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David Aragao


david.aragao@synchrotron.org.au

Journal articles

2011
Daniel M Rosenbaum, Cheng Zhang, Joseph A Lyons, Ralph Holl, David Aragao, Daniel H Arlow, Søren G F Rasmussen, Hee-Jung Choi, Brian T Devree, Roger K Sunahara, Pil Seok Chae, Samuel H Gellman, Ron O Dror, David E Shaw, William I Weis, Martin Caffrey, Peter Gmeiner, Brian K Kobilka (2011)  Structure and function of an irreversible agonist-β(2) adrenoceptor complex.   Nature 469: 7329. 236-240 Jan  
Abstract: G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are eukaryotic integral membrane proteins that modulate biological function by initiating cellular signalling in response to chemically diverse agonists. Despite recent progress in the structural biology of GPCRs, the molecular basis for agonist binding and allosteric modulation of these proteins is poorly understood. Structural knowledge of agonist-bound states is essential for deciphering the mechanism of receptor activation, and for structure-guided design and optimization of ligands. However, the crystallization of agonist-bound GPCRs has been hampered by modest affinities and rapid off-rates of available agonists. Using the inactive structure of the human β(2) adrenergic receptor (β(2)AR) as a guide, we designed a β(2)AR agonist that can be covalently tethered to a specific site on the receptor through a disulphide bond. The covalent β(2)AR-agonist complex forms efficiently, and is capable of activating a heterotrimeric G protein. We crystallized a covalent agonist-bound β(2)AR-T4L fusion protein in lipid bilayers through the use of the lipidic mesophase method, and determined its structure at 3.5 Å resolution. A comparison to the inactive structure and an antibody-stabilized active structure (companion paper) shows how binding events at both the extracellular and intracellular surfaces are required to stabilize an active conformation of the receptor. The structures are in agreement with long-timescale (up to 30 μs) molecular dynamics simulations showing that an agonist-bound active conformation spontaneously relaxes to an inactive-like conformation in the absence of a G protein or stabilizing antibody.
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2010
Nicole Höfer, David Aragão, Martin Caffrey (2010)  Crystallizing transmembrane peptides in lipidic mesophases.   Biophys J 99: 3. L23-L25 Aug  
Abstract: Structure determination of membrane proteins by crystallographic means has been facilitated by crystallization in lipidic mesophases. It has been suggested, however, that this so-called in meso method, as originally implemented, would not apply to small protein targets having </=4 transmembrane crossings. In our study, the hypothesis that the inherent flexibility of the mesophase would enable crystallogenesis of small proteins was tested using a transmembrane pentadecapeptide, linear gramicidin, which produced structure-grade crystals. This result suggests that the in meso method should be considered as a viable means for high-resolution structure determination of integral membrane peptides, many of which are predicted to be coded for in the human genome.
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2008
Carlos Frazão, David Aragão, Ricardo Coelho, Sónia S Leal, Cláudio M Gomes, Miguel Teixeira, Maria Arménia Carrondo (2008)  Crystallographic analysis of the intact metal centres [3Fe-4S](1+/0) and [4Fe-4S](2+/1+) in a Zn(2+) -containing ferredoxin.   FEBS Lett 582: 5. 763-767 Mar  
Abstract: Detailed structural models of di-cluster seven-iron ferredoxins constitute a valuable resource for folding and stability studies relating the metal cofactors' role in protein stability. The here reported, hemihedric twinned crystal structure at 2.0 A resolution from Acidianus ambivalens ferredoxin, shows an integral 103 residues, physiologically relevant native form composed by a N-terminal extension comprising a His/Asp Zn(2+) site and the ferredoxin (betaalphabeta)(2) core, which harbours intact clusters I and II, a [3Fe-4S](1+/0) and a [4Fe-4S](2+/1+) centres. This is in contrast with the previously available ferredoxin structure from Sulfolofus tokodai, which was obtained from an artificial oxidative conversion with two [3Fe-4S](1+/0) centres and poor definition around cluster II.
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David Aragão, Edward P Mitchell, Carlos F Frazão, Maria Arménia Carrondo, Peter F Lindley (2008)  Structural and functional relationships in the hybrid cluster protein family: structure of the anaerobically purified hybrid cluster protein from Desulfovibrio vulgaris at 1.35 A resolution.   Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 64: Pt 6. 665-674 Jun  
Abstract: The hybrid cluster protein (HCP) from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris strain Hildenborough has been isolated and crystallized anaerobically. The phase problem was solved for a P2(1)2(1)2(1) crystal form using multiple-wavelength anomalous diffraction data collected in the vicinity of the Fe K absorption edge. Although the overall protein structure is essentially the same as that previously obtained, it shows that the nature of the hybrid cluster has particular differences when isolated and crystallized in the absence of oxygen and this provides insight into the structural features associated with changes in the oxidation state. A comparison between HCPs and carbon monoxide dehydrogenases (CoDs) shows that they possess a similar fold and that the dehydrogenases have a related cluster at the equivalent HCP hybrid cluster position. This helps to understand the nature of the hybrid cluster and to predict a dimeric structure for class 3 HCPs, which lack the N-terminal region.
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2007
David Aragão, Arsénio M Fialho, Ana R Marques, Edward P Mitchell, Isabel Sá-Correia, Carlos Frazão (2007)  The complex of Sphingomonas elodea ATCC 31461 glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase with glucose-1-phosphate reveals a novel quaternary structure, unique among nucleoside diphosphate-sugar pyrophosphorylase members.   J Bacteriol 189: 12. 4520-4528 Jun  
