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Dive into the research topics where William T. Heller is active.

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Featured researches published by William T. Heller.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Experimental Evidence for Hydrophobic Matching and Membrane- Mediated Interactions in Lipid Bilayers Containing Gramicidin

William T. Heller; Thomas M. Weiss; Lin Yang; Huey W. Huang

Hydrophobic matching, in which transmembrane proteins cause the surrounding lipid bilayer to adjust its hydrocarbon thickness to match the length of the hydrophobic surface of the protein, is a commonly accepted idea in membrane biophysics. To test this idea, gramicidin (gD) was embedded in 1, 2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DLPC) and 1, 2-myristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) bilayers at the peptide/lipid molar ratio of 1:10. Circular dichroism (CD) was measured to ensure that the gramicidin was in the beta6.3 helix form. The bilayer thickness (the phosphate-to-phosphate distance, or PtP) was measured by x-ray lamellar diffraction. In the Lalpha phase near full hydration, PtP is 30.8 A for pure DLPC, 32.1 A for the DLPC/gD mixture, 35.3 A for pure DMPC, and 32.7 A for the DMPC/gD mixture. Gramicidin apparently stretches DLPC and thins DMPC toward a common thickness as expected by hydrophobic matching. Concurrently, gramicidin-gramicidin correlations were measured by x-ray in-plane scattering. In the fluid phase, the gramicidin-gramicidin nearest-neighbor separation is 26.8 A in DLPC, but shortens to 23.3 A in DMPC. These experiments confirm the conjecture that when proteins are embedded in a membrane, hydrophobic matching creates a strain field in the lipid bilayer that in turn gives rise to a membrane-mediated attractive potential between proteins.


Biophysical Journal | 1996

Mechanism of alamethicin insertion into lipid bilayers

Ke He; S.J. Ludtke; William T. Heller; Huey W. Huang

Alamethicin adsorbs on the membrane surface at low peptide concentrations. However, above a critical peptide-to-lipid ratio (P/L), a fraction of the peptide molecules insert in the membrane. This critical ratio is lipid dependent. For diphytanoyl phosphatidylcholine it is about 1/40. At even higher concentrations P/L > or = 1/15, all of the alamethicin inserts into the membrane and forms well-defined pores as detected by neutron in-plane scattering. A previous x-ray diffraction measurement showed that alamethicin adsorbed on the surface has the effect of thinning the bilayer in proportion to the peptide concentration. A theoretical study showed that the energy cost of membrane thinning can indeed lead to peptide insertion. This paper extends the previous studies to the high-concentration region P/L > 1/40. X-ray diffraction shows that the bilayer thickness increases with the peptide concentration for P/L > 1/23 as the insertion approaches 100%. The thickness change with the percentage of insertion is consistent with the assumption that the hydrocarbon region of the bilayer matches the hydrophobic region of the inserted peptide. The elastic energy of a lipid bilayer including both adsorption and insertion of peptide is discussed. The Gibbs free energy is calculated as a function of P/L and the percentage of insertion phi in a simplified one-dimensional model. The model exhibits an insertion phase transition in qualitative agreement with the data. We conclude that the membrane deformation energy is the major driving force for the alamethicin insertion transition.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Theoretical Analysis of Hydrophobic Matching and Membrane-Mediated Interactions in Lipid Bilayers Containing Gramicidin

