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Dive into the research topics where Frederic A. Fellouse is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederic A. Fellouse.


Cell | 2008

Ubiquitin chain editing revealed by polyubiquitin linkage-specific antibodies.

Kim Newton; Marissa L. Matsumoto; Ingrid E. Wertz; Donald S. Kirkpatrick; Jennie R. Lill; Jenille Tan; Debra L. Dugger; Nathaniel C. Gordon; Sachdev S. Sidhu; Frederic A. Fellouse; Laszlo Komuves; Dorothy French; Ronald E. Ferrando; Cynthia Lam; Deanne M. Compaan; Christine Yu; Ivan Bosanac; Sarah G. Hymowitz; Robert F. Kelley; Vishva M. Dixit

Posttranslational modification of proteins with polyubiquitin occurs in diverse signaling pathways and is tightly regulated to ensure cellular homeostasis. Studies employing ubiquitin mutants suggest that the fate of polyubiquitinated proteins is determined by which lysine within ubiquitin is linked to the C terminus of an adjacent ubiquitin. We have developed linkage-specific antibodies that recognize polyubiquitin chains joined through lysine 63 (K63) or 48 (K48). A cocrystal structure of an anti-K63 linkage Fab bound to K63-linked diubiquitin provides insight into the molecular basis for specificity. We use these antibodies to demonstrate that RIP1, which is essential for tumor necrosis factor-induced NF-kappaB activation, and IRAK1, which participates in signaling by interleukin-1beta and Toll-like receptors, both undergo polyubiquitin editing in stimulated cells. Both kinase adaptors initially acquire K63-linked polyubiquitin, while at later times K48-linked polyubiquitin targets them for proteasomal degradation. Polyubiquitin editing may therefore be a general mechanism for attenuating innate immune signaling.


Developmental Cell | 2010

The Hippo Pathway Regulates Wnt/β-Catenin Signaling

Xaralabos Varelas; Bryan W. Miller; Richelle Sopko; Siyuan Song; Alex Gregorieff; Frederic A. Fellouse; Rui Sakuma; Tony Pawson; Walter Hunziker; Helen McNeill; Jeffrey L. Wrana; Liliana Attisano

Several developmental pathways contribute to processes that regulate tissue growth and organ size. The Hippo pathway has emerged as one such critical regulator. However, how Hippo signaling is integrated with other pathways to coordinate these processes remains unclear. Here, we show that the Hippo pathway restricts Wnt/beta-Catenin signaling by promoting an interaction between TAZ and DVL in the cytoplasm. TAZ inhibits the CK1delta/epsilon-mediated phosphorylation of DVL, thereby inhibiting Wnt/beta-Catenin signaling. Abrogation of TAZ levels or Hippo signaling enhances Wnt3A-stimulated DVL phosphorylation, nuclear beta-Catenin, and Wnt target gene expression. Mice lacking Taz develop polycystic kidneys with enhanced cytoplasmic and nuclear beta-Catenin. Moreover, in Drosophila, Hippo signaling modulates Wg target gene expression. These results uncover a cytoplasmic function of TAZ in regulating Wnt signaling and highlight the role of the Hippo pathway in coordinating morphogenetic signaling with growth control.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Crystal structure of full-length KcsA in its closed conformation

Serdar Uysal; Valeria Vásquez; Valentina Tereshko; Kaori Esaki; Frederic A. Fellouse; Sachdev S. Sidhu; Shohei Koide; Eduardo Perozo; Anthony A. Kossiakoff

KcsA is a proton-activated, voltage-modulated K+ channel that has served as the archetype pore domain in the Kv channel superfamily. Here, we have used synthetic antigen-binding fragments (Fabs) as crystallographic chaperones to determine the structure of full-length KcsA at 3.8 Å, as well as that of its isolated C-terminal domain at 2.6 Å. The structure of the full-length KcsA–Fab complex reveals a well-defined, 4-helix bundle that projects ≈70 Å toward the cytoplasm. This bundle promotes a ≈15° bending in the inner bundle gate, tightening its diameter and shifting the narrowest point 2 turns of helix below. Functional analysis of the full-length KcsA–Fab complex suggests that the C-terminal bundle remains whole during gating. We suggest that this structure likely represents the physiologically relevant closed conformation of KcsA.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

