Human proteins behind COVID-19 infection reve – EurekAlert

In the quest for new treatments for COVID-19, a team led by researchers at UC San Francisco has identified a new potential drug target that may block infection by SARS-CoV-2. The protein, called BRD2, regulates the ACE2 receptor, which the novel coronavirus relies on to gain entry to its hosts cells.

In their new study,published January 13 inNature Cell Biology, the researchers found that blocking production of BRD2 prevents the virus from infecting a variety of human cell types.

Weve known that BRD2 regulates expression of other genes, including those that help promote tumor growth in some cancers, saidMartin Kampmann, PhD, an associate professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics and senior author on the study. Having discovered how the protein regulates ACE2 means that pathway could potentially be manipulated to make it harder for SARS-CoV-2 to infect cells.

Unlike many of the proteins being studied as potential targets against COVID-19, BRD2 isnt produced by the virus, but by the cells of its human host. The protein and others related to it are currently being investigated in clinical trials as targets for cancer drugs.

Focusing on ACE2s Gatekeeper

The researchers discovered that BRD2 regulates ACE2 while searching for human host proteins that affect the ability of SARS-CoV-2 to attach to various cell types grown in lab cultures, including cells from lungs, heart, and nasal cavitytissues especially susceptible to infection and long-lasting damage due to COVID-19

The scientists screened 2,325 cellular proteins that they thought might affect COVID-19 infection by influencing the viruss interaction with human cells. They determined that existing drugs targeting BRD2 can thwart COVID-19 infection in susceptible cell types, as well as in hamsters.

We were amazed to see that knocking down BRD2 has almost the same effect on inhibiting ACE2 production and COVID-19 infectivity as directly knocking down ACE2 itself, Kampmann said.

The research team also includedAvi Samelson, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in Kampmanns lab, and Ruilin Tian, PhD, a former graduate student in the lab who is now an assistant professor at the Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen, China. They, along with other members of the Kampmann lab, which is usually focused on neuroscience, proposed the study out of a desire to contribute to a better understanding of COVID-19. Working with members of theCoronavirus Research Groupof UCSFs Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI) and collaborators recruited from around the world, the team identified several other cellular proteins that are potent enhancers and inhibitors of ACE2 production.

However, the researchers caution that this new study is only a first step, and many more studies will be required to prove the safety and efficacy of any drug directed at BRD2 or other newly identified targets.

For example, the team found that inhibiting BRD2 also inhibited the production of interferon, a key protein in the bodys inflammation response.

Its important to learn more about these potential side effects, said Samelson. We dont know whether this impact on the immune system would be harmful or beneficial for an infected patient, and under what circumstances.

CRISPR Aids the Search for Drug Targets

Kampmann is known for inventing innovative new lab techniques based on the powerful gene-editing technology, CRISPR, which was engineered from unique biochemical machinery used by bacteria to fight viruses that infect them.

Scientists first used CRISPR less than a decade ago, to direct the cutting of DNA at specific sites along the genome and now employ the technique to edit DNA in a wide range of organisms.

Kampmann and his colleagues have modified the original bacterial enzyme used in CRISPR so that rather than cutting DNA, it ferries regulatory molecules to specific sites within the genome. Once there, these regulatory molecules can activate or repress genes, overriding normal gene expression.

This ability to fine-tune the gene expression up or down is a useful approach for identifying drug targets, Kampmann said. Repressing genes and their products with CRISPR can mimic their inhibition by drugs and uncover which drug targets may be therapeutically beneficial.

Another benefit is that these CRISPR screenings are unbiased, meaning that the researchers arent looking for a particular outcome, but methodically testing each protein to see which ones have the desired effect, said Tian, who aims to continue studying COVID-19 in China.

Using this powerful approach helps us to find many potential targets that we might otherwise not see, he said. In doing so, this screening helps facilitate new strategies to fend off infection by SARS-CoV-2 and its variants.

This research was supported by NIH grant F32AG063487 and fellowships.

Authors:For additional authors, please see the study.

About UCSF:The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is exclusively focused on the health sciences and is dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.UCSF Health, which serves as UCSF's primary academic medical center,includestop-ranked specialty hospitalsand other clinical programs, and has affiliations throughout the Bay Area. Learn more athttps://www.ucsf.edu, or see ourFact Sheet.

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Nature Cell Biology

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Sex Discrimination Lawsuit Over Alleged Wrongful Title IX Suspension Against UCLA Can Go Forward – Reason

From Doe v. Regents, decided Tuesday by the Ninth Circuit, in an opinion by Judge Consuelo Callahan, joined by Judge Danielle J. Forrest and District Judge and Carol Bagley Amon:

Based on a former student's bare allegations of misconduct, and before beginning a formal Title IX investigation, the University of California, Los Angeles (the "University" or "UCLA") issued an immediate interim suspension of John Doe, a Chinese national graduate student just months away from completing his Ph.D. in chemistry/biochemistry. Over five months later, the University suspended Doe for two years after finding he violated the University's dating violence policy by placing Jane Roe "in fear of bodily injury," just one of the thirteen charges the University brought against him. As a result, Doe lost his housing, his job as a teaching assistant on campus, his ability to complete his Ph.D., and his student visa.

As we clarified in Schwake v. Arizona Board of Regents (9th Cir. 2020), the relevant inquiry on a motion to dismiss a Title IX claim in this context is whether the alleged facts, if true, raise a plausible inference that the university discriminated against the plaintiff on the basis of sex. Doe's First Amended Complaint ("FAC") meets this standard.

At all relevant times herein, Doe was a Chinese national graduate student at UCLA on a student visa pursuing his Ph.D. in chemistry/biochemistry. He first met then-UCLA student Jane Roe in a chemistry class during the spring quarter of 2014, and the two began dating that summer. Their long-term romantic relationship continued, and the couple became engaged in December 2016. They planned to marry after Doe was scheduled to graduate with his doctorate in June 2017.

However, the relationship ended abruptly in February 2017, after Doe learned that Roe had been unfaithful to him throughout their relationship. On February 12, Doe sought to break off his engagement with Roe and the two met briefly outside Roe's home. The next morning, by text message, the pair agreed to meet on campus after Doe completed teaching his course and after Roe got off work on February 13, to exchange property that each had in their possession. Sometime thereafter, Doe learned that Roe had withdrawn the entire balance of approximately $8,000 from their joint bank account.

At about 9:45 a.m. on February 13, Roe showed up unannounced to Doe's teaching assistant office on campus, before he was scheduled to teach, to confront him. Roe was not an active student enrolled at UCLA at the time. Roe pounded on the door repeatedly, without announcing herself, until Doe answered. Doe, who was meeting with another graduate student at the time, refused to let Roe into his office. Roe demanded that Doe return her Social Security card which she claimed Doe had in his possession. When Doe asked for his engagement ring back, Roe said she had thrown it into the ocean.

Doe explained that he needed to leave to teach his class and asked Roe to wait until he was finished, but Roe refused to let him leave his office. Roe attempted to block Doe's doorway with her arms stretched out and threatened to call the police to have Doe arrested. Eventually, Doe was able to get around Roe to get to his class. Roe followed him and unsuccessfully tried to prevent him from entering his classroom.

While Doe taught his class, Roe called the University police to report that Doe had pushed her in the upper torso area and grabbed her wrist and forearm. Based on this report, University police arrested Doe for misdemeanor domestic battery after he completed teaching his class.

Two months after the incident, on April 13, Roe lodged a Title IX complaint with the University against Doe, alleging thirteen instances of misconduct, some dating back to the Fall of 2014. Although she was no longer a student at UCLA at the time of the February incident (or at the time she filed her Title IX complaint), she represented to the University that she was. UCLA did not verify Roe's status as a student. Roe also reported as part of her Title IX complaint that she had suffered a rib fracture from her encounter with Doe on February 13. The University ultimately found this to be untrue.

On May 10, 2017, the University's Title IX Office and the Office of Student Conduct issued a joint Notice of Charges to Doe, charging him with violations of policies relating to dating violence, conduct that threatens health or safety, stalking, sexual harassment, terrorizing conduct, and sexual assault. Pending resolution of the investigation of these charges, and without a hearing, the Office of the Dean of Students immediately suspended Doe on an interim basis, banned him from UCLA property, and evicted him from student housing. {Doe appealed the interim suspension, and following a special hearing held on May 22, 2017, the University modified the interim suspension to allow Doe to participate in certain activities on campus.}

On February 13, 2018, Doe filed a petition for writ of mandamus against the Regents in Los Angeles Superior Court, in which he challenged the disciplinary proceedings and decision rendered by the University. On April 3, 2018, Judge Chalfant granted Doe's motion to stay the decision and sanction, finding in relevant part that the evidence did not support the University's findings. Not long thereafter, on May 22, 2018, the Regents filed a Confession of Judgment stating that the Regents believed that Doe's petition should be granted. The court therefore entered judgment in Doe's favor, the Regents' decision and sanction were vacated and set aside, and the matter was remanded for the Regents to reconsider its action.

But this relief came too late, and Doe lost his student visa status.

The court allowed Doe's sex discrimination against UCLA to go forward:

Doe's [Complaint] divides his relevant allegations into three categories: (1) allegations of external pressures, (2) allegations of an internal pattern and practice of bias, and (3) allegations of specific instances of bias in his case. We consider each of these categories of allegations in turn. We conclude that these allegations, when combined, raise a plausible inference of discrimination on the basis of sex sufficient to withstand dismissal at this stage.

In the interests of space, I'll skip items 1 and 2 (though you can read them in the opinion), and focus on item 3:

The above allegations taken together sufficiently allege background indicia of sex discrimination. However, to survive a motion to dismiss, Doe "must combine [those allegations] with facts particular to his case." We hold that Doe has sufficiently done so.

First, the [Complaint] alleges that Jason Zeck, UCLA's Respondent Coordinator, advised Doe in July 2017, during the pending Title IX investigation, that "no female has ever fabricated allegations against an ex-boyfriend in a Title IX setting." The Regents' position that Mr. Zeck's alleged statement cannot possibly be true because Doe was only found responsible for one of the thirteen alleged incidents of misconduct brought against him by Roe is simply untenable. {An alternative explanation might be that, when confronted by a claim that lacked merit, the University rushed to judgment in issuing the two-year interim suspension and then sought out a way to find the accused responsible for something in order to justify its earlier actions.}

Instead, as we must accept this well-pleaded allegation as true, Mr. Zeck's statement suggests that UCLA's Title IX officials held biased assumptions against male respondents during the course of Doe's disciplinary proceeding. Particularly given the ultimate findings of Roe's numerous fabrications, Mr. Zeck's statement plausibly supports an inference that the Regents prejudged Roe's allegations (and Doe's defenses thereto) during its investigation on the basis of their respective genders.

Contrary to the Regents' argument, "statements by 'pertinent university officials,' not just decisionmakers, can support an inference of gender bias." Mr. Zeck's comments are relevant because he served as the "Respondent Coordinator" throughout the Title IX investigation. So while not a decisionmaker, Mr. Zeck was familiar with UCLA's Title IX process and the facts underlying Doe's case. It is therefore reasonable to infer that Mr. Zeck's statement reflects the broader gender assumptions within UCLA's Title IX office during its investigation of Doe.

Second, the [Complaint] alleges that Associate Dean Rush, the ultimate decisionmaker here, advised Doe that if she were in his shoes, she would have invited Roe into her office during the February 2017 incident. Associate Dean Rush's comment suggests that she did not view Roe as an aggressor, and at the very least raises the question of whether, if the gender roles were reversed, Associate Dean Rush would have made the same recommendation to a female approached by her angry, male ex-fianc when he showed up unannounced to confront her at her place of employment.

The [Complaint] further alleges several additional facts which, if assumed to be true, demonstrate irregularities in Doe's proceedings that, while not dispositive on their own, support an inference of gender bias.

For example, the [Complaint] alleges that the University demonstrated its disparate treatment of Doe as a male during its investigation by failing to investigate his claim that Roe was not a student at the time of the incident and not discrediting Roe when it became apparent that Roe had misrepresented her status as a student and falsely stated that she fractured a rib on February 13. {Roe's status as a non-student at the time of the incident would not preclude the University from proceeding with investigating her complaint under Title IX because her complaint also included allegations of misconduct dating back to 2014, when she was a student at UCLA.} The [Complaint] also alleges other irregularities in the investigation including the fact that Ms. Shakoori made findings of violations of policy not included in the Joint Notice or Amended Joint Notice of Charges.

The [Complaint] enumerates several other allegations of irregular proceedings during the appeal hearing itself, including that (1) the burden was placed on Doe, not the University; (2) Doe was not permitted to speak at the appeal hearing; (3) fact witness testimony supporting Doe's account of the events was discounted, while witness testimony supporting Roe's account was accepted without the need for an independent interview by the appeal panel; (4) Associate Dean Rush evidenced gender bias when she falsely stated that the two-year suspension was required by SVSH Policy for any type of dating violence; and (5) the appeal panel only found that Roe was in fear of "bodily injury," not "serious bodily injury" as required by the policy. Additionally, the [Complaint] referenced the state court's ruling on the motion for stay in the writ proceeding, wherein the court found that the evidence did not support the Regents' findings.

Although the Regents contends that these allegations of procedural irregularities do not suggest that gender was the reason for the supposed errors, this Circuit, as well as the Seventh and Sixth Circuits, have found similar irregularities support an inference of gender bias, particularly when considered in combination with allegations of other specific instances of bias and background indicia of sex discrimination.

The fact that the Regents ultimately found Doe not responsible for twelve of the thirteen allegations made against him does not make the allegations of irregularities in the proceedings any less relevant to our inquiry. Rather, at some point an accumulation of procedural irregularities all disfavoring a male respondent begins to look like a biased proceeding despite the Regents' protests otherwise.

Taken together, Doe's allegations of external pressures and an internal pattern and practice of bias, along with allegations concerning his particular disciplinary case, give rise to a plausible inference that the University discriminated against Doe on the basis of sex. The fact that sex discrimination is "a plausible explanation" for the University's handling of the disciplinary case against Doe is sufficient for his Title IX claim to survive a motion to dismiss. While Doe "may face problems of proof, and the factfinder might not buy the inferences that he's selling," his Title IX claim makes it past the pleading stage.

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Sex Discrimination Lawsuit Over Alleged Wrongful Title IX Suspension Against UCLA Can Go Forward - Reason

Washington University collaborates with Agilent, Merck to expand metabolomics research – Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

A collaborative effort between Washington University in St. Louis, Agilent Technologies and the biopharmaceutical company Merck aims to expand research in the field of metabolomics, the comprehensive study of small molecules within a biological system.

Using top-of-the-line research instrumentation from Agilent, scientists in the Department of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences will develop new metabolomics workflows of interest to many members of the drug-development community. The partnership also includes salary support for postdoctoral research fellows for the next two years.

Metabolomics provides a direct readout of biochemical activity. It is ideally suited to study the effect that drugs have on cells and tissues, said Gary Patti, the Michael and Tana Powell Professor of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences and professor of medicine at the School of Medicine, who leads the universitys portion of the collaboration.

With these instruments from Agilent, we are delighted to establish a dedicated training laboratory outfitted with cutting-edge mass spectrometry equipment for metabolomics, said Feng Sheng Hu, the Lucille P. Markey Distinguished Professor and dean of the faculty of Arts & Sciences.

Trainees will be exposed to computational approaches in metabolomics, mass spectrometry, cell work and animal work, as well as many other biochemical techniques making them exceptional candidates to pursue careers within the biopharmaceutical industry, Hu said. We are grateful to Agilent and Merck for their support in helping Washington University to develop the pipeline of research experts skilled in scientific discovery within the fields of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, drug metabolism and metabolomics.

We are excited to participate in this collaborative effort. The combination of metabolomics with drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics (DMPK) offers significant potential to accelerate drug development, said Sudharshana Seshadri, vice president of Agilents Mass Spectrometry Division. We are confident that the Agilent LC/TQ and LC/Q-TOF workflow solutions will deliver deep insights with great accuracy and enable rapid progress for our collaborators.

This collaboration will fast-track the training of next-generation bioanalytical scientists at Washington University, incorporating new workflows combining metabolomics with DMPK analysis to define mode of action, off-target effects and stratification of results with metabolic biomarkers, said Darlene Solomon, senior vice president and chief technology officer at Agilent.

We are excited to embark on this timely collaboration, said Dan Rock, associate vice president of pharmacokinetics and drug metabolism at Merck Research Laboratories. Mass spectrometry and computational advancements have opened the scope of metabolomics to more global exposure-response modeling techniques, which present a truly unique path to accelerating drug discovery.

Researchers in the Patti laboratory use metabolomics to elucidate novel biochemical mechanisms of disease. Patti himself has made major contributions in the development and application of new metabolomics technologies. He is a previous recipient of an Agilent Early Career Professor Award.

Metabolomics is transforming the ways in which drugs are discovered and developed. For example, researchers can now use metabolomics to create a full tally of drug metabolites the individual byproducts created when the body breaks down a drug into different substances as well as the precursors and products of the reactions that these substances affect. Such work enhances the understanding of how drugs circulate around the body and the chemical mechanisms behind their actions. This knowledge is critical to identifying which drugs can be used to treat which diseases and at what doses to administer them.

The new partnership builds upon Pattis previous work to establish an experimental strategy to find off-target effects by metabolomics.

