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Featured researches published by Tianqi O. Zhang.


Biochemistry | 2013

Amyloid Fiber Formation in Human γD-Crystallin Induced by UV-B Photodamage

Sean D. Moran; Tianqi O. Zhang; Sean M. Decatur; Martin T. Zanni

γD-Crystallin is an abundant structural protein of the lens that is found in native and modified forms in cataractous aggregates. We establish that UV-B irradiation of γD-Crystallin leads to structurally specific modifications and precipitation via two mechanisms: amorphous aggregates and amyloid fibers. UV-B radiation causes cleavage of the backbone, in large measure near the interdomain interface, where side chain oxidations are also concentrated. 2D IR spectroscopy and expressed protein ligation localize fiber formation exclusively to the C-terminal domain of γD-Crystallin. The native β-sandwich domains are not retained upon precipitation by either mechanism. The similarities between the amyloid forming pathways when induced by either UV-B radiation or low pH suggest that the propensity for the C-terminal β-sandwich domain to form amyloid β-sheets determines the misfolding pathway independent of the mechanism of denaturation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

General Strategy for the Bioorthogonal Incorporation of Strongly Absorbing, Solvation-Sensitive Infrared Probes into Proteins

Ivan Peran; Tracey A. Oudenhoven; Ann Marie Woys; Matthew D. Watson; Tianqi O. Zhang; Isaac Carrico; Martin T. Zanni; Daniel P. Raleigh

A high-sensitivity metal-carbonyl-based IR probe is described that can be incorporated into proteins or other biomolecules in very high yield via Click chemistry. A two-step strategy is demonstrated. First, a methionine auxotroph is used to incorporate the unnatural amino acid azidohomoalanine at high levels. Second, a tricarbonyl (η5-cyclopentadienyl) rhenium(I) probe modified with an alkynyl linkage is coupled via the Click reaction. We demonstrate these steps using the C-terminal domain of the ribosomal protein L9 as a model system. An overall incorporation level of 92% was obtained at residue 109, which is a surface-exposed residue. Incorporation of the probe into a surface site is shown not to perturb the stability or structure of the target protein. Metal carbonyls are known to be sensitive to solvation and protein electrostatics through vibrational lifetimes and frequency shifts. We report that the frequencies and lifetimes of this probe also depend on the isotopic composition of the solvent. Comparison of the lifetimes measured in H2O versus D2O provides a probe of solvent accessibility. The metal carbonyl probe reported here provides an easy and robust method to label very large proteins with an amino-acid-specific tag that is both environmentally sensitive and a very strong absorber.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Myeloperoxidase-mediated Methionine Oxidation Promotes an Amyloidogenic Outcome for Apolipoprotein A-I.

Gary K. L. Chan; Andrzej Witkowski; Donald L. Gantz; Tianqi O. Zhang; Martin T. Zanni; Shobini Jayaraman; Giorgio Cavigiolio

Background: Amyloids made of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) contribute to the growth of the atherosclerotic plaques. Results: ApoA-I methionine oxidation by physiological levels of myeloperoxidase induces amyloid formation. Conclusion: Myeloperoxidase-mediated oxidation not only impairs the physiological functions of apoA-I but also promotes protein loss in form of amyloids. Significance: Our findings identify the physiological mechanism transforming wild-type apoA-I into an amyloidogenic protein. High plasma levels of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) correlate with cardiovascular health, whereas dysfunctional apoA-I is a cause of atherosclerosis. In the atherosclerotic plaques, amyloid deposition increases with aging. Notably, apoA-I is the main component of these amyloids. Recent studies identified high levels of oxidized lipid-free apoA-I in atherosclerotic plaques. Likely, myeloperoxidase (MPO) secreted by activated macrophages in atherosclerotic lesions is the promoter of such apoA-I oxidation. We hypothesized that apoA-I oxidation by MPO levels similar to those present in the artery walls in atherosclerosis can promote apoA-I structural changes and amyloid fibril formation. ApoA-I was exposed to exhaustive chemical (H2O2) oxidation or physiological levels of enzymatic (MPO) oxidation and incubated at 37 °C and pH 6.0 to induce fibril formation. Both chemically and enzymatically oxidized apoA-I produced fibrillar amyloids after a few hours of incubation. The amyloid fibrils were composed of full-length apoA-I with differential oxidation of the three methionines. Met to Leu apoA-I variants were used to establish the predominant role of oxidation of Met-86 and Met-148 in the fibril formation process. Importantly, a small amount of preformed apoA-I fibrils was able to seed amyloid formation in oxidized apoA-I at pH 7.0. In contrast to hereditary amyloidosis, wherein specific mutations of apoA-I cause protein destabilization and amyloid deposition, oxidative conditions similar to those promoted by local inflammation in atherosclerosis are sufficient to transform full-length wild-type apoA-I into an amyloidogenic protein. Thus, MPO-mediated oxidation may be implicated in the mechanism that leads to amyloid deposition in the atherosclerotic plaques in vivo.


