Erik A. Feldmann
Miami University
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Featured researches published by Erik A. Feldmann.
Biochemistry | 2011
Erik A. Feldmann; Shuisong Ni; Indra D. Sahu; Clay H. Mishler; Douglas D. Risser; Jodi L. Murakami; Sasa K. Tom; Robert M. McCarrick; Gary A. Lorigan; Blanton S. Tolbert; Sean M. Callahan; Michael A. Kennedy
HetR, master regulator of heterocyst differentiation in the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120, stimulates heterocyst differentiation via transcriptional autoregulation and is negatively regulated by PatS and HetN, both of which contain the active pentapeptide RGSGR. However, the direct targets of PatS and HetN remain uncertain. Here, we report experimental evidence for direct binding between HetR and the C-terminal RGSGR pentapeptide, PatS-5. Strains with a hetR allele coding for conservative substitutions at residues 250-256 had altered patterns of heterocysts and, in some cases, reduced sensitivity to PatS-5. Cysteine scanning mutagenesis coupled with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy showed quenching of spin label motion at HetR amino acid 252 upon titration with PatS-5, indicating direct binding of PatS-5 to HetR. Gel shift assays indicated that PatS-5 disrupted binding of HetR to a 29 base pair inverted-repeat-containing DNA sequence upstream from hetP. Double electron-electron resonance EPR experiments confirmed that HetR existed as a dimer in solution and indicated that PatS-5 bound to HetR without disrupting the dimer form of HetR. Isothermal titration calorimetry experiments corroborated direct binding of PatS-5 to HetR with a K(d) of 227 nM and a 1:1 stoichiometry. Taken together, these results indicated that PatS-5 disrupted HetR binding to DNA through a direct HetR/PatS interaction. PatS-5 appeared to either bind in the vicinity of HetR amino acid L252 or, alternately, to bind in a remote site that leads to constrained motion of this amino acid via an allosteric effect or change in tertiary structure.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Yunhuang Yang; Theresa A. Ramelot; Robert M. McCarrick; Shuisong Ni; Erik A. Feldmann; John R. Cort; Huang Wang; Colleen Ciccosanti; Mei Jiang; Haleema Janjua; Thomas B. Acton; Rong Xiao; John K. Everett; Gaetano T. Montelione; Michael A. Kennedy
There is a general need to develop more powerful and more robust methods for structural characterization of homodimers, homo-oligomers, and multiprotein complexes using solution-state NMR methods. In recent years, there has been increasing emphasis on integrating distinct and complementary methodologies for structure determination of multiprotein complexes. One approach not yet widely used is to obtain intermediate and long-range distance constraints from paramagnetic relaxation enhancements (PRE) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based techniques such as double electron electron resonance (DEER), which, when used together, can provide supplemental distance constraints spanning to 10-70 A. In this Communication, we describe integration of PRE and DEER data with conventional solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods for structure determination of Dsy0195, a homodimer (62 amino acids per monomer) from Desulfitobacterium hafniense. Our results indicate that combination of conventional NMR restraints with only one or a few DEER distance constraints and a small number of PRE constraints is sufficient for the automatic NMR-based structure determination program CYANA to build a network of interchain nuclear Overhauser effect constraints that can be used to accurately define both the homodimer interface and the global homodimer structure. The use of DEER distances as a source of supplemental constraints as described here has virtually no upper molecular weight limit, and utilization of the PRE constraints is limited only by the ability to make accurate assignments of the protein amide proton and nitrogen chemical shifts.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2014
Patrick Videau; Shuisong Ni; Orion S. Rivers; Blake Ushijima; Erik A. Feldmann; Loralyn M. Cozy; Michael A. Kennedy; Sean M. Callahan
In response to a lack of environmental combined nitrogen, the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 differentiates nitrogen-fixing heterocyst cells in a periodic pattern. HetR is a transcription factor that coordinates the regulation of this developmental program. An inverted repeat-containing sequence in the hepA promoter required for proheterocyst-specific transcription was identified based on sequence similarity to a previously characterized binding site for HetR in the promoter of hetP. The binding affinity of HetR for the hepA site is roughly an order of magnitude lower than that for the hetP binding site. A BLAST search of the Anabaena genome identified 166 hepA-like sites that occur as single or tandem sites (two binding sites separated by 13 bp). The vast majority of these sites are present in predicted intergenic regions. HetR bound five representative single binding sites in vitro, and binding was abrogated by transversions in the binding sites that conserved the inverted repeat nature of the sites. Binding to four representative tandem sites was not observed. Transcriptional fusions of the green fluorescent protein gene gfp with putative promoter regions associated with the representative binding sites indicated that HetR could function as either an activator or repressor and that activation was cell-type specific. Taken together, we have expanded the direct HetR regulon and propose a model in which three categories of HetR binding sites, based on binding affinity and nucleotide sequence, contribute to three of the four phases of differentiation.
