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Dive into the research topics where Steve W. Homans is active.

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Featured researches published by Steve W. Homans.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Systematic analysis of nucleation-dependent polymerization reveals new insights into the mechanism of amyloid self-assembly

Wei-Feng Xue; Steve W. Homans; Sheena E. Radford

Self-assembly of misfolded proteins into ordered fibrillar aggregates known as amyloid results in numerous human diseases. Despite an increasing number of proteins and peptide fragments being recognised as amyloidogenic, how these amyloid aggregates assemble remains unclear. In particular, the identity of the nucleating species, an ephemeral entity that defines the rate of fibril formation, remains a key outstanding question. Here, we propose a new strategy for analyzing the self-assembly of amyloid fibrils involving global analysis of a large number of reaction progress curves and the subsequent systematic testing and ranking of a large number of possible assembly mechanisms. Using this approach, we have characterized the mechanism of the nucleation-dependent formation of β2-microglobulin (β2m) amyloid fibrils. We show, by defining nucleation in the context of both structural and thermodynamic aspects, that a model involving a structural nucleus size approximately the size of a hexamer is consistent with the relatively small concentration dependence of the rate of fibril formation, contrary to expectations based on simpler theories of nucleated assembly. We also demonstrate that fibril fragmentation is the dominant secondary process that produces higher apparent cooperatively in fibril formation than predicted by nucleated assembly theories alone. The model developed is able to explain and predict the behavior of β2m fibril formation and provides a rationale for explaining generic properties observed in other amyloid systems, such as fibril growth acceleration and pathway shifts under agitation.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2008

Perspectives on NMR in drug discovery: a technique comes of age

Maurizio Pellecchia; Ivano Bertini; David Cowburn; Claudio Dalvit; Ernest Giralt; Wolfgang Jahnke; Thomas L. James; Steve W. Homans; Horst Kessler; Claudio Luchinat; Bernd Meyer; Hartmut Oschkinat; Jeff Peng; Harald Schwalbe; Gregg Siegal

In the past decade, the potential of harnessing the ability of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to monitor intermolecular interactions as a tool for drug discovery has been increasingly appreciated in academia and industry. In this Perspective, we highlight some of the major applications of NMR in drug discovery, focusing on hit and lead generation, and provide a critical analysis of its current and potential utility.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

Amyloid formation under physiological conditions proceeds via a native-like folding intermediate.

Thomas R. Jahn; Martin J. Parker; Steve W. Homans; Sheena E. Radford

Although most proteins can assemble into amyloid-like fibrils in vitro under extreme conditions, how proteins form amyloid fibrils in vivo remains unresolved. Identifying rare aggregation-prone species under physiologically relevant conditions and defining their structural properties is therefore an important challenge. By solving the folding mechanism of the naturally amyloidogenic protein β-2-microglobulin at pH 7.0 and 37 °C and correlating the concentrations of different species with the rate of fibril elongation, we identify a specific folding intermediate, containing a non-native trans-proline isomer, as the direct precursor of fibril elongation. Structural analysis using NMR shows that this species is highly native-like but contains perturbation of the edge strands that normally protect β-sandwich proteins from self-association. The results demonstrate that aggregation pathways can involve self-assembly of highly native-like folding intermediates, and have implications for the prevention of this, and other, amyloid disorders.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Fibril Fragmentation Enhances Amyloid Cytotoxicity

Wei-Feng Xue; Andrew L. Hellewell; Walraj S. Gosal; Steve W. Homans; Eric W. Hewitt; Sheena E. Radford

Fibrils associated with amyloid disease are molecular assemblies of key biological importance, yet how cells respond to the presence of amyloid remains unclear. Cellular responses may not only depend on the chemical composition or molecular properties of the amyloid fibrils, but their physical attributes such as length, width, or surface area may also play important roles. Here, we report a systematic investigation of the effect of fragmentation on the structural and biological properties of amyloid fibrils. In addition to the expected relationship between fragmentation and the ability to seed, we show a striking finding that fibril length correlates with the ability to disrupt membranes and to reduce cell viability. Thus, despite otherwise unchanged molecular architecture, shorter fibrillar samples show enhanced cytotoxic potential than their longer counterparts. The results highlight the importance of fibril length in amyloid disease, with fragmentation not only providing a mechanism by which fibril load can be rapidly increased but also creating fibrillar species of different dimensions that can endow new or enhanced biological properties such as amyloid cytotoxicity.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2002

Structural properties of an amyloid precursor of |[beta]|2-microglobulin

Victoria J. McParland; Arnout P. Kalverda; Steve W. Homans; Sheena E. Radford

The population of one or more partially folded states has been proposed as a critical initial step in amyloid formation for several proteins. Here we use equilibrium denaturation measured by 1H-15N NMR to determine the conformational properties of an amyloidogenic intermediate of human β2-microglobulin (β2m) formed at low pH. The data show that this amyloid precursor is a noncooperatively stabilized ensemble that retains stable structure in five of the seven β-strands that comprise the native fold. The amyloid precursors of β2m and transthyretin have similar properties despite having structurally unrelated native folds. The data offer a rationale as to why these proteins are both amyloidogenic at low pH and suggest that amyloidosis of these and other proteins may involve ordered assembly from a precursor with similar conformational features.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Conformational Conversion During Amyloid Formation at Atomic Resolution.

