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Dive into the research topics where Peter J. Simpson is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter J. Simpson.


FEBS Letters | 1999

The starch-binding domain from glucoamylase disrupts the structure of starch.

Stacey M. Southall; Peter J. Simpson; Harry J. Gilbert; Gary Williamson; Michael P. Williamson

The full‐length glucoamylase from Aspergillus niger, G1, consists of an N‐terminal catalytic domain followed by a semi‐rigid linker (which together constitute the G2 form) and a C‐terminal starch‐binding domain (SBD). G1 and G2 both liberate glucose from insoluble corn starch, although G2 has a rate 80 times slower than G1. Following pre‐incubation of the starch with SBD, the activity of G1 is uniformly reduced with increasing concentrations of SBD because of competition for binding sites. However, increasing concentrations of SBD produce an initial increase in the catalytic rate of G2, followed by a decrease at higher SBD concentrations. The results show that SBD has two functions: it binds to the starch, but it also disrupts the surface, thereby enhancing the amylolytic rate.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

The Structural Basis for the Ligand Specificity of Family 2 Carbohydrate-binding Modules

Peter J. Simpson; Hefang Xie; David N. Bolam; Harry J. Gilbert; Michael P. Williamson

The interactions of proteins with polysaccharides play a key role in the microbial hydrolysis of cellulose and xylan, the most abundant organic molecules in the biosphere, and are thus pivotal to the recycling of photosynthetically fixed carbon. Enzymes that attack these recalcitrant polymers have a modular structure comprising catalytic modules and non-catalytic carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). The largest prokaryotic CBM family, CBM2, contains members that bind cellulose (CBM2a) and xylan (CBM2b), respectively. A possible explanation for the different ligand specificity of CBM2b is that one of the surface tryptophans involved in the protein-carbohydrate interaction is rotated by 90° compared with its position in CBM2a (thus matching the structure of the binding site to the helical secondary structure of xylan), which may be promoted by a single amino acid difference between the two families. Here we show that by mutation of this single residue (Arg-262→Gly), a CBM2b xylan-binding module completely loses its affinity for xylan and becomes a cellulose-binding module. The structural effect of the mutation has been revealed using NMR spectroscopy, which confirms that Trp-259 rotates 90° to lie flat against the protein surface. Except for this one residue, the mutation only results in minor changes to the structure. The mutated protein interacts with cellulose using the same residues that the wild-type CBM2b uses to interact with xylan, suggesting that the recognition is of the secondary structure of the polysaccharide rather than any specific recognition of the absence or presence of functional groups.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

Carbohydrate-binding modules from a thermostable Rhodothermus marinus xylanase: cloning, expression and binding studies

Maher Abou Hachem; Eva Nordberg Karlsson; Eva Bartonek-Roxå; Srinivasrao Raghothama; Peter J. Simpson; Harry J. Gilbert; Michael P. Williamson; Olle Holst

The two N-terminally repeated carbohydrate-binding modules (CBM4-1 and CBM4-2) encoded by xyn10A from Rhodothermus marinus were produced in Escherichia coli and purified by affinity chromatography. Binding assays to insoluble polysaccharides showed binding to insoluble xylan and to phosphoric-acid-swollen cellulose but not to Avicel or crystalline cellulose. Binding to insoluble substrates was significantly enhanced by the presence of Na(+) and Ca(2+) ions. The binding affinities for soluble polysaccharides were tested by affinity electrophoresis; strong binding occurred with different xylans and beta-glucan. CBM4-2 displayed a somewhat higher binding affinity than CBM4-1 for both soluble and insoluble substrates but both had similar specificities. Binding to short oligosaccharides was measured by NMR; both modules bound with similar affinities. The binding of the modules was shown to be dominated by enthalpic forces. The binding modules did not contribute with any significant synergistic effects on xylan hydrolysis when incubated with a Xyn10A catalytic module. This is the first report of family 4 CBMs with affinity for both insoluble xylan and amorphous cellulose.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

A peptide motif in Raver1 mediates splicing repression by interaction with the PTB RRM2 domain

Alexis Rideau; Clare Gooding; Peter J. Simpson; Tom P. Monie; Mike Lorenz; Stefan Hüttelmaier; Robert H. Singer; Stephen Matthews; Stephen Curry; Christopher W. J. Smith

