Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Whittaker is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jonathan Whittaker.


Nature | 2013

How insulin engages its primary binding site on the insulin receptor.

John G. Menting; Jonathan Whittaker; Mai B. Margetts; Linda Whittaker; Geoffrey Kong; Brian J. Smith; Christopher J. Watson; Lenka Zakova; Emília Kletvíková; Jiří Jiráček; Shu Jin Chan; Donald F. Steiner; Guy Dodson; Andrzej M. Brzozowski; Michael A. Weiss; Colin W. Ward; Michael C. Lawrence

Insulin receptor signalling has a central role in mammalian biology, regulating cellular metabolism, growth, division, differentiation and survival. Insulin resistance contributes to the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus and the onset of Alzheimer’s disease; aberrant signalling occurs in diverse cancers, exacerbated by cross-talk with the homologous type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF1R). Despite more than three decades of investigation, the three-dimensional structure of the insulin–insulin receptor complex has proved elusive, confounded by the complexity of producing the receptor protein. Here we present the first view, to our knowledge, of the interaction of insulin with its primary binding site on the insulin receptor, on the basis of four crystal structures of insulin bound to truncated insulin receptor constructs. The direct interaction of insulin with the first leucine-rich-repeat domain (L1) of insulin receptor is seen to be sparse, the hormone instead engaging the insulin receptor carboxy-terminal α-chain (αCT) segment, which is itself remodelled on the face of L1 upon insulin binding. Contact between insulin and L1 is restricted to insulin B-chain residues. The αCT segment displaces the B-chain C-terminal β-strand away from the hormone core, revealing the mechanism of a long-proposed conformational switch in insulin upon receptor engagement. This mode of hormone–receptor recognition is novel within the broader family of receptor tyrosine kinases. We support these findings by photo-crosslinking data that place the suggested interactions into the context of the holoreceptor and by isothermal titration calorimetry data that dissect the hormone–insulin receptor interface. Together, our findings provide an explanation for a wealth of biochemical data from the insulin receptor and IGF1R systems relevant to the design of therapeutic insulin analogues.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Structural resolution of a tandem hormone-binding element in the insulin receptor and its implications for design of peptide agonists

Brian J. Smith; Kun Huang; Geoffrey Kong; Shu Jin Chan; Satoe H. Nakagawa; John G. Menting; Shi Quan Hu; Jonathan Whittaker; Donald F. Steiner; Panayotis G. Katsoyannis; Colin W. Ward; Michael A. Weiss; Michael C. Lawrence

The C-terminal segment of the human insulin receptor α-chain (designated αCT) is critical to insulin binding as has been previously demonstrated by alanine scanning mutagenesis and photo-cross-linking. To date no information regarding the structure of this segment within the receptor has been available. We employ here the technique of thermal-factor sharpening to enhance the interpretability of the electron-density maps associated with the earlier crystal structure of the human insulin receptor ectodomain. The αCT segment is now resolved as being engaged with the central β-sheet of the first leucine-rich repeat (L1) domain of the receptor. The segment is α-helical in conformation and extends 11 residues N-terminal of the classical αCT segment boundary originally defined by peptide mapping. This tandem structural element (αCT-L1) thus defines the intact primary insulin-binding surface of the apo-receptor. The structure, together with isothermal titration calorimetry data of mutant αCT peptides binding to an insulin minireceptor, leads to the conclusion that putative “insulin-mimetic” peptides in the literature act at least in part as mimics of the αCT segment as well as of insulin. Photo-cross-linking by novel bifunctional insulin derivatives demonstrates that the interaction of insulin with the αCT segment and the L1 domain occurs in trans, i.e., these components of the primary binding site are contributed by alternate α-chains within the insulin receptor homodimer. The tandem structural element defines a new target for the design of insulin agonists for the treatment of diabetes mellitus.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Identification of Common Ligand Binding Determinants of the Insulin and Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 Receptors INSIGHTS INTO MECHANISMS OF LIGAND BINDING

Dennis C. Mynarcik; Paul F. Williams; Lauge Schaffer; Gui Qin Yu; Jonathan Whittaker

Insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) are peptides that share nearly 50% sequence homology. However, although their cognate receptors also exhibit significant overall sequence homology, the affinity of each peptide for the non-cognate receptor is 2–3 orders of magnitude lower than for the cognate receptor. The molecular basis for this discrimination is unclear, as are the molecular mechanisms underlying ligand binding. We have recently identified a major ligand binding site of the insulin receptor by alanine scannning mutagenesis. These studies revealed that a number of amino acids critical for insulin binding are conserved in the IGF-1 receptor, suggesting that they may play a role in ligand binding. We therefore performed alanine mutagenesis of these amino acids to determine whether this is the case. cDNAs encoding alanine-substituted secreted recombinant IGF-1 receptors were expressed in 293 EBNA cells, and the ligand binding properties of the expressed proteins were evaluated. Mutation of Phe701 resulted in a receptor with undetectable IGF-1 binding; alanine substitution of the corresponding amino acid of the insulin receptor, Phe714, produces a 140-fold reduction in affinity for insulin. Mutation of Asp8, Asn11, Phe58, Phe692, Glu693, His697, and Asn698 produces a 3.5–6-fold reduction in affinity for IGF-1. In contrast, alanine mutation of the corresponding amino acids of the insulin receptor with the exception of Asp12 produces reductions in affinity that are 50-fold or greater. The affinity of insulin for these mutants relative to wild type receptor was similar to that of their relative affinity for IGF-1 with two exceptions; the IC50 values for insulin binding to the mutants of Arg10, which has normal affinity for IGF-1, and His697, which has a 6-fold reduction in affinity for IGF-1, were both at least 2 orders of magnitude greater than for wild type receptor. The K d values for insulin of the corresponding alanine mutants of the insulin receptor, Arg14 and His710, are 2–3 orders of magnitude greater than for wild type receptor. However, in contrast, the relative affinity of des(25–30)[PheB25α-carboxamide]insulin for these IGF-1 receptor mutants is reduced only 4- and 50-fold, respectively.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Protective hinge in insulin opens to enable its receptor engagement

John G. Menting; Yanwu Yang; Shu Jin Chan; Nelson B. Phillips; Brian J. Smith; Jonathan Whittaker; Nalinda P. Wickramasinghe; Linda Whittaker; Vijay Pandyarajan; Zhu Li Wan; Satya Prakash Yadav; Julie M. Carroll; Natalie Strokes; Charles T. Roberts; Faramarz Ismail-Beigi; Wieslawa Milewski; Donald F. Steiner; Virander S. Chauhan; Colin W. Ward; Michael A. Weiss; Michael C. Lawrence

Significance Insulin provides a model for analysis of protein structure and evolution. Here we describe in detail a conformational switch that enables otherwise hidden nonpolar surfaces in the hormone to engage its receptor. Whereas the classical closed conformation of insulin enables its stable storage in pancreatic β cells, its active conformation is open and susceptible to nonnative aggregation. Our findings illuminate biophysical constraints underlying the evolution of an essential signaling system and provide a structural foundation for design of therapeutic insulin analogs. Insulin provides a classical model of a globular protein, yet how the hormone changes conformation to engage its receptor has long been enigmatic. Interest has focused on the C-terminal B-chain segment, critical for protective self-assembly in β cells and receptor binding at target tissues. Insight may be obtained from truncated “microreceptors” that reconstitute the primary hormone-binding site (α-subunit domains L1 and αCT). We demonstrate that, on microreceptor binding, this segment undergoes concerted hinge-like rotation at its B20-B23 β-turn, coupling reorientation of PheB24 to a 60° rotation of the B25-B28 β-strand away from the hormone core to lie antiparallel to the receptors L1–β2 sheet. Opening of this hinge enables conserved nonpolar side chains (IleA2, ValA3, ValB12, PheB24, and PheB25) to engage the receptor. Restraining the hinge by nonstandard mutagenesis preserves native folding but blocks receptor binding, whereas its engineered opening maintains activity at the price of protein instability and nonnative aggregation. Our findings rationalize properties of clinical mutations in the insulin family and provide a previously unidentified foundation for designing therapeutic analogs. We envisage that a switch between free and receptor-bound conformations of insulin evolved as a solution to conflicting structural determinants of biosynthesis and function.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Precise mapping of an IGF-I-binding site on the IGF-1R

