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Dive into the research topics where Mark R. Sanderson is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark R. Sanderson.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

Structural insight into the quinolone-DNA cleavage complex of type IIA topoisomerases

Ivan Laponogov; Maninder K. Sohi; Dennis A. Veselkov; Xiao-Su Pan; R Sawhney; A.W Thompson; Katherine E. McAuley; L.M Fisher; Mark R. Sanderson

Type II topoisomerases alter DNA topology by forming a covalent DNA-cleavage complex that allows DNA transport through a double-stranded DNA break. We present the structures of cleavage complexes formed by the Streptococcus pneumoniae ParC breakage-reunion and ParE TOPRIM domains of topoisomerase IV stabilized by moxifloxacin and clinafloxacin, two antipneumococcal fluoroquinolones. These structures reveal two drug molecules intercalated at the highly bent DNA gate and help explain antibacterial quinolone action and resistance.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Structural Basis of Gate-DNA Breakage and Resealing by Type II Topoisomerases

Ivan Laponogov; Xiao-Su Pan; Dennis A. Veselkov; Katherine E. McAuley; L. Mark Fisher; Mark R. Sanderson

Type II DNA topoisomerases are ubiquitous enzymes with essential functions in DNA replication, recombination and transcription. They change DNA topology by forming a transient covalent cleavage complex with a gate-DNA duplex that allows transport of a second duplex though the gate. Despite its biological importance and targeting by anticancer and antibacterial drugs, cleavage complex formation and reversal is not understood for any type II enzyme. To address the mechanism, we have used X-ray crystallography to study sequential states in the formation and reversal of a DNA cleavage complex by topoisomerase IV from Streptococcus pneumoniae, the bacterial type II enzyme involved in chromosome segregation. A high resolution structure of the complex captured by a novel antibacterial dione reveals two drug molecules intercalated at a cleaved B-form DNA gate and anchored by drug-specific protein contacts. Dione release generated drug-free cleaved and resealed DNA complexes in which the DNA gate instead adopts an unusual A/B-form helical conformation with a Mg2+ ion repositioned to coordinate each scissile phosphodiester group and promote reversible cleavage by active-site tyrosines. These structures, the first for putative reaction intermediates of a type II topoisomerase, suggest how a type II enzyme reseals DNA during its normal reaction cycle and illuminate aspects of drug arrest important for the development of new topoisomerase-targeting therapeutics.


Proteins | 1998

Exploring the active site of herpes simplex virus type-1 thymidine kinase by X-ray crystallography of complexes with aciclovir and other ligands

John N. Champness; Matthew S. Bennett; Frank Wien; Rob Visse; William C. Summers; Piet Herdewijn; Erik De Clercq; Tomasz Ostrowski; Richard L. Jarvest; Mark R. Sanderson

Antiherpes therapies are principally targeted at viral thymidine kinases and utilize nucleoside analogs, the triphosphates of which are inhibitors of viral DNA polymerase or result in toxic effects when incorporated into DNA. The most frequently used drug, aciclovir (Zovirax), is a relatively poor substrate for thymidine kinase and high‐resolution structural information on drugs and other molecules binding to the target is therefore important for the design of novel and more potent chemotherapy, both in antiherpes treatment and in gene therapy systems where thymidine kinase is expressed. Here, we report for the first time the binary complexes of HSV‐1 thymidine kinase (TK) with the drug molecules aciclovir and penciclovir, determined by X‐ray crystallography at 2.37 Å resolution. Moreover, from new data at 2.14 Å resolution, the refined structure of the complex of TK with its substrate deoxythymidine (R = 0.209 for 96% of all data) now reveals much detail concerning substrate and solvent interactions with the enzyme. Structures of the complexes of TK with four halogen‐containing substrate analogs have also been solved, to resolutions better than 2.4 Å. The various TK inhibitors broadly fall into three groups which together probe the space of the enzyme active site in a manner that no one molecule does alone, so giving a composite picture of active site interactions that can be exploited in the design of novel compounds. Proteins 32:350–361, 1998.


The EMBO Journal | 1990

Crystal structure of a berenil-dodecanucleotide complex: the role of water in sequence-specific ligand binding.

