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Dive into the research topics where Yu-Shuan Shiau is active.

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Featured researches published by Yu-Shuan Shiau.


Receptors & Channels | 2002

Structural Influence of Hanatoxin Binding on the Carboxyl Terminus of S3 Segment in Voltage-Gated K + -Channel Kv2.1

Po-Tsang Huang; T. Y. Chen; L. J. Tseng; Kuo-Long Lou; Horng-Huei Liou; Tzer Bin Lin; H. C. Spatz; Yu-Shuan Shiau

The voltage-sensing domains of voltage-gated potassium channels Kv2.1 (drk1) contain four transmembrane segments in each subunit, termed S1 to S4. While S4 is known as the voltage sensor, the carboxyl terminus of S3 (S3C) bears a gradually broader interest concerning the site for gating modifier toxins like hanatoxin and thus the secondary structure arrangement as well as its surrounding environment. To further examine the putative three-dimensional (3-D) structure of S3C and to illustrate the residues required for hanatoxin binding (which may, in turn, show the influence on the S4 in terms of changes in channel gating), molecular simulations and dockings were performed. These were based on the solution structure of hanatoxin and the structural information from lysine-scanning results for S3C fragment. Our data suggest that several basic and acidic residues of hanatoxin are electrostatically and stereochemically mapped onto their partner residues on S3C helix, whereas some aromatic or hydrophobic residues located on the same helical fragment interact with the hydrophobic patch of the toxin upon binding. Therefore, a slight distortion of the S3C helix, in a direction toward the N-terminus of S4, may exist. Such conformational change of S3C upon toxin binding is presented as a possible explanation for the observed shift in hanatoxin binding-induced gating.


Langmuir | 2017

Measurement of Hanatoxin-Induced Membrane Thinning with Lamellar X-ray Diffraction

Meng-Hsuan Hsieh; Yu-Shuan Shiau; Horng-Huei Liou; U-Ser Jeng; Ming-Tao Lee; Kuo-Long Lou

Membrane perturbation induced by cysteine-rich peptides is a crucial biological phenomenon but scarcely investigated, in particular with effective biophysical-chemical methodologies. Hanatoxin (HaTx), a 35-residue polypeptide from spider venom, works as an inhibitor of drk1 (Kv2.1) channels, most likely by interacting with the voltage-sensor. However, how this water-soluble peptide modifies the gating remains poorly understood, as the voltage sensor was proposed to be deeply embedded within the bilayer. To see how HaTx interacts with phospholipid bilayers, we observe the toxin-induced perturbation on POPC/DOPG-membranes through measurements of the change in membrane thickness. Lamellar X-ray diffraction (LXD) was applied on stacked planar bilayers in the near-fully hydrated state. The results provide quantitative evidence for the membrane thinning in a concentration-dependent manner, leading to novel and direct combinatory approaches by discovering how to investigate such a biologically relevant interaction between gating-modifier toxins and phospholipid bilayers.


Langmuir | 2018

The Penetration Depth for Hanatoxin Partitioning into the Membrane Hydrocarbon Core Measured with Neutron Reflectivity

Meng-Hsuan Hsieh; Po-Tsang Huang; Horng-Huei Liou; Po-Huang Liang; Pei-Ming Chen; Stephen A. Holt; Isaac Furay Yu; Michael James; Yu-Shuan Shiau; Ming-Tao Lee; Tsang-Lang Lin; Kuo-Long Lou

Hanatoxin (HaTx) from spider venom works as an inhibitor of Kv2.1 channels, most likely by interacting with the voltage sensor (VS). However, the way in which this water-soluble peptide modifies the gating remains poorly understood as the VS is deeply embedded within the bilayer, although it would change its position depending on the membrane potential. To determine whether HaTx can indeed bind to the VS, the depth at which HaTx penetrates into the POPC membranes was measured with neutron reflectivity. Our results successfully demonstrate that HaTx penetrates into the membrane hydrocarbon core (∼9 Å from the membrane surface), not lying on the membrane-water interface as reported for another voltage sensor toxin (VSTx). This difference in penetration depth suggests that the two toxins fix the voltage sensors at different positions with respect to the membrane normal, thereby explaining their different inhibitory effects on the channels. In particular, results from MD simulations constrained by our penetration data clearly demonstrate an appropriate orientation for HaTx to interact with the membranes, which is in line with the biochemical information derived from stopped-flow analysis through delineation of the toxin-VS binding interface.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017

Hanatoxin inserts into phospholipid membranes without pore formation.

