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Dive into the research topics where P. Jonathan G. Butler is active.

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Featured researches published by P. Jonathan G. Butler.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Mechanism of endophilin N-BAR domain-mediated membrane curvature.

Jennifer L. Gallop; Christine C. Jao; Helen M. Kent; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Philip R. Evans; Ralf Langen; Harvey T. McMahon

Endophilin‐A1 is a BAR domain‐containing protein enriched at synapses and is implicated in synaptic vesicle endocytosis. It binds to dynamin and synaptojanin via a C‐terminal SH3 domain. We examine the mechanism by which the BAR domain and an N‐terminal amphipathic helix, which folds upon membrane binding, work as a functional unit (the N‐BAR domain) to promote dimerisation and membrane curvature generation. By electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, we show that this amphipathic helix is peripherally bound in the plane of the membrane, with the midpoint of insertion aligned with the phosphate level of headgroups. This places the helix in an optimal position to effect membrane curvature generation. We solved the crystal structure of rat endophilin‐A1 BAR domain and examined a distinctive insert protruding from the membrane interaction face. This insert is predicted to form an additional amphipathic helix and is important for curvature generation. Its presence defines an endophilin/nadrin subclass of BAR domains. We propose that N‐BAR domains function as low‐affinity dimers regulating binding partner recruitment to areas of high membrane curvature.


Molecular Cell | 2001

The Crystal Structure of the Px Domain from P40Phox Bound to Phosphatidylinositol 3-Phosphate

Jerónimo Bravo; Dimitrios Karathanassis; Christine M Pacold; Michael E. Pacold; Chris D. Ellson; Karen E. Anderson; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Isabelle Lavenir; Olga Perisic; Phillip T. Hawkins; Len Stephens; Roger Williams

More than 50 human proteins with a wide range of functions have a 120 residue phosphoinositide binding module known as the PX domain. The 1.7 A X-ray crystal structure of the PX domain from the p40(phox) subunit of NADPH oxidase bound to PtdIns(3)P shows that the PX domain embraces the 3-phosphate on one side of a water-filled, positively charged pocket and reveals how 3-phosphoinositide specificity is achieved. A chronic granulomatous disease (CGD)-associated mutation in the p47(phox) PX domain that abrogates PtdIns(3)P binding maps to a conserved Arg that does not directly interact with the phosphoinositide but instead appears to stabilize a critical lipid binding loop. The SH3 domain present in the full-length protein does not affect soluble PtdIns(3)P binding to the p40(phox) PX domain.


Nature | 2007

Architectural and mechanistic insights into an EHD ATPase involved in membrane remodelling

Oliver Daumke; Richard Lundmark; Yvonne Vallis; Sascha Martens; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Harvey T. McMahon

The ability to actively remodel membranes in response to nucleotide hydrolysis has largely been attributed to GTPases of the dynamin superfamily, and these have been extensively studied. Eps15 homology (EH)-domain-containing proteins (EHDs/RME-1/pincher) comprise a less-well-characterized class of highly conserved eukaryotic ATPases implicated in clathrin-independent endocytosis, and recycling from endosomes. Here we show that EHDs share many common features with the dynamin superfamily, such as a low affinity for nucleotides, the ability to tubulate liposomes in vitro, oligomerization around lipid tubules in ring-like structures and stimulated nucleotide hydrolysis in response to lipid binding. We present the structure of EHD2, bound to a non-hydrolysable ATP analogue, and provide evidence consistent with a role for EHDs in nucleotide-dependent membrane remodelling in vivo. The nucleotide-binding domain is involved in dimerization, which creates a highly curved membrane-binding region in the dimer. Oligomerization of dimers occurs on another interface of the nucleotide-binding domain, and this allows us to model the EHD oligomer. We discuss the functional implications of the EHD2 structure for understanding membrane deformation.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Bacterial chromosome segregation: structure and DNA binding of the Soj dimer — a conserved biological switch

Thomas A. Leonard; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Jan Löwe

Soj and Spo0J of the Gram‐negative hyperthermophile Thermus thermophilus belong to the conserved ParAB family of bacterial proteins implicated in plasmid and chromosome partitioning. Spo0J binds to DNA near the replication origin and localises at the poles following initiation of replication. Soj oscillates in the nucleoid region in an ATP‐ and Spo0J‐dependent fashion. Here, we show that Soj undergoes ATP‐dependent dimerisation in solution and forms nucleoprotein filaments with DNA. Crystal structures of Soj in three nucleotide states demonstrate that the empty and ADP‐bound states are monomeric, while a hydrolysis‐deficient mutant, D44A, is capable of forming a nucleotide ‘sandwich’ dimer. Soj ATPase activity is stimulated by Spo0J or the N‐terminal 20 amino‐acid peptide of Spo0J. Our analysis shows that dimerisation and activation involving a peptide containing a Lys/Arg is conserved for Soj, ParA and MinD and their modulators Spo0J, ParB and MinE, respectively. By homology to the nitrogenase iron protein and the GTPases Ffh/FtsY, we suggest that Soj dimerisation and regulation represent a conserved biological switch.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Modulation of the Oligomerization State of the Bovine F1-ATPase Inhibitor Protein, IF1, by pH

