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Dive into the research topics where Robert Fairman is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Fairman.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Mechanism of XIAP-Mediated Inhibition of Caspase-9.

Eric N. Shiozaki; Jijie Chai; Daniel J. Rigotti; Stefan J. Riedl; Pingwei Li; Srinivasa M. Srinivasula; Emad S. Alnemri; Robert Fairman; Yigong Shi

The inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins potently inhibit the catalytic activity of caspases. While profound insight into the inhibition of the effector caspases has been gained in recent years, the mechanism of how the initiator caspase-9 is regulated by IAPs remains enigmatic. This paper reports the crystal structure of caspase-9 in an inhibitory complex with the third baculoviral IAP repeat (BIR3) of XIAP at 2.4 A resolution. The structure reveals that the BIR3 domain forms a heterodimer with a caspase-9 monomer. Strikingly, the surface of caspase-9 that interacts with BIR3 also mediates its homodimerization. We demonstrate that monomeric caspase-9 is catalytically inactive due to the absence of a supporting sequence element that could be provided by homodimerization. Thus, XIAP sequesters caspase-9 in a monomeric state, which serves to prevent catalytic activity. These studies, in conjunction with other observations, define a unified mechanism for the activation of all caspases.


Molecular Cell | 2001

Crystal Structure of a Phosphorylated Smad2: Recognition of Phosphoserine by the MH2 Domain and Insights on Smad Function in TGF-β Signaling

Jia-Wei Wu; Min Hu; Jijie Chai; Joan Seoane; Morgan Huse; Carey Li; Daniel J. Rigotti; Saw Kyin; Tom W. Muir; Robert Fairman; Joan Massagué; Yigong Shi

Ligand-induced phosphorylation of the receptor-regulated Smads (R-Smads) is essential in the receptor Ser/Thr kinase-mediated TGF-beta signaling. The crystal structure of a phosphorylated Smad2, at 1.8 A resolution, reveals the formation of a homotrimer mediated by the C-terminal phosphoserine (pSer) residues. The pSer binding surface on the MH2 domain, frequently targeted for inactivation in cancers, is highly conserved among the Co- and R-Smads. This finding, together with mutagenesis data, pinpoints a functional interface between Smad2 and Smad4. In addition, the pSer binding surface on the MH2 domain coincides with the surface on R-Smads that is required for docking interactions with the serine-phosphorylated receptor kinases. These observations define a bifunctional role for the MH2 domain as a pSer-X-pSer binding module in receptor Ser/Thr kinase signaling pathways.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1998

Regulation of SNARE complex assembly by an N-terminal domain of the t-SNARE Sso1p

Karin L. Nicholson; Mary Munson; Rebecca Miller; Thomas J. Filip; Robert Fairman; Frederick M. Hughson

The fusion of intracellular transport vesicles with their target membranes requires the assembly of SNARE proteins anchored in the apposed membranes. Here we use recombinant cytoplasmic domains of the yeast SNAREs involved in Golgi to plasma membrane trafficking to examine this assembly process in vitro. Binary complexes form between the target membrane SNAREs Sso1p and Sec9p; these binary complexes can subsequently bind to the vesicle SNARE Snc2p to form ternary complexes. Binary and ternary complex assembly are accompanied by large increases in α-helical structure, indicating that folding and complex formation are linked. Surprisingly, we find that binary complex formation is extremely slow, with a second-order rate constant of ∼3 M–1 s–1. An N-terminal regulatory domain of Sso1p accounts for slow assembly, since in its absence complexes assemble 2,000-fold more rapidly. Once binary complexes form, ternary complex formation is rapid and is not affected by the presence of the regulatory domain. Our results imply that proteins that accelerate SNARE assembly in vivo act by relieving inhibition by this regulatory domain.


PLOS Biology | 2005

Engineering a dimeric caspase-9: a re-evaluation of the induced proximity model for caspase activation.

Yang Chao; Eric N. Shiozaki; Srinivasa M. Srinivasula; Daniel J. Rigotti; Robert Fairman; Yigong Shi

Caspases are responsible for the execution of programmed cell death (apoptosis) and must undergo proteolytic activation, in response to apoptotic stimuli, to function. The mechanism of initiator caspase activation has been generalized by the induced proximity model, which is thought to drive dimerization-mediated activation of caspases. The initiator caspase, caspase-9, exists predominantly as a monomer in solution. To examine the induced proximity model, we engineered a constitutively dimeric caspase-9 by relieving steric hindrance at the dimer interface. Crystal structure of the engineered caspase-9 closely resembles that of the wild-type (WT) caspase-9, including all relevant structural details and the asymmetric nature of two monomers. Compared to the WT caspase-9, this engineered dimer exhibits a higher level of catalytic activity in vitro and induces more efficient cell death when expressed. However, the catalytic activity of the dimeric caspase-9 is only a small fraction of that for the Apaf-1-activated caspase-9. Furthermore, in contrast to the WT caspase-9, the activity of the dimeric caspase-9 can no longer be significantly enhanced in an Apaf-1-dependent manner. These findings suggest that dimerization of caspase-9 may be qualitatively different from its activation by Apaf-1, and in conjunction with other evidence, posit an induced conformation model for the activation of initiator caspases.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Control of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis by alternate quaternary forms of porphobilinogen synthase

