Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael E. Pique is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael E. Pique.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2004

Type IV pilus structure and bacterial pathogenicity

Lisa Craig; Michael E. Pique; John A. Tainer

Type IV pili are remarkably strong, flexible filaments with varied roles in bacterial pathogenicity. All Gram-negative bacterial surfaces have type IV pili, which are polymeric assemblies of the protein pilin that evoke the host immune response and are potential drug and vaccine targets. Pilin structures that have been solved using X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance, together with models for pilus architectures inferred from electron microscopy, fibre diffraction and computation, have established a molecular basis for assembly and multi-functionality, with implications for therapeutic interventions.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Type IV Pilin Structure and Assembly X-Ray and EM Analyses of Vibrio cholerae Toxin-Coregulated Pilus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAK Pilin

Lisa Craig; Ronald K. Taylor; Michael E. Pique; Brian D. Adair; Andrew S. Arvai; Mona Singh; Sarah J. Lloyd; David S. Shin; Elizabeth D. Getzoff; Mark Yeager; Katrina T. Forest; John A. Tainer

Pilin assembly into type IV pili is required for virulence by bacterial pathogens that cause diseases such as cholera, pneumonia, gonorrhea, and meningitis. Crystal structures of soluble, N-terminally truncated pilin from Vibrio cholera toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP) and full-length PAK pilin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa reveal a novel TCP fold, yet a shared architecture for the type IV pilins. In each pilin subunit a conserved, extended, N-terminal alpha helix wrapped by beta strands anchors the structurally variable globular head. Inside the assembled pilus, characterized by cryo-electron microscopy and crystallography, the extended hydrophobic alpha helices make multisubunit contacts to provide mechanical strength and flexibility. Outside, distinct interactions of adaptable heads contribute surface variation for specificity of pilus function in antigenicity, motility, adhesion, and colony formation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2002

MDB: the Metalloprotein Database and Browser at The Scripps Research Institute

Jesus M. Castagnetto; Sean W. Hennessy; Victoria A. Roberts; Elizabeth D. Getzoff; John A. Tainer; Michael E. Pique

The Metalloprotein Database and Browser (MDB; http://metallo.scripps.edu) at The Scripps Research Institute is a web-accessible resource for metalloprotein research. It offers the scientific community quantitative information on geometrical parameters of metal-binding sites in protein structures available from the Protein Data Bank (PDB). The MDB also offers analytical tools for the examination of trends or patterns in the indexed metal-binding sites. A user can perform interactive searches, metal-site structure visualization (via a Java applet), and analysis of the quantitative data by accessing the MDB through a web browser without requiring an external application or platform-dependent plugin. The MDB also has a non-interactive interface with which other web sites and network-aware applications can seamlessly incorporate data or statistical analysis results from metal-binding sites. The information contained in the MDB is periodically updated with automated algorithms that find and index metal sites from new protein structures released by the PDB.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Definition of the Interaction Domain for Cytochrome con Cytochrome c Oxidase III. PREDICTION OF THE DOCKED COMPLEX BY A COMPLETE, SYSTEMATIC SEARCH

Victoria A. Roberts; Michael E. Pique

The electron transfer complex between bovine cytochrome c oxidase and horse cytochrome c has been predicted with the docking program DOT, which performs a complete, systematic search over all six rotational and translational degrees of freedom. Energies for over 36 billion configurations were calculated, providing a free-energy landscape showing guidance of positively charged cytochrome c to the negative region on the cytochrome c oxidase surface formed by subunit II. In a representative configuration, the solvent-exposed cytochromec heme edge is within 4 Å of the indole ring of subunit II residue Trp104, indicating a likely electron transfer path. These two groups are surrounded by a small, hydrophobic contact region, which is surrounded by electrostatically complementary hydrophilic interactions. Cytochrome c/cytochrome c oxidase interactions of Lys13 with Asp119 and Lys72 with Gln103 and Asp158 are the most critical polar interactions due to their proximity to the hydrophobic region and exclusion from bulk solvent. The predicted complex matches previous mutagenesis, binding, and time-resolved kinetics studies that implicate Trp104 in electron transfer and show the importance of specific charged residues to protein affinity. Electrostatic forces not only enhance long range protein/protein association; they also predominate in short range alignment, creating the transient interaction needed for rapid turnover.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1992

