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Dive into the research topics where Michael W. Clarkson is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael W. Clarkson.


Nature | 2009

Hidden alternative structures of proline isomerase essential for catalysis.

J.S. Fraser; Michael W. Clarkson; Sheena C. Degnan; Renske Erion; Dorothee Kern; Tom Alber

A long-standing challenge is to understand at the atomic level how protein dynamics contribute to enzyme catalysis. X-ray crystallography can provide snapshots of conformational substates sampled during enzymatic reactions, while NMR relaxation methods reveal the rates of interconversion between substates and the corresponding relative populations. However, these current methods cannot simultaneously reveal the detailed atomic structures of the rare states and rationalize the finding that intrinsic motions in the free enzyme occur on a timescale similar to the catalytic turnover rate. Here we introduce dual strategies of ambient-temperature X-ray crystallographic data collection and automated electron-density sampling to structurally unravel interconverting substates of the human proline isomerase, cyclophilin A (CYPA, also known as PPIA). A conservative mutation outside the active site was designed to stabilize features of the previously hidden minor conformation. This mutation not only inverts the equilibrium between the substates, but also causes large, parallel reductions in the conformational interconversion rates and the catalytic rate. These studies introduce crystallographic approaches to define functional minor protein conformations and, in combination with NMR analysis of the enzyme dynamics in solution, show how collective motions directly contribute to the catalytic power of an enzyme.


Nature | 2012

Antiparallel EmrE exports drugs by exchanging between asymmetric structures.

Emma A. Morrison; Gregory T. DeKoster; Supratik Dutta; Reza Vafabakhsh; Michael W. Clarkson; Arjun Bahl; Dorothee Kern; Taekjip Ha; Katherine A. Henzler-Wildman

Small multidrug resistance transporters provide an ideal system to study the minimal requirements for active transport. EmrE is one such transporter in Escherichia coli. It exports a broad class of polyaromatic cation substrates, thus conferring resistance to drug compounds matching this chemical description. However, a great deal of controversy has surrounded the topology of the EmrE homodimer. Here we show that asymmetric antiparallel EmrE exchanges between inward- and outward-facing states that are identical except that they have opposite orientation in the membrane. We quantitatively measure the global conformational exchange between these two states for substrate-bound EmrE in bicelles using solution NMR dynamics experiments. Förster resonance energy transfer reveals that the monomers within each dimer are antiparallel, and paramagnetic relaxation enhancement NMR experiments demonstrate differential water accessibility of the two monomers within each dimer. Our experiments reveal a ‘dynamic symmetry’ that reconciles the asymmetric EmrE structure with the functional symmetry of residues in the active site.


Cell | 2009

Transient non-native hydrogen bonds promote activation of a signaling protein

Alexandra K. Gardino; Janice Villali; Aleksandr Kivenson; Ming Lei; Ce Feng Liu; Phillip Steindel; Elan Z. Eisenmesser; Wladimir Labeikovsky; Magnus Wolf-Watz; Michael W. Clarkson; Dorothee Kern

Phosphorylation is a common mechanism for activating proteins within signaling pathways. Yet, the molecular transitions between the inactive and active conformational states are poorly understood. Here we quantitatively characterize the free-energy landscape of activation of a signaling protein, nitrogen regulatory protein C (NtrC), by connecting functional protein dynamics of phosphorylation-dependent activation to protein folding and show that only a rarely populated, pre-existing active conformation is energetically stabilized by phosphorylation. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) dynamics, we test an atomic scale pathway for the complex conformational transition, inferred from molecular dynamics simulations (Lei et al., 2009). The data show that the loss of native stabilizing contacts during activation is compensated by non-native transient atomic interactions during the transition. The results unravel atomistic details of native-state protein energy landscapes by expanding the knowledge about ground states to transition landscapes.


Nature Communications | 2015

Free energy landscape of activation in a signalling protein at atomic resolution.