Biochemistry | 2012
Erik A. Feldmann; Shuisong Ni; Indra D. Sahu; Clay H. Mishler; Jeffrey D. Levengood; Yegor Kushnir; Robert M. McCarrick; Gary A. Lorigan; Blanton S. Tolbert; Sean M. Callahan; Michael A. Kennedy
Heterocyst differentiation in the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 occurs at regular intervals under nitrogen starvation and is regulated by a host of signaling molecules responsive to availability of fixed nitrogen. The heterocyst differentiation inhibitor PatS contains the active pentapeptide RGSGR (PatS-5) at its C-terminus considered the minimum PatS fragment required for normal heterocyst pattern formation. PatS-5 is known to bind HetR, the master regulator of heterocyst differentiation, with a moderate affinity and a submicromolar dissociation constant. Here we characterized the affinity of HetR for several PatS C-terminal fragments by measuring the relative ability of each fragment to knockdown HetR binding to DNA in electrophoretic mobility shift assays and using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). HetR bound to PatS-6 (ERGSGR) >30 times tighter (K(d) = 7 nM) than to PatS-5 (K(d) = 227 nM) and >1200 times tighter than to PatS-7 (DERGSGR) (K(d) = 9280 nM). No binding was detected between HetR and PatS-8 (CDERGSGR). Quantitative binding constants obtained from ITC measurements were consistent with qualitative results from the gel shift knockdown assays. CW EPR spectroscopy confirmed that PatS-6 bound to a MTSL spin-labeled HetR L252C mutant at a 10-fold lower concentration compared to PatS-5. Substituting the PatS-6 N-terminal glutamate to aspartate, lysine, or glycine did not alter binding affinity, indicating that neither the charge nor size of the N-terminal residues side chain played a role in enhanced HetR binding to PatS-6, but rather increased binding affinity resulted from new interactions with the PatS-6 N-terminal residue peptide backbone.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Erik A. Feldmann; Paolo De Bona; Roberto Galletto
Background: Rap1 is a general regulator of transcription and a component of the telomere. Results: Rap1 binds DNA in at least two binding modes. Conclusion: Access to binding modes in vitro is affected by different regions of the protein. Significance: The ability of Rap1 to access different binding modes may impact its functions. Budding yeast Rap1 is a specific double-stranded DNA-binding protein involved in repression and activation of gene transcription and in the establishment of the nucleoprotein complex formed at telomeres. The DNA-binding domain (DBD) of Rap1 forms a high affinity complex with DNA where both Myb-like domains bind to the recognition site. However, we recently showed that the DBD can also access an alternative, lower affinity DNA-binding mode where a single Myb-like domain binds. This results in Rap1-DNA complexes with stoichiometry higher than previously anticipated. In this work, we show that the ability of the DBD to form higher stoichiometry complexes on DNA is maintained also in larger Rap1 constructs. This indicates that transition between at least two DNA-binding modes is a general property of the protein and not a specific feature of the DBD in isolation. The transition between binding modes is modulated by the C-terminal wrapping loop within the DBD, consistent with the proposed model in which the transient opening of this region allows a switch between binding modes. Finally, we provide evidence that the Rap1 C terminus interacts with the DNA-binding domain, suggesting a complex network of interactions that couples changes in conformation of the protein to the binding of its DNA recognition sequence.
Biochemistry | 2014
Erik A. Feldmann; Roberto Galletto
Saccharomyces cerevisiae repressor-activator protein 1 (Rap1) is an essential protein involved in multiple steps of DNA regulation, as an activator in transcription, as a repressor at silencer elements, and as a major component of the shelterin-like complex at telomeres. All the known functions of Rap1 require the known high-affinity and specific interaction of the DNA-binding domain with its recognition sequences. In this work, we focus on the interaction of the DNA-binding domain of Rap1 (Rap1DBD) with double-stranded DNA substrates. Unexpectedly, we found that while Rap1DBD forms a high-affinity 1:1 complex with its DNA recognition site, it can also form lower-affinity complexes with higher stoichiometries on DNA. These lower-affinity interactions are independent of the presence of the recognition sequence, and we propose they originate from the ability of Rap1DBD to bind to DNA in two different binding modes. In one high-affinity binding mode, Rap1DBD likely binds in the conformation observed in the available crystal structures. In the other alternative lower-affinity binding mode, we propose that a single Myb-like domain of the Rap1DBD makes interactions with DNA, allowing for more than one protein molecule to bind to the DNA substrates. Our findings suggest that the Rap1DBD does not simply target the protein to its recognition sequence but rather it might be a possible point of regulation.
