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Dive into the research topics where Laura A. Lavery is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura A. Lavery.


Nature | 2005

Synthetic biology: engineering Escherichia coli to see light.

Anselm Levskaya; Aaron Chevalier; Jeffrey J. Tabor; Zachary Booth Simpson; Laura A. Lavery; Matthew Levy; Eric A. Davidson; Alexander Scouras; Andrew D. Ellington; Edward M. Marcotte; Christopher A. Voigt

We have designed a bacterial system that is switched between different states by red light. The system consists of a synthetic sensor kinase that allows a lawn of bacteria to function as a biological film, such that the projection of a pattern of light on to the bacteria produces a high-definition (about 100 megapixels per square inch), two-dimensional chemical image. This spatial control of bacterial gene expression could be used to ‘print’ complex biological materials, for example, and to investigate signalling pathways through precise spatial and temporal control of their phosphorylation steps.


Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics | 2011

Conformational dynamics of the molecular chaperone Hsp90.

Kristin A. Krukenberg; Timothy O. Street; Laura A. Lavery; David A. Agard

The ubiquitous molecular chaperone Hsp90 makes up 1-2% of cytosolic proteins and is required for viability in eukaryotes. Hsp90 affects the folding and activation of a wide variety of substrate proteins including many involved in signaling and regulatory processes. Some of these substrates are implicated in cancer and other diseases, making Hsp90 an attractive drug target. Structural analyses have shown that Hsp90 is a highly dynamic and flexible molecule that can adopt a wide variety of structurally distinct states. One driving force for these rearrangements is the intrinsic ATPase activity of Hsp90, as seen with other chaperones. However, unlike other chaperones, studies have shown that the ATPase cycle of Hsp90 is not conformationally deterministic. That is, rather than dictating the conformational state, ATP binding and hydrolysis only shift the equilibria between a pre-existing set of conformational states. For bacterial, yeast and human Hsp90, there is a conserved three-state (apo-ATP-ADP) conformational cycle; however; the equilibria between states are species specific. In eukaryotes, cytosolic co-chaperones regulate the in vivo dynamic behavior of Hsp90 by shifting conformational equilibria and affecting the kinetics of structural changes and ATP hydrolysis. In this review, we discuss the structural and biochemical studies leading to our current understanding of the conformational dynamics of Hsp90, as well as the roles that nucleotide, co-chaperones, post-translational modification and substrates play. This view of Hsp90s conformational dynamics was enabled by the use of multiple complementary structural methods including, crystallography, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), electron microscopy, Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and NMR. Finally, we discuss the effects of Hsp90 inhibitors on conformation and the potential for developing small molecules that inhibit Hsp90 by disrupting the conformational dynamics.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Substrate Binding Drives Large-Scale Conformational Changes in the Hsp90 Molecular Chaperone

Timothy O. Street; Laura A. Lavery; David A. Agard

Hsp90 is a ubiquitous molecular chaperone. Previous structural analysis demonstrated that Hsp90 can adopt a large number of structurally distinct conformations; however, the functional role of this flexibility is not understood. Here we investigate the structural consequences of substrate binding with a model system in which Hsp90 interacts with a partially folded protein (Δ131Δ), a well-studied fragment of staphylococcal nuclease. SAXS measurements reveal that under apo conditions, Hsp90 partially closes around Δ131Δ, and in the presence of AMPPNP, Δ131Δ binds with increased affinity to Hsp90s fully closed state. FRET measurements show that Δ131Δ accelerates the nucleotide-driven open/closed transition and stimulates ATP hydrolysis by Hsp90. NMR measurements reveal that Hsp90 binds to a specific, highly structured region of Δ131Δ. These results suggest that Hsp90 preferentially binds a locally structured region in a globally unfolded protein, and this binding drives functional changes in the chaperone by lowering a rate-limiting conformational barrier.


