John Berriman
Laboratory of Molecular Biology
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Featured researches published by John Berriman.
Cell | 1994
R.A. Crowther; N.A. Kiselev; Bettina Böttcher; John Berriman; Galina Borisova; Velta Ose; Paul Pumpens
Human hepatitis B virus core protein expressed in E. coli assembles into two sizes of particle. We have determined their three-dimensional structures by electron cryomicroscopy and image processing. The large and small particles correspond to triangulation number T = 4 and T = 3 dimer clustered packings, containing 240 and 180 protein subunits, respectively. The local packing of subunits is very similar in the two sizes of particle and shows holes or channels through the shell. The native viral core particle packages RNA and is active in reverse transcription to DNA. The holes we observe may provide access for the necessary small molecules. Shells assembled from the intact core protein contain additional material, probably RNA, which appears as an icosahedrally ordered inner shell in the three-dimensional map.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
John Berriman; Louise C. Serpell; Keith A. Oberg; Anthony L. Fink; Michel Goedert; R. Anthony Crowther
Abnormal filaments consisting of hyperphosphorylated microtubule-associated protein tau form in the brains of patients with Alzheimers disease, Downs syndrome, and various dementing tauopathies. In Alzheimers disease and Downs syndrome, the filaments have two characteristic morphologies referred to as paired helical and straight filaments, whereas in tauopathies, there is a wider range of morphologies. There has been controversy in the literature concerning the internal molecular fine structure of these filaments, with arguments for and against the cross-β structure demonstrated in many other amyloid fibers. The difficulty is to produce from brain pure preparations of filaments for analysis. One approach to avoid the need for a pure preparation is to use selected area electron diffraction from small groups of filaments of defined morphology. Alternatively, it is possible to assemble filaments in vitro from expressed tau protein to produce a homogeneous specimen suitable for analysis by electron diffraction, x-ray diffraction, and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Using both these approaches, we show here that native filaments from brain and filaments assembled in vitro from expressed tau protein have a clear cross-β structure.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Neil Ferguson; Johanna Becker; Henning Tidow; Sandra Tremmel; Timothy D. Sharpe; Gerd Krause; Jeremy Flinders; Miriana Petrovich; John Berriman; Hartmut Oschkinat; Alan R. Fersht
Human CA150, a transcriptional activator, binds to and is co-deposited with huntingtin during Huntingtons disease. The second WW domain of CA150 is a three-stranded β-sheet that folds in vitro in microseconds and forms amyloid fibers under physiological conditions. We found from exhaustive alanine scanning studies that fibrillation of this WW domain begins from its denatured conformations, and we identified a subset of residues critical for fibril formation. We used high-resolution magic-angle-spinning NMR studies on site-specific isotopically labeled fibrils to identify abundant long-range interactions between side chains. The distribution of critical residues identified by the alanine scanning and NMR spectroscopy, along with the electron microscopy data, revealed the protofilament repeat unit: a 26-residue nonnative β-hairpin. The structure we report has similarities to the hairpin formed by the Aβ(1–40) protofilament, yet also contains closely packed side-chains in a “steric zipper” arrangement found in the cross-β spine formed from small peptides from the Sup35 prion protein. Fibrillation of unrelated amyloidogenic sequences shows the common feature of zippered repeat units that act as templates for fiber elongation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Lesley J. Calder; Sebastian Wasilewski; John Berriman; Peter B. Rosenthal
Influenza is a lipid-enveloped, pleomorphic virus. We combine electron cryotomography and analysis of images of frozen-hydrated virions to determine the structural organization of filamentous influenza A virus. Influenza A/Udorn/72 virions are capsule-shaped or filamentous particles of highly uniform diameter. We show that the matrix layer adjacent to the membrane is an ordered helix of the M1 protein and its close interaction with the surrounding envelope determines virion morphology. The ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs) that package the genome segments form a tapered assembly at one end of the virus interior. The neuraminidase, which is present in smaller numbers than the hemagglutinin, clusters in patches and are typically present at the end of the virion opposite to RNP attachment. Incubation of virus at low pH causes a loss of filamentous morphology, during which we observe a structural transition of the matrix layer from its helical, membrane-associated form to a multilayered coil structure inside the virus particle. The polar organization of the virus provides a model for assembly of the virion during budding at the host membrane. Images and tomograms of A/Aichi/68 X-31 virions show the generality of these conclusions to non-filamentous virions.
Cell | 1995
Stephen D. Fuller; John Berriman; Sarah J. Butcher; Brent Gowen
Time-resolved cryoelectron microscopy reveals the first step in the conformational changes that enable membrane fusion in Semliki Forest virus. The neutral pH structure reveals a central cavity within the spike complex, plate-like extensions forming a layer above the membrane, and the paths of the paired transmembrane domains connecting the trimeric spikes and pentamer-hexamer clustered capsid subunits. Low pH treatment results in centrifugal movement of E2, the receptor-binding subunit, centripetal movement of E1 to narrow the central cavity initiating the formation of an E1 trimer, and the extension of the E1 fusion sequence toward the target membrane.
