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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey T. Bolin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey T. Bolin.


Blood | 2000

Crystallographic structure and functional interpretation of the cytoplasmic domain of erythrocyte membrane band 3.

Dachuan Zhang; Anatoly Kiyatkin; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Philip S. Low

The red blood cell membrane (RBCM) is a primary model for animal cell plasma membranes. One of its major organizing centers is the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 (cdb3), which links multiple proteins to the membrane. Included among its peripheral protein ligands are ankyrin (the major bridge to the spectrin-actin skeleton), protein 4. 1, protein 4.2, aldolase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphofructokinase, deoxyhemoglobin, p72syk protein tyrosine kinase, and hemichromes. The crystal structure of cdb3 is reported at 0.26 nm (2.6 A) resolution. A tight symmetric dimer is formed by cdb3; it is stabilized by interlocked dimerization arms contributed by both monomers. Each subunit also includes a larger peripheral protein binding domain with an alpha(+) beta-fold. The binding sites of several peripheral proteins are localized in the structure, and the nature of the major conformational change that regulates membrane-skeletal interactions is evaluated. An improved structural definition of the protein network at the inner surface of the RBCM is now possible.


Science | 1995

Crystal structure of the biphenyl-cleaving extradiol dioxygenase from a PCB-degrading pseudomonad

Seungil Han; Lindsay D. Eltis; Kenneth N. Timmis; Steven W. Muchmore; Jeffrey T. Bolin

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) typify a class of stable aromatic pollutants that are targeted by bioremediation strategies. In the aerobic degradation of biphenyl by bacteria, the key step of ring cleavage is catalyzed by an Fe(II)-dependent extradiol dioxygenase. The crystal structure of 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl 1,2-dioxygenase from a PCB-degrading strain of Pseudomonas cepacia has been determined at 1.9 angstrom resolution. The monomer comprises amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains. Structural homology between and within the domains reveals evolutionary relationships within the extradiol dioxygenase family. The iron atom has five ligands in square pyramidal geometry: one glutamate and two histidine side chains, and two water molecules.


Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2006

The ins and outs of ring-cleaving dioxygenases.

Frédéric H. Vaillancourt; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Lindsay D. Eltis

ABSTRACT Ring-cleaving dioxygenases catalyze the oxygenolytic fission of catecholic compounds, a critical step in the aerobic degradation of aromatic compounds by bacteria. Two classes of these enzymes have been identified, based on the mode of ring cleavage: intradiol dioxygenases utilize non-heme Fe(III) to cleave the aromatic nucleus ortho to the hydroxyl substituents; and extradiol dioxygenases utilize non-heme Fe(II) or other divalent metal ions to cleave the aromatic nucleus meta to the hydroxyl substituents. Recent genomic, structural, spectroscopic, and kinetic studies have increased our understanding of the distribution, evolution, and mechanisms of these enzymes. Overall, extradiol dioxygenases appear to be more versatile than their intradiol counterparts. Thus, the former cleave a wider variety of substrates, have evolved on a larger number of structural scaffolds, and occur in a wider variety of pathways, including biosynthetic pathways and pathways that degrade non-aromatic compounds. The catalytic mechanisms of the two enzymes proceed via similar iron-alkylperoxo intermediates. The ability of extradiol enzymes to act on a variety of non-catecholic compounds is consistent with proposed differences in the breakdown of this iron-alkylperoxo intermediate in the two enzymes, involving alkenyl migration in extradiol enzymes and acyl migration in intradiol enzymes. Nevertheless, despite recent advances in our understanding of these fascinating enzymes, the major determinant of the mode of ring cleavage remains unknown.