Sabine Breinig; Jukka Kervinen; Linda Stith; Andrew S. Wasson; Robert Fairman; Alexander Wlodawer; Alexander Zdanov; Eileen K. Jaffe

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) catalyzes the first common step in the biosynthesis of tetrapyrroles (such as heme and chlorophyll). Although the predominant oligomeric form of this enzyme, as inferred from many crystal structures, is that of a homo-octamer, a rare human PBGS allele, F12L, reveals the presence of a hexameric form. Rearrangement of an N-terminal arm is responsible for this oligomeric switch, which results in profound changes in kinetic behavior. The structural transition between octamer and hexamer must proceed through an unparalleled equilibrium containing two different dimer structures. The allosteric magnesium, present in most PBGS, has a binding site in the octamer but not in the hexamer. The unprecedented structural rearrangement reported here relates to the allosteric regulation of PBGS and suggests that alternative PBGS oligomers may function in a magnesium-dependent regulation of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis in plants and some bacteria.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Biochemical Characterization of WrbA, Founding Member of a New Family of Multimeric Flavodoxin-like Proteins*

Rita Grandori; Peter Khalifah; Judith A. Boice; Robert Fairman; Kira Giovanielli; Jannette Carey

The protein WrbA had been identified as anEscherichia coli stationary-phase protein that copurified and coimmunoprecipitated with the tryptophan repressor. Sequences homologous to WrbA have been reported in several species of yeast and plants. We previously showed that this new family of proteins displays low but structurally significant sequence similarity with flavodoxins and that its members are predicted to share the α/β core of the flavodoxin fold but with a short conserved insertion unique to the new family, which could account for reports that some family members may be dimeric in solution. The general sequence similarity to flavodoxins suggests that the members of the new family might bind FMN, but their wide evolutionary distribution indicates that, unlike the flavodoxins, these proteins may be ubiquitous. In this paper, we report the purification and biochemical characterization of WrbA, demonstrating that the protein binds FMN specifically and is a multimer in solution. The FMN binding constant is weaker than for many flavodoxins, being ∼2 μm at 25 °C in 0.1 mm sodium phosphate, pH 7.2. The protein participates in a dimer-tetramer equilibrium over a wide range of solution conditions, with a midpoint at approximately 1.4 μm. One FMN binds per monomer and has no apparent effect on the multimerization equilibrium. WrbA has no effect on the affinity or mode of DNA binding by the tryptophan repressor; thus, its physiological role remains unclear. Although many proteins with flavodoxin-like domains are known to be multimers, WrbA is apparently the first characterized case in which multimerization is associated directly with the flavodoxin-like domain itself.


Biomacromolecules | 2009

Self Assembly of Coiled-Coil Peptide−Porphyrin Complexes

Bashkim Kokona; Andrew M. Kim; R. Claire Roden; Joshua P. Daniels; Brian J. Pepe-Mooney; Brian C. Kovaric; Julio C. de Paula; Karl A. Johnson; Robert Fairman

We are interested in the controlled assembly of photoelectronic materials using peptides as scaffolds and porphyrins as the conducting material. We describe the integration of a peptide-based polymer strategy with the ability of designed basic peptides to bind anionic porphyrins in order to create regulated photoelectronically active biomaterials. We have described our peptide system in earlier work, which demonstrates the ability of a peptide to form filamentous materials made up of self-assembling coiled-coil structures. We have modified this peptide system to include lysine residues appropriately positioned to specifically bind meso-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphine (TPPS(4)), a porphyrin that contains four negatively charged sulfonate groups at neutral pH. We measure the binding of TPPS(4) to our peptide using UV--visible and fluorescence spectroscopies to follow the porphyrin signature. We determine the concomitant acquisition of helical secondary structure in the peptide upon TPPS(4) binding using circular dichroism spectropolarimetry. This binding fosters polymerization of the peptide, as shown by absorbance extinction effects in the peptide CD spectra. The morphologies of the peptide/porphyrin complexes, as imaged by atomic force microscopy, are consistent with the coiled-coil polymers that we had characterized earlier, except that the heights are slightly higher, consistent with porphyrin binding. Evidence for exciton coupling in the copolymers is shown by red-shifting in the UV--visible data, however, the coupling is weak based on a lack of fluorescence quenching in fluorescence experiments.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2009