Biophysical Chemistry | 2015
Erik A. Feldmann; Katrina N. Koc; Roberto Galletto
The function of yeast Rap1 as an activator in transcription, a repressor at silencer elements, and as a major component of the shelterin-like complex at telomeres requires the known high-affinity and specific interaction of the DNA-binding domain (DBD) with its recognition sequences. In addition to a high-affinity one-to-one complex with its DNA recognition site, Rap1(DBD) also forms lower affinity complexes with higher stoichiometries on DNA. We proposed that this originates from the ability of Rap1(DBD) to access at least two DNA-binding modes. In this work, we show that Rap1(DBD) binds in multiple binding modes to recognition sequences that contain different spacer lengths between the hemi-sites. We also provide evidence that in the singly-ligated complex Rap1(DBD) binds quite differently to these sequences. Rap1(DBD) also binds to a single half-site but does so using the alternative DNA-binding mode where only a single Myb-like domain interacts with DNA. We found that all arrangements of Rap1 sites tested are represented within the telomeric sequence and our data suggest that at telomeres Rap1 might form a nucleoprotein complex with a heterogeneous distribution of bound states.
Proteins | 2009
Shuisong Ni; Matthew M. Benning; Matthew J. Smola; Erik A. Feldmann; Michael A. Kennedy
Cyanobacteria are ancient photosynthetic bacteria ( 2.85 billion years old1) that are capable of fixing atmospheric N2 during periods of nitrogen starvation in their growing environment.2 Among the five distinct classes of cyanobacteria, filamentous cyanobacteria such as Nostoc punctiforme strain PCC 73102 form chains of actively dividing vegetative cells capable of carrying out photosynthesis.2 Within 18–24 h after the onset of nitrogen starvation, 10% of vegetative cells, evenly spaced along the filament, differentiate into ‘‘heterocysts,’’2,3 specialized cells which have a thick glycolipid-rich cellular wall that helps maintain a microaerobic environment required for function of nitrogenases involved in nitrogen fixation.4 Heterocyst differentiation appears to be regulated by a primitive, yet complex, intercellular regulatory network involving hundreds of genes.5 Several genes have been determined to play a specific role in heterocyst differentiation, including two key transcriptional regulators: nitrogen control protein A (NtcA) that manages global nitrogen uptake,6 and HetR, an autoregulatory DNAbinding protein considered to be a master regulator of heterocyst differentiation.7,8 Heterocyst differentiation is also regulated by PatS, which appears to be an intercellular signaling peptide produced by developing heterocysts to inhibit differentiation of neighboring vegetative cells.9–11 Certain genes of yet unknown biochemical function have been shown to suppress heterocyst differentiation when overexpressed in wild-type cells, including HetY12 and HetN,13 while overexpression of HetL, a pentapeptide repeat protein whose structure has recently been solved,14 has been shown to stimulate heterocyst differentiation.15 Asr1734 from Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 (also referred to as Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120) has also recently been reported to be a negative regulator of heterocyst differentiation.16 Asr1734 is a small protein of 93 residues (MW 10.75 kDa) that appears to be an orphan with homologs only in other filamentous cyanobacteria: Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102 (Npun_R1517, 91% seq. id.), Nodularia spumigena CCY9414 (N9414_00595, 93% seq. id.), and Anabaena variabilis (AvA0302, 100% seq. id.). As a first step toward investigating its biochemical function, we have determined the crystal structure of Npun_R1517 from Nostoc punctiforme PCC 73102, at 2.0 Å resolution.
Proteins | 2012
Erik A. Feldmann; Theresa A. Ramelot; Yunhuang Yang; Rong Xiao; Thomas B. Acton; John K. Everett; Gaetano T. Montelione; Michael A. Kennedy
The protein domain family PF12095 (DUF3571) is a functionally uncharacterized family of small proteins conserved from cyanobacteria to plants that are typically 85 to 95 amino acids in length in cyanobacteria. In this report, we describe the solution NMR structure of the 86-residue protein Asl3597 from Nostoc sp. PCC7120. The structure of Asl3597, which constitutes the first three-dimensional structure from protein family PF12095, has a unique α/β sandwich fold consisting of four anti-parallel β-strands opposite three continuous α-helices. Asl3597 may have a role in the assembly of the hydrophilic subcomplex of the cyanobacterial NAD(P)H complex as suggested by data for the orthologous Chlororespiratory reduction 7 protein from Arabidopsis thaliana.
Journal of Structural and Functional Genomics | 2012
Erik A. Feldmann; Jayaraman Seetharaman; Theresa A. Ramelot; Scott Lew; Li Zhao; Keith Hamilton; Colleen Ciccosanti; Rong Xiao; Thomas B. Acton; John K. Everett; Liang Tong; Gaetano T. Montelione; Michael A. Kennedy