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Dive into the research topics where Huanting Liu is active.

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Featured researches published by Huanting Liu.


BMC Biotechnology | 2008

An efficient one-step site-directed deletion, insertion, single and multiple-site plasmid mutagenesis protocol

Huanting Liu; James H. Naismith

BackgroundMutagenesis plays an essential role in molecular biology and biochemistry. It has also been used in enzymology and protein science to generate proteins which are more tractable for biophysical techniques. The ability to quickly and specifically mutate a residue(s) in protein is important for mechanistic and functional studies. Although many site-directed mutagenesis methods have been developed, a simple, quick and multi-applicable method is still desirable.ResultsWe have developed a site-directed plasmid mutagenesis protocol that preserved the simple one step procedure of the QuikChange™ site-directed mutagenesis but enhanced its efficiency and extended its capability for multi-site mutagenesis. This modified protocol used a new primer design that promoted primer-template annealing by eliminating primer dimerization and also permitted the newly synthesized DNA to be used as the template in subsequent amplification cycles. These two factors we believe are the main reasons for the enhanced amplification efficiency and for its applications in multi-site mutagenesis.ConclusionOur modified protocol significantly increased the efficiency of single mutation and also allowed facile large single insertions, deletions/truncations and multiple mutations in a single experiment, an option incompatible with the standard QuikChange™. Furthermore the new protocol required significantly less parental DNA which facilitated the DpnI digestion after the PCR amplification and enhanced the overall efficiency and reliability. Using our protocol, we generated single site, multiple single-site mutations and a combined insertion/deletion mutations. The results demonstrated that this new protocol imposed no additional reagent costs (beyond basic QuikChange™) but increased the overall success rates.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Structural and Functional Characterization of an Archaeal Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeat (CRISPR)-associated Complex for Antiviral Defense (CASCADE)

N.G Lintner; Melina Kerou; S.K Brumfield; Shirley Graham; Huanting Liu; James H. Naismith; M Sdano; Nan Peng; Qunxin She; Copie; M.J Young; Malcolm F. White; C.M. Lawrence

In response to viral infection, many prokaryotes incorporate fragments of virus-derived DNA into loci called clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPRs). The loci are then transcribed, and the processed CRISPR transcripts are used to target invading viral DNA and RNA. The Escherichia coli “CRISPR-associated complex for antiviral defense” (CASCADE) is central in targeting invading DNA. Here we report the structural and functional characterization of an archaeal CASCADE (aCASCADE) from Sulfolobus solfataricus. Tagged Csa2 (Cas7) expressed in S. solfataricus co-purifies with Cas5a-, Cas6-, Csa5-, and Cas6-processed CRISPR-RNA (crRNA). Csa2, the dominant protein in aCASCADE, forms a stable complex with Cas5a. Transmission electron microscopy reveals a helical complex of variable length, perhaps due to substoichiometric amounts of other CASCADE components. A recombinant Csa2-Cas5a complex is sufficient to bind crRNA and complementary ssDNA. The structure of Csa2 reveals a crescent-shaped structure unexpectedly composed of a modified RNA-recognition motif and two additional domains present as insertions in the RNA-recognition motif. Conserved residues indicate potential crRNA- and target DNA-binding sites, and the H160A variant shows significantly reduced affinity for crRNA. We propose a general subunit architecture for CASCADE in other bacteria and Archaea.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

The Structure of Senp1-Sumo-2 Complex Suggests a Structural Basis for Discrimination between Sumo Paralogues During Processing.

Linnan Shen; Changjiang Dong; Huanting Liu; James H. Naismith; Ronald T. Hay

The SUMO (small ubiquitin-like modifier)-specific protease SENP1 (sentrin-specific protease 1) can process the three forms of SUMO to their mature forms and deconjugate SUMO from modified substrates. It has been demonstrated previously that SENP1 processed SUMO-1 more efficiently than SUMO-2, but displayed little difference in its ability to deconjugate the different SUMO paralogues from modified substrates. To determine the basis for this substrate specificity, we have determined the crystal structure of SENP1 in isolation and in a transition-state complex with SUMO-2. The interface between SUMO-2 and SENP1 has a relatively poor complementarity, and most of the recognition is determined by interaction between the conserved C-terminus of SUMO-2 and the cleft in the protease. Although SENP1 is rather similar in structure to the related protease SENP2, these proteases have different SUMO-processing activities. Electrostatic analysis of SENP1 in the region where the C-terminal peptide, removed during maturation, would project indicates that it is the electrostatic complementarity between this region of SENP1 and the C-terminal peptides of the various SUMO paralogues that mediates selectivity.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2009

A simple and efficient expression and purification system using two newly constructed vectors.