Protein Science | 2014

An alternative structural isoform in amyloid-like aggregates formed from thermally denatured human γD-crystallin.

Sean D. Moran; Tianqi O. Zhang; Martin T. Zanni

The eye lens protein γD‐crystallin contributes to cataract formation in the lens. In vitro experiments show that γD‐crystallin has a high propensity to form amyloid fibers when denatured, and that denaturation by acid or UV‐B photodamage results in its C‐terminal domain forming the β‐sheet core of amyloid fibers. Here, we show that thermal denaturation results in sheet‐like aggregates that contain cross‐linked oligomers of the protein, according to transmission electron microscopy and SDS‐PAGE. We use two‐dimensional infrared spectroscopy to show that these aggregates have an amyloid‐like secondary structure with extended β‐sheets, and use isotope dilution experiments to show that each protein contributes approximately one β‐strand to each β‐sheet in the aggregates. Using segmental 13C labeling, we show that the organization of the proteins two domains in thermally induced aggregates results in a previously unobserved structure in which both the N‐terminal and C‐terminal domains contribute to β‐sheets. We propose a model for the structural organization of the aggregates and attribute the recruitment of the N‐terminal domain into the fiber structure to intermolecular cross linking.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016

Isotope-Labeled Amyloids via Synthesis, Expression, and Chemical Ligation for Use in FTIR, 2D IR, and NMR Studies

Tianqi O. Zhang; Maksim Grechko; Sean D. Moran; Martin T. Zanni

This chapter provides protocols for isotope-labeling the human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP or amylin) involved in type II diabetes and γD-crystallin involved in cataract formation. Because isotope labeling improves the structural resolution, these protocols are useful for experiments using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), two-dimensional infrared (2D IR), and NMR spectroscopies. Our research group specializes in using 2D IR spectroscopy and isotope labeling. 2D IR spectroscopy provides structural information by measuring solvation from 2D diagonal lineshapes and vibrational couplings from cross peaks. Infrared spectroscopy can be used to study kinetics, membrane proteins, and aggregated proteins. Isotope labeling provides greater certainty in the spectral assignment, which enables new structural insights that are difficult to obtain with other methods. For amylin, we provide a protocol for (13)C/(18)O labeling backbone carbonyls at one or more desired amino acids in order to obtain residue-specific structural resolution. We also provide a protocol for expressing and purifying amylin from E. coli, which enables uniform (13)C or (13)C/(15)N labeling. Uniform labeling is useful for measuring the monomer infrared spectrum in an amyloid oligomer or fiber as well as amyloid protein bound to another polypeptide or protein, such as a chaperone or an inhibitor. In addition, our expression protocol results in 2-2.5 mg of amylin peptide per 1 L cell culture, which is a high enough yield to straightforwardly obtain the 2-10 mg needed for high resolution and solid-state NMR experiments. Finally, we provide a protocol to isotope-label either of the two domains of γD-crystallin using expressed protein ligation. Domain labeling makes it possible to resolve the structures of the two halves of the protein in FTIR and 2D IR spectra. With modifications, these strategies and protocols for isotope labeling can be applied to other amyloid polypeptides and proteins.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2017

Amyloid β-Sheet Secondary Structure Identified in UV-Induced Cataracts of Porcine Lenses using 2D IR Spectroscopy

