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Dive into the research topics where James C. A. Bardwell is active.

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Featured researches published by James C. A. Bardwell.


Cell | 1991

Identification of a protein required for disulfide bond formation in vivo

James C. A. Bardwell; Karen McGovern; Jon Beckwith

We describe a mutation (dsbA) that renders Escherichia coli severely defective in disulfide bond formation. In dsbA mutant cells, pulse-labeled beta-lactamase, alkaline phosphatase, and OmpA are secreted but largely lack disulfide bonds. These disulfideless proteins may represent in vivo folding intermediates, since they are protease sensitive and chase slowly into stable oxidized forms. The dsbA gene codes for a 21,000 Mr periplasmic protein containing the sequence cys-pro-his-cys, which resembles the active sites of certain disulfide oxidoreductases. The purified DsbA protein is capable of reducing the disulfide bonds of insulin, an activity that it shares with these disulfide oxidoreductases. Our results suggest that disulfide bond formation is facilitated by DsbA in vivo.


Cell | 1999

Chaperone Activity with a Redox Switch

Ursula Jakob; Wilson B. Muse; Markus Eser; James C. A. Bardwell

Hsp33, a member of a newly discovered heat shock protein family, was found to be a very potent molecular chaperone. Hsp33 is distinguished from all other known molecular chaperones by its mode of functional regulation. Its activity is redox regulated. Hsp33 is a cytoplasmically localized protein with highly reactive cysteines that respond quickly to changes in the redox environment. Oxidizing conditions like H2O2 cause disulfide bonds to form in Hsp33, a process that leads to the activation of its chaperone function. In vitro and in vivo experiments suggest that Hsp33 protects cells from oxidants, leading us to conclude that we have found a protein family that plays an important role in the bacterial defense system toward oxidative stress.


Cell | 1999

Oxidative Protein Folding Is Driven by the Electron Transport System

Martin W. Bader; Wilson B. Muse; David P. Ballou; Christian Gassner; James C. A. Bardwell

Disulfide bond formation is catalyzed in vivo by DsbA and DsbB. Here we reconstitute this oxidative folding system using purified components. We have found the sources of oxidative power for protein folding and show how disulfide bond formation is linked to cellular metabolism. We find that disulfide bond formation and the electron transport chain are directly coupled. DsbB uses quinones as electron acceptors, allowing various choices for electron transport to support disulfide bond formation. Electrons flow via cytochrome bo oxidase to oxygen under aerobic conditions or via cytochrome bd oxidase under partially anaerobic conditions. Under truly anaerobic conditions, menaquinone shuttles electrons to alternate final electron acceptors such as fumarate. This flexibility reflects the vital nature of the disulfide catalytic system.


Cell | 1995

Why is DsbA such an oxidizing disulfide catalyst

Ulla Grauschopf; Jakob R. Winther; Philipp Korber; Thomas Zander; Petra Dallinger; James C. A. Bardwell

DsbA, a member of the thioredoxin family of disulfide oxidoreductases, acts in catalyzing disulfide bond formation by donating its disulfide to newly translocated proteins. We have found that the two central residues within the active site Cys-30-Pro-31-His-32-Cys-33 motif are critical in determining the exceptional oxidizing power of DsbA. Mutations that change these two residues can alter the equilibrium oxidation potential of DsbA by more than 1000-fold. A quantitative explanation for the very high redox potential of DsbA was found by measuring the pKa of a single residue, Cys-30. The pKa of Cys-30 varied dramatically from mutant to mutant and could accurately predict the oxidizing power of each DsbA mutant protein.


Molecular Cell | 2000

RNA Methylation under Heat Shock Control

Hans Bügl; Eric B. Fauman; Bart L. Staker; Fuzhong Zheng; Sidney R. Kushner; Mark A. Saper; James C. A. Bardwell; Ursula Jakob

Structural, biochemical, and genetic techniques were applied to investigate the function of FtsJ, a recently identified heat shock protein. FtsJ is well conserved, from bacteria to humans. The 1.5 A crystal structure of FtsJ in complex with its cofactor S-adenosylmethionine revealed that FtsJ has a methyltransferase fold. The molecular surface of FtsJ exposes a putative nucleic acid binding groove composed of highly conserved, positively charged residues. Substrate analysis showed that FtsJ methylates 23S rRNA within 50S ribosomal subunits in vitro and in vivo. Null mutations in ftsJ show a dramatically altered ribosome profile, a severe growth disadvantage, and a temperature-sensitive phenotype. Our results reveal an unexpected link between the heat shock response and RNA metabolism.


Molecular Microbiology | 1994

Building bridges: disulphide bond formation in the cell.

