Janet E. Lovett
University of St Andrews
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Featured researches published by Janet E. Lovett.
Nature | 2009
Muriel C. Schneider; Beverly E. Prosser; Joseph J. E. Caesar; Elisabeth Kugelberg; Su Li; Qian Zhang; Sadik Quoraishi; Janet E. Lovett; Janet E. Deane; Robert B. Sim; Pietro Roversi; Steven Johnson; Christoph M. Tang; Susan M. Lea
The complement system is an essential component of the innate and acquired immune system, and consists of a series of proteolytic cascades that are initiated by the presence of microorganisms. In health, activation of complement is precisely controlled through membrane-bound and soluble plasma-regulatory proteins including complement factor H (fH; ref. 2), a 155 kDa protein composed of 20 domains (termed complement control protein repeats). Many pathogens have evolved the ability to avoid immune-killing by recruiting host complement regulators and several pathogens have adapted to avoid complement-mediated killing by sequestering fH to their surface. Here we present the structure of a complement regulator in complex with its pathogen surface-protein ligand. This reveals how the important human pathogen Neisseria meningitidis subverts immune responses by mimicking the host, using protein instead of charged-carbohydrate chemistry to recruit the host complement regulator, fH. The structure also indicates the molecular basis of the host-specificity of the interaction between fH and the meningococcus, and informs attempts to develop novel therapeutics and vaccines.
Nano Letters | 2012
Marcella Orwick-Rydmark; Janet E. Lovett; Andrea Graziadei; Ljubica Lindholm; Matthew R. Hicks; Anthony Watts
SMA-Lipodisq nanoparticles, with one bacteriorhodopsin (bR) per 12 nm particle on average (protein/lipid molar ratio, 1:172), were prepared without the use of detergents. Using pulsed and continuous wave nitroxide spin label electron paramagnetic resonance, the structural and dynamic integrity of bR was retained when compared with data for bR obtained in the native membrane and in detergents and then with crystal data. This indicates the potential of Lipodisq nanoparticles as a useful membrane mimetic.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009
Janet E. Lovett; Alice M. Bowen; Christiane R. Timmel; Michael W. Jones; Jonathan R. Dilworth; D. Caprotti; Stephen G. Bell; Luet-Lok Wong; Jeffrey Harmer
Double electron-electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy can determine, from measurement of the dipolar interaction, the distance and orientation between two paramagnetic centres in systems lacking long-range order such as powders or frozen solution samples. In spin systems with considerable anisotropy, the microwave pulses excite only a fraction of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum and the resulting orientation selection needs to be explicitly taken into account if a meaningful distance and orientation is to be determined. Here, a general method is presented to analyze the dipolar interaction between two paramagnetic spin centres from a series of DEER traces recorded so that different orientations of the spin-spin vector are sampled. Delocalised spin density distributions and spin projection factors (as for example in iron-sulfur clusters), are explicitly included. Application of the analysis to a spin-labelled flavoprotein reductase/reduced iron-sulfur ferredoxin protein complex and a bi-radical with two Cu(ii) ions provides distance and orientation information between the radical centres. In the protein complex this enables the protein-protein binding geometry to be defined. Experimentally, orientationally selective DEER measurements are possible on paramagnetic systems where the resonator bandwidth allows the frequencies of pump and detection pulses to be separated sufficiently to excite enough orientations to define adequately the spin-spin vector.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Janet E. Lovett; Markus M. Hoffmann; Arjen Cnossen; Alexander T. J. Shutter; Hannah J. Hogben; John E. Warren; Sofia I. Pascu; Christopher W. M. Kay; Christiane R. Timmel; Harry L. Anderson
A series of butadiyne-linked zinc porphyrin oligomers, with one, two, three, and four porphyrin units and lengths of up to 75 A, have been spin-labeled at both ends with stable nitroxide TEMPO radicals. The pulsed EPR technique of double electron electron resonance (DEER) was used to probe the distribution of intramolecular end-to-end distances, under a range of conditions. DEER measurements were carried out at 50 K in two types of dilute solution glasses: deutero-toluene (with 10% deutero-pyridine) and deutero-o-terphenyl (with 5% 4-benzyl pyridine). The complexes of the porphyrin oligomers with monodentate ligands (pyridine or 4-benzyl pyridine) principally adopt linear conformations. Nonlinear conformations are less populated in the lower glass-transition temperature solvent. When the oligomers bind star-shaped multidentate ligands, they are forced to bend into nonlinear geometries, and the experimental end-to-end distances for these complexes match those from molecular mechanics calculations. Our results show that porphyrin-based molecular wires are shape-persistent, and yet that their shapes can deformed by binding to multivalent ligands. Self-assembled ladder-shaped 2:2 complexes were also investigated to illustrate the scope of DEER measurements for providing structural information on synthetic noncovalent nanostructures.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Elizabeth R. Barry; Janet E. Lovett; Alessandro Costa; Susan M. Lea; Stephen D. Bell
The minichromosome maintenance (MCM) helicase is the presumptive replicative helicase in archaea and eukaryotes. The archaeal homomultimeric MCM has a two-tier structure. One tier contains the AAA+ motor domains of the proteins, and these are the minimal functional helicase domains. The second tier is formed by the N-terminal domains. These domains are not essential for MCM helicase activity but act to enhance the processivity of the helicase. We reveal that a conserved loop facilitates communication between processivity and motor tiers. Interestingly, this allostery seems to be mediated by interactions between, rather than within, individual protomers in the MCM ring.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012
