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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas G. Brown is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas G. Brown.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Multiple global suppressors of protein stability defects facilitate the evolution of extended-spectrum TEM β-lactamases

Nicholas G. Brown; Jeanine M. Pennington; Wanzhi Huang; Tulin Ayvaz; Timothy Palzkill

The introduction of extended-spectrum cephalosporins and β-lactamase inhibitors has driven the evolution of extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) that possess the ability to hydrolyze these drugs. The evolved TEM ESBLs from clinical isolates of bacteria often contain substitutions that occur in the active site and alter the catalytic properties of the enzyme to provide an increased hydrolysis of extended-spectrum cephalosporins or an increased resistance to inhibitors. These active-site substitutions often result in a cost in the form of reduced enzyme stability. The evolution of TEM ESBLs is facilitated by mutations that act as global suppressors of protein stability defects in that they allow the enzyme to absorb multiple amino acid changes despite incremental losses in stability associated with the substitutions. The best-studied example is the M182T substitution, which corrects protein stability defects and is commonly found in TEM ESBLs or inhibitor-resistant variants from clinical isolates. In this study, a genetic selection for second-site mutations that could partially restore function to a severely destabilized primary mutant enabled the identification of A184V, T265M, R275Q, and N276D, which are known to occur in TEM ESBLs from clinical isolates, as suppressors of TEM-1 protein stability defects. Further characterization demonstrated that these substitutions increased the thermal stability of TEM-1 and were able to correct the stability defects of two different sets of destabilizing mutations. The acquisition of compensatory global suppressors of stability costs associated with active-site mutations may be a common mechanism for the evolution of novel protein function.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Co-Crystal Structures of PKG Iβ (92–227) with cGMP and cAMP Reveal the Molecular Details of Cyclic-Nucleotide Binding

Jeong Joo Kim; Darren E. Casteel; Gilbert Y. Huang; Taek Hun Kwon; Ronnie Kuo Ren; Peter H. Zwart; Jeffrey J. Headd; Nicholas G. Brown; Dar Chone Chow; Timothy Palzkill; Choel Kim

Background Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinases (PKGs) are central mediators of the NO-cGMP signaling pathway and phosphorylate downstream substrates that are crucial for regulating smooth muscle tone, platelet activation, nociception and memory formation. As one of the main receptors for cGMP, PKGs mediate most of the effects of cGMP elevating drugs, such as nitric oxide-releasing agents and phosphodiesterase inhibitors which are used for the treatment of angina pectoris and erectile dysfunction, respectively. Methodology/Principal Findings We have investigated the mechanism of cyclic nucleotide binding to PKG by determining crystal structures of the amino-terminal cyclic nucleotide-binding domain (CNBD-A) of human PKG I bound to either cGMP or cAMP. We also determined the structure of CNBD-A in the absence of bound nucleotide. The crystal structures of CNBD-A with bound cAMP or cGMP reveal that cAMP binds in either syn or anti configurations whereas cGMP binds only in a syn configuration, with a conserved threonine residue anchoring both cyclic phosphate and guanine moieties. The structure of CNBD-A in the absence of bound cyclic nucleotide was similar to that of the cyclic nucleotide bound structures. Surprisingly, isothermal titration calorimetry experiments demonstrated that CNBD-A binds both cGMP and cAMP with a relatively high affinity, showing an approximately two-fold preference for cGMP. Conclusions/Significance Our findings suggest that CNBD-A binds cGMP in the syn conformation through its interaction with Thr193 and an unusual cis-peptide forming residues Leu172 and Cys173. Although these studies provide the first structural insights into cyclic nucleotide binding to PKG, our ITC results show only a two-fold preference for cGMP, indicating that other domains are required for the previously reported cyclic nucleotide selectivity.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

Deep Sequencing of Systematic Combinatorial Libraries Reveals β-Lactamase Sequence Constraints at High Resolution

Zhifeng Deng; Wanzhi Huang; Erol Bakkalbasi; Nicholas G. Brown; Carolyn J. Adamski; Kacie Rice; Donna M. Muzny; Richard A. Gibbs; Timothy Palzkill

