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Dive into the research topics where S. James Remington is active.

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Featured researches published by S. James Remington.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Investigating mitochondrial redox potential with redox-sensitive green fluorescent protein indicators.

George T. Hanson; Robert Aggeler; Devin Oglesbee; Mark B. Cannon; Roderick A. Capaldi; Roger Y. Tsien; S. James Remington

Current methods for determining ambient redox potential in cells are labor-intensive and generally require destruction of tissue. This precludes single cell or real time studies of changes in redox poise that result from metabolic processes or environmental influences. By substitution of surface-exposed residues on the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein (GFP) with cysteines in appropriate positions to form disulfide bonds, reduction-oxidation-sensitive GFPs (roGFPs) have been created. roGFPs have two fluorescence excitation maxima at about 400 and 490 nm and display rapid and reversible ratiometric changes in fluorescence in response to changes in ambient redox potential in vitro and in vivo. Crystal structure analyses of reduced and oxidized crystals of roGFP2 at 2.0- and 1.9-Å resolution, respectively, reveal in the oxidized state a highly strained disulfide and localized main chain structural changes that presumably account for the state-dependent spectral changes. roGFP1 has been targeted to the mitochondria in HeLa cells. Fluorometric measurements on these cells using a fluorescence microscope or in cell suspension using a fluorometer reveal that the roGFP1 probe is in dynamic equilibrium with the mitochondrial redox status and responds to membrane-permeable reductants and oxidants. The roGFP1 probe reports that the matrix space in HeLa cell mitochondria is highly reducing, with a midpoint potential near -360 mV (assuming mitochondrial pH ∼8.0 at 37 °C). In other work (C. T. Dooley, T. M. Dore, G. Hanson, W. C. Jackson, S. J. Remington, and R. Y. Tsien, submitted for publication), it is shown that the cytosol of HeLa cells is also unusually reducing but somewhat less so than the mitochondrial matrix.


Cancer Research | 2004

Energy Substrate Modulates Mitochondrial Structure and Oxidative Capacity in Cancer Cells

Rodrigue Rossignol; Robert Gilkerson; Robert Aggeler; Kunihiro Yamagata; S. James Remington; Roderick A. Capaldi

Comparative analysis of cytoplasmic organelles in a variety of tumors relative to normal tissues generally reveals a strong diminution in mitochondrial content and in oxidative phosphorylation capacity. However, little is known about what triggers these modifications and whether or not they are physiologically reversible. We hypothesized that energy substrate availability could play an important role in this phenomenon. The physiological effects of a change in substrate availability were examined on a human cancer cell line (HeLa), focusing specifically on its ability to use glycolysis versus oxidative phosphorylation, and the effect that energy substrate type has on mitochondrial composition, structure, and function. Changes in oxidative phosphorylation were measured in vivo by a variety of techniques, including the use of two novel ratiometric green fluorescent protein biosensors, the expression level of oxidative phosphorylation and some glycolytic enzymes were determined by Western blot, mitochondrial DNA content was measured by real-time PCR, and mitochondrial morphology was monitored by both confocal and electron microscopy. Our data show that the defective mitochondrial system described in cancer cells can be dramatically improved by solely changing substrate availability and that HeLa cells can adapt their mitochondrial network structurally and functionally to derive energy by glutaminolysis only. This could also provide an explanation for the enhancement of oxidative phosphorylation capacity observed after tumor regression or removal. Our work demonstrates that the pleomorphic, highly dynamic structure of the mitochondrion can be remodeled to accommodate a change in oxidative phosphorylation activity. We compared our finding on HeLa cells with those for nontransformed fibroblasts to help distinguish the regulatory pathways.


Structure | 1998

Structural basis of spectral shifts in the yellow-emission variants of green fluorescent protein.

