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Dive into the research topics where Maria F. Lodeiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria F. Lodeiro.


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

Core human mitochondrial transcription apparatus is a regulated two-component system in vitro

Timothy E. Shutt; Maria F. Lodeiro; Justin Cotney; Craig E. Cameron; Gerald S. Shadel

The core human mitochondrial transcription apparatus is currently regarded as an obligate three-component system comprising the bacteriophage T7-related mitochondrial RNA polymerase, the rRNA methyltransferase-related transcription factor, h-mtTFB2, and the high mobility group box transcription/DNA-packaging factor, h-mtTFA/TFAM. Using a faithful recombinant human mitochondrial transcription system from Escherichia coli, we demonstrate that specific initiation from the mtDNA promoters, LSP and HSP1, only requires mitochondrial RNA polymerase and h-mtTFB2 in vitro. When h-mtTFA is added to these basal components, LSP exhibits a much lower threshold for activation and a larger amplitude response than HSP1. In addition, when LSP and HSP1 are together on the same transcription template, h-mtTFA-independent transcription from HSP1 and h-mtTFA-dependent transcription from both promoters is enhanced and a higher concentration of h-mtTFA is required to stimulate HSP1. Promoter competition experiments revealed that, in addition to LSP competing transcription components away from HSP1, additional cis-acting signals are involved in these aspects of promoter regulation. Based on these results, we speculate that the human mitochondrial transcription system may have evolved to differentially regulate transcription initiation and transcription-primed mtDNA replication in response to the amount of h-mtTFA associated with nucleoids, which could begin to explain the heterogeneity of nucleoid structure and activity in vivo. Furthermore, this study sheds new light on the evolution of mitochondrial transcription components by showing that the human system is a regulated two-component system in vitro, and thus more akin to that of budding yeast than thought previously.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Transcription from the second heavy-strand promoter of human mtDNA is repressed by transcription factor A in vitro

Maria F. Lodeiro; Akira Uchida; Megan Bestwick; Ibrahim M. Moustafa; Jamie J. Arnold; Gerald S. Shadel; Craig E. Cameron

Cell-based studies support the existence of two promoters on the heavy strand of mtDNA: heavy-strand promoter 1 (HSP1) and HSP2. However, transcription from HSP2 has been reported only once in a cell-free system, and never when recombinant proteins have been used. Here, we document transcription from HSP2 using an in vitro system of defined composition. An oligonucleotide template representing positions 596–685 of mtDNA was sufficient to observe transcription by the human mtRNA polymerase (POLRMT) that was absolutely dependent on mitochondrial transcription factor B2 (TFB2M). POLRMT/TFB2M-dependent transcription was inhibited by concentrations of mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) stoichiometric with the transcription template, a condition that activates transcription from the light-strand promoter (LSP) in vitro. Domains of TFAM required for LSP activation were also required for HSP2 repression, whereas other mtDNA binding proteins failed to alter transcriptional output. Binding sites for TFAM were located on both sides of the start site of transcription from HSP2, suggesting that TFAM binding interferes with POLRMT and/or TFB2M binding. Consistent with a competitive binding model for TFAM repression of HSP2, the impact of TFAM concentration on HSP2 transcription was diminished by elevating the POLRMT and TFB2M concentrations. In the context of our previous studies of LSP and HSP1, it is now clear that three promoters exist in human mtDNA. Each promoter has a unique requirement for and/or response to the level of TFAM present, thus implying far greater complexity in the regulation of mammalian mitochondrial transcription than recognized to date.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Identification of Multiple Rate-limiting Steps during the Human Mitochondrial Transcription Cycle in Vitro

Maria F. Lodeiro; Akira Uchida; Jamie J. Arnold; Shelley Reynolds; Ibrahim M. Moustafa; Craig E. Cameron

We have reconstituted human mitochondrial transcription in vitro on DNA oligonucleotide templates representing the light strand and heavy strand-1 promoters using protein components (RNA polymerase and transcription factors A and B2) isolated from Escherichia coli. We show that 1 eq of each transcription factor and polymerase relative to the promoter is required to assemble a functional initiation complex. The light strand promoter is at least 2-fold more efficient than the heavy strand-1 promoter, but this difference cannot be explained solely by the differences in the interaction of the transcription machinery with the different promoters. In both cases, the rate-limiting step for production of the first phosphodiester bond is open complex formation. Open complex formation requires both transcription factors; however, steps immediately thereafter only require transcription factor B2. The concentration of nucleotide required for production of the first dinucleotide product is substantially higher than that required for subsequent cycles of nucleotide addition. In vitro, promoter-specific differences in post-initiation control of transcription exist, as well as a second rate-limiting step that controls conversion of the transcription initiation complex into a transcription elongation complex. Rate-limiting steps of the biochemical pathways are often those that are targeted for regulation. Like the more complex multisubunit transcription systems, multiple steps may exist for control of transcription in human mitochondria. The tools and mechanistic framework presented here will facilitate not only the discovery of mechanisms regulating human mitochondrial transcription but also interrogation of the structure, function, and mechanism of the complexes that are regulated during human mitochondrial transcription.