The interdependence of protein surface topography and bound water molecules revealed by surface accessibility and fractal density measures

Leslie A. Kuhn; Michael A. Siani; Michael E. Pique; Cindy L. Fisher; Elizabeth D. Getzoff; John A. Tainer

To characterize water binding to proteins, which is fundamental to protein folding, stability and activity, the relationships of 10,837 bound water positions to protein surface shape and residue type were analyzed in 56 high-resolution crystallographic structures. Fractal atomic density and accessibility algorithms provided an objective characterization of deep grooves in solvent-accessible protein surfaces. These deep grooves consistently had approximately the diameter of one water molecule, suggesting that deep grooves are formed by the interactions between protein atoms and bound water molecules. Protein surface topography dominates the chemistry and extent of water binding. Protein surface area within grooves bound three times as many water molecules as non-groove surface; grooves accounted for one-quarter of the total surface area yet bound half the water molecules. Moreover, only within grooves did bound water molecules discriminate between different side-chains. In grooves, main-chain surface was as hydrated as that of the most hydrophilic side-chains, Asp and Glu, whereas outside grooves all main and side-chains bound water to a similar, and much decreased, extent. This identification of the interdependence of protein surface shape and hydration has general implications for modelling and prediction of protein surface shape, recognition, local folding and solvent binding.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

XRCC4 Protein Interactions with XRCC4-like Factor (XLF) Create an Extended Grooved Scaffold for DNA Ligation and Double Strand Break Repair.

Michal Hammel; Martial Rey; Yaping Yu; Rajam S. Mani; Scott Classen; Mona Liu; Michael E. Pique; Shujuan Fang; Brandi L. Mahaney; Michael Weinfeld; David C. Schriemer; Susan P. Lees-Miller; John A. Tainer

The XRCC4-like factor (XLF)-XRCC4 complex is essential for nonhomologous end joining, the major repair pathway for DNA double strand breaks in human cells. Yet, how XLF binds XRCC4 and impacts nonhomologous end joining functions has been enigmatic. Here, we report the XLF-XRCC4 complex crystal structure in combination with biophysical and mutational analyses to define the XLF-XRCC4 interactions. Crystal and solution structures plus mutations characterize alternating XRCC4 and XLF head domain interfaces forming parallel super-helical filaments. XLF Leu-115 (“Leu-lock”) inserts into a hydrophobic pocket formed by XRCC4 Met-59, Met-61, Lys-65, Lys-99, Phe-106, and Leu-108 in synergy with pseudo-symmetric β-zipper hydrogen bonds to drive specificity. XLF C terminus and DNA enhance parallel filament formation. Super-helical XLF-XRCC4 filaments form a positively charged channel to bind DNA and align ends for efficient ligation. Collective results reveal how human XLF and XRCC4 interact to bind DNA, suggest consequences of patient mutations, and support a unified molecular mechanism for XLF-XRCC4 stimulation of DNA ligation.


Nature Protocols | 2016

Computational protein–ligand docking and virtual drug screening with the AutoDock suite

Stefano Forli; Ruth Huey; Michael E. Pique; Michel F. Sanner; David S. Goodsell; Arthur J. Olson

Computational docking can be used to predict bound conformations and free energies of binding for small-molecule ligands to macromolecular targets. Docking is widely used for the study of biomolecular interactions and mechanisms, and it is applied to structure-based drug design. The methods are fast enough to allow virtual screening of ligand libraries containing tens of thousands of compounds. This protocol covers the docking and virtual screening methods provided by the AutoDock suite of programs, including a basic docking of a drug molecule with an anticancer target, a virtual screen of this target with a small ligand library, docking with selective receptor flexibility, active site prediction and docking with explicit hydration. The entire protocol will require ∼5 h.


