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Dive into the research topics where Stephen J. Harrop is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen J. Harrop.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Intracellular Chloride Ion Channel Protein CLIC1 Undergoes a Redox-controlled Structural Transition*

Dene R. Littler; Stephen J. Harrop; W. Douglas Fairlie; Louise J. Brown; Greg J. Pankhurst; Susan Pankhurst; Matthew Z. DeMaere; Terence J. Campbell; Asne R. Bauskin; Raffaella Tonini; Michele Mazzanti; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi

Most proteins adopt a well defined three-dimensional structure; however, it is increasingly recognized that some proteins can exist with at least two stable conformations. Recently, a class of intracellular chloride ion channel proteins (CLICs) has been shown to exist in both soluble and integral membrane forms. The structure of the soluble form of CLIC1 is typical of a soluble glutathione S-transferase superfamily protein but contains a glutaredoxin-like active site. In this study we show that on oxidation CLIC1 undergoes a reversible transition from a monomeric to a non-covalent dimeric state due to the formation of an intramolecular disulfide bond (Cys-24–Cys-59). We have determined the crystal structure of this oxidized state and show that a major structural transition has occurred, exposing a large hydrophobic surface, which forms the dimer interface. The oxidized CLIC1 dimer maintains its ability to form chloride ion channels in artificial bilayers and vesicles, whereas a reducing environment prevents the formation of ion channels by CLIC1. Mutational studies show that both Cys-24 and Cys-59 are required for channel activity.


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.


FEBS Journal | 2005

Crystal structure of the soluble form of the redox-regulated chloride ion channel protein CLIC4.

Dene R. Littler; Nagi Assaad; Stephen J. Harrop; Louise J. Brown; Greg J. Pankhurst; Paolo Luciani; Marie-Isabel Aguilar; Michele Mazzanti; Mark Berryman; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi

The structure of CLIC4, a member of the CLIC family of putative intracellular chloride ion channel proteins, has been determined at 1.8 Å resolution by X‐ray crystallography. The protein is monomeric and it is structurally similar to CLIC1, belonging to the GST fold class. Differences between the structures of CLIC1 and CLIC4 are localized to helix 2 in the glutaredoxin‐like N‐terminal domain, which has previously been shown to undergo a dramatic structural change in CLIC1 upon oxidation. The structural differences in this region correlate with the sequence differences, where the CLIC1 sequence appears to be atypical of the family. Purified, recombinant, wild‐type CLIC4 is shown to bind to artificial lipid bilayers, induce a chloride efflux current when associated with artificial liposomes and produce an ion channel in artificial bilayers with a conductance of 30 pS. Membrane binding is enhanced by oxidation of CLIC4 while no channels were observed via tip‐dip electrophysiology in the presence of a reducing agent. Thus, recombinant CLIC4 appears to be able to form a redox‐regulated ion channel in the absence of any partner proteins.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

MX1: a bending‐magnet crystallography beamline serving both chemical and macromolecular crystallography communities at the Australian Synchrotron

Nathan Cowieson; David Aragão; Mark Clift; Daniel J Ericsson; Christine L. Gee; Stephen J. Harrop; Nathan Mudie; Santosh Panjikar; Jason R. Price; Alan Riboldi-Tunnicliffe; Rachel M. Williamson; Tom T. Caradoc-Davies

The macromolecular crystallography beamline MX1 at the Australian Synchrotron is described.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Arabidopsis AtSerpin1, crystal structure and in vivo interaction with its target protease RESPONSIVE TO DESICCATION-21 (RD21).

Nardy Lampl; Ofra Budai-Hadrian; Olga Davydov; Tom V. Joss; Stephen J. Harrop; Paul M. G. Curmi; Thomas H. Roberts; Robert Fluhr

