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    Date Issued2006 (3)2005 (1)2004 (1)2001 (1)Author
    Knapp, James E. (6)
    Royer, William E. (5)Strand, Kristen (3)Bhyravbhatla, Balaji (2)Flores, Jason F. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (5)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (3)Dept of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (6)KeywordLife Sciences (6)Medicine and Health Sciences (6)Animals (2)Crystallography, X-Ray (2)Dimerization (2)View MoreJournalJournal of molecular biology (2)Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1)Structure (London, England : 1993) (1)The Journal of biological chemistry (1)Trends in biochemical sciences (1)

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    Low resolution crystal structure of Arenicola erythrocruorin: influence of coiled coils on the architecture of a megadalton respiratory protein

    Royer, William E.; Omartian, Michael N.; Knapp, James E. (2006-11-07)
    Annelid erythrocruorins are extracellular respiratory complexes assembled from 180 subunits into hexagonal bilayers. Cryo-electron microscopic experiments have identified two different architectural classes. In one, designated type I, the vertices of the two hexagonal layers are partially staggered, with one hexagonal layer rotated by about 16 degrees relative to the other layer, whereas in the other class, termed type II, the vertices are essentially eclipsed. We report here the first crystal structure of a type II erythrocruorin, that from Arenicola marina, at 6.2 A resolution. The structure reveals the presence of long continuous triple-stranded coiled-coil "spokes" projecting towards the molecular center from each one-twelfth unit; interdigitation of these spokes provides the only contacts between the two hexagonal layers of the complex. This arrangement contrasts with that of a type I erythrocruorin from Lumbricus terrestris in which the spokes are broken into two triple-stranded coiled coils with a disjointed connection. The disjointed connection allows formation of a more compact structure in the type I architecture, with the two hexagonal layers closer together and additional extensive contacts between the layers. Comparison of sequences of the coiled-coil regions of various linker subunits shows that the linker subunits from type II erythrocruorins possess continuous heptad repeats, whereas a sequence gap places these repeats out of register in the type I linker subunits, consistent with a disjointed coiled-coil arrangement.
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    Lumbricus erythrocruorin at 3.5 A resolution: architecture of a megadalton respiratory complex

    Royer, William E.; Sharma, Hitesh; Strand, Kristen; Knapp, James E.; Bhyravbhatla, Balaji (2006-07-18)
    Annelid erythrocruorins are highly cooperative extracellular respiratory proteins with molecular masses on the order of 3.6 million Daltons. We report here the 3.5 A crystal structure of erythrocruorin from the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris. This structure reveals details of symmetrical and quasi-symmetrical interactions that dictate the self-limited assembly of 144 hemoglobin and 36 linker subunits. The linker subunits assemble into a core complex with D(6) symmetry onto which 12 hemoglobin dodecamers bind to form the entire complex. Although the three unique linker subunits share structural similarity, their interactions with each other and the hemoglobin subunits display striking diversity. The observed diversity includes design features that have been incorporated into the linker subunits and may be critical for efficient assembly of large quantities of this complex respiratory protein.
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    Allosteric action in real time: time-resolved crystallographic studies of a cooperative dimeric hemoglobin

    Knapp, James E.; Pahl, Reinhard; Srajer, Vukica; Royer, William E. (2006-05-11)
    Protein allostery provides mechanisms for regulation of biological function at the molecular level. We present here an investigation of global, ligand-induced allosteric transition in a protein by time-resolved x-ray diffraction. The study provides a view of structural changes in single crystals of Scapharca dimeric hemoglobin as they proceed in real time, from 5 ns to 80 micros after ligand photodissociation. A tertiary intermediate structure forms rapidly (ns) as the protein responds to the presence of an unliganded heme within each R-state protein subunit, with key structural changes observed in the heme groups, neighboring residues, and interface water molecules. This intermediate lays a foundation for the concerted tertiary and quaternary structural changes that occur on a microsecond time scale and are associated with the transition to a low-affinity T-state structure. Reversal of these changes shows a considerable lag as a T-like structure persists well after ligand rebinding, suggesting a slow T-to-R transition.
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    Allosteric hemoglobin assembly: diversity and similarity

    Royer, William E. Jr.; Zhu, Hao; Gorr, Thomas A.; Flores, Jason F.; Knapp, James E. (2005-06-04)
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    Crystal structure of the hemoglobin dodecamer from Lumbricus erythrocruorin: allosteric core of giant annelid respiratory complexes

    Strand, Kristen; Knapp, James E.; Bhyravbhatla, Balaji; Royer, William E. (2004-10-27)
    Erythrocruorins are highly cooperative giant extracellular respiratory complexes found in annelids, where they serve the same function as red blood cells. Our previous 5.5A resolution crystal structure of Lumbricus terrestris erythrocruorin revealed a hierarchical organization of 144 oxygen-binding hemoglobin chains that are assembled into 12 dodecamers arranged at the periphery of the complex around a central scaffold formed by 36 non-hemoglobin subunits. We present here the 2.6A resolution crystal structure of the Lumbricus hemoglobin dodecameric subassembly, which provides the first atomic models of the erythrocruorin allosteric core. The hemoglobin dodecamer has a molecular 3-fold axis of symmetry that relates three heterotetramers, each of which is composed of two tightly associated heterodimers. The structure reveals details of the interfaces, including key side-chain interactions likely to contribute to ligand-linked allosteric transitions, and shows the crowded nature of the ligand-binding pockets. Comparison of the Lumbricus dimeric assemblies with similar ones from mollusks and echinoderms suggests plausible pH-dependent quaternary transitions that may occur in response to proton binding and ligand release. Thus, these results provide the first step towards elucidating the structural basis for the strong allosteric properties of Lumbricus erythrocruorin.
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    Cooperative hemoglobins: conserved fold, diverse quaternary assemblies and allosteric mechanisms

    Royer, William E.; Knapp, James E.; Strand, Kristen; Heaslet, Holly A. (2001-05-10)
    Assembly of hemoglobin subunits into cooperative complexes produces a remarkable variety of architectures, ranging in oligomeric state from dimers to complexes containing 144 hemoglobin subunits. Diverse stereochemical mechanisms for modulating ligand affinity through intersubunit interactions have been revealed from studies of three distinct hemoglobin assemblages. This mechanistic diversity, which occurs between assemblies of subunits that have the same fold, provides insight into the range of regulatory strategies that are available to protein molecules.
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