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Dive into the research topics where Sophia C. Goodchild is active.

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Featured researches published by Sophia C. Goodchild.


FEBS Letters | 2010

The enigma of the CLIC proteins: Ion channels, redox proteins, enzymes, scaffolding proteins?

Dene R. Littler; Stephen J. Harrop; Sophia C. Goodchild; Juanita M. Phang; Andrew V. Mynott; Lele Jiang; Stella M. Valenzuela; Michele Mazzanti; Louise J. Brown; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi

Chloride intracellular channel proteins (CLICs) are distinct from most ion channels in that they have both soluble and integral membrane forms. CLICs are highly conserved in chordates, with six vertebrate paralogues. CLIC‐like proteins are found in other metazoans. CLICs form channels in artificial bilayers in a process favoured by oxidising conditions and low pH. They are structurally plastic, with CLIC1 adopting two distinct soluble conformations. Phylogenetic and structural data indicate that CLICs are likely to have enzymatic function. The physiological role of CLICs appears to be maintenance of intracellular membranes, which is associated with tubulogenesis but may involve other substructures.


European Biophysics Journal | 2009

Oxidation promotes insertion of the CLIC1 chloride intracellular channel into the membrane

Sophia C. Goodchild; Michael W. Howell; Nicole M. Cordina; Dene R. Littler; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi; Louise J. Brown

Members of the chloride intracellular channel (CLIC) family exist primarily as soluble proteins but can also auto-insert into cellular membranes to form ion channels. While little is known about the process of CLIC membrane insertion, a unique feature of mammalian CLIC1 is its ability to undergo a dramatic structural metamorphosis between a monomeric glutathione-S-transferase homolog and an all-helical dimer upon oxidation in solution. Whether this oxidation-induced metamorphosis facilitates CLIC1 membrane insertion is unclear. In this work, we have sought to characterise the role of oxidation in the process of CLIC1 membrane insertion. We examined how redox conditions modify the ability of CLIC1 to associate with and insert into the membrane using fluorescence quenching studies and a sucrose-loaded vesicle sedimentation assay to measure membrane binding. Our results suggest that oxidation of monomeric CLIC1, in the presence of membranes, promotes insertion into the bilayer more effectively than the oxidised CLIC1 dimer.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Regulation of the membrane insertion and conductance activity of the metamorphic Chloride Intracellular channel protein CLIC1 by cholesterol

Stella M. Valenzuela; Heba Alkhamici; Louise J. Brown; Oscar C. Almond; Sophia C. Goodchild; Sonia Carne; Paul M. G. Curmi; Stephen A. Holt; Bruce Cornell

The Chloride Intracellular ion channel protein CLIC1 has the ability to spontaneously insert into lipid membranes from a soluble, globular state. The precise mechanism of how this occurs and what regulates this insertion is still largely unknown, although factors such as pH and redox environment are known contributors. In the current study, we demonstrate that the presence and concentration of cholesterol in the membrane regulates the spontaneous insertion of CLIC1 into the membrane as well as its ion channel activity. The study employed pressure versus area change measurements of Langmuir lipid monolayer films; and impedance spectroscopy measurements using tethered bilayer membranes to monitor membrane conductance during and following the addition of CLIC1 protein. The observed cholesterol dependent behaviour of CLIC1 is highly reminiscent of the cholesterol-dependent-cytolysin family of bacterial pore-forming proteins, suggesting common regulatory mechanisms for spontaneous protein insertion into the membrane bilayer.


Biochemistry | 2010

Metamorphic response of the CLIC1 chloride intracellular ion channel protein upon membrane interaction.

Sophia C. Goodchild; Michael W. Howell; Dene R. Littler; Ramya A. Mandyam; Kenneth L. Sale; Michele Mazzanti; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi; Louise J. Brown

A striking feature of the CLIC (chloride intracellular channel) protein family is the ability of its members to convert between a soluble state and an integral membrane channel form. Direct evidence of the structural transition required for the CLIC protein to autonomously insert into the membrane is lacking, largely because of the challenge of probing the conformation of the membrane-bound protein. However, insights into the CLIC transmembrane form can be gained by biophysical methods such as fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy. This approach was used to measure distances from tryptophan 35, located within the CLIC1 putative N-domain transmembrane region, to three native cysteine residues within the C-terminal domain. These distances were computed both in aqueous solution and upon the addition of membrane vesicles. The FRET distances were used as constraints for modeling of a structure for the CLIC1 integral membrane form. The data are suggestive of a large conformational unfolding occurring between the N- and C-domains of CLIC1 upon interaction with the membrane. Consistent with previous findings, the N-terminal domain of CLIC1 is likely to insert into the lipid bilayer, while the C-domain remains in solution on the extravesicular side of the membrane.


Biochemistry | 2011

Transmembrane Extension and Oligomerization of the CLIC1 Chloride Intracellular Channel Protein upon Membrane Interaction

Sophia C. Goodchild; Christopher N. Angstmann; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi; Louise J. Brown

Chloride intracellular channel proteins (CLICs) differ from most ion channels as they can exist in both soluble and integral membrane forms. The CLICs are expressed as soluble proteins but can reversibly autoinsert into the membrane to form active ion channels. For CLIC1, the interaction with the lipid bilayer is enhanced under oxidative conditions. At present, little evidence is available characterizing the structure of the putative oligomeric CLIC integral membrane form. Previously, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) was used to monitor and model the conformational transition within CLIC1 as it interacts with the membrane bilayer. These results revealed a large-scale unfolding between the C- and N-domains of CLIC1 as it interacts with the membrane. In the present study, FRET was used to probe lipid-induced structural changes arising in the vicinity of the putative transmembrane region of CLIC1 (residues 24-46) under oxidative conditions. Intramolecular FRET distances are consistent with the model in which the N-terminal domain inserts into the bilayer as an extended α-helix. Further, intermolecular FRET was performed between fluorescently labeled CLIC1 monomers within membranes. The intermolecular FRET shows that CLIC1 forms oligomers upon oxidation in the presence of the membranes. Fitting the data to symmetric oligomer models of the CLIC1 transmembrane form indicates that the structure is large and most consistent with a model comprising approximately six to eight subunits.


