Probing transient copper chaperone-Wilson disease protein interactions at the single-molecule level with nanovesicle trapping.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Peng Chen | Aaron M Keller | Amy C Rosenzweig | D. Huffman | A. Rosenzweig | Peng Chen | Jaime J. Benítez | A. M. Keller | Jaime J Benítez | Patrick Ochieng | Liliya A Yatsunyk | David L Huffman | L. Yatsunyk | P. Ochieng
[1] J. Rommens,et al. The Wilson disease gene is a putative copper transporting P–type ATPase similar to the Menkes gene , 1993, Nature Genetics.
[2] D. Huffman,et al. Function, structure, and mechanism of intracellular copper trafficking proteins. , 2001, Annual review of biochemistry.
[3] Alexandre M J J Bonvin,et al. A docking approach to the study of copper trafficking proteins; interaction between metallochaperones and soluble domains of copper ATPases. , 2004, Structure.
[4] M. Bally,et al. Production of large unilamellar vesicles by a rapid extrusion procedure: characterization of size distribution, trapped volume and ability to maintain a membrane potential. , 1985, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[5] J. Berg,et al. Principles Of Bioinorganic Chemistry , 1994 .
[6] A. Rosenzweig,et al. Structural biology of copper trafficking. , 2009, Chemical reviews.
[7] E. Rhoades,et al. Watching proteins fold one molecule at a time , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[8] S. McKinney,et al. Nonblinking and long-lasting single-molecule fluorescence imaging , 2006, Nature Methods.
[9] H. Hill,et al. Zinc(II), cadmium(II), and mercury(II) thiolate transitions in metallothionein. , 1981, Biochemistry.
[10] Dianne Ford,et al. Metalloproteins and metal sensing , 2009, Nature.
[11] A. Rosato,et al. The Different Intermolecular Interactions of the Soluble Copper-binding Domains of the Menkes Protein, ATP7A* , 2007, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[12] R. Macdonald,et al. Small-volume extrusion apparatus for preparation of large, unilamellar vesicles. , 1991, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[13] U. Shinde,et al. Biochemical basis of regulation of human copper-transporting ATPases. , 2007, Archives of biochemistry and biophysics.
[14] H. Mcconnell,et al. Allogeneic stimulation of cytotoxic T cells by supported planar membranes. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[15] Taekjip Ha,et al. Surfaces and orientations: much to FRET about? , 2004, Accounts of chemical research.
[16] G. Haran. Single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy of biomolecular folding , 2003 .
[17] A. G. Wedd,et al. Copper and Alzheimer's disease , 1996, Current opinion in chemical biology.
[18] A. Rosato,et al. Solution structure of the apo and copper(I)-loaded human metallochaperone HAH1. , 2004, Biochemistry.
[19] S. Boxer. Molecular transport and organization in supported lipid membranes. , 2000, Current opinion in chemical biology.
[20] P. Monnard,et al. Liposome-entrapped Polymerases as Models for Microscale/Nanoscale Bioreactors , 2003, The Journal of Membrane Biology.
[21] P. Lockhart,et al. The Role of GMXCXXC Metal Binding Sites in the Copper-induced Redistribution of the Menkes Protein* , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[22] Thomas V. O'Halloran,et al. Metallochaperones, an Intracellular Shuttle Service for Metal Ions* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[23] I. Voskoboinik,et al. Functional Analysis of the N-terminal CXXC Metal-binding Motifs in the Human Menkes Copper-transporting P-type ATPase Expressed in Cultured Mammalian Cells* , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[24] D. Lilley,et al. Vesicle encapsulation studies reveal that single molecule ribozyme heterogeneities are intrinsic. , 2004, Biophysical journal.
