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Dive into the research topics where Joel R. Meyerson is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel R. Meyerson.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Molecular Architectures of Trimeric SIV and HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins on Intact Viruses: Strain-Dependent Variation in Quaternary Structure

Tommi A. White; Alberto Bartesaghi; Mario J. Borgnia; Joel R. Meyerson; M. Jason V. de la Cruz; Julian W. Bess; Rachna Nandwani; James A. Hoxie; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Jacqueline L. S. Milne; Sriram Subramaniam

The initial step in target cell infection by human, and the closely related simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV, respectively) occurs with the binding of trimeric envelope glycoproteins (Env), composed of heterodimers of the viral transmembrane glycoprotein (gp41) and surface glycoprotein (gp120) to target T-cells. Knowledge of the molecular structure of trimeric Env on intact viruses is important both for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying virus-cell interactions and for the design of effective immunogen-based vaccines to combat HIV/AIDS. Previous analyses of intact HIV-1 BaL virions have already resulted in structures of trimeric Env in unliganded and CD4-liganded states at ∼20 Å resolution. Here, we show that the molecular architectures of trimeric Env from SIVmneE11S, SIVmac239 and HIV-1 R3A strains are closely comparable to that previously determined for HIV-1 BaL, with the V1 and V2 variable loops located at the apex of the spike, close to the contact zone between virus and cell. The location of the V1/V2 loops in trimeric Env was definitively confirmed by structural analysis of HIV-1 R3A virions engineered to express Env with deletion of these loops. Strikingly, in SIV CP-MAC, a CD4-independent strain, trimeric Env is in a constitutively “open” conformation with gp120 trimers splayed out in a conformation similar to that seen for HIV-1 BaL Env when it is complexed with sCD4 and the CD4i antibody 17b. Our findings suggest a structural explanation for the molecular mechanism of CD4-independent viral entry and further establish that cryo-electron tomography can be used to discover distinct, functionally relevant quaternary structures of Env displayed on intact viruses.


Nature | 2014

Structural mechanism of glutamate receptor activation and desensitization

Joel R. Meyerson; Janesh Kumar; Sagar Chittori; Prashant Rao; Jason Pierson; Alberto Bartesaghi; Mark L. Mayer; Sriram Subramaniam

Ionotropic glutamate receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate excitatory synaptic transmission in the vertebrate brain. To gain a better understanding of how structural changes gate ion flux across the membrane, we trapped rat AMPA (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid) and kainate receptor subtypes in their major functional states and analysed the resulting structures using cryo-electron microscopy. We show that transition to the active state involves a ‘corkscrew’ motion of the receptor assembly, driven by closure of the ligand-binding domain. Desensitization is accompanied by disruption of the amino-terminal domain tetramer in AMPA, but not kainate, receptors with a two-fold to four-fold symmetry transition in the ligand-binding domains in both subtypes. The 7.6 Å structure of a desensitized kainate receptor shows how these changes accommodate channel closing. These findings integrate previous physiological, biochemical and structural analyses of glutamate receptors and provide a molecular explanation for key steps in receptor gating.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Structure and accessibility of HA trimers on intact 2009 H1N1 pandemic influenza virus to stem region-specific neutralizing antibodies

Audray K. Harris; Joel R. Meyerson; Yumiko Matsuoka; Oleg Kuybeda; Amy Moran; Donald Bliss; Suman R. Das; Jonathan W. Yewdell; Guillermo Sapiro; Kanta Subbarao; Sriram Subramaniam