Tianqi O. Zhang; Ariel M. Alperstein; Martin T. Zanni

Cataracts are formed by the aggregation of crystallin proteins in the eye lens. Many in vitro studies have established that crystallin proteins precipitate into aggregates that contain amyloid fibers when denatured, but there is little evidence that ex vivo cataracts contain amyloid. In this study, we collect two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectra on tissue slices of porcine eye lenses. As shown in control experiments on in vitro αB- and γD-crystallin, 2D IR spectroscopy can identify the highly ordered β-sheets typical of amyloid secondary structure even if the fibers themselves are too short to be resolved with TEM. In ex vivo experiments of acid-treated tissues, characteristic 2D IR features are observed and fibers >50nm in length are resolved by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), consistent with amyloid fibers. In UV-irradiated lens tissues, fibers are not observed with TEM, but highly ordered β-sheets of amyloid secondary structure is identified from the 2D IR spectra. The characteristic 2D IR features of amyloid β-sheet secondary structure are created by as few as four or five strands and so identify amyloid secondary structure even if the aggregates themselves are too small to be resolved with TEM. We discuss these findings in the context of the chaperone system of the lens, which we hypothesize sequesters small aggregates, thereby preventing long fibers from forming. This study expands the scope of heterodyned 2D IR spectroscopy to tissues. The results provide a link between in vitro and ex vivo studies and support the hypothesis that cataracts are an amyloid disease.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2018

Heterogeneous Amyloid β-Sheet Polymorphs Identified on Hydrogen Bond Promoting Surfaces Using 2D SFG Spectroscopy

Jia-Jung Ho; Ayanjeet Ghosh; Tianqi O. Zhang; Martin T. Zanni

Two-dimensional sum-frequency generation spectroscopy (2D SFG) is used to study the structures of the pentapeptide FGAIL on hydrogen bond promoting surfaces. FGAIL is the most amyloidogenic portion of the human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP or amylin). In the presence of a pure gold surface, FGAIL does not form ordered structures. When the gold is coated with a self-assembled monolayer of mercaptobenzoic acid (MBA), 2D SFG spectra reveal features associated with β-sheets. Also observed are cross peaks between the FGAIL peptides and the carboxylic acid groups of the MBA monolayer, indicating that the peptides are in close contact with the surface headgroups. In the second set of samples, FGAIL peptides chemically ligated to the MBA monolayer also exhibited β-sheet features but with a much simpler spectrum. From simulations of the experiments, we conclude that the hydrogen bond promoting surface catalyzes the formation of both parallel and antiparallel β-sheet structures with several different orientations. When ligated, parallel sheets with only a single orientation are the primary structure. Thus, this hydrogen bond promoting surface creates a heterogeneous distribution of polymorph structures, consistent with a concentration effect that allows nucleation of many different amyloid seeding structures. A single well-defined seed favors one polymorph over the others, showing that the concentrating influence of a membrane can be counterbalanced by factors that favor directed fiber growth. These experiments lay the foundation for the measurement and interpretation of β-sheet structures with heterodyne-detected 2D SFG spectroscopy. The results of this model system suggest that a heterogeneous distribution of polymorphs found in nature are an indication of nonselective amyloid aggregation whereas a narrow distribution of polymorph structures is consistent with a specific protein or lipid interaction that directs fiber growth.


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Cataracts Contain Amyloid β-Sheets: A 2D IR Study of Human Cataract Tissue

Ariel M. Alperstein; Joshua S. Ostrander; Tianqi O. Zhang; Martin T. Zanni


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

GXXXG-Mediated Parallel and Antiparallel Dimerization of Transmembrane Helices and Its Inhibition by Cholesterol: Single-Pair FRET and 2D IR Studies

Kotaro Kondo; Yuta Watanabe; Tianqi O. Zhang; Jia-Jung Ho; Shinya Oishi; Nobutaka Fujii; Martin T. Zanni; Katsumi Matsuzaki


Biophysical Journal | 2015

The Role of Chaperone Proteins in Cataract Aggregation: A Two-Dimensional Infrared Study

Tianqi O. Zhang; Martin T. Zanni

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Martin T. Zanni

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Sean D. Moran

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ariel M. Alperstein

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jia-Jung Ho

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Andrzej Witkowski

Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute

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Ann Marie Woys

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ayanjeet Ghosh

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Gary K. L. Chan

Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute

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