Huanting Liu; James H. Naismith

Structural biology places a high demand on proteins both in terms of quality and quantity. Although many protein expression and purification systems have been developed, an efficient and simple system which can be easily adapted is desirable. Here, we report a new system which combines improved expression, solubility screening and purification efficiency. The system is based on two newly constructed vectors, pEHISTEV and pEHISGFPTEV derived from a pET vector. Both vectors generate a construct with an amino-terminal hexahistidine tag (His-tag). In addition, pEHISGFPTEV expresses a protein with an N-terminal His-tagged green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion to allow rapid quantitation of soluble protein. Both vectors have a tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease cleavage site that allows for production of protein with only two additional N-terminal residues and have the same multiple cloning site which enables parallel cloning. Protein purification is a simple two-stage nickel affinity chromatography based on the His tag removal. A total of seven genes were tested using this system. Expression was optimised using pEHISGFPTEV constructs by monitoring the GFP fluorescence and the soluble target proteins were quantified using spectrophotometric analysis. All the tested proteins were purified with sufficient quantity and quality to attempt structure determination. This system has been proven to be simple and effective for structural biology. The system is easily adapted to include other vectors, tags or fusions and therefore has the potential to be broadly applicable.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Structural basis of NEDD8 ubiquitin discrimination by the deNEDDylating enzyme NEDP1

Linnan Shen; Huanting Liu; Changjiang Dong; Dimitris P. Xirodimas; James H. Naismith; Ronald T. Hay

NEDD8 (neural precursor cell expressed developmentally downregulated gene 8)‐specific protease NEDP1 processes preNEDD8 to its mature form and deconjugates NEDD8 from substrates such as p53 and cullins. Although NEDD8 and ubiquitin are highly related in sequence and structure, their attachment to a protein leads to different biological effects. It is therefore critical that NEDP1 discriminates between NEDD8 and ubiquitin, and this requires remarkable precision in molecular recognition. To determine the basis of this specificity, we have determined the crystal structure of NEDP1 in isolation and in a transition state complex with NEDD8. This reveals that NEDP1 is a cysteine protease of the Ulp family. Binding of NEDD8 induces a dramatic conformational change in a flexible loop that swings over the C‐terminus of NEDD8 locking it into an extended β‐structure optimal for catalysis. Structural, mutational and biochemical studies have identified key residues involved in molecular recognition. A single‐residue difference in the C‐terminus of NEDD8 and ubiquitin contributes significantly to the ability of NEDP1 to discriminate between them. In vivo analysis indicates that NEDP1 mutants perturb deNEDDylation of the tumour suppressor p53.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

STRUCTURE OF THE DNA REPAIR HELICASE HEL308 REVEALS DNA BINDING AND AUTOINHIBITORY DOMAINS

Jodi D. Richards; Kenneth A. Johnson; Huanting Liu; Anne-Marie McRobbie; Stephen A. McMahon; Muse Oke; Lester G. Carter; James H. Naismith; Malcolm F. White

Hel308 is a superfamily 2 helicase conserved in eukaryotes and archaea. It is thought to function in the early stages of recombination following replication fork arrest and has a specificity for removal of the lagging strand in model replication forks. A homologous helicase constitutes the N-terminal domain of human DNA polymerase Q. The Drosophila homologue mus301 is implicated in double strand break repair and meiotic recombination. We have solved the high resolution crystal structure of Hel308 from the crenarchaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus, revealing a five-domain structure with a central pore lined with essential DNA binding residues. The fifth domain is shown to act as an autoinhibitory domain or molecular brake, clamping the single-stranded DNA extruded through the central pore of the helicase structure to limit the helicase activity of the enzyme. This provides an elegant mechanism to tune the processivity of the enzyme to its functional role. Hel308 can displace streptavidin from a biotinylated DNA molecule, and this activity is only partially inhibited when the DNA is pre-bound with abundant DNA-binding proteins RPA or Alba1, whereas pre-binding with the recombinase RadA has no effect on activity. These data suggest that one function of the enzyme may be in the removal of bound proteins at stalled replication forks and recombination intermediates.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2003

