Adam W. Smith

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Name: Smith, Adam W.
Organization: University of California , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry
Title: Assistant(PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Beata Jastrzebska, William D. Comar, Megan J. Kaliszewski, Kevin C. Skinner, Morgan H. Torcasio, Anthony S. Esway, Hui Jin, Krzysztof Palczewski, and Adam W. Smith
Biochemistry 2017 Volume 56(Issue 1) pp:
Publication Date(Web):November 10, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00877
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) detect a wide variety of physical and chemical signals and transmit that information across the cellular plasma membrane. Dimerization is a proposed modulator of GPCR signaling, but the structure and stability of class A GPCR dimerization have been difficult to establish. Here we investigated the dimerization affinity and binding interface of human cone opsins, which initiate and sustain daytime color vision. Using a time-resolved fluorescence approach, we found that human red cone opsin exhibits a strong propensity for dimerization, whereas the green and blue cone opsins do not. Through mutagenesis experiments, we identified a dimerization interface in the fifth transmembrane helix of human red cone opsin involving amino acids I230, A233, and M236. Insights into this dimerization interface of red cone opsin should aid ongoing investigations of the structure and function of GPCR quaternary interactions in cell signaling. Finally, we demonstrated that the same residues needed for dimerization are also partially responsible for the spectral tuning of red cone opsin. This last observation has the potential to open up new lines of inquiry regarding the functional role of dimerization for red cone opsin.
Co-reporter:Elise K. Grasse; Morgan H. Torcasio
Journal of Chemical Education 2016 Volume 93(Issue 1) pp:146-151
Publication Date(Web):November 12, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.jchemed.5b00654
Visible absorbance spectroscopy is a widely used tool in chemical, biochemical, and medical laboratories. The theory and methods of absorbance spectroscopy are typically introduced in upper division undergraduate chemistry courses, but could be introduced earlier with the right curriculum and instrumentation. A major challenge in teaching spectroscopy is gaining access to laboratory equipment, which can be expensive. Even common educational spectrophotometers still carry a substantial cost and have the disadvantage of being inherently closed designs. We report on a 3D-printable smartphone spectrophotometer that is very inexpensive to build, yet retains the functionality and analytical accuracy necessary to teach concepts like the Beer–Lambert Law. The optical components are arranged in an intuitive, accessible way so that students can see each relevant part and experiment with the parameters. Here, we describe the device and provide exercises to teach different concepts in analytical spectrophotometry.
Co-reporter:Xiaojun Shi, Maryam Kohram, Xiaodong Zhuang, and Adam W. Smith
Langmuir 2016 Volume 32(Issue 7) pp:1732-1741
Publication Date(Web):February 1, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b02814
Phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP) lipids are critical to many cell signaling pathways, in part by acting as molecular beacons that recruit peripheral membrane proteins to specific locations within the plasma membrane. Understanding the biophysics of PIP–protein interactions is critical to developing a chemically detailed model of cell communication. Resolving such interactions is challenging, even in model membrane systems, because of the difficulty in preparing PIP-containing membranes with high fluidity and integrity. Here we report on a simple, vesicle-based protocol for preparing asymmetric supported lipid bilayers in which fluorescent PIP lipid analogues are found only on the top leaflet of the supported membrane facing the bulk solution. With this asymmetric distribution of lipids between the leaflets, the fluorescent signal from the PIP lipid analogue reports directly on interactions between the peripheral molecules and the top leaflet of the membrane. Asymmetric PIP-containing bilayers are an ideal platform to investigate the interaction of PIP with peripheral membrane proteins using fluorescence-based imaging approaches. We demonstrate their usefulness here with a combined fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and single particle tracking study of the interaction between PIP2 lipids and a polycationic polymer, quaternized polyvinylpyridine (QPVP). With this approach we are able to quantify the microscopic features of the mobility coupling between PIP2 lipids and polybasic QPVP. With single particle tracking we observe individual PIP2 lipids switch from Brownian to intermittent motion as they become transiently trapped by QPVP.