Biochemistry | 2014

Kinetic Analysis of Human PrimPol DNA Polymerase Activity Reveals a Generally Error-Prone Enzyme Capable of Accurately Bypassing 7,8-Dihydro-8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine

Maroof K. Zafar; Amit Ketkar; Maria F. Lodeiro; Craig E. Cameron; Robert L. Eoff

Recent studies have identified human PrimPol as a new RNA/DNA primase and translesion DNA synthesis polymerase (TLS pol) that contributes to nuclear and mitochondrial DNA replication. We investigated the mechanism of PrimPol polymerase activity on both undamaged and damaged DNA substrates. With Mg2+ as a cofactor, PrimPol binds primer-template DNA with low affinity Kd,DNA values (∼200–1200 nM). DNA binding is enhanced 34-fold by Mn2+ (Kd,DNA = 27 nM). The pol activity of PrimPol is increased 400–1000-fold by Mn2+ compared to Mg2+ based on steady-state kinetic parameters. PrimPol makes a mistake copying undamaged DNA once every ∼100–2500 insertions events, which is comparable to other TLS pols, and the fidelity of PrimPol is ∼1.7-fold more accurate when Mg2+ is the cofactor compared to Mn2+. PrimPol inserts dCMP opposite 8-oxo-dG with 2- (Mn2+) to 6-fold (Mg2+) greater efficiency than dAMP misinsertion. PrimPol-catalyzed dCMP insertion opposite 8-oxo-dG proceeds at ∼25% efficiency relative to unmodified template dG, and PrimPol readily extends from dC:8-oxo-dG base pairs (bps) with ∼2-fold greater efficiency than dA:8-oxo-dG bps. A tetrahydrofuran (THF) abasic-site mimic decreases PrimPol activity to ∼0.04%. In summary, PrimPol exhibits the fidelity typical of other TLS pols, is rather unusual in the degree of activation afforded by Mn2+, and accurately bypasses 8-oxo-dG, a DNA lesion of special relevance to mitochondrial DNA replication and transcription.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Expanding the proteome of an RNA virus by phosphorylation of an intrinsically disordered viral protein.

Daniel G. Cordek; Tayler J. Croom-Perez; Jungwook Hwang; Michele R. S. Hargittai; Chennareddy V. Subba-Reddy; Qingxia Han; Maria F. Lodeiro; Gang Ning; Thomas S. McCrory; Jamie J. Arnold; Hasan Koc; Brett D. Lindenbach; Scott A. Showalter; Craig E. Cameron

Background: How can HCV require only 10 proteins for decades-long evasion of the immune system? Results: Phosphorylation of the intrinsically disordered domain (IDD) of NS5A changes its dynamics, inducing unique structure and function. Conclusion: IDD phosphorylation expands the HCV proteome. Significance: Post-translational modification of a viral IDD represents a strategy to expand a viral proteome when coding capacity is limited. The human proteome contains myriad intrinsically disordered proteins. Within intrinsically disordered proteins, polyproline-II motifs are often located near sites of phosphorylation. We have used an unconventional experimental paradigm to discover that phosphorylation by protein kinase A (PKA) occurs in the intrinsically disordered domain of hepatitis C virus non-structural protein 5A (NS5A) on Thr-2332 near one of its polyproline-II motifs. Phosphorylation shifts the conformational ensemble of the NS5A intrinsically disordered domain to a state that permits detection of the polyproline motif by using 15N-, 13C-based multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. PKA-dependent proline resonances were lost in the presence of the Src homology 3 domain of c-Src, consistent with formation of a complex. Changing Thr-2332 to alanine in hepatitis C virus genotype 1b reduced the steady-state level of RNA by 10-fold; this change was lethal for genotype 2a. The lethal phenotype could be rescued by changing Thr-2332 to glutamic acid, a phosphomimetic substitution. Immunofluorescence and transmission electron microscopy showed that the inability to produce Thr(P)-2332-NS5A caused loss of integrity of the virus-induced membranous web/replication organelle. An even more extreme phenotype was observed in the presence of small molecule inhibitors of PKA. We conclude that the PKA-phosphorylated form of NS5A exhibits unique structure and function relative to the unphosphorylated protein. We suggest that post-translational modification of viral proteins containing intrinsic disorder may be a general mechanism to expand the viral proteome without a corresponding expansion of the genome.


eLife | 2017

Unexpected sequences and structures of mtDNA required for efficient transcription from the first heavy-strand promoter

Akira Uchida; Divakaran Murugesapillai; Markus Kastner; Yao Wang; Maria F. Lodeiro; Shaan Prabhakar; Guinevere V Oliver; Jamie J. Arnold; L. James Maher; Mark C. Williams; Craig E. Cameron

