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Dive into the research topics where Ofer Yifrach is active.

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Featured researches published by Ofer Yifrach.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Identification of the Zn2+ Binding Site and Mode of Operation of a Mammalian Zn2+ Transporter

Ehud Ohana; Eitan Hoch; Chen Keasar; Taiho Kambe; Ofer Yifrach; Michal Hershfinkel; Israel Sekler

Vesicular zinc transporters (ZnTs) play a critical role in regulating Zn2+ homeostasis in various cellular compartments and are linked to major diseases ranging from Alzheimer disease to diabetes. Despite their importance, the intracellular localization of ZnTs poses a major challenge for establishing the mechanisms by which they function and the identity of their ion binding sites. Here, we combine fluorescence-based functional analysis and structural modeling aimed at elucidating these functional aspects. Expression of ZnT5 was followed by both accelerated removal of Zn2+ from the cytoplasm and its increased vesicular sequestration. Further, activity of this zinc transport was coupled to alkalinization of the trans-Golgi network. Finally, structural modeling of ZnT5, based on the x-ray structure of the bacterial metal transporter YiiP, identified four residues that can potentially form the zinc binding site on ZnT5. Consistent with this model, replacement of these residues, Asp599 and His451, with alanine was sufficient to block Zn2+ transport. These findings indicate, for the first time, that Zn2+ transport mediated by a mammalian ZnT is catalyzed by H+/Zn2+ exchange and identify the zinc binding site of ZnT proteins essential for zinc transport.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Principles underlying energetic coupling along an allosteric communication trajectory of a voltage-activated K+ channel

Evgeniya Sadovsky; Ofer Yifrach

The information flow between distal elements of a protein may rely on allosteric communication trajectories lying along the proteins tertiary or quaternary structure. To unravel the underlying features of energy parsing along allosteric pathways in voltage-gated K+ channels, high-order thermodynamic coupling analysis was performed. We report that such allosteric trajectories are functionally conserved and delineated by well defined boundaries. Moreover, allosteric trajectories assume a hierarchical organization whereby increasingly stronger layers of cooperative residue interactions act to ensure efficient and cooperative long-range coupling between distal channel regions. Such long-range communication is brought about by a coupling of local and global conformational changes, suggesting that the allosteric trajectory also corresponds to a pathway of physical deformation. Supported by theoretical analyses and analogy to studies analyzing the contribution of long-range residue coupling to protein stability, we propose that such experimentally derived trajectory features are a general property of allosterically regulated proteins.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

Inverse coupling in leak and voltage-activated K + channel gates underlies distinct roles in electrical signaling

Yuval Ben-Abu; Yufeng Zhou; Noam Zilberberg; Ofer Yifrach

Voltage-activated (Kv) and leak (K2P) K+ channels have key, yet distinct, roles in electrical signaling in the nervous system. Here we examine how differences in the operation of the activation and slow inactivation pore gates of Kv and K2P channels underlie their unique roles in electrical signaling. We report that (i) leak K+ channels possess a lower activation gate, (ii) the activation gate is an important determinant controlling the conformational stability of the K+ channel pore, (iii) the lower activation and upper slow inactivation gates of leak channels cross-talk and (iv) unlike Kv channels, where the two gates are negatively coupled, these two gates are positively coupled in K2P channels. Our results demonstrate how basic thermodynamic properties of the K+ channel pore, particularly conformational stability and coupling between gates, underlie the specialized roles of Kv and K2P channel families in electrical signaling.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Intrinsic disorder in the C-terminal domain of the Shaker voltage-activated K+ channel modulates its interaction with scaffold proteins

Elhanan Magidovich; Irit Orr; Deborah Fass; Uri Abdu; Ofer Yifrach

The interaction of membrane-embedded voltage-activated potassium channels (Kv) with intracellular scaffold proteins, such as the postsynaptic density 95 (PSD-95) protein, is mediated by the channel C-terminal segment. This interaction underlies Kv channel clustering at unique membrane sites and is important for the proper assembly and functioning of the synapse. In the current study, we address the molecular mechanism underlying Kv/PSD-95 interaction. We provide experimental evidence, based on hydrodynamic and spectroscopic analyses, indicating that the isolated C-terminal segment of the archetypical Shaker Kv channel (ShB-C) is a random coil, suggesting that ShB-C belongs to the recently defined class of intrinsically disordered proteins. We show that isolated ShB-C is still able to bind its scaffold protein partner and support protein clustering in vivo, indicating that unfoldedness is compatible with ShB-C activity. Pulldown experiments involving C-terminal chains differing in flexibility or length further demonstrate that intrinsic disorder in the C-terminal segment of the Shaker channel modulates its interaction with the PSD-95 protein. Our results thus suggest that the C-terminal domain of the Shaker Kv channel behaves as an entropic chain and support a “fishing rod” molecular mechanism for Kv channel binding to scaffold proteins. The importance of intrinsically disordered protein segments to the complex processes of synapse assembly, maintenance, and function is discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Direct analysis of cooperativity in multisubunit allosteric proteins