Adenovirus DNA Replication

Huanting Liu; James H. Naismith; Ronald T. Hay

Replication of the adenovirus genome is catalysed by adenovirus DNA polymerase in which the adenovirus preterminal protein acts as a protein primer. DNA polymerase and preterminal protein form a heterodimer which, in the presence of the cellular transcription factors NFI/CTFI and NFIII/Oct-1, binds to the origin of DNA replication. DNA replication is initiated by DNA polymerase mediated transfer of dCMP onto preterminal protein. Further DNA synthesis is catalysed by DNA polymerase in a strand displacement mechanism which also requires adenovirus DNA binding protein. Here, we discuss the role of individual proteins in this process as revealed by biochemical analysis, mutagenesis and molecular modelling.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2006

Structure of the heterotrimeric PCNA from Sulfolobus solfataricus

Gareth J. Williams; Kenneth A. Johnson; Jana Rudolf; Stephen A. McMahon; Lester G. Carter; Muse Oke; Huanting Liu; Garry L. Taylor; Malcolm F. White; James H. Naismith

The structure of the heterotrimeric PCNA complex from S. sulfataricus is reported to 2.3 Å.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2009

AcsD catalyzes enantioselective citrate desymmetrization in siderophore biosynthesis

Stefan Schmelz; Nadia Kadi; Stephen A. McMahon; Lijiang Song; Daniel Oves-Costales; Muse Oke; Huanting Liu; Kenneth A. Johnson; Lester G. Carter; Catherine H. Botting; Malcolm F. White; Gregory L. Challis; James H. Naismith

Bacterial pathogens need to scavenge iron from their host for growth and proliferation during infection. They have evolved several strategies to do this, one being the biosynthesis and excretion of small, high-affinity iron chelators known as siderophores. The biosynthesis of siderophores is an important area of study, not only for potential therapeutic intervention, but also to illuminate new enzyme chemistries. Two general pathways for siderophore biosynthesis exist: the well-characterized nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS)-dependent pathway and the NRPS-independent (NIS) pathway, which relies on a different family of sparsely-investigated synthetases. Here, we report structural and biochemical studies of AcsD from Pectobacterium (formerly Erwinia) chrysanthemi, a NIS synthetase involved in achromobactin biosynthesis. The structures of ATP and citrate complexes provide a mechanistic rationale for stereospecific formation of an enzyme-bound (3R)-citryl-adenylate, which reacts with L-serine to form a likely achromobactin precursor. AcsD is a novel acyl adenylate-forming enzyme with a new fold and chemical catalysis strategy.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

An Efficient Method for the In Vitro Production of Azol(in)e-Based Cyclic Peptides

Wael E. Houssen; Andrew F. Bent; Andrew R. McEwan; Nathalie Pieiller; Jioji N. Tabudravu; Jesko Koehnke; Greg Mann; Rosemary I. Adaba; Louise Thomas; Usama W. Hawas; Huanting Liu; Ulrich Schwarz-Linek; Margaret C. M. Smith; James H. Naismith; Marcel Jaspars

Heterocycle-containing cyclic peptides are promising scaffolds for the pharmaceutical industry but their chemical synthesis is very challenging. A new universal method has been devised to prepare these compounds by using a set of engineered marine-derived enzymes and substrates obtained from a family of ribosomally produced and post-translationally modified peptides called the cyanobactins. The substrate precursor peptide is engineered to have a non-native protease cleavage site that can be rapidly cleaved. The other enzymes used are heterocyclases that convert Cys or Cys/Ser/Thr into their corresponding azolines. A macrocycle is formed using a macrocyclase enzyme, followed by oxidation of the azolines to azoles with a specific oxidase. The work is exemplified by the production of 17 macrocycles containing 6–9 residues representing 11 out of the 20 canonical amino acids.

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Muse Oke

University of St Andrews

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Shirley Graham

University of St Andrews

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Mark Dorward

University of St Andrews

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