Johanna C. vanderSpek
Boston University
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Featured researches published by Johanna C. vanderSpek.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2003
Ryan Ratts; Eric A. Berg; Clare Blue; Mark E. McComb; Cathy E. Costello; Johanna C. vanderSpek; John R. Murphy
In vitro delivery of the diphtheria toxin catalytic (C) domain from the lumen of purified early endosomes to the external milieu requires the addition of both ATP and a cytosolic translocation factor (CTF) complex. Using the translocation of C-domain ADP-ribosyltransferase activity across the endosomal membrane as an assay, the CTF complex activity was 650–800-fold purified from human T cell and yeast extracts, respectively. The chaperonin heat shock protein (Hsp) 90 and thioredoxin reductase were identified by mass spectrometry sequencing in CTF complexes purified from both human T cell and yeast. Further analysis of the role played by these two proteins with specific inhibitors, both in the in vitro translocation assay and in intact cell toxicity assays, has demonstrated their essential role in the productive delivery of the C-domain from the lumen of early endosomes to the external milieu. These results confirm and extend earlier observations of diphtheria toxin C-domain unfolding and refolding that must occur before and after vesicle membrane translocation. In addition, results presented here demonstrate that thioredoxin reductase activity plays an essential role in the cytosolic release of the C-domain. Because analogous CTF complexes have been partially purified from mammalian and yeast cell extracts, results presented here suggest a common and fundamental mechanism for C-domain translocation across early endosomal membranes.
Nature | 1998
Andre White; Xiaochun Ding; Johanna C. vanderSpek; John R. Murphy; Dagmar Ringe
The virulent phenotype of the pathogenic bacterium Corynebacterium diphtheriae is conferred by diphtheria toxin, whose expression is an adaptive response to low concentrations of iron. The expression of the toxin gene (tox) is regulated by the repressor DtxR (ref. 1), which is activated by transition metal ions. X-ray crystal structures of DtxR with and without (apo-form) its coordinated transition metal ion have established the general architecture of the repressor, identified the location of the metal-binding sites, and revealed a metal-ion-triggered subunit–subunit ‘caliper-like’ conformational change. Here we report thethree-dimensional crystal structure of the complex between a biologically active Ni(ii)-bound DtxR(C102D) mutant, in whicha cysteine is replaced by an aspartate at residue 102, and a 33-base-pair DNA segment containing the toxin operator tox O. This structure shows that DNA interacts with two dimeric repressor proteins bound to opposite sides of the tox operator. We propose that a metal-ion-induced helix-to-coil structural transition in the amino-terminal region of the protein is partly responsible for the unique mode of repressor activation by transition metal ions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Ryan Ratts; Carolina Trujillo; Ajit Bharti; Johanna C. vanderSpek; Robert H. Harrison; John R. Murphy
A 10-aa motif in transmembrane helix 1 of diphtheria toxin that is conserved in anthrax edema factor, anthrax lethal factor, and botulinum neurotoxin serotypes A, C, and D was identified by blast, clustal w, and meme computational analysis. Using the diphtheria toxin-related fusion protein toxin DAB389IL-2, we demonstrate that introduction of the L221E mutation into a highly conserved residue within this motif results in a nontoxic catalytic domain translocation deficient phenotype. To further probe the function of this motif in the process by which the catalytic domain is delivered from the lumen of early endosomes to the cytosol, we constructed a gene encoding a portion of diphtheria toxin transmembrane helix 1, T1, which carries the motif and is expressed from a CMV promoter. We then isolated stable transfectants of Hut102/6TG cells that express the T1 peptide, Hut102/6TG-T1. In contrast to the parental cell line, Hut102/6TG-T1 cells are ca. 104-fold more resistant to the fusion protein toxin. This resistance is completely reversed by coexpression of small interfering RNA directed against the gene encoding the T1 peptide in Hut102/6TG-T1 cells. We further demonstrate by GST-DT140-271 pull-down experiments in the presence and absence of synthetic T1 peptides the specific binding of coatomer protein complex subunit β to this region of the diphtheria toxin transmembrane domain.
Brain Research | 2004
Jonathan W. Francis; Dayse M. Figueiredo; Johanna C. vanderSpek; Laura M. Ayala; Young Seon Kim; Mary P. Remington; Philip J. Young; Christian L. Lorson; Shinichiro Ikebe; Paul S. Fishman; Robert H. Brown
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a degenerative disorder of spinal motor neurons caused by homozygous mutations in the survival motor neuron (SMN1) gene. Because increased tissue levels of human SMN protein (hSMN) in transgenic mice reduce the motor neuron loss caused by murine SMN knockout, we engineered a recombinant SMN fusion protein to deliver exogenous hSMN to the cytosolic compartment of motor neurons. The fusion protein, SDT, is comprised of hSMN linked to the catalytic and transmembrane domains of diphtheria toxin (DTx) followed by fragment C of tetanus toxin (TTC). Following overexpression in Escherichia coli, SDT possessed a subunit molecular weight of approximately 130 kDa as revealed by both SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analyses with anti-SMN, anti-DTx, and anti-TTC antibodies. Like wild-type SMN, purified SDT showed specific binding in vitro to an RG peptide derived from Ewings sarcoma protein. The fusion protein also bound to cultured primary neurons in amounts similar to those achieved by TTC. Unlike the case with TTC, however, immunolabeling of SDT-treated neurons with anti-TTC and anti-SMN antibodies showed staining restricted to the cell surface. Results from cytotoxicity studies in which the DTx catalytic domain of SDT was used as a reporter protein for internalization and membrane translocation activity suggest that the SMN moiety of the fusion protein is interfering with one or both of these processes. While these studies indicate that SDT may not be useful for SMA therapy, the use of the TTC:DTx fusion construct to deliver other passenger proteins to the neuronal cytosol should not be ruled out.
Methods in Enzymology | 2000
Johanna C. vanderSpek; John R. Murphy
Publisher Summary The construction of diphtheria toxin-based fusion protein toxins provides a means for the selective targeting and elimination of eukaryotic cells that express on their surface the targeted receptor. When bound to their respective cell surface receptors, the diphtheria toxin-based fusion protein toxins are internalized into the cell by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Productive delivery of the catalytic domain to the target cell cytosol requires passage through an acidic early endosomal compartment. As the lumen of the early endosome becomes acidified through the action of a vATPase, the transmembrane domain of the fusion protein spontaneously denatures and forms a pore, or channel, in the endosomal membrane and facilitates the translocation of the catalytic domain to the cytosol of the target cell. Because passage through an acid compartment is an essential step in the intoxication process, prior knowledge that a given surrogate ligand is internalized in an early endosomal compartment that becomes acidified is important.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1989
Johanna C. vanderSpek; Herman E. Wyandt; James Skare; Aubrey Milunsky; F G Oppenheim; Robert F. Troxler
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1993
Johanna C. vanderSpek; Joseph A. Mindell; Alan Finkelstein; John R. Murphy
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Li Sun; Johanna C. vanderSpek; John R. Murphy
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1994
Johanna C. vanderSpek; D Cassidy; F Genbauffe; P D Huynh; John R. Murphy
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
John F. Love; Johanna C. vanderSpek; Vedrana Marin; Luis Guerrero; Timothy M. Logan; John R. Murphy