Kuo-Long Lou; Meng-Hsuan Hsieh; Wei-Jung Chen; Yu-Che Cheng; Jia-Nan Jian; Ming-Tao Lee; Tsang-Lang Lin; Yu-Shuan Shiau; Horng-Huei Liou

Hanatoxin (HaTx), a 35-residue polypeptide from spider venom, functions as an inhibitor of Kv2.1 channels by interacting with phospholipids prior to affecting the voltage-sensor. However, how this water-soluble peptide modifies the gating remains poorly understood, as the voltage-sensor is deeply embedded within the bilayer. To determine how HaTx interacts with phospholipid bilayers, in this study, we examined the toxin-induced partitioning of liposomal membranes. HPLC-results from high-speed spin-down vesicles with HaTx demonstrated direct binding. Dynamic light scattering (DLS) and leakage assay results further indicated that neither membrane pores nor membrane fragmentations were observed in the presence of HaTx. To clarify the binding details, Langmuir trough experiments were performed with phospholipid monolayers by mimicking the external leaflet of membrane bilayers, indicating the involvement of acyl chains in such interactions between HaTx and phospholipids. Our current study thus describes the interaction pattern of HaTx with vesicle membranes, defining a membrane-partitioning mechanism for peptide insertion involving the membrane hydrocarbon core without pore formation.


Journal of Oral Rehabilitation | 2003

The effects of masseter muscle pain on biting performance

Yu-Shuan Shiau; C. C. Peng; S. C. Wen; Li-Deh Lin; Wang Js; Kuo-Long Lou


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2003

Structural Basis of Binding and Inhibition of Novel Tarantula Toxins in Mammalian Voltage-Dependent Potassium Channels

Yu-Shuan Shiau; Po-Tsang Huang; Horng-Huei Liou; Yen-Chywan Liaw; Yuh-Yuan Shiau; Kuo-Long Lou


Toxicon | 2007

The interaction of spider gating modifier peptides with voltage-gated potassium channels

Po-Tsang Huang; Yu-Shuan Shiau; Kuo-Long Lou


Journal of Molecular Recognition | 2003

A possible molecular mechanism of hanatoxin binding-modified gating in voltage-gated K+-channels

Kuo-Long Lou; Po-Tsang Huang; Yu-Shuan Shiau; Yen-Chywan Liaw; Yuh-Yuan Shiau; Horng-Huei Liou


Journal of Molecular Recognition | 2002

Molecular determinants of the hanatoxin binding in voltage-gated K+-channel drk1

Kuo-Long Lou; Po-Tsang Huang; Yu-Shuan Shiau; Yuh-Yuan Shiau


Journal of Molecular Recognition | 2006

Structural analysis of the unique insecticidal activity of novel mungbean defensin VrD1 reveals possibility of homoplasy evolution between plant defensins and scorpion neurotoxins

Yu-Shuan Shiau; Shu-Bin Horng; Ching-San Chen; Po-Tsang Huang; Chan Lin; Yi-Ching Hsueh; Kuo-Long Lou

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Kuo-Long Lou

National Taiwan University

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Po-Tsang Huang

National Taiwan University

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Horng-Huei Liou

National Taiwan University

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Yuh-Yuan Shiau

National Taiwan University

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Meng-Hsuan Hsieh

National Taiwan University

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Ming-Tao Lee

National Central University

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Tsang-Lang Lin

National Tsing Hua University

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Chan Lin

National Taiwan University

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