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Dive into the research topics where Mark E. Dumont is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark E. Dumont.


The EMBO Journal | 1987

Identification and sequence of the gene encoding cytochrome c heme lyase in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Mark E. Dumont; J F Ernst; D M Hampsey; Fred Sherman

Mitochondrial cytochrome c contains a heme group covalently attached through thioether linkages to two cysteinyl residues of the protein. We demonstrate here that the nuclear gene, CYC3, in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, encodes cytochrome c heme lyase (CCHL), the enzyme catalyzing the attachment of heme to apocytochrome c. Mitochondrial extracts from cyc3‐ mutants are deficient in CCHL activity compared with extracts from normal strains, whereas strains carrying multiple copies of the CYC3 gene exhibit high levels of the activity. The CYC3 gene was cloned by functional complementation of a cyc3‐ mutant using a previously isolated plasmid containing the gene PYK1, which is tightly linked to CYC3. An open reading frame encoding a protein of 269 amino acids was identified from the DNA sequence of a fragment encompassing the CYC3 gene, and the corresponding transcript shown to be approximately 0.9 kb in length. CCHL appears to be a single polypeptide chain which acts specifically on the two forms of cytochrome c, but not on cytochrome c1.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991

Role of cytochrome c heme lyase in mitochondrial import and accumulation of cytochrome c in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Mark E. Dumont; T S Cardillo; M K Hayes; Fred Sherman

Heme is covalently attached to cytochrome c by the enzyme cytochrome c heme lyase. To test whether heme attachment is required for import of cytochrome c into mitochondria in vivo, antibodies to cytochrome c have been used to assay the distributions of apo- and holocytochromes c in the cytoplasm and mitochondria from various strains of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Strains lacking heme lyase accumulate apocytochrome c in the cytoplasm. Similar cytoplasmic accumulation is observed for an altered apocytochrome c in which serine residues were substituted for the two cysteine residues that normally serve as sites of heme attachment, even in the presence of normal levels of heme lyase. However, detectable amounts of this altered apocytochrome c are also found inside mitochondria. The level of internalized altered apocytochrome c is decreased in a strain that completely lacks heme lyase and is greatly increased in a strain that overexpresses heme lyase. Antibodies recognizing heme lyase were used to demonstrate that the enzyme is found on the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane and is not enriched at sites of contact between the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes. These results suggest that apocytochrome c is transported across the outer mitochondrial membrane by a freely reversible process, binds to heme lyase in the intermembrane space, and is then trapped inside mitochondria by an irreversible conversion to holocytochrome c accompanied by folding to the native conformation. Altered apocytochrome c lacking the ability to have heme covalently attached accumulates in mitochondria only to the extent that it remains bound to heme lyase.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2004

A Facile Method for High-throughput Co-expression of Protein Pairs

Andrei Alexandrov; Marissa Vignali; Douglas J. LaCount; Erin Quartley; Christina de Vries; Daniela De Rosa; Julie Babulski; Sarah F. Mitchell; Lori W. Schoenfeld; Stanley Fields; Wim G. J. Hol; Mark E. Dumont; Eric M. Phizicky; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

We developed a method to co-express protein pairs from collections of otherwise identical Escherichia coli plasmids expressing different ORFs by incorporating a 61-nucleotide sequence (LINK) into the plasmid to allow generation of tandem plasmids. Tandem plasmids are formed in a ligation-independent manner, propagate efficiently, and produce protein pairs in high quantities. This greatly facilitates co-expression for structural genomics projects that produce thousands of clones bearing identical origins and antibiotic markers.


Science | 2013

Structure of the Integral Membrane Protein CAAX Protease Ste24p

Edward E. Pryor; Peter S. Horanyi; Kathleen M. Clark; Nadia Fedoriw; Sara M. Connelly; Mary Koszelak-Rosenblum; Guangyu Zhu; Michael G. Malkowski; Michael C. Wiener; Mark E. Dumont

Lamin Loppers The nuclear lamina provides mechanical stability to the nuclear envelope and is involved in regulation of cellular processes such as DNA replication. Defects in the nuclear lamina lead to diseases such as progeria and metabolic disorders. One of the components of the nuclear lamina, lamin A, undergoes a complex maturation process. A key player is an inner nuclear membrane zinc metalloprotease (ZMP) that is responsible for two proteolysis steps (see the Perspective by Michaelis and Hrycyna). Quigley et al. (p. 1604) report the crystal structure of human ZMPSTE24 and Pryor et al. (p. 1600) that of the yeast homolog Ste24p. The structures provide insight into the mechanism of catalysis and into why mutations in ZMPSTE24 lead to laminopathies. Structures of two transmembrane zinc proteases reveal a barrel of seven helices surrounding a large cavity. [Also see Perspective by Michaelis and Hrycyna] Posttranslational lipidation provides critical modulation of the functions of some proteins. Isoprenoids (i.e., farnesyl or geranylgeranyl groups) are attached to cysteine residues in proteins containing C-terminal CAAX sequence motifs (where A is an aliphatic residue and X is any residue). Isoprenylation is followed by cleavage of the AAX amino acid residues and, in some cases, by additional proteolytic cuts. We determined the crystal structure of the CAAX protease Ste24p, a zinc metalloprotease catalyzing two proteolytic steps in the maturation of yeast mating pheromone a-factor. The Ste24p core structure is a ring of seven transmembrane helices enclosing a voluminous cavity containing the active site and substrate-binding groove. The cavity is accessible to the external milieu by means of gaps between splayed transmembrane helices. We hypothesize that cleavage proceeds by means of a processive mechanism of substrate insertion, translocation, and ejection.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2013

