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Dive into the research topics where Gillian E. Norris is active.

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Featured researches published by Gillian E. Norris.


Natural Product Reports | 2013

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide natural products: overview and recommendations for a universal nomenclature

Paul G. Arnison; Mervyn J. Bibb; Gabriele Bierbaum; Albert A. Bowers; Tim S. Bugni; Grzegorz Bulaj; Julio A. Camarero; Dominic J. Campopiano; Gregory L. Challis; Jon Clardy; Paul D. Cotter; David J. Craik; Michael J. Dawson; Elke Dittmann; Stefano Donadio; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Karl Dieter Entian; Michael A. Fischbach; John S. Garavelli; Ulf Göransson; Christian W. Gruber; Daniel H. Haft; Thomas K. Hemscheidt; Christian Hertweck; Colin Hill; Alexander R. Horswill; Marcel Jaspars; Wendy L. Kelly; Judith P. Klinman; Oscar P. Kuipers

This review presents recommended nomenclature for the biosynthesis of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs), a rapidly growing class of natural products. The current knowledge regarding the biosynthesis of the >20 distinct compound classes is also reviewed, and commonalities are discussed.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1989

Structure of human lactoferrin: Crystallographic structure analysis and refinement at 2·8 Å resolution

Bryan F. Anderson; Heather M. Baker; Gillian E. Norris; David W. Rice; Edward N. Baker

The structure of human lactoferrin has been refined crystallographically at 2.8 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) resolution using restrained least squares methods. The starting model was derived from a 3.2 A map phased by multiple isomorphous replacement with solvent flattening. Rebuilding during refinement made extensive use of these experimental phases, in combination with phases calculated from the partial model. The present model, which includes 681 of the 691 amino acid residues, two Fe3+, and two CO3(2-), gives an R factor of 0.206 for 17,266 observed reflections between 10 and 2.8 A resolution, with a root-mean-square deviation from standard bond lengths of 0.03 A. As a result of the refinement, two single-residue insertions and one 13-residue deletion have been made in the amino acid sequence, and details of the secondary structure and tertiary interactions have been clarified. The two lobes of the molecule, representing the N-terminal and C-terminal halves, have very similar folding, with a root-mean-square deviation, after superposition, of 1.32 A for 285 out of 330 C alpha atoms; the only major differences being in surface loops. Each lobe is subdivided into two dissimilar alpha/beta domains, one based on a six-stranded mixed beta-sheet, the other on a five-stranded mixed beta-sheet, with the iron site in the interdomain cleft. The two iron sites appear identical at the present resolution. Each iron atom is coordinated to four protein ligands, 2 Tyr, 1 Asp, 1 His, and the specific Co3(2-), which appears to bind to iron in a bidentate mode. The anion occupies a pocket between the iron and two positively charged groups on the protein, an arginine side-chain and the N terminus of helix 5, and may serve to neutralize this positive charge prior to iron binding. A large internal cavity, beyond the Arg side-chain, may account for the binding of larger anions as substitutes for CO3(2-). Residues on the other side of the iron site, near the interdomain crossover strands could provide secondary anion binding sites, and may explain the greater acid-stability of iron binding by lactoferrin, compared with serum transferrin. Interdomain and interlobe interactions, the roles of charged side-chains, heavy-atom binding sites, and the construction of the metal site in relation to the binding of different metals are also discussed.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1983

Structure of azurin from Alcaligenes denitrificans at 2·5 Å resolution

Gillian E. Norris; Bryan F. Anderson; Edward N. Baker

The structure of the blue copper protein, azurin, from Alcaligenes denitrificans has been determined from an electron density map at a nominal resolution of 3.0 A. Four isomorphous heavy-atom derivatives, prepared with KAu(CN)2, uranyl acetate, Hg(NH3)2Cl2 and KAu(CN)2 + uranyl acetate (a double derivative) were used to calculate phases by the method of isomorphous replacement. The overall figure of merit was 0.61. The two molecules in the asymmetric unit are related by an approximate 2-fold axis. Independent interpretations of the density were made for the two molecules, and the structures have since been partially refined. After 12 refinement cycles, using the Hendrickson-Konnert restrained least-squares program, the R factor is 0.318 for data to 2.5 A resolution and there are no major conformational differences between the two molecules. Refinement is continuing. Eight extended strands of the polypeptide chain form a beta-barrel structure whose topology is the same as that of plastocyanin and the alternative folding proposed for Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin. As in the latter two proteins, the copper atom forms three short bonds, with His-46 N delta 1, His117 N delta 1 and Cys112 S gamma, and one longer bond, with Met121 S delta, these four ligands forming a very distorted tetrahedron. A possible additional interaction, between copper and the carbonyl oxygen of Gly45, cannot be discounted at the present stage of the analysis. A surface hydrophobic patch, around the edge of the imidazole ring of His117 appears the most likely electron transfer locus. The sequences of azurin and plastocyanin have been aligned and the homology between the two proteins is discussed.


