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Dive into the research topics where Mary Marfori is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary Marfori.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Molecular basis for specificity of nuclear import and prediction of nuclear localization

Mary Marfori; Andrew V. Mynott; Jonathan J. Ellis; Ahmed M. Mehdi; Neil F. W. Saunders; Paul M. G. Curmi; Jade K. Forwood; Mikael Bodén; Bostjan Kobe

Although proteins are translated on cytoplasmic ribosomes, many of these proteins play essential roles in the nucleus, mediating key cellular processes including but not limited to DNA replication and repair as well as transcription and RNA processing. Thus, understanding how these critical nuclear proteins are accurately targeted to the nucleus is of paramount importance in biology. Interaction and structural studies in the recent years have jointly revealed some general rules on the specificity determinants of the recognition of nuclear targeting signals by their specific receptors, at least for two nuclear import pathways: (i) the classical pathway, which involves the classical nuclear localization sequences (cNLSs) and the receptors importin-α/karyopherin-α and importin-β/karyopherin-β1; and (ii) the karyopherin-β2 pathway, which employs the proline-tyrosine (PY)-NLSs and the receptor transportin-1/karyopherin-β2. The understanding of specificity rules allows the prediction of protein nuclear localization. We review the current understanding of the molecular determinants of the specificity of nuclear import, focusing on the importin-α•cargo recognition, as well as the currently available databases and predictive tools relevant to nuclear localization. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Regulation of Signaling and Cellular Fate through Modulation of Nuclear Protein Import.


Traffic | 2012

Structural Basis of High-Affinity Nuclear Localization Signal Interactions with Importin-alpha

Mary Marfori; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Jade K. Forwood; Bostjan Kobe

Classical nuclear localization signals (cNLSs), comprising one (monopartite cNLSs) or two clusters of basic residues connected by a 10–12 residue linker (bipartite cNLSs), are recognized by the nuclear import factor importin‐α. The cNLSs bind along a concave groove on importin‐α; however, specificity determinants of cNLSs remain poorly understood. We present a structural and interaction analysis study of importin‐α binding to both designed and naturally occurring high‐affinity cNLS‐like sequences; the peptide inhibitors Bimax1 and Bimax2, and cNLS peptides of cap‐binding protein 80. Our data suggest that cNLSs and cNLS‐like sequences can achieve high affinity through maximizing interactions at the importin‐α minor site, and by taking advantage of multiple linker region interactions. Our study defines an extended set of binding cavities on the importin‐α surface, and also expands on recent observations that longer linker sequences are allowed, and that long‐range electrostatic complementarity can contribute to cNLS‐binding affinity. Altogether, our study explains the molecular and structural basis of the results of a number of recent studies, including systematic mutagenesis and peptide library approaches, and provides an improved level of understanding on the specificity determinants of a cNLS. Our results have implications for identifying cNLSs in novel proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Structural basis for recruitment of tandem hotdog domains in acyl-CoA thioesterase 7 and its role in inflammation

Jade K. Forwood; Anil S. Thakur; Gregor Gunčar; Mary Marfori; Dmitri Mouradov; Weining Meng; Jodie A. Robinson; Thomas Huber; Stuart Kellie; Jennifer L. Martin; David A. Hume; Bostjan Kobe

