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Dive into the research topics where Mark T. Griffith is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark T. Griffith.


Science | 2008

The 2.6 Angstrom Crystal Structure of a Human A2A Adenosine Receptor Bound to an Antagonist

Veli-Pekka Jaakola; Mark T. Griffith; Michael A. Hanson; Vadim Cherezov; Ellen Y.T. Chien; J. Robert Lane; Adriaan P. IJzerman; Raymond C. Stevens

The adenosine class of heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding protein (G protein)–coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediates the important role of extracellular adenosine in many physiological processes and is antagonized by caffeine. We have determined the crystal structure of the human A2A adenosine receptor, in complex with a high-affinity subtype-selective antagonist, ZM241385, to 2.6 angstrom resolution. Four disulfide bridges in the extracellular domain, combined with a subtle repacking of the transmembrane helices relative to the adrenergic and rhodopsin receptor structures, define a pocket distinct from that of other structurally determined GPCRs. The arrangement allows for the binding of the antagonist in an extended conformation, perpendicular to the membrane plane. The binding site highlights an integral role for the extracellular loops, together with the helical core, in ligand recognition by this class of GPCRs and suggests a role for ZM241385 in restricting the movement of a tryptophan residue important in the activation mechanism of the class A receptors.


Science | 2009

The 2.6 Angstrom Crystal Structure of a Human A[subscript 2A] Adenosine Receptor Bound to an Antagonist

Veli-Pekka Jaakola; Mark T. Griffith; Michael A. Hanson; Vadim Cherezov; Ellen Y.T. Chien; J. Robert Lane; Adriaan P. IJzerman; Raymond C. Stevens; Leiden; Amsterdam

The adenosine class of heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding protein (G protein)–coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediates the important role of extracellular adenosine in many physiological processes and is antagonized by caffeine. We have determined the crystal structure of the human A2A adenosine receptor, in complex with a high-affinity subtype-selective antagonist, ZM241385, to 2.6 angstrom resolution. Four disulfide bridges in the extracellular domain, combined with a subtle repacking of the transmembrane helices relative to the adrenergic and rhodopsin receptor structures, define a pocket distinct from that of other structurally determined GPCRs. The arrangement allows for the binding of the antagonist in an extended conformation, perpendicular to the membrane plane. The binding site highlights an integral role for the extracellular loops, together with the helical core, in ligand recognition by this class of GPCRs and suggests a role for ZM241385 in restricting the movement of a tryptophan residue important in the activation mechanism of the class A receptors.


Science | 2012

Crystal structure of a lipid G protein-coupled receptor.

Michael A. Hanson; Christopher B. Roth; Euijung Jo; Mark T. Griffith; Fiona Scott; G Reinhart; H Desale; B Clemons; Stuart M. Cahalan; S.C Schuerer; Mg Sanna; Gye Won Han; Peter Kuhn; Hugh Rosen; Raymond C. Stevens

A Lipid-Sensing GPCR Sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) is a sphingolipid that binds to the G protein–coupled receptor subtype 1 (S1P1) to activate signaling pathways involved in regulation of the vascular and immune systems. Hanson et al. (p. 851) determined the crystal structure of S1PR in complex with an antagonist sphingolipid mimic. Ligand access to the receptor from the extracellular milieu is occluded, and a gap between helices I and VII may provide ligand access from within the membrane. The structural information, together with mutagenesis and structure activity relationship data, provides insight into the molecular recognition events that modulate signaling. A channel in a lipid-dependent G protein–coupled receptor allows a ligand to access its binding site from within the plasma membrane. The lyso-phospholipid sphingosine 1-phosphate modulates lymphocyte trafficking, endothelial development and integrity, heart rate, and vascular tone and maturation by activating G protein–coupled sphingosine 1-phosphate receptors. Here, we present the crystal structure of the sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor 1 fused to T4-lysozyme (S1P1-T4L) in complex with an antagonist sphingolipid mimic. Extracellular access to the binding pocket is occluded by the amino terminus and extracellular loops of the receptor. Access is gained by ligands entering laterally between helices I and VII within the transmembrane region of the receptor. This structure, along with mutagenesis, agonist structure-activity relationship data, and modeling, provides a detailed view of the molecular recognition and requirement for hydrophobic volume that activates S1P1, resulting in the modulation of immune and stromal cell responses.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2009

Rastering strategy for screening and centring of microcrystal samples of human membrane proteins with a sub-10 µm size X-ray synchrotron beam

Vadim Cherezov; Michael A. Hanson; Mark T. Griffith; Mark Hilgart; Ruslan Sanishvili; Venugopalan Nagarajan; Sergey Stepanov; Robert F. Fischetti; Peter Kuhn; Raymond C. Stevens

Crystallization of human membrane proteins in lipidic cubic phase often results in very small but highly ordered crystals. Advent of the sub-10 µm minibeam at the APS GM/CA CAT has enabled the collection of high quality diffraction data from such microcrystals. Herein we describe the challenges and solutions related to growing, manipulating and collecting data from optically invisible microcrystals embedded in an opaque frozen in meso material. Of critical importance is the use of the intense and small synchrotron beam to raster through and locate the crystal sample in an efficient and reliable manner. The resulting diffraction patterns have a significant reduction in background, with strong intensity and improvement in diffraction resolution compared with larger beam sizes. Three high-resolution structures of human G protein-coupled receptors serve as evidence of the utility of these techniques that will likely be useful for future structural determination efforts. We anticipate that further innovations of the technologies applied to microcrystallography will enable the solving of structures of ever more challenging targets.


