Francisco J Asturias

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Name: Asturias, Francisco
Organization: The Scripps Research Institute , USA
Department: the Department of Cell Biology
Title: Associate(PhD)
Co-reporter:Ellen C. Minnihan;Edward J. Brignole;Catherine L. Drennan;Lisa Olshansky;Francisco J. Asturias;Daniel G. Nocera;Nozomi Ando;JoAnne Stubbe;Johnathan Chittuluru
PNAS 2013 Volume 110 (Issue 10 ) pp:3835-3840
Publication Date(Web):2013-03-05
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1220691110
Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) catalyzes the conversion of nucleoside diphosphates to deoxynucleoside diphosphates (dNDPs). The Escherichia coli class Ia RNR uses a mechanism of radical propagation by which a cysteine in the active site of the RNR large (α2) subunit is transiently oxidized by a stable tyrosyl radical (Y•) in the RNR small (β2) subunit over a 35-Å pathway of redox-active amino acids: Y122• ↔ [W48?] ↔ Y356 in β2 to Y731 ↔ Y730 ↔ C439 in α2. When 3-aminotyrosine (NH2Y) is incorporated in place of Y730, a long-lived NH2Y730• is generated in α2 in the presence of wild-type (wt)-β2, substrate, and effector. This radical intermediate is chemically and kinetically competent to generate dNDPs. Herein, evidence is presented that NH2Y730• induces formation of a kinetically stable α2β2 complex. Under conditions that generate NH2Y730•, binding between Y730NH2Y-α2 and wt-β2 is 25-fold tighter (Kd = 7 nM) than for wt-α2|wt-β2 and is cooperative. Stopped-flow fluorescence experiments establish that the dissociation rate constant for the Y730NH2Y-α2|wt-β2 interaction is ∼104-fold slower than for the wt subunits (∼60 s−1). EM and small-angle X-ray scattering studies indicate that the stabilized species is a compact globular α2β2, consistent with the structure predicted by Uhlin and Eklund’s docking model [Uhlin U, Eklund H (1994) Nature 370(6490):533–539]. These results present a structural and biochemical characterization of the active RNR complex “trapped” during turnover, and suggest that stabilization of the α2β2 state may be a regulatory mechanism for protecting the catalytic radical and ensuring the fidelity of its reactivity.
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Nature Structural and Molecular Biology 2004 11(11) pp:1031-1033
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1038/nsmb1104-1031
A new report provides evidence that the TFIIB-RNAPII interaction depends on the presence of additional factors and highlights the importance of structural characterization of the entire preinitiation complex.
Co-reporter:John L. Craighead;Francisco J. Asturias
PNAS 2003 Volume 100 (Issue 12 ) pp:6893-6895
Publication Date(Web):2003-06-10
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1332606100
Co-reporter:Michaela R. Dotson;Chao Xing Yuan;Robert G. Roeder;Lawrence C. Myers;Claes M. Gustafsson;Yi Wei Jiang;Yang Li;Roger D. Kornberg;Francisco J. Asturias
PNAS 2000 Volume 97 (Issue 26 ) pp:14307-14310
Publication Date(Web):2000-12-19
DOI:10.1073/pnas.260489497
Structures of yeast Mediator complex, of a related complex from mouse cells and of thyroid hormone receptor-associated protein complex from human cells have been determined by three-dimensional reconstruction from electron micrographs of single particles. All three complexes show a division in two parts, a “head” domain and a combined “middle-tail” domain. The head domains of the three complexes appear most similar and interact most closely with RNA polymerase II. The middle-tail domains show the greatest structural divergence and, in the case of the tail domain, may not interact with polymerase at all. Consistent with this structural divergence, analysis of a yeast Mediator mutant localizes subunits that are not conserved between yeast and mammalian cells to the tail domain. Biochemically defined Rgr1 and Srb4 modules of yeast Mediator are then assigned to the middle and head domains.
Co-reporter:Zhengfan Yang, Jia Fang, Johnathan Chittuluru, Francisco J. Asturias, Pawel A. Penczek
Structure (8 February 2012) Volume 20(Issue 2) pp:237-247
Publication Date(Web):8 February 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2011.12.007
Identification of homogeneous subsets of images in a macromolecular electron microscopy (EM) image data set is a critical step in single-particle analysis. The task is handled by iterative algorithms, whose performance is compromised by the compounded limitations of image alignment and K-means clustering. Here we describe an approach, iterative stable alignment and clustering (ISAC) that, relying on a new clustering method and on the concepts of stability and reproducibility, can extract validated, homogeneous subsets of images. ISAC requires only a small number of simple parameters and, with minimal human intervention, can eliminate bias from two-dimensional image clustering and maximize the quality of group averages that can be used for ab initio three-dimensional structural determination and analysis of macromolecular conformational variability. Repeated testing of the stability and reproducibility of a solution within ISAC eliminates heterogeneous or incorrect classes and introduces critical validation to the process of EM image clustering.Highlights► ISAC is an algorithm designed to identify homogenous subsets of EM images ► Repeated evaluation of image alignment and clustering validates ISAC results ► Validated ISAC averages can be directly used for 3D structure determination ► ISAC introduces validation to a critical early step of EM image analysis
Co-reporter:Francisco J. Asturias
Structure (11 November 2009) Volume 17(Issue 11) pp:1423-1424
Publication Date(Web):11 November 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2009.10.004
A shrewd cryo-EM study of the TFIID complex in this issue of Structure (Elmlund et al., 2009) has generated a markedly improved understanding of its structure and conformational dynamics. Accurate localization of TBP and other critical components, and a new understanding of TFIID interaction with promoter DNA answer some significant questions and pose interesting new ones.
S-(hydrogen malonyl)coenzyme A
(3AR,4R,5R,6AS)-4-FORMYL-2-OXOHEXAHYDRO-2H-CYCLOPENTA[B]FURAN-5-YL 4-BIPHENYLCARBOXYLATE