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Dive into the research topics where Robert McKenna is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert McKenna.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Structure of adeno-associated virus serotype 8, a gene therapy vector.

Hyun Joo Nam; Michael Douglas Lane; Eric Padron; Brittney L. Gurda; Robert McKenna; Erik Kohlbrenner; George Aslanidi; Barry J. Byrne; Nicholas Muzyczka; Sergei Zolotukhin; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna

ABSTRACT Adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are being developed as gene therapy vectors, and their efficacy could be improved by a detailed understanding of their viral capsid structures. AAV serotype 8 (AAV8) shows a significantly greater liver transduction efficiency than those of other serotypes, which has resulted in efforts to develop this virus as a gene therapy vector for hemophilia A and familial hypercholesterolemia. Pseudotyping studies show that the differential tissue tropism and transduction efficiencies exhibited by the AAVs result from differences in their capsid viral protein (VP) amino acids. Towards identifying the structural features underpinning these disparities, we report the crystal structure of the AAV8 viral capsid determined to 2.6-Å resolution. The overall topology of its common overlapping VP is similar to that previously reported for the crystal structures of AAV2 and AAV4, with an eight-stranded β-barrel and long loops between the β-strands. The most significant structural differences between AAV8 and AAV2 (the best-characterized serotype) are located on the capsid surface at protrusions surrounding the two-, three-, and fivefold axes at residues reported to control transduction efficiency and antibody recognition for AAV2. In addition, a comparison of the AAV8 and AAV2 capsid surface amino acids showed a reduced distribution of basic charge for AAV8 at the mapped AAV2 heparin sulfate receptor binding region, consistent with an observed non-heparin-binding phenotype for AAV8. Thus, this AAV8 structure provides an additional platform for mutagenesis efforts to characterize AAV capsid regions responsible for differential cellular tropism, transduction, and antigenicity for these promising gene therapy vectors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Entrapment of carbon dioxide in the active site of carbonic anhydrase II

John F. Domsic; Balendu Sankara Avvaru; Chae Un Kim; Sol M. Gruner; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; David N. Silverman; Robert McKenna

The visualization at near atomic resolution of transient substrates in the active site of enzymes is fundamental to fully understanding their mechanism of action. Here we show the application of using CO2-pressurized, cryo-cooled crystals to capture the first step of CO2 hydration catalyzed by the zinc-metalloenzyme human carbonic anhydrase II, the binding of substrate CO2, for both the holo and the apo (without zinc) enzyme to 1.1Å resolution. Until now, the feasibility of such a study was thought to be technically too challenging because of the low solubility of CO2 and the fast turnover to bicarbonate by the enzyme (Liang, J. Y., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 87, 3675–3679). These structures provide insight into the long hypothesized binding of CO2 in a hydrophobic pocket at the active site and demonstrate that the zinc does not play a critical role in the binding or orientation of CO2. This method may also have a much broader implication for the study of other enzymes for which CO2 is a substrate or product and for the capturing of transient substrates and revealing hydrophobic pockets in proteins.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Dithiocarbamates strongly inhibit carbonic anhydrases and show antiglaucoma action in vivo

Fabrizio Carta; Mayank Aggarwal; Alfonso Maresca; Andrea Scozzafava; Robert McKenna; Emanuela Masini; Claudiu T. Supuran

A series of dithiocarbamates were prepared by reaction of primary/secondary amines with carbon disulfide in the presence of bases. These compounds were tested for the inhibition of four human (h) isoforms of the zinc enzyme carbonic anhydrase, CA (EC 4.2.1.1), hCA I, II, IX, and XII, involved in pathologies such as glaucoma (CA II and XII) or cancer (CA IX). Several low nanomolar inhibitors targeting these CAs were detected. The X-ray crystal structure of the hCA II adduct with morpholine dithiocarbamate evidenced the inhibition mechanism of these compounds, which coordinate to the metal ion through a sulfur atom from the dithiocarbamate zinc-binding function. Some dithiocarbamates showed an effective intraocular pressure lowering activity in an animal model of glucoma.


Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Structural annotation of human carbonic anhydrases.