Nitzan Zandany; Maya Ovadia; Irit Orr; Ofer Yifrach

Allosteric regulation of protein function is a fundamental phenomenon of major importance in many cellular processes. Such regulation is often achieved by ligand-induced conformational changes in multimeric proteins that may give rise to cooperativity in protein function. At the heart of allosteric mechanisms offered to account for such phenomenon, involving either concerted or sequential conformational transitions, lie changes in intersubunit interactions along the ligation pathway of the protein. However, structure–function analysis of such homooligomeric proteins by means of mutagenesis, although it provides valuable indirect information regarding (allosteric) mechanisms of action, it does not define the contribution of individual subunits nor interactions thereof to cooperativity in protein function, because any point mutation introduced into homooligomeric proteins will be present in all subunits. Here, we present a general strategy for the direct analysis of cooperativity in multisubunit proteins that combines measurement of the effects on protein function of all possible combinations of mutated subunits with analysis of the hierarchy of intersubunit interactions, assessed by using high-order double-mutant cycle-coupling analysis. We show that the pattern of high-order intersubunit coupling can serve as a discriminative criterion for defining concerted versus sequential conformational transitions underlying protein function. This strategy was applied to the particular case of the voltage-activated potassium channel protein (Kv) to provide compelling evidence for a concerted all-or-none activation gate opening of the Kv channel pore domain. An direct and detailed analysis of the contribution of high-order intersubunit interactions to cooperativity in the function of an allosteric protein has not previously been presented.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Chaperone Activity of a Chimeric GroEL Protein That Can Exist in a Single or Double Ring Form

Annette Erbse; Ofer Yifrach; Susan Jones; Peter A. Lund

The molecular chaperone GroEL is a protein complex consisting of two rings each of seven identical subunits. It is thought to act by providing a cavity in which a protein substrate can fold into a form that has no propensity to aggregate. Substrate proteins are sequestered in the cavity while they fold, and prevented from diffusion out of the cavity by the action of the GroES complex, that caps the open end of the cavity. A key step in the mechanism of action of GroEL is the transmission of a conformational change between the two rings, induced by the binding of nucleotides to the GroEL ring opposite to the one containing the polypeptide substrate. This conformational change then leads to the discharge of GroES from GroEL, enabling polypeptide release. Single ring forms of GroEL are thus predicted to be unable to chaperone the folding of GroES-dependent substrates efficiently, since they are unable to discharge the bound GroES and unable to release folded protein. We describe here a detailed functional analysis of a chimeric GroEL protein, which we show to exist in solution in equilibrium between single and double ring forms. We demonstrate that whereas the double ring form of the GroEL chimera functions effectively in refolding of a GroES-dependent substrate, the single ring form does not. The single ring form of the chimera, however, is able to chaperone the folding of a substrate that does not require GroES for its efficient folding. We further demonstrate that the double ring structure of GroEL is likely to be required for its activity in vivo.


Biochemistry | 2008

Allosteric regulation of Bacillus subtilis threonine deaminase, a biosynthetic threonine deaminase with a single regulatory domain.

Anat Shulman; Elena Zalyapin; Maria Vyazmensky; Ofer Yifrach; Ze’ev Barak; David M. Chipman

The enzyme threonine deaminase (TD) is a key regulatory enzyme in the pathway for the biosynthesis of isoleucine. TD is inhibited by its end product, isoleucine, and this effect is countered by valine, the product of a competing biosynthetic pathway. Sequence and structure analyses have revealed that the protomers of many TDs have C-terminal regulatory domains, composed of two ACT-like subdomains, which bind isoleucine and valine, while others have regulatory domains of approximately half the length, composed of only a single ACT-like domain. The regulatory responses of TDs from both long and short sequence varieties appear to have many similarities, but there are significant differences. We describe here the allosteric properties of Bacillus subtilis TD ( bsTD), which belongs to the short variety of TD sequences. We also examine the effects of several mutations in the regulatory domain on the kinetics of the enzyme and its response to effectors. The behavior of bsTD can be analyzed and rationalized using a modified Monod-Wyman-Changeux model. This analysis suggests that isoleucine is a negative effector, and valine is a very weak positive effector, but that at high concentrations valine inhibits activity by competing with threonine for binding to the active site. The behavior of bsTD is contrasted with the allosteric behavior reported for TDs from Escherichia coli and Arabidopsis thaliana, TDs with two subdomains. We suggest a possible evolutionary pathway to the more complex regulatory effects of valine on the activity of TDs of the long sequence variety, e.g., E. coli TD.


