Susan Marqusee
Professor of Molecular Therapeutics
Lab Homepage: http://zebra.berkeley.edu/Research Interests
The long-term goal of our research is to understand the structural and dynamic information encoded in the linear sequence of amino acids. Proteins undergo an incredible transformation from one-dimensional sequence information into complex three-dimensional shapes that carry out intricate cellular functions. We still, however, don't have enough biophysical knowledge to translate this sequence information into functional insights. For instance, many proteins share the same native structure yet their cellular dynamics and function, in other words their energy landscapes, are different. Our laboratory uses a combination of biophysical, structural and computational techniques to understand these features.
In addition to the native conformation, a protein sequence populates small fluctuations around the native state, partially unfolded forms and even the globally unfolded conformation. Such non-native states on the energy landscape are thought to play a determining function in many cellular processes such as translocation, protein synthesis, degradation, signaling and allostery. They are also prone to aggregation, a phenomena which has been implicated for many diseases (the so-called misfolding and amyloid diseases). Understanding the sequence determinants of the energy landscape is therefore fundamental to the biological process that proteins carry out as well as protein folding itself.
Current Projects
Our group has developed and utilized several methodologies that allow us to probe the energy landscape. Our use of different hydrogen exchange methods to study three different types of intermediates of E. coli ribonuclease H (the acid molten globule, the higher energy conformations of the native state and a kinetic folding intermediate) has been particularly powerful. We have obtained evidence for a surprising conclusion: RNase H folds in an apparently hierarchical fashion in which the most stable individual element folds first. This hypothesis unites a lot of work in the field of and has also provided insight and experimental tests for current theoretical work on protein folding.
We have extended our analysis to investigate the energy landscape of thermophilic proteins. Proteins from thermophilic organisms must retain their native structures under extreme conditions, where their homologues from mesophilic organisms denature. We have found that although protein stability can be altered by single amino acid substitution, evolution for optimal function requires more subtle and delocalized mechanisms.Recent results implicate structure in the unfolded state as playing an important and novel role for the thermostability of these proteins.
Proteolytic susceptibility is another important feature determined by the energy landscape. We have taken a proteomic and biophysical approach to understand how a protein fine-tunes its landscape to control this feature.
Other projects in the lab focus on the mechanism of protein misfolding, the structural and energetic mechanism of signaling, computational identification of folding modules, and the role of ligand binding. Our studies on the mechanism of folding include investigating the role of topological complexity using permuted proteins, the nature and function of folding intermediates, and studies on the role of mechanical unfolding using single molecule measurements.
Structure/FunctionStudies on RNase H: RNase H is an essential activity for retroviral life cycle. It is an excellent, yet underexploited target for antiretroviral therapy. With the long-term goal of rational inhibition, we are using our biophysical background and knowledge of the folding of this protein to understand its structure/function relationship.
Selected Publications
Evaluating the role of contact order as a determinant of protein folding rates. [E.J. Miller, K.F. Fischer, and S. Marqusee (2002) PNAS 16:10359-63]
Differences between PrP and its homolog Dpl: Implications for a partially structured state in the formation of PrPSc. [E.J. Nicholson, H. Mo, F.E. Cohen, S.B. Prusiner, and S. Marqusee (2002) JMB 316:807-15]
Propagation of a Single Destabilizing Mutation throughout the E. coli Ribonuclease HI Native State. [G. Spudich, S. Lorenz and S. Marqusee (2002) Protein Science 11:522-8]
Comparison of the folding processes of T. thermophilus and E. coli Ribonucleases H. [J. Hollien and S.Marqusee (2002) JMB 316:327-40]
Contributions of the folding cores to thermostability of two Ribonucleases H. [S. Robic, J.M. Berger, and S.Marqusee (2002) Protein Science, 11:381-9]
Native-state energetics of a thermostabilized variant of ribonuclease H. [E.R. Goedken, and S. Marqusee (2001) JMB 314:863-71]
A kinetic folding intermediate probed by native state exchange. [M.J. Parker and S. Marqusee (2001) JMB 305: 593-602]
Co-crystal of E. coli RNase HI with MN2+ reveals two divalent metals bound in the active site. [E.R. Goedken and S. Marqusee (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276:7266-7271]
A rapid test for identification of autonomous folding units in proteins. [K.F. Fischer and S.Marqusee (2000) JMB 302, 701-712]
Photo credit: Mark Hanson of Mark Joseph Studios.
Last Updated 2003-09-02