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Dive into the research topics where Robert C. Tyler is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert C. Tyler.


Protein Science | 2005

Solution structure of a late embryogenesis abundant protein (LEA14) from Arabidopsis thaliana, a cellular stress‐related protein

Shanteri Singh; Claudia C. Cornilescu; Robert C. Tyler; Gabriel Cornilescu; Marco Tonelli; Min S. Lee; John L. Markley

We report the three‐dimensional structure of a late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) protein from Arabidopsis thaliana gene At1g01470.1. This protein is a member of Pfam cluster PF03168, and has been classified as a LEA14 protein. LEA proteins are expressed under conditions of cellular stress, such as desiccation, cold, osmotic stress, and heat. The structure, which was determined by NMR spectroscopy, revealed that the At1g01470.1 protein has an αβ‐fold consisting of one α‐helix and seven β‐strands that form two antiparallel β‐sheets. The closest structural homologs were discovered to be fibronectin Type III domains, which have <7% sequence identity. Because fibronectins from animal cells have been shown to be involved in cell adhesion, cell motility, wound healing, and maintenance of cell shape, it is interesting to note that in plants wounding or stress results in the overexpression of a protein with fibronectin Type III structural features.


Proteins | 2005

Comparison of Cell-Based and Cell-Free Protocols for Producing Target Proteins from the Arabidopsis thaliana Genome for Structural Studies

Robert C. Tyler; David J. Aceti; Craig A. Bingman; Claudia C. Cornilescu; Brian G. Fox; Ronnie O. Frederick; Won Bae Jeon; Min S. Lee; Craig S. Newman; Francis C. Peterson; George N. Phillips; Mark N. Shahan; Shanteri Singh; Jikui Song; Ejan M. Tyler; Eldon L. Ulrich; Dmitriy A. Vinarov; Frank C. Vojtik; Brian F. Volkman; Russell L. Wrobel; Qin Zhao; John L. Markley

We describe a comparative study of protein production from 96 Arabidopsis thaliana open reading frames (ORFs) by cell‐based and cell‐free protocols. Each target was carried through four pipeline protocols used by the Center for Eukaryotic Structural Genomics (CESG), one for the production of unlabeled protein to be used in crystallization trials and three for the production of 15N‐labeled proteins to be analyzed by 1H‐15N NMR correlation spectroscopy. Two of the protocols involved Escherichia coli cell‐based and two involved wheat germ cell‐free technology. The progress of each target through each of the protocols was followed with all failures and successes noted. Failures were of the following types: ORF not cloned, protein not expressed, low protein yield, no cleavage of fusion protein, insoluble protein, protein not purified, NMR sample too dilute. Those targets that reached the goal of analysis by 1H‐15N NMR correlation spectroscopy were scored as HSQC+ (protein folded and suitable for NMR structural analysis), HSQC± (protein partially disordered or not in a single stable conformational state), HSQC− (protein unfolded, misfolded, or aggregated and thus unsuitable for NMR structural analysis). Targets were also scored as X− for failing to crystallize and X+ for successful crystallization. The results constitute a rich database for understanding differences between targets and protocols. In general, the wheat germ cell‐free platform offers the advantage of greater genome coverage for NMR‐based structural proteomics whereas the E. coli platform when successful yields more protein, as currently needed for crystallization trials for X‐ray structure determination. Proteins 2005.


Biochemistry | 2010

Distal interactions within the par3-VE-cadherin complex.

Robert C. Tyler; Francis C. Peterson; Brian F. Volkman

par3 is a multiple-PDZ-containing scaffold protein that is central to the organization of an evolutionarily conserved cell polarity complex consisting of par3, par6, and aPKC. The ability of par3 PDZ domains to target various adhesion molecules and enzymes at the plasma membrane leads to the controlled localization of par6 and aPKC, which has firmly established its role in epithelial cell polarity. Of the numerous PDZ ligands associated with par3, interaction of its third PDZ domain with the class II ligand found within the C-terminal tail of vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-Cad) suggests a role in endothelial cell polarity as well, but the molecular details of the interaction are unknown. Previously determined structures of par3-PDZ3 bound to the class I ligand found within the C-terminal tail of the phosphoinositide phosphatase PTEN revealed two discrete binding sites: a canonical PDZ-ligand interaction site and a distal site involving charge-charge complements. Currently, it is unclear if par3-PDZ3 employs both canonical and distal binding modes in its association with VE-Cad or if these modes are unique to the PTEN interaction, suggesting a possible mechanism for ligand specificity within the polarity network. The structure of par3-PDZ3 bound to the C-terminal tail of VE-Cad presented in this work shows that both canonical and distal interactions are utilized in binding. Biophysical measurements using fluorescence polarization and two-dimensional NMR implicate the intermolecular charge pairing of aspartic acid 777 (VE-Cad) and arginine 609 (par3-PDZ3) as a crucial modulator of complex formation. Phosphorylation of VE-Cad at serine 776 increases its affinity for par3, demonstrating that post-translational modifications outside of the canonical carboxylate binding site can enhance PDZ-ligand interactions. Comparison of the VE-Cad and PTEN complexes highlights how the unique molecular architecture of par3-PDZ3 can accommodate both canonical and distal interaction modes that allow dual-class specificity for these two ligand types.