Off-target effects occur when you develop a drug to do one thing, but then it also does something else unexpectedly, Patti said. Off-target effects can lead to toxicity and are one of the biggest reasons that drugs fail during development. The earlier that off-target effects can be identified, the better. Metabolomics has a lot of potential to help here.

The three-way collaboration offers an opportunity to integrate the unique expertise and perspectives of academic researchers, instrument manufacturers and scientists from the pharmaceutical industry.

This will position us to tackle the toughest challenges in drug development by applying the newest metabolomics technologies to a wide range of biological systems that span from cells and animals to human patients, Patti said.

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Washington University collaborates with Agilent, Merck to expand metabolomics research - Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

4-H Foundation awards record number of scholarships for 2021 – The Star Beacon

JEFFERSON The Ashtabula County 4-H Foundation has awarded college scholarships to 14 local youths.

Thats a record number for the foundation,said 4-H president Jim Butler.

Since 1997, the Ashtabula County 4-H Foundation has been raising funds through multiple fund-raising events with the purpose of supporting advanced education of 4-H members.High school seniors and returning college students whohave participated in 4-H for a minimum offive years are eligible to apply, regardless of college or career choice.

The cost of college doesnt go down after the first year and it makes a big difference to get any help you can, Butler said. Some of our recipients applied last year and didnt receive one, but got one this year. You just never know. Different year, different judges. Just keep trying.

The 2021 recipients will need to successfully complete the fall semester to receive their scholarship in January. The recipients are as follows:

Kate Brand, a 2019 graduate of Jefferson Area High School. Sheattends Miami University-Oxford. She is double majoring in biology and psychology, and co-majoring in neuroscience.

Tory Durkovic, a 2021 graduate of Jefferson Area High School. She plans to attend Youngstown State this fall to major in Integrated Mathematics Education.

Katie Eldred, a 2019 graduate of Edgewood High School, who is pursuing a degree in sports psychology at the Ohio State University.

Emily Falcone, a 2020 graduate of Conneaut High School. She is returning to the University of Findlay studying animal science and pre-veterinary medicine.

Megan Jacobs, a 2020 Jefferson Area High School graduate. She attends Thiel College studying biochemistry.

Cheyenne Kase, a 2019 graduate of Jefferson Area High School. She attends the Ohio State University pursuing a degree in animal bioscience.

Emily Millard, a 2021 graduate of Pymatuning Valley High School. She will be attending Kent State-Trumbull campus studying for a bachelor of science in nursing.

Lydia Randolph, a 2021 graduate of Edgewood High School. She will be attending Trine University majoring in chemical engineering and biochemistry.

Caroline Sabo, a 2021 graduate of Madison High School. She will be attending the University of Akron studying civil engineering.

Shelby Schwotzer, a 2019 graduate of Edgewood High School. She will be returning to Grove City College studying biology and secondary education.

Garhett Smith, a 2020 Jefferson Area High School graduate. He attends Malone University studying zoo and wildlife biology.

Allison Stokes, a 2021 graduate of Pymatuning Valley High School. She plans to attend Kent State University-Main Campus studying general studies.

Emily Taft, a 2020 Jefferson Area High School graduate. She attends the Ohio State University studying history and education.

Faith Blankenship, a 2021 graduate of Jefferson Area High School. She is the 2021 recipient of the J.J. Stitt Memorial Scholarship. This scholarship is funded by the annual Ride for J.J. event and awarded through the 4-H Foundation and the Stitt Family. Faith plans to attend Youngstown State University and majoring in special education.

The 4-H Foundation extends a huge congratulations to all of the 2021 scholarship recipients and wishes only success to all of our local youth, Butler said.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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4-H Foundation awards record number of scholarships for 2021 - The Star Beacon

School of Molecular Sciences students reflect on their first semester in the middle of the pandemic – ASU Now

January 19, 2021

The 2020 pandemic changed many things including the college experience for first-year students.

The excitement to attend the first football game as a new addition to the Sun Devil family and step foot into their first-ever college lecture, for the most part, did not happen traditionally. Though it was challenging and uncertain how the future would look, many of the freshmen from Arizona State University's School of Molecular Sciences did not let the pandemic get in the way of achieving their academic goals. School of Molecular sciences freshmen (from left): Sydney Pickett, Eric Do, Jessica Wang and Gabriella Cerna Download Full Image

Here, several first-year students from the school talk about their first semester at ASU in the middle of the pandemic.

Sydney Pickett is in the BS biochemistry program; she is one of the many students who excelled in her first semester at the School of Molecular Sciences. Her drive to attain her goals comes from her dream of attending medical school.

Overwhelming was the word she used to describe her first semester of college. Her biggest challenge was being an out-of-state student: Not knowing anyone from Arizona and also trying to adjust to a new city and a completely new environment made her nervous.

She felt homesick often but was able to overcome it with the help of her support system back at home. With her family and friends' encouragement she achieved her goals of meeting new people by stepping outside of her comfort zone, on top of attaining straight As for the semester.

Her new goals for the year are to get a shadowing position and maintain her 4.0 GPA.

One thing I learned is that it is OK to make mistakes and to mess up sometimes. Just be resilient and do not give up, she said.

Eric Do, a BS medicinal biochemistry major, on the other hand, was frustrated when he realized that his first semester of college would be during the pandemic. He didnt get to meet new people or explore the ASU campus as much as he wanted to.

For him the online learning environment was challenging due to it being difficult to focus in a setting outside of a physical classroom. One of his most difficult courses of the semester was CHM 117: General Chemistry for Majors I. Though it was challenging, a perk he received was attending the in-person lab with fewer students, which allowed him to ask the lab instructor more questions if he had any.

His motivation to succeed this semester came from his goals, friends who were in the same situation and his aspirations to become a future pharmacist, which helped him attain straight As. His goals for the upcoming semester are to improve his work-life balance.

I would like to thank my instructor Tim Lamb for being my guide through my first semester, he said.

Jessica Wang is a medicinal biochemistry BS major who has looked forward to her first year in college since she was a child. She wanted to explore her independence, and she knew traveling across the country was the best way to achieve it.

But due to the pandemic, she was initially disappointed with the way her experience turned out.

I felt as though I was taking a step backwards towards my self growth rather than it being an opportunity for new experiences, she said.

What kept her motivated through the semester was her goal of self growth and sense of independence. She found herself doing something different every week, and while it felt overwhelming at times, she never wanted it to stop.She has made the most of her time at ASU by taking advantage of great opportunities that came her way.

She also made good friends during the first semester.

I got very lucky this semester. Having made such a strong friendship with my roommate, we spend most of our time together, she said.

Although it was not ideal, Gabriella Cerna, who is majoring in biochemistry and microbiology, was very grateful that she had the opportunity to attend college in a safe environment.

Transformative is the word she used to describe her semester, because she was able to discover herself and her beliefs through being exposed to many different ideas and viewpoints. Her biggest motivation was her drive to continue learning.

Instead of focusing on external factors like grades, I concerned myself with truly enjoying and understanding the content in my classes, she said.

During her first year she gained a valuable growth mindset that has allowed her to become a more resilient individual and create attainable goals.

Even though this year was not picture perfect for these students, they found ways to make it work for them. They were able to overcome many hurdles that were passed their way through the pandemic, and instead of giving up, they excelled and pushed forward toward their goals of success.

Written byMariela Lozano, School of Molecular Sciences communications assistant,mariela.lozano@asu.edu.

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School of Molecular Sciences students reflect on their first semester in the middle of the pandemic - ASU Now

Automated Biochemistry Analyzers Market Size, Growth And Key Players- Abbott, Roche, Danaher, Hitachi, Thermo Fisher Scientific The Bisouv Network -…

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Evaluation of glutathione reductase activity in colon tissue of patients with irritable bowel syndrome. – Physician’s Weekly

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is known as one of the most common irritating gastrointestinal disorders. The mechanism behind IBS is still under investigation and it is thought that it may arose from multi factors among which free radicals have been previously mentioned. Studies have found an association between oxidative stress and IBS; however, little is known about the mechanisms and oxidative stress components status during IBS. One of the key factors playing a central role in oxidative stress network is glutathione reductase (GR). Here we report the GR activity in colon tissue samples during IBS to explore a part of contributing components in IBS pathogenesis.The GR enzyme activity was measured in 15active IBS colon biopsy samples and was compared to our best available age and sex matched colorectal tissue samples from normal marginal tissue of resected colon cancers (n=15). The enzyme activity in the two groups was determined and compared using a commercial GR Assay Kit (Cayman chemical).A significant decrease in GR activity among IBS tissue samples was observed compared to anatomically normal marginal colon tissue samples (p=0.007).Lower GR activity may increase oxidized glutathione there by in turn could contribute as a main component in oxidative stress network. The lower GR activity results in hampered defense mechanism against produced free radical species. This finding may clarify a part of IBS pathogenesis. 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.References

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Evaluation of glutathione reductase activity in colon tissue of patients with irritable bowel syndrome. - Physician's Weekly

Biochemical Pathway Discovered That Protects Cells From Ferroptosis – Technology Networks

The hallmarks of cancer include rapid cell reproduction and metabolic activity. But these processes also lead to increased cellular stress and oxidation, and the risk of cell death. To circumvent these negative consequences of supercharged growth, cancer cells stimulate pathways to reduce oxidative stress and avoid cell death. In an article published in Cell Metabolism, Moffitt Cancer Center researchers report on a newly discovered biochemical pathway that protects cells from a type of cell death called ferroptosis.

Ferroptosis is a specialized type of cell death that is caused by imbalances in oxidation within cells. Ferroptosis results in changes to molecules in the cell membrane called lipids and can be caused by cysteine starvation. Cysteine is a type of amino acid that is one of the building blocks of proteins and is also used by the body for numerous important physiological processes, including cell survival, regulation of oxidative-reduction reactions and energy transfer. Because of its critical role in normal processes, cysteine is highly regulated to prevent excess or insufficient amounts of the amino acid.

Several different types of cancer overexpress molecules that play an important role in cysteine regulation. This suggests that reducing cysteine levels may negatively affect cancer growth. In fact, studies have shown that cancer cells can be induced to undergo cell death by either inhibiting cysteine uptake or starving cells of cysteine. However, the downstream processes that are stimulated by cysteine starvation are unclear. Moffitt researchers performed a series of laboratory investigations to learn what molecules become activated after cysteine deprivation and how this impacts cells.

The researchers discovered that cancer cells can activate signaling pathways to protect themselves against cell death due to cysteine starvation. When the team starved non-small cell lung carcinoma cells of cysteine, the cells began to undergo ferroptosis. However, cysteine starvation also resulted in an unexpected accumulation of small molecules called -glutamyl-peptides, which protected the cells against ferroptosis. The researchers found that the peptides were synthesized through the activity of the protein GCLC. Under normal conditions, GCLC is involved in the first step of the synthesis of the antioxidant glutathione from the amino acids cysteine and glutamate. However, this newly discovered activity of GCLC occurred in the absence of cysteine and was important to limit both glutamate accumulation and oxidant production.

The researchers further analyzed signaling mechanisms controlling GCLC-mediated peptide synthesis and discovered that GCLC was regulated by the protein NRF2. They found that under normal conditions, NRF2 regulated GCLC to produce glutathione, but under cysteine-starved conditions, NRF2 regulated GGLC to produce -glutamyl-peptides.

"NRF2 is known to play an important role in the protection against cellular oxidation and is often deregulated in lung cancer," said lead author Gina DeNicola, Ph.D., assistant member of the Cancer Physiology Department at Moffitt. "The ability of NRF2 to protect against ferroptosis has important implications for cancer, particularly lung cancers that commonly have NRF2 activation via mutations in KEAP1 and NRF2."

Reference:Kang YP, Mockabee-Macias A, Jiang C, et al. Non-canonical glutamate-cysteine ligase activity protects against ferroptosis. Cell Metab. 2021;33(1):174-189.e7. doi:10.1016/j.cmet.2020.12.007

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Biochemical Pathway Discovered That Protects Cells From Ferroptosis - Technology Networks

Structure and noncanonical Cdk8 activation mechanism within an Argonaute-containing Mediator kinase module – Science Advances

Abstract

The Cdk8 kinase module (CKM) in Mediator, comprising Med13, Med12, CycC, and Cdk8, regulates RNA polymerase II transcription through kinase-dependent and -independent functions. Numerous pathogenic mutations causative for neurodevelopmental disorders and cancer congregate in CKM subunits. However, the structure of the intact CKM and the mechanism by which Cdk8 is non-canonically activated and functionally affected by oncogenic CKM alterations are poorly understood. Here, we report a cryoelectron microscopy structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CKM that redefines prior CKM structural models and explains the mechanism of Med12-dependent Cdk8 activation. Med12 interacts extensively with CycC and activates Cdk8 by stabilizing its activation (T-)loop through conserved Med12 residues recurrently mutated in human tumors. Unexpectedly, Med13 has a characteristic Argonaute-like bi-lobal architecture. These findings not only provide a structural basis for understanding CKM function and pathological dysfunction, but also further impute a previously unknown regulatory mechanism of Mediator in transcriptional modulation through its Med13 Argonaute-like features.

In eukaryotes, Mediator is a large, evolutionarily conserved, and multisubunit (25 to 30 proteins) transcriptional coactivator complex that conveys regulatory signals from activators and repressors to the RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) transcription machinery (1, 2). Structurally, Mediator proteins are assembled separately into a Core Mediator (~1 MDa) and a dissociable subcomplex (~0.5 MDa), called Cdk8 kinase module (CKM) (36). Biochemically, Core Mediator is able to interact with the RNAPII machinery and initiate transcription (7, 8), while the CKM can reversibly associate with Core Mediator to preclude RNAPII binding (5, 6, 9, 10). The CKM was initially considered to play a repressive role in gene expression, but recent studies have shown its roles in both context-specific activation and repression of transcription (11, 12).

The CKM, first identified in yeast, consists of Cdk8, CycC, Med12, and Med13 subunits (Fig. 1A) (13). The CycC-dependent CDK8 kinase, a colorectal cancer oncoprotein in humans (14), belongs to a transcriptional CDK subbranch and phosphorylates the C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNAPII Rpb1 and many transcription-associated proteins, including Transcription Factor II H (TFIIH) (1518). Notably, CDK8 lacks a canonical phosphorylation residue within its activation segment (T-loop), and this fact, coupled with its incorporation into the large CKM complex essential for kinase activity, renders CDK8 distinct among CDK family proteins with an apparent unique and heretofore obscure activation mechanism. Human MED12, required for CDK8/CDK19 kinase activity (6, 1921), has been found to associate with transcriptional activators/coactivators, the REST corepressor G9a, and certain activating noncoding RNAs (2226). However, the molecular mechanism by which MED12 activates CycC-dependent CDK8/19 remains unclear. Med13, the largest subunit in Mediator, enables association of the CKM with Core Mediator (5, 6). On the basis of sequence alignment, Med13 was predicted to be a member of the PIWI protein family because of the presence of an apparent PIWI module that contains MID and PIWI [ribonuclease H (RNase H)like] domain (27). The PIWI module represents a functional unit within the Argonaute (Ago)/PIWI superfamily of proteins that play crucial roles in transcriptional and posttranscriptional gene silencing (28). Ago proteins are further characterized by the presence of N, L1, L2, and PAZ domains, the latter of which contributes to binding of small interfering RNA/microRNA (29, 30), but the previous alignment analysis identified no such domains in Med13 (27). Therefore, obtaining structural information of Med13 is essential to understand its functional role in Mediator-dependent transcription regulation.

(A) Schematic diagram of CKM subunits. The functional domains are indicated. KA, kinase activation domain. (B) SDS-PAGE analysis of purified WT CKM and Cdk8/CycC (from a Med12/Med13/CycC-TAPtagged yeast strain). The identities of bands corresponding to Cdk8 and CycC were confirmed by MS. CBP, Calmodulin Binding Protein. (C) Kinase activity of purified CKM and Cdk8/CycC directed toward the Ser5 residue of the RNAPII CTD (GST-CTD-6xHis). WB, Western blotting. (D) Left: Cryo-EM map of Kinase- and Central-lobes at 3.8- resolution. Right: Cryo-EM map of the H-lobe at 4.9- resolution. (Cdk8 in blue, CycC in cyan, Med13 in green, and Med12 in orange). (E) Two helices of Med12 and Med13 subunits with their corresponding electron densities. (F) Overall structure of the CKM. The Kinase-, Central-, and H-lobes are as indicated. (G) Cross-linking map of the CKM. In total, 80 intrasubunit and 29 intersubunit cross-links identified between lysine residues present in the CKM atomic model are shown by red and blue lines, respectively. The protein regions belonging to the Kinase-, Central-, or H-lobes are as indicated.

Dysfunction or dysregulation of human CKM has been linked with both germline and somatic developmental and age-associated diseases. For example, mutations in MED12 are causative for several X-linked intellectual disability disorders including Opitz-Kaveggia (FG), Lujan-Fryns (Lujan), and Ohdo syndromes, and MED12 is also recurrently mutated at high frequency in uterine leiomyomas (ULs) and breast fibroadenomas, as well as prostate and other cancers (3135). These findings suggest that delineation of the CKM structure, including resolution of its constituent subunit interactions and mechanism of CDK8 activation therein, will be essential to fully understand the function and dysfunction of Mediator-dependent transcription in development and disease. Although some structural information of human and yeast CKMs were obtained by electron microscopy (EM) and x-ray crystallography (5, 6, 9, 3638), detailed molecular insight into the entire CKM structure, subunit interactions, and mechanism of CDK8 kinase activation are heretofore still lacking.

