Michael F. Mesleh
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by Michael F. Mesleh.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Michael F. Mesleh; Alexander A. Nevzorov; Stanley J. Opella
The atomic resolution structure of fd coat protein determined by solid-state NMR spectroscopy of magnetically aligned filamentous bacteriophage particles differs from that previously determined by x-ray fiber diffraction. Most notably, the 50-residue protein is not a single curved helix, but rather is a nearly ideal straight helix between residues 7 and 38, where there is a distinct kink, and then a straight helix with a different orientation between residues 39 and 49. Residues 1–5 have been shown to be mobile and unstructured, and proline 6 terminates the helix. The structure of the coat protein in virus particles, in combination with the structure of the membrane-bound form of the same protein in bilayers, also recently determined by solid-state NMR spectroscopy, provides insight into the viral assembly process. In addition to their roles in molecular biology and biotechnology, the filamentous bacteriophages continue to serve as model systems for the development of experimental methods for determining the structures of proteins in biological supramolecular assemblies. New NMR results include the complete sequential assignment of the two-dimensional polarization inversion spin-exchange at the magic angle spectrum of a uniformly 15N-labeled 50-residue protein in a 1.6 × 107 Da particle in solution, and the calculation of the three-dimensional structure of the protein from orientational restraints with an accuracy equivalent to an rms deviation of ≈1Å.
Methods in Enzymology | 2005
A.A.De Angelis; D.H. Jones; Christopher V. Grant; Sang Ho Park; Michael F. Mesleh; Stanley J. Opella
NMR methods can be used to determine the structures of membrane proteins. Lipids can be chosen so that protein-containing micelles, bicelles, or bilayers are available as samples. All three types of samples can be aligned weakly or strongly, depending on their rotational correlation time. Solution NMR methods can be used with weakly aligned micelle and small bicelle samples. Solid-state NMR methods can be used with mechanically aligned bilayer and magnetically aligned bicelle samples.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2003
Michael F. Mesleh; Stanley J. Opella
Dipolar Waves describe the periodic variation in the magnitudes of dipolar couplings in the backbone of a protein as a function of residue number. They provide a direct link between experimental measurements of dipolar couplings in aligned samples and the periodicity inherent in regular secondary structure elements. It is possible to identify the residues in a helix and the type of helix, deviations from ideality, and to orient the helices relative to an external axis in completely aligned samples and relative to each other in a common frame in weakly aligned samples with Dipolar Waves. They provide a tool for accurately describing helices and a step towards high throughput structure determination of proteins.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2003
Sangwon Lee; Michael F. Mesleh; Stanley J. Opella
Three solution NMR experiments on a uniformly 15N labeled membrane protein in micelles provide sufficient information to describe the structure, topology, and dynamics of its helices, as well as additional information that characterizes the principal features of residues in terminal and inter-helical loop regions. The backbone amide resonances are assigned with an HMQC-NOESY experiment and the backbone dynamics are characterized by a 1H-15N heteronuclear NOE experiment, which clearly distinguishes between the structured helical residues and the more mobile residues in the terminal and interhelical loop regions of the protein. The structure and topology of the helices are described by Dipolar waves and PISA wheels derived from experimental measurements of residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) and residual chemical shift anisotropies (RCSAs). The results show that the membrane-bound form of Pf1 coat protein has a 20-residue trans-membrane hydrophobic helix with an orientation that differs by about 90° from that of an 8-residue amphipathic helix. This combination of three-experiments that yields Dipolar waves and PISA wheels has the potential to contribute to high-throughput structural characterizations of membrane proteins.
