Jason D. Galpin
University of Iowa
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Featured researches published by Jason D. Galpin.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2011
Stephan A. Pless; Jason D. Galpin; Ana P. Niciforovic; Christopher A. Ahern
Voltage-sensor domains couple membrane potential to conformational changes in voltage-gated ion channels and phosphatases. Highly co-evolved acidic and aromatic side-chains assist the transfer of cationic side-chains across the transmembrane electric field during voltage-sensing. We investigated the functional contribution of negative electrostatic potentials from these residues to channel gating and voltage-sensing with unnatural amino acid mutagenesis, electrophysiology, voltage-clamp fluorometry and ab initio calculations. The data show that neutralization of two conserved acidic side-chains in transmembrane segments S2 and S3, Glu293 and Asp316 in Shaker potassium channels, have little functional effect on conductance-voltage relationships, although Glu293 appears to catalyze S4 movement. Our results suggest that neither Glu293 nor Asp316 engages in electrostatic state-dependent charge-charge interactions with S4, likely because they occupy, and possibly help create, a water-filled vestibule.
Nature Communications | 2011
Stephan A. Pless; Jason D. Galpin; Adam Frankel; Christopher A. Ahern
Cardiac sodium channels are established therapeutic targets for the management of inherited and acquired arrhythmias by class I anti-arrhythmic drugs (AADs). These drugs share a common target receptor bearing two highly conserved aromatic side chains, and are subdivided by the Vaughan-Williams classification system into classes Ia-c based on their distinct effects on the electrocardiogram. How can these drugs elicit distinct effects on the cardiac action potential by binding to a common receptor? Here we use fluorinated phenylalanine derivatives to test whether the electronegative surface potential of aromatic side chains contributes to inhibition by six class I AADs. Surprisingly, we find that class Ib AADs bind via a strong electrostatic cation-pi interaction, whereas class Ia and Ic AADs rely significantly less on this interaction. Our data shed new light on drug-target interactions underlying the inhibition of cardiac sodium channels by clinically relevant drugs and provide information for the directed design of AADs.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Barak Rotblat; Amber L. Southwell; Dagmar E. Ehrnhoefer; Niels H. Skotte; Martina Metzler; Sonia Franciosi; Gabriel Leprivier; Syam Prakash Somasekharan; Adi Barokas; Yu Deng; Tiffany Tang; Joan Mathers; Naniye Malli Cetinbas; Mads Daugaard; Brian Kwok; Liheng Li; Christopher J. Carnie; Dieter Fink; Roberto Nitsch; Jason D. Galpin; Christopher A. Ahern; Gerry Melino; Josef M. Penninger; Michael R. Hayden; Poul H. Sorensen
Significance Oxidative stress is an important contributor to aging-associated diseases including cancer and neurodegeneration, and antioxidant stress responses are critical to limit manifestations of these diseases. We report that the tumor suppressor Homologous to the E6-AP Carboxyl Terminus domain and Ankyrin repeat containing E3 ubiquitin–protein ligase 1 (HACE1) promotes activity of the transcription factor, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2), a master regulator of the antioxidative stress response. In Huntington disease patients, HACE1 is lost in the brain region most affected by the disease, namely the striatum, and restoring HACE1 functions in striatal cells expressing mutant Huntingtin protein provides protection against oxidative stress. Therefore, the tumor suppressor HACE1 is a new regulator of NRF2 and an emerging player in neurodegeneration. Oxidative stress plays a key role in late onset diseases including cancer and neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington disease. Therefore, uncovering regulators of the antioxidant stress responses is important for understanding the course of these diseases. Indeed, the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2), a master regulator of the cellular antioxidative stress response, is deregulated in both cancer and neurodegeneration. Similar to NRF2, the tumor suppressor Homologous to the E6-AP Carboxyl Terminus (HECT) domain and Ankyrin repeat containing E3 ubiquitin–protein ligase 1 (HACE1) plays a protective role against stress-induced tumorigenesis in mice, but its roles in the antioxidative stress response or its involvement in neurodegeneration have not been investigated. To this end we examined Hace1 WT and KO mice and found that Hace1 KO animals exhibited increased oxidative stress in brain and that the antioxidative stress response was impaired. Moreover, HACE1 was found to be essential for optimal NRF2 activation in cells challenged with oxidative stress, as HACE1 depletion resulted in reduced NRF2 activity, stability, and protein synthesis, leading to lower tolerance against oxidative stress triggers. Strikingly, we found a reduction of HACE1 levels in the striatum of Huntington disease patients, implicating HACE1 in the pathology of Huntington disease. Moreover, ectopic expression of HACE1 in striatal neuronal progenitor cells provided protection against mutant Huntingtin-induced redox imbalance and hypersensitivity to oxidative stress, by augmenting NRF2 functions. These findings reveal that the tumor suppressor HACE1 plays a role in the NRF2 antioxidative stress response pathway and in neurodegeneration.