Acyl-CoA thioesterases (Acots) catalyze the hydrolysis of fatty acyl-CoA to free fatty acid and CoA and thereby regulate lipid metabolism and cellular signaling. We present a comprehensive structural and functional characterization of mouse acyl-CoA thioesterase 7 (Acot7). Whereas prokaryotic homologues possess a single thioesterase domain, mammalian Acot7 contains a pair of domains in tandem. We determined the crystal structures of both the N- and C-terminal domains of the mouse enzyme, and inferred the structure of the full-length enzyme using a combination of chemical cross-linking, mass spectrometry, and molecular modeling. The quaternary arrangement in Acot7 features a trimer of hotdog fold dimers. Both domains of Acot7 are required for activity, but only one of two possible active sites in the dimer is functional. Asn-24 and Asp-213 (from N- and C-domains, respectively) were identified as the catalytic residues through site-directed mutagenesis. An enzyme with higher activity than wild-type Acot7 was obtained by mutating the residues in the nonfunctional active site. Recombinant Acot7 was shown to have the highest activity toward arachidonoyl-CoA, suggesting a function in eicosanoid metabolism. In line with the proposal, Acot7 was shown to be highly expressed in macrophages and up-regulated by lipopolysaccharide. Overexpression of Acot7 in a macrophage cell line modified the production of prostaglandins D2 and E2. Together, the results link the molecular and cellular functions of Acot7 and identify the enzyme as a candidate drug target in inflammatory disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Importin-beta is a GDP-to-GTP exchange factor of Ran: implications for the mechanism of nuclear import.

Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Jade K. Forwood; Mary Marfori; Gautier Robin; Bostjan Kobe; Bernard J. Carroll

Ran-GTP interacts strongly with importin-β, and this interaction promotes the release of the importin-α-nuclear localization signal cargo from importin-β. Ran-GDP also interacts with importin-β, but this interaction is 4 orders of magnitude weaker than the Ran-GTP·importin-β interaction. Here we use the yeast complement of nuclear import proteins to show that the interaction between Ran-GDP and importin-β promotes the dissociation of GDP from Ran. The release of GDP from the Ran-GDP-importin-β complex stabilizes the complex, which cannot be dissociated by importin-α. Although Ran has a higher affinity for GDP compared with GTP, Ran in complex with importin-β has a higher affinity for GTP. This feature is responsible for the generation of Ran-GTP from Ran-GDP by importin-β. Ran-binding protein-1 (RanBP1) activates this reaction by forming a trimeric complex with Ran-GDP and importin-β. Importin-α inhibits the GDP exchange reaction by sequestering importin-β, whereas RanBP1 restores the GDP nucleotide exchange by importin-β by forming a tetrameric complex with importin-β, Ran, and importin-α. The exchange is also inhibited by nuclear-transport factor-2 (NTF2). We suggest a mechanism for nuclear import, additional to the established RCC1 (Ran-guanine exchange factor)-dependent pathway that incorporates these results.Ran-GTP interacts strongly with importin-beta, and this interaction promotes the release of the importin-alpha-nuclear localization signal cargo from importin-beta. Ran-GDP also interacts with importin-beta, but this interaction is 4 orders of magnitude weaker than the Ran-GTP.importin-beta interaction. Here we use the yeast complement of nuclear import proteins to show that the interaction between Ran-GDP and importin-beta promotes the dissociation of GDP from Ran. The release of GDP from the Ran-GDP-importin-beta complex stabilizes the complex, which cannot be dissociated by importin-alpha. Although Ran has a higher affinity for GDP compared with GTP, Ran in complex with importin-beta has a higher affinity for GTP. This feature is responsible for the generation of Ran-GTP from Ran-GDP by importin-beta. Ran-binding protein-1 (RanBP1) activates this reaction by forming a trimeric complex with Ran-GDP and importin-beta. Importin-alpha inhibits the GDP exchange reaction by sequestering importin-beta, whereas RanBP1 restores the GDP nucleotide exchange by importin-beta by forming a tetrameric complex with importin-beta, Ran, and importin-alpha. The exchange is also inhibited by nuclear-transport factor-2 (NTF2). We suggest a mechanism for nuclear import, additional to the established RCC1 (Ran-guanine exchange factor)-dependent pathway that incorporates these results.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Ligand-induced Conformational Changes within a Hexameric Acyl-CoA Thioesterase

