Susana C. M. Teixeira
Keele University
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Featured researches published by Susana C. M. Teixeira.
Science | 2014
Cecilia M. Casadei; Andrea Gumiero; Clive L. Metcalfe; Emma J. Murphy; Jaswir Basran; Maria Grazia Concilio; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Tobias E. Schrader; Alistair J. Fielding; Andreas Ostermann; Matthew P. Blakeley; Emma Lloyd Raven; Peter C. E. Moody
Peroxidase proton placement Heme enzymes catalyze a variety of biochemical oxidations through the activation of oxygen by iron. Casadei et al. used neutron crystallography to elucidate the mechanism of cytochrome c peroxidase (see the perspective by Groves and Boaz). In the highly reactive intermediate state termed compound I, the iron(IV) oxo, or ferryl, fragment was not protonated, whereas a nearby histidine residue was protonated. The sensitivity of neutron scattering to proton locations revealed these protonation states, where more common techniques, such as x-ray diffraction, have yielded more ambiguous results. Science, this issue p. 193; see also p. 142 The sensitivity of neutron scattering to proton locations clarifies the acid/base chemistry of a biochemical oxidation. [Also see Perspective by Groves and Boaz] Heme enzymes activate oxygen through formation of transient iron-oxo (ferryl) intermediates of the heme iron. A long-standing question has been the nature of the iron-oxygen bond and, in particular, the protonation state. We present neutron structures of the ferric derivative of cytochrome c peroxidase and its ferryl intermediate; these allow direct visualization of protonation states. We demonstrate that the ferryl heme is an Fe(IV)=O species and is not protonated. Comparison of the structures shows that the distal histidine becomes protonated on formation of the ferryl intermediate, which has implications for the understanding of O–O bond cleavage in heme enzymes. The structures highlight the advantages of neutron cryo-crystallography in probing reaction mechanisms and visualizing protonation states in enzyme intermediates.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2010
Matthew P. Blakeley; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Isabelle Petit-Haertlein; I. Hazemann; A. Mitschler; Michael Haertlein; Eduardo Howard; A. Podjarny
At the Institut Laue-Langevin, a new neutron Laue diffractometer LADI-III has been fully operational since March 2007. LADI-III is dedicated to neutron macromolecular crystallography at medium to high resolution (2.5-1.5 Å) and is used to study key H atoms and water structure in macromolecular structures. An improved detector design and readout system has been incorporated so that a miniaturized reading head located inside the drum scans the image plate. From comparisons of neutron detection efficiency (DQE) with the original LADI-I instrument, the internal transfer of the image plates and readout system provides an approximately threefold gain in neutron detection. The improved performance of LADI-III, coupled with the use of perdeuterated biological samples, now allows the study of biological systems with crystal volumes of 0.1-0.2 mm(3), as illustrated here by the recent studies of type III antifreeze protein (AFP; 7 kDa). As the major bottleneck for neutron macromolecular studies has been the large crystal volumes required, these recent developments have led to an expansion of the field, extending the size and the complexity of the systems that can be studied and reducing the data-collection times required.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003
James H. Thorpe; Benjamin C. Gale; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Christine J. Cardin
The role of metal ions in determining the solution conformation of the Holliday junction is well established, but to date the picture of metal ion binding from structural studies of the four-way DNA junction is very incomplete. Here we present two refined structures of the Holliday junction formed by the sequence d(TCGGTACCGA) in the presence of Na(+) and Ca(2+), and separately with Sr(2+) to resolutions of 1.85A and 1.65A, respectively. This sequence includes the ACC core found to promote spontaneous junction formation, but its structure has not previously been reported. Almost complete hydration spheres can be defined for each metal cation. The Na(+) sites, the most convincing observation of such sites in junctions to date, are one on either face of the junction crossover region, and stabilise the ordered hydration inside the junction arms. The four Ca(2+) sites in the same structure are at the CG/CG steps in the minor groove. The Sr(2+) ions occupy the TC/AG, GG/CC, and TA/TA sites in the minor groove, giving ten positions forming two spines of ions, spiralling through the minor grooves within each arm of the stacked-X structure. The two structures were solved in the two different C2 lattices previously observed, with the Sr(2+) derivative crystallising in the more highly symmetrical form with two-fold symmetry at its centre. Both structures show an opening of the minor groove face of the junction of 8.4 degrees in the Ca(2+) and Na(+) containing structure, and 13.4 degrees in the Sr(2+) containing structure. The crossover angles at the junction are 39.3 degrees and 43.3 degrees, respectively. In addition to this, a relative shift in the base pair stack alignment of the arms of 2.3A is observed for the Sr(2+) containing structure only. Overall these results provide an insight into the so-far elusive stabilising ion structure for the DNA Holliday junction.
FEBS Letters | 2001
Leila Lo Leggio; Stavros Kalogiannis; Kelvin Eckert; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Mahalingeswara K Bhat; Richard W. Pickersgill; Sine Larsen
The substrate specificity of Thermoascus aurantiacus xylanase 10A (TAX) has been investigated both biochemically and structurally. High resolution crystallographic analyses at 291 K and 100 K of TAX complexes with xylobiose show that the ligand is in its α anomeric conformation and provide a rationale for specificity on p‐nitrophenyl glycosides at the −1 and −2 subsites. Trp 275, which is disordered in uncomplexed structures, is stabilised by its interaction with xylobiose. Two structural subsets in family 10 are identified, which differ by the presence or absence of a short helical stretch in the eighth βα‐loop of the TIM barrel, the loop bearing Trp 275. This structural difference is discussed in the context of Trp 275 mobility and xylanase function.
