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Featured researches published by Mark J. Snider.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2008

Characterization of a novel bacterial arginine kinase from Desulfotalea psychrophila

Logan D. Andrews; James Graham; Mark J. Snider; Dean Fraga

Phosphagen kinases are found throughout the animal kingdom and catalyze the transfer of a high-energy gamma phosphoryl-group from ATP to a guanidino group on a suitable acceptor molecule such as creatine or arginine. Recent genome sequencing efforts in several proteobacteria, including Desulfotalea psychrophila LSv54, Myxococcus xanthus, Sulfurovum sp. NBC37-1, and Moritella sp. PE36 have revealed what appears to be a phosphagen kinase homolog present in their genomes. Based on sequence comparisons these putative homologs bear a strong resemblance to arginine kinases found in many invertebrates and some protozoa. We describe here a biochemical characterization of one of these homologs from D. psychrophila expressed in E. coli that confirms its ability to reversibly catalyze phosphoryl transfer from ATP to arginine. A phylogenetic analysis suggests that these bacteria homologs are not widely distributed in proteobacteria species. They appear more related to protozoan arginine kinases than to similar proteins seen in some Gram-positive bacteria that share key catalytic residues but encode protein tyrosine kinases. This raises the possibility of horizontal gene transfer as a likely origin of the bacterial arginine kinases.


Biochemistry | 2002

Determination of the affinity of each component of a composite quaternary transition-state analogue complex of creatine kinase.

Charles L. Borders; Mark J. Snider; Richard Wolfenden; Paul L. Edmiston

Recombinant rabbit muscle creatine kinase (CK) was titrated with MgADP in 50 mM Bicine and 5 mM Mg(OAc)2, pH 8.3, at 30.0 degrees C by following a decrease in the proteins intrinsic fluorescence. In the presence of 50 mM NaOAc, but in the absence of added creatine or nitrate, MgADP has an apparent K(d) of 135 +/- 7 microM, and the total change in fluorescence on saturation (Delta%F) is 15.3 +/- 0.3%. Acetate was used as the anion in this experiment because it does not promote the formation of a CK.MgADP.anion.creatine transition-state analogue complex (TSAC) [Millner-White and Watts (1971) Biochem. J. 122, 727-740]. In the presence of 80 mM creatine, but no nitrate, the apparent K(d) for MgADP remains essentially unchanged at 132 +/- 10 microM, while Delta%F decreases slightly to 13.2 +/- 0.3%. In the presence of 10 mM nitrate, but no creatine, the apparent K(d) is once again essentially unchanged at 143 +/- 23 microM, but the Delta%F is markedly reduced to 4.2 +/- 0.2%. The presence of both 10 mM nitrate and 80 mM creatine during titration reduces the apparent K(d) for MgADP 10-fold to 13.7 +/- 0.7 microM, and Delta%F increases to 20.6 +/- 0.3%, strongly suggesting that the simultaneous presence of saturating levels of creatine and nitrate increases the affinity of CK for MgADP and promotes the formation of the enzyme*MgADP*nitrate*creatine TSAC. When the fluorescence of CK was titrated with MgADP in the presence of 80 mM creatine and fixed saturating concentrations of various anions, apparent K(d) values for MgADP of 132 +/- 10 microM, 25.2 +/- 1.3 microM, 18.8 +/- 0.9 microM, 13.7 +/- 0.7 microM, and 6.4 +/- 0.7 microM were observed as the anion was changed from acetate to formate to chloride to nitrate to nitrite, respectively. This is the same trend reported by Millner-White and Watts for the effectiveness of various monovalent anions in forming the CK.MgADP.anion.creatine TSAC. On titration of CK with MgADP in the presence of 80 mM creatine and various fixed concentrations of NaNO3, the apparent K(d) for MgADP decreases with increasing fixed concentrations of nitrate. A plot of the apparent K(d) for MgADP vs [NO3-] suggests a K(d) for nitrate from the TSAC of 0.39 +/- 0.07 mM. Similarly, titration with MgADP in the presence of 10 mM NaNO3 and various fixed concentrations of creatine gives a value of 0.9 +/- 0.4 mM for the dissociation of creatine from the TSAC. The data were used to calculate K(TDAC), the dissociation constant of the quaternary TSAC into its individual components, of 3 x 10(-10) M3. To our knowledge this is the first reported dissociation constant for a ternary or quaternary TSAC.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Identification and Characterization of a Putative Arginine Kinase Homolog from Myxococcus xanthus Required for Fruiting Body Formation and Cell Differentiation

Jonathan Bragg; Andrei Rajkovic; Chance Anderson; Rachael Curtis; Jason Van Houten; Brittany Begres; Colin Naples; Mark J. Snider; Dean Fraga