Coordinating the impact of structural genomics on the human α-helical transmembrane proteome

Ursula Pieper; Avner Schlessinger; Edda Kloppmann; Geoffrey Chang; James J. Chou; Mark E. Dumont; Brian G. Fox; Petra Fromme; Wayne A. Hendrickson; Michael G. Malkowski; Douglas C. Rees; David L. Stokes; Michael H. B. Stowell; Michael C. Wiener; Burkhard Rost; Robert M. Stroud; Raymond C. Stevens; Andrej Sali

Given the recent successes in determining membrane-protein structures, we explore the tractability of determining representatives for the entire human membrane proteome. This proteome contains 2,925 unique integral α-helical transmembrane-domain sequences that cluster into 1,201 families sharing more than 25% sequence identity. Structures of 100 optimally selected targets would increase the fraction of modelable human α-helical transmembrane domains from 26% to 58%, providing structure and function information not otherwise available.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Oligomerization of the yeast α-factor receptor : Implications for dominant negative effects of mutant receptors

Austin U. Gehret; Anshika Bajaj; Fred Naider; Mark E. Dumont

Oligomerization of G protein-coupled receptors is commonly observed, but the functional significance of oligomerization for this diverse family of receptors remains poorly understood. We used bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) to examine oligomerization of Ste2p, a G protein-coupled receptor that serves as the receptor for the α-mating pheromone in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, under conditions where the functional effects of oligomerization could be examined. Consistent with previous results from fluorescence resonance energy transfer (Overton, M. C., and Blumer, K. J. (2000) Curr. Biol. 10, 341–344), we detected efficient energy transfer between Renilla luciferase and a modified green fluorescent protein individually fused to truncated α-factor receptors lacking the cytoplasmic C-terminal tail. In addition, the low background of the BRET system allowed detection of significant, but less efficient, energy transfer between full-length receptors. The reduced efficiency of energy transfer between full-length receptors does not appear to result from different levels of receptor expression. Instead, attachment of fluorescent reporter proteins to the full-length receptors appears to significantly increase the distance between reporters. Mutations that were previously reported to block dimerization of truncated α-factor receptors reduce but do not completely eliminate BRET transfer between receptors. Dominant negative effects of mutant alleles of α-factor receptors appear to be mediated by receptor oligomerization since these effects are abrogated by introduction of additional mutations that reduce oligomerization. We find that heterodimers of normal and dominant negative receptors are defective in their ability to signal. Thus, signal transduction by oligomeric receptors appears to be a cooperative process requiring an interaction between functional monomers.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Fluorescent Approaches for Understanding Interactions of Ligands with G Protein Coupled Receptors

Rajashri Sridharan; Jeffrey Zuber; Sara M. Connelly; Elizabeth Mathew; Mark E. Dumont

G protein coupled receptors are responsible for a wide variety of signaling responses in diverse cell types. Despite major advances in the determination of structures of this class of receptors, the underlying mechanisms by which binding of different types of ligands specifically elicits particular signaling responses remain unclear. The use of fluorescence spectroscopy can provide important information about the process of ligand binding and ligand dependent conformational changes in receptors, especially kinetic aspects of these processes that can be difficult to extract from X-ray structures. We present an overview of the extensive array of fluorescent ligands that have been used in studies of G protein coupled receptors and describe spectroscopic approaches for assaying binding and probing the environment of receptor-bound ligands with particular attention to examples involving yeast pheromone receptors. In addition, we discuss the use of fluorescence spectroscopy for detecting and characterizing conformational changes in receptors induced by the binding of ligands. Such studies have provided strong evidence for diversity of receptor conformations elicited by different ligands, consistent with the idea that GPCRs are not simple on and off switches. This diversity of states constitutes an underlying mechanistic basis for biased agonism, the observation that different stimuli can produce different responses from a single receptor. It is likely that continued technical advances will allow fluorescence spectroscopy to play an important role in continued probing of structural transitions in G protein coupled receptors. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Structural and biophysical characterisation of membrane protein-ligand binding.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

CYC2 encodes a factor involved in mitochondrial import of yeast cytochrome c.