Here, we report a cryo-EM structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CKM complex that redefines prior human and yeast CKM subunit organizational models. The structure, combined with cross-linking mass spectrometry (XL-MS) and biochemical analyses, provides a structural basis for large Med12 and Med13 subunits and reveals critical contacts between Med12 and Cdk8/CycC essential for kinase activity. The Med12 subunit functions as a scaffold within the CKM, and its unique structure provides great potential for interactions with regulators. The N-terminal region of Med12 stimulates Cdk8 kinase activity by a noncanonical mechanism that involves contacts with both the T-loop and RHYT segment of the kinase. Mapping human UL-linked MED12 driver mutations onto the CKM structure revealed a cluster in the vicinity of the kinase T-loop/RHYT segment, and functional analyses confirmed that these mutations disrupt CDK8 kinase activity. Notably, molecular dynamics simulations suggest a model for mutation-induced disruption of Cdk8 kinase activity through reconfiguration of the T-loop into a nonactivated conformation. Unexpectedly, we found that Med13 not only has MID and PIWI domains, as previously predicted, but also harbors N, L1, L2, and PAZ domains that collectively conform to an Ago structure. Notably, the L2 domain of Med13 adopts a unique structure that mimics Ago-bound RNA to occupy the central channel, resulting in an autoinhibited state. Last, we show that the CKM binding region on Core Mediator is likely to overlap with those of both RNAPII and TFIIH, revealing steric hindrance as the basis by which the CKM precludes the interaction of Mediator with the transcription preinitiation complex (PIC). Together, our findings markedly redefine the central architecture of the Mediator kinase module, confirm the interface between CDK8/CycC and MED12 as a potential therapeutic target for Mediator-associated Cdk8-driven diseases, and shed new light on the regulatory potential of Mediator in transcriptional modulation mediated by its Med13 Ago-like features.

Wild-type (WT) yeast CKM for structure determination was purified from S. cerevisiae through a tandem affinity purification (TAP)tagged CycC subunit and thereafter polished by ion exchange chromatography (table S1). Purified CKM subunit composition and kinase activity were determined by SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and phosphorylation assay against the RNAPII CTD, respectively (Fig. 1, B and C). To compare the activity of Cdk8/CycC with and without Med12/Med13, we also purified endogenous yeast Cdk8/CycC from Med12/Med13 deletion strains. WT CKM kinase activity was substantially higher than that of Cdk8/CycC alone, suggesting that Cdk8/CycC activity was stimulated in the presence of Med12 and Med13 (Fig. 1C).

CKM cryo-EM specimens were prepared on holey carbon grids and imaged on a 300-kV Titan Krios (FEI) microscope equipped with a K2 Summit (Gatan) direct electron detector (fig. S1A and table S2). Two-dimensional (2D) class averages showed various orientations of the CKM that was preserved in ice (fig. S1B). Although the CKM in some averages appear to be symmetric, two distal ends of the CKM are composed of different subunits. Analysis of the CKM images resulted in an overall 4.4- cryo-EM map (fig. S1C). A local resolution map showed that the highest-resolution portions of the map were the Kinase- and Central-lobes, whereas some mobility resulted in blurring of the H-lobe map near the distal end (fig. S1C). Image processing that focused on the Kinase- and Central-lobes was able to produce a final 3.8--resolution density map (Fig. 1D, left, and fig. S1D). For the H-lobe of the CKM near the distal terminus, local refinement was able to improve the map quality to 4.9 , in which secondary structure elements could be resolved and the main chain could be traced (Fig. 1D, right, and fig. S1E). We performed model building for Cdk8/CycC starting from the crystal structure of human Cdk8/CycC complex (38) and built Med12 and Med13 models ab initio on the basis of cryo-EM maps and secondary structure prediction results (Fig. 1, E and F; fig. S2; and table S2).

In the elongated CKM structure, two bent features, corresponding to the Kinase- and H-lobes, protrude from the Central-lobe (Fig. 1F and movie S1). In the Kinase-lobe, the Cdk8 subunit is connected to the Central-lobe through CycC and a portion of Med12, which is consistent with previous structural studies (5, 36). Unexpectedly, however, we found that the H-lobe of the CKM is composed only of Med12, whereas Med13 and a portion of Med12 together constitute the Central-lobe (Fig. 1F). Notably, the relative position of Med13 and Med12 in our high-resolution structure of the CKM is reversed compared to previously published EM studies (5, 6, 36), in which Med13 was instead localized to the distal terminus of the CKM. It is likely that conformational flexibility caused by the deletion of Med13 in prior low-resolution EM studies led to inaccurate interpretation of the subunit organization.

To strengthen our structural findings, we performed XL-MS analysis on the purified CKM (fig. S3, A and B, and data S1). The identified cross-links were selected on the basis of the presence of corresponding lysine residues in our atomic model and then mapped onto the CKM structure (Fig. 1G). Except for those regions missing in the corresponding density map, the organization and interactions among subunits revealed by the CKM atomic model agree with cross-links detected by XL-MS analysis (fig. S3, C to G). Consistent with our CKM structure, several cross-links identified between CycC and Med13 occur at their interface, thus revealing CycC to be positioned next to Med13 in the Central-lobe (fig. S3D). The XL-MS results that support the CKM structure are discussed separately in the following sections. Because of sequence homologies within orthologous subunits and similarities in the CKM overall shape revealed by EM, we suggest that the subunit organization of yeast CKM redefined by our high-resolution structure and XL-MS analysis can be applied to those of higher eukaryotic CKMs.

The elongated conformation of Med12 spans the entire CKM and comprises two extended N- and C-terminal segments (Med12N and Med12C, respectively), connected by a large horseshoe-shaped solenoid structure (Med12HEAT) that is mainly composed of -helical elements (Fig. 2, A and B, and fig. S4A). Med12N (residues 1 to 105) starts as an extended polypeptide with two helices (H1 and H2) that wrap around the Kinase-lobe of the CKM (orange in Fig. 2C) and makes extensive contacts with both the Cdk8 and CycC subunits (described below). This agrees with XL-MS results showing that H2 of Med12 (K88 and K91) cross-linked with CycC (K262) and Med13 (K1114) at their respective interfaces (fig. S3D). Consistent with prior biochemical findings for the human CKM (19, 20), we found that the yeast Med12 N-terminal region (residues 1 to 105) could associate with Cdk8/CycC and stimulate its kinase activity (Fig. 2, D and E), confirming an important role for the Med12 N-terminal region in kinase activation. Med12HEAT (residues 106 to 1343), encompassing the majority of Med12, comprises five HEAT domains, each of which consists of 9 to 14 helices (Fig. 2B and fig. S4B). The first domain (HEAT 1) of Med12HEAT lies adjacent to Med13 in the best-resolved portion of the cryo-EM map, and we were able to assign protein residues for this domain in the atomic model (Fig. 2C and fig. S2B). The remaining four domains (HEAT 2 to HEAT 5) of Med12HEAT, which form the H-lobe, are tightly packed at one end of the CKM (Fig. 1F and fig. S2C). Despite decreased resolution (4.9 ) in this region caused by some mobility, the main-chain trajectory of the H-lobe revealed by our model agreed with cross-links detected by the XL-MS analysis of the CKM (fig. S3E).

(A) Structural organization of Med12. The first and second helices (orange ribbon) in Med12N are labeled as H1 and H2, respectively. Five HEAT domains (Med12HEAT) are shown in transparent surface. (B) Domain organization of Med12. The N- and C-terminal regions of Med12 (Med12N and Med12C) that form interactions with Cdk8/CycC and Med13, respectively, are indicated. Colors are as in (A). (C) Interactions of Med12 with Cdk8, CycC, and Med13. Cdk8, CycC, and Med13 are shown in colored surface representations. (D) The Med12 N-terminal region (residues 1 to 105) associates with Cdk8/CycC. GST-Med12 fragments in Escherichia coli lysates as indicated were immobilized on glutathione Sepharose beads and incubated with yeast cell lysate (CycC-TAP/Med12/Med13) containing Cdk8/CycC. (E) Kinase activity of yeast Cdk8/CycC stimulated by GST-Med12-(1105). Phosphorylation of GST-CTD-6xHis was detected by the antibody that recognizes phosphorylated Ser5 of CTD. For GST-Med12-(1105), 250 ng (+) or 1 g (++) of protein was used in the reactions. (F) Immunoprecipitation (IP) assay. Deletion of the C-terminal region (residues 1346 to 1427) of Med12 caused loss of Med13 from CKM.

In the CKM structure, we found that Med12C (residues 1344 to 1427; green in Fig. 2C) adopts an extended conformation that runs along the Med13 surface, overlaps with a linker region that connects Med12N to HEAT 1, and ultimately contacts CycC by its C terminus near the interface between Med13 and CycC (Fig. 2C and fig. S4, C to E). Consistent with the localization of the Med12 C terminus, XL-MS analysis revealed cross-links between K1392 and K1424 of Med12 and some Lys residues of Med13 around the interface between Med13 and CycC (fig. S3F). In addition, the extensive interactions between Med13 and Med12C described here are consistent with our biochemical observation that Med13 is lost from a Med12C CKM derivative (Fig. 2F). Moreover, the C-terminal region of human MED12, including both PQL and OPA domains, has been reported to interact with Med13 (20). Together, these results reveal that Med12 functions as a scaffold that connects Cdk8, CycC, and Med13, and its elongated conformation could further provide a large surface area for interactions with transcriptional regulators.

Structural studies of CDK2/CycA established the general principle of kinase activation for the CDK family proteins (39). Activation occurs through the binding of the Cyclin to the CDK followed by phosphorylation of a conserved residue in the T-loop of the CDK. The phosphorylated T-loop is extended to form a platform, which relieves a blockade to the catalytic site present in free CDK, leading to fully activated kinase. Notably, among all human CDK proteins, CDK8 (and its close paralog CDK19) uniquely lacks a canonical phosphorylation residue in the T-loop, suggesting an activation mechanism distinct from the other classical CDK proteins.

Within the CKM, the structure of yeast Cdk8 reveals a bilobed architecture (N- and C-lobes) with a peptide substratebinding site located between the two lobes (Fig. 3A and fig. S5A, left). CycC consists of two classical cyclin-box fold domains, N-CBF and C-CBF. The N-CBF in CycC is bound by the N-lobe of Cdk8, including an N-terminal helix (1) present in Cdk8 that provides specificity for CycC recognition. A conserved groove (yellow in fig. S5A) unique to CycC (among all Cyclin family proteins) lies near the T-loop of Cdk8. The overall structures of yeast and human Cdk8/CycC are generally similar (fig. S5, A and B) (38). Compared to the human CDK8/CycC structure, the 1 of Cdk8 and the C-terminal helix of CycC in yeast adopt slightly different orientations due to an additional sheet (S1 and S2) in the latter formed by an insertion of ~30 amino acids between H2 and H3 (fig. S5C). All T-loops in the structures of human CDK8/CycC alone, determined in the absence of MED12/MED13, are mostly disordered (fig. S5D), suggesting that these structures exhibit only partially active conformations. By contrast, the T-loop of yeast Cdk8 within the CKM is well defined in the electron density map (fig. S5A, right). Furthermore, when compared to the structure of human phosphorylated (activated) CDK2 (40), yeast Cdk8 with the CKM shares notable structural similarities in its peptide substratebinding site. First, four highly conserved residues in yeast Cdk8 important for coordinating the T-loop in an activated conformation, including R206 (N-lobe), R285 (C-lobe), R309 (T-loop), and Y342 (RHYT segment), all adopt similar side-chain orientations as observed in the phosphorylated CDK2 (fig. S5E, left). Similarly, the side chain of Y342 forms a hydrogen bond with the side chain of R285 in Cdk8. Second, the VVT motif (V325-V326-T327) of CKM Cdk8 reveals a push-in conformation, similar to that of phosphorylated Cdk2, resulting in a potential substrate-binding site. Third, residues 304 to 306 next to the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)binding site, at the start of the T-loop in CKM Cdk8, adopts a DLG-in (DMG motif in human CDK8) conformation crucial for kinase activity, which is similar to that of phosphorylated CDK2 (fig. S5E, left bottom). Together, these observations suggest that the T-loop of Cdk8 within the CKM is poised in an activated conformation. Because Med12 physically interacts and functionally stimulates CycC/Cdk8 within the CKM, we examined whether and how Med12 contributes to stabilization of the Cdk8 T-loop.

(A) Structure of Cdk8/CycC contacted by Med12N (orange) and a linker region of Med13 (green). The T-loop of Cdk8 is colored in red and highlighted by the red surface. The highly conserved groove within the CycC family proteins is indicated. (B) Contacts between Med12N and the highly conserved groove in CycC. The residues in CycC involved in Med12 binding are indicated. The highly conserved residues are colored in yellow. (C) Detailed view of the interface between Cdk8 (light blue) and Med12 H1 (orange). The RHYT segment is colored in green. (D) The residues following Med12 H1 involved in interactions with the T-loop and 6-7 loop (RHYT segment) of Cdk8 are indicated by orange circles. Three conserved arginine (R206, R285, and R309) and one tyrosine (Y342) residues in Cdk8 important for coordinating an active T-loop conformation are shown. (E) Surface representation of Cdk8/CycC/Med12N showing positions of mutations. (F) Pull-down analysis for interaction of WT or mutant Cdk8/CycC with GST-Med12N-(1105).

The N-terminal region of Med12 (Med12N) adopts an extended conformation that encircles the C-CBF of CycC and contacts the C-lobe of Cdk8, resulting in a total interaction area of ~3800 2 (Fig. 3A, fig. S2D, and movie S2). We divided the overall interface between Med12N and CycC into three regions. In the first, the N-terminal coil region (I, residues 11 to 35) before H1 in Med12 contacts the C-CBF near Cdk8 and the N terminus of CycC (Fig. 3A and fig. S4F). Trp6, highly conserved in the CycC family, is buried almost completely between hydrophobic residues in this area (fig. S4G). The second interface involves a coil region (II, residues 59 to 73) followed by H2 within Med12 and the conserved surface groove on CycC that is formed between its two CBFs (Fig. 3B), including five residues (R92, Q93, W209, D214, and Y297) that are invariantly conserved among CycC, but not other Cyclin family proteins. These interactions are likely responsible for the specificity of CycC for Med12. The third interface (III) corresponds to a composite binding region involving the C-CBF of CycC and both H2 of Med12 and a linker region from Med13 (Fig. 3A and fig. S4H). Med13 contacts in this area could stabilize the interaction between Med12 and CycC, which may explain our previous biochemical observation that the presence of human MED13 could suppress dissociation of oncogenic MED12 mutant derivatives from Cdk8/CycC (20).

Regarding the interface between Med12 and Cdk8, the N-terminal portion of Med12 (residues 35 to 56) folds on the C-lobe of Cdk8 where it makes numerous interactions, primarily with the T-loop and the 6-7 loop (RHYT segment) of Cdk8 (Fig. 3A). The residue W36 of Med12, together with residues W281, L283, and P344 of Cdk8, forms a hydrophobic core that buries residue F311 of the T-loop (Fig. 3C). Med12 residues E42 and L46 within H1 (residues 40 to 49) along with Med12 residues A51, K52, and G53 contact the RHYT segment. Notably, residues 54 to 56, following H1 of Med12, form some contacts with the tip of the T-loop (Fig. 3D). This interaction mode is reminiscent of the unphosphorylated CDK6/Vcyclin complex, in which the N terminus of Vcyclin forms a short sheet with the CDK6 T-loop to activate the kinase (fig. S5F) (41).

To confirm the interaction mode between Med12N and Cdk8/CycC revealed by structural analysis, we assessed the impact of both interfacial and noninterfacial mutations in CycC and Cdk8 on Med12 binding using immobilized protein affinity chromatography (Fig. 3, E and F). Compared to WT Cdk8/CycC, mutant derivatives S210E or F235E in CycC or I449E in Cdk8, all of which alter residues that interface with Med12N, were severely compromised in their respective abilities to bind Med12N. As expected, mutant derivatives A251R in CycC and D410R in Cdk8 that are not involved in Med12 interaction exhibited no reduction in Med12N binding.

Intriguingly, our structural analysis revealed that within the CKM, the Cdk8 T-loop is nonetheless configured into an activated conformation despite the fact that it lacks a canonical phosphorylation residue (fig. S5E, left). Since Med12N contacts both the T-loop and RHYT segment of Cdk8 and is important for kinase activity, we speculated that Med12 H1 supersedes the requirement for T-loop phosphorylation by configuring the T-loop into an activated conformation. To investigate this possibility, we assessed the structural features of the Cdk8 RHYT and T-loop segments in the presence and absence of Med12. Notably, because the RHYT segment, similar to the T-loop, is conserved and present in both yeast and human Cdk8 proteins, we therefore compared the structure of yeast Cdk8 (bound by Med12 within the CKM) to that of human CDK8 (absent MED12).