[25] A. Wernimont,et al. Binding of Copper(I) by the Wilson Disease Protein and Its Copper Chaperone* , 2004, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[26] T. Ha,et al. Extreme conformational diversity in human telomeric DNA. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[27] I. Bertini,et al. Metal binding domains 3 and 4 of the Wilson disease protein: solution structure and interaction with the copper(I) chaperone HAH1. , 2008, Biochemistry.
[28] D. Huffman,et al. Copper transfer studies between the N-terminal copper binding domains one and four of human Wilson protein. , 2006, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[29] Shin Lin,et al. Metal ion chaperone function of the soluble Cu(I) receptor Atx1. , 1997, Science.
[30] S. Lutsenko,et al. Metallochaperone Atox1 Transfers Copper to the NH2-terminal Domain of the Wilson's Disease Protein and Regulates Its Catalytic Activity* , 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[31] Peng Chen,et al. Single-Molecule Kinetic Theory of Heterogeneous and Enzyme Catalysis , 2009 .
[32] J. Kaplan,et al. N-terminal Domains of Human Copper-transporting Adenosine Triphosphatases (the Wilson’s and Menkes Disease Proteins) Bind Copper Selectively in Vivo and in Vitro with Stoichiometry of One Copper Per Metal-binding Repeat* , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[33] S. Andrews,et al. Bacterial iron homeostasis. , 2003, FEMS microbiology reviews.
[34] J. Thornton,et al. Diversity of protein–protein interactions , 2003, The EMBO journal.
[35] I. Bertini,et al. Structure of human Wilson protein domains 5 and 6 and their interplay with domain 4 and the copper chaperone HAH1 in copper uptake. , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[36] S. Sarkar,et al. Engineered holliday junctions as single-molecule reporters for protein-DNA interactions with application to a MerR-family regulator. , 2007, Journal of the American Chemical Society.
[37] Antonio Rosato,et al. Copper(I)-mediated protein-protein interactions result from suboptimal interaction surfaces. , 2009, The Biochemical journal.
[38] G. Haran,et al. Immobilization in Surface-Tethered Lipid Vesicles as a New Tool for Single Biomolecule Spectroscopy , 2001 .
[39] D. Huffman,et al. Erratum: Probing transient copper Chaperone#Wilson disease interactions at the single-molecule level withe nanovesicle trapping (Journal of the American Chemical Society (2009) 131:2 (871)) , 2009 .
[40] Sture Nordholm,et al. Manipulating the biochemical nanoenvironment around single molecules contained within vesicles , 1999 .
[41] T. Gilliam,et al. Characterization of the Interaction between the Wilson and Menkes Disease Proteins and the Cytoplasmic Copper Chaperone, HAH1p* , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[42] A. Rosenzweig,et al. Cu(I) Binding and Transfer by the N Terminus of the Wilson Disease Protein* , 2007, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[43] S. Turner,et al. Zero-Mode Waveguides for Single-Molecule Analysis at High Concentrations , 2003, Science.
[44] M. Schaefer,et al. Interaction of the copper chaperone HAH1 with the Wilson disease protein is essential for copper homeostasis. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[45] B. Schuler,et al. Two-state folding observed in individual protein molecules. , 2004, Journal of the American Chemical Society.
[46] E. Nudler,et al. Cooperation of GroEL/GroES and DnaK/DnaJ heat shock proteins in preventing protein misfolding in Escherichia coli. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[47] D. Winge,et al. Copper trafficking to the mitochondrion and assembly of copper metalloenzymes. , 2006, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[48] Agathe Urvoas,et al. Copper-mediated homo-dimerisation for the HAH1 metallochaperone. , 2004, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[49] Taekjip Ha,et al. DNA-binding orientation and domain conformation of the E. coli rep helicase monomer bound to a partial duplex junction: single-molecule studies of fluorescently labeled enzymes. , 2004, Journal of molecular biology.
[50] M. Merkx,et al. Copper-dependent protein-protein interactions studied by yeast two-hybrid analysis. , 2004, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[51] A. Rosato,et al. Solution structure and backbone dynamics of the Cu(I) and apo forms of the second metal-binding domain of the Menkes protein ATP7A. , 2004, Biochemistry.
