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Dive into the research topics where Peter Chien is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Chien.


Nature | 2004

Conformational variations in an infectious protein determine prion strain differences.

Motomasa Tanaka; Peter Chien; Nariman Naber; Roger Cooke; Jonathan S. Weissman

A remarkable feature of prion biology is the strain phenomenon wherein prion particles apparently composed of the same protein lead to phenotypically distinct transmissible states. To reconcile the existence of strains with the ‘protein-only’ hypothesis of prion transmission, it has been proposed that a single protein can misfold into multiple distinct infectious forms, one for each different strain. Several studies have found correlations between strain phenotypes and conformations of prion particles; however, whether such differences cause or are simply a secondary manifestation of prion strains remains unclear, largely due to the difficulty of creating infectious material from pure protein. Here we report a high-efficiency protocol for infecting yeast with the [PSI+] prion using amyloids composed of a recombinant Sup35 fragment (Sup-NM). Using thermal stability and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, we demonstrate that Sup-NM amyloids formed at different temperatures adopt distinct, stably propagating conformations. Infection of yeast with these different amyloid conformations leads to different [PSI+] strains. These results establish that Sup-NM adopts an infectious conformation before entering the cell—fulfilling a key prediction of the prion hypothesis—and directly demonstrate that differences in the conformation of the infectious protein determine prion strain variation.


Cell | 2000

Molecular Basis of a Yeast Prion Species Barrier

Alex Santoso; Peter Chien; Lev Z Osherovich; Jonathan S. Weissman

The yeast [PSI+] factor is inherited by a prion mechanism involving self-propagating Sup35p aggregates. We find that Sup35p prion function is conserved among distantly related yeasts. As with mammalian prions, a species barrier inhibits prion induction between Sup35p from different yeast species. This barrier is faithfully reproduced in vitro where, remarkably, ongoing polymerization of one Sup35p species does not affect conversion of another. Chimeric analysis identifies a short domain sufficient to allow foreign Sup35p to cross this barrier. These observations argue that the species barrier results from specificity in the growing aggregate, mediated by a well-defined epitope on the amyloid surface and, together with our identification of a novel yeast prion domain, show that multiple prion-based heritable states can propagate independently within one cell.


Nature | 2001

Conformational diversity in a yeast prion dictates its seeding specificity

Peter Chien; Jonathan S. Weissman

A perplexing feature of prion-based inheritance is that prions composed of the same polypeptide can evoke different phenotypes (such as distribution of brain lesions), even when propagated in genetically identical hosts. The molecular basis of this strain diversity and the relationship between strains and barriers limiting transmission between species remain unclear. We have used the yeast prion phenomenon [PSI+]4 to investigate these issues and examine the role that conformational differences may have in prion strains. We have made a chimaeric fusion between the prion domains of two species (Saccharomyces cerevisae and Candida albicans) of Sup35, the protein responsible for [PSI+]. Here we report that this chimaera forms alternate prion strains in vivo when initiated by transient overexpression of different Sup35 species. Similarly, in vitro the purified chimaera, when seeded with different species of Sup35 fibres, establishes and propagates distinct amyloid conformations. These fibre conformations dictate amyloid seeding specificity: a chimaera seeded by S. cerevisiae fibres efficiently catalyses conversion of S. cerevisiae Sup35 but not of C. albicans Sup35, and vice versa. These and other considerations argue that heritable prion strains result from self-propagating conformational differences within the prion protein itself. Moreover, these conformational differences seem to act in concert with the primary structure to determine a prions propensity for transmission across a species barrier.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Regulatory cohesion of cell cycle and cell differentiation through interlinked phosphorylation and second messenger networks

Sören Abel; Peter Chien; Paul Wassmann; Tilman Schirmer; Michael T. Laub; Tania A. Baker; Urs Jenal

In Caulobacter crescentus, phosphorylation of key regulators is coordinated with the second messenger cyclic di-GMP to drive cell-cycle progression and differentiation. The diguanylate cyclase PleD directs pole morphogenesis, while the c-di-GMP effector PopA initiates degradation of the replication inhibitor CtrA by the AAA+ protease ClpXP to license S phase entry. Here, we establish a direct link between PleD and PopA reliant on the phosphodiesterase PdeA and the diguanylate cyclase DgcB. PdeA antagonizes DgcB activity until the G1-S transition, when PdeA is degraded by the ClpXP protease. The unopposed DgcB activity, together with PleD activation, upshifts c-di-GMP to drive PopA-dependent CtrA degradation and S phase entry. PdeA degradation requires CpdR, a response regulator that delivers PdeA to the ClpXP protease in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Thus, CpdR serves as a crucial link between phosphorylation pathways and c-di-GMP metabolism to mediate protein degradation events that irreversibly and coordinately drive bacterial cell-cycle progression and development.