In our CKM structure, the Cdk8 RHYT segment, bound by MED12 residues E42, L46, A51, K52, and G53, adopts a conformation that makes several contacts with the T-loop (Fig. 4A). Thus, Cdk8 residues R340 and Y342 from the RHYT segment contact residues Y319 (as well as residue T317) and L318, respectively, within the T-loop. Notably, the side chain of Y342 interacts with R285 (C-lobe), one of three highly conserved arginine residues in CDK family proteins important for coordinating the T-loop in an activated conformation (Fig. 4A and fig. S5E, left). By contrast, in human CDK8 structures (absent MED12), the RHYT segment adopts a different conformation and is instead positioned such that it could potentially overlap with the T-loop (Fig. 4B and fig. S5E, middle). In this regard, the side chain of Y211 (Y342 in yeast Cdk8) does not engage in hydrogen bonding with R150 (R285 in yeast Cdk8) but instead points to the VVT motif. In addition, residue H210 (H341 in yeast Cdk8) is positioned such that it likely impinges on the T-loop. These factors might cause steric hindrance and T-loop destabilization. This could explain why all T-loops in the structures of human CDK8/CycC (determined in the absence of MED12/MED13) are mostly disordered (fig. S5D). To determine whether Med12 H1 is important for kinase activation, we engineered mutations in RHYT-interacting (E42A and L46R) or RHYT-noninteracting (I45R) residues (Fig. 4A) and assessed their impact on the ability of MED12N to bind and activate Cdk8/CycC. Compared to WT Med12N, mutant derivatives E42A and L46R exhibited no apparent differences in Cdk8/CycC binding activity (Fig. 4C) but markedly reduced Cdk8/CycC kinase activity (Fig. 4D). As expected, mutant derivative I45R exhibited no reduction, compared to WT Med12N, in Cdk8/CycC binding and kinase stimulatory activities (Fig. 4, C and D), as our structure revealed that I45 is not involved in RHYT binding. On the basis of these collective observations, we hypothesize that Med12 binding can elicit structural rearrangement of the Cdk8 RHYT segment, which, in turn, triggers stabilization of the T-loop into an active conformation.

(A) H1 of Med12 bound to yeast Cdk8. (B) Superimposition of yeast and human Cdk8 [Protein Data Bank (PDB ID): 3RGF] structures showing conformational differences of the RHYT segments. (C) Pull-down analysis for interactions between Cdk8/CycC and GST-Med12-(1105). (D) Effects of WT or mutant GST-Med12-(1105) on kinase activity of Cdk8/CycC. (E and F) RMSD plots of the T-loop and RHYT segment regions during molecular dynamics simulations. (G) Left: Superimposition of simulated models showing effects of Med12N binding on the T-loop and the RHYT segment regions of Cdk8. Cdk8 models simulated in the absence or presence of Med12N are colored in green or purple, respectively. Right: Superimposition of simulated models showing effects of mutant Med12N on the T-loop and the RHYT segment regions of Cdk8. (H) Sequence alignment of the N-terminal region of Med12. The identical and similar residues are highlighted by red and yellow, respectively. Three UL hotspot mutations of human MED12 (L36, Q43, and G44) are indicated by red dots. (I) Zoomed-in view of UL-linked MED12 driver mutations near Cdk8/CycC. The portion (residues 27 to 51) of human MED12 carrying recurrent UL-causing mutations is highlighted in red. The T-loop and RHYT segment of Cdk8 are shown in pink and green surfaces, respectively. Three human UL hotspot mutations are indicated by red dots. (J) Structure of Cdk8/CycC/Med12N. The mutations on Med12 are as indicated. (K) Pull-down analysis for interactions between WT and mutants of GST-Med12-(1105). (L) Effects of WT and mutant derivatives of GST-Med12-(1105) on kinase activity of Cdk8/CycC analyzed by Western blot.

To further investigate whether Med12N contributes to stabilization of the Cdk8 T-loop, we performed molecular dynamics simulations to assess flexibilities of the T-loop (residues 304 to 327) and RHYT segment (residues 339 to 344) using models for Cdk8/CycC or Cdk8/CycC/Med12N (residues 1 to 105) obtained from our CKM structure. We calculated the root mean square deviation (RMSD) values for small regions of interest to measure protein conformational stability over the course of their trajectories. Compared with Cdk8 bound by Med12N, we found that the T-loop of Cdk8/CycC alone exhibits higher averaged RMSD, indicating more flexibility in this region when Med12 is absent (Fig. 4E). Similarly, the RMSD of the RHYT region from Cdk8/CycC alone also becomes slightly higher overall and fluctuates more, reflecting the more transient nature of RHYT region to T-loop contacts when Med12N is not present to stabilize the RHYT segment (Fig. 4F). Notably, on the basis of the analysis of the root mean square fluctuation (RMSF) per residue, amino acids A339, R340, and H341 of the RHYT region, as well as Y319 of the T-loop, in Cdk8/CycC show higher RMSF, indicating greater flexibility during the molecular dynamics simulation when Med12N is not bound (fig. S6, A and B). In the absence of Med12N, the close interaction of Cdk8 residues Y319 (T-loop) and R340 (RHYT segment) is lost, and a region (residues 310 to 314) in the T-loop around F311, which is buried by a hydrophobic core formed in the presence of Med12, shows large structural changes (Fig. 4G, left, and fig. S6A). On the basis of these results, we believe that Med12, including H1 and its following residues (residues 51 to 53), contributes to the stabilization of the Cdk8 T-loop through contacts with the RHYT region, thereby enabling kinase function in the absence of canonical phosphorylation.

UL-linked alterations in human MED12, including missense mutations and in-frame deletions/insertions, cluster exclusively within the N-terminal portion of Med12, suggesting a deleterious impact on Cdk8/CycC kinase activity (Fig. 4H). Prior biochemical studies have shown that these mutations disrupt the ability of human MED12 to activate CDK8/CycC (19, 20, 42). Nonetheless, the molecular basis for these biochemical observations has remained obscure. In this regard, we recently postulated that UL-linked mutations in MED12 disrupt its ability to activate CDK8 by disrupting its direct association with CycC, leading to loss of allosteric activation. Notably, however, our structural analysis reveals instead that UL-linked mutations in human MED12, including hotspot mutations G44D, Q43P, and L36R (corresponding to yeast Med12 residues G53, K52, and L46, respectively), as well as in-frame insertions/deletions (variously spanning human residues 26 to 55; corresponding to yeast residues 37 to 64), map to a region next to the T-loop and RHYT segment of Cdk8 (Fig. 4I). For example, yeast Med12 G53 (corresponding to human MED12 G44, the most frequently mutated residue in UL) is positioned next to the interface between the T-loop and RHYT segment (Fig. 4I). Accordingly, pathogenic mutations at G44, Q43, and L36 of human MED12 are likely to alter interactions between MED12 and the CDK8 T-loop/RHYT segment required for T-loop stability and kinase activity.

To examine this possibility, we first assessed the impact of orthologous pathogenic mutations in Med12N on its ability to bind and activate Cdk8/CycC. To this end, we introduced into Med12N substitution mutations L46R, K52P, and G53D (corresponding to UL hotspot mutations L36R, Q43P, and G44D in human MED12; Fig. 4J) and thereafter examined these mutant derivatives for their respective abilities to bind and stimulate Cdk8/CycC activity using an in vitro pull-down assay. We also assessed three additional M12N mutant derivatives, including E73A and I45R, which are not involved in Cdk8/CycC binding, and I89D, which is involved in CycC binding (Fig. 4J). Compared to WT Med12N, mutant derivatives L46R, K52P, and G53D exhibited no apparent difference in Cdk8/CycC binding activity (Fig. 4, C and K) but markedly reduced Cdk8/CycC kinase activity (Fig. 4, D and L). This is consistent with our prior findings that MED12 binding is necessary but not sufficient for CDK8/CycC activation and suggests that mutations L46R, K52P, and G53D in Med12 affect T-loop stability, resulting in decreased Cdk8 kinase activity. As expected, mutant derivatives I45R and E73A exhibited no reduction, compared to WT Med12N, in Cdk8/CycC binding and kinase-stimulatory activities, as our structure revealed that they are not involved in Cdk8/CycC binding. Notably, mutant derivative I89D compromised both the Cdk8/CycC binding and kinase stimulatory activities of Med12N (Fig. 4, K and L), indicating that the Med12-CycC interface is critical to anchor MED12N and thus facilitate Cdk8 activation through direct Med12N-Cdk8 interactions.

To better understand how pathogenic mutations in Med12 disrupt Cdk8 kinase activity, we introduced mutations K52P and G53D (corresponding to human UL-linked mutations Q43P and G44D) into the Cdk8/CycC/Med12N model structure and performed molecular dynamics simulations to assess flexibilities within the Cdk8 T-loop and RHYT regions as a function of these Med12N mutations. We also included an additional Med12N mutation at residue E42 (E42A) since the corresponding residue (E33) in human MED12 is a hotspot for mutation in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (43). The RMSD data revealed similar stabilities for the T-loop and RHYT regions in both WT and mutant Cdk8/CycC/Med12N (Fig. 4, E and F). Notably, however, examination of the models showed that that the conformation of the RHYT region is altered in the mutant models (Fig. 4G, right). Furthermore, Cdk8 T-loop residues 313 to 315 and Y319 adopt altered conformations in the mutant compared to the WT models (Fig. 4G, right). Accordingly, we speculate that pathogenic mutations in Med12N stabilize the T-loop in a distinct conformation that is unfavorable for substrate phosphorylation, which could also explain why these mutations do not affect the binding of Med12N to Cdk8/CycC.

In eukaryotes, Ago proteins (~100 kDa) play a central role in gene-silencing processes guided by small RNAs (44). The structures of Ago proteins reveal a common architecture composed of four globular domains (N, PAZ, MID, and PIWI) and two linker domains (L1 and L2), which form two lobes (N-PAZ and MID-PIWI) with a central nucleic acidbinding cleft between them (45). The PIWI domain adopts a typical RNase H fold with a set of catalytic residues in the active site, while the MID and PAZ domains are involved in 5 and 3 guide RNA binding, respectively (45). On the basis of our structural findings, described below, we categorize Med13 as a new Ago subfamily.

Med13 is located at the middle of the CKM and interacts with Med12 and CycC (Fig. 1F). Although Med13 is widely present among eukaryotes, its physiological role nonetheless remains poorly understood because of limited structural and functional information. On the basis of sequence analysis, the N- and C-terminal regions in Med13 are inferred to be connected by a large intrinsically disordered region (IDR). Furthermore, the C-terminal region of Med13 was previously predicted to have Ago MID and PIWI domains, thus classifying Med13 as a member of the PIWI protein family (27). Unexpectedly, our structure herein reveals that Med13, in addition to MID and PIWI domains, is composed of several additional domains that define classical Argonaute (Ago) proteins (Fig. 5A and movie S3) (28, 45). Thus, despite low overall sequence homology between Med13 and Ago proteins, the structure of Med13 nonetheless revealed that four globular domains (N, PAZ, MID, and PIWI) and two linker domains (L1 and L2) form two lobes with a narrow central channel (Fig. 5B). The large IDR (residues 313 to 814) inferred from sequence analysis, and absent in typical Ago proteins, lies between the PAZ and L2 domains and is indeed disordered in the density map. Although Med13 adopts the bilobal architecture characteristic of ago proteins, no density corresponding to DNA or RNA was found within its central channel. This contrasts with previously reported eukaryotic Ago structures wherein the 5 and 3 guide RNAbinding sites and the central channel are typically occupied by cell-derived small RNAs following protein purification (4652), suggesting that the current Med13 structure within the CKM represents a nucleic acidfree (apo) conformation.

(A) Domain organization of Med13. (B) Structure of Med13. Colors are as in (A). The missing IDR is indicated by dashed lines. (C) Two views of Med13 structure. The L2-N of Med13 is colored in red. The central channel is indicated by a dashed oval. (D) Two views of hAgo2 structure (PDB ID: 4W5N). The 5 and 3 guide RNAs are indicated (red sticks). The L2 domain is colored in dark gray. (E) Left: A portion of Med13 L2-C (red) occupies the 5 nucleic acidbinding site at the MID domain. The residues in Med13 overlapped with the guide RNA in hAgo2 are shown in surface. Right: 5 guide RNA (red sticks) bound at the MID and PIWI domain of hAgo2. The first three 5 RNA nucleotides (U1, U2, and C3) are labeled. The catalytic tetrad residues in the PIWI domain are indicated. (F) Left: Residues in PAZ of Med13 involved in contacts with the N-terminal portion of L2-N (red) in Med13 are indicated. Right: Residues in PAZ of hAgo2 involved in interaction with 3 guide RNA are indicated.

Notably, while Med13 has an overall Ago architecture, our structural analysis nonetheless reveals several unique structural features that are not observed in typical Ago proteins. We identified four unique insertions (ins)two within the PAZ domain (PAZ-ins1 and PAZ-ins2), one between the MID and PIWI domains (MID-PIWI-ins), and one within the PIWI domain (PIWI-ins) (Fig. 5, A and B, and fig. S7A). Among these four insertion segments, three (PAZ-ins2, MID-PIWI-ins, and PIWI-ins) are involved in interactions with Med12 and contribute to stabilizing the CKM (fig. S7B), whereas the fourth (PAZ-ins1) is positioned into and thereby narrows the central cleft (fig. S7C). By comparing both the Med13 and human Ago 2 (hAgo2) structures, we found that all of their individual domains can be superimposed very well (fig. S7, D and E). However, their respective PAZ and PIWI domains, as well as their L2 domains, show greater divergence due to Med13-specific insertions and conformational differences. In Med13, the N-terminal region of the L2 domain (L2-N) adopts a hairpin structure, containing two helices (7 and 8), which extends from the rest of the domain, whereas the corresponding region in hAgo2 forms two helices in an L-shaped conformation adjacent to the elongated C-terminal region of L2 (fig. S7E).

In hAgo2, guide RNAs are threaded through the central channel, and their 5 and 3 ends are recognized by the MID and PAZ domains, respectively (47, 48). However, in contrast to hAgo2 structures, the corresponding nucleic acidbinding regions in our Med13 structure show distinctive features. The L2-N in Med13, which is a Med13-specific hairpin, starts by forming a short helix (7) in the PAZ domain, runs toward the MID domain across the central channel, and then inserts an helix (8) into the interface between the MID and PIWI domains (Fig. 5C). In hAgo2, the L2 domain instead adopts the typical conformation found in Ago proteins that does not run across the central cleft (Fig. 5D). Furthermore, in Med13, the central channel through which guide RNA would be threaded in hAgo2 is instead bound by a linker region between the 7 and 8 of L2-N (Fig. 5C). Last, in Med13, helix 7 and a coil fragment adjacent to helix 8 of L2N occupy the corresponding regions in hAgo2 that are bound by the 3 and 5 ends of the guide strand RNA, respectively (Fig. 5, E and F). These observations led us to propose that Med13 L2-N mimics Ago-bound guide RNA. Together, these structural considerations indicate that Med13 is inaccessible to nucleic acids because the central channel is occupied by L2-N. The implications of these unique structural features will be discussed subsequently.

In this study, we provide a near-atomic resolution structure of the entire CKM, one that redefines prior subunit organization, explains how Cdk8/CycC is recognized and activated by Med12, and newly identifies Med13 as a novel member of the Ago protein family. The fact that Cdk8 lacks a canonical phosphorylation residue in its T-loop and also forms a large complex with CycC, Med12, and Med13 distinguishes its mechanism of activation from other CDK family proteins. Our structural and biochemical studies reveal that Med12 forms critical contacts with both Cdk8 and CycC and establish a novel molecular mechanism for how Med12 activates Cdk8 kinase. The observation that UL-linked MED12 mutations localize to the vicinity of the Cdk8 T-loop and RHYT segment suggests that disruption of Mediator kinase activity is a major biochemical defect arising from these pathogenic mutations, providing new molecular insight into disease etiology. Accordingly, our structure also provides further rationale for targeting the MED12-CDK8/CycC interface for treatment of diseases caused by dysregulation of Cdk8 kinase activity.

Our structure shows that CycC, including its the conserved groove, provides a large surface area for extensive interactions with Med12. Biochemical analyses confirmed these interactions to be critical for the ability of Med12 to bind and activate Cdk8/CycC. Thus, targeted mutations in residues identified by structural analysis to comprise the CycC-Med12 interface were found to disrupt Med12 binding and Cdk8 activation. In addition, while clearly necessary, Med12 binding is not sufficient for Cdk8/CycC activation since we also show that mutations of Med12 residues (H1 and flanking residues) that are not involved in CycC interaction, including oncogenic Med12 mutations L46R, K52P, and G53D, disrupt the ability of Med12 to activate, but not to bind, Cdk8/CycC. These findings are consistent with our prior biochemical observations using human CKM proteins (19, 20) and indicate an additional step beyond CycC binding that is required for Med12-dependent Cdk8 activationone dependent on Med12 residues frequently mutated in UL and other tumors. Here, we identify this additional activation step to be the Med12-dependent stabilization of the Cdk8 T-loop with important implications for Cdk8-driven disease. In this regard, our studies revealed that the interaction of Med12H1 and its flanking residues (51 to 53) with the Cdk8 RHYT segment directs the latter to engage in a precise network of intramolecular interactions with the Cdk8 T-loop, leading to its stabilization in an activated conformation (Fig. 6A). Thus, we observed the Cdk8 T-loop to be flexible in the absence of Med12 (fig. S5D) and unfavorably poised for substrate binding and phosphorylation. By contrast, in the presence of Med12, the Cdk8 T-loop was found to be structured in an activated conformation with space sufficient to accommodate target substrates (Fig. 6A). Notably, the fully activated conformation of Cdk8 is realized only upon stabilization of its T-loop through extensive interactions occurring between the Cdk8 RHYT segment and Med12. Thus, binding of Med12 H1 and its flanking residues (amino acids 51 to 53) to the RHYT segment triggers a structural rearrangement in the latter; in turn, the rearranged RHYT segment, together with the Med12 residues 54 to 56 following H1, contributes to stabilization of the Cdk8 T-loop, thereby enabling kinase activity in the absence of canonical T-loop phosphorylation. Although our findings establish a novel mechanism for Cdk8 activation requiring Med12, they also raise an important question regarding whether and how the kinase activity of Med12-bound Cdk8/CycC is regulated. In this regard, it is notable that human MED12 has been shown to associate with certain activating noncoding RNAs that are able to stimulate the kinase activity of CDK8 toward histone H3 Ser10 (22, 25). Although detailed mechanisms remain to be clarified, it is possible that interactions of MED12 with other factors may affect the kinase activity and substrate specificity of CDK8.