[52] P. Schatz. Use of Peptide Libraries to Map the Substrate Specificity of a Peptide-Modifying Enzyme: A 13 Residue Consensus Peptide Specifies Biotinylation in Escherichia coli , 1993, Bio/Technology.
[53] E. D. Harris,et al. A quantitative test for copper using bicinchoninic acid. , 1995, Analytical biochemistry.
[54] D. Cox,et al. Intracellular trafficking of the human Wilson protein: the role of the six N-terminal metal-binding sites. , 2004, The Biochemical journal.
[55] C. Joo,et al. Fueling protein–DNA interactions inside porous nanocontainers , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[56] Christos T. Chasapis,et al. A NMR Study of the Interaction of a Three-domain Construct of ATP7A with Copper(I) and Copper(I)-HAH1 , 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[57] S. Lutsenko,et al. The Distinct Roles of the N-terminal Copper-binding Sites in Regulation of Catalytic Activity of the Wilson's Disease Protein* , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[58] F. S. Mathews,et al. HAH1 Is a Copper-binding Protein with Distinct Amino Acid Residues Mediating Copper Homeostasis and Antioxidant Defense* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[59] T. Laurence,et al. How to Detect Weak Pairs , 2003, Science.
[60] Thomas V. O'Halloran,et al. Transition Metal Speciation in the Cell: Insights from the Chemistry of Metal Ion Receptors , 2003, Science.
[61] A. Wernimont,et al. Structural basis for copper transfer by the metallochaperone for the Menkes/Wilson disease proteins , 2000, Nature Structural Biology.
[62] T. Ha,et al. Single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer. , 2001, Methods.
[63] S. Boxer,et al. Early steps of supported bilayer formation probed by single vesicle fluorescence assays. , 2002, Biophysical journal.
[64] Sunney Xie,et al. Single‐Molecule Approach to Enzymology , 2001 .
[65] A. Hall,et al. Ras-related GTPases and the cytoskeleton. , 1992, Molecular biology of the cell.
[66] D. Huffman,et al. Energetics of Copper Trafficking between the Atx1 Metallochaperone and the Intracellular Copper Transporter, Ccc2* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[67] D. Deamer,et al. Permeability of lipid bilayers to amino acids and phosphate. , 1992, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[68] P. S. Ho,et al. The Holliday junction in an inverted repeat DNA sequence: sequence effects on the structure of four-way junctions. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[69] A. Rosato,et al. An NMR Study of the Interaction of the N-terminal Cytoplasmic Tail of the Wilson Disease Protein with Copper(I)-HAH1* , 2009, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[70] A. Rosato,et al. Structural genomics of proteins involved in copper homeostasis. , 2003, Accounts of chemical research.
[71] Amit Meller,et al. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer to measure distances along individual DNA molecules: corrections due to nonideal transfer. , 2005, The Journal of chemical physics.
[72] G. Multhaup,et al. Kinetic Analysis of the Interaction of the Copper Chaperone Atox1 with the Metal Binding Sites of the Menkes Protein* , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[73] Paul S. Cremer,et al. Formation and Spreading of Lipid Bilayers on Planar Glass Supports , 1999 .
[74] J. Bryson,et al. Trigonal mercuric complex of an aliphatic thiolate: a spectroscopic and structural model for the receptor site in the Hg(II) biosensor MerR , 1990 .
[75] William I. Wood,et al. Solution structure of the fourth metal-binding domain from the Menkes copper-transporting ATPase , 1998, Nature Structural Biology.
[76] J. Gouaux,et al. Structure of Staphylococcal α-Hemolysin, a Heptameric Transmembrane Pore , 1996, Science.
[77] A. Rosenzweig,et al. Copper delivery by metallochaperone proteins. , 2001, Accounts of chemical research.