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Dive into the research topics where Michael J. Gray is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael J. Gray.


Molecular Cell | 2014

Polyphosphate Is a Primordial Chaperone

Michael J. Gray; Wei Yun Wholey; Nico O. Wagner; Claudia M. Cremers; Antje Mueller-Schickert; Nathaniel T. Hock; Adam G. Krieger; Erica M. Smith; Robert A. Bender; James C. A. Bardwell; Ursula Jakob

Composed of up to 1,000 phospho-anhydride bond-linked phosphate monomers, inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) is one of the most ancient, conserved, and enigmatic molecules in biology. Here we demonstrate that polyP functions as a hitherto unrecognized chaperone. We show that polyP stabilizes proteins in vivo, diminishes the need for other chaperone systems to survive proteotoxic stress conditions, and protects a wide variety of proteins against stress-induced unfolding and aggregation. In vitro studies reveal that polyP has protein-like chaperone qualities, binds to unfolding proteins with high affinity in an ATP-independent manner, and supports their productive refolding once nonstress conditions are restored. Our results uncover a universally important function for polyP and suggest that these long chains of inorganic phosphate may have served as one of natures first chaperones, a role that continues to the present day.


Annual Review of Microbiology | 2013

Bacterial Responses to Reactive Chlorine Species

Michael J. Gray; Wei Yun Wholey; Ursula Jakob

Hypochlorous acid (HOCl), the active ingredient of household bleach, is the most common disinfectant in medical, industrial, and domestic use and plays an important role in microbial killing in the innate immune system. Given the critical importance of the antimicrobial properties of chlorine to public health, it is surprising how little is known about the ways in which bacteria sense and respond to reactive chlorine species (RCS). Although the literature on bacterial responses to reactive oxygen species (ROS) is enormous, work addressing bacterial responses to RCS has begun only recently. Transcriptomic and proteomic studies now provide new insights into how bacteria mount defenses against this important class of antimicrobial compounds. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge, emphasizing the overlaps between RCS stress responses and other more well-characterized bacterial defense systems, and identify outstanding questions that represent productive avenues for future research.


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2015

Oxidative stress protection by polyphosphate — new roles for an old player

Michael J. Gray; Ursula Jakob

Inorganic polyphosphate is a universally conserved biopolymer whose association with oxidative stress resistance has been documented in many species, but whose mode of action has been poorly understood. Here we review the recent discovery that polyphosphate functions as a protein-protective chaperone, examine the mechanisms by which polyphosphate-metal ion interactions reduce oxidative stress, and summarize polyphosphates roles in regulating general stress response pathways. Given the simple chemical structure and ancient pedigree of polyphosphate, these diverse mechanisms are likely to be broadly relevant in many organisms, from bacteria to mammalian cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

NemR is a bleach-sensing transcription factor.

Michael J. Gray; Wei Yun Wholey; Benjamin W. Parker; Minwook Kim; Ursula Jakob

Background: Little is known about how bacteria sense or respond to reactive chlorine species, such as bleach. Results: NemR is a redox-regulated transcription factor which senses bleach. Conclusion: NemR controls expression of genes encoding electrophile detoxification enzymes, which increase bleach resistance. Significance: We demonstrate a bleach-sensing bacterial response system and a new mechanism contributing to bacterial bleach survival. Hypochlorous acid (HOCl), the active component of household bleach, also functions as a powerful antimicrobial during the innate immune response. Despite its widespread use, surprisingly little is known about how cells sense or respond to HOCl. We now demonstrate that Escherichia coli NemR is a redox-regulated transcriptional repressor, which uses the oxidation status of HOCl-sensitive cysteine residues to respond to bleach and related reactive chlorine species. NemR controls bleach-mediated expression of two enzymes required for detoxification of reactive electrophiles: glyoxalase I and N-ethylmaleimide reductase. Both enzymes contribute to bacterial bleach survival. These results provide evidence that bleach resistance relies on the capacity of organisms to specifically sense reactive chlorine species and respond with the up-regulation of enzymes dedicated to detoxification of methylglyoxal and other reactive electrophiles.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2015

Protein Quality Control Under Oxidative Stress Conditions

Jan Ulrik Dahl; Michael J. Gray; Ursula Jakob

Accumulation of reactive oxygen and chlorine species (RO/CS) is generally regarded to be a toxic and highly undesirable event, which serves as contributing factor in aging and many age-related diseases. However, it is also put to excellent use during host defense, when high levels of RO/CS are produced to kill invading microorganisms and regulate bacterial colonization. Biochemical and cell biological studies of how bacteria and other microorganisms deal with RO/CS have now provided important new insights into the physiological consequences of oxidative stress, the major targets that need protection, and the cellular strategies employed by organisms to mitigate the damage. This review examines the redox-regulated mechanisms by which cells maintain a functional proteome during oxidative stress. We will discuss the well-characterized redox-regulated chaperone Hsp33, and we will review recent discoveries demonstrating that oxidative stress-specific activation of chaperone function is a much more widespread phenomenon than previously anticipated. New members of this group include the cytosolic ATPase Get3 in yeast, the Escherichia coli protein RidA, and the mammalian protein α2-macroglobulin. We will conclude our review with recent evidence showing that inorganic polyphosphate (polyP), whose accumulation significantly increases bacterial oxidative stress resistance, works by a protein-like chaperone mechanism. Understanding the relationship between oxidative and proteotoxic stresses will improve our understanding of both host-microbe interactions and how mammalian cells combat the damaging side effects of uncontrolled RO/CS production, a hallmark of inflammation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

The RclR protein is a reactive chlorine-specific transcription factor in Escherichia coli.