Mehrnaz Keyhanfar; Jonathan Whittaker; John C. Wallace; Briony E. Forbes

The IGF-1R [type 1 IGF (insulin-like growth factor) receptor] is activated upon binding to IGF-I and IGF-II leading to cell growth, survival and migration of both normal and cancerous cells. We have characterized the binding interaction between the IGF-1R and its ligands using two high-affinity mouse anti-IGF-1R mAbs (monoclonal antibodies), 7C2 and 9E11. These mAbs both block IGF-I binding to the IGF-1R but have no effect on IGF-II binding. Epitope mapping using chimaeras of the IGF-1R and insulin receptor revealed that the mAbs bind to the CR (cysteine-rich) domain of IGF-1R. The epitope was finely mapped using single point mutations in the IGF-1R. Mutation of Phe241, Phe251 or Phe266 completely abolished 7C2 and 9E11 binding. The three-dimensional structure showed that these residues cluster on the surface of the CR-domain. BIAcore analyses revealed that IGF-I and a chimaeric IGF-II with the IGF-I C-domain competed for the binding of both mAbs with the IGF-1R, whereas neither IGF-II nor a chimaeric IGF-I with the IGF-II C-domain affected antibody binding. We therefore conclude the IGF-I C-domain interacts with the CR (cysteine-rich) domain of the receptor at the cluster of residues Phe241, Phe251 and Phe266. These results allow precise orientation of IGF-I within the IGF-I-IGF-1R complex involving the IGF-I C-domain binding to the IGF-1R CR domain. In addition, mAbs 7C2 and 9E11 inhibited both IGF-I- and IGF-II-induced cancer cell proliferation, migration and IGF-1R down-regulation, demonstrating that targeting the IGF-1R is an effective strategy for inhibition of cancer cell growth.


Biochemistry | 2008

High-affinity insulin binding: insulin interacts with two receptor ligand binding sites.

Linda Whittaker; Caili Hao; Wen Fu; Jonathan Whittaker

The interaction of insulin with its receptor is complex. Kinetic and equilibrium binding studies suggest coexistence of high- and low-affinity binding sites or negative cooperativity. These phenomena and high-affinity interactions are dependent on the dimeric structure of the receptor. Structure-function studies of insulin analogs suggest insulin has two receptor binding sites, implying a bivalent interaction with the receptor. Alanine scanning studies of the secreted recombinant receptor implicate the L1 domain and a C-terminal peptide of the receptor alpha subunit as components of one ligand binding site. Functional studies suggest that the first and second type III fibronectin repeats of the receptor contain a second ligand binding site. We have used structure-directed alanine scanning mutagenesis to identify determinants in these domains involved in ligand interactions. cDNAs encoding alanine mutants of the holo-receptor were transiently expressed in 293 cells, and the binding properties of the expressed receptor were determined. Alanine mutations of Lys(484), Leu(552), Asp(591), Ile(602), Lys(616), Asp(620), and Pro(621) compromised affinities for insulin 2-5-fold. With the exception of Asp(620), none of these mutations compromised the affinity of the recombinant secreted receptor for insulin, indicating that the perturbation of the interaction is at the site of mutation and not an indirect effect on the interaction with the binding site of the secreted receptor. These residues thus form part of a novel ligand binding site of the insulin receptor. Complementation experiments demonstrate that insulin interacts in trans with both receptor binding sites to generate high-affinity interactions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Characterization of the Functional Insulin Binding Epitopes of the Full-length Insulin Receptor

Jonathan Whittaker; Linda Whittaker

Mutational analyses of the secreted recombinant insulin receptor extracellular domain have identified a ligand binding site composed of residues located in the L1 domain (amino acids 1–470) and at the C terminus of the α subunit (amino acids 705–715). To evaluate the physiological significance of this ligand binding site, we have transiently expressed cDNAs encoding full-length receptors with alanine mutations of the residues forming the functional epitopes of this binding site and determined their insulin binding properties. Insulin bound to wild-type receptors with complex kinetics, which were fitted to a two-component sequential model; the Kd of the high affinity component was 0.03 nm and that of the low affinity component was 0.4 nm. Mutations of Arg14, Phe64, Phe705, Glu706, Tyr708, Asn711, and Val715 inactivated the receptor. Alanine mutation of Asn15 resulted in a 20-fold decrease in affinity, whereas mutations of Asp12, Gln34, Leu36, Leu37, Leu87, Phe89, Tyr91, Lys121, Leu709, and Phe714 all resulted in 4–10-fold decreases. When the effects of the mutations were compared with those of the same mutations of the secreted recombinant receptor, significant differences were observed for Asn15, Leu37, Asp707, Leu709, Tyr708, Asn711, Phe714, and Val715, suggesting that the molecular basis for the interaction of each form of the receptor with insulin differs. We also examined the effects of alanine mutations of Asn15, Gln34, and Phe89 on insulin-induced receptor autophosphorylation. They had no effect on the maximal response to insulin but produced an increase in the EC50 commensurate with their effect on the affinity of the receptor for insulin.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

