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Dive into the research topics where Joel H. Weiner is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel H. Weiner.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Insights into the respiratory electron transfer pathway from the structure of nitrate reductase A

Michela G. Bertero; Richard A. Rothery; Monica Palak; Cynthia Hou; Daniel Lim; Francis Blasco; Joel H. Weiner; Natalie C. J. Strynadka

The facultative anaerobe Escherichia coli is able to assemble specific respiratory chains by synthesis of appropriate dehydrogenases and reductases in response to the availability of specific substrates. Under anaerobic conditions in the presence of nitrate, E. coli synthesizes the cytoplasmic membrane-bound quinol-nitrate oxidoreductase (nitrate reductase A; NarGHI), which reduces nitrate to nitrite and forms part of a redox loop generating a proton-motive force. We present here the crystal structure of NarGHI at a resolution of 1.9 Å. The NarGHI structure identifies the number, coordination scheme and environment of the redox-active prosthetic groups, a unique coordination of the molybdenum atom, the first structural evidence for the role of an open bicyclic form of the molybdo-bis(molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide) (Mo-bisMGD) cofactor in the catalytic mechanism and a novel fold of the membrane anchor subunit. Our findings provide fundamental molecular details for understanding the mechanism of proton-motive force generation by a redox loop.


Molecular Microbiology | 1996

The SMR family: a novel family of multidrug efflux proteins involved with the efflux of lipophilic drugs

Ian T. Paulsen; Ronald A. Skurray; Roland Tam; Milton H. Saier; Raymond J. Turner; Joel H. Weiner; Edward B. Goldberg; Leonas L. Grinius

The sequenced members of a novel family of small, hydrophobic, bacterial multidrug‐resistance efflux proteins, which we have designated the small multidrug resistance (SMR) protein family, are identified and analysed. Two distinct clusters of proteins were identified within this family: (i) small multidrug efflux systems; and (ii) Sug proteins, potentially involved in the suppression of groEL mutations. Hydropathy and residue distribution analyses of this family suggest a structural model in which the polypeptide chain spans the membrane four times as mildly amphipathic α‐helices. The roles of specific residues, a possible mechanistic model of drug efflux, and the primary physiological role(s) of the SMR proteins are discussed.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

Molecular biology, biochemistry and bioenergetics of fumarate reductase, a complex membrane-bound iron-sulfur flavoenzyme of Escherichia coli

Stewart T. Cole; Caro Condon; Bernard D. Lemire; Joel H. Weiner

Reference EPFL-REVIEW-151426View record in PubMed Record created on 2010-09-07, modified on 2017-12-29


Biometals | 1998

Selenium metabolism in Escherichia coli.

Raymond J. Turner; Joel H. Weiner; Diane E. Taylor

Escherichia coli will reduce selenite (SeO 3 2- ) andselenate (SeO 4 2- ) to elemental selenium Se 0 . Seleniumwill also become incorporated intoproteins as part of the amino acids selenocysteine or selenomethionine.The reaction of selenitewith glutathione produces selenodiglutathione (GS-Se-GS). Selenodiglutathioneand itssubsequent reduction to glutathioselenol (GS-SeH) are likely the key intermediatesin the possiblemetabolic fates of selenium. This review presents the possible pathwaysinvolving selenium in E. coli. Identification of intermediates and potentialprocesses from uptake of the toxic oxyanions through to theirdetoxification will assist us inunderstanding the complexities of metalloid oxyanion metabolism in thesebacteria.


Microbiology | 1997

Tellurite reductase activity of nitrate reductase is responsible for the basal resistance of Escherichia coli to tellurite

Cécile Avazéri; Raymond J. Turner; Jeanine Pommier; Joel H. Weiner; Gérard Giordano; André Verméglio