Archive | 2005
Stanley J. Opella; Sang Ho Park; Sangwon Lee; David H. Jones; Alexander A. Nevzorov; Michael F. Mesleh; Anthony Mrse; Francesca M. Marassi; Myrta Oblatt-Montal; Mauricio Montal; Klaus Strebel; Stephan Bour
Virus protein “u” (Vpu) contributes to the virulence of HIV-1 infections of humans by enhancing the production and release of progeny virus particles. Its biological activities are associated with the two distinct structural domains of the protein. Since the entire polypeptide consists of only 81 amino acid residues, each of the biological activities is associated with a relatively small and well-defined structural entity. This suggests that the three-dimensional structure of the protein will lead to a detailed understanding of its biological functions, and potentially to the identification of small molecules that act as drugs by interfering with its functions (Miller and Sarver, 1997) as has been done for other HIV-1 encoded proteins (Turner and Summers, 1999; Wlodawer, 2002). The many structure determinations of HIV protease alone and complexed with inhibitors led to the development of the highly effective drugs that are a mainstay of current therapy for AIDS (Erickson and Burt, 1996; Vondrasek et al., 1997). Even though the protease is about 20% larger than Vpu, its structure was determined very soon after its discovery (Navia et al., 1989; Wlodawer et al., 1989), while the structure of Vpu is yet to be determined. The reasons that Vpu has not followed quickly in the path of protease have their roots in the most fundamental aspects of experimental structural biology and biochemistry. Vpu is a helical membrane protein, and it requires the presence of lipids and water to adopt its native functional structure. The lipids interfere with the formation of crystals for X-ray diffraction as well as the preparation of samples suitable for multidimensional solution NMR spectroscopy. In contrast, protease is a globular, soluble protein well suited for experimental structure determination by both X-ray crystallography and
Biochemistry | 2017
Matthew Ranaghan; Michael A. Durney; Michael F. Mesleh; Patrick R. McCarren; Colin W. Garvie; Douglas S. Daniels; Kimberly L. Carey; Adam Skepner; Beth Levine; Jose R. Perez
Beclin-1 (BECN1) is an essential component of macroautophagy. This process is a highly conserved survival mechanism that recycles damaged cellular components or pathogens by encasing them in a bilayer vesicle that fuses with a lysosome to allow degradation of the vesicular contents. Mutations or altered expression profiles of BECN1 have been linked to various cancers and neurodegenerative diseases. Viruses, including HIV and herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), are also known to specifically target BECN1 as a means of evading host defense mechanisms. Autophagy is regulated by the interaction between BECN1 and Bcl-2, a pro-survival protein in the apoptotic pathway that stabilizes the BECN1 homodimer. Disruption of the homodimer by phosphorylation or competitive binding promotes autophagy through an unknown mechanism. We report here the first recombinant synthesis (3-5 mg/L in an Escherichia coli culture) and characterization of full-length, human BECN1. Our analysis reveals that full-length BECN1 exists as a soluble homodimer (KD ∼ 0.45 μM) that interacts with Bcl-2 (KD = 4.3 ± 1.2 μM) and binds to lipid membranes. Dimerization is proposed to be mediated by a coiled-coil region of BECN1. A construct lacking the C-terminal BARA domain but including the coiled-coil region exhibits a homodimer KD 3.5-fold weaker than that of full-length BECN1, indicating that both the BARA domain and the coiled-coil region of BECN1 contribute to dimer formation. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we show that residues at the C-terminus of the coiled-coil region previously shown to interact with the BARA domain play a key role in dimerization and mutations weaken the interface by ∼5-fold.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2003
Michael F. Mesleh; K.G. Valentine; Stanley J. Opella; John M. Louis; Angela M. Gronenborn
N-terminal myristoylation of the immunoglobulin-binding domain of protein G (GB1) from group G Streptococcus provides the means to bind the protein to aligned phospholipid bilayers for solid-state NMR structural studies. The myristoylated protein is immobilized by its interactions with bilayers, and the sample alignment enables orientationally dependent 15N chemical shifts and 1H-15N-dipolar couplings to be measured. Spectra calculated for the average solution NMR structure of the protein at various orientations with respect to the magnetic field direction were compared to the experimental spectrum. The best fit identified the orientation of the myristoylated protein on the lipid bilayers, and demonstrated that the protein adopts a similar structure in both its myristoylated and non-myristoylated forms, and that the structure is not grossly distorted by its interaction with the phosholipid bilayer surface or by its location in the restricted aqueous space between bilayer leaflets. The protein is oriented such that its charged sides face the phosphatidylcholine headgroups of the lipids with the single amphiphilic helix running parallel to the bilayer surface.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003
Sang Ho Park; Anthony Mrse; Alexander A. Nevzorov; Michael F. Mesleh; Myrta Oblatt-Montal; Mauricio Montal; Stanley J. Opella
Biochemistry | 2005
Stanley C. Howell; Michael F. Mesleh; Stanley J. Opella
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002
Michael F. Mesleh; Gianluigi Veglia; Tara M. DeSilva; Francesca M. Marassi; Stanley J. Opella