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Featured researches published by Mark J. van Raaij.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Three-dimensional structure of bacteriophage T4 baseplate

Victor A. Kostyuchenko; Petr G. Leiman; Paul R. Chipman; Shuji Kanamaru; Mark J. van Raaij; Fumio Arisaka; Vadim V. Mesyanzhinov; Michael G. Rossmann

The baseplate of bacteriophage T4 is a multiprotein molecular machine that controls host cell recognition, attachment, tail sheath contraction and viral DNA ejection. We report here the three-dimensional structure of the baseplate–tail tube complex determined to a resolution of 12 Å by cryoelectron microscopy. The baseplate has a six-fold symmetric, dome-like structure ∼520 Å in diameter and ∼270 Å long, assembled around a central hub. A 940 Å–long and 96 Å–diameter tail tube, coaxial with the hub, is connected to the top of the baseplate. At the center of the dome is a needle-like structure that was previously identified as a cell puncturing device. We have identified the locations of six proteins with known atomic structures, and established the position and shape of several other baseplate proteins. The baseplate structure suggests a mechanism of baseplate triggering and structural transition during the initial stages of T4 infection.


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

Structure of the bacteriophage T4 long tail fiber receptor-binding tip.

Sergio G. Bartual; José M. Otero; Carmela Garcia-Doval; Antonio L. Llamas-Saiz; Richard A. Kahn; Gavin C. Fox; Mark J. van Raaij

Bacteriophages are the most numerous organisms in the biosphere. In spite of their biological significance and the spectrum of potential applications, little high-resolution structural detail is available on their receptor-binding fibers. Here we present the crystal structure of the receptor-binding tip of the bacteriophage T4 long tail fiber, which is highly homologous to the tip of the bacteriophage lambda side tail fibers. This structure reveals an unusual elongated six-stranded antiparallel beta-strand needle domain containing seven iron ions coordinated by histidine residues arranged colinearly along the core of the biological unit. At the end of the tip, the three chains intertwine forming a broader head domain, which contains the putative receptor interaction site. The structure reveals a previously unknown beta-structured fibrous fold, provides insights into the remarkable stability of the fiber, and suggests a framework for mutations to expand or modulate receptor-binding specificity.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Structure of the Receptor-Binding Protein of Bacteriophage Det7: a Podoviral Tail Spike in a Myovirus

Monika Walter; Christian Fiedler; Renate Grassl; Manfred Biebl; Reinhard Rachel; X. Lois Hermo-Parrado; Antonio L. Llamas-Saiz; Robert Seckler; Stefan Miller; Mark J. van Raaij

ABSTRACT A new Salmonella enterica phage, Det7, was isolated from sewage and shown by electron microscopy to belong to the Myoviridae morphogroup of bacteriophages. Det7 contains a 75-kDa protein with 50% overall sequence identity to the tail spike endorhamnosidase of podovirus P22. Adsorption of myoviruses to their bacterial hosts is normally mediated by long and short tail fibers attached to a contractile tail, whereas podoviruses do not contain fibers but attach to host cells through stubby tail spikes attached to a very short, noncontractile tail. The amino-terminal 150 residues of the Det7 protein lack homology to the P22 tail spike and are probably responsible for binding to the base plate of the myoviral tail. Det7 tail spike lacking this putative particle-binding domain was purified from Escherichia coli, and well-diffracting crystals of the protein were obtained. The structure, determined by molecular replacement and refined at a 1.6-Å resolution, is very similar to that of bacteriophage P22 tail spike. Fluorescence titrations with an octasaccharide suggest Det7 tail spike to bind its receptor lipopolysaccharide somewhat less tightly than the P22 tail spike. The Det7 tail spike is even more resistant to thermal unfolding than the already exceptionally stable homologue from P22. Folding and assembly of both trimeric proteins are equally temperature sensitive and equally slow. Despite the close structural, biochemical, and sequence similarities between both proteins, the Det7 tail spike lacks both carboxy-terminal cysteines previously proposed to form a transient disulfide during P22 tail spike assembly. Our data suggest receptor-binding module exchange between podoviruses and myoviruses in the course of bacteriophage evolution.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003