D.G Brown; Mark R. Sanderson; J.V. Skelly; Terence C. Jenkins; Tom Brown; Elspeth F. Garman; David I. Stuart; Stephen Neidle

The three‐dimensional structure of a complex between the dodecanucleotide d(CGCGAATTCGCG) and the anti‐trypanocidal drug berenil, has been determined to a resolution of 2.5 A. The structure has been solved by molecular replacement and refined to an R factor of 0.177. A total of 49 water molecules have been located. The drug is bound at the 5′‐AAT‐3′ region of the oligonucleotide. At one end of the drug the amidinium group is in hydrogen‐bonded contact with N3 of the adenine base complementary to the thymine of the AAT. The other amidinium group does not make direct interactions with the DNA. Instead, a water molecule mediates between them. This is in hydrogen‐bonded contact with an amidinium nitrogen atom, N3 of the 5′ end adenine base and the ring oxygen atom of an adjacent deoxyribose. Molecular mechanics calculations have been performed on this complex, with the drug at various positions along the sequence. These show that the observed position is only 0.8 kcal/mol higher in energy than the best position. It is suggested that there is a broad energy well in the AATT region for this drug, and that water molecules as well as the neighbouring sequence, will determine precise positioning. More general aspects of minor groove binding are discussed.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

The SOCS-Box of HIV-1 Vif Interacts with ElonginBC by Induced-Folding to Recruit Its Cul5-Containing Ubiquitin Ligase Complex

Julien R. C. Bergeron; Hendrik Huthoff; Dennis A. Veselkov; Rebecca L. Beavil; Peter J. Simpson; Stephen Matthews; Michael H. Malim; Mark R. Sanderson

The HIV-1 viral infectivity factor (Vif) protein recruits an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, comprising the cellular proteins elongin B and C (EloBC), cullin 5 (Cul5) and RING-box 2 (Rbx2), to the anti-viral proteins APOBEC3G (A3G) and APOBEC3F (A3F) and induces their polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. In this study, we used purified proteins and direct in vitro binding assays, isothermal titration calorimetry and NMR spectroscopy to describe the molecular mechanism for assembly of the Vif-EloBC ternary complex. We demonstrate that Vif binds to EloBC in two locations, and that both interactions induce structural changes in the SOCS box of Vif as well as EloBC. In particular, in addition to the previously established binding of Vifs BC box to EloC, we report a novel interaction between the conserved Pro-Pro-Leu-Pro motif of Vif and the C-terminal domain of EloB. Using cell-based assays, we further show that this interaction is necessary for the formation of a functional ligase complex, thus establishing a role of this motif. We conclude that HIV-1 Vif engages EloBC via an induced-folding mechanism that does not require additional co-factors, and speculate that these features distinguish Vif from other EloBC specificity factors such as cellular SOCS proteins, and may enhance the prospects of obtaining therapeutic inhibitors of Vif function.


FEBS Letters | 1999

Structure to 1.9 A resolution of a complex with herpes simplex virus type-1 thymidine kinase of a novel, non-substrate inhibitor: X-ray crystallographic comparison with binding of aciclovir.

Matthew S Bennett; Frank Wien; John N. Champness; Thilina Batuwangala; Thomas Rutherford; William C. Summers; Hongmao Sun; George E. Wright; Mark R. Sanderson

Treatment of herpes infections with nucleoside analogues requires as an initial step the activation of the compounds by thymidine kinase. As an aid to developing more effective chemotherapy, both for treatment of recurrent herpes infection and in gene therapy systems where thymidine kinase is expressed, two high‐resolution X‐ray structures of thymidine kinase have been compared: one with the relatively poor substrate aciclovir (Zovirax), the other with a synthetic inhibitor having an N 2‐substituted guanine. Both compounds have similar binding modes in spite of their size difference and apparently distinct ligand properties.


FEBS Letters | 2000

Crystal structure of Escherichia coli UvrB C-terminal domain, and a model for UvrB-UvrC interaction

Maninder K. Sohi; Alexander Alexandrovich; Geri F. Moolenaar; Rob Visse; Nora Goosen; Xavier Vernede; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps; John N. Champness; Mark R. Sanderson