Rendiconti Lincei-scienze Fisiche E Naturali | 2006

Allostery in chaperonins

Amnon Horovitz; Yael Fridmann; Galit Kafri; Ofer Yifrach

Chaperonins mediate protein folding in an ATP-dependent manner. ATP binding and hydrolysis by chaperonins are subject to both homotropic and heterotropic allosteric regulation. In the case of GroEL and CCT, homotropic regulation by ATP is manifested in nested cooperativity, which involves positive intra-ring cooperativity and negative inter-ring cooperativity in ATP binding. Both types of cooperativity are modulated by various heterotropic allosteric effectors, which include nonfolded proteins, ADP, Mg2+, monovalent ions such as K+, and cochaperonins in the case of type I chaperonins such as GroEL. Here, the allosteric properties of chaperonins are reviewed and new results of ours are presented with regard to allosteric effects of ADP. The role of allostery in the reaction cycle and folding function of chaperonins is discussed.


Methods in Enzymology | 2009

Examining cooperative gating phenomena in voltage-dependent potassium channels: taking the energetic approach.

Ofer Yifrach; Nitzan Zandany; Tzilhav Shem-Ad

Allosteric regulation of protein function is often achieved by changes in protein conformation induced by changes in chemical or electrical potential. In multisubunit proteins, such conformational changes may give rise to cooperativity in ligand binding. Conformational changes between open and closed states are central to the function of voltage-activated potassium (Kv) channel proteins, homotetrameric pore-forming membrane proteins involved in generating and shaping action potentials in excitable cells. Accessible to extremely high signal-to-noise ratio in functional measurements, combined with the availability of high-resolution structural data for different conformations of the protein, the Kv channel represents an excellent allosteric model system to further understand the aspects of synergism and cooperative effects in protein function. In this chapter, we demonstrate how the use of the simple law of mass action combined with thermodynamic mutant cycle energetic coupling analysis of Kv channel gating can be used to provide valuable information regarding (1) how cooperativity in Kv channel pore opening can be assessed; (2) how one can directly discriminate whether conformational transitions during Kv channel pore opening occur in a concerted or sequential manner; and (3) how mechanistically, the coupling between distant activation gate and selectivity filter functional elements of the prototypical Shaker Kv channel protein might be achieved. In addition to providing valuable insight into the function of this important protein, the conclusions reached at using high-order thermodynamic energetic coupling analysis applied to the Kv channel allosteric model system reveal much about the function of allosteric proteins, in general.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Probing the Transition State of the Allosteric Pathway of the Shaker Kv Channel Pore by Linear Free-Energy Relations

Reshef Azaria; Orr Irit; Yuval Ben-Abu; Ofer Yifrach

Long-range coupling between distant functional elements of proteins may rely on allosteric communication trajectories lying along the protein structure, as described in the case of the Shaker voltage-activated potassium (Kv) channel model allosteric system. Communication between the distant Kv channel activation and slow inactivation pore gates was suggested to be mediated by a network of local pairwise and higher-order interactions among the functionally unique residues that constitute the allosteric trajectory. The mechanism by which conformational changes propagate along the Kv channel allosteric trajectory to achieve pore opening, however, remains unclear. Such conformational changes may propagate in either a concerted or a sequential manner during the reaction coordinate of channel opening. Residue-level structural information on the transition state of channel gating is required to discriminate between these possibilities. Here, we combine patch-clamp electrophysiology recordings of Kv channel gating and analysis using linear free-energy relations, focusing on a select set of residues spanning the allosteric trajectory of the Kv channel pore. We show that all allosteric trajectory residues tested exhibit an open-like conformation in the transition state of channel opening, implying that coupling interactions occur along the trajectory break in a concerted manner upon moving from the closed to the open state. Energetic coupling between the Kv channel gates thus occurs in a concerted fashion in both the spatial and the temporal dimensions, strengthening the notion that such trajectories correspond to pathways of mechanical deformation along which conformational changes propagate.

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Amnon Horovitz

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Irit Orr

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Nitzan Zandany

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Elhanan Magidovich

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Tzilhav Shem-Ad

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Uri Abdu

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Limor Lewin

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Shir Marciano

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Yuval Ben-Abu

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Galit Kafri

Weizmann Institute of Science

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