Mark E. Dumont; J B Schlichter; T S Cardillo; M K Hayes; G Bethlendy; Fred Sherman

The gene CYC2 from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was previously shown to affect levels of mitochondrial cytochrome c by acting at a posttranslational step in cytochrome c biosynthesis. We report here the cloning and identification of the CYC2 gene product as a protein involved in import of cytochrome c into mitochondria. CYC2 encodes a 168-amino-acid open reading frame with at least two potential transmembrane segments. Antibodies against a synthetic peptide corresponding to the carboxyl terminus of the predicted sequence were raised. These antibodies recognize multiple bands on immunoblots of mitochondrial extracts. The intensities of these bands vary according to the gene dosage of CYC2 in various isogenic strains. Immunoblotting of subcellular fractions suggests that the CYC2 gene product is a mitochondrial protein. Deletion of CYC2 leads to accumulation of apocytochrome c in the cytoplasm. However, strains with deletions of this gene still import low levels of cytochrome c into mitochondria. The effects of cyc2 mutations are more pronounced in rho- strains than in rho+ strains, even though rho- strains that are CYC2+ contain normal levels of holocytochrome c. cyc2 mutations affect levels of iso-1-cytochrome c more than they do levels of iso-2-cytochrome c, apparently because of the greater susceptibility of apo-iso-1-cytochrome c to degradation in the cytoplasm. We propose that CYC2 encodes a factor that increases the efficiency of cytochrome c import into mitochondria.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2010

Purification of Transmembrane Proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae for X-ray Crystallography

Kathleen M. Clark; Nadia Fedoriw; Katrina Robinson; Sara M. Connelly; Joan Randles; Michael G. Malkowski; George T. DeTitta; Mark E. Dumont

To enhance the quantity and quality of eukaryotic transmembrane proteins (TMPs) available for structure determination by X-ray crystallography, we have optimized protocols for purification of TMPs expressed in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We focused on a set of the highest-expressing endogenous yeast TMPs for which there are established biochemical assays. Genes encoding the target TMPs are transferred via ligation-independent cloning to a series of vectors that allow expression of reading frames fused to C-terminal His10 and ZZ (IgG-binding) domains that are separated from the reading frame by a cleavage site for rhinovirus 3C protease. Several TMP targets expressed from these vectors have been purified via affinity chromatography and gel filtration chromatography at levels and purities sufficient for ongoing crystallization trials. Initial purifications were based on expression of the genes under control of a galactose-inducible promoter, but higher cell densities and improved expression have been obtained through use of the yeast ADH2 promoter. Wide variations have been observed in the behavior of different TMP targets during purification; some can be readily purified, while others do not bind efficiently to affinity matrices, are not efficiently cleaved from the matrices, or remain tightly associated with the matrices even after cleavage of the affinity tags. The size, oligomeric state, and composition of purified protein-detergent complexes purified under different conditions were analyzed using a colorimetric assay of detergent concentrations and by analytical size-exclusion chromatography using static light scattering, refractive index, and UV absorption detection to monitor the elution profiles. Effective procedures were developed for obtaining high concentrations of purified TMPs without excessively concentrating detergents.


Biochemistry | 2010

Binding of fluorinated phenylalanine alpha-factor analogues to Ste2p: evidence for a cation-pi binding interaction between a peptide ligand and its cognate G protein-coupled receptor.

Subramanyam Tantry; Fa-Xiang Ding; Mark E. Dumont; Jeffrey M. Becker; Fred Naider

Ste2p, a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), binds alpha-factor, WHWLQLKPGQPMY, a tridecapeptide pheromone secreted by yeast cells. Upon alpha-factor binding, Ste2p undergoes conformational changes activating a signal transduction system through its associated heterotrimeric G protein leading to the arrest of cell growth in the G1 phase to prepare cells for mating. Previous studies have indicated that Tyr at position 13 of alpha-factor interacts with Arg58 on transmembrane one (TM1) of Ste2p. This observation prompted this investigation to determine whether a cation-pi type of interaction occurred between these residues. Tyrosine at position 13 of alpha-factor was systematically substituted with analogous amino acids with varying cation-pi binding energies using solid-phase peptide synthesis, and these analogues were modified by derivatization of their Lys(7) residue with the fluorescent group 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD) to serve as a useful probe for binding determination. Saturation binding of these peptides to Ste2p was assayed using whole yeast cells and a flow cytometer. In parallel the biological activities of the peptides were determined using a growth arrest assay. The data provide evidence for the presence of a cation-pi interaction between Arg58 of Ste2p and Tyr(13) of alpha-factor.

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Fred Naider

City University of New York

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Fred Sherman

University of Rochester

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Fa-Xiang Ding

City University of New York

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