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Dive into the research topics where Melissa L. Zastrow is active.

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Featured researches published by Melissa L. Zastrow.


Chemical Reviews | 2014

Protein Design: Toward Functional Metalloenzymes

Fangting Yu; Virginia M. Cangelosi; Melissa L. Zastrow; Matteo Tegoni; Jefferson S. Plegaria; Alison G. Tebo; Catherine S. Mocny; Leela Ruckthong; Hira Qayyum; Vincent L. Pecoraro

1. Overview A 2. Protein Redesign B 2.1. Making Use of Native Proteins: Protein Redesign B 2.2. Protein Redesign Based on Functions C 2.2.1. Redesign of Zinc Finger Structural Sites C 2.2.2. Redesign of Zinc Hydrolytic Centers E 2.2.3. Redesign of Heme Centers J 2.2.4. Redesign of Nonheme Redox Centers M 2.2.5. Artificial Metalloenzymes for Regioand Enantioselective Catalysis AA 2.2.6. Redesigned Protein Assemblies as Nanoreactors AK 2.3. Summary AN 3. De Novo Design AN 3.1. A Minimalist Approach: Designing Proteins from Scratch AN 3.2. Interactions between De Novo Designed Peptides and Metal Ions AN 3.2.1. Heavy Metal Toxicity AO 3.2.2. De Novo Designed Metal Centers Based on β-Structures AT 3.2.3. Metal-Induced Protein Folding AV 3.3. De Novo Designed Functional Metalloproteins: The Grail Quest of Protein Design AX 3.3.1. De Novo Designed Hydrolytic Centers AX 3.3.2. De Novo Designed Electron Transfer Centers BB 3.3.3. Other Catalytic Centers BG 3.4. Summary BN 4. Perspective BO Author Information BO Corresponding Author BO Notes BO Biographies BO Abbreviations BR References BR


Nature Chemistry | 2012

Hydrolytic catalysis and structural stabilization in a designed metalloprotein

Melissa L. Zastrow; Anna F. A. Peacock; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Vincent L. Pecoraro

Metal ions are an important part of many natural proteins, providing structural, catalytic and electron transfer functions. Reproducing these functions in a designed protein is the ultimate challenge to our understanding of them. Here, we present an artificial metallohydrolase, which has been shown by X-ray crystallography to contain two different metal ions – a Zn(II) ion which is important for catalytic activity and a Hg(II) ion which provides structural stability. This metallohydrolase displays catalytic activity that compares well with several characteristic reactions of natural enzymes. It catalyses p-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolysis (pNPA) to within ~100-fold of the efficiency of human carbonic anhydrase (CA)II and is at least 550-fold better than comparable synthetic complexes. Similarly, CO2 hydration occurs with an efficiency within ~500-fold of CAII. While histidine residues in the absence of Zn(II) exhibit pNPA hydrolysis, miniscule apopeptide activity is observed for CO2 hydration. The kinetic and structural analysis of this first de novo designed hydrolytic metalloenzyme uncovers necessary design features for future metalloenzymes containing one or more metals.


Biochemistry | 2014

Designing Hydrolytic Zinc Metalloenzymes

Melissa L. Zastrow; Vincent L. Pecoraro

Zinc is an essential element required for the function of more than 300 enzymes spanning all classes. Despite years of dedicated study, questions regarding the connections between primary and secondary metal ligands and protein structure and function remain unanswered, despite numerous mechanistic, structural, biochemical, and synthetic model studies. Protein design is a powerful strategy for reproducing native metal sites that may be applied to answering some of these questions and subsequently generating novel zinc enzymes. From examination of the earliest design studies introducing simple Zn(II)-binding sites into de novo and natural protein scaffolds to current studies involving the preparation of efficient hydrolytic zinc sites, it is increasingly likely that protein design will achieve reaction rates previously thought possible only for native enzymes. This Current Topic will review the design and redesign of Zn(II)-binding sites in de novo-designed proteins and native protein scaffolds toward the preparation of catalytic hydrolytic sites. After discussing the preparation of Zn(II)-binding sites in various scaffolds, we will describe relevant examples for reengineering existing zinc sites to generate new or altered catalytic activities. Then, we will describe our work on the preparation of a de novo-designed hydrolytic zinc site in detail and present comparisons to related designed zinc sites. Collectively, these studies demonstrate the significant progress being made toward building zinc metalloenzymes from the bottom up.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Influence of Active Site Location on Catalytic Activity in de Novo-Designed Zinc Metalloenzymes

Melissa L. Zastrow; Vincent L. Pecoraro

While metalloprotein design has now yielded a number of successful metal-bound and even catalytically active constructs, the question of where to put a metal site along a linear, repetitive sequence has not been thoroughly addressed. Often several possibilities in a given sequence may exist that would appear equivalent but may in fact differ for metal affinity, substrate access, or protein dynamics. We present a systematic variation of active site location for a hydrolytically active ZnHis3O site contained within a de novo-designed three-stranded coiled coil. We find that the maximal rate, substrate access, and metal-binding affinity are dependent on the selected position, while catalytic efficiency for p-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolysis can be retained regardless of the location of the active site. This achievement demonstrates how efficient, tailor-made enzymes which control rate, pKa, substrate and solvent access (and selectivity), and metal-binding affinity may be realized. These findings may be applied to the more advanced de novo design of constructs containing secondary interactions, such as hydrogen-bonding channels. We are now confident that changes to location for accommodating such channels can be achieved without location-dependent loss of catalytic efficiency. These findings bring us closer to our ultimate goal of incorporating the secondary interactions we believe will be necessary in order to improve both active site properties and the catalytic efficiency to be competitive with the native enzyme, carbonic anhydrase.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Modulation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors by synaptic and tonic zinc

Charles T. Anderson; Robert J. Radford; Melissa L. Zastrow; Daniel Y. Zhang; Ulf-Peter Apfel; Stephen J. Lippard; Thanos Tzounopoulos

Significance As an essential element for living organisms, zinc is a cofactor in many enzymes and regulatory proteins. After the surprising discovery of mobile zinc in synaptic vesicles throughout many areas of the brain, numerous investigators have studied its possible roles during neurotransmission. Nonetheless, knowledge of the physiology of zinc at the synapse is still in its infancy. Here, we show that synaptic and tonic zinc inhibit extrasynaptic NMDA receptors (NMDARs), which are widely distributed in the CNS and are important for normal and pathological excitatory signaling. Our work indicates that this newly discovered interaction between zinc and extrasynaptic NMDARs can provide a general mechanism for controlling neuronal excitability in the CNS. Many excitatory synapses contain high levels of mobile zinc within glutamatergic vesicles. Although synaptic zinc and glutamate are coreleased, it is controversial whether zinc diffuses away from the release site or whether it remains bound to presynaptic membranes or proteins after its release. To study zinc transmission and quantify zinc levels, we required a high-affinity rapid zinc chelator as well as an extracellular ratiometric fluorescent zinc sensor. We demonstrate that tricine, considered a preferred chelator for studying the role of synaptic zinc, is unable to efficiently prevent zinc from binding low-nanomolar zinc-binding sites, such as the high-affinity zinc-binding site found in NMDA receptors (NMDARs). Here, we used ZX1, which has a 1 nM zinc dissociation constant and second-order rate constant for binding zinc that is 200-fold higher than those for tricine and CaEDTA. We find that synaptic zinc is phasically released during action potentials. In response to short trains of presynaptic stimulation, synaptic zinc diffuses beyond the synaptic cleft where it inhibits extrasynaptic NMDARs. During higher rates of presynaptic stimulation, released glutamate activates additional extrasynaptic NMDARs that are not reached by synaptically released zinc, but which are inhibited by ambient, tonic levels of nonsynaptic zinc. By performing a ratiometric evaluation of extracellular zinc levels in the dorsal cochlear nucleus, we determined the tonic zinc levels to be low nanomolar. These results demonstrate a physiological role for endogenous synaptic as well as tonic zinc in inhibiting extrasynaptic NMDARs and thereby fine tuning neuronal excitability and signaling.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

A Crystallographic Examination of Predisposition versus Preorganization in de Novo Designed Metalloproteins

Leela Ruckthong; Melissa L. Zastrow; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Vincent L. Pecoraro

Preorganization and predisposition are important molecular recognition concepts exploited by nature to obtain site-specific and selective metal binding to proteins. While native structures containing an MS3 core are often unavailable in both apo- and holo-forms, one can use designed three-stranded coiled coils (3SCCs) containing tris-thiolate sites to evaluate these concepts. We show that the preferred metal geometry dictates the degree to which the cysteine rotamers change upon metal complexation. The Cys ligands in the apo-form are preorganized for binding trigonal pyramidal species (Pb(II)S3 and As(III)S3) in an endo conformation oriented toward the 3SCC C-termini, whereas the cysteines are predisposed for trigonal planar Hg(II)S3 and 4-coordinate Zn(II)S3O structures, requiring significant thiol rotation for metal binding. This study allows assessment of the importance of protein fold and side-chain reorientation for achieving metal selectivity in human retrotransposons and metalloregulatory proteins.


Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2013

Designing functional metalloproteins: From structural to catalytic metal sites

Melissa L. Zastrow; Vincent L. Pecoraro


ACS Sensors | 2016

Reaction-Based Probes for Imaging Mobile Zinc in Live Cells and Tissues.

Melissa L. Zastrow; Robert J. Radford; Wen Chyan; Charles T. Anderson; Daniel Y. Zhang; Andrei Loas; Thanos Tzounopoulos; Stephen J. Lippard


Chemical Science | 2015

A Far-Red Emitting Probe for Unambiguous Detection of Mobile Zinc in Acidic Vesicles and Deep Tissue.

Pablo Rivera-Fuentes; Alexandra T. Wrobel; Melissa L. Zastrow; Mustafa Khan; John Georgiou; Thomas T. Luyben; John C. Roder; Kenichi Okamoto; Stephen J. Lippard


Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2017

Crystallographic determination of Cys ligands upon metal binding in metalloproteins

Leela Ruckthong; Melissa L. Zastrow; Jeanne A. Stuckey; Vincent L. Pecoraro

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Stephen J. Lippard

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Daniel Y. Zhang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Robert J. Radford

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Andrei Loas

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Wen Chyan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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