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Dive into the research topics where Katherine E. McAuley is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine E. McAuley.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

Structural insight into the quinolone-DNA cleavage complex of type IIA topoisomerases

Ivan Laponogov; Maninder K. Sohi; Dennis A. Veselkov; Xiao-Su Pan; R Sawhney; A.W Thompson; Katherine E. McAuley; L.M Fisher; Mark R. Sanderson

Type II topoisomerases alter DNA topology by forming a covalent DNA-cleavage complex that allows DNA transport through a double-stranded DNA break. We present the structures of cleavage complexes formed by the Streptococcus pneumoniae ParC breakage-reunion and ParE TOPRIM domains of topoisomerase IV stabilized by moxifloxacin and clinafloxacin, two antipneumococcal fluoroquinolones. These structures reveal two drug molecules intercalated at the highly bent DNA gate and help explain antibacterial quinolone action and resistance.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Structural Basis of Gate-DNA Breakage and Resealing by Type II Topoisomerases

Ivan Laponogov; Xiao-Su Pan; Dennis A. Veselkov; Katherine E. McAuley; L. Mark Fisher; Mark R. Sanderson

Type II DNA topoisomerases are ubiquitous enzymes with essential functions in DNA replication, recombination and transcription. They change DNA topology by forming a transient covalent cleavage complex with a gate-DNA duplex that allows transport of a second duplex though the gate. Despite its biological importance and targeting by anticancer and antibacterial drugs, cleavage complex formation and reversal is not understood for any type II enzyme. To address the mechanism, we have used X-ray crystallography to study sequential states in the formation and reversal of a DNA cleavage complex by topoisomerase IV from Streptococcus pneumoniae, the bacterial type II enzyme involved in chromosome segregation. A high resolution structure of the complex captured by a novel antibacterial dione reveals two drug molecules intercalated at a cleaved B-form DNA gate and anchored by drug-specific protein contacts. Dione release generated drug-free cleaved and resealed DNA complexes in which the DNA gate instead adopts an unusual A/B-form helical conformation with a Mg2+ ion repositioned to coordinate each scissile phosphodiester group and promote reversible cleavage by active-site tyrosines. These structures, the first for putative reaction intermediates of a type II topoisomerase, suggest how a type II enzyme reseals DNA during its normal reaction cycle and illuminate aspects of drug arrest important for the development of new topoisomerase-targeting therapeutics.


Nature Communications | 2013

Picornavirus uncoating intermediate captured in atomic detail.

Jingshan Ren; Xiangxi Wang; Zhongyu Hu; Qiang Gao; Yao Sun; Xuemei Li; Claudine Porta; Thomas S. Walter; Robert J. C. Gilbert; Yuguang Zhao; Danny Axford; Mark C. Williams; Katherine E. McAuley; David J. Rowlands; Weidong Yin; Junzhi Wang; David I. Stuart; Zihe Rao; Elizabeth E. Fry

It remains largely mysterious how the genomes of non-enveloped eukaryotic viruses are transferred across a membrane into the host cell. Picornaviruses are simple models for such viruses, and initiate this uncoating process through particle expansion, which reveals channels through which internal capsid proteins and the viral genome presumably exit the particle, although this has not been clearly seen until now. Here we present the atomic structure of an uncoating intermediate for the major human picornavirus pathogen CAV16, which reveals VP1 partly extruded from the capsid, poised to embed in the host membrane. Together with previous low-resolution results, we are able to propose a detailed hypothesis for the ordered egress of the internal proteins, using two distinct sets of channels through the capsid, and suggest a structural link to the condensed RNA within the particle, which may be involved in triggering RNA release.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2001

Probing the interface between membrane proteins and membrane lipids by X-ray crystallography

Paul K. Fyfe; Katherine E. McAuley; Aleksander W. Roszak; Neil W. Isaacs; Richard J. Cogdell; Michael R. Jones

Biological membranes are composed of a complex mixture of lipids and proteins, and the membrane lipids support several key biophysical functions, in addition to their obvious structural role. Recent results from X-ray crystallography are shedding new light on the precise molecular details of the protein-lipid interface.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

Structure of a feruloyl esterase from Aspergillus niger

Katherine E. McAuley; Allan Svendsen; Shamkant Anant Patkar; Keith S. Wilson

The crystallographic structure of feruloyl esterase from Aspergillus niger has been determined to a resolution of 1.5 A by molecular replacement. The protein has an alpha/beta-hydrolase structure with a Ser-His-Asp catalytic triad; the overall fold of the protein is very similar to that of the fungal lipases. The structure of the enzyme-product complex was determined to a resolution of 1.08 A and reveals dual conformations for the serine and histidine residues at the active site.


Methods | 2011

Automated data collection for macromolecular crystallography

Graeme Winter; Katherine E. McAuley

An overview, together with some practical advice, is presented of the current status of the automation of macromolecular crystallography (MX) data collection, with a focus on MX beamlines at Diamond Light Source, UK.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Tuning of the optical and electrochemical properties of the primary donor bacteriochlorophylls in the reaction centre from Rhodobacter sphaeroides: spectroscopy and structure.