Elena Cabezón; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Michael J. Runswick; John E. Walker

Bovine IF1, a basic protein of 84 amino acids, is involved in the regulation of the catalytic activity of the F1 domain of ATP synthase. At pH 6.5, but not at basic pH values, it inhibits the ATP hydrolase activity of the enzyme. The oligomeric state of bovine IF1 has been investigated at various pH values by sedimentation equilibrium analytical ultracentrifugation and by covalent cross-linking. Both techniques confirm that the protein forms a tetramer at pH 8, and below pH 6.5, the protein is predominantly dimeric. By covalent cross-linking, it has been found that at pH 8.0 the fragment of IF1 consisting of residues 44–84 forms a dimer, whereas the fragment from residues 32–84 is tetrameric. Therefore, some or all of the residues between positions 32 and 43 are necessary for tetramer formation and are involved in the pH-sensitive interconversion between dimer and tetramer. One important residue in the interconversion is histidine 49. Mutation of this residue to lysine abolishes the pH-dependent activation-inactivation, and the mutant protein is active and dimeric at all pH values investigated. It is likely from NMR studies that the inhibitor protein dimerizes by forming an antiparallel α-helical coiled-coil over its C-terminal region and that at high pH values, where the protein is tetrameric, the inhibitory regions are masked. The mutation of histidine 49 to lysine is predicted to abolish coiled-coil formation over residues 32–43 preventing interaction between two dimers, forcing the equilibrium toward the dimeric state, thereby freeing the N-terminal inhibitory regions and allowing them to interact with F1.


Cell | 2007

Structure of the Human Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Met in Complex with the Listeria Invasion Protein InlB

Hartmut H. Niemann; Volker Jäger; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Joop van den Heuvel; Sabine Schmidt; Davide Ferraris; Ermanno Gherardi; Dirk W. Heinz

The tyrosine kinase Met, the product of the c-met proto-oncogene and the receptor for hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF), mediates signals critical for cell survival and migration. The human pathogen Listeria monocytogenes exploits Met signaling for invasion of host cells via its surface protein InlB. We present the crystal structure of the complex between a large fragment of the human Met ectodomain and the Met-binding domain of InlB. The concave face of the InlB leucine-rich repeat region interacts tightly with the first immunoglobulin-like domain of the Met stalk, a domain which does not bind HGF/SF. A second contact between InlB and the Met Sema domain locks the otherwise flexible receptor in a rigid, signaling competent conformation. Full Met activation requires the additional C-terminal domains of InlB which induce heparin-mediated receptor clustering and potent signaling. Thus, although it elicits a similar cellular response, InlB is not a structural mimic of HGF/SF.


Nature | 2005

Endophilin and CtBP/BARS are not acyl transferases in endocytosis or Golgi fission

Jennifer L. Gallop; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Harvey T. McMahon

Endophilins have been proposed to have an enzymatic activity (a lysophosphatidic acid acyl transferase or LPAAT activity) that can make phosphatidic acid in membranes. This activity is thought to change the bilayer asymmetry in such a way that negative membrane curvature at the neck of a budding vesicle will be stabilized. An LPAAT activity has also been proposed for CtBP/BARS (carboxy-terminal binding protein/brefeldin A-ribosylated substrate), a transcription co-repressor that is implicated in dynamin-independent endocytosis and fission of the Golgi in mitosis. Here we show that the LPAAT activity associated with endophilin is a contaminant of the purification procedure and can be also found associated with the pleckstrin homology domain of dynamin. Likewise, the LPAAT activity associated with CtBP/BARS is also a co-purification artefact. The proposed locus of activity in endophilins includes the BAR domain, which has no catalytic site but instead senses positive membrane curvature. These data will prompt a re-evaluation of the molecular details of membrane budding.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Structural Analysis of the Chromosome Segregation Protein Spo0J from Thermus Thermophilus