Protein Science | 2005

Three-dimensional structure of the AAH26994.1 protein from Mus musculus, a putative eukaryotic Urm1.

Shanteri Singh; Marco Tonelli; Robert C. Tyler; Arash Bahrami; Min S. Lee; John L. Markley

We have used NMR spectroscopy to determine the solution structure of protein AAH26994.1 from Mus musculus and propose that it represents the first three‐dimensional structure of a ubiquitin‐related modifier 1 (Urm1) protein. Amino acid sequence comparisons indicate that AAH26994.1 belongs to the Urm1 family of ubiquitin‐like modifier proteins. The best characterized member of this family has been shown to be involved in nutrient sensing, invasive growth, and budding in yeast. Proteins in this family have only a weak sequence similarity to ubiquitin, and the structure of AAH26994.1 showed a much closer resemblance to MoaD subunits of molybdopterin synthases (known structures are of three bacterial MoaD proteins with 14%–26% sequence identity to AAH26994.1). The structures of AAH26994.1 and the MoaD proteins each contain the signature ubiquitin secondary structure fold, but all differ from ubiquitin largely in regions outside of this fold. This structural similarity bolsters the hypothesis that ubiquitin and ubiquitin‐related proteins evolved from a protein‐based sulfide donor system of the molybdopterin synthase type.


Cytokine | 2015

Structural and agonist properties of XCL2, the other member of the C-chemokine subfamily.

Jamie C. Fox; Takashi Nakayama; Robert C. Tyler; Tara L. Sander; Osamu Yoshie; Brian F. Volkman

Known for its unusual metamorphic native state structure, XCL1 has been the focus of most efforts to elucidate the structural, functional, and physiological properties of chemokines in the C subfamily. By comparison, its closely related paralog XCL2 remains virtually uncharacterized. Based on the importance of the chemokine N-terminus in receptor activation, it was hypothesized that two amino acid differences in XCL2 would alter its agonist activity relative to XCL1 for their shared receptor XCR1. This present study reveals several properties of XCL2 that were unexamined until now. Structurally, XCL1 and XCL2 are very similar, exchanging between the monomeric chemokine fold and an unrelated dimeric state under physiological NaCl and temperature conditions. Ca(2+) flux, chemotaxis, and heparin binding assays showed that the monomer form of XCL2 is responsible for G protein-coupled receptor activation while the dimeric form is important for GAG binding. Despite their high structural similarity, XCL2 displays a slightly higher affinity for heparin than XCL1. Because their in vitro functional profiles are virtually identical, distinct physiological roles for XCL1 and XCL2 are probably encoded at the level of expression.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2004

Letter to the Editor: Hypothetical protein At2g24940.1 from Arabidopsis thaliana has a cytochrome b5 like fold ∗

Jikui Song; Dmitriy A. Vinarov; Ejan M. Tyler; Mark N. Shahan; Robert C. Tyler; John L. Markley

Progesterone is believed to exert rapid non-genomic actions through its interaction with membrane associated progesterone receptors (MAPRs) (Bramley, 2003; Li and O’Malley, 2003). BLAST sequence searches (Altieri et al., 1995) for mammalian MAPRs and putative MAPRs from plants have identified that these proteins all contain a cytochrome b5-like ligandbinding domain (Mifsud and Bateman, 2002). Interestingly, unlike cytochrome b5 itself, these MAPRs domains appear not to bind heme and not to be involved in redox reactions. Their distinct biological functions suggest that these steroid receptors adopt the cytochrome b5 domain as a template in order to build their own ligand-binding pockets (Mifsud and Bateman, 2002). The Center for Eukaryotic Structural Genomics is engaged in determining the three-dimensional structures of novel proteins from eukaryotic gene families. Its target selection algorithm selected Arabidopsis thaliana putative protein At2g24940.1 for structure determination. The biochemical function of At2g24940.1 currently is unknown. Its ∼40% sequence identity with mammalian MAPR suggests that At2g24940.1 may act as a steroid binding protein. In addition, its sequence is distantly similar to that of cytochrome b5 (Figure 1). Here we describe the threedimensional structure of At2g24940.1 as determined by NMR spectroscopy. At present, no structure of a MAPR is available from the Protein Data Bank. Thus, the structure of At2g24940.1 may provide clues to the function of a class of steroid binding proteins in plants.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Engineering Metamorphic Chemokine Lymphotactin/XCL1 into the GAG-Binding, HIV-Inhibitory Dimer Conformation.