Biophysical Reviews | 2011

Structural gymnastics of multifunctional metamorphic proteins

Sophia C. Goodchild; Paul M. G. Curmi; Louise J. Brown

The classic structure–function paradigm holds that a protein exhibits a single well-defined native state that gives rise to its biological function. Nonetheless, over the past few decades, numerous examples of proteins exhibiting biological function arising from multiple structural states of varying disorder have been identified. Most recently, several examples of ‘metamorphic proteins’, able to interconvert between vastly different native-like topologies under physiological conditions, have been characterised with multiple functions. In this review, we look at the concept of protein metamorphosis in relation to the current understanding of the protein structure–function landscape. Although structural dynamism observed for metamorphic proteins provides a novel source of functional versatility, the dynamic nature of the metamorphic proteins generally makes them difficult to identify and probe using conventional protein structure determination methods. However, as the existence of metamorphic proteins has now been established and techniques enabling the analysis of multiple protein conformers are improving, it is likely that this class will continue to grow in number.


Chirality | 2018

Infrared absorbance spectroscopy of aqueous proteins: comparison of transmission and ATR data collection and analysis for secondary structure fitting

Marco Pinto Corujo; Meropi Sklepari; Dale L. Ang; Mark Millichip; Andrew Reason; Sophia C. Goodchild; Paul Wormell; Don Praveen Amarasinghe; Viv Lindo; Nikola Paul Chmel; Alison Rodger

Abstract Attenuated total reflectance (ATR) infrared absorbance spectroscopy of proteins in aqueous solution is much easier to perform than transmission spectroscopy, where short path‐length cells need to be assembled reproducibly. However, the shape of the resulting ATR infrared spectrum varies with the refractive index of the sample and the instrument configuration. Refractive index in turn depends on the absorbance of the sample. In this work, it is shown that a room temperature triglycine sulfate detector and a ZnSe ATR unit can be used to collect reproducible spectra of proteins. A simple method for transforming the protein ATR spectrum into the shape of the transmission spectrum is also given, which proceeds by approximating a Kramers‐Krönig–determined refractive index of water as a sum of four linear components across the amide I and II regions. The light intensity at the crystal surface (with 45° incidence) and its rate of decay away from the surface is determined as a function of the wave number–dependent refractive index as well as the decay of the evanescent wave from the surface. The result is a single correction factor at each wave number. The spectra were normalized to a maximum of 1 between 1600 cm−1 and 1700 cm−1 and a self‐organizing map secondary structure fitting algorithm, SOMSpec, applied using the BioTools reference set. The resulting secondary structure estimates are encouraging for the future of ATR spectroscopy for biopharmaceutical characterization and quality control applications.


Biophysical Reviews | 2018

Coherent phenomena in photosynthetic light harvesting: part one—theory and spectroscopy

Harry W. Rathbone; Jeffery A. Davis; Katharine A. Michie; Sophia C. Goodchild; Neil O. Robertson; Paul M. G. Curmi

The role of non-trivial quantum mechanical effects in biology has been the subject of intense scrutiny over the past decade. Much of the focus on potential “quantum biology” has been on energy transfer processes in photosynthetic light harvesting systems. Ultrafast laser spectroscopy of several light harvesting proteins has uncovered coherent oscillations dubbed “quantum beats” that persist for hundreds of femtoseconds and are putative signatures for quantum transport phenomena. This review describes the language and basic quantum mechanical phenomena that underpin quantum transport in open systems such as light harvesting and photosynthetic proteins, including the photosystem reaction centre. Coherent effects are discussed in detail, separating various meanings of the term, from delocalized excitations, or excitons, to entangled states and coherent transport. In particular, we focus on the time, energy and length scales of energy transport processes, as these are critical in understanding whether or not coherent processes are important. The role played by the protein in maintaining chromophore systems is analysed. Finally, the spectroscopic techniques that are used to probe energy transfer dynamics and that have uncovered the quantum beats are described with reference to coherent phenomena in light harvesting.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Ion Channel Proteins that Spontaneously Insert into Lipid Bilayer Membranes: An Impedance Spectroscopy Study Employing Tethered Membranes

Bruce Cornell; Heba Alkhamici; Louise J. Brown; Sonia Carne; Sophia C. Goodchild; Russell Richards; Stella M. Valenzuela


Biophysical Reviews | 2018

Coherent phenomena in photosynthetic light harvesting: part two—observations in biological systems

Harry W. Rathbone; Jeffery A. Davis; Katharine A. Michie; Sophia C. Goodchild; Neil O. Robertson; Paul M. G. Curmi

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Paul M. G. Curmi

University of New South Wales

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Samuel N. Breit

University of New South Wales

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Bruce Cornell

University of New South Wales

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Dene R. Littler

University of New South Wales

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