Rapid antigenic variation of HA, the major virion surface protein of influenza A virus, remains the principal challenge to the development of broader and more effective vaccines. Some regions of HA, such as the stem region proximal to the viral membrane, are nevertheless highly conserved across strains and among most subtypes. A fundamental question in vaccine design is the extent to which HA stem regions on the surface of the virus are accessible to broadly neutralizing antibodies. Here we report 3D structures derived from cryoelectron tomography of HA on intact 2009 H1N1 pandemic virions in the presence and absence of the antibody C179, which neutralizes viruses expressing a broad range of HA subtypes, including H1, H2, H5, H6, and H9. By fitting previously derived crystallographic structures of trimeric HA into the density maps, we deduced the locations of the molecular surfaces of HA involved in interaction with C179. Using computational methods to distinguish individual unliganded HA trimers from those that have bound C179 antibody, we demonstrate that ∼75% of HA trimers on the surface of the virus have C179 bound to the stem domain. Thus, despite their close packing on the viral membrane, the majority of HA trimers on intact virions are available to bind anti-stem antibodies that target conserved HA epitopes, establishing the feasibility of universal influenza vaccines that elicit such antibodies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Molecular structures of trimeric HIV-1 Env in complex with small antibody derivatives

Joel R. Meyerson; Erin E. H. Tran; Oleg Kuybeda; Weizao Chen; Dimiter S. Dimitrov; Andrea Gorlani; Theo Verrips; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Sriram Subramaniam

The extensive carbohydrate coat, the variability of protein structural features on HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins (Env), and the steric constraints of the virus-cell interface during infection, present challenges to the elicitation of effective full-length (∼150 kDa), neutralizing antibodies against HIV. These hurdles have motivated the engineering of smaller antibody derivatives that can bind Env and neutralize the virus. To further understand the mechanisms by which these proteins neutralize HIV-1, we carried out cryoelectron tomography of native HIV-1 BaL virions complexed separately to two small (∼15 kDa) HIV-neutralizing proteins: A12, which binds the CD4-binding site on Env, and m36, whose binding to Env is enhanced by CD4 binding. We show that despite their small size, the presence of these proteins and their effects on the quaternary conformation of trimeric Env can be visualized in molecular structures derived by cryoelectron tomography combined with subvolume averaging. Binding of Env to A12 results in a conformational change that is comparable to changes observed upon its binding to the CD4-binding site antibody, b12. In contrast, binding of Env to m36 results in an “open” quaternary conformation similar to that seen with binding of soluble CD4 or the CD4i antibody, 17b. Because these small neutralizing proteins are less sterically hindered than full-length antibodies at zones of virus-cell contact, the finding that their binding has the same structural consequences as that of other broadly neutralizing antibodies highlights their potential for use in therapeutic applications.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Self-assembled monolayers improve protein distribution on holey carbon cryo-EM supports

Joel R. Meyerson; Prashant Rao; Janesh Kumar; Sagar Chittori; Soojay Banerjee; Jason Pierson; Mark L. Mayer; Sriram Subramaniam

Poor partitioning of macromolecules into the holes of holey carbon support grids frequently limits structural determination by single particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). Here, we present a method to deposit, on gold-coated carbon grids, a self-assembled monolayer whose surface properties can be controlled by chemical modification. We demonstrate the utility of this approach to drive partitioning of ionotropic glutamate receptors into the holes, thereby enabling 3D structural analysis using cryo-EM methods.


Nature | 2016

Structural basis of kainate subtype glutamate receptor desensitization

Joel R. Meyerson; Sagar Chittori; Alan Merk; Prashant Rao; Tae Hee Han; Mihaela Serpe; Mark L. Mayer; Sriram Subramaniam

Glutamate receptors are ligand-gated tetrameric ion channels that mediate synaptic transmission in the central nervous system. They are instrumental in vertebrate cognition and their dysfunction underlies diverse diseases. In both the resting and desensitized states of AMPA and kainate receptor subtypes, the ion channels are closed, whereas the ligand-binding domains, which are physically coupled to the channels, adopt markedly different conformations. Without an atomic model for the desensitized state, it is not possible to address a central problem in receptor gating: how the resting and desensitized receptor states both display closed ion channels, although they have major differences in the quaternary structure of the ligand-binding domain. Here, by determining the structure of the kainate receptor GluK2 subtype in its desensitized state by cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) at 3.8 Å resolution, we show that desensitization is characterized by the establishment of a ring-like structure in the ligand-binding domain layer of the receptor. Formation of this ‘desensitization ring’ is mediated by staggered helix contacts between adjacent subunits, which leads to a pseudo-four-fold symmetric arrangement of the ligand-binding domains, illustrating subtle changes in symmetry that are important for the gating mechanism. Disruption of the desensitization ring is probably the key switch that enables restoration of the receptor to its resting state, thereby completing the gating cycle.


