Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb.
Biochemistry | 2012
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Clara Iannuzzi; Annalisa Pastore; David P. Barondeau
Human frataxin (FXN) has been intensively studied since the discovery that the FXN gene is associated with the neurodegenerative disease Friedreichs ataxia. Human FXN is a component of the NFS1-ISD11-ISCU2-FXN (SDUF) core Fe-S assembly complex and activates the cysteine desulfurase and Fe-S cluster biosynthesis reactions. In contrast, the Escherichia coli FXN homologue CyaY inhibits Fe-S cluster biosynthesis. To resolve this discrepancy, enzyme kinetic experiments were performed for the human and E. coli systems in which analogous cysteine desulfurase, Fe-S assembly scaffold, and frataxin components were interchanged. Surprisingly, our results reveal that activation or inhibition by the frataxin homologue is determined by which cysteine desulfurase is present and not by the identity of the frataxin homologue. These data are consistent with a model in which the frataxin-less Fe-S assembly complex exists as a mixture of functional and nonfunctional states, which are stabilized by binding of frataxin homologues. Intriguingly, this appears to be an unusual example in which modifications to an enzyme during evolution inverts or reverses the mode of control imparted by a regulatory molecule.
Biochemistry | 2014
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Nicholas G. Fox; Chi Lin Tsai; Andrew M. Winn; David P. Barondeau
Iron–sulfur clusters are ubiquitous protein cofactors with critical cellular functions. The mitochondrial Fe–S assembly complex, which consists of the cysteine desulfurase NFS1 and its accessory protein (ISD11), the Fe–S assembly protein (ISCU2), and frataxin (FXN), converts substrates l-cysteine, ferrous iron, and electrons into Fe–S clusters. The physiological function of FXN has received a tremendous amount of attention since the discovery that its loss is directly linked to the neurodegenerative disease Friedreich’s ataxia. Previous in vitro results revealed a role for human FXN in activating the cysteine desulfurase and Fe–S cluster biosynthesis activities of the Fe–S assembly complex. Here we present radiolabeling experiments that indicate FXN accelerates the accumulation of sulfur on ISCU2 and that the resulting persulfide species is viable in the subsequent synthesis of Fe–S clusters. Additional mutagenesis, enzyme kinetic, UV–visible, and circular dichroism spectroscopic studies suggest conserved ISCU2 residue C104 is critical for FXN activation, whereas C35, C61, and C104 are all essential for Fe–S cluster formation on the assembly complex. These results cannot be fully explained by the hypothesis that FXN functions as an iron donor for Fe–S cluster biosynthesis, and further support an allosteric regulator role for FXN. Together, these results lead to an activation model in which FXN accelerates persulfide formation on NFS1 and favors a helix-to-coil interconversion on ISCU2 that facilitates the transfer of sulfur from NFS1 to ISCU2 as an initial step in Fe–S cluster biosynthesis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Thammajun L. Wood; Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Yong-Ick Kim; Tiyu Gao; Yong Gang Chang; Andy LiWang; David P. Barondeau; Susan S. Golden
The circadian rhythms exhibited in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus are generated by an oscillator comprised of the proteins KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC. An external signal that commonly affects the circadian clock is light. Previously, we reported that the bacteriophytochrome-like protein CikA passes environmental signals to the oscillator by directly binding a quinone and using cellular redox state as a measure of light in this photosynthetic organism. Here, we report that KaiA also binds the quinone analog 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), and the oxidized form of DBMIB, but not its reduced form, decreases the stability of KaiA in vivo, causes multimerization in vitro, and blocks KaiA stimulation of KaiC phosphorylation, which is central to circadian oscillation. Our data suggest that KaiA directly senses environmental signals as changes in redox state and modulates the circadian clock.
Biochemistry | 2011
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Andrew M. Winn; David P. Barondeau
Friedreichs ataxia (FRDA) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease associated with the loss of function of the protein frataxin (FXN) that results from low FXN levels due to a GAA triplet repeat expansion or, occasionally, from missense mutations in the FXN gene. Here biochemical and structural properties of FXN variants, including three FRDA missense mutations (N146K, Q148R, and R165C) and three related mutants (N146A, Q148G, and Q153A), were determined in an effort to understand the structural basis for the loss of function. In vitro assays revealed that although the three FRDA missense mutations exhibited similar losses of cysteine desulfurase and Fe-S cluster assembly activities, the causes for these activation defects were distinct. The R165C variant exhibited a k(cat)/K(M) higher than that of native FXN but weak binding to the NFS1, ISD11, and ISCU2 (SDU) complex, whereas the Q148R variant exhibited the lowest k(cat)/K(M) of the six tested FXN variants and only a modest binding deficiency. The order of the FXN binding affinities for the SDU Fe-S assembly complex was as follows: FXN > Q148R > N146A > Q148G > N146K > Q153A > R165C. Four different classes of FXN variants were identified on the basis of their biochemical properties. Together, these structure-function studies reveal determinants for the binding and allosteric activation of the Fe-S assembly complex and provide insight into how FRDA missense mutations are functionally compromised.
