Preston N. Garrison
University of Texas at Austin
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Publication
Featured researches published by Preston N. Garrison.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1997
Charles Brenner; Preston N. Garrison; Jeffrey Gilmour; Daniel Peisach; Dagmar Ringe; Gregory A. Petsko; John M. Lowenstein
Histidine triad nucleotide-binding protein (HINT), a dimeric purine nucleotide-binding protein from rabbit heart, is a member of the HIT (histidine triad) superfamily which includes HINT homologues and FHIT (HIT protein encoded at the chromosome 3 fragile site) homologues. Crystal structures of HINT-nucleotide complexes demonstrate that the most conserved residues in the superfamily mediate nucleotide binding and that the HIT motif forms part of the phosphate binding loop. Galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase, whose deficiency causes galactosemia, contains tandem HINT domains with the same fold and mode of nucleotide binding as HINT despite having no overall sequence similarity. Features of FHIT, a diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase and candidate tumour suppressor, are predicted from HINT-nucleotide structures.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Pawel Bieganowski; Preston N. Garrison; Santosh C. Hodawadekar; Gerard Faye; Larry D. Barnes; Charles Brenner
The histidine triad superfamily of nucleotide hydrolases and nucleotide transferases consists of a branch of proteins related to Hint and Aprataxin, a branch of Fhit-related hydrolases, and a branch of galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (GalT)-related transferases. Although substrates of Fhit and GalT are known and consequences of mutations in Aprataxin, Fhit, and GalT are known, good substrates had not been reported for any member of the Hint branch, and mutational consequences were unknown for Hint orthologs, which are the most ancient and widespread proteins in the Hint branch and in the histidine triad superfamily. Here we show that rabbit and yeast Hint hydrolyze the natural product adenosine-5′-monophosphoramidate (AMPNH2) in an active-site-dependent manner at second order rates exceeding 1,000,000m −1 s−1. Yeast strains constructed with specific loss of the Hnt1 active site fail to grow on galactose at elevated temperatures. Loss of Hnt1 enzyme activity also leads to hypersensitivity to mutations in Ccl1, Tfb3, and Kin28, which constitute the TFIIK kinase subcomplex of general transcription factor TFIIH and to mutations in Cak1, which phosphorylates Kin28. The target of Hnt1 regulation in this pathway was shown to be downstream of Cak1 and not to affect stability of Kin28 monomers. Functional complementation of all Hnt1 phenotypes was provided by rabbit Hint, which is only 22% identical to yeast Hnt1 but has very similar adenosine monophosphoramidase activity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Flavia Pichiorri; Hiroshi Okumura; Tatsuya Nakamura; Preston N. Garrison; Pierluigi Gasparini; Sung-Suk Suh; Teresa Druck; Kelly A. McCorkell; Larry D. Barnes; Carlo M. Croce; Kay Huebner
We have previously shown that Fhit tumor suppressor protein interacts with Hsp60 chaperone machinery and ferredoxin reductase (Fdxr) protein. Fhit-effector interactions are associated with a Fhit-dependent increase in Fdxr stability, followed by generation of reactive oxygen species and apoptosis induction under conditions of oxidative stress. To define Fhit structural features that affect interactions, downstream signaling, and biological outcomes, we used cancer cells expressing Fhit mutants with amino acid substitutions that alter enzymatic activity, enzyme substrate binding, or phosphorylation at tyrosine 114. Gastric cancer cell clones stably expressing mutants that do not bind substrate or cannot be phosphorylated showed decreased binding to Hsp60 and Fdxr and reduced mitochondrial localization. Expression of Fhit or mutants that bind interactor proteins results in oxidative damage and accumulation of cells in G2/M or sub-G1 fractions after peroxide treatment; noninteracting mutants are defective in these biological effects. Gastric cancer clones expressing noncomplexing Fhit mutants show reduction of Fhit tumor suppressor activity, confirming that substrate binding, interaction with heat shock proteins, mitochondrial localization, and interaction with Fdxr are important for Fhit tumor suppressor function.
Biochemistry | 1996
Larry D. Barnes; Preston N. Garrison; Zurab Siprashvili; Andrzej Guranowski; Angela K. Robinson; Stephen W. Ingram; Carlo M. Croce; Masataka Ohta; Kay Huebner
Annual Review of Genetics | 1998
Kay Huebner; Preston N. Garrison; Larry D. Barnes; Carlo M. Croce
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Helen C. Pace; Preston N. Garrison; Angela K. Robinson; Larry D. Barnes; Alexandra Draganescu; A. Rosler; G.M Blackburn; Zurab Siprashvili; Carlo M. Croce; Kay Huebner; Charles Brenner
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Yuri Pekarsky; Preston N. Garrison; Alexey Palamarchuk; Nicola Zanesi; Rami I. Aqeilan; Kay Huebner; Larry D. Barnes; Carlo M. Croce
Protein Engineering | 1997
Charles Brenner; Helen C. Pace; Preston N. Garrison; A K Robinson; A. Rosler; Xiaohai Liu; G.M Blackburn; Carlo M. Croce; Kay Huebner; Larry D. Barnes
Biochemistry | 1999
Andreas Abend; Preston N. Garrison; Larry D. Barnes; Perry A. Frey
Biochemistry | 1982
Preston N. Garrison; Glenda M. Roberson; Catherine A. Culver; Larry D. Barnes
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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