In this study, combinatorial libraries were used in conjunction with ultrahigh-throughput sequencing to comprehensively determine the impact of each of the 19 possible amino acid substitutions at each residue position in the TEM-1 β-lactamase enzyme. The libraries were introduced into Escherichiacoli, and mutants were selected for ampicillin resistance. The selected colonies were pooled and subjected to ultrahigh-throughput sequencing to reveal the sequence preferences at each position. The depth of sequencing provided a clear, statistically significant picture of what amino acids are favored for ampicillin hydrolysis for all 263 positions of the enzyme in one experiment. Although the enzyme is generally tolerant of amino acid substitutions, several surface positions far from the active site are sensitive to substitutions suggesting a role for these residues in enzyme stability, solubility, or catalysis. In addition, information on the frequency of substitutions was used to identify mutations that increase enzyme thermodynamic stability. Finally, a comparison of sequence requirements based on the mutagenesis results versus those inferred from sequence conservation in an alignment of 156 class A β-lactamases reveals significant differences in that several residues in TEM-1 do not tolerate substitutions and yet extensive variation is observed in the alignment and vice versa. An analysis of the TEM-1 and other class A structures suggests that residues that vary in the alignment may nevertheless make unique, but important, interactions within individual enzymes.


Protein Science | 2009

Analysis of the plasticity of location of the Arg244 positive charge within the active site of the TEM-1 β-lactamase

David C. Marciano; Nicholas G. Brown; Timothy Palzkill

A large number of β‐lactamases have emerged that are capable of conferring bacterial resistance to β‐lactam antibiotics. Comparison of the structural and functional features of this family has refined understanding of the catalytic properties of these enzymes. An arginine residue present at position 244 in TEM‐1 β‐lactamase interacts with the carboxyl group common to penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics and thereby stabilizes both the substrate and transition state complexes. A comparison of class A β‐lactamase sequences reveals that arginine at position 244 is not conserved, although a positive charge at this structural location is conserved and is provided by an arginine at positions 220 or 276 for those enzymes lacking arginine at position 244. The plasticity of the location of positive charge in the β‐lactamase active site was experimentally investigated by relocating the arginine at position 244 in TEM‐1 β‐lactamase to positions 220, 272, and 276 by site‐directed mutagenesis. Kinetic analysis of the engineered β‐lactamases revealed that removal of arginine 244 by alanine mutation reduced catalytic efficiency against all substrates tested and restoration of an arginine at positions 272 or 276 partially suppresses the catalytic defect of the Arg244Ala substitution. These results suggest an evolutionary mechanism for the observed divergence of the position of positive charge in the active site of class A β‐lactamases.


Molecular Microbiology | 2011

An amino-terminal signal peptide of Vfr protein negatively influences RopB-dependent SpeB expression and attenuates virulence in Streptococcus pyogenes.

Samuel A. Shelburne; Randall J. Olsen; Nishanth Makthal; Nicholas G. Brown; Pranoti Sahasrabhojane; Ebru M. Watkins; Timothy Palzkill; James M. Musser; Muthiah Kumaraswami

Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin B (SpeB) is an extracellular cysteine protease that is a critical virulence factor made by the major human pathogen group A Streptococcus (GAS). speB expression is dependent on the regulator of proteinase B (RopB) and is upregulated with increasing cell density and during infection. Because computer modelling suggested significant structural similarity between RopB and peptide‐sensing regulatory proteins made by other Gram‐positive bacteria, we hypothesized that speB expression is influenced by RopB–peptide interactions. Inactivation of the gene (vfr) encoding the virulence factor related (Vfr) protein resulted in increased speB transcript level during the exponential growth phase, whereas provision of only the amino‐terminal region of Vfr comprising the secretion signal sequence in trans restored a wild‐type speB expression profile. Addition of the culture supernatant from a Vfr signal peptide‐expressing GAS strain restored wild‐type speB transcript level to a vfr‐inactivated isogenic mutant strain. A distinct peptide in the Vfr secretion signal sequence specifically bound to recombinant RopB. Finally, overexpression of the Vfr secretion signal sequence significantly decreased speB transcript level and attenuated GAS virulence in two mouse models of invasive infection. Taken together, these data delineate a previously unknown small peptide‐mediated regulatory system that controls GAS virulence factor production.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Analysis of the Functional Contributions of Asn233 in Metallo-β-Lactamase IMP-1