Structure | 2000

A Cluster Exposed: Structure of the Rieske Ferredoxin from Biphenyl Dioxygenase and the Redox Properties of Rieske Fe-S Proteins

Christopher L. Colbert; Manon M.-J. Couture; Lindsay D. Eltis; Jeffrey T. Bolin

BACKGROUND Ring-hydroxylating dioxygenases are multicomponent systems that initiate biodegradation of aromatic compounds. Many dioxygenase systems include Rieske-type ferredoxins with amino acid sequences and redox properties remarkably different from the Rieske proteins of proton-translocating respiratory and photosynthetic complexes. In the latter, the [Fe2S2] clusters lie near the protein surface, operate at potentials above +300 mV at pH 7, and express pH- and ionic strength-dependent redox behavior. The reduction potentials of the dioxygenase ferredoxins are approximately 150 mV and are pH-independent. These distinctions were predicted to arise from differences in the exposure of the cluster and/or interactions of the histidine ligands. RESULTS The crystal structure of BphF, the Rieske-type ferredoxin associated with biphenyl dioxygenase, was determined by multiwavelength anomalous diffraction and refined at 1.6 A resolution. The structure of BphF was compared with other Rieske proteins at several levels. BphF has the same two-domain fold as other Rieske proteins, but it lacks all insertions that give the others unique structural features. The BphF Fe-S cluster and its histidine ligands are exposed. However, the cluster has a significantly different environment in that five fewer polar groups interact strongly with the cluster sulfide or the cysteinyl ligands. CONCLUSIONS BphF has structural features consistent with a minimal and perhaps archetypical Rieske protein. Variations in redox potentials among Rieske clusters appear to be largely the result of local electrostatic interactions with protein partial charges. Moreover, it appears that the redox-linked ionizations of the Rieske proteins from proton-translocating complexes are also promoted by these electrostatic interactions.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2002

Identification and analysis of a bottleneck in PCB biodegradation.

Shaodong Dai; Frédéric H. Vaillancourt; Halim Maaroufi; Nathalie M. Drouin; David B. Neau; Victor Snieckus; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Lindsay D. Eltis

The microbial degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) provides the potential to destroy these widespread, toxic and persistent environmental pollutants. For example, the four-step upper bph pathway transforms some of the more than 100 different PCBs found in commercial mixtures and is being engineered for more effective PCB degradation. In the critical third step of this pathway, 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl (DHB) 1,2-dioxygenase (DHBD; EC 1.13.11.39) catalyzes aromatic ring cleavage. Here we demonstrate that ortho-chlorinated PCB metabolites strongly inhibit DHBD, promote its suicide inactivation and interfere with the degradation of other compounds. For example, kcatapp for 2′,6′-diCl DHB was reduced by a factor of ∼7,000 relative to DHB, and it bound with sufficient affinity to competitively inhibit DHB cleavage at nanomolar concentrations. Crystal structures of two complexes of DHBD with ortho-chlorinated metabolites at 1.7 Å resolution reveal an explanation for these phenomena, which have important implications for bioremediation strategies.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Purification and Preliminary Characterization of a Serine Hydrolase Involved in the Microbial Degradation of Polychlorinated Biphenyls

Stephen Y. K. Seah; Giuseppe Terracina; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Peter Riebel; Victor Snieckus; Lindsay D. Eltis

2-Hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (6-phenyl-HODA) hydrolase (BphD), an enzyme of the biphenyl biodegradation pathway encoded by the bphD gene ofBurkholderia cepacia LB400, was hyperexpressed and purified to apparent homogeneity. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis confirmed that BphD has a subunit molecular mass of 32 kDa, while gel filtration demonstrated that it is a homotetramer of molecular weight 122,000. The enzyme hydrolyzed 6-phenyl-HODA with ak cat of 5.0 (± 0.07) s−1 and ak cat/K m of 2.0 (± 0.08) × 107 m −1 s−1 (100 mm phosphate, pH 7.5, 25 °C). The specificity of BphD for other 2-hydroxy-6-oxohexa-2,4-dienoates (HODAs) decreased markedly with the size of the C6 substituent; 6-methyl-HODA, themeta cleavage product of 3-methylcatechol, was hydrolyzed approximately 2300 times less specifically than 6-phenyl-HODA. By comparison, the homologous hydrolase from the toluene degradation pathway, TodF, showed highest specificity for 6-methyl- and 6-ethyl-HODA (k cat/K m of 2.0 (± 0.05) × 106 m −1s−1 and 9.0 (± 0.5) × 106 m −1 s−1, respectively). TodF showed no detectable activity toward 6-phenyl-HODA and 6-tert-butyl-HODA. Neither BphD nor TodF hydrolyzed 5-methyl-HODA efficiently. The k cat of BphD determined by monitoring product formation was about half that determined by monitoring substrate disappearance, suggesting that some uncoupling of substrate utilization and product formation occurs during the enzyme catalyzed reaction. Crystals of BphD were obtained using ammonium sulfate combined with polyethylene glycol 400 as the precipitant. Diffraction was observed to a resolution of at least 1.9 Å, and the evaluation of self-rotation functions confirmed 222 (D2) molecular symmetry.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

The tautomeric half-reaction of BphD, a C-C bond hydrolase. Kinetic and structural evidence supporting a key role for histidine 265 of the catalytic triad.

Geoff P. Horsman; Shiva Bhowmik; Stephen Y. K. Seah; Pravindra Kumar; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Lindsay D. Eltis

BphD of Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 catalyzes an unusual C-C bond hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) to afford benzoic acid and 2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoic acid (HPD). An enol-keto tautomerization has been proposed to precede hydrolysis via a gem-diol intermediate. The role of the canonical catalytic triad (Ser-112, His-265, Asp-237) in mediating these two half-reactions remains unclear. We previously reported that the BphD-catalyzed hydrolysis of HOPDA (λmax is 434 nm for the free enolate) proceeds via an unidentified intermediate with a red-shifted absorption spectrum (λmax is 492 nm) (Horsman, G. P., Ke, J., Dai, S., Seah, S. Y. K., Bolin, J. T., and Eltis, L. D. (2006) Biochemistry 45, 11071-11086). Here we demonstrate that the S112A variant generates and traps a similar intermediate (λmax is 506 nm) with a similar rate, 1/τ ∼ 500 s-1. The crystal structure of the S112A:HOPDA complex at 1.8-Å resolution identified this intermediate as the keto tautomer, (E)-2,6-dioxo-6-phenyl-hex-3-enoate. This keto tautomer did not accumulate in either the H265A or the S112A/H265A double variants, indicating that His-265 catalyzes tautomerization. Consistent with this role, the wild type and S112A enzymes catalyzed tautomerization of the product HPD, whereas H265A variants did not. This study thus identifies a keto intermediate, and demonstrates that the catalytic triad histidine catalyzes the tautomerization half-reaction, expanding the role of this residue from its purely hydrolytic function in other serine hydrolases. Finally, the S112A:HOPDA crystal structure is more consistent with hydrolysis occurring via an acyl-enzyme intermediate than a gem-diol intermediate as solvent molecules have poor access to C6, and the closest ordered water is 7Å away.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011

Structural Insight Into the Expanded Pcb-Degrading Abilities of a Biphenyl Dioxygenase Obtained by Directed Evolution.

Pravindra Kumar; Mahmood Mohammadi; Jean-François Viger; Diane Barriault; Leticia Gómez-Gil; Lindsay D. Eltis; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Michel Sylvestre