Mary Marfori; Bostjan Kobe; Jade K. Forwood

Acyl-coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) thioesterases play a crucial role in the metabolism of activated fatty acids, coenzyme A, and other metabolic precursor molecules including arachidonic acid and palmitic acid. These enzymes hydrolyze coenzyme A from acyl-CoA esters to mediate a range of cellular functions including β-oxidation, lipid biosynthesis, and signal transduction. Here, we present the crystal structure of a hexameric hot-dog domain-containing acyl-CoA thioesterase from Bacillus halodurans in the apo-form and provide structural and comparative analyses to the coenzyme A-bound form to identify key conformational changes induced upon ligand binding. We observed dramatic ligand-induced changes at both the hot-dog dimer and the trimer-of-dimer interfaces; the dimer interfaces in the apo-structure differ by over 20% and decrease to about half the size in the ligand-bound state. We also assessed the specificity of the enzyme against a range of fatty acyl-CoA substrates and have identified a preference for short-chain fatty acyl-CoAs. Coenzyme A was shown both to negatively regulate enzyme activity, representing a direct inhibitory feedback, and consistent with the structural data, to destabilize the quaternary structure of the enzyme. Coenzyme A-induced conformational changes in the C-terminal helices of enzyme were assessed through mutational analysis and shown to play a role in regulating enzyme activity. The conformational changes are likely to be conserved from bacteria through to humans and provide a greater understanding, particularly at a structural level, of thioesterase function and regulation.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2009

Crystallization of the flexible nuclear import receptor importin‐β in the unliganded state

Noelia Roman; Brenda Kirkby; Mary Marfori; Bostjan Kobe; Jade K. Forwood

The transport of macromolecules across the nuclear envelope is an essential eukaryotic process that enables proteins such as transcription factors, polymerases and histones to gain access to the genetic material contained within the nucleus. Importin-beta plays a central role in the nucleocytoplasmic transport process, mediating nuclear import through a range of interactions with cytoplasmic, nuclear and nuclear pore proteins such as importin-alpha, Ran, nucleoporins and various cargo molecules. The unliganded form of the full-length yeast importin-beta has been expressed and crystallized. The crystals were obtained by vapour diffusion at pH 6.5 and 290 K. The crystals belonged to space group P2(1) (unit-cell parameters a = 58.17, b = 127.25, c = 68.52 A, beta = 102.23). One molecule is expected in the asymmetric unit. The crystals diffracted to 2.4 A resolution using a laboratory X-ray source and were suitable for crystal structure determination.


Structure | 2010

Quantitative Structural Analysis of Importin-β Flexibility: Paradigm for Solenoid Protein Structures

Jade K. Forwood; Allison Lange; Ulrich Zachariae; Mary Marfori; Callie Preast; Helmut Grubmüller; Murray Stewart; Anita H. Corbett; Bostjan Kobe


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2008

Crystallography and protein–protein interactions: biological interfaces and crystal contacts

Bostjan Kobe; Gregor Gunčar; Rebecca Buchholz; Thomas Huber; Bohumil Maco; Nathan P. Cowieson; Jennifer L. Martin; Mary Marfori; Jade K. Forwood


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Kap95p binding induces the switch loops of RanGDP to adopt the GTP-bound conformation: Implications for nuclear import complex assembly dynamics

Jade K. Forwood; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Mary Marfori; Gautier Robin; Weining Meng; Gregor Gunčar; Sai M. Liu; Murray Stewart; Bernard J. Carroll; Bostjan Kobe


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2013

Phosphorylation adjacent to the nuclear localization signal of human dUTPase abolishes nuclear import: structural and mechanistic insights.

Gergely Róna; Mary Marfori; Máté Borsos; Ildikó Scheer; Enikő Takács; Judit Tóth; Fruzsina Babos; Anna Magyar; Anna Erdei; Zoltán Bozóky; László Buday; Bostjan Kobe; Beáta G. Vértessy

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Bostjan Kobe

University of Queensland

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Gregor Gunčar

University of Queensland

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Bohumil Maco

University of Queensland

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Gautier Robin

University of Queensland

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Weining Meng

University of Queensland

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