James C. A. Bardwell

Disulphides are often vital for the folding and stability of proteins. Dedicated enzymatic systems have been discovered that catalyse the formation of disulphides in the periplasm of prokaryotes. These discoveries provide compelling evidence for the actual catalysis of protein folding in vivo. Disulphide bond formation in Escherichia coli is catalysed by at least three ‘Dsb’ proteins; DsbA, ‐B and ‐C. The DsbA protein has an extremely reactive, oxidizing disulphide which it simply donates directly to other proteins. DsbB is required for the reoxidation of DsbA. DsbC is active in disulphide rearrangements and appears to work synergistically with DsbA. The relative rarity of disulphides in cytoplasmic proteins appears to be dependent upon a disulphide‐destruction machine. One pivotal cog in this machine is thioredoxin reductase.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Oxidative protein folding in bacteria

Jean-François Collet; James C. A. Bardwell

Ten years ago it was thought that disulphide bond formation in prokaryotes occurred spontaneously. Now two pathways involved in disulphide bond formation have been well characterized, the oxidative pathway, which is responsible for the formation of disulphides, and the isomerization pathway, which shuffles incorrectly formed disulphides. Disulphide bonds are donated directly to unfolded polypeptides by the DsbA protein; DsbA is reoxidized by DsbB. DsbB generates disulphides de novo from oxidized quinones. These quinones are reoxidized by the electron transport chain, showing that disulphide bond formation is actually driven by electron transport. Disulphide isomerization requires that incorrect disulphides be attacked using a reduced catalyst, followed by the redonation of the disulphide, allowing alternative disulphide pairing. Two isomerases exist in Escherichia coli, DsbC and DsbG. The membrane protein DsbD maintains these disulphide isomerases in their reduced and thereby active form. DsbD is kept reduced by cytosolic thioredoxin in an NADPH‐dependent reaction.


Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology | 2008

Disulfide-linked protein folding pathways

Bharath S. Mamathambika; James C. A. Bardwell

Determining the mechanism by which proteins attain their native structure is an important but difficult problem in basic biology. The study of protein folding is difficult because it involves the identification and characterization of folding intermediates that are only very transiently present. Disulfide bond formation is thermodynamically linked to protein folding. The availability of thiol trapping reagents and the relatively slow kinetics of disulfide bond formation have facilitated the isolation, purification, and characterization of disulfide-linked folding intermediates. As a result, the folding pathways of several disulfide-rich proteins are among the best known of any protein. This review discusses disulfide bond formation and its relationship to protein folding in vitro and in vivo.


The EMBO Journal | 1989

Autoregulation of RNase III operon by mRNA processing.

James C. A. Bardwell; P. Regnier; Su-Min Chen; Y. Nakamura; M. Grunberg-Manago; D. Court

RNase III has been implicated in the control of gene expression by the processing of mRNA. We have found that the rnc operon is autoregulated; rnc‐ mutant strains oversynthesize the operons mRNA and protein products. A site in the 5′‐noncoding region of the operons message is cleaved by RNase III. This site‐specific cleavage appears to be the initial step in the functional inactivation of the message, since the half‐life of the cut message is dramatically shorter than that of the uncut message.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

In vivo substrate specificity of periplasmic disulfide oxidoreductases

Annie Hiniker; James C. A. Bardwell

In Escherichia coli, a family of periplasmic disulfide oxidoreductases catalyzes correct disulfide bond formation in periplasmic and secreted proteins. Despite the importance of native disulfide bonds in the folding and function of many proteins, a systematic investigation of the in vivo substrates of E. coli periplasmic disulfide oxidoreductases, including the well characterized oxidase DsbA, has not yet been performed. We combined a modified osmotic shock periplasmic extract and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis to identify substrates of the periplasmic oxidoreductases DsbA, DsbC, and DsbG. We found 10 cysteine-containing periplasmic proteins that are substrates of the disulfide oxidase DsbA, including PhoA and FlgI, previously established DsbA substrates. This technique did not detect any in vivo substrates of DsbG, but did identify two substrates of DsbC, RNase I and MepA. We confirmed that RNase I is a substrate of DsbC both in vivo and in vitro. This is the first time that DsbC has been shown to affect the in vivo function of a native E. coli protein, and the results strongly suggest that DsbC acts as a disulfide isomerase in vivo. We also demonstrate that DsbC, but not DsbG, is critical for the in vivo activity of RNase I, indicating that DsbC and DsbG do not function identically in vivo. The absence of substrates for DsbG suggests either that the in vivo substrate specificity of DsbG is more limited than that of DsbC or that DsbG is not active under the growth conditions tested. Our work represents one of the first times the in vivo substrate specificity of a folding catalyst system has been systematically investigated. Because our methodology is based on the simple assumption that the absence of a folding catalyst should cause its substrates to be present at decreased steady-state levels, this technique should be useful in analyzing the substrate specificity of any folding catalyst or chaperone for which mutations are available.

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Jean-François Collet

Université catholique de Louvain

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Linda Foit

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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