Elizabeth E. Pierson
Indiana University Bloomington
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Featured researches published by Elizabeth E. Pierson.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Elizabeth E. Pierson; David Z. Keifer; Lisa Selzer; Lye Siang Lee; Nathan C. Contino; Joseph Che-Yen Wang; Adam Zlotnick; Martin F. Jarrold
The assembly of hundreds of identical proteins into an icosahedral virus capsid is a remarkable feat of molecular engineering. How this occurs is poorly understood. Key intermediates have been anticipated at the end of the assembly reaction, but it has not been possible to detect them. In this work we have used charge detection mass spectrometry to identify trapped intermediates from late in the assembly of the hepatitis B virus T = 4 capsid, a complex of 120 protein dimers. Prominent intermediates are found with 104/105, 110/111, and 117/118 dimers. Cryo-EM observations indicate the intermediates are incomplete capsids and, hence, on the assembly pathway. On the basis of their stability and kinetic accessibility we have proposed plausible structures. The prominent trapped intermediate with 104 dimers is attributed to an icosahedron missing two neighboring facets, the 111-dimer species is assigned to an icosahedron missing a single facet, and the intermediate with 117 dimers is assigned to a capsid missing a ring of three dimers in the center of a facet.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2014
David Z. Keifer; Elizabeth E. Pierson; Joanna A. Hogan; Gregory J. Bedwell; Peter E. Prevelige; Martin F. Jarrold
RATIONALE Charge state resolution is required to determine the masses of ions in electrospray mass spectrometry, a feat which becomes increasingly difficult as the mass increases. Charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) circumvents this limitation by simultaneously measuring the charge and the m/z of individual ions. In this work, we have used electrospray CDMS to determine the number of scaffolding proteins associated with bacteriophage P22 procapsids. METHODS P22 procapsids containing a native cargo of scaffolding protein were assembled in E. coli and purified via differential centrifugation. Electrospray CDMS was used to measure their mass distribution. RESULTS The procapsid peak was centered at 23.60 MDa, which indicates that they contain an average of ~112 scaffolding proteins. The distribution is relatively narrow, less than 31 scaffolding proteins wide. In addition, a peak at 19.84 MDa with a relative abundance of ~15% is attributed to empty capsids. Despite having the same sizes in solution, the empty capsid and the procapsid have significantly different average charges. CONCLUSIONS The detection of empty capsids is unexpected and the process that leads to them is unknown. The average charge on the empty capsids is significantly lower than expected from the charge residue model, which probably indicates that the empty capsids have contracted in the gas phase. The scaffolding protein presumably limits the contraction of the procapsids. This work shows that electrospray CDMS can provide valuable information for masses greater than 20 MDa.
Analytical Chemistry | 2016
Elizabeth E. Pierson; David Z. Keifer; Aravind Asokan; Martin F. Jarrold
Recombinant adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are promising vectors for human gene therapy. However, current methods for evaluating AAV particle populations and vector purity are inefficient and low resolution. Here, we show that charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) can resolve capsids that contain the entire vector genome from those that contain partial genomes and from empty capsids. Measurements were performed for both single-stranded and self-complementary genomes. The self-complementary AAV vector preparation appears to contain particles with partially truncated genomes averaging at half the genome length. Comparison to results from electron microscopy with manual particle counting shows that CDMS has no significant mass discrimination in the relevant mass range (after a correction for the ion velocity is taken into account). Empty AAV capsids are intrinsically heterogeneous, and capsids from different sources have slightly different masses. However, the average masses of both the empty and full capsids are in close agreement with expected values. Mass differences between the empty and full capsids for both single-stranded and self-complementary AAV vectors indicate that the genomes are largely packaged without counterions.
PLOS Pathogens | 2016
Chao Chen; Joseph Che-Yen Wang; Elizabeth E. Pierson; David Z. Keifer; Mildred Delaleau; Lara Gallucci; Christian Cazenave; Michael Kann; Martin F. Jarrold; Adam Zlotnick
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsids are found in many forms: immature single-stranded RNA-filled cores, single-stranded DNA-filled replication intermediates, mature cores with relaxed circular double-stranded DNA, and empty capsids. A capsid, the protein shell of the core, is a complex of 240 copies of core protein. Mature cores are transported to the nucleus by a complex that includes both importin α and importin β (Impα and Impβ), which bind to the core protein’s C-terminal domains (CTDs). Here we have investigated the interactions of HBV core protein with importins in vitro. Strikingly, empty capsids and free core protein can bind Impβ without Impα. Cryo-EM image reconstructions show that the CTDs, which are located inside the capsid, can extrude through the capsid to be bound by Impβ. Impβ density localized on the capsid exterior near the quasi-sixfold vertices, suggested a maximum of 30 Impβ per capsid. However, examination of complexes using single molecule charge-detection mass spectrometry indicate that some complexes include over 90 Impβ molecules. Cryo-EM of capsids incubated with excess Impβ shows a population of damaged particles and a population of “dark” particles with internal density, suggesting that Impβ is effectively swallowed by the capsids, which implies that the capsids transiently open and close and can be destabilized by Impβ. Though the in vitro complexes with great excess of Impβ are not biological, these results have implications for trafficking of empty capsids and free core protein; activities that affect the basis of chronic HBV infection.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Corinne A. Lutomski; Nicholas A. Lyktey; Zhongchao Zhao; Elizabeth E. Pierson; Adam Zlotnick; Martin F. Jarrold