Conformational analysis of furanoid ε-sugar amino acid containing cyclic peptides by NMR spectroscopy, molecular dynamics simulation, and X-ray crystallography: Evidence for a novel turn structure

Renate van Well; Luciana Marinelli; Cornelis Altona; Kees Erkelens; Gregg Siegal; Mark J. van Raaij; Antonio L. Llamas-Saiz; Horst Kessler; Ettore Novellino; Antonio Lavecchia; and Jacques H. van Boom; Mark Overhand

Sugar amino acids (SAAs) are useful building blocks for the design of peptidomimetics and peptide scaffolds. The three-dimensional structures of cyclic hybrid molecules containing the furanoid epsilon-SAA III and several amino acids were elucidated to study the preferred conformation of such an epsilon-SAA and its conformational influence on the backbone of cyclic peptides. NMR-based molecular dynamics simulations and empirical calculations of the cyclic tetramer 1, consisting of two copies of the SAA residue and two amino acids, revealed that it is conformationally restrained. The two SAA residues adopt different conformations. One of them forms an unusual turn, stabilized by an intraresidue nine-member hydrogen bond. The methylene functionalities of the other SAA residue are positioned in such a way that an intraresidue H bond is not possible. The X-ray crystal structure of 1 strongly resembles the solution conformation. Molecular dynamics calculations in combination with NMR analysis were also performed for compounds 2 and 3, which contain the RGD (Arg-Gly-Asp) consensus sequence and were previously shown to inhibit alpha(IIb)beta(3)-receptor-mediated platelet aggregation. The biologically most active compound 2 adopts a preferred conformation with the single SAA residue folded into the nine-member H bond-containing turn. Compound 3, containing an additional valine residue, as compared with compound 2, is conformational flexible. Our studies demonstrate that the furanoid epsilon-SAA III is able to introduce an unusual intraresidue hydrogen bond-stabilized beta-turn-like conformation in two of the three cyclic structures.


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

Structure of the receptor-binding carboxy-terminal domain of bacteriophage T7 tail fibers

Carmela Garcia-Doval; Mark J. van Raaij

The six bacteriophage T7 tail fibers, homo-trimers of gene product 17, are thought to be responsible for the first specific, albeit reversible, attachment to Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide. The protein trimer forms kinked fibers comprised of an amino-terminal tail-attachment domain, a slender shaft, and a carboxyl-terminal domain composed of several nodules. Previously, we expressed, purified, and crystallized a carboxyl-terminal fragment comprising residues 371–553. Here, we report the structure of this protein trimer, solved using anomalous diffraction and refined at 2 Å resolution. Amino acids 371–447 form a tapered pyramid with a triangular cross-section composed of interlocked β-sheets from each of the three chains. The triangular pyramid domain has three α-helices at its narrow end, which are connected to a carboxyl-terminal three-blade β-propeller tip domain by flexible loops. The monomers of this tip domain each contain an eight-stranded β-sandwich. The exact topology of the β-sandwich fold is novel, but similar to that of knob domains of other viral fibers and the phage Sf6 needle. Several host-range change mutants have been mapped to loops located on the top of this tip domain, suggesting that this surface of the tip domain interacts with receptors on the cell surface.


Proteins | 2014

Challenging the state of the art in protein structure prediction: Highlights of experimental target structures for the 10th Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction Experiment CASP10.

Andriy Kryshtafovych; John Moult; Patrick M. Bales; J. Fernando Bazan; Marco Biasini; Alex B. Burgin; Chen Chen; Frank V. Cochran; Timothy K. Craig; Rhiju Das; Deborah Fass; Carmela Garcia-Doval; Osnat Herzberg; Donald D. Lorimer; Hartmut Luecke; Xiaolei Ma; Daniel C. Nelson; Mark J. van Raaij; Forest Rohwer; Anca M. Segall; Victor Seguritan; Kornelius Zeth; Torsten Schwede