Thomas A. Leonard; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Jan Löwe

Prokaryotic chromosomes and plasmids encode partitioning systems that are required for DNA segregation at cell division. The plasmid partitioning loci encode two proteins, ParA and ParB, and a cis‐acting centromere‐like site denoted parS. The chromosomally encoded homologues of ParA and ParB, Soj and Spo0J, play an active role in chromosome segregation during bacterial cell division and sporulation. Spo0J is a DNA‐binding protein that binds to parS sites in vivo. We have solved the X‐ray crystal structure of a C‐terminally truncated Spo0J (amino acids 1–222) from Thermus thermophilus to 2.3 Å resolution by multiwavelength anomalous dispersion. It is a DNA‐binding protein with structural similarity to the helix–turn–helix (HTH) motif of the lambda repressor DNA‐binding domain. The crystal structure is an antiparallel dimer with the recognition α‐helices of the HTH motifs of each monomer separated by a distance of 34 Å corresponding to the length of the helical repeat of B‐DNA. Sedimentation velocity and equilibrium ultracentrifugation studies show that full‐length Spo0J exists in a monomer–dimer equilibrium in solution and that Spo0J1–222 is exclusively monomeric. Sedimentation of the C‐terminal domain of Spo0J shows it to be exclusively dimeric, confirming that the C‐terminus is the primary dimerization domain. We hypothesize that the C‐terminus mediates dimerization of Spo0J, thereby effectively increasing the local concentration of the N‐termini, which most probably dimerize, as shown by our structure, upon binding to a cognate parS site.


Methods | 2008

Determination of the molecular mass and dimensions of membrane proteins by size exclusion chromatography

Edmund R. S. Kunji; Marilyn Harding; P. Jonathan G. Butler; Pearl Akamine

Size exclusion chromatography is an established technique for the determination of hydrodynamic volumes of proteins or protein complexes. When applied to membrane proteins, the contribution of the detergent micelle, which is required to keep the protein soluble in the aqueous phase, needs to be determined to obtain accurate measurements for the protein. In a detergent series, in which the detergents differ only by the length of the alkyl chain, the contribution of the detergent micelle to the hydrodynamic volume is variable, whereas the contribution of the protein is constant. By using this approach, several parameters of membrane proteins can be estimated by extrapolation, such as the radius at the midpoint of the membrane, the average radius, the Stokes radius, and the excluded volume. The molecular mass of the protein can be determined by two independent measurements that arise from the behaviour of the free detergent micelle and protein-detergent micelle during size exclusion chromatography and the determination of the detergent-protein ratio. Determining the dimensions of protein-detergent micelles may facilitate membrane protein purification and crystallization by defining the accessibility of the protein surface.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1988

The tobacco mosaic virus assembly origin RNA: Functional characteristics defined by directed mutagenesis

D.Richard Turner; Lorie E. Joyce; P. Jonathan G. Butler

The in vitro reassembly of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) begins with the specific recognition by the viral coat protein disk aggregate of an internal TMV RNA sequence, known as the assembly origin (Oa). This RNA sequence contains a putative stem-loop structure (loop 1), believed to be the target for disk binding in assembly initiation, which has the characteristic sequence AAGAAGUCG exposed as a single strand at its apex. We show that a 75-base RNA sequence encompassing loop 1 is sufficient to direct the encapsidation by TMV coat protein disks of a heterologous RNA fragment. This RNA sequence and structure, which is sufficient to elicit TMV assembly in vitro, was explored by site-directed mutagenesis. Structure analysis of the RNA identified mutations that appear to effect assembly via a perturbation in RNA structure, rather than by a direct effect on coat protein binding. The binding of the loop 1 apex RNA sequence to coat protein disks was shown to be due primarily to its regularly repeated G residues. Sequences such as (UUG)3 and (GUG)3 are equally effective at initiating assembly, indicating that the other bases are less functionally constrained. However, substitution of the sequences (CCG)3, (CUG)3 or (UCG)3 reduced the assembly initiation rate, indicating that C residues are unfavourable for assembly. Two additional RNA sequences within the 75-base Oa sequence, both of the form (NNG)3, may play subsidiary roles in disk binding. RNA structure plays an important part in permitting selective protein-RNA recognition, since altering the RNA folding close to the apex of the loop 1 stem reduces the rate of disk binding, as does shortening the stem itself. Whereas the RNA sequence making up the hairpin does not in general affect the specificity of the protein-RNA interaction, it is required to present the apex signal sequence in a special conformation. Mechanisms for this are discussed.

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Harvey T. McMahon

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Philip R. Evans

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Helen M. Kent

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Jennifer L. Gallop

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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John T. Finch

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Mark Bycroft

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Roger Williams

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Mark R. Proctor

Boston Children's Hospital

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