Molecular Cell | 2014

Structural Asymmetry in the Closed State of Mitochondrial Hsp90 (TRAP1) Supports a Two-Step ATP Hydrolysis Mechanism

Laura A. Lavery; James R. Partridge; Theresa A. Ramelot; Daniel Elnatan; Michael A. Kennedy; David A. Agard

While structural symmetry is a prevailing feature of homo-oligomeric proteins, asymmetry provides unique mechanistic opportunities. We present the crystal structure of full-length TRAP1, the mitochondrial Hsp90 molecular chaperone, in a catalytically active closed state. The TRAP1 homodimer adopts a distinct, asymmetric conformation, where one protomer is reconfigured via a helix swap at the middle:C-terminal domain (MD:CTD) interface. This interface plays a critical role in client binding. Solution methods validate the asymmetry and show extension to Hsp90 homologs. Point mutations that disrupt unique contacts at each MD:CTD interface reduce catalytic activity and substrate binding and demonstrate that each protomer needs access to both conformations. Crystallographic data on a dimeric NTD:MD fragment suggests that asymmetry arises from strain induced by simultaneous NTD and CTD dimerization. The observed asymmetry provides the potential for an additional step in the ATPase cycle, allowing sequential ATP hydrolysis steps to drive both client remodeling and client release.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

Cross-monomer substrate contacts reposition the Hsp90 N-terminal domain and prime the chaperone activity.

Timothy O. Street; Laura A. Lavery; Kliment A. Verba; Chung-Tien Lee; Matthias P. Mayer; David A. Agard

The ubiquitous molecular chaperone Hsp90 plays a critical role in substrate protein folding and maintenance, but the functional mechanism has been difficult to elucidate. In previous work, a model Hsp90 substrate revealed an activation process in which substrate binding accelerates a large open/closed conformational change required for ATP hydrolysis by Hsp90. While this could serve as an elegant mechanism for conserving ATP usage for productive interactions on the substrate, the structural origin of substrate-catalyzed Hsp90 conformational changes is unknown. Here, we find that substrate binding affects an intrinsically unfavorable rotation of the Hsp90 N-terminal domain (NTD) relative to the middle domain (MD) that is required for closure. We identify an MD substrate binding region on the interior cleft of the Hsp90 dimer and show that a secondary set of substrate contacts drives an NTD orientation change on the opposite monomer. These results suggest an Hsp90 activation mechanism in which cross-monomer contacts mediated by a partially structured substrate prime the chaperone for its functional activity.


Nature | 2005

Engineering Escherichia coli to see light

Anselm Levskaya; Aaron Chevalier; Jeffrey J. Tabor; Zachary Booth Simpson; Laura A. Lavery; Matthew Levy; Eric A. Davidson; Alexander Scouras; Andrew D. Ellington; Edward M. Marcotte; Christopher A. Voigt

We have designed a bacterial system that is switched between different states by red light. The system consists of a synthetic sensor kinase that allows a lawn of bacteria to function as a biological film, such that the projection of a pattern of light on to the bacteria produces a high-definition (about 100 megapixels per square inch), two-dimensional chemical image. This spatial control of bacterial gene expression could be used to ‘print’ complex biological materials, for example, and to investigate signalling pathways through precise spatial and temporal control of their phosphorylation steps.


eLife | 2014

A novel N-terminal extension in mitochondrial TRAP1 serves as a thermal regulator of chaperone activity

James R. Partridge; Laura A. Lavery; Daniel Elnatan; Nariman Naber; Roger Cooke; David A. Agard

Hsp90 is a conserved chaperone that facilitates protein homeostasis. Our crystal structure of the mitochondrial Hsp90, TRAP1, revealed an extension of the N-terminal β-strand previously shown to cross between protomers in the closed state. In this study, we address the regulatory function of this extension or ‘strap’ and demonstrate its responsibility for an unusual temperature dependence in ATPase rates. This dependence is a consequence of a thermally sensitive kinetic barrier between the apo ‘open’ and ATP-bound ‘closed’ conformations. The strap stabilizes the closed state through trans-protomer interactions. Displacement of cis-protomer contacts from the apo state is rate-limiting for closure and ATP hydrolysis. Strap release is coupled to rotation of the N-terminal domain and dynamics of the nucleotide binding pocket lid. The strap is conserved in higher eukaryotes but absent from yeast and prokaryotes suggesting its role as a thermal and kinetic regulator, adapting Hsp90s to the demands of unique cellular and organismal environments. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.03487.001


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Sparse labeling of proteins: structural characterization from long range constraints.