Nicholas G. Brown; Lori B. Horton; Wanzhi Huang; Sompong Vongpunsawad; Timothy Palzkill

ABSTRACT Metallo-β-lactamases, such as IMP-1, are a major global health threat, as they provide for bacterial resistance to a wide range of β-lactam antibiotics, including carbapenems. Understanding the molecular details of the enzymatic process and the sequence requirements for function are essential aids in overcoming β-lactamase-mediated resistance. An asparagine residue is conserved at position 233 in approximately 67% of all metallo-β-lactamases. Despite its conservation, the molecular basis of Asn233 function is poorly understood and remains controversial. It has previously been shown that mutations at this site exhibit context-dependent sequence requirements in that the importance of a given amino acid depends on the antibiotic being tested. To provide a more thorough examination as to the function and sequence requirements at this position, a collection of IMP-1 mutants encoding each of the 19 possible amino acid substitutions was generated. The resistance levels toward four β-lactam antibiotics were measured for Escherichia coli containing each of these mutants. The sequence requirements at position 233 for wild-type levels of resistance toward two cephalosporins were the most relaxed, while there were more stringent sequence requirements for resistance to ampicillin or imipenem. Enzyme kinetic analysis and determinations of steady-state protein levels indicated that the effects of the substitutions on resistance are due to changes in the kinetic parameters of the enzyme. Taken together, the results indicate that substitutions at position 233 significantly alter the kinetic parameters of the enzyme, but most substituted enzymes are able to provide for a high level of resistance to a broad range of β-lactams.


Biochemistry | 2015

Molecular basis for the catalytic specificity of the CTX-M extended-spectrum β-lactamases.

Carolyn J. Adamski; Ana Maria Cardenas; Nicholas G. Brown; Lori B. Horton; Banumathi Sankaran; B. V. Venkataram Prasad; Hiram F. Gilbert; Timothy Palzkill

Extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) pose a threat to public health because of their ability to confer resistance to extended-spectrum cephalosporins such as cefotaxime. The CTX-M β-lactamases are the most widespread ESBL enzymes among antibiotic resistant bacteria. Many of the active site residues are conserved between the CTX-M family and non-ESBL β-lactamases such as TEM-1, but the residues Ser237 and Arg276 are specific to the CTX-M family, suggesting that they may help to define the increased specificity for cefotaxime hydrolysis. To test this hypothesis, site-directed mutagenesis of these positions was performed in the CTX-M-14 β-lactamase. Substitutions of Ser237 and Arg276 with their TEM-1 counterparts, Ala237 and Asn276, had a modest effect on cefotaxime hydrolysis, as did removal of the Arg276 side chain in an R276A mutant. The S237A:R276N and S237A:R276A double mutants, however, exhibited 29- and 14-fold losses in catalytic efficiency for cefotaxime hydrolysis, respectively, while the catalytic efficiency for benzylpenicillin hydrolysis was unchanged. Therefore, together, the Ser237 and Arg276 residues are important contributors to the cefotaximase substrate profile of the enzyme. High-resolution crystal structures of the CTX-M-14 S70G, S70G:S237A, and S70G:S237A:R276A variants alone and in complex with cefotaxime show that residues Ser237 and Arg276 in the wild-type enzyme promote the expansion of the active site to accommodate cefotaxime and favor a conformation of cefotaxime that allows optimal contacts between the enzyme and substrate. The conservation of these residues, linked to their effects on structure and catalysis, imply that their coevolution is an important specificity determinant in the CTX-M family.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Mutagenesis of Zinc Ligand Residue Cys221 Reveals Plasticity in the IMP-1 Metallo-β-Lactamase Active Site

Lori B. Horton; Sreejesh Shanker; Rose L. Mikulski; Nicholas G. Brown; Kevin J. Phillips; Ernest Lykissa; B. V. Venkataram Prasad; Timothy Palzkill