Polypyrimidine tract–binding protein (PTB) is a regulatory splicing repressor. Raver1 acts as a PTB corepressor for splicing of α-tropomyosin (Tpm1) exon 3. Here we define a minimal region of Raver1 that acts as a repressor domain when recruited to RNA. A conserved [S/G][I/L]LGxxP motif is essential for splicing repressor activity and sufficient for interaction with PTB. An adjacent proline-rich region is also essential for repressor activity but not for PTB interaction. NMR analysis shows that LLGxxP peptides interact with a hydrophobic groove on the dorsal surface of the RRM2 domain of PTB, which constitutes part of the minimal repressor region of PTB. The requirement for the PTB-Raver1 interaction that we have characterized may serve to bring the additional repressor regions of both proteins into a configuration that allows them to synergistically effect exon skipping.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Atomic resolution insight into host cell recognition by Toxoplasma gondii

Tharin M. A. Blumenschein; Nikolas Friedrich; Robert A. Childs; Savvas Saouros; Elisabeth P. Carpenter; Maria A. Campanero-Rhodes; Peter J. Simpson; Wengang Chai; Theodoros Koutroukides; Michael J. Blackman; Ten Feizi; Dominique Soldati-Favre; Stephen Matthews

The obligate intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii, a member of the phylum Apicomplexa that includes Plasmodium spp., is one of the most widespread parasites and the causative agent of toxoplasmosis. Micronemal proteins (MICs) are released onto the parasite surface just before invasion of host cells and play important roles in host cell recognition, attachment and penetration. Here, we report the atomic structure for a key MIC, TgMIC1, and reveal a novel cell‐binding motif called the microneme adhesive repeat (MAR). Using glycoarray analyses, we identified a novel interaction with sialylated oligosaccharides that resolves several prevailing misconceptions concerning TgMIC1. Structural studies of various complexes between TgMIC1 and sialylated oligosaccharides provide high‐resolution insights into the recognition of sialylated oligosaccharides by a parasite surface protein. We observe that MAR domains exist in tandem repeats, which provide a highly specialized structure for glycan discrimination. Our work uncovers new features of parasite–receptor interactions at the early stages of host cell invasion, which will assist the design of new therapeutic strategies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Specific DNA recognition mediated by a type IV pilin

Ana Cehovin; Peter J. Simpson; Melanie A. McDowell; Daniel R. Brown; Rossella Noschese; Mitchell A. Pallett; Jacob P. Brady; Geoffrey S. Baldwin; Susan M. Lea; Stephen Matthews; Vladimir Pelicic

Natural transformation is a dominant force in bacterial evolution by promoting horizontal gene transfer. This process may have devastating consequences, such as the spread of antibiotic resistance or the emergence of highly virulent clones. However, uptake and recombination of foreign DNA are most often deleterious to competent species. Therefore, model naturally transformable Gram-negative bacteria, including the human pathogen Neisseria meningitidis, have evolved means to preferentially take up homotypic DNA containing short and genus-specific sequence motifs. Despite decades of intense investigations, the DNA uptake sequence receptor in Neisseria species has remained elusive. We show here, using a multidisciplinary approach combining biochemistry, molecular genetics, and structural biology, that meningococcal type IV pili bind DNA through the minor pilin ComP via an electropositive stripe that is predicted to be exposed on the filaments surface and that ComP displays an exquisite binding preference for DNA uptake sequence. Our findings illuminate the earliest step in natural transformation, reveal an unconventional mechanism for DNA binding, and suggest that selective DNA uptake is more widespread than previously thought.


FEBS Letters | 1998

All three surface tryptophans in Type IIa cellulose binding domains play a pivotal role in binding both soluble and insoluble ligands

Tibor Nagy; Peter J. Simpson; Michael P. Williamson; Geoffrey P. Hazlewood; Harry J. Gilbert; László Orosz

The three surface tryptophans of the Type IIa cellulose binding domain of Pseudomonas fluorescens subsp. cellulosa xylanase A (CBDXYLA) were independently mutated to alanine, to create the mutants W13A, W49A and W66A. The three mutant proteins were purified, and their capacity to bind to a variety of ligands was determined. The mutant proteins have native‐like structures but exhibited much weaker affinity for crystalline and amorphous cellulose and for cellohexaose than the wild type. These data indicate that all three tryptophans are important for binding to cellulose, and support a model in which the three tryptophans form an aromatic strip on the surface of the protein that binds to a single cellulose.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