(A) Model for Cdk8 kinase activated by Med12N. Left: In the absence of Med12, CycC-bound Cdk8 is in a partially activated conformation. The T-loop (red) is disordered, thus hindering substrates from entering into the catalytic site (yellow). A highly conserved region in CycC is highlighted in green. Middle: Binding of Med12 to the conserved groove in CycC allows its H1 to trigger rearrangements of the RHYT segment, leading to stabilization of the Cdk8 T-loop. Right: Stabilized T-loop leads to formation of platform for substrate phosphorylation. (B) Model of the Core MediatorCKM complex. The subunits of Core Mediator are highlighted by surface representations. The CKM is highlighted by a dashed outline. (C) Location of the CKM (dashed outline) on Core Mediator overlaps with RNAPII and TFIIH. Left: Structure of the Core MediatorRNAPII complex (PDB ID: 5U0S). Right: Structure of the Core MediatorPICTFIIH complex (PDB ID 5OQM). RNAPII and TFIIH are colored in yellow and gray, respectively. The remaining subunits of the PIC are colored in pink.

Our yeast CKM structure is not generally consistent with a recently reported study on the human CDK8/CycC/MED12N complex analyzed by XL-MS experiments, which concluded that MED12 makes extensive contacts with both the N- and C-lobes of CDK8 without substantially interacting with CycC (53). In our CKM structure, however, Med12N interacts extensively with CycC and contacts Cdk8 only at its C-lobe (Fig. 3A). We speculate that this discrepancy could be attributed to Med13, which was present in our CKM structure but absent in the prior XL-MSbased study. In our yeast CKM structure, the Med13 MID-PIWI-ins makes several contacts with the interface between Med12 H2 and CycC (Fig. 3A and fig. S4H), suggesting that Med13 could stabilize the Med12-CycC interaction. In the absence of MED13, it is likely that MED12N may not be able to stably wrap around CDK8/CycC, leading to conformational flexibility that precluded detectable contacts between MED12 and CycC in prior XL-MS experiments. Our findings are supported by near-atomic level structural determination and XL-MSbased confirmation carried out with the intact CKM. Considering significant protein sequence conservation between human and yeast Cdk8, CycC, and Med12 (N-terminal region), we believe that the interaction mode between Med12 and Cdk8/CycC is likely conserved among species.

Our studies further clarify the molecular basis of MED12 in human disease. In this regard, numerous pathogenic alterations, including germline mutations causing the intellectual disability disorders FG, Lujan, and Ohdo syndromes, as well as somatic driver mutations leading to UL, breast fibroadenomas, and prostate cancer, have been found in human MED12 (3135, 42, 54, 55). In general, different types of disease mutations are mapped on different regions of Med12, indicating that disease typespecific mutations in MED12 may differentially affect its function (fig. S8A). To clarify molecular mechanisms underlying disease typespecific mutations in MED12, we mapped pathogenic MED12 mutations onto our yeast CKM structure based on sequence alignment (fig. S8B). Although we did not assign residues for the Med12 HEAT domains (2 to 5) within the CKM, we found that MED12 mutations linked to FG, Lujan, and Ohdo syndromes, as well as prostate cancer, are nonetheless localized in the H-lobe (fig. S8B). This suggests that these mutations may influence interactions of MED12 with other factors but not CDK8/CycC.

By contrast, UL-linked alterations in MED12 were mapped exclusively within Med12 H1 and its flanking residues that critically interface with the Cdk8 RHYT/T-loop region, suggesting a deleterious impact on MED12-dependent CycC/Cdk8 activation (fig. S8B). Here, we confirm this prediction and, thus, clarify the mechanistic basis by which pathogenic mutations in MED12 drive tumorigenesis through CKM dysfunction. Curiously, our molecular dynamics simulations indicate that driver mutations in Med12, as opposed to triggering T-loop destabilization, instead promote reconfiguration of the Cdk8 T-loop into a stable conformation incompatible with efficient substrate binding and/or phosphorylation. This could effectively disable Cdk8 kinase activity, and, thus, circumvent a critical barrier to cellular transformation, while also preserving its structural integrity and retention of a critical kinase-independent (scaffolding) function required for cell viability (56, 57). Ongoing studies designed to elucidate the structure and function of CKM variants incorporating oncogenic Med12 mutant derivatives should clarify these and other pressing issues.

We found that Med13 has an Ago-like bilobal architecture, which implies an additional capability for CKM interaction with nucleic acid duplexes. Since nucleic acids were not observed in the central channel, the conformation of the current Med13 structure is more similar to the closed form of prokaryotic apo-Ago proteins (29, 5860). The PIWI domains of Ago proteins adopt an RNase H fold (28), but their slicing capability depends on the existence of the catalytic DEDD or DEDH tetrad in the active site (46). For instance, eukaryotic slicer Ago proteins, such as Kluyveromyces polysporus Ago, hAgo2, and hAgo3, have the catalytic tetrad in the active site (fig. S7F, top) (46, 51). Our structure described herein shows that the Med13 PIWI domain retains none of the previously identified catalytic residues (fig. S7F, bottom), suggesting that Med13 lacks endonucleolytic activity. However, similar to other human and yeast Ago proteins, Med13 does carry some positively charged residues along the central channel on the surface of the PIWI and MID domains (fig. S7G). These structural observations suggest that the channel of Med13 retains nucleic acidbinding ability but is nonetheless occupied by L2-N (Fig. 5, C, E, and F). This contradiction could be explained if the current structure reflects an autoinhibition state, one in which the central channel cannot interact with nucleic acids that absent a regulated release of the coil fragments of L2-N. Rearrangement of L2-N may enable the central channel of Med13 to capture nucleic acid duplexes without cleavage, given that the Med13 PIWI domain lacks a catalytic tetrad. Supporting this, the CKM was found to preferentially associate with highly transcribed genes in yeast (61, 62) that have the propensity to generate DNAsmall RNA hybrids. In this regard, it is perhaps notable that deletion of Med13 in yeast has been implicated in R-loop formation and genomic instability (63). On the basis of these observations, the CKM might be involved in the modulation of high-level gene expression through Med13. On the other hand, Med13 might bind to an RNA stem region in long noncoding RNAs. This ability could correlate with the observation that the CKM is located in enhancer elements genome wide (64) and might also be involved in enhancer-promoter looping through interactions with enhancer RNAs (22). Further studies will be required to investigate whether and what type of nucleic acid duplex binds to Med13 and how such a role regulates the transcription process.

Prior studies have reported that the CKM is able to suppress activated transcription in vitro and precludes interaction of RNAPII with the Mediator (5, 9, 21). To understand how the CKM forms a complex with Core Mediator, we developed a model by fitting our CKM and previously reported Core Mediator structures into a negative-stain EM map of yeast Mediator-CKM complex (fig. S9) (3, 5). This model indicates that the CKM is localized to the top portion of Core Mediator at which Med12 and Med13 subunits are close to the Hook and Neck regions (Fig. 6B). This is in agreement with previous biochemical observations that human MED12 and MED13 are able to associate with a part of Mediator Middle module subunits (5). Notably, when compared with cryo-EM structures of RNAPIICore Mediator and TFIIHPICCore Mediator (Fig. 6C) (3, 65), our model reveals that the location of CKM on Core Mediator partially overlaps with those of both RNAPII and TFIIH, suggesting steric hindrance as the basis by which the CKM precludes interactions of Pol II and TFIIH with the Mediator and suppresses the activated transcription. A high-resolution structure of the Mediator-CKM complex will reveal more detailed information about how the CKM interacts with Mediator and represses transcription.

The CKM constitutes a large sophisticated and multifunctional macromolecular complex. Here, we have shown that in addition to a noncanonically activated and oncogenic mutation-sensitive cyclin-dependent kinase, the CKM comprises both an Ago-like Med13 and an elongated Med12 subunit with a HEAT core that offers great potential for regulatory interactions. The capabilities of the CKM to phosphorylate transcription factors, to associate with activating noncoding RNAs, and to regulate Mediator-RNAPII interaction demonstrate the broad influence of CKM on RNAPII gene transcription. Further studies are warranted to determine how the structural and functional complexity of the CKM are exploited to expand the regulatory potential of Mediator in transcriptional regulation.

All yeast strains used in this study were constructed from a protease-deficient yeast strain BJ2168 (American Type Culture Collection, 208277). Yeast gene manipulations, including TAP, hemagglutinin (HA), and Flag tagging, subunit deletion, and truncation, were carried out by using a standard polymerase chain reaction (PCR)based transformation protocol (66). To generate a TAP-tagged strain of CycC, the pBS1479 plasmid was used to introduce a TAP tag at the C terminus of the targeted protein. The pFA6a-Flag-kanMX6 and pHyg-AID-HA plasmids were used to introduce a 5xFLAG tag and 1 HA tag at the C terminus of Med12 and Med13, respectively. For subunit deletion or truncation, a PCR-amplified KanMX6 or Hyg cassette was used to replace either the entirety of an open reading frame or a specific region. The tagged yeast strains were confirmed by Western blot analysis. The strains with subunit deletion or truncation were verified by DNA sequencing. Yeast strains used in this study are listed in table S1.

DNA fragments encoding residues 1 to 105, 106 to 419, 420 to 596, 597 to 789, 789 to 1335, and 1336 to 1427 of yeast Med12 were generated by PCR amplification using full-length Med12 DNA as a template and ligated into pGEX6P-1. The I45R, K52P, G53D, E73A, and I89D mutants were generated using the pGEX6P-1-Med12-(1105) WT plasmid as a template. All constructs were verified by DNA sequencing. WT and mutants of Med12-(1105), fused to the C terminus of glutathione S-transferase (GST) protein, were expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) by addition of IPTG (isopropyl--d-thiogalactopyranoside) at a final concentration of 1 mM for 3 hours at 37C. After induction, E. coli cells were harvested and lysed by sonication in buffer A [1 phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (pH 7.4), 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, and 0.1% NP-40] containing protease inhibitors (Roche). The lysate was clarified by high-speed centrifugation at 20,000 rpm for 30 min using a Beckman 45 Ti rotor, and the resulting supernatant was incubated with glutathione Sepharose 4B beads (GE Healthcare) for 30 min at 4C. Beads were washed three times using buffer A. Proteins were eluted by buffer A containing 10 mM glutathione and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Purified proteins were subjected to the following kinase assay experiments. For GST pull-down assays, each of the Med12 fragments or mutants, fused to the C terminus of GST protein, was expressed in E. coli BL21(DE3) followed by the procedure as described below.

Yeast cells of CycC-TAP/Med12/Med13 from 20 liters of 2 YPD (yeast extract, peptone, and dextrose) medium were used to obtain cell extract that contains endogenous Cdk8/CycC proteins. To examine the interaction between Cdk8/CycC and Med12 fragments, lysates of E. coli cells from 50 ml of LB medium expressing GST alone, GST-Med12-(1105), GST-Med12-(106419), GST-Med12-(420596), GST-Med12-(597789), GST-Med12-(7891335), or GST-Med12-(13361427) were clarified by high-speed centrifugation. Each supernatant was incubated with 20 l of glutathione Sepharose 4B beads (GE Healthcare) in buffer A containing protease inhibitors for 30 min at 4C. The bead resin was washed three times with buffer A followed by the addition of 1 ml of yeast cell extract (0.5 mg/ml; CycC-TAP/Med12/Med13) and then incubated for 30 min at 4C. The resin was washed five times using buffer A and then eluted using 50 l of elution buffer A containing 10 mM glutathione. The eluates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using anti-GST antibodies (GenScript, A0086640) and antiprotein A antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich, P1291). The same procedure was performed as described above to analyze the interaction between Cdk8/CycC and wild type or mutants (E42A, I45R, L46R, K52P, G53D, E73A, or I89D) of GST-Med12-(1105).

pFastBac Dual plasmids carrying WT or mutant (S210E, A227R, or F235E in CycC or D410R or I449E in Cdk8) yeast Cdk8-FLAG/CycC-6xHis were transformed into DH10Bac competent cells (Invitrogen). The isolated recombinant bacmid DNAs from white colonies were used for transfection of Sf9 insect cells. After three rounds of viral amplification, high-titer baculoviruses (P3) were used for infection of High Five cells (Invitrogen). After 48 hours after infection, 50 ml of cells was harvested and lysed with binding buffer B [20 mM Hepes (pH 7.5), 300 mM NaCl, 0.1% NP-40, 0.1 mM EDTA, 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, and cOmplete protease inhibitors (Roche)] using a dounce homogenizer at 4C. Lysates were clarified by high-speed centrifugation at 20,000 rpm for 30 min. Supernatants containing WT or mutant yeast Cdk8-FLAG/CycC-6xHis were subjected to FLAG immunoprecipitation (IP) for 1 hour at 4C in buffer B. The FLAG bead resin was washed three times with buffer B followed by the addition of 1 ml of E. coli cell extract [0.5 mg/ml; GST or GST-Med12-(1105)] and then incubated for 1 hour at 4C. The resin was washed five times using buffer B and then eluted using 50 l of elution buffer B containing 1 FLAG peptide (200 g/ml). The eluates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using anti-GST antibodies (GenScript, A0086640), antiFLAG M2 antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich, F1804), and anti-His antibodies (R&D Systems, MAB050).

The CTD of yeast RNAPII (residues 1535 to 1733) with a C-terminal 6 His-tag was fused to the C terminus of GST. GST-CTD-His6 was expressed in E. coli and purified using glutathione Sepharose 4B beads (GE Healthcare) following standard procedures. CKM and Cdk8/CycC proteins were purified from CycC-TAP and CycC-TAP/Med12/Med13 yeast cells, respectively, by ammonium sulfate precipitation and TAP purification procedures, as described (7). Purified Cdk8/CycC was confirmed by MS showing absence of Med12 and Med13 (data S2). Purified CKM (100 ng) or Cdk8/CycC (25 ng) was incubated at 30C for 30 min in kinase buffer (100 l) containing 1 PBS (pH 7.4), 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM ATP, and purified GST-CTD-His6 substrate. Reactions were terminated by addition of SDS sample buffer. The samples were processed by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by Western blotting using anti-His antibodies (R&D Systems, MAB050), anti-GST antibodies (GenScript, A0086640), and anti-CBP (Calmodulin Binding Protein) antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich, 07482). The antibody that recognizes phosphorylated Ser5 of CTD (GenScript, A10634) was used to detect CTD phosphorylation. To assay effects of Med12N on kinase activity of Cdk8/CycC, reactions were carried with 60 ng of purified Cdk8/CycC and 250 or 1 g of purified GST-Med12-(1105) at 30C for 30 min in kinase buffer (100 l) containing 1 PBS (pH 7.4), 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM ATP, and purified GST-CTD-His6 substrate. To assay effects of Med12 mutants on kinase activity of Cdk8/CycC, we incubated 60 ng of purified Cdk8/CycC with 600 ng of purified WT, I45R, K52P, G53D, E73A, or I89D GST-Med12-(1105) in the same kinase reaction buffer (100 l) for 30 min at 30C. The reactions were terminated and analyzed by the same procedure as described above.

Yeast cells of BJ2168, CycC-TAP/Med12-5FLAG/Med13-HA, and CycC-TAP/Med12(13451427)-5FLAG/Med13-HA from 50 ml of cultures were harvested by centrifugation (4000g, 10 min, 4C). Harvested cells were washed twice with Milli-Q H2O, resuspended in 1 ml of binding buffer [20 mM Hepes (pH 7.6), 500 mM NaCl, 0.1% NP-40, 5 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, 0.5 mM EDTA, and protease inhibitors], and lysed using BeadBeater for 5 min at 4C. Cell lysates were then centrifuged at 38,000 rpm for 30 min using a Beckman SW60 Ti rotor. Supernatants were collected and subjected to IP using 20 l of IgG-Sepharose resin (GE Healthcare) for 1 hour of binding at 4C in the binding buffer. After binding, reactions were washed five times using 0.5 ml of binding buffer without protease inhibitors and followed by tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease cleavage for 1 hour at 20C. The elutes were processed by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by Western blotting using anti-HA antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich, 11867423001), antiFlag M2 antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich, F1804), and anti-CBP antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich, 07482).

