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Dive into the research topics where Lukasz A. Joachimiak is active.

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Featured researches published by Lukasz A. Joachimiak.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

The Chaperonin TRIC Blocks a Huntingtin Sequence Element that promotes the Conformational Switch to Aggregation

Stephen Tam; Christoph Spiess; William Auyeung; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Bryan Chen; Michelle A. Poirier; Judith Frydman

Aggregation of proteins containing polyglutamine (polyQ) expansions characterizes many neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntingtons disease. Molecular chaperones modulate the aggregation and toxicity of the huntingtin (Htt) protein by an ill-defined mechanism. Here we determine how the chaperonin TRiC suppresses Htt aggregation. Unexpectedly, TRiC does not physically block the polyQ tract itself, but rather sequesters a short Htt sequence element, N-terminal to the polyQ tract, that promotes the amyloidogenic conformation. The residues of this element essential for rapid Htt aggregation are directly bound by TRiC. Our findings illustrate how molecular chaperones, which recognize hydrophobic determinants, can prevent aggregation of polar polyQ tracts associated with neurodegenerative diseases. The observation that short endogenous sequence elements can accelerate the switch of polyQ tracts to an amyloidogenic conformation provides a novel target for therapeutic strategies.


Structure | 2012

The Molecular Architecture of the Eukaryotic Chaperonin TRiC/CCT

Alexander Leitner; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Andreas Bracher; L. Mönkemeyer; Thomas Walzthoeni; Bryan Chen; Sebastian Pechmann; Susan Holmes; Yao Cong; Boxue Ma; S Ludtke; Wah Chiu; F. U. Hartl; Ruedi Aebersold; Judith Frydman

TRiC/CCT is a highly conserved and essential chaperonin that uses ATP cycling to facilitate folding of approximately 10% of the eukaryotic proteome. This 1 MDa hetero-oligomeric complex consists of two stacked rings of eight paralogous subunits each. Previously proposed TRiC models differ substantially in their subunit arrangements and ring register. Here, we integrate chemical crosslinking, mass spectrometry, and combinatorial modeling to reveal the definitive subunit arrangement of TRiC. In vivo disulfide mapping provided additional validation for the crosslinking-derived arrangement as the definitive TRiC topology. This subunit arrangement allowed the refinement of a structural model using existing X-ray diffraction data. The structure described here explains all available crosslink experiments, provides a rationale for previously unexplained structural features, and reveals a surprising asymmetry of charges within the chaperonin folding chamber.


Molecular Cell | 2011

A De Novo Protein Binding Pair By Computational Design and Directed Evolution

John Karanicolas; Jacob E. Corn; Irwin Chen; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Orly Dym; Sun H. Peck; Shira Albeck; Tamar Unger; Wenxin Hu; Gaohua Liu; Scott Delbecq; Gaetano T. Montelione; Clint P. Spiegel; David R. Liu; David Baker

The de novo design of protein-protein interfaces is a stringent test of our understanding of the principles underlying protein-protein interactions and would enable unique approaches to biological and medical challenges. Here we describe a motif-based method to computationally design protein-protein complexes with native-like interface composition and interaction density. Using this method we designed a pair of proteins, Prb and Pdar, that heterodimerize with a Kd of 130 nM, 1000-fold tighter than any previously designed de novo protein-protein complex. Directed evolution identified two point mutations that improve affinity to 180 pM. Crystal structures of an affinity-matured complex reveal binding is entirely through the designed interface residues. Surprisingly, in the in vitro evolved complex one of the partners is rotated 180° relative to the original design model, yet still maintains the central computationally designed hotspot interaction and preserves the character of many peripheral interactions. This work demonstrates that high-affinity protein interfaces can be created by designing complementary interaction surfaces on two noninteracting partners and underscores remaining challenges.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Chemical cross-linking/mass spectrometry targeting acidic residues in proteins and protein complexes.

Alexander Leitner; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Pia Unverdorben; Thomas Walzthoeni; Judith Frydman; Friedrich Förster; Ruedi Aebersold

Significance Most proteins carry out their function by associating with other proteins in stable or transient complexes. Structural analysis of such complexes, for example by crystallography, is frequently performed to study their function or mode of action. However, many large complexes are refractory to traditional structural biology methods. Alternative methods have been developed that are often combined with computational methods in hybrid structural biology strategies. Among these, the combination of chemical cross-linking and MS (XL-MS) has shown to be particularly informative. Current XL-MS methods mainly rely on the coupling of lysine residues. Here we describe a chemistry to cross-link acidic residues that generates structural information complementary to that obtained by amine-specific cross-linking, thus significantly expanding the scope of XL-MS analyses. The study of proteins and protein complexes using chemical cross-linking followed by the MS identification of the cross-linked peptides has found increasingly widespread use in recent years. Thus far, such analyses have used almost exclusively homobifunctional, amine-reactive cross-linking reagents. Here we report the development and application of an orthogonal cross-linking chemistry specific for carboxyl groups. Chemical cross-linking of acidic residues is achieved using homobifunctional dihydrazides as cross-linking reagents and a coupling chemistry at neutral pH that is compatible with the structural integrity of most protein complexes. In addition to cross-links formed through insertion of the dihydrazides with different spacer lengths, zero-length cross-link products are also obtained, thereby providing additional structural information. We demonstrate the application of the reaction and the MS identification of the resulting cross-linked peptides for the chaperonin TRiC/CCT and the 26S proteasome. The results indicate that the targeting of acidic residues for cross-linking provides distance restraints that are complementary and orthogonal to those obtained from lysine cross-linking, thereby expanding the yield of structural information that can be obtained from cross-linking studies and used in hybrid modeling approaches.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Exogenous delivery of chaperonin subunit fragment ApiCCT1 modulates mutant Huntingtin cellular phenotypes