Rebekka M. Wachter; Marc André Elsliger; Karen Kallio; George T. Hanson; S. James Remington

BACKGROUND Because of its ability to spontaneously generate its own fluorophore, the green fluorescent protein (GFP) from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria is used extensively as a fluorescent marker in molecular and cell biology. The yellow fluorescent proteins (YFPs) have the longest wavelength emissions of all GFP variants examined to date. This shift in the spectrum is the result of a T203Y substitution (single-letter amino acid code), a mutation rationally designed on the basis of the X-ray structure of GFP S65T. RESULTS We have determined the crystal structures of YFP T203Y/S65G/V68L/S72A and YFP H148G to 2.5 and 2.6 A resolution, respectively. Both structures show clear electron density for nearly coplanar pi-pi stacking between Tyr203 and the chromophore. The chromophore has been displaced by nearly 1 A in comparison to other available structures. Although the H148G mutation results in the generation of a solvent channel to the chromophore cavity, intense fluorescence is maintained. The chromophore in the intact protein can be titrated, and the two variants have pKa values of 7.0 (YFP) and 8.0 (YFP H148G). CONCLUSIONS The observed red shift of the T203Y YFP variant is proposed to be mainly due to the additional polarizability of the pi-stacked Tyr203. The altered location of the chromophore suggests that the exact positions of nearby residues are not crucial for the chemistry of chromophore formation. The YFPs significantly extend the pH range over which GFPs may be employed as pH indicators in live cells.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

Directed evolution of a monomeric, bright and photostable version of Clavularia cyan fluorescent protein: structural characterization and applications in fluorescence imaging

Hui-wang Ai; J. Nathan Henderson; S. James Remington; Robert E. Campbell

The arsenal of engineered variants of the GFP [green FP (fluorescent protein)] from Aequorea jellyfish provides researchers with a powerful set of tools for use in biochemical and cell biology research. The recent discovery of diverse FPs in Anthozoa coral species has provided protein engineers with an abundance of alternative progenitor FPs from which improved variants that complement or supersede existing Aequorea GFP variants could be derived. Here, we report the engineering of the first monomeric version of the tetrameric CFP (cyan FP) cFP484 from Clavularia coral. Starting from a designed synthetic gene library with mammalian codon preferences, we identified dimeric cFP484 variants with fluorescent brightness significantly greater than the wild-type protein. Following incorporation of dimer-breaking mutations and extensive directed evolution with selection for blue-shifted emission, high fluorescent brightness and photostability, we arrived at an optimized variant that we have named mTFP1 [monomeric TFP1 (teal FP 1)]. The new mTFP1 is one of the brightest and most photostable FPs reported to date. In addition, the fluorescence is insensitive to physiologically relevant pH changes and the fluorescence lifetime decay is best fitted as a single exponential. The 1.19 A crystal structure (1 A=0.1 nm) of mTFP1 confirms the monomeric structure and reveals an unusually distorted chromophore conformation. As we experimentally demonstrate, the high quantum yield of mTFP1 (0.85) makes it particularly suitable as a replacement for ECFP (enhanced CFP) or Cerulean as a FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer) donor to either a yellow or orange FP acceptor.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Structural basis for reversible photobleaching of a green fluorescent protein homologue

J. Nathan Henderson; Hui-wang Ai; Robert E. Campbell; S. James Remington

Fluorescent protein (FP) variants that can be reversibly converted between fluorescent and nonfluorescent states have proven to be a catalyst for innovation in the field of fluorescence microscopy. However, the structural basis of the process remains poorly understood. High-resolution structures of a FP derived from Clavularia in both the fluorescent and the light-induced nonfluorescent states reveal that the rapid and complete loss of fluorescence observed upon illumination with 450-nm light results from cis–trans isomerization of the chromophore. The photoinduced change in configuration from the well ordered cis isomer to the highly nonplanar and disordered trans isomer is accompanied by a dramatic rearrangement of internal side chains. Taken together, the structures provide an explanation for the loss of fluorescence upon illumination, the slow light-independent recovery, and the rapid light-induced recovery of fluorescence. The fundamental mechanism appears to be common to all of the photoactivatable and reversibly photoswitchable FPs reported to date.