ABSTRACT Metallo-β-lactamases catalyze the hydrolysis of a broad range of β-lactam antibiotics and are a concern for the spread of drug resistance. To analyze the determinants of enzyme structure and function, the sequence requirements for the subclass B1 IMP-1 β-lactamase zinc binding residue Cys221 were tested by saturation mutagenesis and evaluated for protein expression, as well as hydrolysis of β-lactam substrates. The results indicated that most substitutions at position 221 destabilized the enzyme. Only the enzymes containing C221D and C221G substitutions were expressed well in Escherichia coli and exhibited catalytic activity toward β-lactam antibiotics. Despite the lack of a metal-chelating group at position 221, the C221G enzyme exhibited high levels of catalytic activity in the presence of exogenous zinc. Molecular modeling suggests the glycine substitution is unique among substitutions in that the complete removal of the cysteine side chain allows space for a water molecule to replace the thiol and coordinate zinc at the Zn2 zinc binding site to restore function. Multiple methods were used to estimate the C221G Zn2 binding constant to be 17 to 43 μM. Studies of enzyme function in vivo in E. coli grown on minimal medium showed that both IMP-1 and the C221G mutant exhibited compromised activity when zinc availability was low. Finally, substitutions at residue 121, which is the IMP-1 equivalent of the subclass B3 zinc-chelating position, failed to rescue C221G function, suggesting the coordination schemes of subclasses B1 and B3 are not interchangeable.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Structural and biochemical evidence that a TEM-1 beta-lactamase N170G active site mutant acts via substrate-assisted catalysis

Nicholas G. Brown; Sreejesh Shanker; B. V. Venkataram Prasad; Timothy Palzkill

TEM-1 β-lactamase is the most common plasmid-encoded β-lactamase in Gram-negative bacteria and is a model class A enzyme. The active site of class A β-lactamases share several conserved residues including Ser70, Glu166, and Asn170 that coordinate a hydrolytic water involved in deacylation. Unlike Ser70 and Glu166, the functional significance of residue Asn170 is not well understood even though it forms hydrogen bonds with both Glu166 and the hydrolytic water. The goal of this study was to examine the importance of Asn170 for catalysis and substrate specificity of β-lactam antibiotic hydrolysis. The codon for position 170 was randomized to create a library containing all 20 possible amino acids. The random library was introduced into Escherichia coli, and functional clones were selected on agar plates containing ampicillin. DNA sequencing of the functional clones revealed that only asparagine (wild type) and glycine at this position are consistent with wild-type function. The determination of kinetic parameters for several substrates revealed that the N170G mutant is very efficient at hydrolyzing substrates that contain a primary amine in the antibiotic R-group that would be close to the Asn170 side chain in the acyl-intermediate. In addition, the x-ray structure of the N170G enzyme indicated that the position of an active site water important for deacylation is altered compared with the wild-type enzyme. Taken together, the results suggest the N170G TEM-1 enzyme hydrolyzes ampicillin efficiently because of substrate-assisted catalysis where the primary amine of the ampicillin R-group positions the hydrolytic water and allows for efficient deacylation.


Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2010

Identification and characterization of β-lactamase inhibitor protein-II (BLIP-II) interactions with β-lactamases using phage display

Nicholas G. Brown; Timothy Palzkill

Protein-protein interactions are critical to cellular processes yet the ability to predict and rationally design interactions is limited because of incomplete knowledge of the principles governing these interactions. The beta-lactamase inhibitory protein (BLIP)/beta-lactamase interaction has become a model system to investigate protein-protein interactions and has been the focus of several structural, thermodynamic and binding specificity studies. BLIP-II also inhibits beta-lactamase but has no sequence homology with BLIP. The structure of BLIP-II in complex with TEM-1 beta-lactamase revealed that BLIP-II has a completely different structure than BLIP but it interacts with the same protruding loop-helix region of TEM-1 as does BLIP. The significance of the individual interacting residues in molecular recognition by BLIP-II is currently unknown. Therefore, a phage display vector was developed with the purpose of expressing BLIP-II onto the surface of the M13 filamentous bacteriophage. The BLIP-II displayed phage bound to TEM-1 with picomolar affinity indicating that BLIP-II is properly folded while on the surface of the phage. The phage system, as well as enzyme inhibition assays with purified proteins, revealed that BLIP-II is a more potent inhibitor than BLIP for several class A beta-lactamases with K(i) values in the low picomolar range.

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Timothy Palzkill

Baylor College of Medicine

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Wanzhi Huang

Baylor College of Medicine

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Dar-Chone Chow

Baylor College of Medicine

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Lori B. Horton

Baylor College of Medicine

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Peter H. Zwart

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Banumathi Sankaran

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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