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Dive into the research topics where Toshiki G. Nakashige is active.

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Featured researches published by Toshiki G. Nakashige.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Contributions of the S100A9 C-terminal tail to high-affinity Mn(II) chelation by the host-defense protein human calprotectin.

Megan Brunjes Brophy; Toshiki G. Nakashige; Aleth Gaillard; Elizabeth M. Nolan

Human calprotectin (CP) is an antimicrobial protein that coordinates Mn(II) with high affinity in a Ca(II)-dependent manner at an unusual histidine-rich site (site 2) formed at the S100A8/S100A9 dimer interface. We present a 16-member CP mutant family where mutations in the S100A9 C-terminal tail (residues 96-114) are employed to evaluate the contributions of this region, which houses three histidines and four acidic residues, to Mn(II) coordination at site 2. The results from analytical size-exclusion chromatography, Mn(II) competition titrations, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy establish that the C-terminal tail is essential for high-affinity Mn(II) coordination by CP in solution. The studies indicate that His103 and His105 (HXH motif) of the tail complete the Mn(II) coordination sphere in solution, affording an unprecedented biological His6 site. These solution studies are in agreement with a Mn(II)-CP crystal structure reported recently (Damo, S. M.; et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2013, 110, 3841). Remarkably high-affinity Mn(II) binding is retained when either H103 or H105 are mutated to Ala, when the HXH motif is shifted from positions 103-105 to 104-106, and when the human tail is substituted by the C-terminal tail of murine S100A9. Nevertheless, antibacterial activity assays employing human CP mutants reveal that the native disposition of His residues is important for conferring growth inhibition against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. Within the S100 family, the S100A8/S100A9 heterooligomer is essential for providing high-affinity Mn(II) binding; the S100A7, S100A9(C3S), S100A12, and S100B homodimers do not exhibit such Mn(II)-binding capacity.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2016

Membrane anchoring stabilizes and favors secretion of New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase

Lisandro J González; Guillermo Bahr; Toshiki G. Nakashige; Elizabeth M. Nolan; Robert A. Bonomo; Alejandro J. Vila

Carbapenems, “last resort” β-lactam antibiotics, are inactivated by zinc-dependent metallo-β-lactamases (MBLs). The host innate immune response withholds nutrient metal ions from microbial pathogens by releasing metal-chelating proteins such as calprotectin. We show that metal sequestration is detrimental for the accumulation of MBLs in the bacterial periplasm, since these enzymes are readily degraded in their non-metallated form. However, the New Delhi Metallo-β-lactamase (NDM-1) is able to persist under conditions of metal depletion. NDM-1 is a lipidated protein anchored to the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Membrane-anchoring contributes to the unusual stability of NDM-1 and favors secretion of this enzyme in outer membrane vesicles (OMVs). OMVs containing NDM-1 can protect nearby populations of bacteria from otherwise lethal antibiotic levels, and OMVs from clinical pathogens expressing NDM-1 can carry this MBL and the blaNDM gene. We show that protein export into OMVs can be targeted, providing possibilities of new antibacterial therapeutic strategies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

The Hexahistidine Motif of Host-Defense Protein Human Calprotectin Contributes to Zinc Withholding and Its Functional Versatility

Toshiki G. Nakashige; Jules Rabie Stephan; Lisa S. Cunden; Megan Brunjes Brophy; Andrew Wommack; Brenna C. Keegan; Jason Shearer; Elizabeth M. Nolan

Human calprotectin (CP, S100A8/S100A9 oligomer, MRP-8/MRP-14 oligomer) is an abundant host-defense protein that is involved in the metal-withholding innate immune response. CP coordinates a variety of divalent first-row transition metal ions, which is implicated in its antimicrobial function, and its ability to sequester nutrient Zn(II) ions from microbial pathogens has been recognized for over two decades. CP has two distinct transition-metal-binding sites formed at the S100A8/S100A9 dimer interface, including a histidine-rich site composed of S100A8 residues His17 and His27 and S100A9 residues His91 and His95. In this study, we report that CP binds Zn(II) at this site using a hexahistidine motif, completed by His103 and His105 of the S100A9 C-terminal tail and previously identified as the high-affinity Mn(II) and Fe(II) coordination site. Zn(II) binding at this unique site shields the S100A9 C-terminal tail from proteolytic degradation by proteinase K. X-ray absorption spectroscopy and Zn(II) competition titrations support the formation of a Zn(II)-His6 motif. Microbial growth studies indicate that the hexahistidine motif is important for preventing microbial Zn(II) acquisition from CP by the probiotic Lactobacillus plantarum and the opportunistic human pathogen Candida albicans. The Zn(II)-His6 site of CP expands the known biological coordination chemistry of Zn(II) and provides new insight into how the human innate immune system starves microbes of essential metal nutrients.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Nickel Sequestration by the Host-Defense Protein Human Calprotectin