FEBS Letters | 2011

Cysteine S-glycosylation, a new post-translational modification found in glycopeptide bacteriocins

Judith Stepper; Shilpa Shastri; Trevor S. Loo; Joanne C. Preston; Petr Novák; Petr Man; Christopher H. Moore; Vladimír Havlíček; Mark L. Patchett; Gillian E. Norris

O‐glycosylation is a ubiquitous eukaryotic post‐translational modification, whereas early reports of S‐linked glycopeptides have never been verified. Prokaryotes also glycosylate proteins, but there are no confirmed examples of sidechain glycosylation in ribosomal antimicrobial polypeptides collectively known as bacteriocins. Here we show that glycocin F, a bacteriocin secreted by Lactobacillus plantarum KW30, is modified by an N‐acetylglucosamine β‐O‐linked to Ser18, and an N‐acetylhexosamine S‐linked to C‐terminal Cys43. The O‐linked N‐acetylglucosamine is essential for bacteriostatic activity, and the C‐terminus is required for full potency (IC50 2 nM). Genomic context analysis identified diverse putative glycopeptide bacteriocins in Firmicutes. One of these, the reputed lantibiotic sublancin, was shown to contain a hexose S‐linked to Cys22.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1994

Three-Dimensional Structure of Lactoferrin in Various Functional States

Edward N. Baker; Bryan F. Anderson; Heather M. Baker; Catherine L. Day; M. Haridas; Gillian E. Norris; Sylvia V. Rumball; David H. Thomas

The three-dimensional structures of various forms of lactoferrin, determined by high resolution crystallographic studies, have been compared in order to determine the relationship between structure and biological function. These comparisons include human apo and diferric lactoferrins, metal and anion substituted lactoferrins, the N-terminal half molecule of human lactoferrin, and bovine diferric lactoferrin. The structures themselves define the nature and location of the iron binding sites and allow anti-bacterial and putative receptor-binding regions to be mapped on to the molecular surface. The structural comparisons show that small internal adjustments can allow the accommodation of different metals and anions without altering the overall molecular structure, whereas large-scale conformational changes are associated with metal binding and release, and smaller, but significant, movements accompany species variations. The results also focus on differences in flexibility between the two lobes, and on the importance of interactions in the inter-lobe region in modulating iron release from the N-lobe and in possibly enabling binding at one site to be signalled to the other.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 1991

Structure, function and flexibility of human lactoferrin

Edward N. Baker; Bryan F. Anderson; Heather M. Baker; M. Haridas; Geoffrey B. Jameson; Gillian E. Norris; Sylvia V. Rumball

X-ray structure analyses of four different forms of human lactoferrin (diferric, dicupric, an oxalate-substituted dicupric, and apo-lactoferrin), and of bovine diferric lactoferrin, have revealed various ways in which the protein structure adapts to different structural and functional states. Comparison of diferric and dicupric lactoferrins has shown that different metals can, through slight variations in the metal position, have different stereochemistries and anion coordination without any significant change in the protein structure. Substitution of oxalate for carbonate, as seen in the structure of a hybrid dicupric complex with oxalate in one site and carbonate in the other, shows that larger anions can be accommodated by small side-chain movements in the binding site. The multidomain nature of lactoferrin also allows rigid body movements. Comparison of human and bovine lactoferrins, and of these with rabbit serum transferrin, shows that the relative orientations of the two lobes in each molecule can vary; these variations may contribute to differences in their binding properties. The structure of apo-lactoferrin demonstrates the importance of large-scale domain movements for metal binding and release and suggests that in solution an equilibrium exists between open and closed forms, with the open form being the active binding species. These structural forms are shown to be similar to those seen for bacterial periplasmic binding proteins, and lead to a common model for the various steps in the binding process.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Bovine β-Lactoglobulin Is Dimeric Under Imitative Physiological Conditions: Dissociation Equilibrium and Rate Constants over the pH Range of 2.5–7.5