Nature | 2003

Generation of prion transmission barriers by mutational control of amyloid conformations.

Peter Chien; Angela H. DePace; Sean R. Collins; Jonathan S. Weissman

Self-propagating β-sheet-rich protein aggregates are implicated in a wide range of protein-misfolding phenomena, including amyloid diseases and prion-based inheritance. Two properties have emerged as common features of amyloids. Amyloid formation is ubiquitous: many unrelated proteins form such aggregates and even a single polypeptide can misfold into multiple forms — a process that is thought to underlie prion strain variation. Despite this promiscuity, amyloid propagation can be highly sequence specific: amyloid fibres often fail to catalyse the aggregation of other amyloidogenic proteins. In prions, this specificity leads to barriers that limit transmission between species. Using the yeast prion [PSI+], we show in vitro that point mutations in Sup35p, the protein determinant of [PSI+], alter the range of ‘infectious’ conformations, which in turn changes amyloid seeding specificity. We generate a new transmission barrier in vivo by using these mutations to specifically disfavour subsets of prion strains. The ability of mutations to alter the conformations of amyloid states without preventing amyloid formation altogether provides a general mechanism for the generation of prion transmission barriers and may help to explain how mutations alter toxicity in conformational diseases.


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

Direct and adaptor-mediated substrate recognition by an essential AAA+ protease

Peter Chien; Barrett S. Perchuk; Michael T. Laub; Robert T. Sauer; Tania A. Baker

Regulated proteolysis is required to execute many cellular programs. In Caulobacter crescentus, timely degradation of the master regulator CtrA by ClpXP protease is essential for cell-cycle progression and requires the colocalization of CtrA and RcdA. Here, we establish a biochemical framework to understand regulated proteolysis in C. crescentus and show that RcdA is not an adaptor for CtrA degradation. CtrA is rapidly degraded without RcdA and is recognized with an affinity comparable with the best ClpXP substrates. In contrast, SspBα, the α-proteobacterial homolog of SspB, functions as an adaptor to enhance degradation of specific substrates. Cargo-free SspBα is also itself a substrate of ClpXP-mediated proteolysis. Thus, our analysis (i) reveals the consequences of both direct and adaptor-stimulated recognition in mediating substrate specificity in vitro, (ii) reveals a potential regulatory role of controlled adaptor stability, and (iii) suggests that cell-cycle regulation of CtrA stability depends on repression of its intrinsic degradation rather than adaptor-mediated enhancement.


Cell | 2013

Proteotoxic Stress Induces a Cell-Cycle Arrest by Stimulating Lon to Degrade the Replication Initiator DnaA

Kristina Jonas; Jing Liu; Peter Chien; Michael T. Laub

The decision to initiate DNA replication is a critical step in the cell cycle of all organisms. Cells often delay replication in the face of stressful conditions, but the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely defined. Here, we demonstrate in Caulobacter crescentus that proteotoxic stress induces a cell-cycle arrest by triggering the degradation of DnaA, the conserved replication initiator. A depletion of available Hsp70 chaperone, DnaK, either through genetic manipulation or heat shock, induces synthesis of the Lon protease, which can directly degrade DnaA. Unexpectedly, we find that unfolded proteins, which accumulate following a loss of DnaK, also allosterically activate Lon to degrade DnaA, thereby ensuring a cell-cycle arrest. Our work reveals a mechanism for regulating DNA replication under adverse growth conditions. Additionally, our data indicate that unfolded proteins can actively and directly alter substrate recognition by cellular proteases.