William T. Heller; Thomas M. Weiss; Lin Yang; Huey W. Huang

We present a quantitative analysis of the effects of hydrophobic matching and membrane-mediated protein-protein interactions exhibited by gramicidin embedded in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC) bilayers (Harroun et al., 1999. Biophys. J. 76:937-945). Incorporating gramicidin, at 1:10 peptide/lipid molar ratio, decreases the phosphate-to-phosphate (PtP) peak separation in the DMPC bilayer from 35.3 A without gramicidin to 32.7 A. In contrast, the same molar ratio of gramicidin in DLPC increases the PtP from 30.8 A to 32.1 A. Concurrently, x-ray in-plane scattering showed that the most probable nearest-neighbor separation between gramicidin channels was 26.8 A in DLPC, but reduced to 23.3 A in DMPC. In this paper we review the idea of hydrophobic matching in which the lipid bilayer deforms to match the hydrophobic surface of the embedded proteins. We use a simple elasticity theory, including thickness compression, tension, and splay terms to describe the membrane deformation. The energy of membrane deformation is compared with the energy cost of hydrophobic mismatch. We discuss the boundary conditions between a gramicidin channel and the lipid bilayer. We used a numerical method to solve the problem of membrane deformation profile in the presence of a high density of gramicidin channels and ran computer simulations of 81 gramicidin channels to find the equilibrium distributions of the channels in the plane of the bilayer. The simulations contain four parameters: bilayer thickness compressibility 1/B, bilayer bending rigidity Kc, the channel-bilayer mismatch Do, and the slope of the interface at the lipid-protein boundary s. B, Kc, and Do were experimentally measured; the only free parameter is s. The value of s is determined by the requirement that the theory produces the experimental values of bilayer thinning by gramicidin and the shift in the peak position of the in-plane scattering due to membrane-mediated channel-channel interactions. We show that both hydrophobic matching and membrane-mediated interactions can be understood by the simple elasticity theory.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Breakdown of Cell Wall Nanostructure in Dilute Acid Pretreated Biomass

Sai Venkatesh Pingali; Volker S. Urban; William T. Heller; Joseph McGaughey; Hugh O'Neill; Marcus Foston; Dean A. A. Myles; Arthur J. Ragauskas; Barbara R. Evans

The generation of bioethanol from lignocellulosic biomass holds great promise for renewable and clean energy production. A better understanding of the complex mechanisms of lignocellulose breakdown during various pretreatment methods is needed to realize this potential in a cost and energy efficient way. Here we use small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) to characterize morphological changes in switchgrass lignocellulose across molecular to submicrometer length scales resulting from the industrially relevant dilute acid pretreatment method. Our results demonstrate that dilute acid pretreatment increases the cross-sectional radius of the crystalline cellulose fibril. This change is accompanied by removal of hemicellulose and the formation of R(g) ∼ 135 A lignin aggregates. The structural signature of smooth cell wall surfaces is observed at length scales larger than 1000 A, and it remains remarkably invariable during pretreatment. This study elucidates the interplay of the different biomolecular components in the breakdown process of switchgrass by dilute acid pretreatment. The results are important for the development of efficient strategies of biomass to biofuel conversion.


Biophysical Journal | 1997

Effect of changing the size of lipid headgroup on peptide insertion into membranes.

William T. Heller; Ke He; S.J. Ludtke; Huey W. Huang

Adsorption of amphiphilic peptides to the headgroup region of a lipid bilayer is a common mode of protein-membrane interactions. Previous studies have shown that adsorption causes membrane thinning. The degree of the thinning depends on the degree of the lateral expansion caused by the peptide adsorption. If this simple molecular mechanism is correct, the degree of lateral expansion and consequently the membrane thinning should depend on the size of the headgroup relative to the cross section of the hydrocarbon chains. Previously we have established the connection between the alamethicin insertion transition and the membrane thinning effect. In this paper we use oriented circular dichroism to study the effect of varying the size of the headgroup, while maintaining a constant cross section of the lipid chains, on the insertion transition. A simple quantitative prediction agrees very well with the experiment.


Green Chemistry | 2014

Common processes drive the thermochemical pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass

Paul Langan; Loukas Petridis; Hugh O'Neill; Sai Venkatesh Pingali; Marcus Foston; Yoshiharu Nishiyama; Roland Schulz; Benjamin Lindner; B. Leif Hanson; Shane E. Harton; William T. Heller; Volker S. Urban; Barbara R. Evans; S. Gnanakaran; Arthur J. Ragauskas; Jeremy C. Smith; Brian H. Davison

Lignocellulosic biomass, a potentially important renewable organic source of energy and chemical feedstock, resists degradation to glucose in industrial hydrolysis processes and thus requires expensive thermochemical pretreatments. Understanding the mechanism of biomass breakdown during these pretreatments will lead to more efficient use of biomass. By combining multiple probes of structure, sensitive to different length scales, with molecular dynamics simulations, we reveal two fundamental processes responsible for the morphological changes in biomass during steam explosion pretreatment: cellulose dehydration and lignin-hemicellulose phase separation. We further show that the basic driving forces are the same in other leading thermochemical pretreatments, such as dilute acid pretreatment and ammonia fiber expansion.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Characterization of the influence of the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride on the structure and thermal stability of green fluorescent protein.