Abstract: Gellan gum is a widely used commercial material, available in many different forms. Its economic importance has led to studies into the biosynthesis of exopolysaccharide gellan gum, which is industrially prepared in high yields using Sphingomonas elodea ATCC 31461. Glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase mediates the reversible conversion of glucose-1-phosphate and UTP into UDP-glucose and pyrophosphate, which is a key step in the biosynthetic pathway of gellan gums. Here we present the X-ray crystal structure of the glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase from S. elodea. The S. elodea enzyme shares strong monomeric similarity with glucose-1-phosphate thymidylyltransferase, several structures of which are known, although the quaternary structures of the active enzymes are rather different. A detailed comparison between S. elodea glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase and available thymidylyltransferases is described and shows remarkable structural similarities, despite the low sequence identities between the two divergent groups of proteins.
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2006
D Aragão, A R Marques, C Frazão, F J Enguita, M A Carrondo, A M Fialho, I Sá-Correia, E P Mitchell (2006)  Cloning, expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary structure determination of glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (UgpG) from Sphingomonas elodea ATCC 31461 bound to glucose-1-phosphate.   Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun 62: Pt 9. 930-934 Sep  
Abstract: The cloning, expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (UgpG) from Sphingomonas elodea ATCC 31461 bound to glucose-1-phosphate are reported. Diffraction data sets were obtained from seven crystal forms in five different space groups, with highest resolutions ranging from 4.20 to 2.65 A. The phase problem was solved for a P2(1) crystal form using multiple isomorphous replacement with anomalous scattering from an osmium derivative and a SeMet derivative. The best native crystal in space group P2(1) has unit-cell parameters a = 105.5, b = 85.7, c = 151.8 A, beta = 105.2 degrees . Model building and refinement are currently under way.
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2003
Sofia Macedo, David Aragão, Edward P Mitchell, Peter Lindley (2003)  Structure of the hybrid cluster protein (HCP) from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 containing molecules in the oxidized and reduced states.   Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 59: Pt 12. 2065-2071 Dec  
Abstract: The hybrid cluster protein (HCP) from the sulfate-reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 has been isolated and crystallized anaerobically. The protein sample used in the crystallization studies was several months old, having been stored at 193 K, and initial crystal structure studies were unable to fully resolve details of the hybrid cluster despite the use of high-resolution data to 1.25 A collected at the ESRF, Grenoble, France. Full elucidation of the structure has only become possible with the complete knowledge of the as-isolated and fully reduced crystal structures. The analysis clarifies the significant movements in the position of the Fe atom linked to the persulfide moiety in the oxidized as-isolated protein and the S atom of the persulfide itself as the protein is reduced. The structures of the as-isolated and reduced states are discussed in terms of the putative function of the HCP proteins.
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David Aragão, Carlos Frazão, Larry Sieker, George M Sheldrick, Jean LeGall, Maria Arménia Carrondo (2003)  Structure of dimeric cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio gigas at 1.2 A resolution.   Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 59: Pt 4. 644-653 Apr  
Abstract: The structure of dimeric cytochrome c(3) from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio gigas, diDg, obtained by ab initio methods was further refined to 1.2 A resolution, giving final reliability factors of R(free) = 14.8% and R = 12.4%. This cytochrome is a dimer of tetraheme cytochrome c(3) molecules covalently linked by two solvent-accessible disulfide bridges, a characteristic unique to members of the cytochrome c(3) superfamily. Anisotropic analysis using the semi-rigid TLS method shows different behaviour for analogous loops in each monomer arising from their different packing environments. A detailed sequence and structural comparison with all other known cytochrome c(3) domains in single- and multi-domain cytochromes c(3) shows the presence of structurally conserved regions in this family, despite the high variability of the amino-acid sequence. An internal water molecule is conserved in a common structural arrangement in all c(3) tetraheme domains, indicating a probable electron-transfer pathway between hemes I and II. Unique features of diDg are an internal methionine residue close to heme I and to one of the axial ligands of heme III, where all other structures of the cytochrome c(3) superfamily have a phenylalanine, and a rather unusual CXXXCH heme-binding motif only found so far in this cytochrome.
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David Aragão, Sofia Macedo, Edward P Mitchell, Célia V Romão, Ming Y Liu, Carlos Frazão, Lígia M Saraiva, António V Xavier, Jean LeGall, Walter M A M van Dongen, Wilfred R Hagen, Miguel Teixeira, Maria A Carrondo, Peter Lindley (2003)  Reduced hybrid cluster proteins (HCP) from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 and Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough): X-ray structures at high resolution using synchrotron radiation.   J Biol Inorg Chem 8: 5. 540-548 May  
Abstract: The hybrid cluster proteins from the sulfate reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 ( Dd) and Desulfovibrio vulgaris strain Hildenborough ( Dv) have been isolated and crystallized anaerobically. In each case, the protein has been reduced with dithionite and the crystal structure of the reduced form elucidated using X-ray synchrotron radiation techniques at 1.25 A and 1.55 A resolution for Dd and Dv, respectively. Although the overall structures of the proteins are unchanged upon reduction, there are significant changes at the hybrid cluster centres. These include significant movements in the position of the iron atom linked to the persulfide moiety in the oxidized as-isolated proteins and the sulfur atom of the persulfide itself. The nature of these changes is described and the implications with respect to the function of hybrid cluster proteins are discussed.
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