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Dive into the research topics where Susan Marqusee is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan Marqusee.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1996

Detection of rare partially folded molecules in equilibrium with the native conformation of RNaseH

Aaron K. Chamberlain; Tracy M. Handel; Susan Marqusee

Despite the general observation that single domain proteins denature in a completely cooperative manner, amide hydrogen exchange of ribonuclease H in low levels of denaturant demonstrates the existence of two partially folded species. The structures of these marginally stable species resemble kinetic folding intermediates and the molten globule state of the protein. These data suggest that the first region to fold is the thermodynamically most stable portion of the protein and that the molten globule is a high free energy conformation present at equilibrium in the native state.


Nature Methods | 2005

Pulse proteolysis: a simple method for quantitative determination of protein stability and ligand binding.

Chiwook Park; Susan Marqusee

Thermodynamic stability is fundamental to the biology of proteins. Information on protein stability is essential for studying protein structure and folding and can also be used indirectly to monitor protein-ligand or protein-protein interactions. While clearly valuable, the experimental determination of a proteins stability typically requires biophysical instrumentation and substantial quantities of purified protein, which has limited the use of this technique as a general laboratory method. We report here a simple new method for determining protein stability by using pulse proteolysis with varying concentrations of denaturant. Pulse proteolysis is designed to digest only the unfolded proteins in an equilibrium mixture of folded and unfolded proteins that relaxes on a time scale longer than the proteolytic pulse. We used this method to study the stabilities of Escherichia coli ribonuclease H and its variants, both in purified form and directly from cell lysates. The ΔGunf° values obtained by this technique were in agreement with those determined by traditional methods. We also successfully used this method to monitor the binding of maltose-binding protein to maltose, as well as to rapidly screen cognate ligands for this protein. The simplicity of pulse proteolysis suggests that it is an excellent strategy for the high-throughput determination of protein stability in protein engineering and drug discovery applications.


Protein Science | 2005

Protein folding : Defining a "standard" set of experimental conditions and a preliminary kinetic data set of two-state proteins

Karen L. Maxwell; David Wildes; Arash Zarrine-Afsar; Miguel A. De Los Rios; Andrew G. Brown; Claire T. Friel; Linda Hedberg; Jia-Cherng Horng; Diane Bona; Erik J. Miller; Alexis Vallée-Bélisle; Ewan R. G. Main; Francesco Bemporad; Linlin Qiu; Kaare Teilum; Ngoc Diep Vu; A. Edwards; Ingo Ruczinski; Flemming M. Poulsen; Stephen W. Michnick; Fabrizio Chiti; Yawen Bai; Stephen J. Hagen; Luis Serrano; Mikael Oliveberg; Daniel P. Raleigh; Pernilla Wittung-Stafshede; Sheena E. Radford; Sophie E. Jackson; Tobin R. Sosnick

Recent years have seen the publication of both empirical and theoretical relationships predicting the rates with which proteins fold. Our ability to test and refine these relationships has been limited, however, by a variety of difficulties associated with the comparison of folding and unfolding rates, thermodynamics, and structure across diverse sets of proteins. These difficulties include the wide, potentially confounding range of experimental conditions and methods employed to date and the difficulty of obtaining correct and complete sequence and structural details for the characterized constructs. The lack of a single approach to data analysis and error estimation, or even of a common set of units and reporting standards, further hinders comparative studies of folding. In an effort to overcome these problems, we define here a “consensus” set of experimental conditions (25°C at pH 7.0, 50 mM buffer), data analysis methods, and data reporting standards that we hope will provide a benchmark for experimental studies. We take the first step in this initiative by describing the folding kinetics of 30 apparently two‐state proteins or protein domains under the consensus conditions. The goal of our efforts is to set uniform standards for the experimental community and to initiate an accumulating, self‐consistent data set that will aid ongoing efforts to understand the folding process.