Mayank Aggarwal; Christopher D. Boone; Bhargav Kondeti; Robert McKenna

Carbonic anhydrases (CAs, EC 4.2.1.1) are a family of metalloenzymes that catalyze the reversible interconversion of CO2 and HCO3−. Of the 15 isoforms of human (h) α-CA, 12 are catalytic (hCAs I-IV, VA, VB, VI, VII, IX, XII-XIV). The remaining three acatalytic isoforms (hCAs VIII, X and XI) lack the active site Zn2+ and are referred to as CA-related proteins (CA-RPs); however, their function remains elusive. Overall these isoforms are very similar to each other in structure but they differ in their expression and distribution. The favourable properties of hCA II such as fast kinetics, easy expression and purification, high solubility and intermediate heat resistance have made it an attractive candidate for numerous industrial applications. This review highlights the structural similarity and stability comparison among hCAs.


Nature | 1997

Structure of a viral procapsid with molecular scaffolding

Terje Dokland; Robert McKenna; Leodevico L. Ilag; Brian R. Bowman; Nino L. Incardona; Bentley A. Fane; Michael G. Rossmann

The assembly of a macromolecular structure proceeds along an ordered morphogenetic pathway, and is accomplished by the switching of proteins between discrete conformations as they are added to the nascent assembly. Scaffolding proteins often play a catalytic role in the assembly process, rather like molecular chaperones. Although macromolecular assembly processes are fundamental to all biological systems, they have been characterized most thoroughly in viral systems, such as the icosahedral Escherichia coli bacteriophage φX174 (refs 6, 7). The φX174 virion contains the proteins F, G, H and J. During assembly, two scaffolding proteins B and D are required for the formation of a 108S, 360-Å-diameter procapsid from pentameric precursors containing the F, G and H proteins. The procapsid contains 240 copies of protein D, forming an external scaffold, and 60 copies each of the internal scaffolding protein B, the capsid protein F, and the spike protein G. Maturation involves packaging of DNA and J proteins and loss of protein B, producing a 132S intermediate. Subsequent removal of the external scaffold yields the mature virion. Both the F and G proteins have the eight-stranded antiparallel β-sandwich motif common to many plant and animal viruses. Here we describe the structure of a procapsid-like particle at 3.5-Å resolution, showing how the scaffolding proteins coordinate assembly of the virus by interactions with the F and G proteins, and showing that the F protein undergoes conformational changes during capsid maturation.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Structurally Mapping the Diverse Phenotype of Adeno-Associated Virus Serotype 4

Lakshmanan Govindasamy; Eric Padron; Robert McKenna; Nicholas Muzyczka; Nikola Kaludov; John A. Chiorini; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna

ABSTRACT The adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) can package and deliver foreign DNA into cells for corrective gene delivery applications. The AAV serotypes have distinct cell binding, transduction, and antigenic characteristics that have been shown to be dictated by the capsid viral protein (VP) sequence. To understand the contribution of capsid structure to these properties, we have determined the crystal structure of AAV serotype 4 (AAV4), one of the most diverse serotypes with respect to capsid protein sequence and antigenic reactivity. Structural comparison of AAV4 to AAV2 shows conservation of the core β strands (βB to βI) and helical (αA) secondary structure elements, which also exist in all other known parvovirus structures. However, surface loop variations (I to IX), some containing compensating structural insertions and deletions in adjacent regions, result in local topological differences on the capsid surface. These include AAV4 having a deeper twofold depression, wider and rounder protrusions surrounding the threefold axes, and a different topology at the top of the fivefold channel from that of AAV2. Also, the previously observed “valleys” between the threefold protrusions, containing AAV2s heparin binding residues, are narrower in AAV4. The observed differences in loop topologies at subunit interfaces are consistent with the inability of AAV2 and AAV4 VPs to combine for mosaic capsid formation in efforts to engineer novel tropisms. Significantly, all of the surface loop variations are associated with amino acids reported to affect receptor recognition, transduction, and anticapsid antibody reactivity for AAV2. This observation suggests that these capsid regions may also play similar roles in the other AAV serotypes.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Dithiocarbamates: a new class of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors. Crystallographic and kinetic investigations

Fabrizio Carta; Mayank Aggarwal; Alfonso Maresca; Andrea Scozzafava; Robert McKenna; Claudiu T. Supuran