Timo Eichner; Arnout P. Kalverda; Gary S. Thompson; Steve W. Homans; Sheena E. Radford

Summary Numerous studies of amyloid assembly have indicated that partially folded protein species are responsible for initiating aggregation. Despite their importance, the structural and dynamic features of amyloidogenic intermediates and the molecular details of how they cause aggregation remain elusive. Here, we use ΔN6, a truncation variant of the naturally amyloidogenic protein β2-microglobulin (β2m), to determine the solution structure of a nonnative amyloidogenic intermediate at high resolution. The structure of ΔN6 reveals a major repacking of the hydrophobic core to accommodate the nonnative peptidyl-prolyl trans-isomer at Pro32. These structural changes, together with a concomitant pH-dependent enhancement in backbone dynamics on a microsecond-millisecond timescale, give rise to a rare conformer with increased amyloidogenic potential. We further reveal that catalytic amounts of ΔN6 are competent to convert nonamyloidogenic human wild-type β2m (Hβ2m) into a rare amyloidogenic conformation and provide structural evidence for the mechanism by which this conformational conversion occurs.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Fibril Growth Kinetics Reveal a Region of β2-microglobulin Important for Nucleation and Elongation of Aggregation

Geoffrey W. Platt; Katy E. Routledge; Steve W. Homans; Sheena E. Radford

Amyloid is a highly ordered form of aggregate comprising long, straight and unbranched proteinaceous fibrils that are formed with characteristic nucleation-dependent kinetics in vitro. Currently, the structural molecular mechanism of fibril nucleation and elongation is poorly understood. Here, we investigate the role of the sequence and structure of the initial monomeric precursor in determining the rates of nucleation and elongation of human β2-microglobulin (β2m). We describe the kinetics of seeded and spontaneous (unseeded) fibril growth of wild-type β2m and 12 variants at pH 2.5, targeting specifically an aromatic-rich region of the polypeptide chain (residues 62–70) that has been predicted to be highly amyloidogenic. The results reveal the importance of aromatic residues in this part of the β2m sequence in fibril formation under the conditions explored and show that this region of the polypeptide chain is involved in both the nucleation and the elongation phases of fibril formation. Structural analysis of the conformational properties of the unfolded monomer for each variant using NMR relaxation methods revealed that all variants contain significant non-random structure involving two hydrophobic clusters comprising regions 29–51 and 58–79, the extent of which is critically dependent on the sequence. No direct correlation was observed, however, between the extent of non-random structure in the unfolded state and the rates of fibril nucleation and elongation, suggesting that the early stages of aggregation involve significant conformational changes from the initial unfolded state. Together, the data suggest a model for β2m amyloid formation in which structurally specific interactions involving the highly hydrophobic and aromatic-rich region comprising residues 62–70 provide a complementary interface that is key to the generation of amyloid fibrils for this protein at acidic pH.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2011

Ligand binding to distinct states diverts aggregation of an amyloid-forming protein.

Lucy A. Woods; Geoffrey W. Platt; Andrew L. Hellewell; Eric W. Hewitt; Steve W. Homans; Alison E. Ashcroft; Sheena E. Radford

Although small molecules that modulate amyloid formation in vitro have been identified, significant challenges remain in determining precisely how these species act. Here we describe the identification of rifamycin SV as a potent inhibitor of β2m fibrillogenesis when added during the lag time of assembly or early during fibril elongation. Biochemical experiments demonstrate that the small molecule does not act by a colloidal mechanism. Exploiting the ability of electrospray ionization-ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry (ESI-IMS-MS) to resolve intermediates of amyloid assembly, we show instead that rifamycin SV inhibits β2m fibrillation by binding distinct monomeric conformers, disfavoring oligomer formation, and diverting the course of assembly to the formation of spherical aggregates. The results reveal the power of ESI-IMS-MS to identify specific protein conformers as targets for intervention in fibrillogenesis using small molecules and reveal a mechanism of action in which ligand binding diverts unfolded protein monomers towards alternative assembly pathways.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Poxvirus K7 protein adopts a Bcl-2 fold: biochemical mapping of its interactions with human DEAD box RNA helicase DDX3.

Arnout P. Kalverda; Gary S. Thompson; Andre Vogel; Martina Schröder; Andrew G. Bowie; Amir R. Khan; Steve W. Homans

Poxviruses have evolved numerous strategies to evade host innate immunity. Vaccinia virus K7 is a 149-residue protein with previously unknown structure that is highly conserved in the orthopoxvirus family. K7 bears sequence and functional similarities to A52, which interacts with interleukin receptor-associated kinase 2 and tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 6 to suppress nuclear factor kappaB activation and to stimulate the secretion of the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-10. In contrast to A52, K7 forms a complex with DEAD box RNA helicase DDX3, thereby suppressing DDX3-mediated ifnb promoter induction. We determined the NMR solution structure of K7 to provide insight into the structural basis for poxvirus antagonism of innate immune signaling. The structure reveals an alpha-helical fold belonging to the Bcl-2 family despite an unrelated primary sequence. NMR chemical-shift mapping studies have localized the binding surface for DDX3 on a negatively charged face of K7. Furthermore, thermodynamic studies have mapped the K7-binding region to a 30-residue N-terminal fragment of DDX3, ahead of the core RNA helicase domains.


Biochemistry | 1998

Solution structure of the complex between the B-subunit homopentamer of verotoxin VT-1 from Escherichia coli and the trisaccharide moiety of globotriaosylceramide.

Hiroki Shimizu; Robert A. Field; Steve W. Homans; Donohue-Rolfe A

We report the solution structure of the carbohydrate-binding B subunit of verotoxin VT-1 (VTB) from enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli in association with the trisaccharide Galalpha1-4Galbeta1-4Glcbeta1-O-trimethylsilylethyl , determined by use of stable isotope-assisted NMR techniques. In contrast to the crystal structure of the complex which predicts three binding sites per monomer, only one of these sites is observed with substantial occupancy by the trisaccharide in solution.

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Agnieszka Bronowska

Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies

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Simon E. V. Phillips

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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