Tellurite and selenate reductase activities were identified in extracts of Escherichia coli. These activities were detected on non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels using an in situ methyl viologen activity-staining technique. The activity bands produced from membrane-protein extracts had the same RF values as those of nitrate reductases (NRs) A and Z. Tellurite and selenate reductase activities were absent from membranes obtained from mutants deleted in NRs A and Z. Further evidence of the tellurite and selenate reductase activities of NR was demonstrated using rocket immunoelectrophoresis analysis, where the tellurite and selenate reductase activities corresponded to the precipitation arc of NR. Additionally, hypersensitivity to potassium tellurite was observed under aerobic growth conditions in nar mutants. The tac promoter expression of NR A resulted in elevated tellurite resistance. The data obtained also imply that a minimal threshold level of NR A is required to increase resistance. Under anaerobic growth conditions additional tellurite reductase activity was identified in the soluble fraction on non-denaturing gels. Nitrate reductase mutants were not hypersensitive under anaerobic conditions, possibly due to the presence of this additional reductase activity.


Molecular Microbiology | 1988

Nucleotide sequence of the dmsABC operon encoding the anaerobic dimethylsulphoxide reductase of Escherichia coli

P. T. Bilous; Stewart T. Cole; Wayne F. Anderson; Joel H. Weiner

The nucleotide sequence of a 6.5 kilobasepair chromosomal DNA fragment encoding the anaerobic dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) reductase operon of Escherichia coli has been determined. The DMSO reductase structural operon was shown to consist of three open reading frames, namely dmsABC, encoding polypeptides with predicted molecular weights of 87350, 23070, and 30789 Daltons, respectively. The DMS A polypeptide displayed a high degree of amino acid sequence homology with the single‐subunit enzyme, biotin sulphoxide reductase (bisC) and with formate dehydrogenase (fdhF), suggesting that the active site and molybdopterin cofactor binding site that is common to these enzymes is located in the DMS A subunit. A comparison of the predicted N‐terminal amino acids of the dmsA gene product to those of the 82600 subunit of purified DMSO reductase indicated that post‐translational processing of a 16 amino acid peptide at the amino terminus of DMS A had occurred. The DMS B polypeptide contains 16 cysteine residues organized in four clusters, two of which are typical of 4Fe–4S binding domains. The DMS C polypeptide is composed of eight segments of hydrophobic amino acids of appropriate length to cross the cytoplasmic membrane, suggesting that this subunit functions to anchor the enzyme to the membrane.


Proteomics | 2007

Comparison of SDS‐ and methanol‐assisted protein solubilization and digestion methods for Escherichia coli membrane proteome analysis by 2‐D LC‐MS/MS

Nan Zhang; Rui Chen; Nelson Young; David S. Wishart; Philip Winter; Joel H. Weiner; Liang Li

Both organic solvent and surfactant have been used for dissolving membrane proteins for shotgun proteomics. In this work, two methods of protein solubilization, namely using 60% methanol or 1% SDS, to dissolve and analyze the inner membrane fraction of an Escherichia coli K12 cell lysate were compared. A total of 358 proteins (1417 unique peptides) from the methanol‐solubilized protein mixture and 299 proteins (892 peptides) from the SDS‐solubilized samplewere identified by using trypsin digestion and 2‐D LC‐ESI MS/MS. It was found that the methanol method detected more hydrophobic peptides, resulting in a greater number of proteins identified, than the SDS method. We found that 159 out of 358 proteins (44%) and 120 out of 299 proteins (40%) detected from the methanol‐ and SDS‐solubilized samples, respectively, are integral membrane proteins. Among the 190 integral membrane proteins 70 were identified exclusively in the methanol‐solubilized sample, 89 were identified by both methods, and only 31 proteins were exclusively identified by the SDS method. It is shown that the integral membrane proteins reflected the theoretical proteome for number of transmembrane helices, length, functional class, and topology, indicating there was no bias in the proteins identified.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2005

Localization, Annotation, and Comparison of the Escherichia coli K-12 Proteome under Two States of Growth

Ana Lopez-Campistrous; Paul D. Semchuk; Lorne Burke; Taunja Palmer-Stone; Stephen J. Brokx; Gordon Broderick; Drell Bottorff; Sandra Bolch; Joel H. Weiner; Michael J. Ellison