The SOCS-Box of HIV-1 Vif Interacts with ElonginBC by Induced-Folding to Recruit Its Cul5-Containing Ubiquitin Ligase Complex

Julien R. C. Bergeron; Hendrik Huthoff; Dennis A. Veselkov; Rebecca L. Beavil; Peter J. Simpson; Stephen Matthews; Michael H. Malim; Mark R. Sanderson

The HIV-1 viral infectivity factor (Vif) protein recruits an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, comprising the cellular proteins elongin B and C (EloBC), cullin 5 (Cul5) and RING-box 2 (Rbx2), to the anti-viral proteins APOBEC3G (A3G) and APOBEC3F (A3F) and induces their polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. In this study, we used purified proteins and direct in vitro binding assays, isothermal titration calorimetry and NMR spectroscopy to describe the molecular mechanism for assembly of the Vif-EloBC ternary complex. We demonstrate that Vif binds to EloBC in two locations, and that both interactions induce structural changes in the SOCS box of Vif as well as EloBC. In particular, in addition to the previously established binding of Vifs BC box to EloC, we report a novel interaction between the conserved Pro-Pro-Leu-Pro motif of Vif and the C-terminal domain of EloB. Using cell-based assays, we further show that this interaction is necessary for the formation of a functional ligase complex, thus establishing a role of this motif. We conclude that HIV-1 Vif engages EloBC via an induced-folding mechanism that does not require additional co-factors, and speculate that these features distinguish Vif from other EloBC specificity factors such as cellular SOCS proteins, and may enhance the prospects of obtaining therapeutic inhibitors of Vif function.


Structure | 2011

Structure of a Blinkin-BUBR1 Complex Reveals an Interaction Crucial for Kinetochore-Mitotic Checkpoint Regulation via an Unanticipated Binding Site

Victor M. Bolanos-Garcia; Tiziana Lischetti; Dijana Matak-Vinkovic; Ernesto Cota; Peter J. Simpson; Dimitri Y. Chirgadze; David R. Spring; Carol V. Robinson; Jakob Nilsson; Tom L. Blundell

Summary The maintenance of genomic stability relies on the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), which ensures accurate chromosome segregation by delaying the onset of anaphase until all chromosomes are properly bioriented and attached to the mitotic spindle. BUB1 and BUBR1 kinases are central for this process and by interacting with Blinkin, link the SAC with the kinetochore, the macromolecular assembly that connects microtubules with centromeric DNA. Here, we identify the Blinkin motif critical for interaction with BUBR1, define the stoichiometry and affinity of the interaction, and present a 2.2 Å resolution crystal structure of the complex. The structure defines an unanticipated BUBR1 region responsible for the interaction and reveals a novel Blinkin motif that undergoes a disorder-to-order transition upon ligand binding. We also show that substitution of several BUBR1 residues engaged in binding Blinkin leads to defects in the SAC, thus providing the first molecular details of the recognition mechanism underlying kinetochore-SAC signaling.


Structure | 2011

Atomic Resolution Insights into Curli Fiber Biogenesis

Jonathan D. Taylor; Yizhou Zhou; Paula S. Salgado; Ardan Patwardhan; Matt McGuffie; Tillmann Pape; Grzegorz J. Grabe; Elisabeth M. Ashman; Sean C. Constable; Peter J. Simpson; Wei Chao Lee; Ernesto Cota; Matthew R. Chapman; Steve Matthews

Summary Bacteria produce functional amyloid fibers called curli in a controlled, noncytotoxic manner. These extracellular fimbriae enable biofilm formation and promote pathogenicity. Understanding curli biogenesis is important for appreciating microbial lifestyles and will offer clues as to how disease-associated human amyloid formation might be ameliorated. Proteins encoded by the curli specific genes (csgA-G) are required for curli production. We have determined the structure of CsgC and derived the first structural model of the outer-membrane subunit translocator CsgG. Unexpectedly, CsgC is related to the N-terminal domain of DsbD, both in structure and oxido-reductase capability. Furthermore, we show that CsgG belongs to the nascent class of helical outer-membrane macromolecular exporters. A cysteine in a CsgG transmembrane helix is a potential target of CsgC, and mutation of this residue influences curli assembly. Our study provides the first high-resolution structural insights into curli biogenesis.

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Ernesto Cota

Imperial College London

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Jan Marchant

Imperial College London

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