In animals, protease inhibitors of the serpin family are associated with many physiological processes, including blood coagulation and innate immunity. Serpins feature a reactive center loop (RCL), which displays a protease target sequence as a bait. RCL cleavage results in an irreversible, covalent serpin-protease complex. AtSerpin1 is an Arabidopsis protease inhibitor that is expressed ubiquitously throughout the plant. The x-ray crystal structure of recombinant AtSerpin1 in its native stressed conformation was determined at 2.2 Å. The electrostatic surface potential below the RCL was found to be highly positive, whereas the breach region critical for RCL insertion is an unusually open structure. AtSerpin1 accumulates in plants as a full-length and a cleaved form. Fractionation of seedling extracts by nonreducing SDS-PAGE revealed the presence of an additional slower migrating complex that was absent when leaves were treated with the specific cysteine protease inhibitor l-trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido (4-guanidino)butane. Significantly, RESPONSIVE TO DESICCATION-21 (RD21) was the major protease labeled with the l-trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido (4-guanidino)butane derivative DCG-04 in wild type extracts but not in extracts of mutant plants constitutively overexpressing AtSerpin1, indicating competition. Fractionation by nonreducing SDS-PAGE followed by immunoblotting with RD21-specific antibody revealed that the protease accumulated both as a free enzyme and in a complex with AtSerpin1. Importantly, both RD21 and AtSerpin1 knock-out mutants lacked the serpin-protease complex. The results establish that the major Arabidopsis plant serpin interacts with RD21. This is the first report of the structure and in vivo interaction of a plant serpin with its target protease.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Crystal structure of an integron gene cassette-associated protein from Vibrio cholerae identifies a cationic drug-binding module.

Chandrika N. Deshpande; Stephen J. Harrop; Yan Boucher; Karl A. Hassan; Rosa Di Leo; Xiaohui Xu; Hong Cui; Alexei Savchenko; Changsoo Chang; Maurizio Labbate; Ian T. Paulsen; H. W. Stokes; Paul M. G. Curmi; Bridget C. Mabbutt

Background The direct isolation of integron gene cassettes from cultivated and environmental microbial sources allows an assessment of the impact of the integron/gene cassette system on the emergence of new phenotypes, such as drug resistance or virulence. A structural approach is being exploited to investigate the modularity and function of novel integron gene cassettes. Methodology/Principal Findings We report the 1.8 Å crystal structure of Cass2, an integron-associated protein derived from an environmental V. cholerae. The structure defines a monomeric beta-barrel protein with a fold related to the effector-binding portion of AraC/XylS transcription activators. The closest homologs of Cass2 are multi-drug binding proteins, such as BmrR. Consistent with this, a binding pocket made up of hydrophobic residues and a single glutamate side chain is evident in Cass2, occupied in the crystal form by polyethylene glycol. Fluorescence assays demonstrate that Cass2 is capable of binding cationic drug compounds with submicromolar affinity. The Cass2 module possesses a protein interaction surface proximal to its drug-binding cavity with features homologous to those seen in multi-domain transcriptional regulators. Conclusions/Significance Genetic analysis identifies Cass2 to be representative of a larger family of independent effector-binding proteins associated with lateral gene transfer within Vibrio and closely-related species. We propose that the Cass2 family not only has capacity to form functional transcription regulator complexes, but represents possible evolutionary precursors to multi-domain regulators associated with cationic drug compounds.


Proteins | 2008

Comparison of vertebrate and invertebrate CLIC proteins: The crystal structures of Caenorhabditis elegans EXC-4 and Drosophila melanogaster DmCLIC

Dene R. Littler; Stephen J. Harrop; Louise J. Brown; Greg J. Pankhurst; Andrew V. Mynott; Paolo Luciani; Ramya A. Mandyam; Michele Mazzanti; Soichi Tanda; Mark Berryman; Samuel N. Breit; Paul M. G. Curmi

The crystal structures of two CLIC family members DmCLIC and EXC‐4 from the invertebrates Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans, respectively, have been determined. The proteins adopt a glutathione S‐transferase (GST) fold. The structures are highly homologous to each other and more closely related to the known structures of the human CLIC1 and CLIC4 than to GSTs. The invertebrate CLICs show several unique features including an elongated C‐terminal extension and a divalent metal binding site. The latter appears to alter the ancestral glutathione binding site, and thus, the invertebrate CLICs are unlikely to bind glutathione in the same manner as the GST proteins. Purified recombinant DmCLIC and EXC‐4 both bind to lipid bilayers and can form ion channels in artificial lipid bilayers, albeit at low pH. EXC‐4 differs from other CLIC proteins in that the conserved redox‐active cysteine at the N‐terminus of helix 1 is replaced by an aspartic acid residue. Other key distinguishing features of EXC‐4 include the fact that it binds to artificial bilayers at neutral pH and this binding is not sensitive to oxidation. These differences with other CLIC family members are likely to be due to the substitution of the conserved cysteine by aspartic acid. Proteins 2008.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Structural Insights into the Organization of the Cavin Membrane Coat Complex