Here we describe a proteomic analysis of Escherichia coli in which 3,199 protein forms were detected, and of those 2,160 were annotated and assigned to the cytosol, periplasm, inner membrane, and outer membrane by biochemical fractionation followed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and tandem mass spectrometry. Represented within this inventory were unique and modified forms corresponding to 575 different ORFs that included 151 proteins whose existence had been predicted from hypothetical ORFs, 76 proteins of completely unknown function, and 222 proteins currently without location assignments in the Swiss-Prot Database. Of the 575 unique proteins identified, 42% were found to exist in multiple forms. Using DIGE, we also examined the relative changes in protein expression when cells were grown in the presence and absence of amino acids. A total of 23 different proteins were identified whose abundance changed significantly between the two conditions. Most of these changes were found to be associated with proteins involved in carbon and amino acid metabolism, transport, and chemotaxis. Detailed information related to all 2,160 protein forms (protein and gene names, accession numbers, subcellular locations, relative abundances, sequence coverage, molecular masses, and isoelectric points) can be obtained upon request in either tabular form or as interactive gel images.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Structural and biochemical identification of a novel bacterial oxidoreductase.

Lodovica Loschi; Stephen J. Brokx; Tanya L. Hills; Glen Zhang; Michela G. Bertero; Andrew L. Lovering; Joel H. Weiner; Natalie C. J. Strynadka

By using a bioinformatics screen of the Escherichia coli genome for potential molybdenum-containing enzymes, we have identified a novel oxidoreductase conserved in the majority of Gram-negative bacteria. The identified operon encodes for a proposed heterodimer, YedYZ in Escherichia coli, consisting of a soluble catalytic subunit termed YedY, which is likely anchored to the membrane by a heme-containing trans-membrane subunit termed YedZ. YedY is uniquely characterized by the presence of one molybdenum molybdopterin not conjugated by an additional nucleotide, and it represents the only molybdoenzyme isolated from E. coli characterized by the presence of this cofactor form. We have further characterized the catalytic subunit YedY in both the molybdenum- and tungsten-substituted forms by using crystallographic analysis. YedY is very distinct in overall architecture from all known bacterial reductases but does show some similarity with the catalytic domain of the eukaryotic chicken liver sulfite oxidase. However, the strictly conserved residues involved in the metal coordination sphere and in the substrate binding pocket of YedY are strikingly different from that of chicken liver sulfite oxidase, suggesting a catalytic activity more in keeping with a reductase than that of a sulfite oxidase. Preliminary kinetic analysis of YedY with a variety of substrates supports our proposal that YedY and its many orthologues may represent a new type of membrane-associated bacterial reductase.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Multiple Roles for the Twin Arginine Leader Sequence of Dimethyl Sulfoxide Reductase of Escherichia coli

Damaraju Sambasivarao; Raymond J. Turner; Joanne Simala-Grant; Gillian Shaw; Jing Hu; Joel H. Weiner

Dimethyl sulfoxide (Me2SO) reductase of Escherichia coli is a terminal electron transport chain enzyme that is expressed under anaerobic growth conditions and is required for anaerobic growth with Me2SO as the terminal electron acceptor. The trimeric enzyme is composed of a membrane extrinsic catalytic dimer (DmsAB) and a membrane intrinsic anchor (DmsC). The amino terminus of DmsA has a leader sequence with a twin arginine motif that targets DmsAB to the membrane via a novel Sec-independent mechanism termed MTT for membrane targeting and translocation. We demonstrate that the Met-1 present upstream of the twin arginine motif serves as the correct translational start site. The leader is essential for the expression of DmsA, stability of the DmsAB dimer, and membrane targeting of the reductase holoenzyme. Mutation of arginine 17 to aspartate abolished membrane targeting. The reductase was labile in the leader sequence mutants. These mutants failed to support growth on glycerol-Me2SO minimal medium. Replacing the DmsA leader with the TorA leader of trimethylamineN-oxide reductase produced a membrane-bound DmsABC with greatly reduced enzyme activity and inefficient anaerobic respiration indicating that the twin arginine leaders may play specific roles in the assembly of redox enzymes.

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Gary Cecchini

University of California

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Natalie C. J. Strynadka

University of British Columbia

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