CycC-TAPtagged yeast cells were grown in 50 liters of 2 YPD medium. Cells were harvested, washed, and frozen using liquid nitrogen followed by a blending process. Whole-cell extract was prepared starting from 800 g of broken-cell powder as described (5). Briefly, lysed cells were resuspended in purification buffer [100 mM tris-HCl (pH 7.8), 500 mM ammonium sulfate, 2 mM EDTA, 5 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, and protease inhibitors] followed by ammonium sulfate precipitation. The pellet containing CKM was dissolved using immunoglobulin G (IgG) binding buffer [25 mM Hepes (pH 7.4), 200 mM NaCl, 0.5 mM EDTA, 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, 0.01% NP-40, and protease inhibitors] followed by high-speed centrifugation at 42,000 rpm for 30 min using a Beckman 50.2 Ti rotor. The supernatant was incubated with 4 ml of IgG-Sepharose beads (GE Healthcare) for 4 hours at 4C. After incubation, the column was washed with buffer [25 mM Hepes (pH 7.4), 200 mM NaCl, 0.5 mM EDTA, 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, 0.01% NP-40, and 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT)] followed by the addition of TEV protease incubated overnight at 4C. The CKM was then eluted in buffer [25 mM Hepes (pH 7.4), 200 mM NaCl, 0.5 mM EDTA, 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, and 0.01% NP-40] followed by ion exchange Q chromatography. The peak fractions were collected and concentrated (Vivaspin, 50 kDa, GE Healthcare) for preparation of cryo-EM specimens.

Briefly, 3.0 l of WT CKM (~1 mg/ml) in buffer [25 mM Hepes (pH 7.4), 200 mM NaCl, and 0.005% NP-40] were directly applied to grow discharged 400-mesh C-flat holey carbon grids (EMS) with 2 m by 1 m holes. After incubation for 10 s, each grid was blotted for 3 to 4 s at 4C with 100% humidity and vitrified in liquid ethane using a Vitrobot Mark IV (FEI). The grids were imaged on a 300-kV Titan Krios electron microscope (FEI) using a GIF Quantum K2 direct electron detector (Gatan) operating in counting mode. Images were automatically collected at 0.8- to 3.5-m underfocus values with a nominal pixel size of 1.07 per pixel using EPU (FEI). Each image was exposed for 8 s with a total dose of approximately 65 electrons/2, which was fractioned into 40 frames. MotionCor2 was used to align frames (67). The parameters of contrast transfer function (CTF) for each image were estimated using the program Gctf (68). Images with an estimated resolution better than 7 and underfocus values between 0.8 and 3.5 m were selected, resulting in 15,075 micrographs (table S2). An initial particle picking was carried out using template-free picking on ~1000 micrographs followed by 2D clustering in RELION (69). Five of 2D class averages showing different views of CKM were used as templates to perform template-based picking on the 15,075 micrographs using Gautomatch (70), resulting in a total of 815,542 images. 2D clustering in cryoSPARC (71) was carried out to obtain a stack of 230,748 images that was used to generate initial 3D models of CKM. 3D classification was carried out in RELION (69) to identify a set of 138,178 images that was run through 3D refinement, Bayesian polishing, and CTF refinement to obtain a 3D map of CKM at 4.4- resolution. For Kinase- and Central-lobes of the CKM, the 138,178 images were further 3D classified and refined with a focused mask that covered both lobes, resulting in a final map of Kinase/Central-lobes at 3.8- resolution. For the H-lobe of CKM, we also started from the 138,178 images and performed 3D classification with a mask that only covered the H-lobe using cryoSPARC and RELION (69, 71). A final stack of 36,691 images were selected to run 3D refinement with the same mask, resulting in a final H-lobe map at 4.9- resolution. The resolutions of final 3D maps were estimated using gold-standard Fourier shell correlation curves with 0.143 criteria (72). RELION was used to calculate local resolutions. An image analysis procedure for the cryo-EM data of CKM is shown in fig. S1.

To build the CKM atomic model, we started by rigid-body fitting the x-ray structure of human CDK8/CycC [Protein Data Bank (PDB ID): 3RGF] (38) into the cryo-EM map of Kinase/Central-lobes using Chimera (73). The model building of yeast Cdk8/CycC was facilitated by sequence alignments of Cdk8/CycC between yeast and human. The rest portion of the Kinase/Central-lobes map was of sufficient quality for ab initio model building for the N- and C-terminal regions, and HEAT-1 domain of Med12, and Med13, facilitated by secondary structure predictions from PHYRE2 web server (74). For model building of the H-lobe, the main-chain trajectory of Med12 HEAT domains (2 to 5) was able to be traced in the map. Alanine residues were assigned to this model. The model building and adjustments were done using Coot (75). Refinement of the Kinase/Central and H models against their corresponding cryo-EM maps were done by using the real-space refinement in Phenix (76). Both models built from two cryo-EM maps were combined to obtain an overall CKM model. In the final CKM model, amino acids for Cdk8 (1 to 47, 97 to 173, 190 to 194, 372 to 374, and 490 to 555), CycC (1, 46 to 56, 245 to 260, and 319 to 323), Med12 (1 to 3, 297 to 308, 1026 to 1068, and 1327 to 1343), and Med13 (1 to 4, 313 to 813, 1123 to 1141, and 1401 to 1420) were not built because of missing or poor densities. The connection that contains 17 missing residues (1327 to 1343) between Med12 HEAT-5 and Med12C is disordered with a distance of ~20 . The final overall model was validated using MolProbity (table S2) (76). All molecular graphic figures, including overall and local density maps, were made by Chimera or PyMOL.

The yeast CKM purified by ion exchange Q chromatography was dialyzed into a buffer containing 50 mM Hepes (pH 7.9), 200 mM NaCl, 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, 0.01% NP-40, and 10% glycerol. The protein sample was resuspended with a disuccinimidyl dibutyric urea (DSBU) cross-linker (6 mM final, Thermo Fisher Scientific) and incubated for 90 min on ice. The reaction was quenched with ammonium bicarbonate and further incubated for 30 min on ice. Cross-linked proteins were reduced with 10 mM DTT for 30 min at 30C, followed by alkylation with iodoacetamide (50 mM final, Sigma-Aldrich) for 30 min at 30C. The proteins were processed by S-Trap (ProtiFi) with its recommended protocol: with trypsin in 1:10 (w/w) enzyme-to-protein ratio for an hour at 30C. Eluted peptides were dried under vacuum and resuspended with the peptide fractionation elution buffer: LC-MS (liquid chromatographyMS)grade 70% (v/v) water, 30% (v/v) acetonitrile (ACN), and 0.1% (v/v) trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). Peptide fraction was performed on KTA pure 25 with Superdex 30 Increase 3.2/300 (GE Healthcare) at a flow rate of 30 l min1 of the elution buffer with a 100-l fraction volume. Fractions containing enriched cross-linked peptides, which were empirically determined by the elution profile, were retained and dried under vacuum and resuspended with 0.1% (v/v) TFA containing LC-MSgrade water for MS analysis. Each fraction was analyzed on a Q Exactive HF mass spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) coupled with Dionex UltiMate 3000 UHPLC system (Thermo Fischer Scientific) with an in-house C18 column. Half of each sample amount was injected for the analysis and separated on a 90-min gradient: mobile phase A [99.9% water with 0.1% formic acid (Sigma-Aldrich)]; mobile phase B (80% ACN with 0.1% formic acid); starting 5% B, increased to 45% B for 90 min, then kept B constant at 90% for 5 min, and sharply decreased to 5% B for 5 min for re-equilibration of the column with the constant flow rate set to 400 nl min1. The data-dependent acquisition method was set as follows: full MS resolution of 120,000; MS1 Automatic Gain Control (AGC) target of 1 106; MS1 maximum injection time (IT) of 200 ms; scan range of 300 to 1800; data-dependent tandem MS (MS/MS) resolution of 30,000; MS/MS AGC target of 2 105; MS2 maximum IT of 300 ms; fragmentation was enforced by higher-energy collisional dissociation with stepped collision energy with 25, 27, and 30; loop count top of 12; isolation window of 1.5; fixed first mass of 130; MS2 minimum AGC target of 800; charge exclusion: unassigned,1, 2, 3, 8, and >8; peptide match off; exclude isotope on; dynamic exclusion of 45 s. Raw files were converted to mgf format with TurboRawToMGF 2.0.8 (77): Precursor mass weight range of 300 to 10,000 Da and all default removal options were off. Searches for cross-linked peptides were performed by MeroX 2.0.0.5 (78) with the default setting for DSBU with the following minor modifications: mass limit from 300 to 10,000 Da, minimum charge (MS1) set to 4, apply prescore and score cutoff to 10, and false discovery rate (FDR) cutoff set to 1%. All search results from each fractions MS acquisition was combined and filtered by recalculated FDR at 1%. Redundant cross-linked pairs were sorted by the main score, and the top hit was chosen for the final report table and mapping onto the structure in Chimera (73) with Xlink Analyzer plugin (79).

Preparation of the model protein structure began with a cryo-EM structure of yeast CDK8-CycC-Med12N that contained some disconnected outer-loop regions that were remote from our areas of interest. To obtain an intact structure of the complex for molecular dynamics simulation, we used the online homology model builder SWISS-MODEL (80) with human CDK8-CycC structure (PDB ID: 5XS2 (81)] as a template. For the simulations of mutant Med12N, we used the Swiss PDB Viewer program (82) to perform the mutations, which selects the most energetically favorable rotamers of the mutated residue side chains. Molecular dynamics simulations were prepared and carried out by the Amber18 molecular dynamics package (83) using the ff14SB force field for proteins (84). All systems were solvated with a rectangular box of explicit TIP3P water extending 12 beyond the solute edges. Explicit Cl ions were added only to neutralize the overall system charge. Systems were minimized in three steps, starting with hydrogen atoms only, then protein side chains, and, lastly, the entire structure, for 500, 5000, and 5000 steps, respectively. This was followed by isothermic-isobaric (NPT) ensemble equilibration in 50-K increments from 100 to 298 K, first for water only and then for the entire system, for 200 ps at each temperature. All production molecular dynamics simulations were performed in the NPT ensemble at 298 K using the Langevin thermostat for 500 ns with a 2-fs time step. A 12- cutoff distance was used for direct nonbonded energy calculations, and long-range electrostatics were calculated by the particle mesh Ewald method. The SHAKE algorithm was used to constrain water hydrogen atoms. Raw trajectories were saved every 2 ps and then processed and resaved every 20 ps using Ambers cpptraj (85) for analysis.

I. Y. B.-S. D. A. Case, S. R. Brozell, D. S. Cerutti, T. E. Cheatham III, V. W. D. Cruzeiro, T. A. Darden, R. E. Duke, D. Ghoreishi, M. K. Gilson, H. Gohlke, A. W. Goetz, D. Greene, R. Harris, N. Homeyer, Y. Huang, S. Izadi, A. Kovalenko, T. Kurtzman, T. S. Lee, S. LeGrand, P. Li, C. Lin, J. Liu, T. Luchko, R. Luo, D. J. Mermelstein, K. M. Merz, Y. Miao, G. Monard, C. Nguyen, H. Nguyen, I. Omelyan, A. Onufriev, F. Pan, R. Qi, D. R. Roe, A. Roitberg, C. Sagui, S. Schott-Verdugo, J. Shen, C. L. Simmerling, J. Smith, R. Salomon- Ferrer, J. Swails, R. C. Walker, J. Wang, H. Wei, R. M. Wolf, X. Wu, L. Xiao, D. M. York, P. A. Kollman, AMBER 2018 (University of California, San Francisco, 2018).

Acknowledgments: We thank F. Asturias for helpful discussions and critical reading of the manuscript. We thank K. Morano, N. Kim, and P. Christie for providing a Med13 yeast strain, a yeast pNK150 plasmid, and two E. coli expression plasmids, respectively. We thank T. Otomo for providing a TEV protease expression plasmid. We thank the Electron Cryo-Microscopy Core Facility of the UTHealth McGovern Medical School for cryo-EM data collection. We thank MS facilities at the University of Pennsylvania and the UTHealth for the XL-MS analysis and protein identification, respectively. Funding: This work was supported by the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas, grant number 13127 to CPRIT Scholar in Cancer Research, K.-L.T., and the Welch Foundation (AU-2050-20200401) and U.S. National Institutes of Health grants CA196539, GM110174, and AI118891 (B.A.G.), HD087417 and HD094378 (T.G.B.), R01 GM124320 (K.N.), R01 GM123233 (K.M.), R01 GM-109045 (C.-e.C.), and S10 OD023592-01 and T32 GM133398-01 (H.J.K.). Y.-C.L. was supported, in part, by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, R.O.C. under grant number MOST 108-2917-I-564-025. Author contributions: Y.-C.L., T.-C.C., and K.-L.T. performed all experiments related to high-resolution cryo-EM analysis, including cryo-EM grid preparation, cryo-EM data collection and processing, and model building and refinement. Y.-C.L., T.-C.C., G.L., S.-F.C., and L.S. executed yeast cell culture and CKM purification. H.J.K., K.M., and B.A.G. designed and performed XL-MS analysis of the CKM. Y.-C.L. and T.-C.C. performed expression and purification of recombinant Med12 proteins. T.C. and C.-e.C. performed molecular dynamics simulation experiments. Y.-C.L., T.-C.C., and T.G.B. designed and performed binding assay and kinase activity measurement. Y.-C.L., T.-C.C., H.J.K., T.C., C.-e.C., K.N., K.M., B.A.G., T.G.B., and K.-L.T. discussed, interpreted results, and wrote the manuscript. Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Data and materials availability: Cryo-EM maps of the yeast CKM, Kinase/Central-lobes, and H-lobe were deposited to the EMDataBank with accession numbers EMD-22991, EMD-22989, and EMD-22990, respectively. Their corresponding atomic models were deposited to the RCSB Protein Data Bank with accession numbers 7KPX, 7KPV, and 7KPW, respectively. All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

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Structure and noncanonical Cdk8 activation mechanism within an Argonaute-containing Mediator kinase module - Science Advances

2021 CSUPERB Awards Honor the Best in Biological Sciences – Newswise

Newswise Hundreds of CSU students, faculty, alumni, administrators and partners gathered virtually for the 33rd annualCSU Biotechnology Symposiumon Jan. 7 10, 2021, to share how they are advancing innovation in the life sciences.

Organized by theCSUProgram for Education and Research in Biotechnology(CSUPERB), the symposium showcases students and faculty who reflect the best of research, teaching and service in the biological sciences.

Along with multiple presentations and workshops from faculty, CSUPERB alumni and students over four days, the symposium honored a handful of exemplary peopleas part of its annual awards program. Congratulations to the 2021 award winners:

Shaina Nguyen | Cal State Fullerton

Poster Title:Structure Activity Relationship Study of Indole-based Scaffolds for the Inhibition of the West Nile Virus NS2B-NS3"

Faculty Mentor:Nicholas Salzameda, Ph.D., associate professor of chemistry & biochemistry

The award is named in honor of Dean Glenn Nagel, a biochemistry professor at Cal State Fullerton who later worked to promote high-quality undergraduate research as Dean of Natural Science and Mathematics at Cal State Long Beach. The Nagel Award fosters excellence in undergraduate student research.

Angelo Niosi | Sacramento State

Poster Title:The Autism-Associated Chromatin Modifier, Chromodomain Helicase DNA Binding Protein 8, Affects Gastrointestinal Phenotypes in Drosophila melanogaster"

Faculty Mentor:Kimberly Mulligan, Ph.D., associate professor of biological sciences

Named in honor of San Francisco State Professor Don Eden, a tireless participant in CSUPERB governance, the award celebrates the work of outstanding graduate student researchers.

See the entire list ofstudent research posterssubmitted for the 2021 symposium.

Rowen Jane Odango | CSUN

Graduate student researcher, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry

Chloe Welch | Sacramento State

Graduate student researcher, Department of Biological Sciences

Named in honor of San Francisco State Professor Crellin Pauling, a co-founder of CSUPERB who made extraordinary contributions to the training of teachers and scientists, the award acknowledges outstanding student teachers who inspire future science and engineering educators.

Both students exemplify the Pauling Award, demonstrating a deep awareness and appreciation of the importance of educating the future generation in making informed and fact-based decisions. Odango, who is also a2020-21 CSU Sally Casanova Pre-Doctoral Scholar, is recognized for combining her passion for teaching with her background as an underrepresented minority within STEM to help diverse students develop effectivescience communicationskills. Welch is an excellent educator with experience teaching at different levels, mentoring and training students to help them reach their goals.

Katherine McReynolds, Ph.D. | Sacramento State

Professor, Department of ChemistryCollege of Natural Sciences & Mathematics

Named in honor of Dr. Anthony Andreoli, a longtime chemistry professor at Cal State LA, the award celebrates CSU faculty members for outstanding contributions to the development of biotechnology programs. Dr. McReynolds, a Cal Poly San Luis Obispo alumna, is recognized for her more than 15 years of service developing and supporting biotechnology programs with CSUPERB, where she has supervised dozens of undergraduate and master's students in their research projects.Read more about McReynolds' achievements.

Jonathan Kelber, Ph.D. | CSUN

Associate Professor, Department of BiologyCollege of Science and Mathematics

The Faculty Research Award celebrates CSU instructors who have built outstanding biotechnology related research programs. Dr. Kelber, a Cal Poly Pomona alumnus, is recognized for his groundbreaking cancer research as the director of his National Institutes of Health (NIH)Developmental Oncogene Laboratorywithin CSUN's Department of Biology. Kelber is providing opportunities for meaningful, hands-on research experience to many undergraduate and graduate students through his lab, inspiring the next generation of scientists.Learn more about Kelber's achievements and seehis 2017 profileon Calstate.edu

Learn more aboutCSUPERBand its important role in preparinghighly skilled graduates for California's growing biotechnology workforce.

