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Dive into the research topics where Michael Geralt is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Geralt.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Novel β-Barrel Fold in the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Structure of the Replicase Nonstructural Protein 1 from the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus

Marcius S. Almeida; Margaret A. Johnson; Torsten Herrmann; Michael Geralt; Kurt Wüthrich

ABSTRACT The nonstructural protein 1 (nsp1) of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus has 179 residues and is the N-terminal cleavage product of the viral replicase polyprotein that mediates RNA replication and processing. The specific function of nsp1 is not known. Here we report the nuclear magnetic resonance structure of the nsp1 segment from residue 13 to 128, which represents a novel α/β-fold formed by a mixed parallel/antiparallel six-stranded β-barrel, an α-helix covering one opening of the barrel, and a 310-helix alongside the barrel. We further characterized the full-length 179-residue protein and show that the polypeptide segments of residues 1 to 12 and 129 to 179 are flexibly disordered. The structure is analyzed in a search for possible correlations with the recently reported activity of nsp1 in the degradation of mRNA.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Microscale NMR Screening of New Detergents for Membrane Protein Structural Biology

Qinghai Zhang; Reto Horst; Michael Geralt; Xingquan Ma; Wen-Xu Hong; M. G. Finn; Raymond C. Stevens; Kurt Wüthrich

The rate limiting step in biophysical characterization of membrane proteins is often the availability of suitable amounts of protein material. It was therefore of interest to demonstrate that microcoil nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technology can be used to screen microscale quantities of membrane proteins for proper folding in samples destined for structural studies. Micoscale NMR was then used to screen a series of newly designed zwitterionic phosphocholine detergents for their ability to reconstitute membrane proteins, using the previously well characterized beta-barrel E. coli outer membrane protein OmpX as a test case. Fold screening was thus achieved with microgram amounts of uniformly (2)H, (15)N-labeld OmpX and affordable amounts of the detergents, and prescreening with SDS-gel electrophoresis ensured efficient selection of the targets for NMR studies. A systematic approach to optimize the phosphocholine motif for membrane protein refolding led to the identification of two new detergents, 138-Fos and 179-Fos, that yield 2D [ (15)N, (1)H]-TROSY correlation NMR spectra of natively folded reconstituted OmpX.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2014

NMR structures of α-proteobacterial ATPase-regulating ζ-subunits.

Pedro Serrano; Michael Geralt; Biswaranjan Mohanty; Kurt Wüthrich

NMR structures of ζ-subunits, which are recently discovered α-proteobacterial F1F0-ATPase-regulatory proteins representing a Pfam protein family of 246 sequences from 219 species (PF07345), exhibit a four-helix bundle, which is different from all other known F1F0-ATPase inhibitors. Chemical shift mapping reveals a conserved ADP/ATP binding site in ζ-subunit, which mediates long-range conformational changes related to function, as revealed by the structure of the Paracoccus denitrificans ζ-subunit in complex with ADP. These structural data suggest a new mechanism of F1F0-ATPase regulation in α-proteobacteria.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2010

Comparison of NMR and crystal structures highlights conformational isomerism in protein active sites

Pedro Serrano; Bill Pedrini; Michael Geralt; Kristaps Jaudzems; Biswaranjan Mohanty; Reto Horst; Torsten Herrmann; Marc André Elsliger; Ian A. Wilson; Kurt Wüthrich

Tools for systematic comparisons of NMR and crystal structures developed by the JCSG were applied to two proteins with known functions: the T. maritima anti-σ factor antagonist TM1081 and the mouse γ-glutamylamine cyclotransferase A2LD1 (gi:13879369). In an attempt to exploit the complementarity of crystal and NMR data, the combined use of the two structure-determination techniques was explored for the initial steps in the challenge of searching proteins of unknown functions for putative active sites.


Biology | 2013

Thermodynamic Stability of Psychrophilic and Mesophilic Pheromones of the Protozoan Ciliate Euplotes

Michael Geralt; Claudio Alimenti; Adriana Vallesi; Pierangelo Luporini; Kurt Wüthrich

Three psychrophilic protein pheromones (En-1, En-2 and En-6) from the polar ciliate, Euplotes nobilii, and six mesophilic pheromones (Er-1, Er-2, Er-10, Er-11, Er-22 and Er-23) from the temperate-water sister species, Euplotes raikovi,were studied in aqueous solution for their thermal unfolding and refolding based on the temperature dependence of their circular dichroism (CD) spectra. The three psychrophilic proteins showed thermal unfolding with mid points in the temperature range 55–70 °C. In contrast, no unfolding was observed for any of the six mesophilic proteins and their regular secondary structures were maintained up to 95 °C. Possible causes of these differences are discussed based on comparisons of the NMR structures of the nine proteins.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2010

Comparison of NMR and crystal structures for the proteins TM1112 and TM1367

Biswaranjan Mohanty; Pedro Serrano; Bill Pedrini; Kristaps Jaudzems; Michael Geralt; Reto Horst; Torsten Herrmann; Marc André Elsliger; Ian A. Wilson; Kurt Wüthrich

NMR structures of the proteins TM1112 and TM1367 solved by the JCSG in solution at 298 K could be superimposed with the corresponding crystal structures at 100 K with r.m.s.d. values of <1.0 Å for the backbone heavy atoms. For both proteins the structural differences between multiple molecules in the asymmetric unit of the crystals correlated with structural variations within the bundles of conformers used to represent the NMR solution structures. A recently introduced JCSG NMR structure-determination protocol, which makes use of the software package UNIO for extensive automation, was further evaluated by comparison of the TM1112 structure obtained using these automated methods with another NMR structure that was independently solved in another PSI center, where a largely interactive approach was applied.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2010