PLOS Pathogens | 2007

A Viral Nanoparticle with Dual Function as an Anthrax Antitoxin and Vaccine

Darly J. Manayani; Diane Thomas; Kelly A. Dryden; Vijay S. Reddy; Marc E Siladi; John Marlett; G. Jonah A. Rainey; Michael E. Pique; Heather M. Scobie; Mark Yeager; John A. T. Young; Marianne Manchester; Anette Schneemann

The recent use of Bacillus anthracis as a bioweapon has stimulated the search for novel antitoxins and vaccines that act rapidly and with minimal adverse effects. B. anthracis produces an AB-type toxin composed of the receptor-binding moiety protective antigen (PA) and the enzymatic moieties edema factor and lethal factor. PA is a key target for both antitoxin and vaccine development. We used the icosahedral insect virus Flock House virus as a platform to display 180 copies of the high affinity, PA-binding von Willebrand A domain of the ANTXR2 cellular receptor. The chimeric virus-like particles (VLPs) correctly displayed the receptor von Willebrand A domain on their surface and inhibited lethal toxin action in in vitro and in vivo models of anthrax intoxication. Moreover, VLPs complexed with PA elicited a potent toxin-neutralizing antibody response that protected rats from anthrax lethal toxin challenge after a single immunization without adjuvant. This recombinant VLP platform represents a novel and highly effective, dually-acting reagent for treatment and protection against anthrax.


conference on high performance computing (supercomputing) | 1995

Surveying Molecular Interactions with DOT

Lynn F. Ten Eyck; Jeffrey Mandell; Victoria A. Roberts; Michael E. Pique

The purpose of the molecular interaction program DOT (Daughter of Turnip) is rapid computation of the electrostatic potential energy between two proteins or other charged molecules. DOT exhaustively tests all six degrees of freedom, rotational and translational, and produces a grid of approximate interaction energies and orientations. It is able to do this because the problem is cast as the convolution of the potential field of the first molecule and any rotated charge distribution of the second. The algorithm lends itself to both parallelization and vectorization, permitting huge increases in computational speed over other methods for obtaining the same information. For example, a complete mapping of interactions between plastocyanin and cytochrome c was done in eight minutes using 256 nodes of an Intel Paragon. DOT is expected to be particularly useful as a rapid screen to find configurations for more detailed study using exact energy models.


Structure | 2008

Vibrio cholerae toxin-coregulated pilus structure analyzed by hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry.

Juliana Li; Mindy S. Lim; Sheng Li; Melissa Brock; Michael E. Pique; Virgil L. Woods; Lisa Craig

The bacterial pathogen Vibrio cholerae uses toxin-coregulated pili (TCP) to colonize the human intestine, causing the severe diarrheal disease cholera. TCP are long, thin, flexible homopolymers of the TcpA subunit that self-associate to hold cells together in microcolonies and serve as the receptor for the cholera toxin phage. To better understand TCPs roles in pathogenesis, we characterized its structure using hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry and computational modeling. We show that the pilin subunits are held together by tight packing of the N-terminal alpha helices, but loose packing of the C-terminal globular domains leaves substantial gaps on the filament surface. These gaps expose a glycine-rich, amphipathic segment of the N-terminal alpha-helix, contradicting the consensus view that this region is buried in the filament core. Our results explain extreme filament flexibility, suggest a molecular basis for pilus-pilus interactions, and reveal a previously unrecognized therapeutic target for V. cholerae and other enteric pathogens.

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael E. Pique's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John A. Tainer

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sheng Li

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lisa Craig

Simon Fraser University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arthur J. Olson

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Yeager

University of Virginia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge