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Dive into the research topics where Neil Ferguson is active.

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Featured researches published by Neil Ferguson.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

Structural and mechanistic basis of immunity toward endonuclease colicins.

Ulrike C. Kühlmann; Ansgar J. Pommer; Neil Ferguson; Sheena E. Radford; Geoffrey R. Moore; Richard James; Andrew M. Hemmings

The crystal structure of the cytotoxic endonuclease domain from the bacterial toxin colicin E9 in complex with its cognate immunity protein Im9 reveals that the inhibitor does not bind at the active site, the core of which comprises the HNH motif found in intron-encoded homing endonucleases, but rather at an adjacent position leaving the active site exposed yet unable to bind DNA because of steric and electrostatic clashes with incoming substrate. Although its mode of action is unorthodox, Im9 is a remarkably effective inhibitor since it folds within milliseconds and then associates with its target endonuclease at the rate of diffusion to form an inactive complex with sub-femtomolar binding affinity. This hyperefficient mechanism of inhibition could be well suited to other toxic enzyme systems, particularly where the substrate is a polymer extending beyond the boundaries of the active site.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

General structural motifs of amyloid protofilaments

Neil Ferguson; Johanna Becker; Henning Tidow; Sandra Tremmel; Timothy D. Sharpe; Gerd Krause; Jeremy Flinders; Miriana Petrovich; John Berriman; Hartmut Oschkinat; Alan R. Fersht

Human CA150, a transcriptional activator, binds to and is co-deposited with huntingtin during Huntingtons disease. The second WW domain of CA150 is a three-stranded β-sheet that folds in vitro in microseconds and forms amyloid fibers under physiological conditions. We found from exhaustive alanine scanning studies that fibrillation of this WW domain begins from its denatured conformations, and we identified a subset of residues critical for fibril formation. We used high-resolution magic-angle-spinning NMR studies on site-specific isotopically labeled fibrils to identify abundant long-range interactions between side chains. The distribution of critical residues identified by the alanine scanning and NMR spectroscopy, along with the electron microscopy data, revealed the protofilament repeat unit: a 26-residue nonnative β-hairpin. The structure we report has similarities to the hairpin formed by the Aβ(1–40) protofilament, yet also contains closely packed side-chains in a “steric zipper” arrangement found in the cross-β spine formed from small peptides from the Sup35 prion protein. Fibrillation of unrelated amyloidogenic sequences shows the common feature of zippered repeat units that act as templates for fiber elongation.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2012

Polycomb PHF19 binds H3K36me3 and recruits PRC2 and demethylase NO66 to embryonic stem cell genes during differentiation

Gerard L. Brien; Guillermo Gambero; David J. O'Connell; Emilia Jerman; Siobhán Turner; Chris M. Egan; Eiseart J. Dunne; Maike C. Jürgens; Kieran Wynne; Lianhua Piao; Amanda J. Lohan; Neil Ferguson; Xiaobing Shi; Krishna Sinha; Brendan J. Loftus; Gerard Cagney; Adrian P. Bracken

Polycomb group proteins are repressive chromatin modifiers with essential roles in metazoan development, cellular differentiation and cell fate maintenance. How Polycomb proteins access active chromatin to confer transcriptional silencing during lineage transitions remains unclear. Here we show that the Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) component PHF19 binds trimethylated histone H3 Lys36 (H3K36me3), a mark of active chromatin, via its Tudor domain. PHF19 associates with the H3K36me3 demethylase NO66, and it is required to recruit the PRC2 complex and NO66 to stem cell genes during differentiation, leading to PRC2-mediated trimethylation of histone H3 Lys27 (H3K27), loss of H3K36me3 and transcriptional silencing. We propose a model whereby PHF19 functions during mouse embryonic stem cell differentiation to transiently bind the H3K36me3 mark via its Tudor domain, forming essential contact points that allow recruitment of PRC2 and H3K36me3 demethylase activity to active gene loci during their transition to a Polycomb-repressed state.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2003

Early events in protein folding

Neil Ferguson; Alan R. Fersht

Recent advances have significantly increased the time and spectroscopic resolution of protein folding experiments. We can now study the timescale and nature of polypeptide collapse, and how this correlates with secondary and tertiary structure formation. Studies on ultrafast folding proteins and peptides provide experimental benchmarks on a timescale that overlaps directly with that of molecular dynamics simulations. This makes possible direct tests of both simulations and current models of protein folding.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Ultrafast folding of WW domains without structured aromatic clusters in the denatured state

Neil Ferguson; Christopher M. Johnson; Maria J. Macias; Hartmut Oschkinat; Alan R. Fersht