Nature | 2010

The folding cooperativity of a protein is controlled by its chain topology

Elizabeth A. Shank; Ciro Cecconi; Jesse Dill; Susan Marqusee; Carlos Bustamante

The three-dimensional structures of proteins often show a modular architecture comprised of discrete structural regions or domains. Cooperative communication between these regions is important for catalysis, regulation and efficient folding; lack of coupling has been implicated in the formation of fibrils and other misfolding pathologies. How different structural regions of a protein communicate and contribute to a protein’s overall energetics and folding, however, is still poorly understood. Here we use a single-molecule optical tweezers approach to induce the selective unfolding of particular regions of T4 lysozyme and monitor the effect on other regions not directly acted on by force. We investigate how the topological organization of a protein (the order of structural elements along the sequence) affects the coupling and folding cooperativity between its domains. To probe the status of the regions not directly subjected to force, we determine the free energy changes during mechanical unfolding using Crooks’ fluctuation theorem. We pull on topological variants (circular permutants) and find that the topological organization of the polypeptide chain critically determines the folding cooperativity between domains and thus what parts of the folding/unfolding landscape are explored. We speculate that proteins may have evolved to select certain topologies that increase coupling between regions to avoid areas of the landscape that lead to kinetic trapping and misfolding.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Role of residual structure in the unfolded state of a thermophilic protein

Srebrenka Robic; Mercedes Guzmán-Casado; Jose M. Sanchez-Ruiz; Susan Marqusee

Ribonucleases H from the thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus and the mesophile Escherichia coli demonstrate a dramatic and surprising difference in their change in heat capacity upon unfolding (ΔCp°). The lower ΔCp° of the thermophilic protein directly contributes to its higher thermal denaturation temperature (Tm). We propose that this ΔCp° difference originates from residual structure in the unfolded state of the thermophilic protein; we verify this hypothesis by using a mutagenic approach. Residual structure in the unfolded state may provide a mechanism for balancing a high Tm with the optimal thermodynamic stability for a proteins function. Structure in the unfolded state is shown to differentially affect the thermodynamic profiles of thermophilic and mesophilic proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Stepwise protein folding at near amino acid resolution by hydrogen exchange and mass spectrometry

Wenbing Hu; Benjamin T. Walters; Zhong-Yuan Kan; Leland Mayne; Laura E. Rosen; Susan Marqusee; S. Walter Englander

The kinetic folding of ribonuclease H was studied by hydrogen exchange (HX) pulse labeling with analysis by an advanced fragment separation mass spectrometry technology. The results show that folding proceeds through distinct intermediates in a stepwise pathway that sequentially incorporates cooperative native-like structural elements to build the native protein. Each step is seen as a concerted transition of one or more segments from an HX-unprotected to an HX-protected state. Deconvolution of the data to near amino acid resolution shows that each step corresponds to the folding of a secondary structural element of the native protein, termed a “foldon.” Each folded segment is retained through subsequent steps of foldon addition, revealing a stepwise buildup of the native structure via a single dominant pathway. Analysis of the pertinent literature suggests that this model is consistent with experimental results for many proteins and some current theoretical results. Two biophysical principles appear to dictate this behavior. The principle of cooperativity determines the central role of native-like foldon units. An interaction principle termed “sequential stabilization” based on native-like interfoldon interactions orders the pathway.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

A Ras-induced conformational switch in the Ras activator Son of sevenless

Tanya S. Freedman; Holger Sondermann; Gregory D. Friedland; Tanja Kortemme; Dafna Bar-Sagi; Susan Marqusee; John Kuriyan

