Elizabeth Garami
University of Toronto
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Featured researches published by Elizabeth Garami.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Canhui Li; Mohabir Ramjeesingh; Wei Wang; Elizabeth Garami; Marek Hewryk; Daniel Lee; Johanna M. Rommens; Kevin Galley; Christine E. Bear
The gene mutated in cystic fibrosis codes for the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), a cyclic AMP-activated chloride channel thought to be critical for salt and water transport by epithelial cells. Plausible models exist to describe a role for ATP hydrolysis in CFTR channel activity; however, biochemical evidence that CFTR possesses intrinsic ATPase activity is lacking. In this study, we report the first measurements of the rate of ATP hydrolysis by purified, reconstituted CFTR. The mutation CFTRG551D resides within a motif conserved in many nucleotidases and is known to cause severe human disease. Following reconstitution the mutant protein exhibited both defective ATP hydrolysis and channel gating, providing direct evidence that CFTR utilizes ATP to gate its channel activity.
Biochemical Journal | 1999
Mohabir Ramjeesingh; Ling-Jun Huan; Elizabeth Garami; Christine E. Bear
Assessment of the quaternary structure of membrane proteins by PAGE has been problematic owing to their relatively poor solubility in non-dissociative detergents. Here we report that several membrane proteins can be readily solubilized in their native quaternary structure with the use of the detergent perfluoro-octanoic acid (PFO). Further, PFO can be used with PAGE, thereby providing a novel, accessible tool with which to assess the molecular mass of homo-multimeric protein complexes.
Biochemical Journal | 2000
Najma Ahmed; Mohabir Ramjeesingh; Simeon Wong; Alison Varga; Elizabeth Garami; Christine E. Bear
The chloride channel ClC-2 has been implicated in essential physiological functions, including cell-volume regulation and fluid secretion by specific epithelial tissues. Although ClC-2 is known to be activated by hyperpolarization and hypo-osmotic shock, the molecular basis for the regulation of this channel remains unclear. Here we show in the Xenopus oocyte expression system that the chloride-channel activity of ClC-2 is enhanced after treatment with the actin-disrupting agents cytochalasin and latrunkulin. These findings suggest that the actin cytoskeleton normally exerts an inhibitory effect on ClC-2 activity. An inhibitory domain was previously defined in the N-terminus of ClC-2, so we sought to determine whether this domain might interact directly with actin in binding assays in vitro. We found that a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein containing the inhibitory domain was capable of binding actin in overlay and co-sedimentation assays. Further, the binding of actin to this relatively basic peptide (pI 8.4) might be mediated through electrostatic interactions because binding was inhibited at high concentrations of NaCl with a half-maximal decrease in signal at 180 mM NaCl. This work suggests that electrostatic interactions between the N-terminus of ClC-2 and the actin cytoskeleton might have a role in the regulation of this channel.
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2001
Katalin Gyömörey; Elizabeth Garami; Kevin Galley; Johanna M. Rommens; Christine E. Bear
Abstract. While most cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-knockout animals die due to intestinal obstruction before or at the time of weaning, a subpopulation of these animals are long living and exhibit a milder phenotype. The decreased severity of intestinal disease in these mildly affected CF mice is related to the expression of non-CFTR genetic modifiers. The identity of these genetic modifiers is not known, but we hypothesize that they may complement CFTR function as a chloride channel in this tissue. To assess the contribution of non-CFTR chloride channels to chloride secretion across the small intestine of CF mice with mild disease, we measured the basal transepithelial potential difference across this tissue as well as the secretory response to agonists of the cAMP and the calcium-mediated signaling pathways. Chloride secretion across the small intestine of mildly affected CF mice was not stimulated by forskolin or by carbachol. The absence of CFTR is thus not compensated by the activity of a distinct, cAMP- or calcium-activated chloride channel at the apical surface of the intestinal epithelium. On the other hand, a basal chloride secretion across the intestinal epithelium was present in these animals, and we hypothesize that this activity may be linked to improved survival of these animals.
Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1997
Christine E. Bear; Canhui Li; Kevin Galley; Yanchun Wang; Elizabeth Garami; Mohabir Ramjeesingh
The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is a chloride channel situated on the apical membrane of epithelial cells. Our recent studies of purified, reconstituted CFTR revealed that it also functions as an ATPase and that there may be coupling between ATP hydrolysis and channel gating. Both the ATP turnover rate and channel gating are slow, in the range of 0.2 to 1 s−1, and both activities are suppressed in a disease-causing mutation situated in a putative nucleotide binding motif. Our future studies using purified protein will be directed toward understanding the structural basis and mechanism for coupling between hydrolysis and channel function.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Shunbin Xu; Rahim Ladak; Deborah A. Swanson; Anna Soltyk; Hui Sun; Lynda Ploder; Danka Vidgen; Alessandra M V Duncan; Elizabeth Garami; David Valle; Roderick R. McInnes
We cloned human and murine cDNAs of a gene (designated PHR1), expressed preferentially in retina and brain. In both species, PHR1 utilizes two promoters and alternative splicing to produce four PHR1 transcripts, encoding isoforms of 243, 224, 208, and 189 amino acids, each with a pleckstrin homology domain at their N terminus and a transmembrane domain at their C terminus. Transcript 1 originates from a 5′-photoreceptor-specific promoter with at least three Crx elements ((C/T)TAATCC). Transcript 2 originates from the same promoter but lacks exon 7, which encodes 35 amino acids immediately C-terminal to the pleckstrin homology domain. Transcripts 3 and 4 originate from an internal promoter in intron 2 and either include or lack exon 7, respectively. In situ hybridization shows thatPHR1 is highly expressed in photoreceptors, with lower expression in retinal ganglion cells. Immunohistochemistry localizes the PHR1 protein to photoreceptor outer segments where chemical extraction studies confirm it is an integral membrane protein. Using a series of PHR1 glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins to perform in vitro binding assays, we found PHR1 binds transducin βγ subunits but not inositol phosphates. This activity and subcellular location suggests that PHR1 may function as a previously unrecognized modulator of the phototransduction pathway.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Eva A. Pasyk; Xenia K. Morin; Peter Zeman; Elizabeth Garami; Kevin Galley; Ling Jun Huan; Yanchun Wang; Christine E. Bear
The R domain of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) connects the two halves of the protein, each of which possess a transmembrane-spanning domain and a nucleotide binding domain. Phosphorylation of serine residues, which reside mostly within the C-terminal two-thirds of the R domain, is required for nucleotide-dependent activation of CFTR chloride channel activity. The N terminus of the R domain is also likely to be important in CFTR function, since this region is highly conserved among CFTRs of different species and exhibits sequence similarity with the “linker region” of the related protein, P-glycoprotein. To date, however, the role of this region in CFTR channel function remains unknown. In this paper, we report the effects of five disease-causing mutations within the N terminus of the CFTR-R domain. All five mutants exhibit defective protein processing in mammalian HEK-293 cells, suggesting that they are mislocalized and fail to reach the cell surface. However, in theXenopus oocyte, three mutants reached the plasma membrane. One of these mutants, L619S, exhibits no detectable function, whereas the other two, D614G and I618T, exhibit partial activity as chloride channels. Single channel analysis of these latter two mutants revealed that they possess defective rates of channel opening, consistent with the hypothesis that the N terminus of the R domain participates in ATP-dependent channel gating. These findings support recent structural models that include this region within extended boundaries of the first nucleotide binding domain.
Methods in Enzymology | 1999
Mohabir Ramjeesingh; Elizabeth Garami; Kevin Galley; Canhui Li; Yanchun Wang; Christine E. Bear
Publisher Summary When the cystic fibrosis (CF) gene was first discovered, its protein product, the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) was thought to act either as a chloride channel or as a chloride channel regulator. Eventually, the chloride channel activity of CFTR was confirmed using a variety of experimental approaches. The chloride channel function of CFTR is currently thought to be critical for the elaboration of salt and water secretion across the epithelial cell lining of the airways, pancreatic ductules, gastrointestinal tract, and reproductive tract. This chapter describes the method employed to purify and functionally reconstitute CFTR in model membranes. The chapter also addresses the methods used to express, purify, and reconstitute CFTR. It describes the procedures used to study the function of the reconstituted molecule. Two different strategies for CFTR purification from Sf9 cells are compared; the original method, which employs conventional chromatographic techniques, and a novel procedure, which applies metal affinity chromatography to purify a CFTR molecule engineered to possess a polyhistidine tag at its carboxy terminus (CFTR-His). This new method for CFTR purification may be applicable to other ion channels and will expedite studies of the structure-function relationships of these membrane proteins.
Biochemistry | 1999
Mohabir Ramjeesingh; Canhui Li; Elizabeth Garami; Ling-Jun Huan; Kevin Galley; Yanchun Wang; Christine E. Bear
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2000
Katalin Gyömörey; Herman Yeger; Cameron Ackerley; Elizabeth Garami; Christine E. Bear