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Dive into the research topics where Robert M. Nwokonko is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert M. Nwokonko.


Nature Communications | 2015

STIM1 dimers undergo unimolecular coupling to activate Orai1 channels

Xizhuo Wang; Xianming Wang; Natalia A. Loktionova; Xiangyu Cai; Robert M. Nwokonko; Erin Vrana; Youjun Wang; Brad S. Rothberg; Donald L. Gill

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ sensor, STIM1, becomes activated when ER-stored Ca2+ is depleted and translocates into ER–plasma membrane junctions where it tethers and activates Orai1 Ca2+ entry channels. The dimeric STIM1 protein contains a small STIM-Orai-activating region (SOAR)—the minimal sequence sufficient to activate Orai1 channels. Since SOAR itself is a dimer, we constructed SOAR concatemer–dimers and introduced mutations at F394, which is critical for Orai1 coupling and activation. The F394H mutation in both SOAR monomers completely blocks dimer function, but F394H introduced in only one of the dimeric SOAR monomers has no effect on Orai1 binding or activation. This reveals an unexpected unimolecular coupling between STIM1 and Orai1 and argues against recent evidence suggesting dimeric interaction between STIM1 and two adjacent Orai1 channel subunits. The model predicts that STIM1 dimers may be involved in crosslinking between Orai1 channels with implications for the kinetics and localization of Orai1 channel opening.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

The Orai1 Store-operated Calcium Channel Functions as a Hexamer

Xiangyu Cai; Robert M. Nwokonko; Natalia A. Loktionova; Xianming Wang; Ping Xin; Mohamed Trebak; Youjun Wang; Donald L. Gill

Orai channels mediate store-operated Ca2+ signals crucial in regulating transcription in many cell types, and implicated in numerous immunological and inflammatory disorders. Despite their central importance, controversy surrounds the basic subunit structure of Orai channels, with several biochemical and biophysical studies suggesting a tetrameric structure yet crystallographic evidence indicating a hexamer. We systematically investigated the subunit configuration of the functional Orai1 channel, generating a series of tdTomato-tagged concatenated Orai1 channel constructs (dimers to hexamers) expressed in CRISPR-derived ORAI1 knock-out HEK cells, stably expressing STIM1-YFP. Surface biotinylation demonstrated that the full-length concatemers were surface membrane-expressed. Unexpectedly, Orai1 dimers, trimers, tetramers, pentamers, and hexamers all mediated similar and substantial store-operated Ca2+ entry. Moreover, each Orai1 concatemer mediated Ca2+ currents with inward rectification and reversal potentials almost identical to those observed with expressed Orai1 monomer. In Orai1 tetramers, subunit-specific replacement with Orai1 E106A “pore-inactive” subunits revealed that functional channels utilize only the N-terminal dimer from the tetramer. In contrast, Orai1 E106A replacement in Orai1 hexamers established that all the subunits can contribute to channel formation, indicating a hexameric channel configuration. The critical Ca2+ selectivity filter-forming Glu-106 residue may mediate Orai1 channel assembly around a central Ca2+ ion within the pore. Thus, multiple E106A substitutions in the Orai1 hexamer may promote an alternative “trimer-of-dimers” channel configuration in which the C-terminal E106A subunits are excluded from the hexameric core. Our results argue strongly against a tetrameric configuration for Orai1 channels and indicate that the Orai1 channel functions as a hexamer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Cross-linking of Orai1 channels by STIM proteins

Robert M. Nwokonko; Xiangyu Cai; Natalia A. Loktionova; Raz Abdulqadir; Ping Xin; Barbara A. Niemeyer; Youjun Wang; Mohamed Trebak; Donald L. Gill