Structure | 2005

Structural Basis of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus ADP-Ribose-1″-Phosphate Dephosphorylation by a Conserved Domain of nsP3

Kumar Singh Saikatendu; Jeremiah S. Joseph; Vanitha Subramanian; Tom Clayton; Mark T. Griffith; Kin Moy; Jeffrey Velasquez; Benjamin W. Neuman; Michael J. Buchmeier; Raymond C. Stevens; Peter Kuhn

Summary The crystal structure of a conserved domain of nonstructural protein 3 (nsP3) from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) has been solved by single-wavelength anomalous dispersion to 1.4 Å resolution. The structure of this “X” domain, seen in many single-stranded RNA viruses, reveals a three-layered α/β/α core with a macro-H2A-like fold. The putative active site is a solvent-exposed cleft that is conserved in its three structural homologs, yeast Ymx7, Archeoglobus fulgidus AF1521, and Er58 from E. coli. Its sequence is similar to yeast YBR022W (also known as Poa1P), a known phosphatase that acts on ADP-ribose-1″-phosphate (Appr-1″-p). The SARS nsP3 domain readily removes the 1″ phosphate group from Appr-1″-p in in vitro assays, confirming its phosphatase activity. Sequence and structure comparison of all known macro-H2A domains combined with available functional data suggests that proteins of this superfamily form an emerging group of nucleotide phosphatases that dephosphorylate Appr-1″-p.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Crystal Structure of Nonstructural Protein 10 from the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Reveals a Novel Fold with Two Zinc-Binding Motifs

Jeremiah S. Joseph; Kumar Singh Saikatendu; Vanitha Subramanian; Benjamin W. Neuman; Alexei Brooun; Mark T. Griffith; Kin Moy; Maneesh K. Yadav; Jeffrey Velasquez; Michael J. Buchmeier; Raymond C. Stevens; Peter Kuhn

ABSTRACT The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) possesses a large 29.7-kb positive-stranded RNA genome. The first open reading frame encodes replicase polyproteins 1a and 1ab, which are cleaved to generate 16 “nonstructural” proteins, nsp1 to nsp16, involved in viral replication and/or RNA processing. Among these, nsp10 plays a critical role in minus-strand RNA synthesis in a related coronavirus, murine hepatitis virus. Here, we report the crystal structure of SARS-CoV nsp10 at a resolution of 1.8 Å as determined by single-wavelength anomalous dispersion using phases derived from hexatantalum dodecabromide. nsp10 is a single domain protein consisting of a pair of antiparallel N-terminal helices stacked against an irregular β-sheet, a coil-rich C terminus, and two Zn fingers. nsp10 represents a novel fold and is the first structural representative of this family of Zn finger proteins found so far exclusively in coronaviruses. The first Zn finger coordinates a Zn2+ ion in a unique conformation. The second Zn finger, with four cysteines, is a distant member of the “gag-knuckle fold group” of Zn2+-binding domains and appears to maintain the structural integrity of the C-terminal tail. A distinct clustering of basic residues on the protein surface suggests a nucleic acid-binding function. Gel shift assays indicate that in isolation, nsp10 binds single- and double-stranded RNA and DNA with high-micromolar affinity and without obvious sequence specificity. It is possible that nsp10 functions within a larger RNA-binding protein complex. However, its exact role within the replicase complex is still not clear.


Structure | 2012

Fusion Partner Toolchest for the Stabilization and Crystallization of G Protein-Coupled Receptors

Eugene Chun; Aaron A. Thompson; Wei Liu; Christopher B. Roth; Mark T. Griffith; Vsevolod Katritch; Joshua Kunken; Fei Xu; Vadim Cherezov; Michael A. Hanson; Raymond C. Stevens


Cell | 2015

Crystal Structure of Antagonist Bound Human Lysophosphatidic Acid Receptor 1.

Jill E. Chrencik; Christopher B. Roth; Masahiko Terakado; Haruto Kurata; Rie Omi; Yasuyuki Kihara; Dora Warshaviak; Shinji Nakade; Guillermo Asmar-Rovira; Mauro Mileni; Hirotaka Mizuno; Mark T. Griffith; Caroline Rodgers; Gye Won Han; Jeffrey Velasquez; Jerold Chun; Raymond C. Stevens; Michael A. Hanson


Crystal Growth & Design | 2008

LCP-FRAP Assay for Pre-Screening Membrane Proteins for in Meso Crystallization.

Vadim Cherezov; Jeffrey J. Liu; Mark T. Griffith; Michael A. Hanson; Raymond C. Stevens


Protein Expression and Purification | 2007

Profiling of membrane protein variants in a baculovirus system by coupling cell-surface detection with small-scale parallel expression

Michael A. Hanson; Alexei Brooun; Kent A. Baker; Veli-Pekka Jaakola; Christopher B. Roth; Ellen Y.T. Chien; Alexander I. Alexandrov; Jeffrey Velasquez; Leila K. Davis; Mark T. Griffith; Kin Moy; Barbie K. Ganser-Pornillos; Yuanzi Hua; Peter Kuhn; Sam Ellis; Mark Yeager; Raymond C. Stevens

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Michael A. Hanson

Scripps Research Institute

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Vadim Cherezov

University of Southern California

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Peter Kuhn

University of Southern California

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Ellen Y.T. Chien

Scripps Research Institute

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Jeffrey Velasquez

Scripps Research Institute

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Kin Moy

Scripps Research Institute

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Aaron A. Thompson

Scripps Research Institute

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