Paola Pietroni
University of Oregon
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Featured researches published by Paola Pietroni.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Robert A. Spooner; P. Hart; Jonathan P. Cook; Paola Pietroni; Christian Rogon; Jörg Höhfeld; Lynne M. Roberts; J. Michael Lord
The plant cytotoxin ricin enters target mammalian cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis and undergoes retrograde transport to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Here, its catalytic A chain (RTA) is reductively separated from the cell-binding B chain, and free RTA enters the cytosol where it inactivates ribosomes. Cytosolic entry requires unfolding of RTA and dislocation across the ER membrane such that it arrives in the cytosol in a vulnerable, nonnative conformation. Clearly, for such a dislocated toxin to become active, it must avoid degradation and fold to a catalytic conformation. Here, we show that, in vitro, Hsc70 prevents aggregation of heat-treated RTA, and that RTA catalytic activity is recovered after chaperone treatment. A combination of pharmacological inhibition and cochaperone expression reveals that, in vivo, cytosolic RTA is scrutinized sequentially by the Hsc70 and Hsp90 cytosolic chaperone machineries, and that its eventual fate is determined by the balance of activities of cochaperones that regulate Hsc70 and Hsp90 functions. Cytotoxic activity follows Hsc70-mediated escape of RTA from an otherwise destructive pathway facilitated by Hsp90. We demonstrate a role for cytosolic chaperones, proteins typically associated with folding nascent proteins, assembling multimolecular protein complexes and degrading cytosolic and stalled, cotranslocational clients, in a toxin triage, in which both toxin folding and degradation are initiated from chaperone-bound states.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Paola Pietroni; Mark C. Young; Gary J. Latham; Peter H. von Hippel
A multisubunit ring-shaped protein complex is used to tether the polymerase to the DNA at the primer-template junction in most DNA replication systems. This “sliding clamp” interacts with the polymerase, completely encircles the DNA duplex, and is assembled onto the DNA by a specific clamp loading complex in an ATP-driven process. Site-specific mutagenesis has been used to introduce single cysteine residues as reactive sites for adduct formation within each of the three subunits of the bacteriophage T4-coded sliding clamp complex (gp45). Two such mutants, gp45S19C and gp45K81C, are reacted with the cysteine-specific photoactivable cross-linker TFPAM-3 and used to track the changes in the relative positioning of the gp45 subunits with one another and with the other components of the clamp loading complex (gp44/62) in the various stages of the loading process. Cross-linking interactions performed in the presence of nucleotide cofactors show that ATP binding and hydrolysis, interaction with primer-template DNA, and release of ADP all result in significant conformational changes within the clamp loading cycle. A structural model is presented to account for the observed rearrangements of intersubunit contacts within the complex during the loading process.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Gary J. Latham; Daniel J. Bacheller; Paola Pietroni; Peter H. von Hippel
The phage T4 gp45 sliding clamp is a ring-shaped replication accessory protein that is mounted onto DNA in an ATP-dependent manner by the gp44/62 clamp loader. In the preceding paper (Pietroni, P., Young, M. C., Latham, G. J., and von Hippel, P. H. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 31666–31676), two gp45 mutants were exploited to probe interactions of the sliding clamp ring with the gp44/62 loading machinery at various steps during the clamp loading process. In this report, these studies are extended to examine the polarity of the binding interaction between gp45 and gp44/62. Three different gp45 mutants containing a single cysteine in three topographically distinct positions were used. Several different reporter groups, including extrinsic fluorophores, a photo-cross-linker, and a biotin linker for use in a novel “streptavidin interference assay,” were covalently attached to these cysteine residues. Since gp45 is a trimeric protein, these three different mutations allowed us to probe up to nine distinct local environments along the surface of the sliding clamp in the presence and absence of other replication proteins. The results show that the gp44/62-ATP clamp loader complex binds exclusively to the C-terminal (S19C) face of the gp45 ring.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Gary J. Latham; Daniel J. Bacheller; Paola Pietroni; Peter H. von Hippel
In the preceding paper (Latham, G. J., Bacheller, D. J., Pietroni, P., and von Hippel, P. H. (1997)J. Biol. Chem. 272, 31677–31684), we demonstrated that the T4 gp44/62-ATP clamp loader binds to the C-terminal face of the gp45 sliding clamp. Here we extend these results by exploring the structural relationship between the gp43 polymerase and the gp45 sliding clamp. Using fluorescence intensity and polarization techniques, as well as photo-cross-linking methods, we present evidence that gp43, like gp44/62, binds to the C-terminal face of gp45. In addition, we show that g43 binds to the gp45 clamp in two distinct interaction modes, depending on the presence or absence of template-primer DNA. When template-primer DNA is present, gp43 binds tightly to gp45 to form the highly processive DNA polymerase holoenzyme. Gp43 also binds to gp45 in the absence of template-primer DNA, but this interaction is more than 100 times weaker than gp43-gp45 binding on DNA. Specific interactions between gp43 and the C-terminal face of gp45 are maintained in both modes of binding. These results underscore the pivotal role of template-primer DNA in modulating the strength of protein-protein interactions during DNA synthesis and provide additional insight into the structural requirements of the replication process.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Paola Pietroni; Peter H. von Hippel
Most DNA replication systems include a sliding clamp that encircles the genomic DNA and links the polymerase to the template to control polymerase processivity. A loading complex is required to open the clamp and place it onto the DNA. In phage T4 this complex consists of a trimeric clamp of gp45 subunits and a pentameric loader assembly of four gp44 and one gp62 subunit(s), with clamp loading driven by ATP binding. We measure this binding as a function of input ligand concentration and show that four ATPs bind to the gp44/62 complex with equal affinity. In contrast, the ATPase rate profile of the clamp-clamp loader complex exhibits a marked peak at an input ATP concentration close to the overall Kd (∼30 μm), with further increases in bound ATP decreasing the ATPase rate to a much lower level. Thus the progressive binding of the four ATPs triggers a conformational change in the complex that markedly inhibits ATPase activity. This inhibition is related to ring opening by using a clamp that is covalently cross-linked across its subunit interfaces and thus rendered incapable of opening. Binding of this clamp abolishes substrate inhibition of the ATPase but leaves ATP binding unchanged. We show that four ATP ligands must bind to the T4 clamp loader before the loader can be fully “activated” and the clamp opened, and that ATP hydrolysis is required only for release of the loader complex after clamp loading onto the replication fork has been completed.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Mina Olga Aletrari; Craig McKibbin; Helen Williams; Vidya Pawar; Paola Pietroni; J. Michael Lord; Sabine L. Flitsch; Roger C. Whitehead; Eileithyia Swanton; Stephen High; Robert A. Spooner
Background The small molecule Eeyarestatin I (ESI) inhibits the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-cytosol dislocation and subsequent degradation of ERAD (ER associated protein degradation) substrates. Toxins such as ricin and Shiga/Shiga-like toxins (SLTx) are endocytosed and trafficked to the ER. Their catalytic subunits are thought to utilise ERAD-like mechanisms to dislocate from the ER into the cytosol, where a proportion uncouples from the ERAD process, recovers a catalytic conformation and destroys their cellular targets. We therefore investigated ESI as a potential inhibitor of toxin dislocation. Methodology and Principal Findings Using cytotoxicity measurements, we found no role for ESI as an inhibitor of toxin dislocation from the ER, but instead found that for SLTx, ESI treatment of cells was protective by reducing the rate of toxin delivery to the ER. Microscopy of the trafficking of labelled SLTx and its B chain (lacking the toxic A chain) showed a delay in its accumulation at a peri-nuclear location, confirmed to be the Golgi by examination of SLTx B chain metabolically labelled in the trans-Golgi cisternae. The drug also reduced the rate of endosomal trafficking of diphtheria toxin, which enters the cytosol from acidified endosomes, and delayed the Golgi-specific glycan modifications and eventual plasma membrane appearance of tsO45 VSV-G protein, a classical marker for anterograde trafficking. Conclusions and Significance ESI acts on one or more components that function during vesicular transport, whilst at least one retrograde trafficking pathway, that of ricin, remains unperturbed.
Biochemical Journal | 2013
Paola Pietroni; Nishi Vasisht; Jonathan P. Cook; David M. Roberts; J. Michael Lord; Rasmus Hartmann-Petersen; Lynne M. Roberts; Robert A. Spooner
The plant cytotoxin ricin enters mammalian cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis, undergoing retrograde transport to the ER (endoplasmic reticulum) where its catalytic A chain (RTA) is reductively separated from the holotoxin to enter the cytosol and inactivate ribosomes. The currently accepted model is that the bulk of ER-dislocated RTA is degraded by proteasomes. We show in the present study that the proteasome has a more complex role in ricin intoxication than previously recognized, that the previously reported increase in sensitivity of mammalian cells to ricin in the presence of proteasome inhibitors simply reflects toxicity of the inhibitors themselves, and that RTA is a very poor substrate for proteasomal degradation. Denatured RTA and casein compete for a binding site on the regulatory particle of the 26S proteasome, but their fates differ. Casein is degraded, but the mammalian 26S proteasome AAA (ATPase associated with various cellular activities)-ATPase subunit RPT5 acts as a chaperone that prevents aggregation of denatured RTA and stimulates recovery of catalytic RTA activity in vitro. Furthermore, in vivo, the ATPase activity of Rpt5p is required for maximal toxicity of RTA dislocated from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae ER. The results of the present study implicate RPT5/Rpt5p in the triage of substrates in which either activation (folding) or inactivation (degradation) pathways may be initiated.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2017
Xiang Meng; Helena Firczuk; Paola Pietroni; Richard Westbrook; Estelle Dacheux; Pedro Mendes; John E. G. McCarthy
Gene expression noise influences organism evolution and fitness. The mechanisms determining the relationship between stochasticity and the functional role of translation machinery components are critical to viability. eIF4G is an essential translation factor that exerts strong control over protein synthesis. We observe an asymmetric, approximately bell-shaped, relationship between the average intracellular abundance of eIF4G and rates of cell population growth and global mRNA translation, with peak rates occurring at normal physiological abundance. This relationship fits a computational model in which eIF4G is at the core of a multi-component–complex assembly pathway. This model also correctly predicts a plateau-like response of translation to super-physiological increases in abundance of the other cap-complex factors, eIF4E and eIF4A. Engineered changes in eIF4G abundance amplify noise, demonstrating that minimum stochasticity coincides with physiological abundance of this factor. Noise is not increased when eIF4E is overproduced. Plasmid-mediated synthesis of eIF4G imposes increased global gene expression stochasticity and reduced viability because the intrinsic noise for this factor influences total cellular gene noise. The naturally evolved eIF4G gene expression noise minimum maps within the optimal activity zone dictated by eIF4Gs mechanistic role. Rate control and noise are therefore interdependent and have co-evolved to share an optimal physiological abundance point.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001
Paola Pietroni; Mark C. Young; Gary J. Latham; Peter H. von Hippel
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1996
Gary J. Latham; Paola Pietroni; Feng Dong; Mark C. Young; Peter H. von Hippel