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Dive into the research topics where Mair E. A. Churchill is active.

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Featured researches published by Mair E. A. Churchill.


Methods in Enzymology | 1987

Hydroxyl radical footprinting: a high-resolution method for mapping protein-DNA contacts.

Thomas D. Tullius; Beth A. Dombroski; Mair E. A. Churchill; Laurance Kam

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the utilization of the high resolution method “hydroxyl radical footprinting” for mapping protein–deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) contacts. Hydroxyl radical cleaves DNA by abstracting a hydrogen atom from the deoxyribose sugars along the DNA backbone. As hydroxyl radical is exceedingly short lived and reactive and attacks sites on the surface of the DNA molecule, there is almost no sequence dependence or base dependence in the cleavage reaction. Every position along the backbone is cleaved nearly equally. This chemistry is used to determine the helical periodicity of a DNA-restriction fragment bound to an inorganic crystal, because hydroxyl radical could cut efficiently only the DNA backbone sugars that were directed away from the inorganic surface. The chapter illustrates that this same chemistry can be applied to produce the footprints of proteins bound to DNA as cutting of the DNA backbone by hydroxyl radical is blocked by bound protein. The chapter illustrates hydroxyl radical footprinting by its application to a well studied DNA–protein complex that of the bacteriophage λ repressor with the O R 1 operator DNA sequence. It also illustrates the way the reaction conditions for hydroxyl radical footprinting may be altered to accommodate other DNA-protein complexes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Nasal chemosensory cells use bitter taste signaling to detect irritants and bacterial signals

Marco Tizzano; Brian D. Gulbransen; Aurelie Vandenbeuch; Tod R. Clapp; Jake P. Herman; Hiruy M. Sibhatu; Mair E. A. Churchill; Wayne L. Silver; Sue C. Kinnamon; Thomas E. Finger

The upper respiratory tract is continually assaulted with harmful dusts and xenobiotics carried on the incoming airstream. Detection of such irritants by the trigeminal nerve evokes protective reflexes, including sneezing, apnea, and local neurogenic inflammation of the mucosa. Although free intra-epithelial nerve endings can detect certain lipophilic irritants (e.g., mints, ammonia), the epithelium also houses a population of trigeminally innervated solitary chemosensory cells (SCCs) that express T2R bitter taste receptors along with their downstream signaling components. These SCCs have been postulated to enhance the chemoresponsive capabilities of the trigeminal irritant-detection system. Here we show that transduction by the intranasal solitary chemosensory cells is necessary to evoke trigeminally mediated reflex reactions to some irritants including acyl–homoserine lactone bacterial quorum-sensing molecules, which activate the downstream signaling effectors associated with bitter taste transduction. Isolated nasal chemosensory cells respond to the classic bitter ligand denatonium as well as to the bacterial signals by increasing intracellular Ca2+. Furthermore, these same substances evoke changes in respiration indicative of trigeminal activation. Genetic ablation of either Gα-gustducin or TrpM5, essential elements of the T2R transduction cascade, eliminates the trigeminal response. Because acyl–homoserine lactones serve as quorum-sensing molecules for Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria, detection of these substances by airway chemoreceptors offers a means by which the airway epithelium may trigger an epithelial inflammatory response before the bacteria reach population densities capable of forming destructive biofilms.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2010

The histone shuffle: histone chaperones in an energetic dance

Chandrima Das; Jessica K. Tyler; Mair E. A. Churchill

Our genetic information is tightly packaged into a rather ingenious nucleoprotein complex called chromatin in a manner that enables it to be rapidly accessed during genomic processes. Formation of the nucleosome, which is the fundamental unit of chromatin, occurs via a stepwise process that is reversed to enable the disassembly of nucleosomes. Histone chaperone proteins have prominent roles in facilitating these processes as well as in replacing old histones with new canonical histones or histone variants during the process of histone exchange. Recent structural, biophysical and biochemical studies have begun to shed light on the molecular mechanisms whereby histone chaperones promote chromatin assembly, disassembly and histone exchange to facilitate DNA replication, repair and transcription.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Specificity of Acyl-Homoserine Lactone Synthases Examined by Mass Spectrometry

Ty A. Gould; Jake P. Herman; Jessica Krank; Robert C. Murphy; Mair E. A. Churchill