Davide Mercadante; Laurence D. Melton; Gillian E. Norris; Trevor S. Loo; Martin A. K. Williams; R.J. Dobson; Geoffrey B. Jameson

The oligomerization of β-lactoglobulin (βLg) has been studied extensively, but with somewhat contradictory results. Using analytical ultracentrifugation in both sedimentation equilibrium and sedimentation velocity modes, we studied the oligomerization of βLg variants A and B over a pH range of 2.5-7.5 in 100 mM NaCl at 25°C. For the first time, to our knowledge, we were able to estimate rate constants (k(off)) for βLg dimer dissociation. At pH 2.5 k(off) is low (0.008 and 0.009 s(-1)), but at higher pH (6.5 and 7.5) k(off) is considerably greater (>0.1 s(-1)). We analyzed the sedimentation velocity data using the van Holde-Weischet method, and the results were consistent with a monomer-dimer reversible self-association at pH 2.5, 3.5, 6.5, and 7.5. Dimer dissociation constants K(D)(2-1) fell close to or within the protein concentration range of ∼5 to ∼45 μM, and at ∼45 μM the dimer predominated. No species larger than the dimer could be detected. The K(D)(2-1) increased as |pH-pI| increased, indicating that the hydrophobic effect is the major factor stabilizing the dimer, and suggesting that, especially at low pH, electrostatic repulsion destabilizes the dimer. Therefore, through Poisson-Boltzmann calculations, we determined the electrostatic dimerization energy and the ionic charge distribution as a function of ionic strength at pH above (pH 7.5) and below (pH 2.5) the isoelectric point (pI∼5.3). We propose a mechanism for dimer stabilization whereby the added ionic species screen and neutralize charges in the vicinity of the dimer interface. The electrostatic forces of the ion cloud surrounding βLg play a key role in the thermodynamics and kinetics of dimer association/dissociation.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 1998

Structure of human apolactoferrin at 2.0 A resolution. Refinement and analysis of ligand-induced conformational change.

Geoffrey B. Jameson; Bryan F. Anderson; Gillian E. Norris; David H. Thomas; Edward N. Baker

The three-dimensional structure of a form of human apolactoferrin, in which one lobe (the N-lobe) has an open conformation and the other lobe (the C-lobe) is closed, has been refined at 2.0 A resolution. The refinement, by restrained least-squares methods, used synchrotron radiation X-ray diffraction data combined with a lower resolution diffractometer data set. The final refined model (5346 protein atoms from residues 1-691, two Cl- ions and 363 water molecules) gives a crystallographic R factor of 0.201 (Rfree = 0. 286) for all 51305 reflections in the resolution range 10.0-2.0 A. The conformational change in the N-lobe, which opens up the binding cleft, involves a 54 degrees rotation of the N2 domain relative to the N1 domain. This also results in a small reorientation of the two lobes relative to one another with a further approximately 730 A2 of surface area being buried as the N2 domain contacts the C-lobe and the inter-lobe helix. These new contacts also involve the C-terminal helix and provide a mechanism through which the conformational and iron-binding status of the N-lobe can be signalled to the C-lobe. Surface-area calculations indicate a fine balance between open and closed forms of lactoferrin, which both have essentially the same solvent-accessible surface. Chloride ions are bound in the anion-binding sites of both lobes, emphasizing the functional significance of these sites. The closed configuration of the C-lobe, attributed in part to weak stabilization by crystal packing interactions, has important implications for lactoferrin dynamics. It shows that a stable closed structure, essentially identical to that of the iron-bound form, can be formed in the absence of iron binding.


Biochemistry | 2011

Structural, Dynamic, and Chemical Characterization of a Novel S-Glycosylated Bacteriocin

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.


Pure and Applied Chemistry | 1990

Metal and anion binding sites in lactoferrin and related proteins

Edward N. Baker; Bryan F. Anderson; Heather M. Baker; M. Haridas; Gillian E. Norris; Sylvia V. Rumball

The metal and anion binding sites of the protein lactoferrin (Lf) have been defined through crystallographic analyses of FegLf and Cu2Lf. In both cases each metal ion is 6-coordinate, with four protein ligands (2 Tyr, 1 Asp, 1 His) and the synergistic C032- anion which binds as a bidentate ligand. The C032- fits into a pocket between the metal and the N-terminus of an a-helix. Binding of other metals and anions can be understood in terms of the protein structure and a suggested mechanism for binding and release. Differences between the two sites in Lf can also be explained. suggest links between bacterial and mammalian binding proteins. Striking similarities between Lf and a S042- binding protein

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