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2021 CSUPERB Awards Honor the Best in Biological Sciences - Newswise

Scientists develop a cheaper method that might help create fuels from plants – The Ohio State University News

Scientists have figured out a cheaper, more efficient way to conduct a chemical reaction at the heart of many biological processes, which may lead to better ways to create biofuels from plants.

Scientists around the world have been trying for years to create biofuels and other bioproducts more cheaply; this study, published todayin the journal Scientific Reports, suggests that it is possible to do so.

The process of converting sugar to alcohol has to be very efficient if you want to have the end product be competitive with fossil fuels, said Venkat Gopalan, a senior author on the paper and professor of chemistry and biochemistry at The Ohio State University. The process of how to do that is well-established, but the cost makes it not competitive, even with significant government subsidies. This new development is likely to help lower the cost.

At the heart of their discovery: A less expensive and simpler method to create the helper molecules that allow carbon in cells to be turned into energy. Those helper molecules (which chemists call cofactors) are nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and its derivative (NADPH). These cofactors in their reduced forms have long been known to be a key part of turning sugar from plants into butanol or ethanol for fuels. Both cofactors also play an important role in slowing the metabolism of cancer cells and have been a target of treatment for some cancers.

But NADH and NADPH are expensive.

If you can cut the production cost in half, that would make biofuels a very attractive additive to make flex fuels with gasoline, said Vish Subramaniam, a senior author on the paper and recently retired professor of engineering at Ohio State. Butanol is often not used as an additive because its not cheap. But if you could make it cheaply, suddenly the calculus would change. You could cut the cost of butanol in half, because the cost is tied up in the use of this cofactor.

To create these reduced cofactors in the lab, the researchers built an electrode by layering nickel and copper, two inexpensive elements. That electrode allowed them to recreate NADH and NADPH from their corresponding oxidized forms. In the lab, the researchers were able to use NADPH as a cofactor in producing an alcohol from another molecule, a test they did intentionally to show that the electrode they built could help convert biomass plant cells to biofuels. This work was performed by Jonathan Kadowaki and Travis Jones, two mechanical and aerospace engineering graduate students in the Subramaniam lab, and Anindita Sengupta, a postdoctoral researcher in the Gopalan lab.

But because NADH and NADPH are at the heart of so many energy conversion processes inside cells, this discovery could aid other synthetic applications.

Subramaniams previous work showed that electromagnetic fields can slow the spread of some breast cancers. He retired from Ohio State on Dec. 31.

This finding is connected, he said: It might be possible for scientists to more easily and affordably control the flow of electrons in some cancer cells, potentially slowing their growth and ability to metastasize.

Subramaniam also has spent much of his later scientific career exploring if scientists could create a synthetic plant, something that would use the energy of the sun to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. On a large enough scale, he thought, such a creation could potentially reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and help address climate change.

Ive always been interested in that question of, Can we make a synthetic plant? Can we make something that can solve this global warming problem with carbon dioxide? Subramaniam said. If its impractical to do it with plants because we keep destroying them via deforestation, are there other inorganic ways of doing this?

This discovery could be a step toward that goal: Plants use NADPH to turn carbon dioxide into sugars, which eventually become oxygen through photosynthesis. Making NADPH more accessible and more affordable could make it possible to produce an artificial photosynthesis reaction.

But its most likely and most immediate application is for biofuels.

That the researchers came together for this scientific inquiry was rare: Biochemists and engineers dont often conduct joint laboratory research.

Gopalan and Subramaniam met at a brainstorming session hosted by Ohio States Center for Applied Plant Sciences (CAPS), where they were told to think about big sky ideas that might help solve some of societys biggest problems. Subramaniam told Gopalan about his work with electrodes and cells, and the next thing we knew, we were discussing this project, Gopalan said. We certainly would not have talked to each other if it were not for the CAPS workshop.

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Scientists develop a cheaper method that might help create fuels from plants - The Ohio State University News

[Full text] A Differential Study into Body Fat in Healthy and Hypertensive Populat | DMSO – Dove Medical Press

Introduction

With the development of the economy, peoples eating habits and lifestyles have changed.1 The intake of sugar has generally increased, while the consumption of high-fat food has significantly risen, resulting in a significant increase in average body fat.1 This has become an important factor in the notable growth in the incidence of chronic diseases, such as hypertension, in recent years.13 However, the evaluation methods and evaluation indexes for fat mass in vivo have not improved, which seriously affects the options available for intervention and their effects. It also has an impact on the timing of any intervention and can even result in it being excessive as well.3 Therefore, this study aims to determine whether there is a statistically significant difference between the healthy population and the hypertensive population in the anthropometric indexes widely used at present. These include the BMI, waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio and bioelectric impedance (body fat percentage and visceral fat area).

Between January 2016 and January 2017, a total of 895 people, who were all Han Chinese, were screened and selected as study subjects, according to certain inclusion and exclusion criteria. These subjects then visited the Physical Examination Center in Weifang, Shandong, China, for physical examinations and body composition analyses. According to the blood pressure and biochemical examination results, these study subjects were divided into four groups: a healthy male group, a hypertensive male group, a healthy female group, and a hypertensive female group.

The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in 2013). The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Weifang Peoples Hospital and informed consent was given by all the patients.

Subjects were 18 to 60 years of age, with a mean age of 43.12 9.34 years. Those from the healthy male group and the healthy female group received a biochemical examination after >6 hours of fasting. The results revealed that their fasting blood glucose, triglyceride, blood pressure, uric acid and other indexes were normal, and no fatty liver was reported. Subjects who met the criteria for the diagnosis of hypertension were divided into the male hypertensive group and the female hypertensive group. Transient elevated blood pressure was ruled out by their medical history.

The exclusion criteria were as follows: subjects who were <18 years old and >60 years old, and received a physical examination; subjects suffering from endocrine obesity and diabetes; pregnant women; subjects who were undergoing endocrine therapy; professional athletes; subjects who were losing weight with sizeable and rapid changes in body fat.

The criteria used for the diagnosis of hypertension were those recommended in the Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Hypertension 2005, and were as follows: systolic blood pressure 140 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure 90 mmHg.

On the day of the physical examination, the subjects were required to wear light clothing and have an empty stomach. Their height, weight, waist circumference and hip circumference were measured, and their blood pressure was taken after a five-minute rest. The right arm alone was measured with an Omron electronic sphygmomanometer, and the measurement was not repeated that day. The subjects of the experimental groups were those who were diagnosed with hypertension.

The body composition analyzer Inbody720 of Biospace was used to obtain the body fat percentage and visceral fat area of the subjects by importing 100 A and 500 A of constant current at five frequencies (5, 50, 250 and 500 kHz), in order to detect the electrical impedance of each part of the body, obtain the body fat mass, and automatically calculate the body fat percentage and visceral fat area data.

A comparison was made between the results of the healthy male group and the hypertensive male group, the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group, the healthy male group and the healthy female group, and the hypertensive male group and the hypertensive female group. The results were statistically analyzed using a t-test and SPSS 18.0 statistical software, and P<0.05 was considered statistically significant.

These subjects were divided into four groups, according to the blood pressure and biochemical examination results: healthy male group (n=273), hypertensive male group (n=254), healthy female group (n=308), and hypertensive female group (n=60). The healthy male group was 41.309.48 years old, the hypertensive male group was 45.487.99 years old, the healthy female group was 41.269.36 years old, and the hypertensive female group was 50.977.11 years old.

As presented in Tables 1 and 2, the study results showed that the difference in waist circumference between the healthy male group and the hypertensive male group was the only statistically significant difference (P<0.05). The difference in waist-to-hip ratio was statistically significant (P<0.05) between the healthy male group and the healthy female group, and the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group. The difference in BMI was only statistically significant (P<0.05) between the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group. The difference in body fat area was not statistically significant (P>0.05) between any of these groups. The difference in visceral fat area was statistically significant (P<0.05) between the healthy male group and the hypertensive male group, the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group, and the healthy male group and the healthy female group.

Table 1 The Means of the Indexes and the 95% Confidence Intervals of the Different Gender Groups

Table 2 The Means of the Indexes and the 95% Confidence Intervals of the Different Healthy Groups

With the development of the social economy and the improvement of living standards, peoples diets and lifestyles have changed a great deal, and their body fat mass has sharply increased, followed by a significant increase in the incidence of various chronic diseases represented by hypertension. Therefore, the early detection of excessive body fat and the use of effective intervention can significantly reduce the incidence of chronic diseases, such as hypertension. This is why in clinical practice medical staff often ask patients to reduce their body fat. However, to make a difference it is necessary to have appropriate methods to assess body fat levels and changes. Whilst the total body fat mass of the population has risen, the evaluation methods and evaluation indexes for fat mass in vivo still remain in the past, which seriously affects the options for intervention, the timing of intervention, and the evaluation of intervention effects. Therefore, this study is investigating the anthropometric indexes widely used at present, the BMI, waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio and bioelectric impedance (body fat percentage and visceral fat area), in order to provide some basis for the application of relevant indexes in the future.

The waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio and visceral fat area mainly reflect the distribution of fat in the abdomen. In the present study, the difference in waist circumference was statistically significant (P<0.05) only between the healthy male group and the hypertensive male group. The difference in waist-to-hip ratio was statistically significant (P<0.05) between the healthy male group and the healthy female group, and the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group. This indicates that waist circumference has considerable significance in the evaluation of male abdominal fat, while the waist-to-hip ratio has great significance in the evaluation of female abdominal fat. Previous studies have suggested that abdominal obesity is more likely to lead to chronic diseases, such as hypertension,47 and the results of the present study also support this point of view. However, it has also been found that the evaluation results for waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio are not consistent. Further studies are also needed to determine the critical values of waist circumference, in order to differentiate them according to gender.

BMI is the most commonly used index to judge overweight or obesity. However, the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05) only between the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group, which indicates that BMI has a weak significance in assessing body fat in different populations.810 In addition, it has been noted that BMI cannot distinguish muscle from fat, which may lead to misjudging subjects with well-developed muscles as obese, or with muscle-reducing obesity as normal.1113 Other indicators need to be used in combination to avoid misjudgment. The present study has also revealed that most of the study subjects with hypertension had a BMI within 2428 kg/m2. Determining whether the differentiation of available BMI as being overweight or obese would affect the education and prevention of chronic diseases, such as hypertension, is worthy of further discussion.

The body fat percentage measured by the proportion of body fat, and the difference of the index was not statistically significant (P>0.05) between the groups in the present study, which is not completely consistent with previous studies.14,15 Furthermore, the difference in gender was not statistically significant in the present study. This may be because the sample size of the present study is not large enough, or because the previous study data were slightly different from the actual physical condition of these subjects at the present stage. Thus, the significance of body fat percentage in the evaluation of body fat in different populations needs to be further studied.

The fat condition of abdominal organs was assessed by measuring the visceral fat area, and the differences were statistically significant (P<0.05) between the healthy male group and the hypertensive male group, the healthy female group and the hypertensive female group, and the healthy male group and the healthy female group. This is basically consistent with previous studies,16 indicating its usefulness in assessing fat conditions in different populations. In addition, the present study showed that there were differences in the visceral fat area between healthy men and healthy women, indicating that it may be necessary to distinguish a separate critical value for each gender.

The present study has a number of limitations. The ages of the subjects in the present study ranged from 18 to 60 years so further studies are needed to determine whether the conclusions are also applicable to the young (<18 years old) and the elderly (>60 years old). In addition, local diet and customs may have some impact on these research results. Therefore, a multi-center study in different regions should be considered to further determine whether these five indexes can be used to evaluate the difference in body fat, and reconfirm the normal range and gender differentiation.

The analysis of the results of the present study shows a number of findings. First, the visceral fat area and waist circumference were not exactly the same, indicating that waist circumference cannot replace visceral fat area for evaluation. Second, the visceral fat area of men was consistent with the result for waist circumference, while that of women was inconsistent, indicating that the waist circumference of men may be more affected by the visceral fat condition than the waist circumference of women. In addition, the difference in fat distribution among men is greater than the total fat. It would also seem that evaluating the fat condition of the population using a single index showed less significance, and therefore the combined use of two or more indexes is preferable. Lastly, the available normal range and gender differentiation of the five indicators may no longer apply to the actual situation of the population under present socio-economic conditions.

We are particularly grateful to all the people who have given us help on our article.

There is no funding to report.

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

1. Kolanowski J. Obesity and hypertension: from pathophysiology to treatment. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 1999;23:142146. doi:10.1038/sj.ijo.0800794

2. Seravalle G, Grassi G. Obesity and hypertension. Pharmacol Res. 2017;122:17. doi:10.1016/j.phrs.2017.05.013

3. Mikhail N, Golub MS, Tuek ML. Obesity and hypertension. Prog Cardiovasc Dis. 1999;42:3958. doi:10.1016/S0033-0620(99)70008-3

4. Neovius M, Linn Y, Rossner S. BMI, waist-circumference and waist-hip-ratio as diagnostic tests for fatness in adolescents. Int J Obes (Lond). 2005;29:163169. doi:10.1038/sj.ijo.0802867

5. Zhan G, Dong L, Huayu H, et al. Body mass index, waist circumference, and waist-to-height ratio for prediction of multiple metabolic risk factors in Chinese elderly population. Sci Rep. 2018;10(8):385. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-18854-1

6. Savva SC, Lamnisos D, Kafatos AG. Predicting cardiometabolic risk: waist-to-height ratio or BMI: a meta-analysis. Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes. 2013;24:403419. doi:10.2147/DMSO.S34220

7. Yu Q, Pang B, Liu R, et al. Appropriate body mass index and waist-hip ratio cutoff points for overweight and obesity in adults of Northeast China. Iran J Public Health. 2017;46:10381045.

8. Romero-Corral A, Somers VK, Sierra-Johnson J, et al. Diagnostic performance of body mass index to detect obesity in patients with coronary artery disease. Eur Heart J. 2007;28:20872093. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehm243

9. Weatherald J, Huertas A, Boucly A, et al. The association between body mass index and obesity with survival in pulmonary arterial hypertension. Chest. 2018;154:872881. doi:10.1016/j.chest.2018.05.006

10. Zhang ZQ, Deng J, He LP, et al. Comparison of various anthropometric and body fat indices in identifying cardiometabolic disturbances in Chinese men and women. PLoS One. 2013;12. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0070893

11. Stenholm S, Harris TB, Rantanen T, et al. Sarcopenic obesity: definition,cause and consequences. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2008;1169311700.

12. Di Monaco M, Vallero F, Di Monaco R, et al. Prevalence of sarcopenia and its association with osteoporosis in 313 older women following a hip fracture. Arch Gerontol Geriatr. 2011;52:7174. doi:10.1016/j.archger.2010.02.002

13. Ruiz JR, Sui X, Lobelo F, et al. Association between muscular strength and mortality in men: prospective cohort study. BMJ. 2008;337:9295. doi:10.1136/bmj.a439

14. Van Gaal LF, Maggioni AP. Overweight, obesity, and outcomes: fat mass and beyond. Lancet. 2014;383:935936. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62076-0

15. Lavie CJ, De Schutter A, Patel DA, et al. Body composition and survival in stable coronary heart disease: impact of lean mass index and body fat in the obesity paradox. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2012;60:13741380. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2012.05.037

16. Chandra A, Neeland IJ, Berry JD, et al. The relationship of body mass and fat distribution with incident hypertension: observations from the Dallas Heart Study. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2014;64:9971002. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2014.05.057

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[Full text] A Differential Study into Body Fat in Healthy and Hypertensive Populat | DMSO - Dove Medical Press

Survey by the French Medicine Agency (ANSM) of the imaging protocol, detection rate, and safety of (68)Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT in the biochemical recurrence…

This article was originally published here

Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2021 Jan 8. doi: 10.1007/s00259-020-05086-1. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Despite growing evidence of a superior diagnostic performance of 68Ga-PSMA-11 over 18F-fluorocholine (FCH) PET/CT, the number of PET/CT centres able to label on site with gallium-68 is still currently limited. Therefore, patients with biochemical recurrence (BCR) of prostate cancer frequently undergo FCH as the 1st-line PET/CT. Actually, the positivity rate (PR) of a second-line PSMA-11 PET/CT in case of negative FCH PET/CT has only been reported in few short series, in a total of 185 patients. Our aims were to check (1) whether the excellent PR reported with PSMA-11 is also obtained in BCR patients whose recent FCH PET/CT was negative or equivocal; (2) in which biochemical and clinical context a high PSMA-11 PET/CT PR may be expected in those patients, in particular revealing an oligometastatic pattern; (3) whether among the various imaging protocols for PSMA-11 PET/CT used in France, one yields a significantly highest PR; (4) the tolerance of PSMA-11.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Six centres performed 68Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CTs during the first 3 years of its use in France. Prior to each PET/CT, the patients data were submitted prospectively for authorisation to ANSM, the French Medicine Agency. The on-site readings of 1084 PSMA-11 PET/CTs in BCR patients whose recent FCH PET/CTs resulted negative or equivocal were pooled and analysed.

RESULTS: (1) The overall PR was 68%; for a median serum PSA level (sPSA) of 1.7 ng/mL, an oligometastatic pattern (1-3 foci) was observed in 31% of the cases overall; (2) PR was significantly related to sPSA (from 41% if < 0.2 ng/mL to 81% if 2 ng/mL), to patients age, to initial therapy (64% if prostatectomy vs. 85% without prostatectomy due to frequent foci in the prostate fossa), to whether FCH PET/CT was negative or equivocal (PR = 62% vs. 82%), and to previous BCR (PR = 63% for 1st BCR vs. 72% in case of previous BCR); (3) no significant difference in PR was found according to the imaging protocol: injected activity, administration of a contrast agent and/or of furosemide, dose length product, one single or multiple time points of image acquisition; (4) no adverse event was reported after PSMA-11 injection, even associated with a contrast agent and/or furosemide.