Ultramicroscopy | 1994
John Berriman; Nigel Unwin
A simple method to determine transient conformations of biological molecules is described. The two reactants (e.g. protein complex and ligand) are mixed rapidly by the coalescence of spray droplets containing one component, with a thin, grid-supported aqueous film containing the other. The transient state is then trapped by rapid freezing, and investigated later by cryo-microscopy. Images of conformations associated with reaction times of 1-100 ms can be achieved by adjusting the delay between the droplet impact and freezing. The droplets (typically 1 micron in diameter) are propelled onto the grid by an atomizer spray. It is shown that the droplets impinging on the liquid film spread rapidly over its surface under the influence of surface tension, and only weakly disturb the underlying film, partially displacing its contents away from the point of impact. Experiments with sprayed salt solutions, using vesicles derived from erythrocytes as micro-osmometers, indicate that rapid mixing occurs both through the film and laterally, by diffusion. The spraying process does not produce any detectable concentration changes due to drying in either the droplets or the film, and the method is applicable to high-resolution imaging.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Neil Ferguson; John Berriman; Miriana Petrovich; Timothy D. Sharpe; John T. Finch; Alan R. Fersht
The WW domains are small proteins that contain a three-stranded, antiparallel β-sheet. The 40-residue murine FBP28 WW domain rapidly formed twirling ribbon-like fibrils at physiological temperature and pH, with morphology typical of amyloid fibrils. These ribbons were unusually wide and well ordered, making them highly suitable for structural studies. Their x-ray and electron-diffraction patterns displayed the characteristic amyloid fiber 0.47-nm reflection of the cross-β diffraction signature. Both conventional and electron cryomicroscopy showed clearly that the ribbons were composed of many 2.5-nm-wide subfilaments that ran parallel to the long axis of the fiber. There was a region of lower density along the center of each filament. Lateral association of these filaments generated twisted, often interlinked, sheets up to 40 nm wide and many microns in length. The pitch of the helix varied from 60 to 320 nm, depending on the width of the ribbon. The wild-type FBP28 fibers were formed under conditions in which multiexponential folding kinetics is observed in other studies and which was attributed to a change in the mechanism of folding. It is more likely that those phases result from initial events in the off-pathway aggregation observed here.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
John Berriman; Sam Li; Lindsay Hewlett; Sebastian Wasilewski; Fedir N. Kiskin; Matthew J. Hannah; Peter B. Rosenthal
In endothelial cells, the multifunctional blood glycoprotein von Willebrand Factor (VWF) is stored for rapid exocytic release in specialized secretory granules called Weibel-Palade bodies (WPBs). Electron cryomicroscopy at the thin periphery of whole, vitrified human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) is used to directly image WPBs and their interaction with a 3D network of closely apposed membranous organelles, membrane tubules, and filaments. Fourier analysis of images and tomographic reconstruction show that VWF is packaged as a helix in WPBs. The helical signature of VWF tubules is used to identify VWF-containing organelles and characterize their paracrystalline order in low dose images. We build a 3D model of a WPB in which individual VWF helices can bend, but in which the paracrystalline packing of VWF tubules, closely wrapped by the WPB membrane, is associated with the rod-like morphology of the granules.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012
Alan M. Roseman; O. Borschukova; John Berriman; Samantha A. Wynne; Paul Pumpens; R.A. Crowther
The core shell of hepatitis B virus is a potent immune stimulator, giving a strong neutralizing immune response to foreign epitopes inserted at the immunodominant region, located at the tips of spikes on the exterior of the shell. Here, we analyze structures of core shells with a model epitope inserted at two alternative positions in the immunodominant region. Recombinantly expressed core protein assembles into T = 3 and T = 4 icosahedral shells, and atomic coordinates are available for the T = 4 shell. Since the modified protein assembles predominantly into T = 3 shells, a quasi-atomic model of the native T = 3 shell was made. The spikes in this T = 3 structure resemble those in T = 4 shells crystallized from expressed protein. However, the spikes in the modified shells exhibit an altered conformation, similar to the DNA containing shells in virions. Both constructs allow full access of antibodies to the foreign epitope, DPAFR from the preS1 region of hepatitis B virus surface antigen. However, one induces a 10-fold weaker immune response when injected into mice. In this construct, the epitope is less constrained by the flanking linker regions and is positioned so that the symmetry of the shell causes pairs of epitopes to come close enough to interfere with one another. In the other construct, the epitope mimics the native epitope conformation and position. The interaction of native core shells with an antibody specific to the immunodominant epitope is compared to the constructs with an antibody against the foreign epitope. Our findings have implications for the design of vaccines based on virus-like particles.
Virology | 1992
David Reddy; Cornelia C. Bergmann; Janice C. Meyer; John Berriman; Gerald W. Both; Barbara E.H. Colipar; David B. Boyle; Marion E. Andrew; A.Richard Bellamy
The major inner capsid protein of rotavirus is VP6, a 42-kDa polypeptide that forms the icosahedral surface of the rotavirus single-shelled particle. A chimeric form of VP6 (VP6sc) was constructed containing an upstream leader sequence derived from the influenza virus hemagglutinin and a downstream membrane-spanning (anchor) domain from a mouse immunoglobulin gene. When VP6sc was expressed in cells using a recombinant vaccinia virus, the protein was transported, glycosylated, and anchored in the plasma membrane as a trimer with the major domains of the protein orientated externally. Immunofluorescence and immunolabeling with colloidal gold indicated that VP6sc also localized in patches on the cell surface; electron microscopy revealed that the protein assembled into two-dimensional arrays which exhibited the same periodicity as the paracrystalline arrays formed by purified (viral) VP6. Mice inoculated with a recombinant vaccinia virus that expressed VP6sc produced rotavirus-specific antibodies at a titer 10 times higher than that achieved when wild-type, intracellular VP6 was delivered in the same way. Presentation at the cell surface therefore may represent a general method for enhancing the immunogenicity of rotavirus proteins.