A crystal structure of the C‐terminal domain of Escherichia coli UvrB (UvrB′) has been solved to 3.0 Å resolution. The domain adopts a helix‐loop‐helix fold which is stabilised by the packing of hydrophobic side‐chains between helices. From the UvrB′ fold, a model for a domain of UvrC (UvrC′) that has high sequence homology with UvrB′ has been made. In the crystal, a dimerisation of UvrB′ domains is seen involving specific hydrophobic and salt bridge interactions between residues in and close to the loop region of the domain. It is proposed that a homologous mode of interaction may occur between UvrB and UvrC. This interaction is likely to be flexible, potentially spanning >50 Å.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Novel Symmetric and Asymmetric DNA Scission Determinants for Streptococcus pneumoniae Topoisomerase IV and Gyrase Are Clustered at the DNA Breakage Site

Elisabetta Leo; Katherine A. Gould; Xiao-Su Pan; Giovanni Capranico; Mark R. Sanderson; Manlio Palumbo; Larry Mark Fisher

Topoisomerase (topo) IV and gyrase are bacterial type IIA DNA topoisomerases essential for DNA replication and chromosome segregation that act via a transient double-stranded DNA break involving a covalent enzyme-DNA “cleavage complex.” Despite their mechanistic importance, the DNA breakage determinants are not understood for any bacterial type II enzyme. We investigated DNA cleavage by Streptococcus pneumoniae topo IV and gyrase stabilized by gemifloxacin and other antipneumococcal fluoroquinolones. Topo IV and gyrase induce distinct but overlapping repertoires of double-strand DNA breakage sites that were essentially identical for seven different quinolones and were augmented (in intensity) by positive or negative supercoiling. Sequence analysis of 180 topo IV and 126 gyrase sites promoted by gemifloxacin on pneumococcal DNA revealed the respective consensus sequences: G(G/c)(A/t)A*GNNCt(T/a)N(C/a) and GN4G(G/c)(A/c)G*GNNCtTN(C/a) (preferred bases are underlined; disfavored bases are in small capitals; N indicates no preference; and asterisk indicates DNA scission between -1 and +1 positions). Both enzymes show strong preferences for bases clustered symmetrically around the DNA scission site, i.e. +1G/+4C, -4G/+8C, and particularly the novel -2A/+6T, but with no preference at +2/+3 within the staggered 4-bp overhang. Asymmetric elements include -3G and several unfavored bases. These cleavage preferences, the first for Gram-positive type IIA topoisomerases, differ markedly from those reported for Escherichia coli topo IV (consensus (A/G)*T/A) and gyrase, which are based on fewer sites. However, both pneumococcal enzymes cleaved an E. coli gyrase site suggesting overlap in gyrase determinants. We propose a model for the cleavage complex of topo IV/gyrase that accommodates the unique -2A/+6T and other preferences.


Journal of General Virology | 1998

HERPESVIRAL THYMIDINE KINASES : LAXITY AND RESISTANCE BY DESIGN

James S. Evans; Kevin P. Lock; Barry A. Levine; John N. Champness; Mark R. Sanderson; William C. Summers; P. J. McLeish; A. Buchan

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Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Structure of an ‘open’ clamp type II topoisomerase-DNA complex provides a mechanism for DNA capture and transport

Ivan Laponogov; Dennis A. Veselkov; Isabelle M.-T. Crevel; Xiao-Su Pan; L. Mark Fisher; Mark R. Sanderson

Type II topoisomerases regulate DNA supercoiling and chromosome segregation. They act as ATP-operated clamps that capture a DNA duplex and pass it through a transient DNA break in a second DNA segment via the sequential opening and closure of ATPase-, G-DNA- and C-gates. Here, we present the first ‘open clamp’ structures of a 3-gate topoisomerase II-DNA complex, the seminal complex engaged in DNA recognition and capture. A high-resolution structure was solved for a (full-length ParE-ParC55)2 dimer of Streptococcus pneumoniae topoisomerase IV bound to two DNA molecules: a closed DNA gate in a B-A-B form double-helical conformation and a second B-form duplex associated with closed C-gate helices at a novel site neighbouring the catalytically important β-pinwheel DNA-binding domain. The protein N gate is present in an ‘arms-wide-open’ state with the undimerized N-terminal ParE ATPase domains connected to TOPRIM domains via a flexible joint and folded back allowing ready access both for gate and transported DNA segments and cleavage-stabilizing antibacterial drugs. The structure shows the molecular conformations of all three gates at 3.7 Å, the highest resolution achieved for the full complex to date, and illuminates the mechanism of DNA capture and transport by a type II topoisomerase.

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Stephen Neidle

University College London

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