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Description
The human gastrin receptor (CCKBR or CCK2R) is a class A G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) found throughout the central nervous system, stomach, and a variety of cancer cells. CCK2R is implicated in the regulation of biological processes, including anxiety, satiety, arousal, analgesia, psychosis, and cancer cell growth and proliferation. While

The human gastrin receptor (CCKBR or CCK2R) is a class A G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) found throughout the central nervous system, stomach, and a variety of cancer cells. CCK2R is implicated in the regulation of biological processes, including anxiety, satiety, arousal, analgesia, psychosis, and cancer cell growth and proliferation. While CCK2R is an attractive drug target, few drugs have managed to effectively target the receptor, and none have been brought to market. Contributory to this is the lack of high-resolution crystal structure capable of elucidating the binding regions of CCK2R to streamlining drug screening. While GPCRs are not amenable to traditional structural analysis methodologies, the advent of lipidic cubic phase (LCP) crystallography and serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) at X-ray free electron lasers (XFELs), has extended the applicability of X-ray crystallography to these integral membrane proteins. LCP-SFX depends on optimizing the protein of interest for extraction, purification, and crystallization. Here we report our findings regarding the optimization of CCK2R suggesting the synergistic relationship between N-terminal truncations and the insertion of a fusion protein along ICL3, in addition to a 30-residue truncation of the C-terminus. Samples were expressed in Sf9 insect cells using a Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression system, extracted using n-Dodecyl-β-D-Maltoside detergent, and purified via TALON immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography. The constructs were characterized via SDS-PAGE, Western blot, and size exclusion chromatography. These findings demonstrate the improvements to CCK2R’s crystallographic amenability upon these modifications, however significant improvements must be made prior to crystallization trials. Future work will involve screening C-terminal truncations, thermostabilizing point mutations, and co-crystallizing ligands. Ideally this investigation will serve as a model for future CCK2R structural analysis and contribute to a heightened interest in CCK2R as a therapeutic target.
ContributorsStevens, Alexander Wade (Author) / Liu, Wei (Thesis director) / Chiu, Po-Lin (Committee member) / Mills, Jeremy (Committee member) / School of Human Evolution & Social Change (Contributor) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor, Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05
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Description
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase enzyme (Rubisco) is responsible for the majority of carbon fixation and is also the least efficient enzyme on Earth. Rubisco assists 1,5-ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) in binding CO2, however CO2 and oxygen have similar binding affinities to Rubisco, resulting in a low enzymatic efficiency. Rubisco activase (Rca) is an

Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase enzyme (Rubisco) is responsible for the majority of carbon fixation and is also the least efficient enzyme on Earth. Rubisco assists 1,5-ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) in binding CO2, however CO2 and oxygen have similar binding affinities to Rubisco, resulting in a low enzymatic efficiency. Rubisco activase (Rca) is an enzyme that removes inhibiting molecules from Rubisco’s active sites, promoting the Rubisco activity. The binding of Rubisco and Rca stimulates a high-rate of carbon fixation and lowers the overall CO2 concentration in the atmosphere. To study the interaction between the two complexes, Rubisco was extracted from baby spinach (Spinacia oleracea) and purified using anion-exchange chromatography and size-exclusion chromatography. Rca was designed to use a recombinant gene and overexpressed in Escherichia coli (E. coli). The purified proteins were verified using SDS-PAGE. The two proteins were assembled in vitro and the interaction of the protein complex was stabilized using glutaraldehyde cross-linking. The samples were then deposited on a carbon-coated electron microscopy (EM) grid, stained with uranyl formate, and observed under a transmission electron microscope (TEM). The ultimate goal is to image the specimen and reconstruct the structure of the protein complex at high resolution.
ContributorsHart, Hayden (Author) / Chiu, Po-Lin (Thesis director) / Redding, Kevin (Committee member) / Van Horn, Wade (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / Department of Military Science (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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Description
Proteins function as molecular machines which perform a diverse set of essential jobs. To use these proteins as tools and manipulate them with directed engineering, a deeper understanding of their function and regulation is needed. In the studies presented here, the chemical mechanism of a fluorescent protein and the assembly

Proteins function as molecular machines which perform a diverse set of essential jobs. To use these proteins as tools and manipulate them with directed engineering, a deeper understanding of their function and regulation is needed. In the studies presented here, the chemical mechanism of a fluorescent protein and the assembly behavior of a chemo-mechanical protein were explored to better understand their operation. In the first study a photoconvertible fluorescent protein (pcFP) was examined which undergoes a photochemical transformation upon irradiation with blue light resulting in an emission wavelength change from green to red. Photo-transformable proteins have been used in high resolution, subcellular biological imaging techniques, and desires to engineer them have prompted investigations into the mechanism of catalysis in pcFPs. Here, a Kinetic Isotope Effect was measured to determine the rate-limiting step of green-to-red photoconversion in the reconstructed Least Evolved Ancestor (LEA) protein. The results provide insight on the process of photoconversion and evidence for the formation of a long-lived intermediate. The second study presented here focuses on the AAA+ protein Rubisco activase (Rca), which plays a critical role in the removal of inhibitors from the carbon-dioxide fixing enzyme Rubisco. Efforts to engineer Rubisco and Rca can be guided by a deeper understanding of their structure and interactions. The structure of higher plant Rca from spinach, and its interactions with its cognate Rubisco, were investigated through negative-stain electron microscopy (EM) and cryo-EM experiments. Multiple types of higher-order oligomers of plant Rca were imaged which have never been structurally characterized, and the AAA+ core of plant Rca was shown to bind Rubisco side-on, similar to bacterial Rca’s. Higher resolution structures of these aggregates and complexes are needed to make definitive observations on protein-protein interactions. However, the results presented here provide evidence for the formation of regulatory structures and an experimental foundation for future exploration of plant Rca through cryo-EM.
ContributorsBreen, Isabella (Author) / Wachter, Rebekka (Thesis advisor) / Chiu, Po-Lin (Thesis advisor) / Levitus, Marcia (Committee member) / Mills, Jeremy (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020