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

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Featured researches published by Michael E. Rodgers.


Protein Science | 2002

Subunit organization in cytoplasmic dynein subcomplexes

Stephen J. King; Myriam Bonilla; Michael E. Rodgers; Trina A. Schroer

Because cytoplasmic dynein plays numerous critical roles in eukaryotic cells, determining the subunit composition and the organization and functions of the subunits within dynein are important goals. This has been difficult partly because of accessory polypeptide heterogeneity of dynein populations. The motor domain containing heavy chains of cytoplasmic dynein are associated with multiple intermediate, light intermediate, and light chain accessory polypeptides. We examined the organization of these subunits within cytoplasmic dynein by separating the molecule into two distinct subcomplexes. These subcomplexes were competent to reassemble into a molecule with dynein‐like properties. One subcomplex was composed of the dynein heavy and light intermediate chains whereas the other subcomplex was composed of the intermediate and light chains. The intermediate and light chain subcomplex could be further separated into two pools, only one of which contained dynein light chains. The two pools had distinct intermediate chain compositions, suggesting that intermediate chain isoforms have different light chain–binding properties. When the two intermediate chain pools were characterized by analytical velocity sedimentation, at least four molecular components were seen: intermediate chain monomers, intermediate chain dimers, intermediate chain monomers with bound light chains, and a mixture of intermediate chain dimers with assorted bound light chains. These data provide new insights into the compositional heterogeneity and assembly of the cytoplasmic dynein complex and suggest that individual dynein molecules have distinct molecular compositions in vivo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Mechanism of dynamitin-mediated disruption of dynactin

Karin A. Melkonian; Kerstin C. Maier; Jamie E. Godfrey; Michael E. Rodgers; Trina A. Schroer

Dynamitin is a commonly used inhibitor of cytoplasmic dynein-based motility in living cells. Dynamitin does not inhibit dynein directly but instead acts by causing disassembly of dynactin, a multiprotein complex required for dynein-based movement. In dynactin, dynamitin is closely associated with the subunits p150Glued and p24, which together form the shoulder and projecting arm structures of the dynactin molecule. In this study, we explore the way in which exogenous dynamitin effects dynactin disruption. We find that pure, recombinant dynamitin is an elongated protein with a strong propensity for self-assembly. Titration experiments reveal that free dynamitin binds dynactin before it causes release of subunits. When dynamitin is added to dynactin at an equimolar ratio of exogenous dynamitin subunits to endogenous dynamitin subunits (1×= 4 mol of exogenous dynamitin per mole of dynactin), exogenous dynamitin exchanges with endogenous dynamitin, and partial release of p150Glued is observed. When added in vast excess (≥25×; 100 mol of exogenous dynamitin per mole of dynactin), recombinant dynamitin causes complete release of both p150Glued subunits, two dynamitins and one p24, but not other dynactin subunits. Our data suggest that dynamitin mediates disruption of dynactin by binding to endogenous dynamitin subunits. This binding destabilizes the shoulder structure that links the p150Glued arm to the Arp1 filament and leads to subunit release.


Cell | 1977

Patterns of protein synthesis in imaginal discs of drosophila melanogaster

Michael E. Rodgers; Allen Shearn

Patterns of polypeptide synthesis in wing, leg and eye-antenna imaginal discs and in whole larvae of wild-type and and mutant Drosophila melanogaster have been examined using two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. After 2 hr of labeling with 35S during the third larval instar, the synthesis of more than 318 polypeptides has been detected in imaginal discs. Of these, 268 are present in similar amounts in all three disc types. The remaining polypeptides detected in the three imaginal disc types fall into two categories: those unique to a particular disc type, and those specific for a particular pair of disc types. These results are discussed in relation to the spectrum of gene expression in imaginal discs.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1983

Self-association of a high molecular weight subfragment-2 of myosin induced by divalent metal ions