Oleksiy Kovtun; Vikas A. Tillu; WooRam Jung; Natalya Leneva; Nicholas Ariotti; Natasha Chaudhary; Ramya A. Mandyam; Charles Ferguson; Garry P. Morgan; Wayne A. Johnston; Stephen J. Harrop; Kirill Alexandrov; Robert G. Parton; Brett M. Collins

Caveolae are cell-surface membrane invaginations that play critical roles in cellular processes including signaling and membrane homeostasis. The cavin proteins, in cooperation with caveolins, are essential for caveola formation. Here we show that a minimal N-terminal domain of the cavins, termed HR1, is required and sufficient for their homo- and hetero-oligomerization. Crystal structures of the mouse cavin1 and zebrafish cavin4a HR1 domains reveal highly conserved trimeric coiled-coil architectures, with intersubunit interactions that determine the specificity of cavin-cavin interactions. The HR1 domain contains a basic surface patch that interacts with polyphosphoinositides and coordinates with additional membrane-binding sites within the cavin C terminus to facilitate membrane association and remodeling. Electron microscopy of purified cavins reveals the existence of large assemblies, composed of a repeating rod-like structural element, and we propose that these structures polymerize through membrane-coupled interactions to form the unique striations observed on the surface of caveolae in vivo.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

CLIC proteins, ezrin, radixin, moesin and the coupling of membranes to the actin cytoskeleton: a smoking gun?

Lele Jiang; Juanita M. Phang; Jiang Yu; Stephen J. Harrop; Anna Sokolova; Anthony P. Duff; Krystyna E. Wilk; Heba Alkhamici; Samuel N. Breit; Stella M. Valenzuela; Louise J. Brown; Paul M. G. Curmi

The CLIC proteins are a highly conserved family of metazoan proteins with the unusual ability to adopt both soluble and integral membrane forms. The physiological functions of CLIC proteins may include enzymatic activity in the soluble form and anion channel activity in the integral membrane form. CLIC proteins are associated with the ERM proteins: ezrin, radixin and moesin. ERM proteins act as cross-linkers between membranes and the cortical actin cytoskeleton. Both CLIC and ERM proteins are controlled by Rho family small GTPases. CLIC proteins, ERM and Rho GTPases act in a concerted manner to control active membrane processes including the maintenance of microvillar structures, phagocytosis and vesicle trafficking. All of these processes involve the interaction of membranes with the underlying cortical actin cytoskeleton. The relationships between Rho GTPases, CLIC proteins, ERM proteins and the membrane:actin cytoskeleton interface are reviewed. Speculative models are proposed involving the formation of localised multi-protein complexes on the membrane surface that assemble via multiple weak interactions. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Reciprocal influences between cell cytoskeleton and membrane channels, receptors and transporters. Guest Editor: Jean Claude Hervé.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Structural basis of GDP release and gating in G protein coupled Fe2+ transport.

Amy P. Guilfoyle; Megan J. Maher; Mikaela Rapp; Ronald J. Clarke; Stephen J. Harrop; Mika Jormakka

G proteins are key molecular switches in the regulation of membrane protein function and signal transduction. The prokaryotic membrane protein FeoB is involved in G protein coupled Fe2+ transport, and is unique in that the G protein is directly tethered to the membrane domain. Here, we report the structure of the soluble domain of FeoB, including the G protein domain, and its assembly into an unexpected trimer. Comparisons between nucleotide free and liganded structures reveal the closed and open state of a central cytoplasmic pore, respectively. In addition, these data provide the first observation of a conformational switch in the nucleotide‐binding G5 motif, defining the structural basis for GDP release. From these results, structural parallels are drawn to eukaryotic G protein coupled membrane processes.

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Paul M. G. Curmi

University of New South Wales

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Krystyna E. Wilk

University of New South Wales

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Samuel N. Breit

University of New South Wales

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Anthony P. Duff

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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