2017
Two transmembrane dimers of the bovine papillomavirus E5 oncoprotein clamp the PDGF β receptor in an active dimeric conformation
Karabadzhak AG, Petti LM, Barrera FN, Edwards APB, Moya-Rodríguez A, Polikanov YS, Freites JA, Tobias DJ, Engelman DM, DiMaio D. Two transmembrane dimers of the bovine papillomavirus E5 oncoprotein clamp the PDGF β receptor in an active dimeric conformation. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America 2017, 114: e7262-e7271. PMID: 28808001, PMCID: PMC5584431, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1705622114.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTransmembrane domainE5 proteinE5 dimerPlatelet-derived growth factor β receptorGrowth factor β receptorActive dimeric conformationPDGF β-receptorTransmembrane dimerProtein bindsMembrane environmentReceptor dimerizationDimeric conformationAtom molecular dynamics simulationsBiochemical experimentsMouse cellsMolecular mechanismsActive dimerΒ receptorBovine papillomavirusProteinSpecific interactionsMembrane modelingReceptor activationDimerizationComplexes
2015
Biologically active LIL proteins built with minimal chemical diversity
Heim EN, Marston JL, Federman RS, Edwards AP, Karabadzhak AG, Petti LM, Engelman DM, DiMaio D. Biologically active LIL proteins built with minimal chemical diversity. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America 2015, 112: e4717-e4725. PMID: 26261320, PMCID: PMC4553812, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1514230112.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAmino acidsTransmembrane proteinSpecific biological activityPlatelet-derived growth factor β receptorArtificial transmembrane proteinsChemical diversityGrowth factor β receptorHydrophobic amino acidsLIL proteinsKnown proteinsIndividual amino acidsTransmembrane domainCellular contextDifferent amino acidsComplete mutagenesisMost proteinsBiological activityActive proteinSimple proteinSingle isoleucineSpecific sequencesProteinDiversityLeucineΒ receptor
2014
Small transmembrane protein inhibitors of the platelet‐derived growth factor β receptor (LB215)
Petti L, Talbert‐Slagle K, Chacon K, Hochstrasser M, DiMaio D. Small transmembrane protein inhibitors of the platelet‐derived growth factor β receptor (LB215). The FASEB Journal 2014, 28 DOI: 10.1096/fasebj.28.1_supplement.lb215.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchTransmembrane domainTransmembrane proteinPlatelet-derived growth factor β receptorProtein inhibitorGrowth factor receptor signalingSingle conservative amino acid substitutionSmall transmembrane proteinConservative amino acid substitutionsGrowth factor β receptorParticular tyrosine residueReceptor tyrosine kinasesAmino acid substitutionsSequence similarityGrowth factor receptorTraptamersReceptor dimerizationEffects of PDGFSmall proteinsTyrosine residuesExtracellular domainTyrosine kinaseAcid substitutionsReceptor signalingRetroviral libraryPDGFβR
2001
Identification of the transmembrane dimer interface of the bovine papillomavirus E5 protein
Mattoon D, Gupta K, Doyon J, Loll P, DiMaio D. Identification of the transmembrane dimer interface of the bovine papillomavirus E5 protein. Oncogene 2001, 20: 3824-3834. PMID: 11439346, DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1204523.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBovine papillomavirus E5 proteinE5 proteinDimer interfacePlatelet-derived growth factor β receptorEssential glutamine residueHeterologous dimerization domainGrowth factor β receptorNon-productive interactionsReceptor tyrosine phosphorylationFocus formation assayPDGF β-receptorDimerization domainHomodimeric proteinTyrosine phosphorylationGenetic methodsGlutamine residuesActive chimerasΒ receptorActive orientationFormation assaysProtein helicesProteinPosition 17ReceptorsPhosphorylation
2000
Bovine Papillomavirus E5 Protein Induces the Formation of Signal Transduction Complexes Containing Dimeric Activated Platelet-derived Growth Factor β Receptor and Associated Signaling Proteins*
Lai C, Henningson C, DiMaio D. Bovine Papillomavirus E5 Protein Induces the Formation of Signal Transduction Complexes Containing Dimeric Activated Platelet-derived Growth Factor β Receptor and Associated Signaling Proteins*. Journal Of Biological Chemistry 2000, 275: 9832-9840. PMID: 10734138, DOI: 10.1074/jbc.275.13.9832.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBovine papillomavirus E5 proteinE5 proteinPDGF beta receptorBeta receptor complexCellular platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) beta receptorReceptor complexPlatelet-derived growth factor beta receptorPlatelet-derived growth factor β receptorRas-GTPase activating proteinAssembly of multiproteinSignal transduction complexGrowth factor β receptorGrowth factor beta receptorCell growth transformationTransduction complexBeta receptorsP85 subunitSignaling proteinsPhospholipase CgammaActivating proteinReceptor dimersConstitutive activationInactive receptorProteinReceptor molecules
1998
Bovine papillomavirus E5 protein induces oligomerization and trans-phosphorylation of the platelet-derived growth factor β receptor
Lai C, Henningson C, DiMaio D. Bovine papillomavirus E5 protein induces oligomerization and trans-phosphorylation of the platelet-derived growth factor β receptor. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America 1998, 95: 15241-15246. PMID: 9860953, PMCID: PMC28027, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.95.26.15241.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAmino Acid SubstitutionAnimalsBovine papillomavirus 1CattleCell LineCell Line, TransformedCross-Linking ReagentsDimerizationHumansKineticsMacromolecular SubstancesMiceOncogene Proteins, ViralPhosphorylationProtein-Tyrosine KinasesReceptor, Platelet-Derived Growth Factor betaReceptors, Platelet-Derived Growth FactorRecombinant ProteinsSequence DeletionTransfectionConceptsBovine papillomavirus E5 proteinE5 proteinPDGF beta receptorCellular platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) beta receptorKinase-negative mutant receptorPlatelet-derived growth factor beta receptorPlatelet-derived growth factor β receptorChemical cross-linking experimentsGrowth factor β receptorConstitutive tyrosine phosphorylationGrowth factor beta receptorLigand-independent fashionCross-linking experimentsReceptor tyrosine kinasesStable complexesExtracts of cellsPDGF beta-receptor activationIntramolecular autophosphorylationBeta receptorsCoimmunoprecipitation experimentsTransmembrane proteinReceptor activationTyrosine phosphorylationReceptor dimerizationMutant receptors
1995
Ligand-Independent Activation of the Platelet-Derived Growth Factor β Receptor: Requirements for Bovine Papillomavirus E5-Induced Mitogenic Signaling
Drummond-Barbosa D, Vaillancourt R, Kazlauskas A, DiMaio D. Ligand-Independent Activation of the Platelet-Derived Growth Factor β Receptor: Requirements for Bovine Papillomavirus E5-Induced Mitogenic Signaling. Molecular And Cellular Biology 1995, 15: 2570-2581. PMID: 7739538, PMCID: PMC230487, DOI: 10.1128/mcb.15.5.2570.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsE5 proteinPDGF beta receptorTyrosine phosphorylationMitogenic signalsMitogenic signalingReceptor mutantsSH2 domain-containing proteinsPlatelet-derived growth factor beta receptorPDGF beta receptor tyrosine kinaseDomain-containing proteinsPhosphorylation of substratesInterleukin-3Tyrosine phosphorylation sitesGrowth factor β receptorBa/F3 cellsReceptor tyrosine phosphorylationGrowth factor beta receptorLigand-independent activationReceptor tyrosine kinasesTyrosine kinase activityBovine papillomavirus E5Beta receptorsComplex formationPhosphorylation sitesReceptor autophosphorylation