Hitoshi Ueno; Michael E. Rodgers; William F. Harrington

The effect of divalent cations on the self-association of high molecular weight subfragment-2 (long S-2) and low molecular weight subfragment-2 (short S-2) of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin has been investigated. In the presence of millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ or Mg2+ long S-2 associates at neutral pH to form ordered, high molecular weight aggregates whereas short S-2 does not associate. The association process is co-operative and results from binding two to four divalent cations within the light meromyosin-heavy meromyosin (LMM-HMM) hinge region of long S-2. Optical diffraction of electron micrographs of the long S-2 aggregates revealed several periodicities including reflections near 143 A. High molecular weight HMM showed a similar divalent metal induced self-association. Chymotryptic digestion studies of rod filaments reveal that cleavage within the LMM-HMM hinge is also strongly dependent on the presence of divalent cations. At pH 8, in the absence of divalent cations, the S-2 region appears to be displaced away from the filament backbone resulting in rapid proteolysis in the hinge domain. At high cation concentrations (greater than 10 mM) proteolytic cleavage is suppressed. A similar depression of the (substantially lower) hinge cleavage rate was also observed at neutral pH following addition of these divalent metal ions. Results suggest that binding of Mg2+ within the hinge domain under physiological conditions may act to lock the cross-bridge onto the thick filament surface in its resting-state orientation.


Proteins | 2006

Structure and properties of a truely apo form of AraC dimerization domain

John E. Weldon; Michael E. Rodgers; Christopher Larkin; Robert Schleif

The arabinose‐binding pockets of wild type AraC dimerization domains crystallized in the absence of arabinose are occupied with the side chains of Y31 from neighboring domains. This interaction leads to aggregation at high solution concentrations and prevents determination of the structure of truely apo AraC. In this work we found that the aggregation does not significantly occur at physiological concentrations of AraC. We also found that the Y31V mutation eliminates the self‐association, but does not affect regulation properties of the protein. At the same time, the mutation allows crystallization of the dimerization domain of the protein with only solvent in the arabinose‐binding pocket. Using a distance difference method suitable for detecting and displaying even minor structural variation among large groups of similar structures, we find that there is no significant structural change in the core of monomers of the AraC dimerization domain resulting from arabinose, fucose, or tyrosine occupancy of the ligand‐binding pocket. A slight change is observed in the relative orientation of monomers in the dimeric form of the domain upon the binding of arabinose but its significance cannot yet be assessed. Proteins 2007.


Proteins | 2009

Solution structure of the DNA binding domain of AraC protein

Michael E. Rodgers; Robert Schleif

We report the solution structure of the DNA binding domain of the Escherichia coli regulatory protein AraC determined in the absence of DNA. The 20 lowest energy structures, determined on the basis of 1507 unambiguous nuclear Overhauser restraints and 180 angle restraints, are well resolved with a pair wise backbone root mean square deviation of 0.7 Å. The protein, free of DNA, is well folded in solution and contains seven helices arranged in two semi‐independent sub domains, each containing one helix‐turn‐helix DNA binding motif, joined by a 19 residue central helix. This solution structure is discussed in the context of extensive biochemical and physiological data on AraC and with respect to the DNA‐bound structures of the MarA and Rob homologs. Proteins 2009.


Proteins | 2009

Functional modes of the regulatory arm of AraC

Michael E. Rodgers; Nakisha D. Holder; Stephanie Dirla; Robert Schleif

One of the two crystal structures of the arm‐dimerization domain determined in the absence of arbinose fails to show the arm, whereas the other structure does show it. The two structures lead to different pictures for the regulatory behavior of the arms. Trypsin digestion, fluorescence anisotropy, and NMR experiments presented here were designed to resolve the issue and show that in arm‐dimerization domain, the arms are structured, although differently, in the presence and absence of arabinose. The arms have also been shown to interact with the DNA binding domains of AraC by their requirement for the immobilization of the DNA binding domains that is necessary for DNA looping and repression. The binding of arabinose has been shown to release the DNA binding domains and looping ceases. The picture resulting from the new experiments and the crystal structures of the arm‐dimerization domain is that in the absence of arabinose, the arm adopts one structure on the dimerization domain and that the DNA binding domain then binds to this complex. Upon binding arabinose, the arm restructures and as a result, no longer serves as a gasket between the DNA binding domain and dimerization domain. The DNA binding domain is then released, subject only to the constraints imposed by the flexible linker connecting it to dimerization domain, and the protein relocates on the DNA and activates transcription. Proteins 2009.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

