Mia C. Brown
University of Missouri
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Featured researches published by Mia C. Brown.
Biophysical Chemistry | 2014
Mia C. Brown; Rauta A. Yakubu; Jay Taylor; Christopher M. Halsey; Jian Xiong; Renee D. JiJi; Jason W. Cooley
Despite their presence in many aspects of biology, the study of membrane proteins lags behind that of their soluble counterparts. Improving structural analysis of membrane proteins is essential. Deep-UV resonance Raman (DUVRR) spectroscopy is an emerging technique in this area and has demonstrated sensitivity to subtle structural transitions and changes in protein environment. The pH low insertion peptide (pHLIP) has three distinct structural states: disordered in an aqueous environment, partially folded and associated with a lipid membrane, and inserted into a lipid bilayer as a transmembrane helix. While the soluble and membrane-inserted forms are well characterized, the partially folded membrane-associated state has not yet been clearly described. The amide I mode, known to be sensitive to protein environment, is the same in spectra of membrane-associated and membrane-inserted pHLIP, indicating comparable levels of backbone dehydration. The amide S mode, sensitive to helical structure, indicates less helical character in the membrane-associated form compared to the membrane-inserted state, consistent with previous findings. However, the structurally sensitive amide III region is very similar in both membrane-associated and membrane-inserted pHLIP, suggesting that the membrane-associated form has a large amount of ordered structure. Where before the membrane-associated state was thought to contain mostly unordered structure and reside in a predominantly aqueous environment, we have shown that it contains a significant amount of ordered structure and rests deeper within the lipid membrane.
EPL | 2014
A. Miskowiec; Zachary Buck; Mia C. Brown; H. Kaiser; Flemming Y. Hansen; Gavin M. King; Haskell Taub; Renee D. JiJi; Jason W. Cooley; Madhu Sudan Tyagi; Souleymane Diallo; Eugene Mamontov; Kenneth W. Herwig
We compare the freezing/melting behavior of water hydrating single-supported bilayers of a zwitterionic lipid DMPC with that of an anionic lipid DMPG. For both membranes, the temperature dependence of the elastically scattered neutron intensity indicates distinct water types undergoing translational diffusion: bulk-like water probably located above the membrane and two types of confined water closer to the lipid head groups. The membranes differ in the greater width of the water freezing transition near the anionic DMPG bilayer compared to zwitterionic DMPC as well as in the abruptness of the freezing/melting transitions of the bulk-like water.
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Mia C. Brown; Alaa Abdine; Jose Chavez; Adam Schaffner; Celia Torres-Arancivia; Brian Lada; Renee D. JiJi; Roman Osman; Jason W. Cooley; Iban Ubarretxena-Belandia
Intramembrane-cleaving proteases (I-CLiPs) activate pools of single-pass helical membrane protein signaling precursors that are key in the physiology of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Proteases typically cleave peptide bonds within extended or flexible regions of their substrates, and thus the mechanism underlying the ability of I-CLiPs to hydrolyze the presumably α-helical transmembrane domain (TMD) of these membrane proteins is unclear. Using deep-ultraviolet resonance Raman spectroscopy in combination with isotopic labeling, we show that although predominantly in canonical α-helical conformation, the TMD of the established I-CLiP substrate Gurken displays 310-helical geometry. As measured by microscale thermophoresis, this substrate binds with high affinity to the I-CLiPs GlpG rhomboid and MCMJR1 presenilin homolog in detergent micelles. Binding results in deep-ultraviolet resonance Raman spectra, indicating conformational changes consistent with unwinding of the 310-helical region of the substrates TMD. This 310-helical conformation is key for intramembrane proteolysis, as the substitution of a single proline residue in the TMD of Gurken by alanine suppresses 310-helical content in favor of α-helical geometry and abolishes cleavage without affecting binding to the I-CLiP. Complemented by molecular dynamics simulations of the TMD of Gurken, our vibrational spectroscopy data provide biophysical evidence in support of a model in which the transmembrane region of cleavable I-CLiP substrates displays local deviations in canonical α-helical conformation characterized by chain flexibility, and binding to the enzyme results in conformational changes that facilitate local unwinding of the transmembrane helix for cleavage.
Methods in Enzymology | 2017
Jason W. Cooley; Alaa Abdine; Mia C. Brown; Jose Chavez; Bryan M. Lada; Renee D. JiJi; Iban Ubarretxena-Belandia
We present a new method based on deep-UV resonance Raman spectroscopy to determine the backbone conformation of intramembrane protease substrates. The classical amide vibrational modes reporting on the conformation of just the transmembrane region of the substrate can be resolved from solvent exchangeable regions outside the detergent micelle by partial deuteration of the solvent. In the presence of isotopically triple-labeled intramembrane protease, these amide modes can be accurately measured to monitor the transmembrane conformation of the substrate during intramembrane proteolysis.
Plasmonics: Design, Materials, Fabrication, Characterization, and Applications XV | 2017
Ronald L. Koder; David T. Crouse; Derek J. Kosciolek; Ajay V. Sonar; Lori A. Lepak; Peter Schnatz; Igor Bendoym; Mia C. Brown
In this project we develop a handheld, portable, highly selective and sensitive chem/biosensor that has potential applications in both airborne and water-based environmental sensing. The device relies on a plasmonic chip of subwavelength-scale periodic gold rods engineered to resonate in the near infrared. The chip is functionalized with a novel class of proteins that exhibit large conformational changes upon binding to a specific target analyte. The subsequent change in local refractive index near the surface of the gold is one to two orders of magnitude greater than current conventional methods, which produces a readily measurable 5 to 10 percent difference in light transmission. This allows us to forgo traditional, bulky tabletop setups in favor of a compact form factor. Using commercially available optics to construct a transmission-based optical train, measured changes in bulk refractive index are presented here. While synthesis of binding protein efforts are focused on heme as analyte for proof of concept validation, the functionalized protein can be engineered to pair with a wide variety of analytes with minimal alterations to the plasmonic chip or device design. Such flexibility allows for this device to potentially meet the needs of first responders and health care professionals in a multitude of scenarios.
Journal of Raman Spectroscopy | 2013
Mia C. Brown; Andrew C. Mutter; Ronald L. Koder; Renee D. JiJi; Jason W. Cooley
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Mia C. Brown; Kelly Greenland; Lei Zhang; Ronald L. Koder
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Anahita Zare; Michael K. Eagleburger; Mia C. Brown; Christopher M. Halsey; Carol A. Roach; Olayinka O. Oshokoya; Jeremy D. King; Jason W. Cooley; Renee D. JiJi
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Mia C. Brown; Alaa Abdine; Jose Chavez; Bryan M. Lada; Renee D. JiJi; Roman Osman; Jason W. Cooley; Iban Ubarretxena-Bilandia
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Jason W. Cooley; Mia C. Brown; Renee D. JiJi