Co-reporter:Adam W. Smith, Hector H. Huang, Nicholas F. Endres, Christopher Rhodes, and Jay T. Groves
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2016 Volume 120(Issue 5) pp:867-876
Publication Date(Web):January 15, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b08887
The spatial organization of lipid-anchored proteins in the plasma membrane directly influences cell signaling, but measuring such organization in situ is experimentally challenging. The canonical oncogene, c-Src, is a lipid anchored protein that plays a key role in integrin-mediated signal transduction within focal adhesions and cell–cell junctions. Because of its activity in specific plasma membrane regions, structural motifs within the protein have been hypothesized to play an important role in its subcellular localization. This study used a combination of time-resolved fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy and super-resolution microscopy to quantify the dynamic organization of c-Src in live cell membranes. Pulsed-interleaved excitation fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (PIE–FCCS) showed that a small fraction of c-Src transiently sorts into membrane clusters that are several times larger than the monomers. Photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) confirmed that c-Src partitions into clusters with low probability and showed that the characteristic size of the clusters is 10–80 nm. Finally, time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements were used to quantify the rotational mobility of c-Src to determine how it interacts with its local environment. Taken together, these results build a quantitative description of the mobility and clustering behavior of the c-Src nonreceptor tyrosine kinase in the live cell plasma membrane.
Co-reporter:Xiaojun Shi, Xiaosi Li, Megan J. Kaliszewski, Xiaodong Zhuang, and Adam W. Smith
Langmuir 2015 Volume 31(Issue 5) pp:1784-1791
Publication Date(Web):January 19, 2015
DOI:10.1021/la504241w
Binding of biomacromolecules to anionic lipids in the plasma membrane is a common motif in many cell signaling pathways. Previous work has shown that macromolecules with cationic sequences can form nanodomains with sequestered anionic lipids, which alters the lateral distribution and mobility of the membrane lipids. Such sequestration is believed to result from the formation of a lipid–macromolecule complex. To date, however, the molecular structure and dynamics of the lipid–polymer interface are poorly understood. We have investigated the behavior of polycationic quaternized polyvinylpyridine (QPVP) on supported lipid bilayers doped with phosphatidylserine (PS) or phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP) lipids using time-resolved fluorescence microscopy, including pulsed interleaved excitation fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (PIE-FCCS). PIE-FCCS is a dual-color fluorescence spectroscopy that translates fluctuations in fluorescence signal into a measurement of diffusion and colocalization. By labeling the polymer and lipids, we investigated the adsorption-induced translational mobility of lipids and systematically studied the influence of lipid charge density and solution ionic strength. Our results show that alteration of anionic lipid lateral mobility is dependent on the net charge of the lipid headgroup and is modulated by the ionic strength of the solution, indicating that electrostatic interactions drive the decrease in lateral mobility of anionic lipids by adsorbed QPVP. At physiological salt concentration we observe that the lipid lateral mobility is weakly influenced by QPVP and that there is no evidence of stable lipid–polymer complexes.
Co-reporter:William D. Comar ; Sarah M. Schubert ; Beata Jastrzebska ; Krzysztof Palczewski
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014 Volume 136(Issue 23) pp:8342-8349
Publication Date(Web):May 15, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ja501948w
Determining membrane protein quaternary structure is extremely challenging, especially in live cell membranes. We measured the oligomerization of opsin, a prototypical G protein-coupled receptor with pulsed-interleaved excitation fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (PIE-FCCS). Individual cell measurements revealed that opsin is predominantly organized into dimeric clusters. At low concentrations, we observed that the population of oligomers increased linearly with the square of the individual monomer populations. This finding supports a monomer–dimer equilibrium and provides an experimental measurement of the equilibrium constant.
2-ethenylbenzenesulfonic acid
3,5,9-Trioxa-4-phosphaheptacos-18-en-1-aminium,4-hydroxy-N,N,N-trimethyl-10-oxo-7-[[(9Z)-1-oxo-9-octadecen-1-yl]oxy]-, innersalt, 4-oxide, (7R,18Z)-