Acta Crystallographica Section C-crystal Structure Communications | 2014
Estelle Mossou; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Edward P. Mitchell; S.A. Mason; Lihi Adler-Abramovich; Ehud Gazit; V.T. Forsyth
The title zwitterion (2S)-2-azaniumyl-1-hydroxy-3-phenylpropan-1-olate, C9H11NO2, also known as L-phenylalanine, was characterized using synchrotron X-rays. It crystallized in the monoclinic space group P21 with four molecules in the asymmetric unit. The 0.62 Å resolution structure is assumed to be closely related to the fibrillar form of phenylalanine, as observed by electron microscopy and electron diffraction. The structure exists in a zwitterionic form in which π-π stacking and hydrogen-bonding interactions are believed to form the basis of the self-assembling properties.
Dairy Science & Technology | 2015
Samuel Lenton; Tommy Nylander; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Carl Holt
In milk, a stable fluid is formed in which sequestered nanoclusters of calcium phosphate are substructures in casein micelles. As a result, calcium and phosphate concentrations in milk can be far in excess of their solubility. Variations of calcium, phosphate and casein concentrations in milks, both within and among species, are mainly due to the formation of the nanocluster complexes. Caseins evolved from tooth and bone proteins well before the evolution of lactation. It has therefore been suggested that the role of caseins in milk is an adaptation of an antecedent function in the control of some aspect of biomineralisation. There is new evidence that nanocluster-type complexes are also present in blood serum and, by implication, in many other closely related biofluids. Because such fluids are stable but nevertheless supersaturated with respect to the bone and tooth mineral hydroxyapatite, they allow soft and mineralised tissues to co-exist in the same organism with relative ease. An appreciable concentration of nanocluster complexes exists in fresh saliva. Such saliva may stabilise tooth mineral and help to repair demineralised lesions. In the extracellular matrix of bone, nanocluster complexes may be involved in directing the amorphous calcium phosphate to intrafibrillar spaces in collagen where they can mature into oriented apatite crystals. Thus, evidence is accumulating that calcium phosphate sequestration by phosphopeptides to form equilibrium complexes, first observed in milk, is more generally important in the control of physiological calcification.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002
Susana C. M. Teixeira; James H. Thorpe; Alan K. Todd; Harold R. Powell; Adrienne Adams; Laurence P. G. Wakelin; William A. Denny; Christine J. Cardin
We report the single-crystal X-ray structure for the complex of the bisacridine bis-(9-aminooctyl(2-(dimethylaminoethyl)acridine-4-carboxamide)) with the oligonucleotide d(CGTACG)(2) to a resolution of 2.4A. Solution studies with closed circular DNA show this compound to be a bisintercalating threading agent, but so far we have no crystallographic or NMR structural data conforming to the model of contiguous intercalation within the same duplex. Here, with the hexameric duplex d(CGTACG), the DNA is observed to undergo a terminal cytosine base exchange to yield an unusual guanine quadruplex intercalation site through which the bisacridine threads its octamethylene linker to fuse two DNA duplexes. The 4-carboxamide side-chains form anchoring hydrogen-bonding interactions with guanine O6 atoms on each side of the quadruplex. This higher-order DNA structure provides insight into an unexpected property of bisintercalating threading agents, and suggests the idea of targeting such compounds specifically at four-way DNA junctions.
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2008
Susana C. M. Teixeira; Matthew P. Blakeley; Ricardo M. F. Leal; Edward P. Mitchell; V. Trevor Forsyth
A preliminary neutron crystallographic study of the sweet protein thaumatin is presented. Large hydrogenated crystals were prepared in deuterated crystallization buffer using the gel-acupuncture method. Data were collected to a resolution of 2 A on the LADI-III diffractometer at the Institut Laue Langevin (ILL). The results demonstrate the feasibility of a full neutron crystallographic analysis of this structure aimed at providing relevant information on the location of H atoms, the distribution of charge on the protein surface and localized water in the structure. This information will be of interest for understanding the specificity of thaumatin-receptor interactions and will contribute to further understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the perception of taste.
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2011
Sarah M. Tiggelaar; Estelle Mossou; Phil Callow; Shirley Callow; Susana C. M. Teixeira; Edward P. Mitchell; Anna Mitraki; V. Trevor Forsyth
The first neutron fibre diffraction studies of an amyloid system are presented. The techniques used to prepare the large samples needed are described, as well as the procedures used to isotopically replace H2O in the sample by D2O. The results demonstrate the feasibility of this type of approach for the pursuit of novel structural analyses that will strongly complement X-ray fibre diffraction studies and probe aspects of amyloid structure that to date have remained obscure. The approach is demonstrated using an amyloid form of the peptide NSGAITIG, but is equally applicable for the study of other systems such as Alzheimers Aβ peptide.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2015
Samuel Lenton; Tilo Seydel; Tommy Nylander; Carl Holt; Michael Härtlein; Susana C. M. Teixeira; G Zaccai
The sequestration of calcium phosphate by unfolded proteins is fundamental to the stabilization of biofluids supersaturated with respect to hydroxyapatite, such as milk, blood or urine. The unfolded state of osteopontin (OPN) is thought to be a prerequisite for this activity, which leads to the formation of core–shell calcium phosphate nanoclusters. We report on the structures and dynamics of a native OPN peptide from bovine milk, studied by neutron spectroscopy and small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering. The effects of sequestration are quantified on the nanosecond– ångström resolution by elastic incoherent neutron scattering. The molecular fluctuations of the free phosphopeptide are in agreement with a highly flexible protein. An increased resilience to diffusive motions of OPN is corroborated by molecular fluctuations similar to those observed for globular proteins, yet retaining conformational flexibilities. The results bring insight into the modulation of the activity of OPN and phosphopeptides with a role in the control of biomineralization. The quantification of such effects provides an important handle for the future design of new peptides based on the dynamics–activity relationship.