The Journal of General Physiology | 2012
Jérôme J. Lacroix; Stephan A. Pless; Luca Maragliano; Fabiana V. Campos; Jason D. Galpin; Christopher A. Ahern; Benoît Roux; Francisco Bezanilla
Voltage sensor domains (VSDs) regulate ion channels and enzymes by undergoing conformational changes depending on membrane electrical signals. The molecular mechanisms underlying the VSD transitions are not fully understood. Here, we show that some mutations of I241 in the S1 segment of the Shaker Kv channel positively shift the voltage dependence of the VSD movement and alter the functional coupling between VSD and pore domains. Among the I241 mutants, I241W immobilized the VSD movement during activation and deactivation, approximately halfway between the resting and active states, and drastically shifted the voltage activation of the ionic conductance. This phenotype, which is consistent with a stabilization of an intermediate VSD conformation by the I241W mutation, was diminished by the charge-conserving R2K mutation but not by the charge-neutralizing R2Q mutation. Interestingly, most of these effects were reproduced by the F244W mutation located one helical turn above I241. Electrophysiology recordings using nonnatural indole derivatives ruled out the involvement of cation-Π interactions for the effects of the Trp inserted at positions I241 and F244 on the channel’s conductance, but showed that the indole nitrogen was important for the I241W phenotype. Insight into the molecular mechanisms responsible for the stabilization of the intermediate state were investigated by creating in silico the mutations I241W, I241W/R2K, and F244W in intermediate conformations obtained from a computational VSD transition pathway determined using the string method. The experimental results and computational analysis suggest that the phenotype of I241W may originate in the formation of a hydrogen bond between the indole nitrogen atom and the backbone carbonyl of R2. This work provides new information on intermediate states in voltage-gated ion channels with an approach that produces minimum chemical perturbation.
Journal of Proteomics | 2012
Syam Prakash Somasekharan; Nikolay Stoynov; Barak Rotblat; Gabriel Leprivier; Jason D. Galpin; Christopher A. Ahern; Leonard J. Foster; Poul H. Sorensen
Messenger RNA-binding translational regulatory proteins determine in large part the spectrum of transcripts that are translated under specific cellular contexts. Y-box binding protein-1 (YB-1) is a conserved eukaryotic translational regulator that is implicated in cancer progression. To identify specific proteins that are translationally regulated by YB-1, we established a pulse-labelling approach combining Click chemistry and stable isotope labelling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC). The proteome of TC32 human Ewing sarcoma cells, which robustly express YB-1, was compared with or without YB-1 siRNA knockdown. Cells labelled with light or heavy isotopologs of Arg and Lys were then cotranslationally pulsed with the methionine derivative, azidohomoalanine (AHA). Cells were lysed and newly synthesized proteins were selectively derivatized via a Click (3+2 cycloaddition) reaction to add an alkyne biotin tag. They were then affinity purified and subjected to liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. This combined Click-SILAC approach enabled us to catalog and quantify newly synthesized proteins regulated by YB-1 after only 45 min of labelling. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that YB-1 regulated proteins are involved in diverse biological pathways. We anticipate that this Click-SILAC strategy will be useful for studying short-term protein synthesis in different cell culture systems and under diverse biological contexts.