Design and Folding of [GluA4(OβThrB30)]Insulin (“Ester Insulin”): A Minimal Proinsulin Surrogate that Can Be Chemically Converted into Human Insulin

Youhei Sohma; Qing Xin Hua; Jonathan Whittaker; Michael A. Weiss; Stephen B. H. Kent

Insulin biosynthesis involves the efficient folding of a single polypeptide-chain precursor, with concomitant formation of three disulfides, to give proinsulin and the subsequent enzymatic removal of the C-peptide to give mature insulin.[1,2] A proinsulin- or mini-proinsulin-based approach is currently used in the recombinant production of human insulin.[3,4] However, recombinant production of insulin analogues is effectively limited to the creation of mutants from the twenty genetically encoded amino acids. In contrast to this, total chemical synthesis of insulin would in principle enable the incorporation of a wide range of non-natural amino acids and other chemical modifications into the molecule,[5] and would thus enable the full exploration of the medicinal chemistry of this important therapeutic molecule. Until now, however, we have lacked an efficient approach to the chemical synthesis of human insulin.[5] This has impeded development of next-generation insulin analogues containing non-standard side chains, D-amino acids[6,7] or other novel chemical structural features.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Supramolecular Protein Engineering DESIGN OF ZINC-STAPLED INSULIN HEXAMERS AS A LONG ACTING DEPOT

Nelson B. Phillips; Zhu Li Wan; Linda Whittaker; Shi Quan Hu; Kun Huang; Qing Xin Hua; Jonathan Whittaker; Faramarz Ismail-Beigi; Michael A. Weiss

Bottom-up control of supramolecular protein assembly can provide a therapeutic nanobiotechnology. We demonstrate that the pharmacological properties of insulin can be enhanced by design of “zinc staples” between hexamers. Paired (i, i+4) His substitutions were introduced at an α-helical surface. The crystal structure contains both classical axial zinc ions and novel zinc ions at hexamer-hexamer interfaces. Although soluble at pH 4, the combined electrostatic effects of the substitutions and bridging zinc ions cause isoelectric precipitation at neutral pH. Following subcutaneous injection in a diabetic rat, the analog effected glycemic control with a time course similar to that of long acting formulation Lantus®. Relative to Lantus, however, the analog discriminates at least 30-fold more stringently between the insulin receptor and mitogenic insulin-like growth factor receptor. Because aberrant mitogenic signaling may be associated with elevated cancer risk, such enhanced specificity may improve safety. Zinc stapling provides a general strategy to modify the pharmacokinetic and biological properties of a subcutaneous protein depot.


Structure | 2016

Higher-Resolution Structure of the Human Insulin Receptor Ectodomain: Multi-Modal Inclusion of the Insert Domain.

Tristan I. Croll; Brian J. Smith; Mai B. Margetts; Jonathan Whittaker; Michael A. Weiss; Colin W. Ward; Michael C. Lawrence

Insulin receptor (IR) signaling is critical to controlling nutrient uptake and metabolism. However, only a low-resolution (3.8 Å) structure currently exists for the IR ectodomain, with some segments ill-defined or unmodeled due to disorder. Here, we revise this structure using new diffraction data to 3.3 Å resolution that allow improved modeling of the N-linked glycans, the first and third fibronectin type III domains, and the insert domain. A novel haptic interactive molecular dynamics strategy was used to aid fitting to low-resolution electron density maps. The resulting model provides a foundation for investigation of structural transitions in IR upon ligand binding.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jonathan Whittaker's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael A. Weiss

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nelson B. Phillips

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kun Huang

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Linda Whittaker

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Faramarz Ismail-Beigi

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael C. Lawrence

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bin Xu

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge