Helen M. Webb
University of Kent
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Featured researches published by Helen M. Webb.
Cell | 2000
Haiwei Song; Pierre M. Mugnier; Amit K. Das; Helen M. Webb; David R. H. Evans; Mick F. Tuite; Brian A. Hemmings; David Barford
The release factor eRF1 terminates protein biosynthesis by recognizing stop codons at the A site of the ribosome and stimulating peptidyl-tRNA bond hydrolysis at the peptidyl transferase center. The crystal structure of human eRF1 to 2.8 A resolution, combined with mutagenesis analyses of the universal GGQ motif, reveals the molecular mechanism of release factor activity. The overall shape and dimensions of eRF1 resemble a tRNA molecule with domains 1, 2, and 3 of eRF1 corresponding to the anticodon loop, aminoacyl acceptor stem, and T stem of a tRNA molecule, respectively. The position of the essential GGQ motif at an exposed tip of domain 2 suggests that the Gln residue coordinates a water molecule to mediate the hydrolytic activity at the peptidyl transferase center. A conserved groove on domain 1, 80 A from the GGQ motif, is proposed to form the codon recognition site.
Molecular Microbiology | 1992
Jun Yu; Helen M. Webb; Timothy R. Hirst
A strain of Vibrio cholerae, which had been engineered to express high levels of the non‐toxic B subunit (EtxB) of Escherichia coli heat‐labile enterotoxin, was subjected to transposon (TnphoA) mutagenesis. Two chromosomal TnphoA insertion mutations of the strain were isolated that showed a severe defect in the amount of EtxB produced. The loci disrupted by TnphoA in the two mutant derivatives were cloned and sequenced, and this revealed that the transposon had inserted at different sites in the same gene. The open reading frame of the gene predicts a 200‐amino‐acid exported protein, with a Cys–X–X–Cys motif characteristic of thioredoxin, protein disulphide isomerase, and DsbA (a periplasmic protein required for disulphide bond formation In E. coli). The V. cholerae protein exhibited 40% identity with the DsbA protein of E. coli, including 90% identity in the region of the active‐site motif. Introduction of a plasmid encoding E. coli DsbA into the V. cholerae TnphoA derivatives was found to restore enterotoxin formation, whilst expression of Etx or EtxB in a dsbA mutant of E. coli confirmed that DsbA is required for enterotoxin formation in E. coli. These results suggest that, since each EtxB subunit contains a single intramolecular disulphide bond, a transient intermolecular interaction with DsbA occurs during toxin subunit folding which catalyses formation of the disulphide in vivo.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2010
Gloria H. Merritt; Wesley R. Naemi; Pierre M. Mugnier; Helen M. Webb; Mick F. Tuite; Tobias von der Haar
Translation termination in eukaryotes typically requires the decoding of one of three stop codons UAA, UAG or UGA by the eukaryotic release factor eRF1. The molecular mechanisms that allow eRF1 to decode either A or G in the second nucleotide, but to exclude UGG as a stop codon, are currently not well understood. Several models of stop codon recognition have been developed on the basis of evidence from mutagenesis studies, as well as studies on the evolutionary sequence conservation of eRF1. We show here that point mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae eRF1 display significant variability in their stop codon read-through phenotypes depending on the background genotype of the strain used, and that evolutionary conservation of amino acids in eRF1 is only a poor indicator of the functional importance of individual residues in translation termination. We further show that many phenotypes associated with eRF1 mutants are quantitatively unlinked with translation termination defects, suggesting that the evolutionary history of eRF1 was shaped by a complex set of molecular functions in addition to translation termination. We reassess current models of stop-codon recognition by eRF1 in the light of these new data.
Journal of Cell Biology | 1995
Wayne I. Lencer; Chris Constable; Signa Moe; Michael G. Jobling; Helen M. Webb; Stephen P. Ruston; James L. Madara; Timothy R. Hirst; Randall K. Holmes
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996
Toufic O. Nashar; Helen M. Webb; Simon S. Eaglestone; Neil A. Williams; Timothy R. Hirst
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Helen M. Webb; Lloyd W. Ruddock; Rosalyn J. Marchant; Kim Jonas; Peter Klappa
Biochemistry | 1996
Lloyd W. Ruddock; Helen M. Webb; Stephen P. Ruston; Caroline Cheesman; Robert B. Freedman; Timothy R. Hirst
Vaccine | 1996
E.A. Green; Catherine H. Botting; Helen M. Webb; Timothy R. Hirst; Richard E. Randall
Biochemical Society Transactions | 1994
Timothy R. Hirst; Toufic O. Nashar; Simon S. Eaglestone; Wayne I. Lencer; Helen M. Webb; Jun Yu
Biochemistry | 2012
Damien Farrell; Helen M. Webb; Michael Johnston; Thomas Agersten Poulsen; Fergal O’Meara; Lars H. Christensen; Lars Beier; Torben V. Borchert; Jens Erik Nielsen