Eugenio de la Mora; Janet E. Lovett; Christopher F. Blanford; Elspeth F. Garman; Brenda Valderrama; Enrique Rudiño-Piñera
X-ray radiation induces two main effects at metal centres contained in protein crystals: radiation-induced reduction and radiolysis and a resulting decrease in metal occupancy. In blue multicopper oxidases (BMCOs), the geometry of the active centres and the metal-to-ligand distances change depending on the oxidation states of the Cu atoms, suggesting that these alterations are catalytically relevant to the binding, activation and reduction of O(2). In this work, the X-ray-determined three-dimensional structure of laccase from the basidiomycete Coriolopsis gallica (Cg L), a high catalytic potential BMCO, is described. By combining spectroscopic techniques (UV-Vis, EPR and XAS) and X-ray crystallography, structural changes at and around the active copper centres were related to pH and absorbed X-ray dose (energy deposited per unit mass). Depletion of two of the four active Cu atoms as well as low occupancies of the remaining Cu atoms, together with different conformations of the metal centres, were observed at both acidic pH and high absorbed dose, correlating with more reduced states of the active coppers. These observations provide additional evidence to support the role of flexibility of copper sites during O(2) reduction. This study supports previous observations indicating that interpretations regarding redox state and metal coordination need to take radiation effects explicitly into account.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
James Lillington; Janet E. Lovett; Steven Johnson; Pietro Roversi; Christiane R. Timmel; Susan M. Lea
Shigella flexneri Spa15 is a chaperone of the type 3 secretion system, which binds a number of effectors to ensure their stabilization prior to secretion. One of these effectors is IpgB1, a mimic of the human Ras-like Rho guanosine triphosphatase RhoG. In this study, Spa15 alone and in complex with IpgB1 has been studied by double electron electron resonance, an experiment that gives distance information showing the spacial separation of attached spin labels. This distance is explained by determining the crystal structure of the spin-labeled Spa15 where labels are seen to be buried in hydrophobic pockets. The double electron electron resonance experiment on the Spa15 complex with IpgB1 shows that IpgB1 does not bind Spa15 in the same way as is seen in the homologous Salmonella sp. chaperone:effector complex InvB:SipA.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016
Claire L. Motion; Janet E. Lovett; Stacey Bell; Scott L. Cassidy; Paul A. S. Cruickshank; David R. Bolton; Robert I. Hunter; Hassane El Mkami; Sabine Van Doorslaer; Graham Smith
This work demonstrates the feasibility of making sensitive nanometer distance measurements between Fe(III) heme centers and nitroxide spin labels in proteins using the double electron–electron resonance (DEER) pulsed EPR technique at 94 GHz. Techniques to measure accurately long distances in many classes of heme proteins using DEER are currently strongly limited by sensitivity. In this paper we demonstrate sensitivity gains of more than 30 times compared with previous lower frequency (X-band) DEER measurements on both human neuroglobin and sperm whale myoglobin. This is achieved by taking advantage of recent instrumental advances, employing wideband excitation techniques based on composite pulses and exploiting more favorable relaxation properties of low-spin Fe(III) in high magnetic fields. This gain in sensitivity potentially allows the DEER technique to be routinely used as a sensitive probe of structure and conformation in the large number of heme and many other metalloproteins.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Alice M. Bowen; Michael W. Jones; Janet E. Lovett; Thembanikosi G. Gaule; Michael J. McPherson; Jonathan R. Dilworth; Christiane R. Timmel; Jeffrey Harmer
Orientation-selective DEER (Double Electron-Electron Resonance) measurements were conducted on a series of rigid and flexible molecules containing Cu(ii) ions. A system with two rigidly held Cu(ii) ions was afforded by the protein homo-dimer of copper amine oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis. This system provided experimental DEER data between two Cu(ii) ions with a well-defined distance and relative orientation to assess the accuracy of the methodology. Evaluation of orientation-selective DEER (os DEER) on systems with limited flexibility was probed using a series of porphyrin-based Cu(ii)-nitroxide and Cu(ii)-Cu(ii) model systems of well-defined lengths synthesized for this project. Density functional theory was employed to generate molecular models of the conformers for each porphyrin-based Cu(ii) dimer studied. Excellent agreement was found between DEER traces simulated using these computed conformers and the experimental data. The performance of different parameterised structural models in simulating the experimental DEER data was also investigated. The results of this analysis demonstrate the degree to which the DEER data define the relative orientation of the two Cu(ii) ions and highlight the need to choose a parameterised model that captures the essential features of the flexibility (rotational freedom) of the system being studied.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2017
Claire L. Motion; Scott L. Cassidy; Paul A. S. Cruickshank; Robert I. Hunter; David R. Bolton; Hassane El Mkami; Sabine Van Doorslaer; Janet E. Lovett; Graham Smith
The sensitivity of pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements on broad-line paramagnetic centers is often limited by the available excitation bandwidth. One way to increase excitation bandwidth is through the use of chirp or composite pulses. However, performance can be limited by cavity or detection bandwidth, which in commercial systems is typically 100-200MHz. Here we demonstrate in a 94GHz spectrometer, with >800MHz system bandwidth, an increase in signal and modulation depth in a 4-pulse DEER experiment through use of composite rather than rectangular π pulses. We show that this leads to an increase in sensitivity by a factor of 3, in line with theoretical predictions, although gains are more limited in nitroxide-nitroxide DEER measurements.