TraY DNA Recognition of Its Two F Factor Binding Sites

Pamela L. Lum; Michael E. Rodgers; Joel F. Schildbach

F factor TraY, a ribbon-helix-helix DNA-binding protein, performs two roles in bacterial conjugation. TraY binds the F origin of transfer (oriT) to promote nicking of plasmid DNA prior to conjugative transfer. TraY also binds the P(Y) promoter to up-regulate tra gene expression. The two plasmid regions bound by TraY share limited sequence identity, yet TraY binds them with similar affinities. TraY recognition of the two sites was first probed using in vitro footprinting methods. Hydroxyl radical footprinting at both oriT and P(Y) sites indicated that bound TraY protected the DNA backbone bordering three adjacent DNA subsites. Analytical ultracentrifugation results for TraY:oligonucleotide complexes were consistent with two of these subsites being bound cooperatively, and the third being occupied at higher TraY concentrations. Methylation protection and interference footprinting identified several guanine bases contacted by or proximal to bound TraY, most located within these subsites. TraY affinity for variant oriT sequences with base substitutions at or near these guanine bases suggested that two of the three subsites correspond to high-affinity, cooperatively bound imperfect inverted GA(G/T)A repeats. Altering the spacing or orientation of these sites reduced binding. TraY mutant R73A failed to protect two symmetry-related oriT guanine bases in these repeats from methylation, identifying possible direct TraY-DNA contacts. The third subsite appears to be oriented as an imperfect direct repeat with its adjacent subsite, although base substitutions at this subsite did not reduce binding. Although unusual for ribbon-helix-helix proteins, this binding site arrangement occurs at both F TraY sites, consistent with it being functionally relevant.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Analytical Sedimentation of the IIAChb and IIBChb Proteins of the Escherichia coli N,N′-Diacetylchitobiose Phosphotransferase System DEMONSTRATION OF A MODEL PHOSPHOTRANSFER TRANSITION STATE COMPLEX

Nemat O. Keyhani; Michael E. Rodgers; Borries Demeler; Jeffrey C. Hansen; Saul Roseman

The phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose transferase system (PTS) is a prototypic signaling system responsible for the vectorial uptake and phosphorylation of carbohydrate substrates. The accompanying papers describe the proteins and product of theEscherichia coli N,N-diacetylchitobiose ((GlcNAc)2) PTS-mediated permease. Unlike most PTS transporters, the Chb system is composed of two soluble proteins, IIAChb and IIBChb, and one transmembrane receptor (IICChb). The oligomeric states of PTS permease proteins and phosphoproteins have been difficult to determine. Using analytical ultracentrifugation, both dephospho and phosphorylated IIAChb are shown to exist as stable dimers, whereas IIBChb, phospho-IIBChb and the mutant Cys10SerIIBChb are monomers. The mutant protein Cys10SerIIBChb is unable to accept phosphate from phospho-IIAChb but forms a stable higher order complex with phospho-IIAChb (but not with dephospho-IIAChb). The stoichiometry of proteins in the purified complex was determined to be 1:1, indicating that two molecules of Cys10SerIIBChb are associated with one phospho-IIAChb dimer in the complex. The complex appears to be a transition state analogue in the phosphotransfer reaction between the proteins. A model is presented that describes the concerted assembly and disassembly of IIAChb-IIBChb complexes contingent on phosphorylation-dependent conformational changes, especially of IIAChb.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

DNA tape measurements of AraC

Michael E. Rodgers; Robert Schleif

A new method for measuring distances between points in the AraC–DNA complex was developed and applied. It utilizes variable lengths of single-stranded DNA that connect double-stranded regions containing the two half-site binding sequences of AraC. These distances plus the protein interdomain linker distances are compatible with two classes of structure for the dimeric AraC gene regulatory protein. In one class, the N-terminal regulatory arm of one dimerization domain is capable of interacting with the DNA-binding domain on the same polypeptide chain for a cis interaction. In the other class, the possible arm-DNA-binding domain interaction is trans, where it adds to the dimerization interface.

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Robert Schleif

Johns Hopkins University

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Allen Shearn

Johns Hopkins University

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Hitoshi Ueno

Johns Hopkins University

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Fabiana Malaga

Cayetano Heredia University

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Andrew Timmes

Johns Hopkins University

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Anjali Dhiman

Johns Hopkins University

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