The biphenyl dioxygenase of Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 is a multicomponent Rieske-type oxygenase that catalyzes the dihydroxylation of biphenyl and many polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The structural bases for the substrate specificity of the enzymes oxygenase component (BphAE(LB400)) are largely unknown. BphAE(p4), a variant previously obtained through directed evolution, transforms several chlorobiphenyls, including 2,6-dichlorobiphenyl, more efficiently than BphAE(LB400), yet differs from the parent oxygenase at only two positions: T335A/F336M. Here, we compare the structures of BphAE(LB400) and BphAE(p4) and examine the biochemical properties of two BphAE(LB400) variants with single substitutions, T335A or F336M. Our data show that residue 336 contacts the biphenyl and influences the regiospecificity of the reaction, but does not enhance the enzymes reactivity toward 2,6-dichlorobiphenyl. By contrast, residue 335 does not contact biphenyl but contributes significantly to expansion of the enzymes substrate range. Crystal structures indicate that Thr335 imposes constraints through hydrogen bonds and nonbonded contacts to the segment from Val320 to Gln322. These contacts are lost when Thr is replaced by Ala, relieving intramolecular constraints and allowing for significant movement of this segment during binding of 2,6-dichlorobiphenyl, which increases the space available to accommodate the doubly ortho-chlorinated congener 2,6-dichlorobiphenyl. This study provides important insight about how Rieske-type oxygenases can expand substrate range through mutations that increase the plasticity and/or mobility of protein segments lining the catalytic cavity.


The Plant Cell | 2014

The Structure of the Catalytic Domain of a Plant Cellulose Synthase and Its Assembly into Dimers

Anna T. Olek; Catherine Rayon; Lee Makowski; Hyung Rae Kim; Peter N. Ciesielski; John Badger; Lake N. Paul; Subhangi Ghosh; Daisuke Kihara; Michael F. Crowley; Michael E. Himmel; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Nicholas C. Carpita

Small-angle x-ray scattering gives a glimpse at the solution structure of the catalytic domains of plant cellulose synthase and their dimerization. Dimerization through the plant-specific sequences of the catalytic domain provides important clues for how Zn-finger domains couple these fundamental scaffold units into large, multimeric synthase complexes. Cellulose microfibrils are para-crystalline arrays of several dozen linear (1→4)-β-d-glucan chains synthesized at the surface of the cell membrane by large, multimeric complexes of synthase proteins. Recombinant catalytic domains of rice (Oryza sativa) CesA8 cellulose synthase form dimers reversibly as the fundamental scaffold units of architecture in the synthase complex. Specificity of binding to UDP and UDP-Glc indicates a properly folded protein, and binding kinetics indicate that each monomer independently synthesizes single glucan chains of cellulose, i.e., two chains per dimer pair. In contrast to structure modeling predictions, solution x-ray scattering studies demonstrate that the monomer is a two-domain, elongated structure, with the smaller domain coupling two monomers into a dimer. The catalytic core of the monomer is accommodated only near its center, with the plant-specific sequences occupying the small domain and an extension distal to the catalytic domain. This configuration is in stark contrast to the domain organization obtained in predicted structures of plant CesA. The arrangement of the catalytic domain within the CesA monomer and dimer provides a foundation for constructing structural models of the synthase complex and defining the relationship between the rosette structure and the cellulose microfibrils they synthesize.


Archive | 2004

Ring-Cleavage Dioxygenases

Frédéric H. Vaillancourt; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Lindsay D. Eltis

Pseudomonads have an exceptional ability to utilize aromatic compounds as sole source of energy and carbon. This capability is critical to maintaining the global carbon cycle. Aromatic compounds are planar, fully conjugated, ring-shaped molecules possessing (4n + 2)π electrons where n is a nonnegative integer (Huckel’s rule)93. Formed by a variety of biogeochemical processes, these compounds are widely distributed in nature, and range in size from low-molecular-mass compounds, such as phenols, to biopolymers, such as lignin. Indeed, lignin is the second most abundant polymer in nature after cellulose2. Aromatic compounds are exceptionally stable due to the delocalization of their π orbitals (resonance structure). This property has contributed to the wide spread production and usage of natural and non-natural aromatic compounds for a variety of industrial applications, as well as the distribution of stable, nonnatural compounds in the environment.

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Joseph Kraut

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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