Journal of Virology | 2001

LFA-1 Expression on Target Cells Promotes Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection and Transmission

Catarina E. Hioe; Peter Chien; Chafen Lu; Timothy A. Springer; Xiao-Hong Wang; Juan C. Bandres; Michael Tuen

ABSTRACT While CD4 and the chemokine receptors are the principal receptors for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), other cellular proteins, such as LFA-1, are also involved in HIV infection. LFA-1 and its ligands, ICAM-1, ICAM-2, and ICAM-3, can be expressed on the cells infected by HIV, as well as on the HIV virions themselves. To examine the role of LFA-1 expressed on target cells in HIV infection, Jurkat-derived Jβ2.7 T-cell lines that express either wild-type LFA-1, a constitutively active mutant LFA-1, or no LFA-1 were used. The presence of wild-type LFA-1 enhanced the initial processes of HIV infection, as well as the subsequent replication and transmission from cell to cell. In contrast, the constitutively active LFA-1 mutant failed to promote virus replication and spread, even though this mutant could help HIV enter cells and establish the initial infection. This study clearly demonstrates the contribution of LFA-1 in the different stages of HIV infection. Moreover, not only is LFA-1 expression important for initial HIV-cell interaction, subsequent replication, and transmission, but its activity must also be properly regulated.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Identification of an N-Linked Glycosylation in the C4 Region of HIV-1 Envelope gp120 That Is Critical for Recognition of Neighboring CD4 T Cell Epitopes

Hualin Li; Peter Chien; Michael Tuen; Maria Luisa Visciano; Sandra Cohen; Steven Blais; Chong-Feng Xu; Hui-Tang Zhang; Catarina E. Hioe

The heavy glycosylation of HIV-1 envelope gp120 shields this important Ag from recognition by neutralizing Abs and cytolytic CD8 T cells. However, very little work has been done to understand the influence of glycosylation on the generation of gp120 epitopes and their recognition by MHC class II-restricted CD4 T cells. In this study, three conserved glycans (linked to N406, N448, and N463) flanking the C4 region of gp120 that contains many known CD4 T cell epitopes were disrupted individually or in combination by asparagine-to-glutamine substitutions. The mutant proteins lacking the N448 glycan did not effectively stimulate CD4 T cells specific for the nearby C4 epitopes, although the same mutants were recognized well by CD4 T cells specific for epitopes located in the distant C1 and C2 regions. The loss of recognition was not due to amino acid substitutions introduced to the mutant proteins. Data from trypsin digestion and mass spectrometry analyses demonstrated that the N448 glycan removal impeded the proteolytic cleavage of the nearby C4 region, without affecting more distant sites. Importantly, this inhibitory effect was observed only in the digestion of the native nondenatured protein and not in that of the denatured protein. These data indicate that the loss of the N448 glycan induces structural changes in the C4 region of gp120 that make this specific region more resistant to proteolytic processing, thereby restricting the generation of CD4 T cell epitopes from this region. Hence, N-linked glycans are critical determinants that can profoundly influence CD4 T cell recognition of HIV-1 gp120.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Adaptor-mediated Lon proteolysis restricts Bacillus subtilis hyperflagellation

Sampriti Mukherjee; Anna C. Bree; Jing Liu; Joyce E. Patrick; Peter Chien; Daniel B. Kearns

Significance Bacteria are thought to change physiology when in contact with a solid surface, but the mechanism of surface-contact signal transduction and the output physiological changes are often poorly understood. Here, we show that Bacillus subtilis controls flagellar density by regulatory proteolysis of the master flagellar activator protein SwrA. We further show that the broadly conserved AAA+ protease LonA degrades SwrA only in the presence of swarming motility inhibitor A, the first substrate-specific adaptor protein reported for the Lon family. We propose that surface contact inhibits proteolytic turnover such that SwrA accumulates and the cells synthesize flagella in excess of a critical threshold required for swarming migration. The Lon AAA+ protease is a highly conserved intracellular protease that is considered an anticancer target in eukaryotic cells and a crucial virulence regulator in bacteria. Lon degrades both damaged, misfolded proteins and specific native regulators, but how Lon discriminates among a large pool of candidate targets remains unclear. Here we report that Bacillus subtilis LonA specifically degrades the master regulator of flagellar biosynthesis SwrA governed by the adaptor protein swarming motility inhibitor A (SmiA). SmiA-dependent LonA proteolysis is abrogated upon microbe-substrate contact causing SwrA protein levels to increase and elevate flagellar density above a critical threshold for swarming motility atop solid surfaces. Surface contact-dependent cellular differentiation in bacteria is rapid, and regulated proteolysis may be a general mechanism of transducing surface stimuli.

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Jing Liu

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Robert H. Vass

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Kamal Kishore Joshi

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Tania A. Baker

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Michael T. Laub

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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