NMR structure of the protein NP_247299.1: comparison with the crystal structure

Kristaps Jaudzems; Michael Geralt; Pedro Serrano; Biswaranjan Mohanty; Reto Horst; Bill Pedrini; Marc André Elsliger; Ian A. Wilson; Kurt Wüthrich

Comparison of the NMR and crystal structures of a protein determined using largely automated methods has enabled the interpretation of local differences in the highly similar structures. These differences are found in segments of higher B values in the crystal and correlate with dynamic processes on the NMR chemical shift timescale observed in solution.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2016

Directional Phosphorylation and Nuclear Transport of the Splicing Factor SRSF1 Is Regulated by an RNA Recognition Motif

Pedro Serrano; Brandon E. Aubol; Malik M. Keshwani; Stefano Forli; Chen-Ting Ma; Samit Dutta; Michael Geralt; Kurt Wüthrich; Joseph A. Adams

Multisite phosphorylation is required for the biological function of serine-arginine (SR) proteins, a family of essential regulators of mRNA splicing. These modifications are catalyzed by serine-arginine protein kinases (SRPKs) that phosphorylate numerous serines in arginine-serine-rich (RS) domains of SR proteins using a directional, C-to-N-terminal mechanism. The present studies explore how SRPKs govern this highly biased phosphorylation reaction and investigate biological roles of the observed directional phosphorylation mechanism. Using NMR spectroscopy with two separately expressed domains of SRSF1, we showed that several residues in the RNA-binding motif 2 interact with the N-terminal region of the RS domain (RS1). These contacts provide a structural framework that balances the activities of SRPK1 and the protein phosphatase PP1, thereby regulating the phosphoryl content of the RS domain. Disruption of the implicated intramolecular RNA-binding motif 2-RS domain interaction impairs both the directional phosphorylation mechanism and the nuclear translocation of SRSF1 demonstrating that the intrinsic phosphorylation bias is obligatory for SR protein biological function.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2016

UHM-ULM interactions in the RBM39-U2AF65 splicing-factor complex.

Galina A. Stepanyuk; Pedro Serrano; Eigen R. Peralta; Carol L. Farr; Herbert L. Axelrod; Michael Geralt; Debanu Das; Hsiu-Ju Chiu; Lukasz Jaroszewski; Ashley M. Deacon; Scott A. Lesley; Marc-André Elsliger; Adam Godzik; Ian A. Wilson; Kurt Wüthrich; Daniel R. Salomon; James R. Williamson

RNA-binding protein 39 (RBM39) is a splicing factor and a transcriptional co-activator of estrogen receptors and Jun/AP-1, and its function has been associated with malignant progression in a number of cancers. The C-terminal RRM domain of RBM39 belongs to the U2AF homology motif family (UHM), which mediate protein-protein interactions through a short tryptophan-containing peptide known as the UHM-ligand motif (ULM). Here, crystal and solution NMR structures of the RBM39-UHM domain, and the crystal structure of its complex with U2AF65-ULM, are reported. The RBM39-U2AF65 interaction was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation from human cell extracts, by isothermal titration calorimetry and by NMR chemical shift perturbation experiments with the purified proteins. When compared with related complexes, such as U2AF35-U2AF65 and RBM39-SF3b155, the RBM39-UHM-U2AF65-ULM complex reveals both common and discriminating recognition elements in the UHM-ULM binding interface, providing a rationale for the known specificity of UHM-ULM interactions. This study therefore establishes a structural basis for specific UHM-ULM interactions by splicing factors such as U2AF35, U2AF65, RBM39 and SF3b155, and a platform for continued studies of intermolecular interactions governing disease-related alternative splicing in eukaryotic cells.


Protein Science | 2011

NMR structure of the Bordetella bronchiseptica protein NP_888769.1 establishes a new phage-related protein family PF13554

Atia-tul Wahab; Pedro Serrano; Michael Geralt; Kurt Wüthrich

The solution structure of the hypothetical phage‐related protein NP_888769.1 from the Gram‐negative bacterium Bordetella bronchoseptica contains a well‐structured core comprising a five‐stranded, antiparallel β‐sheet packed on one side against two α‐helices and a short β‐hairpin with three flexibly disordered loops extending from the central β‐sheet. A homology search with the software DALI identified two Protein Data Bank deposits with Z‐scores > 8, where both of these proteins have less than 8% sequence identity relative to NP_888769.1, and one has been functionally annotated as a lambda phage tail terminator protein. A sequence‐homology analysis then confirmed that NP_888769.1 represents the first three‐dimensional structural representative of a new protein family that was previously predicted by the Joint Center for Structural Genomics, which includes so far about 20 prophage proteins encoded in bacterial genomes.

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Kurt Wüthrich

Scripps Research Institute

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Pedro Serrano

Scripps Research Institute

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Bill Pedrini

Scripps Research Institute

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Ian A. Wilson

Scripps Research Institute

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Samit Dutta

Scripps Research Institute

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Reto Horst

Scripps Research Institute

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Andrew Proudfoot

Scripps Research Institute

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Kristaps Jaudzems

Scripps Research Institute

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