Retrovirology | 2015

Griffithsin tandemers: flexible and potent lectin inhibitors of the human immunodeficiency virus

Tinoush Moulaei; Kabamba B. Alexandre; Shilpa R. Shenoy; Joel R. Meyerson; Lauren R.H. Krumpe; Brian Constantine; Jennifer A. Wilson; Robert W. Buckheit; James B. McMahon; Sriram Subramaniam; Alexander Wlodawer; Barry R. O’Keefe

BackgroundThe lectin griffithsin (GRFT) is a potent antiviral agent capable of prevention and treatment of infections caused by a number of enveloped viruses and is currently under development as an anti-HIV microbicide. In addition to its broad antiviral activity, GRFT is stable at high temperature and at a broad pH range, displays little toxicity and immunogenicity, and is amenable to large-scale manufacturing. Native GRFT is a domain-swapped homodimer that binds to viral envelope glycoproteins and has displayed mid-picomolar activity in cell-based anti-HIV assays. Previously, we have engineered and analyzed several monomeric forms of this lectin (mGRFT) with anti-HIV EC50 values ranging up to 323 nM. Based on our previous analysis of mGRFT, we hypothesized that the orientation and spacing of the carbohydrate binding domains GRFT were key to its antiviral activity.ResultsHere we present data on engineered tandem repeats of mGRFT (mGRFT tandemers) with antiviral activity at concentrations as low as one picomolar in whole-cell anti-HIV assays. mGRFT tandemers were analyzed thermodynamically, both individually and in complex with HIV-1 gp120. We also demonstrate by dynamic light scattering and cryo-electron microscopy that mGRFT tandemers do not aggregate HIV virions. This establishes that, although the intra-virion crosslinking of HIV envelope glycoproteins is likely integral to their activity, the antiviral activity of these lectins is not due to virus aggregation caused by inter-virion crosslinking.ConclusionsThe engineered tandemer constructs of mGRFT may provide novel and powerful agents for prevention of infection by HIV and other enveloped viruses.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2011

Determination of Molecular Structures of HIV Envelope Glycoproteins using Cryo-Electron Tomography and Automated Sub-tomogram Averaging

Joel R. Meyerson; Tommi A. White; Donald Bliss; Amy Moran; Alberto Bartesaghi; Mario J. Borgnia; M. Jason V. de la Cruz; David M. Schauder; Lisa M. Hartnell; Rachna Nandwani; Moez Dawood; Brianna Kim; Jun Hong Kim; John Sununu; Lisa Yang; Siddhant Bhatia; Carolyn Subramaniam; Darrell E. Hurt; Laurent Gaudreault; Sriram Subramaniam


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Molecular Structures of Native HA Trimers on 2009 H1N1 Pandemic Influenza Virus Complexed with Neutralizing Antibodies

Audray K. Harris; Joel R. Meyerson; Yumiko Matsuoka; Oleg Kuybeda; Amy Moran; Donald Bliss; Suman R. Das; Jonathan W. Yewdell; Guillermo Sapiro; Kanta Subbarao; Sriram Subramaniam


Biophysical Journal | 2017

Cryo-Electron Microscopy Reveals Structural Basis of Kainate Subtype Glutamate Receptor Desensitization

Sagar Chittori; Joel R. Meyerson; Alan Merk; Prashant Rao; Tae H. Han; Mihaela Serpe; Mark L. Mayer; Sriram Subramaniam

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Sriram Subramaniam

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Mark L. Mayer

National Institutes of Health

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Sagar Chittori

National Institutes of Health

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Amy Moran

National Institutes of Health

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Donald Bliss

National Institutes of Health

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Prashant Rao

National Institutes of Health

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Mario J. Borgnia

National Institutes of Health

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Oleg Kuybeda

National Institutes of Health

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Rachna Nandwani

National Institutes of Health

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