Arginine kinases catalyze the reversible transfer of a high-energy phosphoryl group from ATP to l-arginine to form phosphoarginine, which is used as an energy buffer in insects, crustaceans, and some unicellular organisms. It plays an analogous role to that of phosphocreatine in vertebrates. Recently, putative arginine kinases were identified in several bacterial species, including the social Gram-negative soil bacterium Myxococcus xanthus. It is still unclear what role these proteins play in bacteria and whether they have evolved to acquire novel functions in the species in which they are found. In this study, we biochemically purified and characterized a putative M. xanthus arginine kinase, Ark, and demonstrated that it has retained the ability to catalyze the phosphorylation of arginine by using ATP. We also constructed a null mutation in the ark gene and demonstrated its role in both certain stress responses and development.


Biochemistry | 2012

Structure and catalytic mechanism of nicotinate (vitamin B3) degradative enzyme maleamate amidohydrolase from Bordetella bronchiseptica RB50.

Virginia A. Kincaid; Eric D. Sullivan; Roger D. Klein; Jeff W. Noel; Roger S. Rowlett; Mark J. Snider

The penultimate reaction in the oxidative degradation of nicotinate (vitamin B(3)) to fumarate in several species of aerobic bacteria is the hydrolytic deamination of maleamate to maleate, catalyzed by maleamate amidohydrolase (NicF). Although it has been considered a model system for bacterial degradation of N-heterocyclic compounds, only recently have gene clusters that encode the enzymes of this catabolic pathway been identified to allow detailed investigations concerning the structural basis of their mechanisms. Here, the Bb1774 gene from Bordetella bronchiseptica RB50, putatively annotated as nicF, has been cloned, and the recombinant enzyme, overexpressed and purified from Escherichia coli, is shown to catalyze efficiently the hydrolysis of maleamate to maleate and ammonium ion. Steady-state kinetic analysis of the reaction by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) established k(cat) and K(M) values (pH 7.5 and 25 °C) of 11.7 ± 0.2 s(-1) and 128 ± 6 μM, respectively. The observed K(D) of the NicF·maleate (E·P) complex, also measured by ITC, is approximated to be 3.8 ± 0.4 mM. The crystal structure of NicF, determined at 2.4 Å using molecular replacement, shows that the enzyme belongs to the cysteine hydrolase superfamily. The structure provides insight concerning the roles of potential catalytically important residues, most notably a conserved catalytic triad (Asp29, Lys117, and Cys150) observed in the proximity of a conserved non-proline cis-peptide bond within a small cavity that is likely the active site. On the basis of this structural information, the hydrolysis of maleamate is proposed to proceed by a nucleophilic addition-elimination sequence involving the thiolate side chain of Cys150.


Protein Science | 2003

Asparagine 285 plays a key role in transition state stabilization in rabbit muscle creatine kinase.

Charles L. Borders; Katherine M. MacGregor; Paul L. Edmiston; Elikem R.K. Gbeddy; Michael J. Thomenius; Guy B. Mulligan; Mark J. Snider

To explore the possibility that asparagine 285 plays a key role in transition state stabilization in phosphagen kinase catalysis, the N285Q, N285D, and N285A site‐directed mutants of recombinant rabbit muscle creatine kinase (rmCK) were prepared and characterized. Kinetic analysis of phosphocreatine formation showed that the catalytic efficiency of each N285 mutant was reduced by approximately four orders of magnitude, with the major cause of activity loss being a reduction in kcat in comparison to the recombinant native CK. The data for N285Q still fit a random‐order, rapid‐equilibrium mechanism, with either MgATP or creatine binding first with affinities very nearly equal to those for native CK. However, the affinity for the binding of the second substrate is reduced approximately 10‐fold, suggesting that addition of a single methylene group at position 285 disrupts the symphony of substrate binding. The data for the N285A mutant only fit an ordered binding mechanism, with MgATP binding first. Isosteric replacement to form the N285D mutant has almost no effect on the KM values for either creatine or MgATP, thus the decrease in activity is due almost entirely to a 5000‐fold reduction in kcat. Using the quenching of the intrinsic CK tryptophan fluorescence by added MgADP (Borders et al. 2002 ), it was found that, unlike native CK, none of the mutants have the ability to form a quaternary TSAC. We use these data to propose that asparagine 285 indeed plays a key role in transition state stabilization in the reaction catalyzed by creatine kinase and other phosphagen kinases.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2013

Characterization of a putative oomycete taurocyamine kinase: Implications for the evolution of the phosphagen kinase family

