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Featured researches published by Rupak Doshi.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Probing the ATP hydrolysis cycle of the ABC multidrug transporter LmrA by pulsed EPR spectroscopy.

Ute A. Hellmich; Sevdalina Lyubenova; Eva Kaltenborn; Rupak Doshi; Hendrik W. van Veen; Thomas F. Prisner; Clemens Glaubitz

Members of the ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter superfamily translocate various types of molecules across the membrane at the expense of ATP. This requires cycling through a number of catalytic states. Here, we report conformational changes throughout the catalytic cycle of LmrA, a homodimeric multidrug ABC transporter from L. lactis. Using site-directed spin labeling and pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR/DEER) spectroscopy, we have probed the reorientation of the nucleotide binding domains and transmembrane helix 6 which is of particular relevance to drug binding and part of the dimerization interface. Our data show that LmrA samples a very large conformational space in its apo state, which is significantly reduced upon nucleotide binding. ATP binding but not hydrolysis is required to trigger this conformational change, which results in a relatively fixed orientation of both the nucleotide binding domains and transmembrane helices 6. This orientation is maintained throughout the ATP hydrolysis cycle until the protein cycles back to its apo state. Our data present strong evidence that switching between two dynamically and structurally distinct states is required for substrate translocation.


Proteins | 2010

Dissection of the conformational cycle of the multidrug/lipidA ABC exporter MsbA.

Rupak Doshi; Barbara Woebking; Hendrik W. van Veen

Recent crystal structures of the multidrug ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) exporters Sav1866 from Staphylococcus aureus, MsbA from Escherichia coli, Vibrio cholera, and Salmonella typhimurium, and mouse ABCB1a suggest a common alternating access mechanism for export. However, the molecular framework underlying this mechanism is critically dependent on assumed conformational relationships between nonidentical crystal structures and therefore requires biochemical verification. The structures of homodimeric MsbA reveal a pair of glutamate residues (E208 and E208′) in the intracellular domains of its two half‐transporters, close to the nucleotide‐binding domains (NBDs), which are in close proximity of each other in the outward‐facing state but not in the inward‐facing state. Using intermolecular cysteine crosslinking between E208C and E208C′ in E. coli MsbA, we demonstrate that the NBDs dissociate in nucleotide‐free conditions and come close on ATP binding and ADP·vanadate trapping. Interestingly, ADP alone separates the half‐transporters like a nucleotide‐free state, presumably for the following catalytic cycle. Our data fill persistent gaps in current studies on the conformational dynamics of a variety of ABC exporters. Based on a single biochemical method, the findings describe a conformational cycle for a single ABC exporter at major checkpoints of the ATPase reaction under experimental conditions, where the exporter is transport active. Proteins 2010.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Substrate binding stabilizes a pre-translocation intermediate in the ATP-binding cassette transport protein MsbA.

Rupak Doshi; Hendrik W. van Veen

Background: During substrate transport, ATP-binding cassette exporters switch between an inward-facing and an outward-facing state in a nucleotide-dependent fashion. Results: Substrate binding to bacterial MsbA initiates dimerization of nucleotide-binding domains without opening the membrane domains at their external side. Conclusion: Substrate binding to MsbA stabilizes an “inward-facing closed” pre-translocation state that binds ATP. Significance: Our observations suggest a fundamental mechanism by which substrates stimulate ATP hydrolysis. ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters belong to one of the largest protein superfamilies that expands from prokaryotes to man. Recent x-ray crystal structures of bacterial and mammalian ABC exporters suggest a common alternating access mechanism of substrate transport, which has also been biochemically substantiated. However, the current model does not yet explain the coupling between substrate binding and ATP hydrolysis that underlies ATP-dependent substrate transport. In our studies on the homodimeric multidrug/lipid A ABC exporter MsbA from Escherichia coli, we performed cysteine cross-linking, fluorescence energy transfer, and cysteine accessibility studies on two reporter positions, near the nucleotide-binding domains and in the membrane domains, for transporter embedded in a biological membrane. Our results suggest for the first time that substrate binding by MsbA stimulates the maximum rate of ATP hydrolysis by facilitating the dimerization of nucleotide-binding domains in a state, which is markedly distinct from the previously described nucleotide-free, inward-facing and nucleotide-bound, outward-facing conformations of ABC exporters and which binds ATP.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Molecular Disruption of the Power Stroke in the ATP-binding Cassette Transport Protein MsbA

Rupak Doshi; Anam Ali; Wilma Shi; Elizabeth V. Freeman; Lisa A. Fagg; Hendrik W. van Veen

Background: ATP-binding cassette exporters utilize ATP binding and hydrolysis to switch between the inward-facing and outward-facing state during transport. Results: Mutations in bacterial MsbA, in a conserved structural element termed the tetrahelix bundle, do not affect nucleotide binding but impair formation of the outward-facing conformation. Conclusion: The ATP-dependent switch requires robust tetrahelix bundle interactions. Significance: Agents that target the tetrahelix bundle might modulate clinically important ABC exporters. ATP-binding cassette transporters affect drug pharmacokinetics and are associated with inherited human diseases and impaired chemotherapeutic treatment of cancers and microbial infections. Current alternating access models for ATP-binding cassette exporter activity suggest that ATP binding at the two cytosolic nucleotide-binding domains provides a power stroke for the conformational switch of the two membrane domains from the inward-facing conformation to the outward-facing conformation. In outward-facing crystal structures of the bacterial homodimeric ATP-binding cassette transporters MsbA from Gram-negative bacteria and Sav1866 from Staphylococcus aureus, two transmembrane helices (3 and 4) in the membrane domains have their cytoplasmic extensions in close proximity, forming a tetrahelix bundle interface. In biochemical experiments on MsbA from Escherichia coli, we show for the first time that a robust network of inter-monomer interactions in the tetrahelix bundle is crucial for the transmission of nucleotide-dependent conformational changes to the extracellular side of the membrane domains. Our observations are the first to suggest that modulation of tetrahelix bundle interactions in ATP-binding cassette exporters might offer a potent strategy to alter their transport activity.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2011

The choreography of multidrug export

Rupak Doshi; Daniel A.P. Gutmann; Yvonne S.K. Khoo; Lisa A. Fagg; Hendrik W. van Veen

Multidrug transporters have a crucial role in causing the drug resistance that can arise in infectious micro-organisms and tumours. These integral membrane proteins mediate the export of a broad range of unrelated compounds from cells, including antibiotics and anticancer agents, thus reducing the concentration of these compounds to subtoxic levels in target cells. In spite of intensive research, it is not clear exactly how multidrug transporters work. The present review focuses on recent advancements in the biochemistry and structural biology of bacterial and human multidrug ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporters. These advancements point to a common mechanism in which polyspecific drug-binding surfaces in the membrane domains are alternately exposed to the inside and outside surface of the membrane in response to the ATP-driven dimerization of nucleotide-binding domains and their dissociation following ATP hydrolysis.


Protein and Peptide Letters | 2009

Metabolomics of serum peptides.

Rupak Doshi; Philip J. R. Day

Diseased-cell secreted proteins/peptides offer several leads in biomarker development. Blood is a rich and universal source of biomarkers because of its proximity to all cells in the body. However, important physiological and practical aspects need consideration before serum peptidomics is effectively applied in a clinical, and later bedside, setting.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2010

Spectrophotometric analysis of nucleic acids: oxygenation-dependant hyperchromism of DNA

Rupak Doshi; Philip J. R. Day; Paolo Carampin; Ewan W. Blanch; Ian J. Stratford; Nicola Tirelli


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017

Where do we go from here? Membrane protein research beyond the structure-function horizon

Ute A. Hellmich; Benjamin McIlwain; Rupak Doshi


Brain Research | 2012

Introduction: the cognitive neuroscience of thought.

Rupak Doshi; Kalina Christoff


arXiv: Biological Physics | 2010

A proposed increase in retinal field-of-view may lead to spatial shifts in images

Rupak Doshi; Philip J. R. Day

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Lisa A. Fagg

University of Cambridge

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Ute A. Hellmich

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Anam Ali

University of Cambridge

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Paolo Carampin

University of Manchester

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