For the last two decades, CASP has assessed the state of the art in techniques for protein structure prediction and identified areas which required further development. CASP would not have been possible without the prediction targets provided by the experimental structural biology community. In the latest experiment, CASP10, more than 100 structures were suggested as prediction targets, some of which appeared to be extraordinarily difficult for modeling. In this article, authors of some of the most challenging targets discuss which specific scientific question motivated the experimental structure determination of the target protein, which structural features were especially interesting from a structural or functional perspective, and to what extent these features were correctly reproduced in the predictions submitted to CASP10. Specifically, the following targets will be presented: the acid‐gated urea channel, a difficult to predict transmembrane protein from the important human pathogen Helicobacter pylori; the structure of human interleukin (IL)−34, a recently discovered helical cytokine; the structure of a functionally uncharacterized enzyme OrfY from Thermoproteus tenax formed by a gene duplication and a novel fold; an ORFan domain of mimivirus sulfhydryl oxidase R596; the fiber protein gene product 17 from bacteriophage T7; the bacteriophage CBA‐120 tailspike protein; a virus coat protein from metagenomic samples of the marine environment; and finally, an unprecedented class of structure prediction targets based on engineered disulfide‐rich small proteins. Proteins 2014; 82(Suppl 2):26–42.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Structural characterization of the bacteriophage t7 tail machinery.

Ana Maria Cuervo; Mar Pulido-Cid; Mónica Chagoyen; Rocío Arranz; Verónica A. González-García; Carmela Garcia-Doval; José R. Castón; José M. Valpuesta; Mark J. van Raaij; Jaime Martín-Benito; José L. Carrascosa

Background: T7 tail is involved in host recognition, DNA securing, and delivery. Results: The tail is formed by a tubular structure (proteins gp11 and gp12) surrounded by six fibers. Conclusion: gp11 is a gatekeeper-adaptor protein, and gp12 closes the ejection channel. Significance: Tailed bacteriophages may share a common molecular mechanism to coordinate the switch between DNA packaging and tail assembly. Most bacterial viruses need a specialized machinery, called “tail,” to inject their genomes inside the bacterial cytoplasm without disrupting the cellular integrity. Bacteriophage T7 is a well characterized member of the Podoviridae family infecting Escherichia coli, and it has a short noncontractile tail that assembles sequentially on the viral head after DNA packaging. The T7 tail is a complex of around 2.7 MDa composed of at least four proteins as follows: the connector (gene product 8, gp8), the tail tubular proteins gp11 and gp12, and the fibers (gp17). Using cryo-electron microscopy and single particle image reconstruction techniques, we have determined the precise topology of the tail proteins by comparing the structure of the T7 tail extracted from viruses and a complex formed by recombinant gp8, gp11, and gp12 proteins. Furthermore, the order of assembly of the structural components within the complex was deduced from interaction assays with cloned and purified tail proteins. The existence of common folds among similar tail proteins allowed us to obtain pseudo-atomic threaded models of gp8 (connector) and gp11 (gatekeeper) proteins, which were docked into the corresponding cryo-EM volumes of the tail complex. This pseudo-atomic model of the connector-gatekeeper interaction revealed the existence of a common molecular architecture among viruses belonging to the three tailed bacteriophage families, strongly suggesting that a common molecular mechanism has been favored during evolution to coordinate the transition between DNA packaging and tail assembly.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Mycobacterium tuberculosis shikimate kinase inhibitors: design and simulation studies of the catalytic turnover.

Beatriz Blanco; Verónica Prado; Emilio Lence; José M. Otero; Carmela Garcia-Doval; Mark J. van Raaij; Antonio L. Llamas-Saiz; Heather K. Lamb; Alastair R. Hawkins; Concepción González-Bello

