minimal changes in secondary structure propensity relative to the free state. Our results establish a unique method to observe NMR-invisible dynamic states of GroEL-bound substrates and to describe at atomic resolution the events between substrate binding and encapsulation that are crucial for understanding the normal and stress-related metabolic function of chaperonins.
Biochemistry | 2011
Hariprasad Venugopal; Patrick J. B. Edwards; Martin Schwalbe; Jolyon K. Claridge; David S. Libich; Judith Stepper; Trevor S. Loo; Mark L. Patchett; Gillian E. Norris; Steven M. Pascal
Bacteriocins are bacterial peptides with specific activity against competing species. They hold great potential as natural preservatives and for their probiotic effects. We show here nuclear magnetic resonance-based evidence that glycocin F, a 43-amino acid bacteriocin from Lactobacillus plantarum, contains two β-linked N-acetylglucosamine moieties, attached via side chain linkages to a serine via oxygen, and to a cysteine via sulfur. The latter linkage is novel and has helped to establish a new type of post-translational modification, the S-linked sugar. The peptide conformation consists primarily of two α-helices held together by a pair of nested disulfide bonds. The serine-linked sugar is positioned on a short loop sequentially connecting the two helices, while the cysteine-linked sugar presents at the end of a long disordered C-terminal tail. The differing chemical and conformational stabilities of the two N-actetylglucosamine moieties provide clues about the possible mode of action of this bacteriostatic peptide.
Biochemistry and Cell Biology | 2010
David S. Libich; Mumdooh A.M. Ahmed; Zhong L; Vladimir V. Bamm; Ladizhansky; George Harauz
The classic 18.5 kDa isoform of myelin basic protein (MBP) is central to maintaining the structural homeostasis of the myelin sheath of the central nervous system. It is an intrinsically disordered, promiscuous, multifunctional, peripheral membrane protein, whose conformation adapts to its particular environment. Its study requires the selective and complementary application of diverse approaches, of which solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopy are the most powerful to elucidate site-specific features. We review here several recent solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopic studies of 18.5 kDa MBP, and the induced partial disorder-to-order transitions that it has been demonstrated to undergo when complexed with calmodulin, actin, and phospholipid membranes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
David S. Libich; Vitali Tugarinov; G. Marius Clore
Significance Chaperones are integral components of the cellular machinery that assist protein folding and protect against misfolding and aggregation. A bottleneck in understanding how chaperones work is that the relevant functional states are too sparsely populated and dynamic to be observed using conventional biophysical methods. NMR is uniquely suited to detect and provide atomic resolution functional information on such “invisible” states. Here we quantitate the kinetics of the chaperone GroEL binding to a protein substrate that exists in a metastable equilibrium between the native state and a sparsely populated folding intermediate, under conditions where the GroEL-bound states are not directly observable. We show that in the absence of cofactors, GroEL possesses substantial intrinsic un/foldase activity that is mediated by hydrophobic interactions. The prototypical chaperonin GroEL assists protein folding through an ATP-dependent encapsulation mechanism. The details of how GroEL folds proteins remain elusive, particularly because encapsulation is not an absolute requirement for successful re/folding. Here we make use of a metastable model protein substrate, comprising a triple mutant of Fyn SH3, to directly demonstrate, by simultaneous analysis of three complementary NMR-based relaxation experiments (lifetime line broadening, dark state exchange saturation transfer, and Carr–Purcell–Meinboom–Gill relaxation dispersion), that apo GroEL accelerates the overall interconversion rate between the native state and a well-defined folding intermediate by about 20-fold, under conditions where the “invisible” GroEL-bound states have occupancies below 1%. This is largely achieved through a 500-fold acceleration in the folded-to-intermediate transition of the protein substrate. Catalysis is modulated by a kinetic deuterium isotope effect that reduces the overall interconversion rate between the GroEL-bound species by about 3-fold, indicative of a significant hydrophobic contribution. The location of the GroEL binding site on the folding intermediate, mapped from 15N, 1HN, and 13Cmethyl relaxation dispersion experiments, is composed of a prominent, surface-exposed hydrophobic patch.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003
David S. Libich; Christopher M.D Hill; Jeffery D Haines; George Harauz
Myelin basic protein (MBP) has been shown to bind calmodulin (CaM) in a specific Ca(2+)-dependent manner via a primary target sequence at its C-terminus [Protein Sci. 12 (2003) 1507]. Upon deimination of MBP, the nature of the interaction changed significantly, suggesting either a new binding site or different conformers with different affinities for CaM. In order to resolve this issue, we investigated here the CaM-binding properties of N- and C-terminal deletion mutants of MBP using Trp fluorescence spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. We conclude that there is an additional CaM-binding site on MBP in a central segment (we posit murine residues 82-93) that forms an amphipathic alpha-helix.
Micron | 2003
Christopher M.D Hill; Jeffery D Haines; Christine E Antler; Ian R. Bates; David S. Libich; George Harauz
The 18.5kDa isoform of myelin basic protein (MBP) has strong and probably specific interactions with phosphoinositides that are of interest regarding this proteins function, and in effecting its two-dimensional crystallization for structural determination. We have designed and constructed truncation mutants of recombinant 18.5kDa murine myelin basic protein (rmMBP) lacking either the N- or C-terminal third, i.e. rmMBPDeltaN and rmMBPDeltaC, respectively. Both variants rmMBPDeltaC and rmMBPDeltaN generally had a reduced ability to aggregate lipid vesicles, compared to the whole protein, especially at lower protein/lipid ratios. Lipid vesicle cosedimentation showed that both truncated variants exhibited altered binding with phosphatidylinositol (PI). Incubation of these proteins under monolayers comprising PI and a nickel-chelating lipid yielded crystalline arrays of rmMBPDeltaC (but not rmMBPDeltaN) in the absence of high salt or osmolytes, which are required for crystallization of whole protein. This result suggests that the C-terminal segment of MBP is a significant source of conformational heterogeneity, and its removal will facilitate future planar or three-dimensional crystallization attempts. Incubation of rmMBPDeltaN and rmMBPDeltaC under monolayers comprising phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate and a nickel-chelating lipid yielded tubular structures of opposite chirality, suggesting a synergistic effect of both termini of MBP in organizing myelin lipids.
Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2003
Jaspreet Kaur; David S. Libich; Celia W. Campagnoni; D. Denise Wood; Mario A. Moscarello; Anthony T. Campagnoni; George Harauz
A recombinant form of the murine Golli‐myelin basic protein (MBP) isoform J37 (rmJ37) has been expressed in Escherichia coli and isolated to 95% purity via metal chelation and ion exchange chromatography. The protein did not aggregate lipid vesicles containing acidic phospholipids, unlike the 18.5 kDa isoform of MBP. This result is consistent with J37 having a functional role prior to the assembly of compact myelin. Circular dichroic spectroscopy showed that rmJ37 had a large proportion of random coil in aqueous solution but gained α‐helix and β‐sheet in the presence of monosialoganglioside GM1 and PI(4)P. Thus, like “classic” MBP, J37 is intrinsically unstructured, and its conformation depends on its environment and bound ligands. Analyses of the amino acid sequence of rmJ37 predicted an N‐terminal calmodulin (CaM)‐binding site. It was determined via a gel‐shift assay and fluorescence spectroscopy that rmJ37 and CaM interacted in a 1:1 ratio in a Ca2+‐dependent manner. However, the interaction was weak compared with 18.5 kDa MBP.