Emily Mitchell Sontag; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Zhiqun Tan; Anthony Tomlinson; David E. Housman; Charles G. Glabe; Steven G. Potkin; Judith Frydman; Leslie M. Thompson

Aggregation of misfolded proteins is characteristic of a number of neurodegenerative diseases, including Huntington disease (HD). The CCT/TRiC (chaperonin containing TCP-1/TCP-1 ring) chaperonin complex can inhibit aggregation and cellular toxicity induced by expanded repeat Huntingtin (mHtt) fragments. The substrate-binding apical domain of CCT/TRiC subunit CCT1, ApiCCT1, is sufficient to inhibit aggregation of expanded repeat mHtt fragments in vitro, providing therapeutic promise for HD. However, a key hurdle in considering ApiCCT1 as a potential treatment is in delivery. Because ApiCCT1 has a region of similarity to the HIV Tat protein cell-transduction domain, we tested whether recombinant ApiCCT1 (ApiCCT1r) protein could enter cells following exogenous delivery and modulate an established panel of mHtt-mediated cell-based phenotypes. Cell fractionation studies demonstrate that exogenous ApiCCT1r can penetrate cell membranes and can localize to the nucleus, consistent with a strategy that can target both cytosolic and nuclear pathogenic events in HD. ApiCCT1r application does indeed modulate HD cellular phenotypes by decreasing formation of visible inclusions, fibrillar oligomers, and insoluble mHtt derived from expression of a truncated mHtt exon 1 fragment. ApiCCT1r also delays the onset of inclusion body formation as visualized via live imaging. ApiCCT1r reduces mHtt-mediated toxicity in immortalized striatal cells derived from full-length knock-in HD mice, suggesting that therapeutic benefit may extend beyond effects on aggregation. These studies provide the basis for a potentially robust and unique therapeutic strategy to target mHtt-mediated protein pathogenesis.


Nature Methods | 2015

xTract: software for characterizing conformational changes of protein complexes by quantitative cross-linking mass spectrometry

Thomas Walzthoeni; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; George Rosenberger; Hannes L. Röst; Lars Malmström; Alexander Leitner; Judith Frydman; Ruedi Aebersold

Chemical cross-linking in combination with mass spectrometry generates distance restraints of amino acid pairs in close proximity on the surface of native proteins and protein complexes. In this study we used quantitative mass spectrometry and chemical cross-linking to quantify differences in cross-linked peptides obtained from complexes in spatially discrete states. We describe a generic computational pipeline for quantitative cross-linking mass spectrometry consisting of modules for quantitative data extraction and statistical assessment of the obtained results. We used the method to detect conformational changes in two model systems: firefly luciferase and the bovine TRiC complex. Our method discovers and explains the structural heterogeneity of protein complexes using only sparse structural information.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Structure and Dynamics of the Huntingtin Exon-1 N-Terminus: A Solution NMR Perspective

Maria Baias; Pieter E. S. Smith; Koning Shen; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Szymon Żerko; Wiktor Koźmiński; Judith Frydman; Lucio Frydman

Many neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by misfolding and aggregation of an expanded polyglutamine tract (polyQ). Huntingtons Disease, caused by expansion of the polyQ tract in exon 1 of the Huntingtin protein (Htt), is associated with aggregation and neuronal toxicity. Despite recent structural progress in understanding the structures of amyloid fibrils, little is known about the solution states of Htt in general, and about molecular details of their transition from soluble to aggregation-prone conformations in particular. This is an important question, given the increasing realization that toxicity may reside in soluble conformers. This study presents an approach that combines NMR with computational methods to elucidate the structural conformations of Htt Exon 1 in solution. Of particular focus was Htts N17 domain sited N-terminal to the polyQ tract, which is key to enhancing aggregation and modulate Htt toxicity. Such in-depth structural study of Htt presents a number of unique challenges: the long homopolymeric polyQ tract contains nearly identical residues, exon 1 displays a high degree of conformational flexibility leading to a scaling of the NMR chemical shift dispersion, and a large portion of the backbone amide groups are solvent-exposed leading to fast hydrogen exchange and causing extensive line broadening. To deal with these problems, NMR assignment was achieved on a minimal Htt exon 1, comprising the N17 domain, a polyQ tract of 17 glutamines, and a short hexameric polyProline region that does not contribute to the spectrum. A pH titration method enhanced this polypeptides solubility and, with the aid of ≤5D NMR, permitted the full assignment of N17 and the entire polyQ tract. Structural predictions were then derived using the experimental chemical shifts of the Htt peptide at low and neutral pH, together with various different computational approaches. All these methods concurred in indicating that low-pH protonation stabilizes a soluble conformation where a helical region of N17 propagates into the polyQ region, while at neutral pH both N17 and the polyQ become largely unstructured-thereby suggesting a mechanism for how N17 regulates Htt aggregation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006

Computational Design of a New Hydrogen Bond Network and at Least a 300-fold Specificity Switch at a Protein−Protein Interface

Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Tanja Kortemme; Barry L. Stoddard; David Baker


Cell | 2014

The Structural Basis of Substrate Recognition by the Eukaryotic Chaperonin TRiC/CCT

Lukasz A. Joachimiak; Thomas Walzthoeni; Corey W. Liu; Ruedi Aebersold; Judith Frydman


Structure | 2011

Cryo-EM Structure of a Group II Chaperonin in the Prehydrolysis ATP-Bound State Leading to Lid Closure

Junjie Zhang; Boxue Ma; Frank DiMaio; Nicholai R. Douglas; Lukasz A. Joachimiak; David Baker; Judith Frydman; Michael Levitt; Wah Chiu

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David Baker

University of Washington

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Boxue Ma

Baylor College of Medicine

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