The zinc enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) is inhibited by several classes of zinc-binders (sulfonamides, sulfamates, and sulfamides) as well as by compounds which do not interact with the metal ion (phenols, polyamines and coumarins). Here we report a new class of potent CA inhibitors which bind the zinc ion: the dithiocarbamates (DTCs). They coordinate to the zinc ion from the enzyme active site in monodentate manner and establish many favorable interactions with amino acid residues nearby. Several low nanomolar CA I, II and IX inhibitors were detected.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Assembly and structural analysis of a covalently closed nano-scale DNA cage

Felicie F. Andersen; Bjarne Knudsen; Cristiano L. P. Oliveira; Rikke Frøhlich; Dinna Krüger; Jörg Bungert; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; Robert McKenna; Sissel Juul; Christopher Veigaard; Jørn Koch; John L. Rubinstein; Bernt Guldbrandtsen; Marianne Smedegaard Hede; Göran Karlsson; Anni H. Andersen; Jan Skov Pedersen; Birgitta R. Knudsen

The inherent properties of DNA as a stable polymer with unique affinity for partner molecules determined by the specific Watson–Crick base pairing makes it an ideal component in self-assembling structures. This has been exploited for decades in the design of a variety of artificial substrates for investigations of DNA-interacting enzymes. More recently, strategies for synthesis of more complex two-dimensional (2D) and 3D DNA structures have emerged. However, the building of such structures is still in progress and more experiences from different research groups and different fields of expertise are necessary before complex DNA structures can be routinely designed for the use in basal science and/or biotechnology. Here we present the design, construction and structural analysis of a covalently closed and stable 3D DNA structure with the connectivity of an octahedron, as defined by the double-stranded DNA helices that assembles from eight oligonucleotides with a yield of ∼30%. As demonstrated by Small Angle X-ray Scattering and cryo-Transmission Electron Microscopy analyses the eight-stranded DNA structure has a central cavity larger than the apertures in the surrounding DNA lattice and can be described as a nano-scale DNA cage, Hence, in theory it could hold proteins or other bio-molecules to enable their investigation in certain harmful environments or even allow their organization into higher order structures.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Patents | 2013

Anticonvulsant/antiepileptic carbonic anhydrase inhibitors: a patent review.

Mayank Aggarwal; Bhargav Kondeti; Robert McKenna

Introduction: An epileptic seizure is a transient occurrence of signs and/or symptoms due to abnormal excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain. The International League Against Epilepsy classifies seizures in two broad categories: partial (localized to one cerebral hemisphere) and generalized (localized to both cerebral hemispheres). One indirect pathway for the treatment of epilepsy includes the inhibition of carbonic anhydrase (CA), thereby increasing CO2 levels in the brain. Areas covered: Carbonic anhydrases (EC 4.2.1.1) are ubiquitous metalloenzymes that catalyze the reversible hydration/dehydration of CO2/HCO3 -, respectively. CA inhibitors (CAIs) such as acetazolamide, methazolamide, topiramate, zonisamide, and sulthiame can reduce seizures through perturbation of the CO2 equilibrium and/or the inhibition of ion channels. This review focuses on the mechanism of epilepsy, CA catalysis, and recent developments in the treatment of epilepsy using CAIs. Expert opinion: Based on the observed active-site binding interactions of CAIs in crystal structures and their respective inhibition constants, structure–activity relationships can be mapped. Various CAIs along with novel techniques to administer them have been patented in the last four years. However, epilepsy continues to be a path less traveled when it comes to CAIs. A major area of research must focus toward the design of isoform-specific inhibitors using analogs of existing CAIs.


Biochemistry | 2010

A short, strong hydrogen bond in the active site of human carbonic anhydrase II.

Balendu Sankara Avvaru; Chae Un Kim; Katherine H. Sippel; Sol M. Gruner; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; David N. Silverman; Robert McKenna

The crystal structure of human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) obtained at 0.9 A resolution reveals that a water molecule, termed deep water, Dw, and bound in a hydrophobic pocket of the active site forms a short, strong hydrogen bond with the zinc-bound solvent molecule, a conclusion based on the observed oxygen-oxygen distance of 2.45 A. This water structure has similarities with hydrated hydroxide found in crystals of certain inorganic complexes. The energy required to displace Dw contributes in significant part to the weak binding of CO(2) in the enzyme-substrate complex, a weak binding that enhances k(cat) for the conversion of CO(2) into bicarbonate. In addition, this short, strong hydrogen bond is expected to contribute to the low pK(a) of the zinc-bound water and to promote proton transfer in catalysis.

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