The Journal of General Physiology | 2014
Stephan A. Pless; Fisal D. Elstone; Ana P. Niciforovic; Jason D. Galpin; Runying Yang; Harley T. Kurata; Christopher A. Ahern
Conserved acidic and aromatic residues in the four sodium channel voltage-sensor domains make domain-specific functional contributions.
eLife | 2013
Stephan A. Pless; Jason D. Galpin; Ana P. Niciforovic; Harley T. Kurata; Christopher A. Ahern
Voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels enable potassium efflux and membrane repolarization in excitable tissues. Many Kv channels undergo a progressive loss of ion conductance in the presence of a prolonged voltage stimulus, termed slow inactivation, but the atomic determinants that regulate the kinetics of this process remain obscure. Using a combination of synthetic amino acid analogs and concatenated channel subunits we establish two H-bonds near the extracellular surface of the channel that endow Kv channels with a mechanism to time the entry into slow inactivation: an intra-subunit H-bond between Asp447 and Trp434 and an inter-subunit H-bond connecting Tyr445 to Thr439. Breaking of either interaction triggers slow inactivation by means of a local disruption in the selectivity filter, while severing the Tyr445–Thr439 H-bond is likely to communicate this conformational change to the adjacent subunit(s). DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01289.001
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Stephan A. Pless; Ada W. Y. Leung; Jason D. Galpin; Christopher A. Ahern
Glycine receptors (GlyRs) are chloride channels that mediate fast inhibitory neurotransmission and are members of the pentameric ligand-gated ion channel (pLGIC) family. The interface between the ligand binding domain and the transmembrane domain of pLGICs has been proposed to be crucial for channel gating and is lined by a number of charged and aromatic side chains that are highly conserved among different pLGICs. However, little is known about specific interactions between these residues that are likely to be important for gating in α1 GlyRs. Here we use the introduction of cysteine pairs and the in vivo nonsense suppression method to incorporate unnatural amino acids to probe the electrostatic and hydrophobic contributions of five highly conserved side chains near the interface, Glu-53, Phe-145, Asp-148, Phe-187, and Arg-218. Our results suggest a salt bridge between Asp-148 in loop 7 and Arg-218 in the pre-M1 domain that is crucial for channel gating. We further propose that Phe-145 and Phe-187 play important roles in stabilizing this interaction by providing a hydrophobic environment. In contrast to the equivalent residues in loop 2 of other pLGICs, the negative charge at Glu-53 α1 GlyRs is not crucial for normal channel function. These findings help decipher the GlyR gating pathway and show that distinct residue interaction patterns exist in different pLGICs. Furthermore, a salt bridge between Asp-148 and Arg-218 would provide a possible mechanistic explanation for the pathophysiologically relevant hyperekplexia, or startle disease, mutant Arg-218 → Gln.
Nature Communications | 2015
Robin Y. Kim; Michael C. Yau; Jason D. Galpin; Guiscard Seebohm; Christopher A. Ahern; Stephan A. Pless; Harley T. Kurata
Retigabine is a recently approved anticonvulsant that acts by potentiating neuronal M-current generated by KCNQ2–5 channels, interacting with a conserved Trp residue in the channel pore domain. Using unnatural amino-acid mutagenesis, we subtly altered the properties of this Trp to reveal specific chemical interactions required for retigabine action. Introduction of a non-natural isosteric H-bond-deficient Trp analogue abolishes channel potentiation, indicating that retigabine effects rely strongly on formation of a H-bond with the conserved pore Trp. Supporting this model, substitution with fluorinated Trp analogues, with increased H-bonding propensity, strengthens retigabine potency. In addition, potency of numerous retigabine analogues correlates with the negative electrostatic surface potential of a carbonyl/carbamate oxygen atom present in most KCNQ activators. These findings functionally pinpoint an atomic-scale interaction essential for effects of retigabine and provide stringent constraints that may guide rational improvement of the emerging drug class of KCNQ channel activators.
Nature Communications | 2013
Stephan A. Pless; Ana P. Niciforovic; Jason D. Galpin; John-Jose Nunez; Harley T. Kurata; Christopher A. Ahern
Voltage-gated potassium channels elicit membrane hyperpolarization through voltage-sensor domains that regulate the conductive status of the pore domain. To better understand the inherent basis for the open-closed equilibrium in these channels, we undertook an atomistic scan using synthetic fluorinated derivatives of aromatic residues previously implicated in the gating of Shaker potassium channels. Here we show that stepwise dispersion of the negative electrostatic surface potential of only one site, Phe481, stabilizes the channel open state. Furthermore, these data suggest that this apparent stabilization is the consequence of the amelioration of an inherently repulsive open-state interaction between the partial negative charge on the face of Phe481 and a highly co-evolved acidic side chain, Glu395, and this interaction is potentially modulated through the Tyr485 hydroxyl. We propose that the intrinsic open-state destabilization via aromatic repulsion represents a new mechanism by which ion channels, and likely other proteins, fine-tune conformational equilibria.