Ultrafast-folding proteins are important for combining experiment and simulation to give complete descriptions of folding pathways. The WW domain family comprises small proteins with a three-stranded antiparallel β-sheet topology. Previous studies on the 57-residue YAP 65 WW domain indicate the presence of residual structure in the chemically denatured state. Here we analyze three minimal core WW domains of 38–44 residues. There was little spectroscopic or thermodynamic evidence for residual structure in either their chemically or thermally denatured states. Folding and unfolding kinetics, studied by using rapid temperature-jump and continuous-flow techniques, show that each domain folds and unfolds very rapidly in a two-state transition through a highly compact transition state. Folding half-times were as short as 17 μs at 25°C, within an order of magnitude of the predicted maximal rate of loop formation. The small size and topological simplicity of these domains, in conjunction with their very rapid two-state folding, may allow us to reduce the difference in time scale between experiment and theoretical simulation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Using flexible loop mimetics to extend phi-value analysis to secondary structure interactions.

Neil Ferguson; José Ricardo Pires; Florian Toepert; Christopher M. Johnson; Yong Ping Pan; Rudolf Volkmer-Engert; Jens Schneider-Mergener; Valerie Daggett; Hartmut Oschkinat; Alan R. Fersht

Chemical synthesis allows the incorporation of nonnatural amino acids into proteins that may provide previously untried probes of their folding pathway and thermodynamic stability. We have used a flexible thioether linker as a loop mimetic in the human yes kinase-associated protein (YAP 65) WW domain, a three-stranded, 44-residue, β-sheet protein. This linkage avoids problems of incorporating sequences that constrain loops to the extent that they significantly change the nature of the denatured state with concomitant effects on the folding kinetics. An NMR solution structure shows that the thioether linker had little effect on the global fold of the domain, although the loop is apparently more dynamic. The thioether variants are destabilized by up to 1.4 kcal/mol (1 cal = 4.18 J). Preliminary Φ-value analysis showed that the first loop is highly structured in the folding transition state, and the second loop is essentially unstructured. These data are consistent with results from simulated unfolding and detailed protein-engineering studies of structurally homologous WW domains. Previously, Φ-value analysis was limited to studying side-chain interactions. The linkers used here extend the protein engineering method directly to secondary-structure interactions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Rapid amyloid fiber formation from the fast-folding WW domain FBP28.

Neil Ferguson; John Berriman; Miriana Petrovich; Timothy D. Sharpe; John T. Finch; Alan R. Fersht

The WW domains are small proteins that contain a three-stranded, antiparallel β-sheet. The 40-residue murine FBP28 WW domain rapidly formed twirling ribbon-like fibrils at physiological temperature and pH, with morphology typical of amyloid fibrils. These ribbons were unusually wide and well ordered, making them highly suitable for structural studies. Their x-ray and electron-diffraction patterns displayed the characteristic amyloid fiber 0.47-nm reflection of the cross-β diffraction signature. Both conventional and electron cryomicroscopy showed clearly that the ribbons were composed of many 2.5-nm-wide subfilaments that ran parallel to the long axis of the fiber. There was a region of lower density along the center of each filament. Lateral association of these filaments generated twisted, often interlinked, sheets up to 40 nm wide and many microns in length. The pitch of the helix varied from 60 to 320 nm, depending on the width of the ribbon. The wild-type FBP28 fibers were formed under conditions in which multiexponential folding kinetics is observed in other studies and which was attributed to a change in the mechanism of folding. It is more likely that those phases result from initial events in the off-pathway aggregation observed here.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Thermodynamic origins of protein folding, allostery, and capsid formation in the human hepatitis B virus core protein

Crispin G. Alexander; Maike C. Jürgens; Dale A. Shepherd; Stefan M. V. Freund; Alison E. Ashcroft; Neil Ferguson