The Intrinsic Contributions of Tyrosine, Serine, Glycine and Arginine to the Affinity and Specificity of Antibodies

Sara C. Birtalan; Yingnan Zhang; Frederic A. Fellouse; Lihua Shao; Gabriele Schaefer; Sachdev S. Sidhu

Synthetic antibody libraries with restricted chemical diversity were used to explore the intrinsic contributions of four amino acids (Tyr, Ser, Gly and Arg) to the affinity and specificity of antigen recognition. There was no correlation between nonspecific binding and the content of Tyr, Ser or Gly in the antigen-binding site, and in fact, the most specific antibodies were those with the highest Tyr content. In contrast, Arg content was clearly correlated with increased nonspecific binding. We combined Tyr, Ser and Gly to generate highly specific synthetic antibodies with affinities in the subnanomolar range, showing that the high abundance of Tyr, Ser and Gly in natural antibody germ line sequences reflects the intrinsic capacity of these residues to work together to mediate antigen recognition. Despite being a major functional contributor to co-evolved protein-protein interfaces, we find that Arg does not contribute generally to the affinity of naïve antigen-binding sites and is detrimental to specificity. Again, this is consistent with studies of natural antibodies, which have shown that nonspecific, self-reactive antibodies are rich in Arg and other positively charged residues. Our findings suggest that the principles governing naïve molecular recognition differ from those governing co-evolved interactions. Analogous studies can be designed to explore the roles of the other amino acids in molecular recognition. Results of such studies should illuminate the basic principles underlying natural protein-protein interactions and should aid the design of synthetic binding proteins with functions beyond the scope of natural proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Synthetic antibodies for specific recognition and crystallization of structured RNA

Jing-Dong Ye; Valentina Tereshko; John K. Frederiksen; Akiko Koide; Frederic A. Fellouse; Sachdev S. Sidhu; Shohei Koide; Anthony A. Kossiakoff; Joseph A. Piccirilli

Antibodies that bind protein antigens are indispensable in biochemical research and modern medicine. However, knowledge of RNA-binding antibodies and their application in the ever-growing RNA field is lacking. Here we have developed a robust approach using a synthetic phage-display library to select specific antigen-binding fragments (Fabs) targeting a large functional RNA. We have solved the crystal structure of the first Fab–RNA complex at 1.95 Å. Capability in phasing and crystal contact formation suggests that the Fab provides a potentially valuable crystal chaperone for RNA. The crystal structure reveals that the Fab achieves specific RNA binding on a shallow surface with complementarity-determining region (CDR) sequence diversity, length variability, and main-chain conformational plasticity. The Fab–RNA interface also differs significantly from Fab–protein interfaces in amino acid composition and light-chain participation. These findings yield valuable insights for engineering of Fabs as RNA-binding modules and facilitate further development of Fabs as possible therapeutic drugs and biochemical tools to explore RNA biology.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Synthetic antibodies from a four-amino-acid code: A dominant role for tyrosine in antigen recognition

Frederic A. Fellouse; Christian Wiesmann; Sachdev S. Sidhu


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2007

High-throughput Generation of Synthetic Antibodies from Highly Functional Minimalist Phage-displayed Libraries

Frederic A. Fellouse; Kaori Esaki; Sara C. Birtalan; Demetrios Raptis; Vincenzo J. Cancasci; Akiko Koide; Parkash Jhurani; Mark Vasser; Christian Wiesmann; Anthony A. Kossiakoff; Shohei Koide; Sachdev S. Sidhu


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2004

Phage-displayed Antibody Libraries of Synthetic Heavy Chain Complementarity Determining Regions

Sachdev S. Sidhu; Bing Li; Yvonne Chen; Frederic A. Fellouse; Charles Eigenbrot; Germaine Fuh


Archive | 2006

Binding polypeptides with restricted diversity sequences

Sara C. Birtalan; Frederic A. Fellouse; Sachdev S. Sidhu


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005

Molecular recognition by a binary code.

Frederic A. Fellouse; Bing Li; Deanne M. Compaan; Andrew A. Peden; Sarah G. Hymowitz; Sachdev S. Sidhu

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