Peptides as materials

Brian J. Pepe-Mooney; Robert Fairman

This review focuses on the creation of electronically active peptide-based biomaterials and how such materials may be deposited onto surfaces to create integrated bionanocircuits. We describe recent efforts to add electronically active groups, such as metal complexes and various porphyrin derivatives, onto peptide-based materials. Having created such materials, the next challenge in creating a nanocircuit is to deposit these materials robustly and precisely onto appropriate surfaces. Methods for the deposition of peptides onto a variety of inorganic and organic surfaces are explored. Advances in patterning at the nanoscale are also described, focusing largely on softer methods appropriate for peptides. There are challenges yet to be overcome in realizing such peptide-based nanocircuits; these are discussed in our concluding remarks.


Proteins | 2002

Coupling of ligand binding and dimerization of helix-loop-helix peptides: Spectroscopic and sedimentation analyses of calbindin D9k EF-hands

Karin Julenius; James Robblee; Eva Thulin; Bryan E. Finn; Robert Fairman; Sara Linse

Isolated Ca2+‐binding EF‐hand peptides have a tendency to dimerize. This study is an attempt to account for the coupled equilibria of Ca2+‐binding and peptide association for two EF‐hands with strikingly different loop sequence and net charge. We have studied each of the two separate EF‐hand fragments from calbindin D9k. A series of Ca2+‐titrations at different peptide concentrations were monitored by CD and fluorescence spectroscopy. All data were fitted simultaneously to both a complete model of all possible equilibrium intermediates and a reduced model not including dimerization in the absence of Ca2+. Analytical ultracentrifugation shows that the peptides may occur as monomers or dimers depending on the solution conditions. Our results show strikingly different behavior for the two EF‐hands. The fragment containing the N‐terminal EF‐hand shows a strong tendency to dimerize in the Ca2+‐bound state. The average Ca2+‐affinity is 3.5 orders of magnitude lower than for the intact protein. We observe a large apparent cooperativity of Ca2+ binding for the overall process from Ca2+‐free monomer to fully loaded dimer, showing that a Ca2+‐free EF‐hand folds upon dimerization to a Ca2+‐bound EF‐hand, thereby presenting a preformed binding site to the second Ca2+‐ion. The C‐terminal EF‐hand shows a much smaller tendency to dimerize, which may be related to its larger net negative charge. In spite of the differences in dimerization behavior, the Ca2+ affinities of both EF‐hand fragments are similar and in the range lgK = 4.6–5.3. Proteins 2002;47:323–333.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Single Amino Acid Mutations Alter the Distribution of Human Porphobilinogen Synthase Quaternary Structure Isoforms (Morpheeins)

Lei Tang; Sabine Breinig; Linda Stith; Adele Mischel; Justin Tannir; Bashkim Kokona; Robert Fairman; Eileen K. Jaffe

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) is an obligate oligomer that can exist in functionally distinct quaternary states of different stoichiometries, which are called morpheeins. The morpheein concept describes an ensemble of quaternary structure isoforms wherein different structures of the monomer dictate different multiplicities of the oligomer (Jaffe, E. K. (2005) Trends Biochem. Sci. 30, 490-497). Human PBGS assembles into long-lived morpheeins and has been shown to be capable of forming either a high activity octamer or a low activity hexamer (Breinig, S., Kervinen, J., Stith, L., Wasson, A. S., Fairman, R., Wlodawer, A., Zdanov, A., and Jaffe, E. K. (2003) Nat. Struct. Biol. 10, 757-763). All PBGS monomers contain an αβ-barrel domain and an N-terminal arm domain. The N-terminal arm structure varies among PBGS morpheeins, and the spatial relationship between the arm and the barrel dictates the different quaternary assemblies. We have analyzed the structures of human PBGS morpheeins for key interactions that would be predicted to affect the oligomeric assembly. Examples of individual mutations that shift assembly of human PBGS away from the native octamer are R240A and W19A. The alternate morpheeins of human PBGS variants R240A and W19A are chromatographically separable from each other and kinetically distinct; their structure and dynamics have been characterized by native gel electrophoresis, dynamic light scattering, and analytical ultracentrifugation. R240A assembles into a metastable hexamer, which can undergo a reversible conversion to the octamer in the presence of substrate. The metastable nature of the R240A hexamer supports the hypothesis that octameric and hexameric morpheeins of PBGS are very close in energy. W19A assembles into a mixture of dimers, which appear to be stable.

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Brian Kuhlman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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