Shikimate kinase (SK) is an essential enzyme in several pathogenic bacteria and does not have any counterpart in human cells, thus making it an attractive target for the development of new antibiotics. The key interactions of the substrate and product binding and the enzyme movements that are essential for catalytic turnover of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis shikimate kinase enzyme (Mt-SK) have been investigated by structural and computational studies. Based on these studies several substrate analogs were designed and assayed. The crystal structure of Mt-SK in complex with ADP and one of the most potent inhibitors has been solved at 2.15 Å. These studies reveal that the fixation of the diaxial conformation of the C4 and C5 hydroxyl groups recognized by the enzyme or the replacement of the C3 hydroxyl group in the natural substrate by an amino group is a promising strategy for inhibition because it causes a dramatic reduction of the flexibility of the LID and shikimic acid binding domains. Molecular dynamics simulation studies showed that the product is expelled from the active site by three arginines (Arg117, Arg136, and Arg58). This finding represents a previously unknown key role of these conserved residues. These studies highlight the key role of the shikimic acid binding domain in the catalysis and provide guidance for future inhibitor designs.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2010

Two-chaperone assisted soluble expression and purification of the bacteriophage T4 long tail fibre protein gp37.

Sergio G. Bartual; Carmela Garcia-Doval; Jana Alonso; Guy Schoehn; Mark J. van Raaij

Bacteriophage T4 recognises its host cells through its long tail fibre protein gene product (gp) 37. Gp37 is a protein containing 1026 amino acids per monomer, forming a fibrous parallel homotrimer at the distal end of the long tail fibres. The other distal half-fibre protein, gp36, is much smaller, forming a trimer of 221 amino acids per monomer. Functional and structural studies of gp37 have been hampered by the inability to produce suitable amounts of it. We produced soluble gp37 by co-expression with two bacteriophage T4-encoded chaperones in a two-vector system; co-expression with each chaperone separately did not lead to good amounts of correctly folded, trimeric protein. An expression vector for the bacteriophage T4 fibrous protein chaperone gp57 was co-transformed into bacteria with a compatible bi-cistronic expression vector containing bacteriophage T4 genes 37 and 38. A six-histidine tag is encoded amino-terminal to the gp37 gene. Recombinant trimeric gp37, containing the histidine tag and residues 12-1026 of gp37, was purified from lysed bacteria by subsequent nickel-affinity, size exclusion and strong anion exchange column chromatography. Yields of approximately 4 mg of purified protein per litre of bacterial culture were achieved. Electron microscopy confirmed the protein to form fibres around 63 nm long, presumably gp36 makes up the remaining 11 nm in the intact distal half-fibre. Purified, correctly folded, gp37 will be useful for receptor-binding studies, high-resolution structural studies and for specific binding and detection of bacteria.


Advances in Protein Chemistry | 2006

Natural Triple β‐Stranded Fibrous Folds1

Anna Mitraki; Katerina Papanikolopoulou; Mark J. van Raaij

Abstract A distinctive family of β‐structured folds has recently been described for fibrous proteins from viruses. Virus fibers are usually involved in specific host‐cell recognition. They are asymmetric homotrimeric proteins consisting of an N‐terminal virus‐binding tail, a central shaft or stalk domain, and a C‐terminal globular receptor‐binding domain. Often they are entirely or nearly entirely composed of β‐structure. Apart from their biological relevance and possible gene therapy applications, their shape, stability, and rigidity suggest they may be useful as blueprints for biomechanical design. Folding and unfolding studies suggest their globular C‐terminal domain may fold first, followed by a “zipping‐up” of the shaft domains. The C‐terminal domains appear to be important for registration because peptides corresponding to shaft domains alone aggregate into nonnative fibers and/or amyloid structures. C‐terminal domains can be exchanged between different fibers and the resulting chimeric proteins are useful as a way to solve structures of unknown parts of the shaft domains. The following natural triple β‐stranded fibrous folds have been discovered by X‐ray crystallography: the triple β‐spiral, triple β‐helix, and T4 short tail fiber fold. All have a central longitudinal hydrophobic core and extensive intermonomer polar and nonpolar interactions. Now that a reasonable body of structural and folding knowledge has been assembled about these fibrous proteins, the next challenge and opportunity is to start using this information in medical and industrial applications such as gene therapy and nanotechnology.

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Antonio L. Llamas-Saiz

University of Santiago de Compostela

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José M. Otero

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Carmela Garcia-Doval

Spanish National Research Council

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Gavin C. Fox

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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Concepción González-Bello

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Abhimanyu K. Singh

Spanish National Research Council

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