Toshiki G. Nakashige; Emily M. Zygiel; Catherine L. Drennan; Elizabeth M. Nolan

The human innate immune protein calprotectin (CP, S100A8/S100A9 oligomer, calgranulin A/calgranulin B oligomer, MRP-8/MRP-14 oligomer) chelates a number of first-row transition metals, including Mn(II), Fe(II), and Zn(II), and can withhold these essential nutrients from microbes. Here we elucidate the Ni(II) coordination chemistry of human CP. We present a 2.6-Å crystal structure of Ni(II)- and Ca(II)-bound CP, which reveals that CP binds Ni(II) ions at both its transition-metal-binding sites: the His3Asp motif (site 1) and the His6 motif (site 2). Further biochemical studies establish that coordination of Ni(II) at the hexahistidine site is thermodynamically preferred over Zn(II). We also demonstrate that CP can sequester Ni(II) from two human pathogens, Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae, that utilize this metal nutrient during infection, and inhibit the activity of the Ni(II)-dependent enzyme urease in bacterial cultures. In total, our findings expand the biological coordination chemistry of Ni(II)-chelating proteins in nature and provide a foundation for evaluating putative roles of CP in Ni(II) homeostasis at the host-microbe interface and beyond.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Biochemical and Spectroscopic Observation of Mn(II) Sequestration from Bacterial Mn(II) Transport Machinery by Calprotectin

Rose C. Hadley; Derek M. Gagnon; Megan Brunjes Brophy; Yu Gu; Toshiki G. Nakashige; R. David Britt; Elizabeth M. Nolan

Human calprotectin (CP, S100A8/S100A9 oligomer) is a metal-sequestering host-defense protein that prevents bacterial acquisition of Mn(II). In this work, we investigate Mn(II) competition between CP and two solute-binding proteins that Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae, Gram-positive bacterial pathogens of significant clinical concern, use to obtain Mn(II) when infecting a host. Biochemical and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic analyses demonstrate that CP outcompetes staphylococcal MntC and streptococcal PsaA for Mn(II). This behavior requires the presence of excess Ca(II) ions, which enhance the Mn(II) affinity of CP. This report presents new spectroscopic evaluation of two Mn(II) proteins important for bacterial pathogenesis, direct observation of Mn(II) sequestration from bacterial Mn(II) acquisition proteins by CP, and molecular insight into the extracellular battle for metal nutrients that occurs during infection.


Biochemistry | 2018

Biophysical Examination of the Calcium-Modulated Nickel-Binding Properties of Human Calprotectin Reveals Conformational Change in the EF-Hand Domains and His3Asp Site.

Toshiki G. Nakashige; Sarah E. J. Bowman; Emily M. Zygiel; Catherine L. Drennan; Elizabeth M. Nolan

Calprotectin (CP, S100A8/S100A9 oligomer, MRP-8/MRP-14 oligomer) is a host-defense protein that sequesters nutrient transition metals from microbes. Each S100A8/S100A9 heterodimer contains four EF-hand domains and two transition-metal-binding sites. We investigate the effect of Ca(II) ions on the structure and Ni(II)-binding properties of human CP. By employing energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy, we evaluate the metal content of Ni(II)-bound CP-Ser [oligomer of S100A8(C42S) and S100A9(C3S)] crystals obtained in the absence and presence of Ca(II). We present a 2.1 Å resolution crystal structure of Ni(II)-bound CP-Ser and compare this structure to a reported Ni(II)- and Ca(II)-bound CP-Ser structure [Nakashige, T. G., et al. (2017) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 139, 8828-8836]. This analysis reveals conformational changes associated with coordination of Ca(II) to the EF-hands of S100A9 and that Ca(II) binding affects the coordination number and geometry of the Ni(II) ion bound to the His3Asp site. In contrast, negligible differences are observed for the Ni(II)-His6 site in the absence and presence of Ca(II). Biochemical studies show that, whereas the His6 site has a thermodynamic preference for Ni(II) over Zn(II), the His3Asp site selects for Zn(II) over Ni(II), and relatively rapid metal exchange occurs at this site. These observations inform the working model for how CP withholds nutrient metals in the extracellular space.


Chemical Science | 2017

Magnetic circular dichroism studies of iron(II) binding to human calprotectin

Tessa M. Baker; Toshiki G. Nakashige; Elizabeth M. Nolan; Michael L. Neidig


Metallomics | 2017

Human calprotectin affects the redox speciation of iron

Toshiki G. Nakashige; Elizabeth M. Nolan


Metallomics | 2018

Calprotectin influences the aggregation of metal-free and metal-bound amyloid-β by direct interaction

Hyuck Jin Lee; Masha G. Savelieff; Juhye Kang; Megan Brunjes Brophy; Toshiki G. Nakashige; Shin Jung C. Lee; Elizabeth M. Nolan; Mi Hee Lim


PMC | 2015

Human calprotectin is an iron-sequestering host-defense protein

Bo Zhang; Carsten Krebs; Toshiki G. Nakashige; Elizabeth M. Nolan

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Elizabeth M. Nolan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Megan Brunjes Brophy

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Catherine L. Drennan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Emily M. Zygiel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Aleth Gaillard

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Andrew Wommack

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Bo Zhang

Pennsylvania State University

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Carsten Krebs

Pennsylvania State University

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