Understanding capsid assembly is important because of its role in virus lifecycles and in applications to drug discovery and nanomaterial development. Many virus capsids are icosahedral, and assembly is thought to occur by the sequential addition of capsid protein subunits to a nucleus, with the final step completing the icosahedron. Almost nothing is known about the final (completion) step because the techniques usually used to study capsid assembly lack the resolution. In this work, charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) has been used to track the assembly of the T = 4 hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid in real time. The initial assembly reaction occurs rapidly, on the time scale expected from low resolution measurements. However, CDMS shows that many of the particles generated in this process are defective and overgrown, containing more than the 120 capsid protein dimers needed to form a perfect T = 4 icosahedron. The defective and overgrown capsids self-correct over time to the mass expected for a perfect T = 4 capsid. Thus, completion is a distinct phase in the assembly reaction. Capsid completion does not necessarily occur by inserting the last building block into an incomplete, but otherwise perfect icosahedron. The initial assembly reaction can be predominently imperfect, and completion involves the slow correction of the accumulated errors.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2016
Suzanne M. Daddio; Jameson R. Bothe; Claudia Neri; Paul Walsh; Jingtao Zhang; Elizabeth E. Pierson; Yun Mao; Marian Gindy; Anthony Leone; Allen C. Templeton
Advances in technologies related to the design and manufacture of therapeutic peptides have enabled researchers to overcome the biological and technological challenges that have limited their application in the past. As a result, peptides of increasing complexity have become progressively important against a variety of disease targets. Developing peptide drug products brings with it unique scientific challenges consistent with the unique physicochemical properties of peptide molecules. The identification of the proper characterization tools is required in order to develop peptide formulations with the appropriate stability, manufacturability, and bioperformance characteristics. This knowledge supports the build of critical quality attributes and, ultimately, regulatory specifications. The purpose of this review article is to provide an overview of the techniques that are employed for analytical characterization of peptide drug products. The techniques covered are highlighted in the context of peptide drug product understanding and include chemical and biophysical approaches. Emphasis is placed on summarizing the recent literature experience in the field. Finally, the authors provide regulatory perspective on these characterization approaches and discuss some potential areas for further research in the field.
Protein Science | 2017
Lye Siang Lee; Nicholas E Brunk; Daniel G. Haywood; David Z. Keifer; Elizabeth E. Pierson; Panagiotis Kondylis; Joseph Che-Yen Wang; Stephen C. Jacobson; Martin F. Jarrold; Adam Zlotnick
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) core protein is a model system for studying assembly and disassembly of icosahedral structures. Controlling disassembly will allow re‐engineering the 120 subunit HBV capsid, making it a molecular breadboard. We examined removal of subunits from partially crosslinked capsids to form stable incomplete particles. To characterize incomplete capsids, we used two single molecule techniques, resistive‐pulse sensing and charge detection mass spectrometry. We expected to find a binomial distribution of capsid fragments. Instead, we found a preponderance of 3 MDa complexes (90 subunits) and no fragments smaller than 3 MDa. We also found 90‐mers in the disassembly of uncrosslinked HBV capsids. 90‐mers seem to be a common pause point in disassembly reactions. Partly explaining this result, graph theory simulations have showed a threshold for capsid stability between 80 and 90 subunits. To test a molecular breadboard concept, we showed that missing subunits could be refilled resulting in chimeric, 120 subunit particles. This result may be a means of assembling unique capsids with functional decorations.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Corinne A. Lutomski; Nicholas A. Lyktey; Elizabeth E. Pierson; Zhongchao Zhao; Adam Zlotnick; Martin F. Jarrold
For a three-dimensional structure to spontaneously self-assemble from many identical components, the steps on the pathway must be kinetically accessible. Many virus capsids are icosahedral and assembled from hundreds of identical proteins, but how they navigate the assembly process is poorly understood. Capsid assembly is thought to involve stepwise addition of subunits to a growing capsid fragment. Coarse-grained models suggest that the reaction occurs on a downhill energy landscape, so intermediates are expected to be fleeting. In this work, charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) has been used to track assembly of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) capsid in real time. The icosahedral T = 4 capsid of HBV is assembled from 120 capsid protein dimers. Our results indicate that there are multiple pathways for assembly. Under conditions that favor a modest association energy there is no accumulation of large intermediates, which indicates that available pathways include ones on a downhill energy surface. Under higher salt conditions, where subunit interactions are strengthened, around half of the products of the initial assembly reaction have masses close to the T = 4 capsid and the other half are stalled intermediates which emerge abruptly at around 90 dimers, indicating a bifurcation in the ensemble of assembly paths. When incubated at room temperature, the 90-dimer intermediates accumulate dimers and gradually shift to higher mass and merge with the capsid peak. Though free subunits are present in solution, the stalled intermediates indicate the presence of a local minima on the energy landscape. Some intermediates may result from hole closure, where the growing capsid distorts to close the hole due to the missing capsid proteins or from a species where subsequent additions are particularly labile.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2013
Nathan C. Contino; Elizabeth E. Pierson; David Z. Keifer; Martin F. Jarrold
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2015
Elizabeth E. Pierson; Nathan C. Contino; David Z. Keifer; Martin F. Jarrold