F. Pontiggia; D.V. Pachov; Michael W. Clarkson; Janice Villali; M.F. Hagan; Vijay S. Pande; Dorothee Kern

The interconversion between inactive and active protein states, traditionally described by two static structures, is at the heart of signaling. However, how folded states interconvert is largely unknown due to the inability to experimentally observe transition pathways. Here we explore the free energy landscape of the bacterial response regulator NtrC by combining computation and NMR, and discover unexpected features underlying efficient signaling. We find that functional states are defined purely in kinetic and not structural terms. The need of a well-defined conformer, crucial to the active state, is absent in the inactive state, which comprises a heterogeneous collection of conformers. The transition between active and inactive states occurs through multiple pathways, facilitated by a number of nonnative transient hydrogen bonds, thus lowering the transition barrier through both entropic and enthalpic contributions. These findings may represent general features for functional conformational transitions within the folded state.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Dissecting the Microscopic Steps of the Cyclophilin A Enzymatic Cycle on the Biological HIV-1 Capsid Substrate by NMR

Daryl A. Bosco; Elan Z. Eisenmesser; Michael W. Clarkson; Magnus Wolf-Watz; Wladimir Labeikovsky; Oscar Millet; Dorothee Kern

Peptidyl-prolyl isomerases (PPIases) are emerging as key regulators of many diverse biological processes. Elucidating the role of PPIase activity in vivo has been challenging because mutagenesis of active-site residues not only reduces the catalytic activity of these enzymes but also dramatically affects substrate binding. Employing the cyclophilin A PPIase together with its biologically relevant and natively folded substrate, the N-terminal domain of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 capsid (CA(N)) protein, we demonstrate here how to dissect residue-specific contributions to PPIase catalysis versus substrate binding utilizing NMR spectroscopy. Surprisingly, a number of cyclophilin A active-site mutants previously assumed to be strongly diminished in activity toward biological substrates based only on a peptide assay catalyze the human immunodeficiency virus capsid with wild-type activity but with a change in the rate-limiting step of the enzymatic cycle. The results illustrate that a quantitative analysis of catalysis using the biological substrates is critical when interpreting the effects of PPIase mutations in biological assays.


Nature Communications | 2018

Rescue of conformational dynamics in enzyme catalysis by directed evolution.

Renee Otten; Lin Liu; Lillian R. Kenner; Michael W. Clarkson; David Mavor; Dan S. Tawfik; Dorothee Kern; J.S. Fraser

Rational design and directed evolution have proved to be successful approaches to increase catalytic efficiencies of both natural and artificial enzymes. Protein dynamics is recognized as important, but due to the inherent flexibility of biological macromolecules it is often difficult to distinguish which conformational changes are directly related to function. Here, we use directed evolution on an impaired mutant of the proline isomerase CypA and identify two second-shell mutations that partially restore its catalytic activity. We show both kinetically, using NMR spectroscopy, and structurally, by room-temperature X-ray crystallography, how local perturbations propagate through a large allosteric network to facilitate conformational dynamics. The increased catalysis selected for in the evolutionary screen is correlated with an accelerated interconversion between the two catalytically essential conformational sub-states, which are both captured in the high-resolution X-ray ensembles. Our data provide a glimpse of an evolutionary trajectory and show how subtle changes can fine-tune enzyme function.A key challenge in the field of protein design and evolution is to understand the mechanisms by which directed evolution is improving enzymes. Here the authors combine different biophysical methods and give mechanistic insights into how directed evolution increases the catalytic efficiency of human peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase CypA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Dynamic activation and regulation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase p38

Ganesan Senthil Kumar; Michael W. Clarkson; Micha Ben Achim Kunze; Daniele Granata; A. Joshua Wand; Kresten Lindorff-Larsen; Rebecca Page; Wolfgang Peti