William T. Heller; Hugh O’Neill; Qiu Zhang; Gary A. Baker

Ionic liquids (ILs) are finding a vast array of applications as novel solvents for a wide variety of processes that include enzymatic chemistry, particularly as more biocompatible ILs are designed and discovered. While it is assumed that a native or near-native structure is required for enzymatic activity, there is some evidence that ILs alter protein structure and oligomerization states in a manner than can negatively impact function. The IL 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride, [bmim]Cl, is a well-studied, water-miscible member of the popular 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium IL family. To improve our understanding of the impact of water-miscible ILs on proteins, we have characterized the structure and oligomerization state of green fluorescent protein (GFP) in aqueous solutions containing 25 and 50 vol % [bmim]Cl using a combination of optical spectroscopy and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Measurements were also performed as a function of temperature to provide insight into the effect of the IL on the thermal stability of GFP. While GFP exists as a dimer in water, the presence of 25 vol % [bmim]Cl causes GFP to transition to a monomeric state. The SANS data indicate that GFP is a great deal less compact in 50 vol % [bmim]Cl than in neat water, indicative of unfolding from the native structure. The oligomerization state of the protein in IL-containing aqueous solution changes from a dimer to a monomer in response to the IL, but does not change as a function of temperature in the IL-containing solution. The SANS and spectroscopic results also demonstrate that the addition of [bmim]Cl to the solution decreases the thermal stability of GFP, allowing the protein to unfold at lower temperatures than in aqueous solution.


Biophysical Journal | 1998

Neutron Off-Plane Scattering of Aligned Membranes. I. Method of Measurement

Lin Yang; William T. Heller; Thomas M. Weiss; Huey W. Huang

We describe a method of measuring neutron scattering of aligned membranes with the momentum transfer oriented parallel or partly perpendicular to the plane of the membranes. The method obtains the complete information for the structures within fluid membranes obtainable by scattering. Data from alamethicin- and magainin-induced pores are presented. Although the in-plane scattering curves of these two peptides are similar to each other, their off-plane scattering patterns are strikingly distinct. Magainin pores exhibit intermembrane correlations.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2010

Small-angle neutron scattering and contrast variation: a powerful combination for studying biological structures.

William T. Heller

The use of small-angle scattering (SAS) in the biological sciences continues to increase, driven as much by the need to study increasingly complex systems that are often resistant to crystallization or are too large for NMR as by the availability of user facilities and advancements in the modelling of biological structures from SAS data. SAS, whether with neutrons (SANS) or X-rays (SAXS), is a structural probe of length scales ranging from 10 to 10,000 Å. When applied to biological complexes in dilute solution, it provides size and shape information that can be used to produce structural models that can provide insight into function. SANS enables the use of contrast-variation methods through the unique interaction of neutrons with hydrogen and its isotope deuterium. SANS with contrast variation enables the visualization of components within multisubunit complexes, making it a powerful tool for probing protein-protein and protein-nucleic acid complexes, as well as the interaction of proteins with lipids and detergents.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2007

ORNL_SAS: software for calculation of small-angle scattering intensities of proteins and protein complexes

Elina Tjioe; William T. Heller

The program ORNL_SAS calculates solution small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering intensity profiles from a wide variety of structures, including atomic-resolution models of proteins and protein complexes, low-resolution models defined in any manner, or combinations of both. ORNL_SAS is capable of simultaneously generating multiple intensity profiles, such as a contrast-variation series, and evaluating the quality of the fit of the model profiles to experimental data in a single run of the program. The capabilities of the widely applicable approach make it possible to use ORNL_SAS as the intensity calculation engine of model-building applications for small-angle scattering data.

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Shuo Qian

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Volker S. Urban

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Hugh O'Neill

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Sai Venkatesh Pingali

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Dean A. A. Myles

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Paul Langan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Gary W. Lynn

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Lilin He

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Changwoo Do

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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