The goal of this subproject is to purify in sufficient amounts two intrinsic membrane proteins of Escherichia coli, the OmpA protein of the outer membrane and the multi-subunit, maltose transporter complex of the inner, cytoplasmic membrane, and to carry out the electron crystallographic studies of these membrane proteins. OmpA was chosen because it belongs to a family of novel porins, with unusually low permeability, and the structural basis for this property is total unknown. The elucidation of the channel structure of this protein is expected to help design better chemotherapeutic agents, which would be more effective against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, that is a major source of opportunistic infections because it has an OmpA homolog, a low permeability porin, as its main porin. The maltose transporter complex was chosen because it is one of the best-studied members of a widespread transporter family, the ABC (""""""""ATP-binding cassette"""""""") transporters, and much knowledge is available on the physiology and genetics of this transporter. The ABC transporters include the MDR system of mammalian cells, which pumps out anti-cancer agents from the cytoplasm of cancer cells. Thus the understanding of the molecular structure and mechanism of action of maltose transporter, as a paradigm of the ABC transporters, is expected to contribute to the design of anti-cancer agents that may remain active even in cells expressing the MDR system at a high level.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01GM051487-05
Application #
2829670
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
1997-10-01
Budget End
1998-09-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Department
Type
DUNS #
078576738
City
Berkeley
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94720
Sazzed, Salim; Song, Junha; Kovacs, Julio A et al. (2018) Tracing Actin Filament Bundles in Three-Dimensional Electron Tomography Density Maps of Hair Cell Stereocilia. Molecules 23:
Kamennaya, Nina A; Zemla, Marcin; Mahoney, Laura et al. (2018) High pCO2-induced exopolysaccharide-rich ballasted aggregates of planktonic cyanobacteria could explain Paleoproterozoic carbon burial. Nat Commun 9:2116
Howes, Stuart C; Geyer, Elisabeth A; LaFrance, Benjamin et al. (2018) Structural and functional differences between porcine brain and budding yeast microtubules. Cell Cycle 17:278-287
Glaeser, Robert M (2018) PROTEINS, INTERFACES, AND CRYO-EM GRIDS. Curr Opin Colloid Interface Sci 34:1-8
Kellogg, Elizabeth H; Hejab, Nisreen M A; Poepsel, Simon et al. (2018) Near-atomic model of microtubule-tau interactions. Science 360:1242-1246
Zhang, Rui; LaFrance, Benjamin; Nogales, Eva (2018) Separating the effects of nucleotide and EB binding on microtubule structure. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E6191-E6200
Nogales, Eva (2018) Cytoskeleton in high resolution. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 19:142
Downing, Kenneth H; Glaeser, Robert M (2018) Estimating the effect of finite depth of field in single-particle cryo-EM. Ultramicroscopy 184:94-99
Nogales, Eva (2018) Cryo-EM. Curr Biol 28:R1127-R1128
Han, Bong-Gyoon; Watson, Zoe; Cate, Jamie H D et al. (2017) Monolayer-crystal streptavidin support films provide an internal standard of cryo-EM image quality. J Struct Biol 200:307-313

Showing the most recent 10 out of 136 publications