James H. Prestegard; David A. Agard; Kelley W. Moremen; Laura A. Lavery; Laura C. Morris; Kari Pederson

Structural characterization of biologically important proteins faces many challenges associated with degradation of resolution as molecular size increases and loss of resolution improving tools such as perdeuteration when non-bacterial hosts must be used for expression. In these cases, sparse isotopic labeling (single or small subsets of amino acids) combined with long range paramagnetic constraints and improved computational modeling offer an alternative. This perspective provides a brief overview of this approach and two discussions of potential applications; one involving a very large system (an Hsp90 homolog) in which perdeuteration is possible and methyl-TROSY sequences can potentially be used to improve resolution, and one involving ligand placement in a glycosylated protein where resolution is achieved by single amino acid labeling (the sialyltransferase, ST6Gal1). This is not intended as a comprehensive review, but as a discussion of future prospects that promise impact on important questions in the structural biology area.


Biomedical optics | 2005

Semiconductor nanocrystal-aptamer bioconjugate probes for specific prostate carcinoma cell targeting

Felice Shieh; Laura A. Lavery; Chitai Ted Chu; Rebecca Richards-Kortum; Andrew D. Ellington; Brian A. Korgel

Cancer of the prostate affects approximately 1 in 11 men. Current early screening for prostate cancer utilizes digital rectal examinations to detect anomalies in the prostate gland and blood test screenings for upregulated levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA). Many of these tests are invasive and can often be inconclusive as PSA levels may be heightened due to benign factors. Prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a well-characterized integral membrane protein, is expressed in virtually all prostate cancers and often correlates with cancer aggressiveness. Therefore, it may be used as an indicator of cancer growth and metastases. PSMA-specific antibodies have been identified and conjugated to fluorescent markers for cancer cell targeting; however, both the antibodies and markers possess significant limitations in their pharmaceutical and diagnostic value. Here we report the use of semiconductor nanocrystals bioconjugated to PSMA-specific aptamer recognition molecules for prostate carcinoma cell targeting. The nanocrystal/aptamer bioconjugates are small biocompatible probes with the potential for color-tunability for multicolor imaging. Ongoing in vitro and in vivo research seeks to introduce these nanoparticle bioconjugates into medical diagnostics.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Elucidating the Mechanism of Protein Remodeling by the Hsp90 Molecular Chaperone

Timothy O. Street; Laura A. Lavery; David A. Agard

Hsp90 is a ubiquitous molecular chaperone that interacts with highly diverse protein substrates. Previous structural analysis demonstrated that Hsp90 can adopt a large number of structurally distinct conformations, however the functional role of this flexibility is not understood. We investigate the structural consequences of substrate binding with a model system in which Hsp90 interacts with a constitutively unfolded protein (Δ131Δ), a well-studied fragment of staphylococcal nuclease. SAXS measurements reveal that under apo conditions Hsp90 partially closes around Δ131Δ and in the presence of AMPPNP Δ131Δ binds with increased affinity to Hsp90s fully closed state. Δ131Δ accelerates the nucleotide-driven open/closed transition and stimulates ATP hydrolysis by Hsp90. NMR measurements reveal that Hsp90 binds to a specific region of Δ131Δ. Although Δ131Δ is globally unfolded this particular region is significantly structured. These results indicate that Hsp90 can bind a locally structured region in a globally unfolded protein and this binding drives conformational and functional changes in the chaperone.

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Andrew D. Ellington

University of Texas at Austin

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David A. Agard

University of California

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Matthew Levy

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Alexander Scouras

University of Texas at Austin

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Christopher A. Voigt

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Edward M. Marcotte

University of Texas at Austin

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Eric A. Davidson

University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

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