Jamie C. Fox; Robert C. Tyler; Christina Guzzo; Robbyn L. Tuinstra; Francis C. Peterson; Paolo Lusso; Brian F. Volkman

Unlike other chemokines, XCL1 undergoes a distinct metamorphic interconversion between a canonical monomeric chemokine fold and a unique β-sandwich dimer. The monomeric conformation binds and activates the receptor XCR1, whereas the dimer binds extracellular matrix glycosaminoglycans and has been associated with anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) activity. Functional studies of WT-XCL1 are complex, as both conformations are populated in solution. To overcome this limitation, we engineered a stabilized dimeric variant of XCL1 designated CC5. This variant features a new disulfide bond (A36C-A49C) that prevents structural interconversion by locking the chemokine into the β-sandwich dimeric conformation, as demonstrated by NMR structural analysis and hydrogen/deuterium exchange experiments. Functional studies analyzing glycosaminoglycan binding demonstrate that CC5 binds with high affinity to heparin. In addition, CC5 exhibits potent inhibition of HIV-1 activity in primary peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), demonstrating the importance of the dimer in blocking viral infection. Conformational variants like CC5 are valuable tools for elucidating the biological relevance of the XCL1 native-state interconversion and will assist in future antiviral and functional studies.


Biochemistry | 2012

Electrostatic Optimization of the Conformational Energy Landscape in a Metamorphic Protein

Robert C. Tyler; Jamie C. Wieting; Francis C. Peterson; Brian F. Volkman

The equilibrium unfolding reaction of Ltn, a metamorphic C-class chemokine, was monitored by tryptophan fluorescence to determine unfolding free energies. Measurements revealed that addition of 150 mM NaCl stabilized the Ltn chemokine fold by approximately 1 kcal/mol. Specific mutations involving Arg23 and Arg43 also increased the stability by 1 kcal/mol, suggesting their involvement in chloride ion coordination. This interaction was confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) salt titration studies that revealed chemical shift perturbations localized to these residues and backbone amides within the proximal 40s loop. The effects of NaCl on the free energy landscape were further verified by ZZ-exchange NMR spectroscopy. Our results suggest that changes in the electrostatic environment modulate the Gibbs free energy of folding and alter the forward and reverse rates of interconversion. These results demonstrate how solution ions can promote metamorphic folding by adjusting the relative stabilities of two unrelated Ltn native-state structures.


Protein Science | 2005

Solution structure of At3g04780.1‐des15, an Arabidopsis thaliana ortholog of the C‐terminal domain of human thioredoxin‐like protein

Jikui Song; Robert C. Tyler; Russell L. Wrobel; Ronnie O. Frederick; Frank C. Vojtek; Won Bae Jeon; Min S. Lee; John L. Markley

The structure of At3g04780.1‐des15, an Arabidopsis thaliana ortholog of the C‐terminal domain of human thioredoxin‐like protein, was determined by NMR spectroscopy. The structure is dominated by a β‐barrel sandwich. A two‐stranded anti‐parallel β‐sheet, which seals off one end of the β‐barrel, is flanked by two flexible loops rich in acidic amino acids. Although this fold often provides a ligand binding site, the structure did not reveal an appreciable cavity inside the β‐barrel. The three‐dimensional structure of At3g04780.1‐des15 provides an entry point for understanding its functional role and those of its mammalian homologs.


Biochemistry | 2016

Examination of glycosaminoglycan binding sites on the XCL1 dimer

Jamie C. Fox; Robert C. Tyler; Francis C. Peterson; Douglas P. Dyer; Fuming Zhang; Robert J. Linhardt; Tracy M. Handel; Brian F. Volkman

Known for its distinct metamorphic behavior, XCL1 interconverts between a canonical chemokine folded monomer (XCL1mon) that interacts with the receptor, XCR1, and a unique dimer (XCL1dim) that interacts with glycosaminoglycans and inhibits HIV-1 activity. This study presents the first detailed analysis of the GAG binding properties of XCL1dim. Basic residues within a conformationally selective dimeric variant of XCL1 (W55D) were mutated and analyzed for their effects on heparin binding. Mutation of Arg23 and Arg43 greatly diminished the level of heparin binding in both heparin Sepharose chromatography and surface plasmon resonance assays. To assess the contributions of different GAG structures to XCL1 binding, we developed a solution fluorescence polarization assay and correlated affinity with the length and level of sulfation of heparan sulfate oligosaccharides. It was recently demonstrated that the XCL1 GAG binding form, XCL1dim, is responsible for preventing HIV-1 infection through interactions with gp120. This study defines a GAG binding surface on XCL1dim that includes residues that are important for HIV-1 inhibition.

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Brian F. Volkman

Medical College of Wisconsin

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John L. Markley

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Francis C. Peterson

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Min S. Lee

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jikui Song

University of California

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Craig A. Bingman

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ejan M. Tyler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Brian G. Fox

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Claudia C. Cornilescu

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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