Significance The physical basis for the regulation of protein MAP kinases is key to understanding their role in cellular signaling in human biology and disease. However, the biochemical events that lead to MAPK activation are not well understood. Here, using biomolecular NMR dynamics measurements, we show that kinase activation is not due simply to phosphorylation of the activation loop. Rather, we show that phosphorylation and substrate binding cause the dynamics of p38 to change from a state in which they are uncoordinated to one that is uniform across the entire molecule. That is, synchronized dynamics coordinates enzyme activity, which leads to a shift in the energy landscape and ultimately drives enzyme function. This makes essential elements of allostery and activation dynamically accessible. Mitogen-activated protein kinases, which include p38, are essential for cell differentiation and autophagy. The current model for p38 activation involves activation-loop phosphorylation with subsequent substrate binding leading to substrate phosphorylation. Despite extensive efforts, the molecular mechanism of activation remains unclear. Here, using NMR spectroscopy, we show how the modulation of protein dynamics across timescales activates p38. We find that activation-loop phosphorylation does not change the average conformation of p38; rather it quenches the loop ps-ns dynamics. We then show that substrate binding to nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated p38 results in uniform µs-ms backbone dynamics at catalytically essential regions and across the entire molecule, respectively. Together, these results show that phosphorylation and substrate binding flatten the energy landscape of the protein, making essential elements of allostery and activation dynamically accessible. The high degree of structural conservation among ser/thr kinases suggests that elements of this mechanism may be conserved across the kinase family.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2018

Structural Dynamics of the Activation of Elongation Factor 2 Kinase by Ca 2+ -Calmodulin

Nathan Will; Kwangwoon Lee; Fatlum Hajredini; David H. Giles; Rinat R. Abzalimov; Michael W. Clarkson; Kevin N. Dalby; Ranajeet Ghose

Eukaryotic elongation factor 2 kinase (eEF-2K), the only known calmodulin (CaM)-activated α-kinase, phosphorylates eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF-2) on a specific threonine (Thr-56) diminishing its affinity for the ribosome and reducing the rate of nascent chain elongation during translation. Despite its critical cellular role, the precise mechanisms underlying the CaM-mediated activation of eEF-2K remain poorly defined. Here, employing a minimal eEF-2K construct (TR) that exhibits activity comparable to the wild-type enzyme and is fully activated by CaM in vitro and in cells, and using a variety of complimentary biophysical techniques in combination with computational modeling, we provide a structural mechanism by which CaM activates eEF-2K. Native mass analysis reveals that CaM, with two bound Ca2+ ions, forms a stoichiometric 1:1 complex with TR. Chemical crosslinking mass spectrometry and small-angle X-ray scattering measurements localize CaM near the N-lobe of the TR kinase domain and the spatially proximal C-terminal helical repeat. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry and methyl NMR indicate that the conformational changes induced on TR by the engagement of CaM are not localized but are transmitted to remote regions that include the catalytic site and the functionally important phosphate binding pocket. The structural insights obtained from the present analyses, together with our previously published kinetics data, suggest that TR, and by inference, wild-type eEF-2K, upon engaging CaM undergoes a conformational transition resulting in a state that is primed to efficiently auto-phosphorylate on the primary activating T348 en route to full activation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2014

Evidence against the "Y-T coupling" mechanism of activation in the response regulator NtrC.

Janice Villali; Francesco Pontiggia; Michael W. Clarkson; Michael F. Hagan; Dorothee Kern


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2009

Mesodynamics in the SARS nucleocapsid measured by NMR field cycling

Michael W. Clarkson; Ming Lei; Elan Z. Eisenmesser; Wladimir Labeikovsky; Alfred G. Redfield; Dorothee Kern

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Dorothee Kern

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Elan Z. Eisenmesser

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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J.S. Fraser

University of California

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Wladimir Labeikovsky

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Emma A. Morrison

Washington University in St. Louis

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Francesco Pontiggia

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Katherine A. Henzler-Wildman

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ming Lei

University of Michigan

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