Human mtDNA contains three promoters, suggesting a need for differential expression of the mitochondrial genome. Studies of mitochondrial transcription have used a reductionist approach, perhaps masking differential regulation. Here we evaluate transcription from light-strand (LSP) and heavy-strand (HSP1) promoters using templates that mimic their natural context. These studies reveal sequences upstream, hypervariable in the human population (HVR3), and downstream of the HSP1 transcription start site required for maximal yield. The carboxy-terminal tail of TFAM is essential for activation of HSP1 but not LSP. Images of the template obtained by atomic force microscopy show that TFAM creates loops in a discrete region, the formation of which correlates with activation of HSP1; looping is lost in tail-deleted TFAM. Identification of HVR3 as a transcriptional regulatory element may contribute to between-individual variability in mitochondrial gene expression. The unique requirement of HSP1 for the TFAM tail may enable its regulation by post-translational modifications. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.27283.001


PLOS Pathogens | 2018

Multiple poliovirus-induced organelles suggested by comparison of spatiotemporal dynamics of membranous structures and phosphoinositides

Hyung Suk Oh; Sravani Banerjee; David Aponte-Diaz; Suresh D. Sharma; Jason Aligo; Maria F. Lodeiro; Gang Ning; Rajni Sharma; Jamie J. Arnold; Craig E. Cameron

At the culmination of poliovirus (PV) multiplication, membranes are observed that contain phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) and appear as vesicular clusters in cross section. Induction and remodeling of PI4P and membranes prior to or concurrent with genome replication has not been well studied. Here, we exploit two PV mutants, termed EG and GG, which exhibit aberrant proteolytic processing of the P3 precursor that substantially delays the onset of genome replication and/or impairs virus assembly, to illuminate the pathway of formation of PV-induced membranous structures. For WT PV, changes to the PI4P pool were observed as early as 30 min post-infection. PI4P remodeling occurred even in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride, a replication inhibitor, and was accompanied by formation of membrane tubules throughout the cytoplasm. Vesicular clusters appeared in the perinuclear region of the cell at 3 h post-infection, a time too slow for these structures to be responsible for genome replication. Delays in the onset of genome replication observed for EG and GG PVs were similar to the delays in virus-induced remodeling of PI4P pools, consistent with PI4P serving as a marker of the genome-replication organelle. GG PV was unable to convert virus-induced tubules into vesicular clusters, perhaps explaining the nearly 5-log reduction in infectious virus produced by this mutant. Our results are consistent with PV inducing temporally distinct membranous structures (organelles) for genome replication (tubules) and virus assembly (vesicular clusters). We suggest that the pace of formation, spatiotemporal dynamics, and the efficiency of the replication-to-assembly-organelle conversion may be set by both the rate of P3 polyprotein processing and the capacity for P3 processing to yield 3AB and/or 3CD proteins.


Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 2015

26 Sequence-specific DNA looping by mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM)

Divakaran Murugesapillai; Maria F. Lodeiro; L. James Maher; Craig E. Cameron; Mark C. Williams

in the recognition of one guanine. In contrast, the other Zn-finger exhibits various behaviours according to the nucleic acids nature (DNA or RNA) and the presence/absence of double-strand regions. This analysis supplies reliable quantitative basis supporting striking differences in binding properties of the two Zn-fingers and strengthens the proposal of two different functions for the Zn-fingers in NCp7, a view supported by biochemical studies. The nucleosome, the fundamental building block of packaged DNA in eukaryotic cells, consists in eight histone proteins around which a ~147 bp DNA is wrapped in a bit less than two turns. A nucleosome containing the high affinity sequence 601 was simulated using molecular dynamics in explicit solvent and then analyzed with VLDM. The most salient discovery was that the DNA is more strongly maintained around the histone core than expected. In addition to the structured part of histones, the unstructured, flexible histone tails efficiently contribute to the interface. Electrostatic interactions are supplemented by extensive hydrophobic contacts. The identification of such dense interface gives a better understanding of how the marked DNA distortions required by the wrapping are promoted and stabilized, keeping the double helix intact. Overall, this work demonstrates that an accurate description of interfaces in complexes provides new insights into the interaction mode of nucleic acids-proteins complexes and opens a new way towards the elucidation of molecular recognition processes.


Mitochondrion | 2010

53 Characterization of mitochondrial transcription using bacterially expressed proteins and oligonucleotide templates reveals promoter melting and dinucleotide synthesis as rate-limiting steps in transcription initiation

Maria F. Lodeiro; Akira Uchida; Shelley Reynolds; Jamie J. Arnold; Craig E. Cameron


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Craig E. Cameron

Pennsylvania State University

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Jamie J. Arnold

Pennsylvania State University

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Akira Uchida

Pennsylvania State University

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Ibrahim M. Moustafa

Pennsylvania State University

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Gang Ning

Pennsylvania State University

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Qingxia Han

Pennsylvania State University

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