Significance The work presents a unique understanding of the organization and function of two ubiquitously expressed proteins, central in generating calcium signals in all cell types. These are the intracellular calcium sensing “STIM” proteins, and the highly selective cell surface “Orai” calcium channels. We reveal that STIM proteins can cross-link Orai channels, resulting in a reorganized microenvironment within the membrane junctions in which they function, with important consequences in the generation of oscillatory calcium signals. Interestingly, we show a variant STIM protein widely expressed in cells functions to prevent the STIM–Orai cross-linking and clustering of channels. This provides important modulation of calcium signal generation and can serve to protect cells from overstimulation of the calcium signaling machinery. The transmembrane docking of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-sensing STIM proteins with plasma membrane (PM) Orai Ca2+ channels is a critical but poorly understood step in Ca2+ signal generation. STIM1 protein dimers unfold to expose a discrete STIM–Orai activating region (SOAR1) that tethers and activates Orai1 channels within discrete ER–PM junctions. We reveal that each monomer within the SOAR dimer interacts independently with single Orai1 subunits to mediate cross-linking between Orai1 channels. Superresolution imaging and mobility measured by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching reveal that SOAR dimer cross-linking leads to substantial Orai1 channel clustering, resulting in increased efficacy and cooperativity of Orai1 channel function. A concatenated SOAR1 heterodimer containing one monomer point mutated at its critical Orai1 binding residue (F394H), although fully activating Orai channels, is completely defective in cross-linking Orai1 channels. Importantly, the naturally occurring STIM2 variant, STIM2.1, has an eight-amino acid insert in its SOAR unit that renders it functionally identical to the F394H mutant in SOAR1. Contrary to earlier predictions, the SOAR1–SOAR2.1 heterodimer fully activates Orai1 channels but prevents cross-linking and clustering of channels. Interestingly, combined expression of full-length STIM1 with STIM2.1 in a 5:1 ratio causes suppression of sustained agonist-induced Ca2+ oscillations and protects cells from Ca2+ overload, resulting from high agonist-induced Ca2+ release. Thus, STIM2.1 exerts a powerful regulatory effect on signal generation likely through preventing Orai1 channel cross-linking. Overall, STIM-mediated cross-linking of Orai1 channels is a hitherto unrecognized functional paradigm that likely provides an organizational microenvironment within ER–PM junctions with important functional impact on Ca2+ signal generation.


Nature Communications | 2016

The STIM1-binding site nexus remotely controls Orai1 channel gating

Xiangyu Cai; Natalia A. Loktionova; Xianming Wang; Robert M. Nwokonko; Xizhuo Wang; Youjun Wang; Brad S. Rothberg; Mohamed Trebak; Donald L. Gill


Cell Calcium | 2017

The STIM-Orai coupling interface and gating of the Orai1 channel

Xiangyu Cai; Robert M. Nwokonko; Natalia A. Loktionova; Youjun Wang; Donald L. Gill


Archive | 2017

The STIM-Orai Pathway: Conformational Coupling Between STIM and Orai in the Activation of Store-Operated Ca 2+ Entry

Robert M. Nwokonko; Xiangyu Cai; Natalia A. Loktionova; Youjun Wang; Donald L. Gill


Biophysical Journal | 2016

Orai1 Concatemers Reveal a Hexameric Orai1 Channel Assembly

Xiangyu Cai; Xianming Wang; Natalia A. Loktionova; Robert M. Nwokonko; Mohamed Trebak; Donald L. Gill


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2018

Calcium store refilling and STIM activation in STIM- and Orai-deficient cell lines

Sisi Zheng; Lijuan Zhou; Guolin Ma; Tian Zhang; Jindou Liu; Jia Li; Nhung T. Nguyen; Xiaoyan Zhang; Wanjie Li; Robert M. Nwokonko; Fukuan Zhao; Jingguo Liu; Yun Huang; Donald L. Gill; Youjun Wang


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

Pore properties of Orai1 calcium channel dimers and their activation by the STIM1 ER calcium sensor

Xiangyu Cai; Robert M. Nwokonko; Natalia A. Loktionova; Raz Abdulqadir; James H. Baraniak; Youjun Wang; Mohamed Trebak; Donald L. Gill


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Ion Conductance of Orai1 Channel Selectivity-Filter Heterodimers

Xiangyu Cai; Robert M. Nwokonko; Natalia A. Loktionova; Donald L. Gill

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Donald L. Gill

Pennsylvania State University

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Natalia A. Loktionova

Pennsylvania State University

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Xiangyu Cai

Pennsylvania State University

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Youjun Wang

Beijing Normal University

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Mohamed Trebak

Pennsylvania State University

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Xianming Wang

Pennsylvania State University

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Ping Xin

Pennsylvania State University

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