Current Biology | 1999

Sensitivity of the yellow variant of green fluorescent protein to halides and nitrate

Rebekka M. Wachter; S. James Remington

as those found in the hindbrain only occurred after 35 hpf (Figure 1e). In the hindbrain and the midbrain tegmentum, medio-laterally oriented spinning axes (that is, rotations in the observation plane) were predominant, whereas in the optic tectum, most nuclei did not spin around a medio-lateral axis — a difference that might be related to the different orientation of the neuroepithelium in that part of the brain. Because it is less accessible, the forebrain was not investigated. Interestingly, the neuroretina, although it originates from the brain neuroepithelium, did not have spinning nuclei at any stage of its development. A more extensive survey of the distribution and direction of nuclear rotations occurring in the observation plane was carried out in a well-defined compartment of the hindbrain, rhombomere 5, the limits of which can be fairly well discerned in the living embryo. Both clockwise and anticlockwise rotations were found throughout the rhombomere, with a somewhat reduced frequency anteriorly, both on the left and the right side of the rhombomere (Figure 1g). In the hindbrain or midbrain of the day-2 embryo, only a small minority of the cells of the neuroepithelium have already differentiated into neurons [1]. Although the larger, easily recognizable nuclei of these young neurons occasionally undergo partial or even complete rotations during a 1 hour recording session, this is by no means comparable to the high spin rates displayed by undifferentiated cells of the neuroepithelium. Only one report, by Pomerat in 1953 [2], concerning tissue cultures of adult human nasal mucosa, documented nuclei spinning at rates comparable to, although lower than, those reported here in the zebrafish embryo. Some later papers reported nuclear rotations in tissue cultures of neurons and in some cell lines, but at much lower rates (up to one rotation per hour, at most) [3–7]. The very high spinning rates found here in the zebrafish embryo occur only in the still undifferentiated brain neuroepithelium, and in a well defined developmental sequence — first in the hindbrain and subsequently in the midbrain. This observation raises at least three lines of questioning: how are the spinning nuclei anchored to the surrounding cell structures; what is the motive force that can make them spin so fast; and what is the possible functional significance of this phenomenon for the neuroepithelial cells involved? Supplementary material Supplementary material including time-lapse video recordings of the spinning nuclei shown in Figure 1 is available at …


Plant Physiology | 2006

Expression and Characterization of a Redox-Sensing Green Fluorescent Protein (Reduction-Oxidation-Sensitive Green Fluorescent Protein) in Arabidopsis

Keni Jiang; Christian Schwarzer; Elizabeth Lally; Shibo Zhang; Steven Ruzin; Terry E. Machen; S. James Remington; Lewis J. Feldman

Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) was transformed with a redox-sensing green fluorescent protein (reduction-oxidation-sensitive green fluorescent protein [roGFP]), with expression targeted to either the cytoplasm or to the mitochondria. Both the mitochondrial and cytosolic forms are oxidation-reduction sensitive, as indicated by a change in the ratio of 510 nm light (green light) emitted following alternating illumination with 410 and 474 nm light. The 410/474 fluorescence ratio is related to the redox potential (in millivolts) of the organelle, cell, or tissue. Both forms of roGFP can be reduced with dithiothreitol and oxidized with hydrogen peroxide. The average resting redox potentials for roots are −318 mV for the cytoplasm and −362 mV for the mitochondria. The elongation zone of the Arabidopsis root has a more oxidized redox status than either the root cap or meristem. Mitochondria are much better than the cytoplasm, as a whole, at buffering changes in redox. The data show that roGFP is redox sensitive in plant cells and that this sensor makes it possible to monitor, in real time, dynamic changes in redox in vivo.


Biochemistry | 2008

Development of a family of redox-sensitive green fluorescent protein indicators for use in relatively oxidizing subcellular environments.

Jeremy R. Lohman; S. James Remington

Green fluorescent protein (GFP) indicators were previously developed that rapidly and quantitatively respond to changes in the thiol/disulfide equilibrium within subcellular compartments. In these indicators, surface-exposed cysteines residues were introduced so as to form a labile redox-active disulfide that in turn controls the emission properties of the internal chromophore. The biosensors have been shown to be effective reporters of the thiol/disulfide status within reducing compartments such as the mitochondria and cytosol for several cell types. However, due to the high thermodynamic stability of the introduced disulfide bond, the indicators are not useful for quantitative analysis within more oxidizing compartments such as the endoplasmic reticulum. Here we report the development of a new family of GFP-based redox indicators (roGFP1-iX) in which the thermodynamic stability of the disulfide is substantially lowered by insertion of a single amino acid into the main chain, adjacent to cysteine 147. The insertions result in indicators with midpoint potentials of -229 to -246 mV and are thus better suited for study of relatively oxidizing subcellular compartments. Atomic resolution crystallographic analyses suggest that two important factors act to destabilize the disulfide linkage in roGFP1-iX. In the oxidized state, an unusual non-proline cis-peptide bond adjacent to one of the cysteines introduces geometric strain into the system, while in the reduced state, a dramatic loop opening lowers the effective concentration of the reacting species.


Protein Science | 2011

Green fluorescent protein: A perspective

S. James Remington

A brief personal perspective is provided for green fluorescent protein (GFP), covering the period 1994–2011. The topics discussed are primarily those in which my research group has made a contribution and include structure and function of the GFP polypeptide, the mechanism of fluorescence emission, excited state protein transfer, the design of ratiometric fluorescent protein biosensors and an overview of the fluorescent proteins derived from coral reef animals. Structure‐function relationships in photoswitchable fluorescent proteins and nonfluorescent chromoproteins are also briefly covered.


Nature | 2014

The 'mitoflash' probe cpYFP does not respond to superoxide

Markus Schwarzländer; Stephan Wagner; Yulia G. Ermakova; Vsevolod V. Belousov; Rafael Radi; Joseph S. Beckman; Garry R. Buettner; Nicolas Demaurex; Michael R. Duchen; Henry Jay Forman; Mark D. Fricker; David Gems; Andrew P. Halestrap; Barry Halliwell; Ursula Jakob; Iain G. Johnston; Nick S. Jones; David C. Logan; Bruce Morgan; Florian Muller; David G. Nicholls; S. James Remington; Paul T. Schumacker; Christine C. Winterbourn; Lee J. Sweetlove; Andreas J. Meyer; Tobias P. Dick; Michael P. Murphy

Arising from E.-Z. Shen et al. 508, 128–132 (2014); doi:10.1038/nature1301210.1038/nature13012Ageing and lifespan of organisms are determined by complicated interactions between their genetics and the environment, but the cellular mechanisms remain controversial; several studies suggest that cellular energy metabolism and free radical dynamics affect lifespan, implicating mitochondrial function. Recently, Shen et al. provided apparent mechanistic insight by reporting that mitochondrial oscillations of ‘free radical production’, called ‘mitoflashes’, in the pharynx of three-day old Caenorhabditis elegans correlated inversely with lifespan. The interpretation of mitoflashes as ‘bursts of superoxide radicals’ assumes that circularly permuted yellow fluorescent protein (cpYFP) is a reliable indicator of mitochondrial superoxide, but this interpretation has been criticized because experiments and theoretical considerations both show that changes in cpYFP fluorescence are due to alterations in pH, not superoxide. Here we show that purified cpYFP is completely unresponsive to superoxide, and that mitoflashes do not reflect superoxide generation or provide a link between mitochondrial free radical dynamics and lifespan. There is a Reply to this Brief Communication Arising by Cheng, H. et al. Nature 514, http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature13859 (2014).

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Xiaokun Shu

University of California

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Roger Y. Tsien

University of California

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