Significance Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major pathogen, yet no fully effective therapies exist. HBc is the multifunctional, capsid-forming protein essential for HBV replication. HBc structural plasticity is reportedly functionally important. We analyzed the folding mechanism of HBc using a multidisciplinary approach, including microscale thermophoresis and ion mobility spectrometry–mass spectrometry. HBc folds in a 3-state transition with a dimeric, helical intermediate. We found evidence of a strained native ensemble wherein the energy landscapes for folding, allostery, and capsid formation are linked. Mutations thermodynamically trapped HBc in conformations unable to form capsids, suggesting chemical chaperones could elicit similar, potentially antiviral, effects. HBc, the capsid-forming “core protein” of human hepatitis B virus (HBV), is a multidomain, α-helical homodimer that aggressively forms human HBV capsids. Structural plasticity has been proposed to be important to the myriad functions HBc mediates during viral replication. Here, we report detailed thermodynamic analyses of the folding of the dimeric HBc protomer under conditions that prevented capsid formation. Central to our success was the use of ion mobility spectrometry–mass spectrometry and microscale thermophoresis, which allowed folding mechanisms to be characterized using just micrograms of protein. HBc folds in a three-state transition with a stable, dimeric, α-helical intermediate. Extensive protein engineering showed thermodynamic linkage between different structural domains. Unusual effects associated with mutating some residues suggest structural strain, arising from frustrated contacts, is present in the native dimer. We found evidence of structural gatekeepers that, when mutated, alleviated native strain and prevented (or significantly attenuated) capsid formation by tuning the population of alternative native conformations. This strain is likely an evolved feature that helps HBc access the different structures associated with its diverse essential functions. The subtle balance between native and strained contacts may provide the means to tune conformational properties of HBc by molecular interactions or mutations, thereby conferring allosteric regulation of structure and function. The ability to trap HBc conformers thermodynamically by mutation, and thereby ablate HBV capsid formation, provides proof of principle for designing antivirals that elicit similar effects.


Biochemical Journal | 2015

Gremlin1 preferentially binds to Bone Morphogenetic Protein-2 (BMP-2) and BMP-4 over BMP-7

Rachel H. Church; Arjun Krishnakumar; Annika Urbanek; Stefan Geschwindner; Julie P. Meneely; Alessandro Bianchi; Barbro Basta; Sean Monaghan; Christopher Elliot; Maria Strömstedt; Neil Ferguson; Finian Martin; Derek P. Brazil

Gremlin (Grem1) is a member of the DAN family of secreted bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) antagonists. Bone morphogenetic protein-7 (BMP-7) mediates protective effects during renal fibrosis associated with diabetes and other renal diseases. The pathogenic mechanism of Grem1 during diabetic nephropathy (DN) has been suggested to be binding and inhibition of BMP-7. However, the precise interactions between Grem1, BMP-7 and other BMPs have not been accurately defined. In the present study, we show the affinity of Grem1 for BMP-7 is lower than that of BMP-2 and BMP-4, using a combination of surface plasmon resonance and cell culture techniques. Using kidney proximal tubule cells and HEK (human embryonic kidney)-293 cell Smad1/5/8 phosphorylation and BMP-dependent gene expression as readouts, Grem1 consistently demonstrated a higher affinity for BMP-2>BMP-4>BMP-7. Cell-associated Grem1 did not inhibit BMP-2- or BMP-4-mediated signalling, suggesting that Grem1-BMP-2 binding occurred in solution, preventing BMP receptor activation. These data suggest that Grem1 preferentially binds to BMP-2 and this may be the dominant complex in a disease situation where levels of Grem1 and BMPs are elevated.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Downhill versus barrier-limited folding of BBL 2: mechanistic insights from kinetics of folding monitored by independent tryptophan probes.

Hannes Neuweiler; Timothy D. Sharpe; Christopher M. Johnson; Daniel P. Teufel; Neil Ferguson; Alan R. Fersht

Barrier-free downhill folding has been proposed for the peripheral subunit-binding domain BBL. To date, ultrafast kinetic experiments on BBL, which are crucial for a mechanistic understanding of folding, have been hampered by the lack of good intrinsic spectroscopic probes. Here, we present a detailed kinetic characterization of three single-point tryptophan mutants of BBL that have suitable fluorescence properties for following microsecond and nanosecond folding kinetics using temperature jump fluorescence spectroscopy. Experiments were performed at pH 7, which is optimal for stability and minimizes complications that arise from the presence of an alternative native-state conformation of BBL at lower pH. We examined the dependence of rate and equilibrium constants on concentration of denaturant and found that they follow well-established laws allowing kinetic transients to be related to events in folding and compared with equilibrium data. Logarithms of rate constants versus denaturant concentration yielded plots (chevrons) that are characteristic of barrier-limited folding for all mutants investigated, including a truncated sequence that was previously used in the proposal of downhill folding. The thermodynamic quantities calculated from the rate constants were in excellent agreement with those directly determined from equilibrium denaturation based on empirical two-state equations. We found that sequence truncation of BBL as used in studies proposing downhill folding leads to a large loss in helical content and protein stability, which were exacerbated at the low pH used in those studies. The kinetics and equilibria of folding of BBL fit to conventional barrier-limited kinetics.

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Alan R. Fersht

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Mark D. Allen

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Stefan M. V. Freund

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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