Allyson Palmer; Brittany Begres; Jason Van Houten; Mark J. Snider; Dean Fraga

Phosphagen kinases (PKs) are known to be distributed throughout the animal kingdom, but have recently been discovered in some protozoan and bacterial species. Within animal species, these enzymes play a critical role in energy homeostasis by catalyzing the reversible transfer of a high-energy phosphoryl group from Mg⋅ATP to an acceptor molecule containing a guanidinium group. In this work, a putative PK gene was identified in the oomycete Phytophthora sojae that was predicted, based on sequence homology, to encode a multimeric hypotaurocyamine kinase. The recombinant P. sojae enzyme was purified and shown to catalyze taurocyamine phosphorylation efficiently (kcat/KM (taurocyamine) = 2 × 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) and glycocyamine phosphorylation only weakly (kcat/KM (glycocyamine) = 2 × 10(2) M(-1) s(-1)), but lacked any observable kinase activity with the more ubiquitous guanidinium substrates, creatine or arginine. Additionally, the enzyme was observed to be dimeric but lacked cooperativity between the subunits in forming a transition state analog complex. These results suggest that protozoan PKs may exhibit more diversity in substrate specificity than was previously thought.


Biochemistry | 2016

Structural and Biochemical Characterization of 6-Hydroxynicotinic Acid 3-Monooxygenase, A Novel Decarboxylative Hydroxylase Involved in Aerobic Nicotinate Degradation

Katherine A. Hicks; Meigan E. Yuen; Wei Feng Zhen; Tyler J. Gerwig; Ryan W. Story; Megan C. Kopp; Mark J. Snider

The genes coding for the enzymes of oxidative degradation of nicotinic acid have recently been identified in several species of aerobic bacteria, namely, Pseudomonas putida KT2440, Bordetella bronchiseptica RB50, and Bacillus niacini. One of the enzymes involved in an early step of this pathway is a flavin-dependent monooxygenase (6-hydroxynicotinic acid 3-monooxygenase; NicC) that catalyzes the decarboxylative hydroxylation of 6-hydroxynicotinic acid (6-HNA) to 2,5-dihydroxypyridine (2,5-DHP), with concomitant oxidation of NADH to NAD+. The nicC genes from B. bronchiseptica RB50 and P. putida have been cloned, and the purified enzymes have been characterized functionally and structurally. Global fits of the steady-state kinetic data show that both enzymes are efficient catalysts, with an apparent kcat/KM6-HNA of 5.0 × 104 M–1 s–1 for B. bronchiseptica NicC. The pH dependence of Vmax/[E]t fits a double-bell model showing an optimum around pH 8 with apparent pKas of 7.24 ± 0.08 and 8.64 ± 0.08, whereas the...


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2015

Characterization of the arginine kinase isoforms in Caenorhabditis elegans.

Dean Fraga; Manish Aryal; Joseph E. Hall; Evan Rae; Mark J. Snider

Phosphagen kinases (PKs) are well-studied enzymes involved in energy homeostasis in a wide range of animal, protozoan, and even some bacterial species. Recent genome efforts have allowed comparative work on the PKs to extend beyond the biochemistry of individual proteins to the comparative cellular physiology and examining of the role of all PK family members in an organism. The sequencing of the Caenorhabditis elegans genome and availability of sophisticated genetic tools within that system affords the opportunity to conduct a detailed physiological analysis of the PKs from a well known invertebrate for comparison with the extensive work conducted on vertebrate systems. As a first step in this effort we have carried out a detailed molecular genetic and biochemical characterization of the PKs in C. elegans. Our results reveal that C. elegans has five PK genes encoding arginine kinases that range in catalytic efficiency (kcat/KM(Arg)) from (3.1±0.6)×10(4) to (9±4)×10(5) M(-1) s(-1). This range is generally within the range seen for arginine kinases from a variety of species. Our molecular genetic and phylogenetic analysis reveals that the gene family has undergone extensive intron loss and gain within the suborder Rhabditina. In addition, within C. elegans we find evidence of gene duplication and loss. The analysis described here for the C. elegans AKs represents one of the most complete biochemical and molecular genetic analysis of a PK family within a genetically tractable invertebrate system and opens up the possibility of conducting detailed physiological comparisons with vertebrate systems using the sophisticated tools available with this model invertebrate system.


Genome Announcements | 2014

Draft Genome Sequence of the Nicotinate-Metabolizing Soil Bacterium Bacillus niacini DSM 2923.

Zachary Harvey; Mark J. Snider

ABSTRACT Bacillus niacini is a member of a small yet diverse group of bacteria able to catabolize nicotinic acid. We report here the availability of a draft genome for B. niacini, which we will use to understand the evolution of its namesake phenotype, which appears to be unique among the species in its phylogenetic neighborhood.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2001

The Depth of Chemical Time and the Power of Enzymes as Catalysts

Richard Wolfenden; Mark J. Snider

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Richard Wolfenden

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Dean Fraga

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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