Benjamin W. Parker; Emily A. Schwessinger; Ursula Jakob; Michael J. Gray

Background: Reactive chlorine compounds are important natural antimicrobials produced by the immune system. Results: Reactive chlorine treatment leads to RclR cysteine oxidation, activation of DNA binding, and expression of RclR-controlled genes. Conclusion: RclR is a transcriptional activator that responds specifically to reactive chlorine. Significance: Understanding reactive chlorine responses is important for understanding interactions between bacteria and the host immune system. Reactive chlorine species (RCS) such as hypochlorous acid are powerful antimicrobial oxidants. Used extensively for disinfection in household and industrial settings (i.e. as bleach), RCS are also naturally generated in high quantities during the innate immune response. Bacterial responses to RCS are complex and differ substantially from the well characterized responses to other physiologically relevant oxidants, like peroxide or superoxide. Several RCS-sensitive transcription factors have been identified in bacteria, but most of them respond to multiple stressors whose damaging effects overlap with those of RCS, including reactive oxygen species and electrophiles. We have now used in vivo genetic and in vitro biochemical methods to identify and demonstrate that Escherichia coli RclR (formerly YkgD) is a redox-regulated transcriptional activator of the AraC family, whose highly conserved cysteine residues are specifically sensitive to oxidation by RCS. Oxidation of these cysteines leads to strong, highly specific activation of expression of genes required for survival of RCS stress. These results demonstrate the existence of a widely conserved bacterial regulon devoted specifically to RCS resistance.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Do nucleic acids moonlight as molecular chaperones

Brianne E. Docter; Scott Horowitz; Michael J. Gray; Ursula Jakob; James C. A. Bardwell

Abstract Organisms use molecular chaperones to combat the unfolding and aggregation of proteins. While protein chaperones have been widely studied, here we demonstrate that DNA and RNA exhibit potent chaperone activity in vitro. Nucleic acids suppress the aggregation of classic chaperone substrates up to 300-fold more effectively than the protein chaperone GroEL. Additionally, RNA cooperates with the DnaK chaperone system to refold purified luciferase. Our findings reveal a possible new role for nucleic acids within the cell: that nucleic acids directly participate in maintaining proteostasis by preventing protein aggregation.


Nature microbiology | 2017

The anti-inflammatory drug mesalamine targets bacterial polyphosphate accumulation

Jan Ulrik Dahl; Michael J. Gray; Daphne Bazopoulou; Francois Beaufay; Justine Lempart; Mark J. Koenigsknecht; Ying Wang; Jason Baker; William L. Hasler; Vincent B. Young; Duxin Sun; Ursula Jakob

Mesalamine serves as the gold standard in treating ulcerative colitis. However, its precise mechanism(s) of action remains unclear. Here, we show that mesalamine treatment rapidly decreases polyphosphate levels in diverse bacteria, including members of the human gut microbiome. This decrease sensitizes bacteria towards oxidative stress, reduces colonization and attenuates persister cell and biofilm formation, suggesting that mesalamine aids in diminishing the capacity of bacteria to persist within chronically inflamed environments.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2015

Does the Transcription Factor NemR Use a Regulatory Sulfenamide Bond to Sense Bleach

Michael J. Gray; Yan Li; Lars I. Leichert; Zhaohui Xu; Ursula Jakob

Reactive chlorine species (RCS), such as hypochlorous acid (i.e., bleach), are antimicrobial oxidants produced by the innate immune system. Like many redox-regulated transcription factors, the Escherichia coli repressor NemR responds to RCS by using the reversible oxidation of highly conserved cysteines to alter its DNA-binding affinity. However, earlier work showed that RCS response in NemR does not depend on any commonly known oxidative cysteine modifications. We have now determined the crystal structure of NemR, showing that the regulatory cysteine, Cys106, is in close proximity to a highly conserved lysine (Lys175). We used crystallographic, biochemical, and mass spectrometric analyses to analyze the role of this lysine residue in RCS sensing. Based on our results, we hypothesize that RCS treatment of NemR results in the formation of a reversible Cys106-Lys175 sulfenamide bond. This is, to our knowledge, the first description of a protein whose function is regulated by a cysteine-lysine sulfenamide thiol switch, constituting a novel addition to the biological repertoire of functional redox switches.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2018

Polyphosphate Stabilizes Protein Unfolding Intermediates as Soluble Amyloid-like Oligomers

Nicholas G. Yoo; Siddhant Dogra; Ben A. Meinen; Eric Tse; Janine Haefliger; Daniel R. Southworth; Michael J. Gray; Jan-Ulrik Dahl; Ursula Jakob

Inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) constitutes one of the most conserved and ubiquitous molecules in biology. Recent work in bacteria demonstrated that polyP increases oxidative stress resistance by preventing stress-induced protein aggregation and promotes biofilm formation by stimulating functional amyloid formation. To gain insights into these two seemingly contradictory functions of polyP, we investigated the effects of polyP on the folding model lactate dehydrogenase. We discovered that the presence of polyP during the thermal unfolding process stabilizes folding intermediates of lactate dehydrogenase as soluble micro-β-aggregates with amyloid-like properties. Size and heterogeneity of the oligomers formed in this process were dependent on the polyP chain length, with longer chains forming smaller, more homogenous complexes. This ability of polyP to stabilize thermally unfolded proteins even upon exposure to extreme temperatures appears to contribute to the observed resistance of uropathogenic Escherichia coli toward severe heat shock treatment. These results suggest that the working mechanism of polyP is the same for both soluble and amyloidogenic proteins, with the ultimate outcome likely being determined by a combination of polyP chain length and the client protein itself. They help to explain how polyP can simultaneously function as general stress-protective chaperone and instigator of amyloidogenic processes in vivo.

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Ben A. Meinen

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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