Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Julie A. Hoy is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Julie A. Hoy.


Biopolymers | 2009

Review: Correlations between oxygen affinity and sequence classifications of plant hemoglobins

Benoit J. Smagghe; Julie A. Hoy; Ryan Percifield; Suman Kundu; Mark S. Hargrove; Gautam Sarath; Jean-Louis Hilbert; Richard A. Watts; Elizabeth S. Dennis; W. James Peacock; Sylvia Dewilde; Luc Moens; George C. Blouin; John S. Olson; Cyril A. Appleby

Plants express three phylogenetic classes of hemoglobins (Hb) based on sequence analyses. Class 1 and 2 Hbs are full‐length globins with the classical eight helix Mb‐like fold, whereas Class 3 plant Hbs resemble the truncated globins found in bacteria. With the exception of the specialized leghemoglobins, the physiological functions of these plant hemoglobins remain unknown. We have reviewed and, in some cases, measured new oxygen binding properties of a large number of Class 1 and 2 plant nonsymbiotic Hbs and leghemoglobins. We found that sequence classification correlates with distinct extents of hexacoordination with the distal histidine and markedly different overall oxygen affinities and association and dissociation rate constants. These results suggest strong selective pressure for the evolution of distinct physiological functions. The leghemoglobins evolved from the Class 2 globins and show no hexacoordination, very high rates of O2 binding (∼250 μM−1 s−1), moderately high rates of O2 dissociation (∼5–15 s−1), and high oxygen affinity (Kd or P50 ≈ 50 nM). These properties both facilitate O2 diffusion to respiring N2 fixing bacteria and reduce O2 tension in the root nodules of legumes. The Class 1 plant Hbs show weak hexacoordination (KHisE7 ≈ 2), moderate rates of O2 binding (∼25 μM−1 s−1), very small rates of O2 dissociation (∼0.16 s−1), and remarkably high O2 affinities (P50 ≈ 2 nM), suggesting a function involving O2 and nitric oxide (NO) scavenging. The Class 2 Hbs exhibit strong hexacoordination (KHisE7 ≈ 100), low rates of O2 binding (∼1 μM−1 s−1), moderately low O2 dissociation rate constants (∼1 s−1), and moderate, Mb‐like O2 affinities (P50 ≈ 340 nM), perhaps suggesting a sensing role for sustained low, micromolar levels of oxygen.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Crystal Structure of the Membrane Fusion Protein CusB from Escherichia coli

Chih-Chia Su; Feng Yang; Feng Long; Deepak Reyon; Mathew D. Routh; Dennis W. Kuo; Adam K. Mokhtari; Jonathan D. Van Ornam; Katherine L. Rabe; Julie A. Hoy; Young Jin Lee; Kanagalaghatta R. Rajashankar; Edward W. Yu

Gram-negative bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, frequently utilize tripartite efflux complexes belonging to the resistance-nodulation-division family to expel diverse toxic compounds from the cell. These systems contain a periplasmic membrane fusion protein (MFP) that is critical for substrate transport. We here present the x-ray structures of the CusB MFP from the copper/silver efflux system of E. coli. This is the first structure of any MFPs associated with heavy-metal efflux transporters. CusB bridges the inner-membrane efflux pump CusA and outer-membrane channel CusC to mediate resistance to Cu(+) and Ag(+) ions. Two distinct structures of the elongated molecules of CusB were found in the asymmetric unit of a single crystal, which suggests the flexible nature of this protein. Each protomer of CusB can be divided into four different domains, whereby the first three domains are mostly beta-strands and the last domain adopts an entirely helical architecture. Unlike other known structures of MFPs, the alpha-helical domain of CusB is folded into a three-helix bundle. This three-helix bundle presumably interacts with the periplasmic domain of CusC. The N- and C-termini of CusB form the first beta-strand domain, which is found to interact with the periplasmic domain of the CusA efflux pump. Atomic details of how this efflux protein binds Cu(+) and Ag(+) were revealed by the crystals of the CusB-Cu(I) and CusB-Ag(I) complexes. The structures indicate that CusB consists of multiple binding sites for these metal ions. These findings reveal novel structural features of an MFP in the resistance-nodulation-division efflux system and provide direct evidence that this protein specifically interacts with transported substrates.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2008

The structure and function of plant hemoglobins

Julie A. Hoy; Mark S. Hargrove

Plants, like humans, contain hemoglobin. Three distinct types of hemoglobin exist in plants: symbiotic, non-symbiotic, and truncated hemoglobins. Crystal structures and other structural and biophysical techniques have revealed important knowledge about ligand binding and conformational stabilization in all three types. In symbiotic hemoglobins (leghemoglobins), ligand binding regulatory mechanisms have been shown to differ dramatically from myoglobin and red blood cell hemoglobin. In the non-symbiotic hemoglobins found in all plants, crystal structures and vibrational spectroscopy have revealed the nature of the structural transition between the hexacoordinate and ligand-bound states. In truncated hemoglobins, the abbreviated globin is porous, providing tunnels that may assist in ligand binding, and the bound ligand is stabilized by more than one distal pocket residue. Research has implicated these plant hemoglobins in a number of possible functions differing among hemoglobin types, and possibly between plant species.


Protein Science | 2007

Covalent heme attachment in Synechocystis hemoglobin is required to prevent ferrous heme dissociation

Julie A. Hoy; Benoit J. Smagghe; Puspita Halder; Mark S. Hargrove

Synechocystis hemoglobin contains an unprecedented covalent bond between a nonaxial histidine side chain (H117) and the heme 2‐vinyl. This bond has been previously shown to stabilize the ferric protein against denaturation, and also to affect the kinetics of cyanide association. However, it is unclear why Synechocystis hemoglobin would require the additional degree of stabilization accompanying the His117–heme 2‐vinyl bond because it also displays endogenous bis‐histidyl axial heme coordination, which should greatly assist heme retention. Furthermore, the mechanism by which the His117–heme 2‐vinyl bond affects ligand binding has not been reported, nor has any investigation of the role of this bond on the structure and function of the protein in the ferrous oxidation state. Here we report an investigation of the role of the Synechocystis hemoglobin His117–heme 2‐vinyl bond on structure, heme coordination, exogenous ligand binding, and stability in both the ferrous and ferric oxidation states. Our results reveal that hexacoordinate Synechocystis hemoglobin lacking this bond is less stable in the ferrous oxidation state than the ferric, which is surprising in light of our understanding of pentacoordinate Hb stability, in which the ferric protein is always less stable. It is also demonstrated that removal of the His117–heme 2‐vinyl bond increases the affinity constant for intramolecular histidine coordination in the ferric oxidation state, thus presenting greater competition for the ligand binding site and lowering the observed rate and affinity constants for exogenous ligands.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2011

Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of the SH2 domain of IL-2-inducible T-cell kinase

Raji E. Joseph; Nathaniel D. Ginder; Julie A. Hoy; Jay C. Nix; Richard B. Honzatko; Amy H. Andreotti

Proline is a unique amino acid owing to the relatively small energy difference between the cis and trans conformations of its peptide bond. The X-Pro imide bond readily undergoes cis-trans isomerization in the context of short peptides as well as some proteins. However, the direct detection of cis-trans proline isomerization in folded proteins is technically challenging. NMR spectroscopy is well suited to the direct detection of proline isomerization in folded proteins. It is less clear how well X-ray crystallography can reveal this conformational exchange event in folded proteins. Conformational heterogeneity owing to cis-trans proline isomerization in the Src homology 2 (SH2) domain of the IL-2-inducible T-cell kinase (ITK) has been extensively characterized by NMR. Using the ITK SH2 domain as a test system, an attempt was made to determine whether proline isomerization could be detected in a crystal structure of the ITK SH2 domain. As a first step towards this goal, the purification, crystallization and preliminary characterization of the ITK SH2 domain are described.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2007

Plant hemoglobins: a molecular fossil record for the evolution of oxygen transport

Julie A. Hoy; Howard Robinson; James T. Trent; Smita Kakar; Benoit J. Smagghe; Mark S. Hargrove


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Crystal Structure of Synechocystis Hemoglobin with a Covalent Heme Linkage

Julie A. Hoy; Suman Kundu; James T. Trent; S. Ramaswamy; Mark S. Hargrove


Biophysical Journal | 2003

Direct measurement of equilibrium constants for high-affinity hemoglobins

Suman Kundu; Scott A. Premer; Julie A. Hoy; James T. Trent; Mark S. Hargrove


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2004

Crystallographic analysis of synechocystis cyanoglobin reveals the structural changes accompanying ligand binding in a hexacoordinate hemoglobin.

James T. Trent; Suman Kundu; Julie A. Hoy; Mark S. Hargrove


Biochemistry | 2006

Role of phenylalanine B10 in plant nonsymbiotic hemoglobins.

Benoit J. Smagghe; Suman Kundu; Julie A. Hoy; Puspita Halder; Theodore R. Weiland; Andrea Savage; Anand Venugopal; Matthew Goodman; Scott A. Premer; Mark S. Hargrove

Collaboration


Dive into the Julie A. Hoy's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge