Karl J. Petersen
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by Karl J. Petersen.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Joseph M. Muretta; Karl J. Petersen; David D. Thomas
We have used transient kinetics, nanosecond time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), and kinetics simulations to resolve a structural transition in the Dictyostelium myosin II relay helix during the actin-activated power stroke. The relay helix plays a critical role in force generation in myosin, coupling biochemical changes in the ATPase site with the force-transducing rotation of the myosin light-chain domain. Previous research in the absence of actin showed that ATP binding to myosin induces a dynamic equilibrium between a bent prepower stroke state of the relay helix and a straight postpower stroke state, which dominates in the absence of ATP or when ADP is bound. We now ask whether actin binding reverses this transition and if so, how this reversal is coordinated with actin-activated phosphate release. We labeled a Cys-lite Dictyostelium myosin II motor domain with donor and acceptor probes at two engineered Cys residues designed to detect relay helix bending. We then performed transient time-resolved FRET following stopped-flow mixing of actin with labeled myosin, preincubated with ATP. We determined the kinetics of actin-activated phosphate release, using fluorescent phosphate-binding protein. The results show that actin binding to the myosin.ADP.P complex straightens the relay helix before phosphate dissociation. This actin-activated relay helix straightening is reversible, but phosphate irreversibly dissociates from the postpower stroke state, preventing reversal of the power stroke. Thus, relay helix straightening gates phosphate dissociation, whereas phosphate dissociation provides the thermodynamic driving force underlying force production.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014
Karl J. Petersen; Kurt C. Peterson; Joseph M. Muretta; Sutton E. Higgins; Gregory D. Gillispie; David D. Thomas
We describe a nanosecond time-resolved fluorescence spectrometer that acquires fluorescence decay waveforms from each well of a 384-well microplate in 3 min with signal-to-noise exceeding 400 using direct waveform recording. The instrument combines high-energy pulsed laser sources (5-10 kHz repetition rate) with a photomultiplier and high-speed digitizer (1 GHz) to record a fluorescence decay waveform after each pulse. Waveforms acquired from rhodamine or 5-((2-aminoethyl)amino) naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid dyes in a 384-well plate gave lifetime measurements 5- to 25-fold more precise than the simultaneous intensity measurements. Lifetimes as short as 0.04 ns were acquired by interleaving with an effective sample rate of 5 GHz. Lifetime measurements resolved mixtures of single-exponential dyes with better than 1% accuracy. The fluorescence lifetime plate reader enables multiple-well fluorescence lifetime measurements with an acquisition time of 0.5 s per well, suitable for high-throughput fluorescence lifetime screening applications.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Joseph M. Muretta; William M. Behnke-Parks; Jennifer Major; Karl J. Petersen; Adeline Goulet; Carolyn A. Moores; David D. Thomas; Steven S. Rosenfeld
Background: Loop L5 shapes the enzymology of kinesin motors to meet specific physiologic roles. Results: L5 is in a dynamic equilibrium of three conformations whose relative proportions shift during the ATPase cycle. Conclusion: Interactions between L5 and helix α3 modulate the kinetics of microtubule binding. Significance: Combining transient kinetics with time-resolved fluorescence reveals important insights in the structural dynamics of molecular motors. Members of the kinesin superfamily of molecular motors differ in several key structural domains, which probably allows these molecular motors to serve the different physiologies required of them. One of the most variable of these is a stem-loop motif referred to as L5. This loop is longest in the mitotic kinesin Eg5, and previous structural studies have shown that it can assume different conformations in different nucleotide states. However, enzymatic domains often consist of a mixture of conformations whose distribution shifts in response to substrate binding or product release, and this information is not available from the “static” images that structural studies provide. We have addressed this issue in the case of Eg5 by attaching a fluorescent probe to L5 and examining its fluorescence, using both steady state and time-resolved methods. This reveals that L5 assumes an equilibrium mixture of three orientations that differ in their local environment and segmental mobility. Combining these studies with transient state kinetics demonstrates that there is a major shift in this distribution during transitions that interconvert weak and strong microtubule binding states. Finally, in conjunction with previous cryo-EM reconstructions of Eg5·microtubule complexes, these fluorescence studies suggest a model in which L5 regulates both nucleotide and microtubule binding through a set of reversible interactions with helix α3. We propose that these features facilitate the production of sustained opposing force by Eg5, which underlies its role in supporting formation of a bipolar spindle in mitosis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Karl J. Petersen; Holly V. Goodson; Ashley L. Arthur; G. W. Gant Luxton; Anne Houdusse; Margaret A. Titus
Significance Filopodia are actin-based structures used by cells to sense chemical stimuli and promote adhesion to the extracellular environment during the development of multicellular organisms. Filopod formation in evolutionarily distant organisms requires MyTH4-FERM (myosin tail homology 4-band 4.1, ezrin, radixin, moesin; MF) myosins that consist of a motor domain paired with a tail domain that binds cytoskeletal and membrane proteins. Mutational analysis identified the minimal requirements for MF myosin function in filopod formation and revealed that the key features are conserved between amoebozoan and metazoan MF myosins. These findings have implications for understanding the fundamental principles of how filopodia form and how MF myosins function in phylogenetically distant organisms. The formation of filopodia in Metazoa and Amoebozoa requires the activity of myosin 10 (Myo10) in mammalian cells and of Dictyostelium unconventional myosin 7 (DdMyo7) in the social amoeba Dictyostelium. However, the exact roles of these MyTH4-FERM myosins (myosin tail homology 4-band 4.1, ezrin, radixin, moesin; MF) in the initiation and elongation of filopodia are not well defined and may reflect conserved functions among phylogenetically diverse MF myosins. Phylogenetic analysis of MF myosin domains suggests that a single ancestral MF myosin existed with a structure similar to DdMyo7, which has two MF domains, and that subsequent duplications in the metazoan lineage produced its functional homolog Myo10. The essential functional features of the DdMyo7 myosin were identified using quantitative live-cell imaging to characterize the ability of various mutants to rescue filopod formation in myo7-null cells. The two MF domains were found to function redundantly in filopod formation with the C-terminal FERM domain regulating both the number of filopodia and their elongation velocity. DdMyo7 mutants consisting solely of the motor plus a single MyTH4 domain were found to be capable of rescuing the formation of filopodia, establishing the minimal elements necessary for the function of this myosin. Interestingly, a chimeric myosin with the Myo10 MF domain fused to the DdMyo7 motor also was capable of rescuing filopod formation in the myo7-null mutant, supporting fundamental functional conservation between these two distant myosins. Together, these findings reveal that MF myosins have an ancient and conserved role in filopod formation.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Carter J. Swanson; Ruth F. Sommese; Karl J. Petersen; Michael Ritt; Joshua Karslake; David D. Thomas; Sivaraj Sivaramakrishnan
Protein kinase C α (PKCα) is a nodal regulator in several intracellular signaling networks. PKCα is composed of modular domains that interact with each other to dynamically regulate spatial-temporal function. We find that PKCα specifically, rapidly and reversibly self-assembles in the presence of calcium in vitro. This phenomenon is dependent on, and can be modulated by an intramolecular interaction between the C1a and C2 protein domains of PKCα. Next, we monitor self-assembly of PKC—mCitrine fusion proteins using time-resolved and steady-state homoFRET. HomoFRET between full-length PKCα molecules is observed when in solution with both calcium and liposomes containing either diacylglycerol (DAG) or phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2). Surprisingly, the C2 domain is sufficient to cluster on liposomes containing PI(4,5)P2, indicating the C1a domain is not required for self-assembly in this context. We conclude that three distinct clustered states of PKCα can be formed depending on what combination of cofactors are bound, but Ca2+ is minimally required and sufficient for clustering.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015
Brett A. Colson; Karl J. Petersen; Brittany C. Collins; Dawn A. Lowe; David D. Thomas
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Lien A. Phung; Sira Karvinen; Brett A. Colson; Karl J. Petersen; Dawn A. Lowe; David D. Thomas
Biophysical Journal | 2017
Lien A. Phung; Joseph M. Muretta; Karl J. Petersen; John A. Rohde; Tara L. Mader; Dawn A. Lowe; David D. Thomas
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Brett A. Colson; Karl J. Petersen; Thomas A. Bunch; Brittany C. Collins; David D. Thomas; Dawn A. Lowe
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Jared G. Matzke; David D. Thomas; Karl J. Petersen; Joseph M. Muretta; Margaret A. Titus