Biochemistry | 2011
Chi Lin Tsai; Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; David P. Barondeau
Friedreichs ataxia (FRDA) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that has been linked to defects in the protein frataxin (Fxn). Most FRDA patients have a GAA expansion in the first intron of their Fxn gene that decreases protein expression. Some FRDA patients have a GAA expansion on one allele and a missense mutation on the other allele. Few functional details are known for the ∼15 different missense mutations identified in FRDA patients. Here in vitro evidence is presented that indicates the FRDA I154F and W155R variants bind more weakly to the complex of Nfs1, Isd11, and Isu2 and thereby are defective in forming the four-component SDUF complex that constitutes the core of the Fe-S cluster assembly machine. The binding affinities follow the trend Fxn ∼ I154F > W155F > W155A ∼ W155R. The Fxn variants also have diminished ability to function as part of the SDUF complex to stimulate the cysteine desulfurase reaction and facilitate Fe-S cluster assembly. Four crystal structures, including the first for a FRDA variant, reveal specific rearrangements associated with the loss of function and lead to a model for Fxn-based activation of the Fe-S cluster assembly complex. Importantly, the weaker binding and lower activity for FRDA variants correlate with the severity of disease progression. Together, these results suggest that Fxn facilitates sulfur transfer from Nfs1 to Isu2 and that these in vitro assays are sensitive and appropriate for deciphering functional defects and mechanistic details for human Fe-S cluster biosynthesis.
Nature | 2017
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Aoshu Zhong; He G. Sun; Catherine L. Drennan; Hung Wen Liu
Oxetanocin A (OXT-A) is a potent antitumour, antiviral and antibacterial compound. Biosynthesis of OXT-A has been linked to a plasmid-borne Bacillus megaterium gene cluster that contains four genes: oxsA, oxsB, oxrA and oxrB. Here we show that both the oxsA and oxsB genes are required for the production of OXT-A. Biochemical analysis of the encoded proteins, a cobalamin (Cbl)-dependent S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) radical enzyme, OxsB, and an HD-domain phosphohydrolase, OxsA, reveals that OXT-A is derived from a 2′-deoxyadenosine phosphate in an OxsB-catalysed ring contraction reaction initiated by hydrogen atom abstraction from C2′. Hence, OxsB represents the first biochemically characterized non-methylating Cbl-dependent AdoMet radical enzyme. X-ray analysis of OxsB reveals the fold of a Cbl-dependent AdoMet radical enzyme, a family of enzymes with an estimated 7,000 members. Overall, this work provides a framework for understanding the interplay of AdoMet and Cbl cofactors and expands the catalytic repertoire of Cbl-dependent AdoMet radical enzymes.
Accounts of Chemical Research | 2016
Sarah E. J. Bowman; Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Catherine L. Drennan
Metal ions and metallocofactors play important roles in a broad range of biochemical reactions. Accordingly, it has been estimated that as much as 25-50% of the proteome uses transition metal ions to carry out a variety of essential functions. The metal ions incorporated within metalloproteins fulfill functional roles based on chemical properties, the diversity of which arises as transition metals can adopt different redox states and geometries, dictated by the identity of the metal and the protein environment. The coupling of a metal ion with an organic framework in metallocofactors, such as heme and cobalamin, further expands the chemical functionality of metals in biology. The three-dimensional visualization of metal ions and complex metallocofactors within a protein scaffold is often a starting point for enzymology, highlighting the importance of structural characterization of metalloproteins. Metalloprotein crystallography, however, presents a number of implicit challenges including correctly incorporating the relevant metal or metallocofactor, maintaining the proper environment for the protein to be purified and crystallized (including providing anaerobic, cold, or aphotic environments), and being mindful of the possibility of X-ray induced damage to the proteins or incorporated metal ions. Nevertheless, the incorporated metals or metallocofactors also present unique advantages in metalloprotein crystallography. The significant resonance that metals undergo with X-ray photons at wavelengths used for protein crystallography and the rich electronic properties of metals, which provide intense and spectroscopically unique signatures, allow a metalloprotein crystallographer to use anomalous dispersion to determine phases for structure solution and to use simultaneous or parallel spectroscopic techniques on single crystals. These properties, coupled with the improved brightness of beamlines, the ability to tune the wavelength of the X-ray beam, the availability of advanced detectors, and the incorporation of spectroscopic equipment at a number of synchrotron beamlines, have yielded exciting developments in metalloprotein structure determination. Here we will present results on the advantageous uses of metals in metalloprotein crystallography, including using metallocofactors to obtain phasing information, using K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy to identify metals coordinated in metalloprotein crystals, and using UV-vis spectroscopy on crystals to probe the enzymatic activity of the crystallized protein.
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2017
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Catherine L. Drennan
The ability of cobalamin to coordinate different upper axial ligands gives rise to a diversity of reactivity. Traditionally, adenosylcobalamin is associated with radical-based rearrangements, and methylcobalamin with methyl cation transfers. Recently, however, a new role for adenosylcobalamin has been discovered as a light sensor, and a methylcobalamin-dependent enzyme has been identified that is suggested to transfer a methyl anion. Additionally, recent studies have provided a wealth of new information about a third class of cobalamin-dependent enzymes that do not appear to use an upper ligand. They function in reductive dehalogenations and epoxide reduction reactions. Finally, mechanistic details are beginning to emerge about the cobalamin-dependent S-adenosylmethionine radical enzyme superfamily for which the role of cobalamin has been largely enigmatic.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Gyunghoon Kang; Aoshu Zhong; Hung Wen Liu; Catherine L. Drennan
Significance Over the past few decades, natural products, or chemical compounds derived from plants, animals, or microbes have greatly inspired drug discovery. Because natural products often have more complex and architecturally unique scaffolds than available man-made drugs, characterization of natural product biosynthetic pathways often reveals unprecedented chemistry and enzymatic platforms. Oxetanocin-A (OXT) is a natural product nucleoside analog that has an unusual four-membered oxetane ring connected to an adenine base. Prior to this work, there were no details available about OXT biosynthesis. Here, we not only elucidate a scheme for the two-enzyme catalyzed production of OXT, but also reveal modifications to an HD domain phosphohydrolase enzyme scaffold that expand the catalytic repertoire of this enzyme superfamily. HD domain phosphohydrolase enzymes are characterized by a conserved set of histidine and aspartate residues that coordinate an active site metallocenter. Despite the important roles these enzymes play in nucleotide metabolism and signal transduction, few have been both biochemically and structurally characterized. Here, we present X-ray crystal structures and biochemical characterization of the Bacillus megaterium HD domain phosphohydrolase OxsA, involved in the biosynthesis of the antitumor, antiviral, and antibacterial compound oxetanocin-A. These studies reveal a previously uncharacterized reaction for this family; OxsA catalyzes the conversion of a triphosphorylated compound into a nucleoside, releasing one molecule of inorganic phosphate at a time. Remarkably, this functionality is a result of the OxsA active site, which based on structural and kinetic analyses has been tailored to bind the small, four-membered ring of oxetanocin-A over larger substrates. Furthermore, our OxsA structures show an active site that switches from a dinuclear to a mononuclear metal center as phosphates are eliminated from substrate.
Science | 2016
Jennifer Bridwell-Rabb; Catherine L. Drennan
Biosynthesis of the antibiotic nosiheptide proceeds via unforeseen radical intermediates [Also see Report by Sicoli et al.] The S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) radical enzyme superfamily plays a central role in the biosynthesis of many vitamins, cofactors, and antibiotics. Radical SAM enzymes catalyze challenging chemical reactions such as C-H bond activation (1), ring contraction (2), and molecular skeletal rearrangements (3, 4). They overcome the dif culty of these reactions by forming a highly oxidizing radical species, 5′-deoxyadenosyl (5′-dAdo·), from SAM and a reduced iron-sulfur cluster (5). This radical species can selectively abstract a hydrogen atom from a substrate, enabling complex chemical transformations. There are more than 113,000 radical SAM enzymes, but only a small number are both biochemically and structurally characterized, and many of the reaction mechanisms remain enigmatic. On page 1320 of this issue, Sicoli et al. provide evidence for unexpected radical intermediates in the mechanism of the radical SAM enzyme NosL (6).