Many gram-negative bacteria produce a specific set of N-acyl-L-homoserine-lactone (AHL) signaling molecules for the purpose of quorum sensing, which is a means of regulating coordinated gene expression in a cell-density-dependent manner. AHLs are produced from acylated acyl-carrier protein (acyl-ACP) and S-adenosyl-L-methionine by the AHL synthase enzyme. The appearance of specific AHLs is due in large part to the intrinsic specificity of the enzyme for subsets of acyl-ACP substrates. Structural studies of the Pantoea stewartii enzyme EsaI and AHL-sensitive bioassays revealed that threonine 140 in the acyl chain binding pocket directs the enzyme toward production of 3-oxo-homoserine lactones. Mass spectrometry was used to examine the range of AHL molecular species produced by AHL synthases under a variety of conditions. An AHL selective normal-phase chromatographic purification with addition of a deuterated AHL internal standard was followed by reverse-phase liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry in order to obtain estimates of the relative amounts of different AHLs from biological samples. The AHLs produced by wild-type and engineered EsaI and LasI AHL synthases show that intrinsic specificity and different cellular conditions influence the production of AHLs. The threonine at position 140 in EsaI is important for the preference for 3-oxo-acyl-ACPs, but the role of the equivalent threonine in LasI is less clear. In addition, LasI expressed in Escherichia coli produces a high proportion of unusual AHLs with acyl chains consisting of an odd number of carbons. Furthermore, these studies offer additional methods that will be useful for surveying and quantitating AHLs from different sources.


Chemical Reviews | 2011

Structural Basis of Acyl-homoserine Lactone-Dependent Signaling

Mair E. A. Churchill; Lingling Chen

Acyl-homoserine lactones are small neutral lipid molecules that bacteria in the Proteobacteria group use to sense and signal their cell density. This signaling process, known as quorum sensing, activates differentiation to diverse community oriented lifestyles within the bacterial population. Since the first description of autoinduction 40 years ago 1 and quorum sensing systems in the light producing gram-negative bacterium Vibrio fischeri 2,3, which is a symbiont of the Hawaiian bobtail squid Euprymna scolopes, much has been learned about the molecular mechanism of signaling in these and many related bacteria (reviewed in 4 and Chapters 5-25 in 5). The primary signals used by gram negative bacteria to sense cell density are acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL) molecules, which are composed of a homoserine lactone ring (HSL) with an acyl chain (Figure 1). The acyl-chain length generally varies from C4 to C18 6,7 and this can be modified by a 3-oxo substituent, or in some cases, a 3-hydroxy substituent, a terminal methyl branch, or varied degrees of unsaturation 8. AHLs are synthesized by enzymes known as the AHL synthases 7,9. Once produced, the AHLs diffuse in and out of the cell by passive 10 as well as active transport mechanisms 11. The concentration of AHL eventually reaches a sufficiently high concentration at a given threshold cell number or bacterial “quorum”, and it is then recognized by a receptor protein, which is the second component of the system. The AHLresponsive receptors include a wide variety of transcriptional regulators called “R proteins”, such as LuxR or LasR, which are DNA-binding transcription factors 4,12 and a small family of sensor kinases related to LuxN 13. The binding of the AHL by most of the characterized R-proteins initiates the activation and repression of target genes, and in some cases AHL binding leads to target gene derepression 14-18.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2012

The high mobility group box: the ultimate utility player of a cell

Christopher S. Malarkey; Mair E. A. Churchill

High mobility group (HMG) box proteins are abundant and ubiquitous DNA binding proteins with a remarkable array of functions throughout the cell. The structure of the HMG box DNA binding domain and general mechanisms of DNA binding and bending have been known for more than a decade. However, new mechanisms that regulate HMG box protein intracellular translocation, and by which HMG box proteins recognize DNA with and without sequence specificity, have only recently been uncovered. This review focuses primarily on the Sry-like HMG box family, HMGB1, and mitochondrial transcription factor A. For these proteins, structural and biochemical studies have shown that HMG box protein modularity, interactions with other DNA binding proteins and cellular receptors, and post-translational modifications are key regulators of their diverse functions.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

Quorum-Sensing Control of Antibiotic Synthesis in Burkholderia thailandensis

Breck A. Duerkop; John Varga; Josephine R. Chandler; Snow Brook Peterson; Jake P. Herman; Mair E. A. Churchill; Matthew R. Parsek; William C. Nierman; E. Peter Greenberg

The genome of Burkholderia thailandensis codes for several LuxR-LuxI quorum-sensing systems. We used B. thailandensis quorum-sensing deletion mutants and recombinant Escherichia coli to determine the nature of the signals produced by one of the systems, BtaR2-BtaI2, and to show that this system controls genes required for the synthesis of an antibiotic. BtaI2 is an acyl-homoserine lactone (acyl-HSL) synthase that produces two hydroxylated acyl-HSLs, N-3-hydroxy-decanoyl-HSL (3OHC(10)-HSL) and N-3-hydroxy-octanoyl-HSL (3OHC(8)-HSL). The btaI2 gene is positively regulated by BtaR2 in response to either 3OHC(10)-HSL or 3OHC(8)-HSL. The btaR2-btaI2 genes are located within clusters of genes with annotations that suggest they are involved in the synthesis of polyketide or peptide antibiotics. Stationary-phase cultures of wild-type B. thailandensis, but not a btaR2 mutant or a strain deficient in acyl-HSL synthesis, produced an antibiotic effective against gram-positive bacteria. Two of the putative antibiotic synthesis gene clusters require BtaR2 and either 3OHC(10)-HSL or 3OHC(8)-HSL for activation. This represents another example where antibiotic synthesis is controlled by quorum sensing, and it has implications for the evolutionary divergence of B. thailandensis and its close relatives Burkholderia pseudomallei and Burkholderia mallei.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Crystal structure of QscR, a Pseudomonas aeruginosa quorum sensing signal receptor