Diane Spiedel; Aleksander W. Roszak; Kimberley McKendrick; Katherine E. McAuley; Paul K. Fyfe; Eliane Nabedryk; Jacques Breton; Bruno Robert; Richard J. Cogdell; Neil W. Isaacs; Michael R. Jones

A series of mutations have been introduced at residue 168 of the L-subunit of the reaction centre from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. In the wild-type reaction centre, residue His L168 donates a strong hydrogen bond to the acetyl carbonyl group of one of the pair of bacteriochlorophylls (BChl) that constitutes the primary donor of electrons. Mutation of His L168 to Phe or Leu causes a large decrease in the mid-point redox potential of the primary electron donor, consistent with removal of this strong hydrogen bond. Mutations to Lys, Asp and Arg cause smaller decreases in redox potential, indicative of the presence of weak hydrogen bond and/or an electrostatic effect of the polar residue. A spectroscopic analysis of the mutant complexes suggests that replacement of the wild-type His residue causes a decrease in the strength of the coupling between the two primary donor bacteriochlorophylls. The X-ray crystal structure of the mutant in which His L168 has been replaced by Phe (HL168F) was determined to a resolution of 2.5 A, and the structural model of the HL168F mutant was compared with that of the wild-type complex. The mutation causes a shift in the position of the primary donor bacteriochlorophyll that is adjacent to residue L168, and also affects the conformation of the acetyl carbonyl group of this bacteriochlorophyll. This conformational change constitutes an approximately 27 degrees through-plane rotation, rather than the large into-plane rotation that has been widely discussed in the context of the HL168F mutation. The possible structural basis of the altered spectroscopic properties of the HL168F mutant reaction centre is discussed, as is the relevance of the X-ray crystal structure of the HL168F mutant to the possible structures of the remaining mutant complexes.


FEBS Letters | 2000

X-ray crystal structure of the YM210W mutant reaction centre from Rhodobacter sphaeroides.

Katherine E. McAuley; Paul K. Fyfe; Richard J. Cogdell; Neil W. Isaacs; Michael R. Jones

The X‐ray crystal structure of a reaction centre from Rhodobacter sphaeroides with a mutation of tyrosine M210 to tryptophan (YM210W) has been determined to a resolution of 2.5 Å. Structural conservation is very good throughout the body of the protein, with the tryptophan side chain adopting a position in the mutant complex closely resembling that of the tyrosine in the wild‐type complex. The spectroscopic properties of the YM210W reaction centre are discussed with reference to the structural data, with particular focus on evidence that the introduction of the bulkier tryptophan in place of the native tyrosine may cause a small tilt of the macrocycle of the BL monomeric bacteriochlorophyll.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

An examination of how structural changes can affect the rate of electron transfer in a mutated bacterial photoreaction centre.

Justin P. Ridge; Paul K. Fyfe; Katherine E. McAuley; M. E. Van Brederode; Bruno Robert; R. van Grondelle; Neil W. Isaacs; Richard J. Cogdell; Michael R. Jones

A series of reaction centres bearing mutations at the (Phe) M197 position were constructed in the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. This residue is adjacent to the pair of bacteriochlorophyll molecules (P(L) and P(M)) that is the primary donor of electrons (P) in photosynthetic light-energy transduction. All of the mutations affected the optical and electrochemical properties of the P bacteriochlorophylls. A mutant reaction centre with the change Phe M197 to Arg (FM197R) was crystallized, and a structural model constructed at 2.3 A (1 A=0.1 nm) resolution. The mutation resulted in a change in the structure of the protein at the interface region between the P bacteriochlorophylls and the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll that is the first electron acceptor (B(L)). The new Arg residue at the M197 position undergoes a significant reorientation, creating a cavity at the interface region between P and B(L). The acetyl carbonyl substituent group of the P(M) bacteriochlorophyll undergoes an out-of-plane rotation, which decreases the edge-to-edge distance between the macrocycles of P(M) and B(L). In addition, two new buried water molecules partially filled the cavity that is created by the reorientation of the Arg residue. These waters are in a suitable position to connect the macrocycles of P and B(L) via three hydrogen bonds. Transient absorption measurements show that, despite an inferred decrease in the driving force for primary electron transfer in the FM197R reaction centre, there is little effect on the overall rate of the primary reaction in the bulk of the reaction-centre population. Examination of the X-ray crystal structure reveals a number of small changes in the structure of the reaction centre in the interface region between the P and B(L) bacteriochlorophylls that could account for this faster-than-predicted rate of primary electron transfer.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2013

Visualization of membrane protein crystals in lipid cubic phase using X-ray imaging.

Anna J. Warren; Wes Armour; Danny Axford; Mark Basham; T. Connolley; David R. Hall; Sam Horrell; Katherine E. McAuley; Vitaliy Mykhaylyk; Armin Wagner; Gwyndaf Evans

A comparison of X-ray diffraction and radiographic techniques for the location and characterization of protein crystals is demonstrated on membrane protein crystals mounted within lipid cubic phase material.

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Gwyndaf Evans

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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David R. Hall

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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