James R. Ault
University of Leeds
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Featured researches published by James R. Ault.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
David R. Taylor; Edward T. Parkin; Sarah L. Cocklin; James R. Ault; Alison E. Ashcroft; Anthony J. Turner; Nigel M. Hooper
The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is essential for the pathogenesis and transmission of prion diseases. PrPC is bound to the plasma membrane via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor, although a secreted, soluble form has also been identified. Previously we reported that PrPC is subject to ectodomain shedding from the membrane by zinc metalloproteinases with a similar inhibition profile to those involved in shedding the amyloid precursor protein. Here we have used gain-of-function (overexpression) and loss-of-function (small interfering RNA knockdown) experiments in cells to identify the ADAMs (a disintegrin and metalloproteinases) involved in the ectodomain shedding of PrPC. These experiments revealed that ADAM9 and ADAM10, but not ADAM17, are involved in the shedding of PrPC and that ADAM9 exerts its effect on PrPC shedding via ADAM10. Using dominant negative, catalytically inactive mutants, we show that the catalytic activity of ADAM9 is required for its effect on ADAM10. Mass spectrometric analysis revealed that ADAM10, but not ADAM9, cleaved PrP between Gly228 and Arg229, three residues away from the site of glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor attachment. The shedding of another membrane protein, the amyloid precursor protein β-secretase BACE1, by ADAM9 is also mediated via ADAM10. Furthermore, we show that pharmacological inhibition of PrPC shedding or activation of both PrPC and PrPSc shedding by ADAM10 overexpression in scrapie-infected neuroblastoma N2a cells does not alter the formation of proteinase K-resistant PrPSc. Collectively, these data indicate that although PrPC can be shed through the action of ADAM family members, modulation of PrPC or PrPSc ectodomain shedding does not regulate prion conversion.
ChemBioChem | 2013
Nicole Timms; Claire L. Windle; Anna Polyakova; James R. Ault; Chi H. Trinh; Arwen R. Pearson; Adam Nelson; Alan Berry
Chemical modification has been used to introduce the unnatural amino acid γ‐thialysine in place of the catalytically important Lys165 in the enzyme N‐acetylneuraminic acid lyase (NAL). The Staphylococcus aureus nanA gene, encoding NAL, was cloned and expressed in E. coli. The protein, purified in high yield, has all the properties expected of a class I NAL. The S. aureus NAL which contains no natural cysteine residues was subjected to site‐directed mutagenesis to introduce a cysteine in place of Lys165 in the enzyme active site. Subsequently chemical mutagenesis completely converted the cysteine into γ‐thialysine through dehydroalanine (Dha) as demonstrated by ESI‐MS. Initial kinetic characterisation showed that the protein containing γ‐thialysine regained 17 % of the wild‐type activity. To understand the reason for this lower activity, we solved X‐ray crystal structures of the wild‐type S. aureus NAL, both in the absence of, and in complex with, pyruvate. We also report the structures of the K165C variant, and the K165‐γ‐thialysine enzyme in the presence, or absence, of pyruvate. These structures reveal that γ‐thialysine in NAL is an excellent structural mimic of lysine. Measurement of the pH‐activity profile of the thialysine modified enzyme revealed that its pH optimum is shifted from 7.4 to 6.8. At its optimum pH, the thialysine‐containing enzyme showed almost 30 % of the activity of the wild‐type enzyme at its pH optimum. The lowered activity and altered pH profile of the unnatural amino acid‐containing enzyme can be rationalised by imbalances of the ionisation states of residues within the active site when the pKa of the residue at position 165 is perturbed by replacement with γ‐thialysine. The results reveal the utility of chemical mutagenesis for the modification of enzyme active sites and the exquisite sensitivity of catalysis to the local structural and electrostatic environment in NAL.
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2013
Andrew J. Wilson; James R. Ault; Maria H. Filby; Hazel I. A. Philips; Alison E. Ashcroft; Nicholas C. Fletcher
Highly functionalised ruthenium(II) tris-bipyridine receptor 1 which acts as a selective sensor for equine cytochrome c (cyt c) is shown to destabilise the native protein conformation by around 25 °C. Receptors 2 and 3 do not exert this effect confirming the behaviour is a specific effect of molecular recognition between 1 and cyt c, whilst the absence of a destabilising effect on 60% acetylated cyt c demonstrates the behaviour of 1 to be protein specific. Molecular recognition also modifies the conformational properties of the target protein at room temperature as evidenced by ion-mobility spectrometry (IMS) and accelerated trypsin proteolysis.
Methods | 2015
Antonio N. Calabrese; James R. Ault; Sheena E. Radford; Alison E. Ashcroft
Highlights • Fast photochemical oxidation of proteins discriminates between protein conformers.• Global increases in the extent of oxidation correlate with protein unfolding.• Localisation of oxidation to the peptide/amino acid level provides further insights.
Proteomics | 2015
Helen S. Beeston; James R. Ault; Steven Derek Pringle; Jeffery Mark Brown; Alison E. Ashcroft
The study of protein conformation by solution‐phase hydrogen/deuterium exchange (HDX) coupled to MS is well documented. This involves monitoring the exchange of backbone amide protons with deuterium and provides details concerning the proteins tertiary structure. However, undesired back‐exchange during post‐HDX analyses can be difficult to control. Here, gas‐phase HDX‐MS, during which labile hydrogens on amino acid side chains are exchanged in sub‐millisecond time scales, has been employed to probe changes within protein structures. Addition of the solvent 2,2,2‐trifluoroethanol to a protein in solution can affect the structure of the protein, resulting in an increase in secondary and/or tertiary structure which is detected using circular dichroism. Using a Synapt G2‐S ESI‐mass spectrometer modified to allow deuterated ammonia into the transfer ion guide (situated between the ion mobility cell and the TOF analyser), gas‐phase HDX‐MS is shown to reflect minor structural changes experienced by the proteins β‐lactoglobulin and ubiquitin, as observed by the reduction in the level of deuterium incorporation. Additionally, the use of gas‐phase HDX‐MS to distinguish between co‐populated proteins conformers within a solution is demonstrated with the disordered protein calmodulin; the gas‐phase HDX‐MS results correspond directly with complementary data obtained by use of ion mobility spectrometry‐MS.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012
Hazel I. A. Phillips; Aleksey V. Chernikov; Nicholas C. Fletcher; Alison E. Ashcroft; James R. Ault; Maria H. Filby; Andrew J. Wilson
The composition of a dynamic mixture of similar 2,2′-bipyridine complexes of iron(II) bearing either an amide (5-benzylamido-2,2′-bipyridine and 5-(2-methoxyethane)amido-2,2′-bipyridine) or an ester (2,2′-bipyridine-5-carboxylic acid benzylester and 2,2′-bipyridine-5-carboxylic acid 2-methoxyethane ester) side chain have been evaluated by electrospray mass spectroscopy in acetonitrile. The time taken for the complexes to come to equilibrium appears to be dependent on the counteranion, with chloride causing a rapid redistribution of two preformed heteroleptic complexes (of the order of 1 hour), whereas the time it takes in the presence of tetrafluoroborate salts is in excess of 24 h. Similarly the final distribution of products is dependent on the anion present, with the presence of chloride, and to a lesser extent bromide, preferring three amide-functionalized ligands, and a slight preference for an appended benzyl over a methoxyethyl group. Furthermore, for the first time, this study shows that the distribution of a dynamic library of metal complexes monitored by ESI-MS can adapt following the introduction of a different anion, in this case tetrabutylammonium chloride to give the most favoured heteroleptic complex despite the increasing ionic strength of the solution.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Claire L. Windle; Katie J. Simmons; James R. Ault; Chi H. Trinh; Adam Nelson; Arwen R. Pearson; Alan Berry
Significance The remarkable power of enzymes as catalysts is derived from the precise spatial positioning of amino acids as a result of a polypeptide folding into its native, active fold. Protein engineers have a wide arsenal of tools available to alter the properties of enzymes but, until recently, have been limited to replacement of amino acids with one of the other naturally occurring proteogenic amino acids. Here we describe a protein engineering approach to introduce a noncanonical amino acid that results in altered substrate specificity of an aldolase to produce a novel activity that cannot be achieved by simple substitution with any of the canonical amino acids. Natural enzymes are constructed from the 20 proteogenic amino acids, which may then require posttranslational modification or the recruitment of coenzymes or metal ions to achieve catalytic function. Here, we demonstrate that expansion of the alphabet of amino acids can also enable the properties of enzymes to be extended. A chemical mutagenesis strategy allowed a wide range of noncanonical amino acids to be systematically incorporated throughout an active site to alter enzymic substrate specificity. Specifically, 13 different noncanonical side chains were incorporated at 12 different positions within the active site of N-acetylneuraminic acid lyase (NAL), and the resulting chemically modified enzymes were screened for activity with a range of aldehyde substrates. A modified enzyme containing a 2,3-dihydroxypropyl cysteine at position 190 was identified that had significantly increased activity for the aldol reaction of erythrose with pyruvate compared with the wild-type enzyme. Kinetic investigation of a saturation library of the canonical amino acids at the same position showed that this increased activity was not achievable with any of the 20 proteogenic amino acids. Structural and modeling studies revealed that the unique shape and functionality of the noncanonical side chain enabled the active site to be remodeled to enable more efficient stabilization of the transition state of the reaction. The ability to exploit an expanded amino acid alphabet can thus heighten the ambitions of protein engineers wishing to develop enzymes with new catalytic properties.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2017
Thomas G. Watkinson; Antonio N. Calabrese; James R. Ault; Sheena E. Radford; Alison E. Ashcroft
AbstractAmphipols are a class of novel surfactants that are capable of stabilizing the native state of membrane proteins. They have been shown to be highly effective, in some cases more so than detergent micelles, at maintaining the structural integrity of membrane proteins in solution, and have shown promise as vehicles for delivering native membrane proteins into the gas phase for structural interrogation. Here, we use fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP), which irreversibly labels the side chains of solvent-accessible residues with hydroxyl radicals generated by laser photolysis of hydrogen peroxide, to compare the solvent accessibility of the outer membrane protein OmpT when solubilized with the amphipol A8-35 or with n-dodecyl-β-maltoside (DDM) detergent micelles. Using quantitative mass spectrometry analyses, we show that fast photochemical oxidation reveals differences in the extent of solvent accessibility of residues between the A8-35 and DDM solubilized states, providing a rationale for the increased stability of membrane proteins solubilized with amphipol compared with detergent micelles, as a result of additional intermolecular contacts. Graphical Abstractᅟ
PLOS ONE | 2014
Sebastian Eves-van den Akker; Catherine J. Lilley; James R. Ault; Alison E. Ashcroft; John T. Jones; Peter E. Urwin
Plant parasitic nematodes comprise several groups; the most economically damaging of these are the sedentary endoparasites. Sedentary endoparasitic nematodes are obligate biotrophs and modify host root tissue, using a suite of effector proteins, to create a feeding site that is their sole source of nutrition. They feed by withdrawing host cell assimilate from the feeding site though a structure known as the feeding tube. The function, composition and molecular characteristics of feeding tubes are poorly characterised. It is hypothesised that the feeding tube facilitates uptake of host cell assimilate by acting as a molecular sieve. Several studies, using molecular mass as the sole indicator of protein size, have given contradictory results about the exclusion limits of the cyst nematode feeding tube. In this study we propose a method to predict protein size, based on protein database coordinates in silico. We tested the validity of these predictions using travelling wave ion mobility spectrometry – mass spectrometry, where predictions and measured values were within approximately 6%. We used the predictions, coupled with mass spectrometry, analytical ultracentrifugation and protein electrophoresis, to resolve previous conflicts and define the exclusion characteristics of the cyst nematode feeding tube. Heterogeneity was tested in the liquid, solid and gas phase to provide a comprehensive evaluation of three proteins of particular interest to feeding tube size exclusion, GFP, mRFP and Dual PI. The data and procedures described here could be applied to the design of plant expressed defence compounds intended for uptake into cyst nematodes. We also highlight the need to assess protein heterogeneity when creating novel fusion proteins.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2015
Alexander Borodavka; James R. Ault; Peter G. Stockley; Roman Tuma
Reoviruses are important human, animal and plant pathogens having 10–12 segments of double-stranded genomic RNA. The mechanisms controlling the assortment and packaging of genomic segments in these viruses, remain poorly understood. RNA–protein and RNA–RNA interactions between viral genomic segment precursors have been implicated in the process. While non-structural viral RNA-binding proteins, such as avian reovirus σNS, are essential for virus replication, the mechanism by which they assist packaging is unclear. Here we demonstrate that σNS assembles into stable elongated hexamers in vitro, which bind single-stranded nucleic acids with high affinity, but little sequence specificity. Using ensemble and single molecule fluorescence spectroscopy, we show that σNS also binds to a partially double-stranded RNA, resulting in gradual helix unwinding. The hexamer can bind multiple RNA molecules and exhibits strand-annealing activity, thus mediating conversion of metastable, intramolecular stem-loops into more stable heteroduplexes. We demonstrate that the ARV σNS acts as an RNA chaperone facilitating specific RNA–RNA interactions between genomic precursors during segment assortment and packaging.