Mario J. Lintz; Ken Ichi Oinuma; Christina L. Wysoczynski; E. P. Greenberg; Mair E. A. Churchill

Acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL) quorum sensing controls gene expression in hundreds of Proteobacteria including a number of plant and animal pathogens. Generally, the AHL receptors are members of a family of related transcription factors, and although they have been targets for development of antivirulence therapeutics there is very little structural information about this class of bacterial receptors. We have determined the structure of the transcription factor, QscR, bound to N-3-oxo-dodecanoyl-homoserine lactone from the opportunistic human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa at a resolution of 2.55 Å. The ligand-bound QscR is a dimer with a unique symmetric “cross-subunit” arrangement containing multiple dimerization interfaces involving both domains of each subunit. The QscR dimer appears poised to bind DNA. Predictions about signal binding and dimerization contacts were supported by studies of mutant QscR proteins in vivo. The acyl chain of the AHL is in close proximity to the dimerization interfaces. Our data are consistent with an allosteric mechanism of signal transmission in the regulation of DNA binding and thus virulence gene expression.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Structural analysis and DNA binding of the HMG domains of the human mitochondrial transcription factor A

Todd A. Gangelhoff; Purnima S. Mungalachetty; Jay C. Nix; Mair E. A. Churchill

The mitochondrial transcription factor A (mtTFA) is central to assembly and initiation of the mitochondrial transcription complex. Human mtTFA (h-mtTFA) is a dual high mobility group box (HMGB) protein that binds site-specifically to the mitochondrial genome and demarcates the promoters for recruitment of h-mtTFB1, h-mtTFB2 and the mitochondrial RNA polymerase. The stoichiometry of h-mtTFA was found to be a monomer in the absence of DNA, whereas it formed a dimer in the complex with the light strand promoter (LSP) DNA. Each of the HMG boxes and the C-terminal tail were evaluated for their ability to bind to the LSP DNA. Removal of the C-terminal tail only slightly decreased nonsequence specific DNA binding, and box A, but not box B, was capable of binding to the LSP DNA. The X-ray crystal structure of h-mtTFA box B, at 1.35 Å resolution, revealed the features of a noncanonical HMG box. Interactions of box B with other regions of h-mtTFA were observed. Together, these results provide an explanation for the unusual DNA-binding properties of box B and suggest possible roles for this domain in transcription complex assembly.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

Mutational Analysis of Burkholderia thailandensis Quorum Sensing and Self-Aggregation

Josephine R. Chandler; Breck A. Duerkop; Aaron Hinz; T. Eoin West; Jake P. Herman; Mair E. A. Churchill; Shawn J. Skerrett; E. Peter Greenberg

Acyl-homoserine lactone (acyl-HSL) quorum-sensing signaling is common to many Proteobacteria. Acyl-HSLs are synthesized by the LuxI family of synthases, and the signal response is mediated by members of the LuxR family of transcriptional regulators. Burkholderia thailandensis is a member of a closely related cluster of three species, including the animal pathogens Burkholderia mallei and Burkholderia pseudomallei. Members of this group have similar luxI and luxR homologs, and these genes contribute to B. pseudomallei and B. mallei virulence. B. thailandensis possesses three pairs of luxI-luxR homologs. One of these pairs, BtaI2-BtaR2, has been shown to produce and respond to 3OHC(10)-HSL and to control the synthesis of an antibiotic. By using a markerless-exhange method, we constructed an assortment of B. thailandensis quorum-sensing mutants, and we used these mutants to show that BtaI1 is responsible for C(8)-HSL production and BtaI3 is responsible for 3OHC(8)-HSL production. We also show that a strain incapable of acyl-HSL production is capable of growth on the same assortment of carbon and nitrogen sources as the wild type. Furthermore, this mutant shows no loss of virulence compared to the wild type in mice. However, the wild type self-aggregates in minimal medium, whereas the quorum-sensing mutant does not. The wild-type aggregation phenotype is recovered by addition of the BtaI1-R1 HSL signal C(8)-HSL. We propose that the key function of the BtaR1-BtaI1 quorum-sensing system is to cause cells to gather into aggregates once a sufficient population has been established.

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Jake P. Herman

University of Colorado Denver

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Sarah C. Roemer

University of Colorado Denver

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Jessica K. Tyler

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Wallace H. Liu

University of Colorado Denver

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Dean P. Edwards

Baylor College of Medicine

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Breck A. Duerkop

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Briana K. Dennehey

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Charis L. Uhlson

University of Colorado Denver

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