Travis P. Schrank
University of Texas Medical Branch
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Featured researches published by Travis P. Schrank.
Biophysical Chemistry | 2011
James O. Wrabl; Jenny Gu; Tong Liu; Travis P. Schrank; Steven T. Whitten; Vincent J. Hilser
It is now well-known that proteins exist at equilibrium as ensembles of conformational states rather than as unique static structures. Here we review from an ensemble perspective important biological effects of such spontaneous fluctuations on protein allostery, function, and evolution. However, rather than present a thorough literature review on each subject, we focus instead on connecting these phenomena through the ensemble-based experimental, theoretical, and computational investigations from our laboratory over the past decade. Special emphasis is given to insights that run counter to some of the prevailing ideas that have emerged over the past 40 years of structural biology research. For instance, when proteins are viewed as conformational ensembles rather than as single structures, the commonly held notion of an allosteric pathway as an obligate series of individual structural distortions loses its meaning. Instead, allostery can result from energetic linkage between distal sites as one Boltzmann distribution of states transitions to another. Additionally, the emerging principles from this ensemble view of proteins have proven surprisingly useful in describing the role of intrinsic disorder in inter-domain communication, functional adaptation mediated by mutational control of fluctuations, and evolutionary conservation of the energetics of protein stability.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2011
Travis P. Schrank; Yimei Han; Heidi L. Weiss; Vicente A. Resto
Several studies have documented disparities in head and neck cancer outcomes for black patients in the United States. Recent studies have found that differences in oropharyngeal tumor human papillomavirus (HPV) status may be a cause of this disparity.
Protein Science | 2013
W. Austin Elam; Travis P. Schrank; Andrew J. Campagnolo; Vincent J. Hilser
Intrinsically disordered (ID) proteins function in the absence of a unique stable structure and appear to challenge the classic structure‐function paradigm. The extent to which ID proteins take advantage of subtle conformational biases to perform functions, and whether signals for such mechanism can be identified in proteome‐wide studies is not well understood. Of particular interest is the polyproline II (PII) conformation, suggested to be highly populated in unfolded proteins. We experimentally determine a complete calorimetric propensity scale for the PII conformation. Projection of the scale into representative eukaryotic proteomes reveals significant PII bias in regions coding for ID proteins. Importantly, enrichment of PII in ID proteins, or protein segments, is also captured by other PII scales, indicating that this enrichment is robustly encoded and universally detectable regardless of the method of PII propensity determination. Gene ontology (GO) terms obtained using our PII scale and other scales demonstrate a consensus for molecular functions performed by high PII proteins across the proteome. Perhaps the most striking result of the GO analysis is conserved enrichment (P < 10−8) of phosphorylation sites in high PII regions found by all PII scales. Subsequent conformational analysis reveals a phosphorylation‐dependent modulation of PII, suggestive of a conserved “tunability” within these regions. In summary, the application of an experimentally determined polyproline II (PII) propensity scale to proteome‐wide sequence analysis and gene ontology reveals an enrichment of PII bias near disordered phosphorylation sites that is conserved throughout eukaryotes.
Methods in Enzymology | 2011
Travis P. Schrank; W. Austin Elam; Jing Li; Vincent J. Hilser
Conformational fluctuations in proteins have emerged as an important aspect of biological function, having been linked to processes ranging from molecular recognition and catalysis to allostery and signal transduction. In spite of the realization of their importance, however, the connections between fluctuations and function have largely been empirical, even when they have been quantitative. Part of the problem in understanding the role of fluctuations in function is the fact that the mere existence of fluctuations complicates the interpretation of classic mutagenesis approaches. Namely, mutagenesis, which is typically targeted to an internal position (to elicit an effect), will change the fluctuations as well as the structure of the native state. Decoupling these effects is essential to an unambiguous understanding of the role of fluctuations in function. Here, we use a mutation strategy that targets surface-exposed sites in flexible parts of the molecule for mutation to glycine. Such mutations leave the ground-state structure unaffected. As a result, we can assess the nature of the fluctuations, develop a quantitative model relating fluctuations to function (in this case, molecular recognition), and unambiguously resolve the probabilities of the fluctuating states. We show that when this approach is applied to Escherichia coli adenylate kinase (AK), unique thermodynamic and structural insights are obtained, even when classic mutagenesis approaches targeted to the same region yield ambiguous results.
Biochemistry | 2013
W. Austin Elam; Travis P. Schrank; Andrew J. Campagnolo; Vincent J. Hilser
The native states of globular proteins have been accessed in atomic detail by X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, yet characterization of denatured proteins beyond global metrics has proven to be elusive. Denatured proteins have been observed to exhibit global geometric properties of a random coil polymer. However, this does not preclude the existence of nonrandom, local conformational bias that may be significant for protein folding and function. Indeed, circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy and other methods have suggested that the denatured state contains considerable local bias to the polyproline II (PII) conformation. Here, we develop predictive models to determine the extent that temperature and the chemical denaturant urea modulate PII propensity. In agreement with our predictive model, PII propensity is observed experimentally to decrease with an increase in temperature. Conversely, urea appears to promote the PII conformation as determined by CD and isothermal titration calorimetry. Importantly, the calorimetric data are in quantitative agreement with a model that predicts the stability of the PII helix relative to other denatured state conformations based upon solvent accessible surface area and experimentally measured Gibbs transfer free energies. The ability of urea to promote the PII conformation can be attributed to the favorable interaction of urea with the peptide backbone. Thus, perturbing denatured states by temperature or cosolutes has subtle, yet opposing, impacts on local PII conformational biases. These results have implications for protein folding as well as for the function of signaling proteins that bind proline-rich targets in globular or intrinsically disordered proteins.
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Alexander F. Chin; Dmitri Toptygin; W. Austin Elam; Travis P. Schrank; Vincent J. Hilser
Intrinsically disordered regions of proteins, which lack unique tertiary structure under physiological conditions, are enriched in phosphorylation sites and in significant local bias toward the polyproline II conformation. The overrepresented coincidence of this posttranslational regulatory signal and local conformational bias within unstructured regions raises a question: can phosphorylation serve to manipulate the conformational preferences of a disordered protein? In this study, we use time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer and a, to our knowledge, novel data analysis method to directly measure the end-to-end distance distribution of a phosphorylatable peptide derived from the human microtubule associated protein tau. Our results show that phosphorylation at threonine or serine extends the end-to-end distance and increases the effective persistence length of the tested model peptides. Unexpectedly, the extension is independent of salt concentration, suggestive of a nonelectrostatic origin. The phosphorylation extension and stiffening effect provides a peptide-scale physical interpretation for the posttranslational regulation of the highly abundant protein-protein interactions found in disordered proteins, as well as a potential insight into the regulatory mechanism of the tau proteins microtubule binding activity.
Laryngoscope | 2017
Travis P. Schrank; Kevin Y. Zhan; Eric J. Lentsch
Major salivary gland large‐cell undifferentiated carcinoma (LCUC) is rare and has a poor prognosis. Characterization of patient demographics, tumor characteristics, and predictors of outcome have been limited by low case numbers, as well as grouped analysis with other salivary malignancies. The objective of this study was to address these issues using large‐scale national data.
Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 2014
Joseph L. Russell; Nai Wei Chen; Shani J. Ortiz; Travis P. Schrank; Yong Fang Kuo; Vicente A. Resto
Topics in Current Chemistry | 2013
Travis P. Schrank; James O. Wrabl; Vincent J. Hilser
Protein and Peptide Folding, Misfolding, and Non-Folding | 2012
W. Austin Elam; Travis P. Schrank; Vincent J. Hilser