Korrie L. Mack
Syracuse University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Korrie L. Mack.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2016
Adam L. Yokom; Stephanie N. Gates; Meredith E. Jackrel; Korrie L. Mack; Min Su; James Shorter; Daniel R. Southworth
Hsp104, a conserved AAA+ protein disaggregase, promotes survival during cellular stress. Hsp104 remodels amyloids, thereby supporting prion propagation, and disassembles toxic oligomers associated with neurodegenerative diseases. However, a definitive structural mechanism for its disaggregase activity has remained elusive. We determined the cryo-EM structure of wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae Hsp104 in the ATP state, revealing a near-helical hexamer architecture that coordinates the mechanical power of the 12 AAA+ domains for disaggregation. An unprecedented heteromeric AAA+ interaction defines an asymmetric seam in an apparent catalytic arrangement that aligns the domains in a two-turn spiral. N-terminal domains form a broad channel entrance for substrate engagement and Hsp70 interaction. Middle-domain helices bridge adjacent protomers across the nucleotide pocket, thus explaining roles in ATP hydrolysis and protein disaggregation. Remarkably, substrate-binding pore loops line the channel in a spiral arrangement optimized for substrate transfer across the AAA+ domains, thereby establishing a continuous path for polypeptide translocation.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Yurii S. Moroz; Tiffany T. Dunston; Olga V. Makhlynets; Olesia V. Moroz; Yibing Wu; Jennifer H. Yoon; Alissa B. Olsen; Jaclyn M. McLaughlin; Korrie L. Mack; Pallavi M. Gosavi; Nico A. J. van Nuland; Ivan V. Korendovych
Design of a new catalytic function in proteins, apart from its inherent practical value, is important for fundamental understanding of enzymatic activity. Using a computationally inexpensive, minimalistic approach that focuses on introducing a single highly reactive residue into proteins to achieve catalysis we converted a 74-residue-long C-terminal domain of calmodulin into an efficient esterase. The catalytic efficiency of the resulting stereoselective, allosterically regulated catalyst, nicknamed AlleyCatE, is higher than that of any previously reported de novo designed esterases. The simplicity of our design protocol should complement and expand the capabilities of current state-of-art approaches to protein design. These results show that even a small nonenzymatic protein can efficiently attain catalytic activities in various reactions (Kemp elimination, ester hydrolysis, retroaldol reaction) as a result of a single mutation. In other words, proteins can be just one mutation away from becoming entry points for subsequent evolution.
Science | 2017
Stephanie N. Gates; Adam L. Yokom; JiaBei Lin; Meredith E. Jackrel; Alexandrea N. Rizo; Nathan M. Kendsersky; Courtney E. Buell; Elizabeth A. Sweeny; Korrie L. Mack; Edward Chuang; Mariana P. Torrente; Min Su; James Shorter; Daniel R. Southworth
Untangling aggregates one step at a time Conserved AAA+ protein complexes exploit adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis to unfold and disaggregate their substrates in response to cell stress, but exactly how they do this has been unclear. Gates et al. determined high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy structures of the Hsp104 disaggregase bound to an unfolded polypeptide substrate in its channel. The structures reveal substrate interactions and two different translocation states. Hsp104 undergoes conformational changes that drive movement along the substrate by two-amino-acid steps. These states help explain how this molecular machine can solubilize protein aggregates and amyloids. Science, this issue p. 273 Cryo–electron microscopy structures of an AAA+ machine reveal details of the mechanism used for substrate protein disaggregation. Hsp100 polypeptide translocases are conserved members of the AAA+ family (adenosine triphosphatases associated with diverse cellular activities) that maintain proteostasis by unfolding aberrant and toxic proteins for refolding or proteolytic degradation. The Hsp104 disaggregase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae solubilizes stress-induced amorphous aggregates and amyloids. The structural basis for substrate recognition and translocation is unknown. Using a model substrate (casein), we report cryo–electron microscopy structures at near-atomic resolution of Hsp104 in different translocation states. Substrate interactions are mediated by conserved, pore-loop tyrosines that contact an 80-angstrom-long unfolded polypeptide along the axial channel. Two protomers undergo a ratchet-like conformational change that advances pore loop–substrate interactions by two amino acids. These changes are coupled to activation of specific nucleotide hydrolysis sites and, when transmitted around the hexamer, reveal a processive rotary translocation mechanism and substrate-responsive flexibility during Hsp104-catalyzed disaggregation.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Olesia V. Moroz; Yurii S. Moroz; Yibing Wu; Alissa B. Olsen; Hong Cheng; Korrie L. Mack; Jaclyn M. McLaughlin; Elizabeth A. Raymond; Krystyna Zhezherya; Heinrich Roder; Ivan V. Korendovych
It only takes one mutation: a strategically placed single mutation in a non-enzymatic protein scaffold produced AlleyCat, a small, allosterically regulated catalyst of Kemp elimination. In only 7 rounds of directed evolution enzymatic efficiency of the original 74 amino acid residue catalyst was improved more than 220-fold to achieve kcat value higher than that of catalytic antibodies for the same reaction, still preserving allosteric regulation.
Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences | 2016
Korrie L. Mack; James Shorter
Cells have evolved a sophisticated proteostasis network to ensure that proteins acquire and retain their native structure and function. Critical components of this network include molecular chaperones and protein disaggregases, which function to prevent and reverse deleterious protein misfolding. Nevertheless, proteostasis networks have limits, which when exceeded can have fatal consequences as in various neurodegenerative disorders, including Parkinsons disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. A promising strategy is to engineer proteostasis networks to counter challenges presented by specific diseases or specific proteins. Here, we review efforts to enhance the activity of individual molecular chaperones or protein disaggregases via engineering and directed evolution. Remarkably, enhanced global activity or altered substrate specificity of various molecular chaperones, including GroEL, Hsp70, ClpX, and Spy, can be achieved by minor changes in primary sequence and often a single missense mutation. Likewise, small changes in the primary sequence of Hsp104 yield potentiated protein disaggregases that reverse the aggregation and buffer toxicity of various neurodegenerative disease proteins, including α-synuclein, TDP-43, and FUS. Collectively, these advances have revealed key mechanistic and functional insights into chaperone and disaggregase biology. They also suggest that enhanced chaperones and disaggregases could have important applications in treating human disease as well as in the purification of valuable proteins in the pharmaceutical sector.
Protein Science | 2015
Elizabeth A. Raymond; Korrie L. Mack; Jennifer H. Yoon; Olesia V. Moroz; Yurii S. Moroz; Ivan V. Korendovych
We employed a minimalist approach for design of an allosterically controlled retroaldolase. Introduction of a single lysine residue into the nonenzymatic protein calmodulin led to a 15,000‐fold increase in the second order rate constant for retroaldol reaction with methodol as a substrate. The resulting catalyst AlleyCatR is active enough for subsequent directed evolution in crude cell bacterial lysates. AlleyCatRs activity is allosterically regulated by Ca2+ ions. No catalysis is observed in the absence of the metal ion. The increase in catalytic activity originates from the hydrophobic interaction of the substrate (∼2000‐fold) and the change in the apparent pKa of the active lysine residue.
Biochemistry | 2017
Clarissa L. Weaver; Elizabeth C. Duran; Korrie L. Mack; JiaBei Lin; Meredith E. Jackrel; Elizabeth A. Sweeny; James Shorter; Aaron L. Lucius
Recent Hsp104 structural studies have reported both planar and helical models of the hexameric structure. The conformation of Hsp104 monomers within the hexamer is affected by nucleotide ligation. After nucleotide-driven hexamer formation, Hsp104-catalyzed disruption of protein aggregates requires binding to the peptide substrate. Here, we examine the oligomeric state of Hsp104 and its peptide binding competency in the absence of nucleotide and in the presence of ADP, ATPγS, AMPPNP, or AMPPCP. Surprisingly, we found that only ATPγS facilitates avid peptide binding by Hsp104. We propose that the modulation between high- and low-peptide affinity states observed with these ATP analogues is an important component of the disaggregation mechanism of Hsp104.
Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Korrie L. Mack; Olesia V. Moroz; Yurii S. Moroz; Alissa B. Olsen; Jaclyn M. McLaughlin; Ivan V. Korendovych
Fems Yeast Research | 2018
Amber Tariq; JiaBei Lin; Megan M. Noll; Mariana P. Torrente; Korrie L. Mack; Oscar Hernandez Murillo; Meredith E. Jackrel; James Shorter
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Clarissa L. Weaver; Meredith E. Jackrel; JiaBei Lin; Korrie L. Mack; Elizabeth A. Sweeny; Elizabeth C. Duran; James Shorter; Aaron L. Lucius