The Ras-specific guanine nucleotide-exchange factors Son of sevenless (Sos) and Ras guanine nucleotide-releasing factor 1 (RasGRF1) transduce extracellular stimuli into Ras activation by catalyzing the exchange of Ras-bound GDP for GTP. A truncated form of RasGRF1 containing only the core catalytic Cdc25 domain is sufficient for stimulating Ras nucleotide exchange, whereas the isolated Cdc25 domain of Sos is inactive. At a site distal to the catalytic site, nucleotide-bound Ras binds to Sos, making contacts with the Cdc25 domain and with a Ras exchanger motif (Rem) domain. This allosteric Ras binding stimulates nucleotide exchange by Sos, but the mechanism by which this stimulation occurs has not been defined. We present a crystal structure of the Rem and Cdc25 domains of Sos determined at 2.0-Å resolution in the absence of Ras. Differences between this structure and that of Sos bound to two Ras molecules show that allosteric activation of Sos by Ras occurs through a rotation of the Rem domain that is coupled to a rotation of a helical hairpin at the Sos catalytic site. This motion relieves steric occlusion of the catalytic site, allowing substrate Ras binding and nucleotide exchange. A structure of the isolated RasGRF1 Cdc25 domain determined at 2.2-Å resolution, combined with computational analyses, suggests that the Cdc25 domain of RasGRF1 is able to maintain an active conformation in isolation because the helical hairpin has strengthened interactions with the Cdc25 domain core. These results indicate that RasGRF1 lacks the allosteric activation switch that is crucial for Sos activity.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

Confirmation of the hierarchical folding of RNase H: a protein engineering study

Tanya M. Raschke; Joan Kho; Susan Marqusee

The kinetic intermediate of RNase H is structured in a core region of the protein. To probe the role of this intermediate in the folding of RNase H, the folding kinetics of mutant proteins with altered native state stabilities were investigated. Mutations within the folding core destabilize the kinetic intermediate and slow refolding in a manner consistent with an obligatory intermediate model. Mutations outside of the folding core, however, do not affect the stability of the kinetic intermediate but do perturb the native state and transition state. These results indicate that interactions formed in the intermediate persist in the transition and native states and that RNase H folds through a hierarchical mechanism.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

The energetics of T4 lysozyme reveal a hierarchy of conformations

Manuel Llinás; Blake Gillespie; Frederick W. Dahlquist; Susan Marqusee

We have used native state exchange to examine the energy landscape of the well-characterized protein T4 lysozyme. Although the protein exhibits two-state behavior by traditional probes, the energy landscape determined here is much more complex. The average stability of the C-terminal subdomain is significantly higher than that for the N-terminus suggesting at least two regions of unfolding. At a more detailed level, there appears to be a broad continuum of stabilities throughout each region. The overall subdomain hierarchy of energies does not mirror data on the folding pathway for this protein, challenging the relationship between energy landscapes and folding trajectories.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Co-crystal of Escherichia coli RNase HI with Mn2+ Ions Reveals Two Divalent Metals Bound in the Active Site

Eric R. Goedken; Susan Marqusee

Ribonuclease H (RNase H) selectively degrades the RNA strand of RNA·DNA hybrids in a divalent cation-dependent manner. Previous structural studies revealed a single Mg2+ ion-binding site inEscherichia coli RNase HI. In the crystal structure of the related RNase H domain of human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase, however, two Mn2+ ions were observed suggesting a different mode of metal binding. E. coli RNase HI shows catalytic activity in the presence of Mg2+ or Mn2+ ions, but these two metals show strikingly different optimal concentrations. Mg2+ ions are required in millimolar concentrations, but Mn2+ ions are only required in micromolar quantities. Based upon the metal dependence of E. coli RNase HI activity, we proposed an activation/attenuation model in which one metal is required for catalysis, and binding of a second metal is inhibitory. We have now solved the co-crystal structure of E. coli RNase HI with Mn2+ ions at 1.9-Å resolution. Two octahedrally coordinated Mn2+ ions are seen to bind to the enzyme-active site. Residues Asp-10, Glu-48, and Asp-70 make direct (inner sphere) coordination contacts to the first (activating) metal, whereas residues Asp-10 and Asp-134 make direct contacts to the second (attenuating) metal. This structure is consistent with biochemical evidence suggesting that two metal ions may bind RNase H but liganding a second ion inhibits RNase H activity.

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Kambiz Hamadani

California State University San Marcos

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Shion A. Lim

University of California

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Eric Bolin

University of California

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Elizabeth A. Shank

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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James L. Keck

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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