CONCLUSION: Compared with the performance of PSMA-11 PET/CT in BCR reported independently of FCH PET/CT in 6 large published series (n > 200), the selection based on FCH PET/CT resulted in no difference of PSMA-11 PR for sPSA < 1 ng/mL but in a slightly lower PR for sPSA 1 ng/mL, probably because FCH performs rather well at this sPSA and very occult BCR was over-represented in our cohort. An oligometastatic pattern paving the way to targeted therapy was observed in one fourth to one third of the cases, according to the clinico-biochemical context of the BCR. Systematic dual or triple acquisition time points or administration of a contrast agent and/or furosemide did not bring a significant added value for PSMA-11 PET/CT positivity and should be decided on individual bases.

PMID:33416958 | DOI:10.1007/s00259-020-05086-1

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Survey by the French Medicine Agency (ANSM) of the imaging protocol, detection rate, and safety of (68)Ga-PSMA-11 PET/CT in the biochemical recurrence...

Birds Have a Mysterious ‘Quantum Sense’. For The First Time, Scientists Saw It in Action – ScienceAlert

Seeing our world through the eyes of a migratory bird would be a rather spooky experience. Something about their visual system allows them to 'see' our planet's magnetic field, a clever trick of quantum physics, and biochemistry that helps them navigate vast distances.

Now, for the first time ever, scientists from the University of Tokyo have directly observed a key reaction hypothesised to be behind birds', and many other creatures', talents for sensing the direction of the planet's poles.

Importantly, this is evidence of quantum physics directly affecting a biochemical reaction in a cell something we've long hypothesised but haven't seen in action before.

Using a tailor-made microscope sensitive to faint flashes of light, the team watched a culture of human cells containing a special light-sensitive material respond dynamically to changes in a magnetic field.

A cell's fluorescence dimming as a magnetic field passes over it. (Ikeya and Woodward, CC BY 4.0)

The change the researchers observed in the lab match just what would be expected if a quirky quantum effect was responsible for the illuminating reaction.

"We've not modified or added anything to these cells,"saysbiophysicist Jonathan Woodward.

"We think we have extremely strong evidence that we've observed a purely quantum mechanical process affecting chemical activity at the cellular level."

So how are cells, particularly human cells, capable of responding to magnetic fields?

While there are several hypotheses out there, many researchers think the ability is due to a unique quantum reaction involving photoreceptors called cryptochromes.

Cyrptochromes are found in the cells of many species and are involved in regulating circadian rhythms. In species of migratory birds, dogs, and other species, they're linked to the mysterious ability to sense magnetic fields.

In fact, while most of us can't see magnetic fields, our own cells definitelycontain cryptochromes.And there's evidence that even though it's not conscious, humans are actually still capable of detecting Earth's magnetism.

To see the reaction within cyrptochromes in action, the researchers bathed a culture of human cells containing cryptochromes in blue light caused them to fluoresce weakly. As they glowed, the team swept magnetic fields of various frequencies repeatedly over the cells.

They found that each time the magnetic field passed over the cells, their fluorescent dipped around 3.5 percent enough to show a direct reaction.

So how can a magnetic field affect a photoreceptor?

It all comes down to something called spin an innate property of electrons.

We already know that spin is significantly affected by magnetic fields. Arrange electrons in the right way around an atom, and collect enough of them together in one place, and the resulting mass of material can be made to move using nothing more than a weak magnetic field like the one that surrounds our planet.

This is all well and good if you want to make a needle for a navigational compass. But with no obvious signs of magnetically-sensitive chunks of material inside pigeon skulls, physicists have had to think smaller.

In 1975, a Max Planck Institute researcher named Klaus Schulten developed a theory on how magnetic fields could influence chemical reactions.

It involved something called a radical pair.

A garden-variety radical is an electron in the outer shell of an atom that isn't partnered with a second electron.

Sometimes these bachelor electrons can adopt a wingman in another atom to form a radical pair. The two stay unpaired but thanks to a shared history are considered entangled, which in quantum terms means their spins will eerily correspond no matter how far apart they are.

Since this correlation can't be explained by ongoing physical connections, it's purely a quantum activity, something even Albert Einstein considered 'spooky'.

In the hustle-bustle of a living cell, their entanglement will be fleeting. But even these briefly correlating spins should last just long enough to make a subtle difference in the way their respective parent atoms behave.

In this experiment, as the magnetic field passed over the cells, the corresponding dip in fluorescence suggests that the generation of radical pairs had been affected.

An interesting consequence of the research could be in how even weak magnetic fields could indirectly affect other biological processes. While evidence of magnetism affecting human health is weak, similar experiments as this could prove to be another avenue for investigation.

"The joyous thing about this research is to see that the relationship between the spins of two individual electrons can have a major effect on biology," says Woodward.

Of course, birds aren't the only animal to rely on our magnetosphere for direction. Species of fish, worms, insects, and even some mammals have a knack for it. We humans might even be cognitively affected by Earth's faint magnetic field.

Evolution of this ability could have delivered a number of vastlydifferent actionsbased on different physics.

Having evidence that at least one of them connects the weirdness of the quantum world with the behaviour of a living thing is enough to force us to wonder what other bits of biology arise from the spooky depths of fundamental physics.

This research was published in PNAS.

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Birds Have a Mysterious 'Quantum Sense'. For The First Time, Scientists Saw It in Action - ScienceAlert

Nanomedic Technologies Appoints John R. Harper, PhD, to Board of Directors – BioSpace

LOD, Israel, Jan. 6, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Nanomedic Technologies,a leader in Electrospun Healing Fiber (EHF) technology for wound healing and skin regeneration, today announced the appointment of John R. Harper, PhD, a globally renowned expert in extracellular matrix biochemistry, regenerative medicine, and wound healing, to the company's Board of Directors.

"I am pleased to join Nanomedic's Board of Directors at such an exciting time in the company's development as it continues to expand availability of its advanced wound care technology to wider healthcare markets," said Dr. Harper. "Nanomedic's pioneering Spincare solution has the potential to dramatically change the process of wound care treatment as we know it. I look forward to bringing my experience of regenerative medicine to Nanomedic to help push forward important and long-awaited changes in wound care."

With more than 35 years' of experience, Dr. Harper currently serves as a Senior Medical Scientist in the Medical Solutions Division of 3M Health Care, where he is responsible for early-stage discovery and innovation related to advanced wound care. Dr. Harper previously served as Chief Technology Officer for 3M affiliate KCI, where he was responsible for innovation and technology development at the company's Center for Advanced Research and Technology. He also served as Vice President of Clinical Development and Clinical Sciences at biotechnology company LifeCell Corporation. Dr. Harper earned his PhD in Biochemistry from the University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

"We are honored to welcome Dr. Harper to Nanomedic's Board of Directors," said Dr. Chen Barak, Chief Executive Officer of Nanomedic. "His expertise and global recognition in regenerative medicine and wound care will prove invaluable for Nanomedic and our commitment to radically change the paradigm of wound treatment to allow patients to heal faster with less impediment to their daily lives."

Nanomedic's flagship product, the Spincare Wound Care System, is the first and only CE-cleared commercialized portable electrospinning wound treatment device on the market. The hand-held Spincare system utilizes proprietary Electrospun Healing Fiber (EHF) technology to enable faster and pain-reduced healing through site-specific real time printing of a nanofibrous matrix directly on to a wound that bio-mimics the structure of the human extracellular matrix. The unique structure of the matrix can treat even the most severe and complicated wounds with just one application.

"Dr. Harper brings vast knowledge in our industry and globalstrategic experience to our Board of Directors, an important step forward as we expand access of our Spincare System throughout Europe and prepare to enter the U.S. market," said Chen Katz, Active Chairman of Nanomedic's Board of Directors. "Our unique technology provides an exciting personalized total therapy solution for wound healing and we look forward to introducing our Spincare System to many more healthcare facilities worldwide."

About Nanomedic

Nanomedic Technologies Ltd. is a medical therapeutics company focused on transforming wound care both within and outside of hospital settings. Specializing in research, development and distribution of its proprietary Electrospun Healing Fiber (EHF) technology, Nanomedic is advancing the standard of care and helping improve wound care across the healthcare continuum. Nanomedic'sflagship product, the Spincare System, is the first and only CE-cleared commercialized portable electrospinning wound treatment device on the market. Founded in 2018, Nanomedic Technologies Ltd. is headquartered in Lod, Israel.For more information, visit https://nanomedic.com/Follow Nanomedic on LinkedIn: Nanomedic Technologies

Media Contact:Ellie HansonFinn PartnersEllie.Hanson@finnpartners.com+972-54-467-6980

Nanomedic ContactGary Sagivgary@nanomedic.com+972 54 562 7083

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SOURCE Nanomedic Technologies

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Nanomedic Technologies Appoints John R. Harper, PhD, to Board of Directors - BioSpace

Immunomic Therapeutics’ CEO to present at the 13th Annual Biotech Showcase Digital Event – Business Wire

ROCKVILLE, Md.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Immunomic Therapeutics, Inc. (ITI), a privately held, Maryland-based biotechnology company, announced today that the company will present at the 13th Annual Biotech Showcase Digital Event, January 11-15, 2021. Chief Executive Officer at ITI, Dr. Bill Hearl, will present a talk titled, ITI-1000-A Novel Immunotherapy for GBM. Dr. Hearl will discuss ITIs investigational UNiversal Intracellular Targeted Expression (UNITE) platform and its application in immuno-oncology, specifically glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). ITIs technology platform has the potential to utilize the bodys natural biochemistry to develop a broad immune response and is currently being employed in a Phase II clinical trial as a cancer immunotherapy.

Presentation details are as follows:

Who: William Hearl, Ph.D., Founder and CEO of Immunomic Therapeutics

What: ITI-1000--A Novel Immunotherapy for GBM

About UNITE

ITIs investigational UNITE platform, or UNiversal Intracellular Targeted Expression, works by fusing target antigens with the Lysosomal Associated Membrane Protein, an endogenous protein in humans, for immune processing. In this way, ITIs vaccines (DNA or RNA) have the potential to utilize the bodys natural biochemistry to develop a broad immune response including antibody production, cytokine release and critical immunological memory. This approach could put UNITE technology at the crossroads of immunotherapies in a number of illnesses, including cancer, allergy and infectious diseases. UNITE is currently being employed in Phase II clinical trials as a cancer immunotherapy. ITI is also collaborating with academic centers and biotechnology companies to study the use of UNITE in cancer types of high mortality, including cases where there are limited treatment options like glioblastoma and acute myeloid leukemia. ITI believes that these early clinical studies may provide a proof of concept for UNITE therapy in cancer, and if successful, set the stage for future studies, including combinations in these tumor types and others. Preclinical data is currently being developed to explore whether LAMP nucleic acid constructs may amplify and activate the immune response in highly immunogenic tumor types and be used to create immune responses to tumor types that otherwise do not provoke an immune response.

About Immunomic Therapeutics, Inc.

Immunomic Therapeutics, Inc. (ITI) is a privately-held, clinical stage biotechnology company pioneering the development of vaccines through its investigational proprietary technology platform, UNiversal Intracellular Targeted Expression (UNITE), which is designed to utilize the bodys natural biochemistry to develop vaccines that have the potential to generate broad immune responses. The UNITE platform has a robust history of applications in various therapeutic areas, including infectious diseases, oncology, allergy and autoimmune diseases. ITI is primarily focused on applying the UNITE platform to oncology, where it could potentially have broad applications, including targeting viral antigens, cancer antigens, neoantigens and producing antigen-derived antibodies as biologics. In early 2020, an investment of over $60M by HLB Co., LTD, a global pharmaceutical company, enabled ITI to accelerate application of its immuno-oncology platform, in particular to glioblastoma multiforme, and rapidly advance other key candidates in the pipeline, including the most recent initiative into infectious diseases with development of its vaccine candidate for COVID-19. The Company has built a large pipeline from UNITE with four oncology programs, multiple animal health programs and a SARS-CoV-2 program to prevent and treat COVID-19. ITI has entered into a significant allergy partnership with Astellas Pharma and has formed several academic collaborations with leading Immuno-oncology researchers at Duke University and the University of Florida. ITI maintains its headquarters in Rockville, Maryland. For more information, please visit http://www.immunomix.com.

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Immunomic Therapeutics' CEO to present at the 13th Annual Biotech Showcase Digital Event - Business Wire

John Friend obituary – The Guardian

My former colleague John Friend, who has died aged 89, was a biochemist at Hull University, where he was head of the plant biology department from 1969 until his retirement some 30 years later. He was also a keen advocate for Judaism in the Hull area, encouraging local people to gain a better understanding of the religion into which he was born and committed to promoting interfaith understanding.

John was born in Liverpool to Richard Friend, a draper, and his wife, Lilian (nee Jonas). At Liverpool Collegiate school he gained his A-level equivalents when only 16, so had to wait two years before attending Liverpool University, where he achieved a first in biochemistry, followed by a PhD.

He then moved to Cambridge University to study the effects of low temperatures on plant pigments that contribute to photosynthesis and which give many fruits and vegetables their distinctive colours. This work, important for food transport and storage, gained John another PhD.

I met him when he was appointed as a lecturer in botany at the University of Hull in 1960: I attended his first lecture there as a new undergraduate. John soon became a senior lecturer and then, in 1969, professor and head of the botany (later renamed plant biology) department. At Hull he continued his earlier research, together with new studies of how crop plants resist infection by pathogens, and his wider activities included becoming a signatory to the 1972 Blueprint for Survival, an early environmental manifesto. He also served as dean of science, then pro vice-chancellor (science) of the university.

Visits to other biochemists around the globe took him to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, leading to a renewed interest in the teachings of Judaism. Being liberal-minded and not uncritical of Israeli politics, John believed in tolerance and the need to foster intercultural understanding through collaboration. He therefore became the first chair of the Hull Academic Study Group on Israel and the Middle East, organising academic exchange visits.

After he retired, John became active in the Hull and East Riding Interfaith group, welcoming schoolchildren and students to the Hull Reform Synagogue and patiently answering questions with his characteristic quiet enthusiasm. He also chaired the local Standing Advisory Council for Religious Education.

John was a gentle, cultured and compassionate man with an infectious sense of humour and an acute appreciation of lifes absurdities. He was a generous friend to many, and a dedicated family man.

He is survived by his wife, Carol (nee Loofe), a former student counsellor at the University of Hull, whom he married in 1956, and their three children, Mark, Jenny and Richard.

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John Friend obituary - The Guardian

L-Citrulline Market Overview | Key Vendor Landscape, Demand By Countries And Future Growth | Nutra Green Biotechnology Co.Ltd, MH2 BIOCHEMICAL, Alfa…

L-Citrulline Market Report acts as a valued source of information with which businesses can achieve a telescopic view of the current market trends, consumers demands and preferences, market situations, opportunities and market status. It helps businesses obtain granular level clarity on current business trends and expected future developments. The principal areas of market analysis such as market definition, market segmentation, competitive analysis and research methodology are studied very vigilantly and precisely throughout the report. L-Citrulline market research report assists businesses with the intelligent decision making and better manage marketing of goods which ultimately leads to growth in the business.

Market Overview:

Global L-Citrulline Market is expected to rise from its initial estimated value of USD 29.64 billion in 2018 to an estimated value of USD 48.14 billion by 2026, registering a CAGR of 6.25% in the forecast period of 2019-2026. This rise in market value can be attributed to the increase in awareness regarding the benefits of l-citrulline and rising levels of adoption of the product.

This L-Citrulline report provides overview of the market where it identifies industry trends, determines brand awareness and influence, provides industry insights and offers competitive intelligence. L-Citrulline Market report includes noteworthy information alongside future conjecture and point by point market scanning on a worldwide, regional and local level for the industry.

Download Free Sample Report with Statistical info @https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/request-a-sample/?dbmr=global-l-citrulline-market

Competitors Analysis:

Few of the major competitors currently working in l-citrulline market are KYOWA HAKKO BIO CO.LTD., Merck KGaA, TCI Chemicals (India) Pvt. Ltd., Newseed Chemical Co. Limited, Nutra Green Biotechnology Co.Ltd., MH2 BIOCHEMICAL, Alfa Aesar, abcr GmbH, SERVA Electrophoresis GmbH, DingKang Pharmaceuticals Ltd, and CJ CheilJedang Corp.

Scope of the Report:

Key Market Development:

The report provides in-depth information about profitable showing markets and analyzes the markets for the global L-Citrulline market. It provides full information about new product launches, current developments, and investments in the global market. The report delivers an complete evaluation of market shares, strategies, products, and manufacturing capabilities of the top players in the global market.

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L-Citrulline Market report covers the different market scenarios that have direct impact on the growth of the market. The report is structured with the meticulous efforts of an innovative, enthusiastic, knowledgeable and experienced team of analysts, researchers, industry experts, and forecasters. In the end, the report makes some important proposal of the new project of L-Citrulline industry before evaluating its feasibility.

Key Pointers in TOC of L-Citrulline Market Report:

Sections 1: Definition, Specifications and Classification of L-Citrulline, Applications of L-Citrulline, Market Segment by RegionsSections 2: Technical Data and Manufacturing Plants Analysis of L-Citrulline, Capacity and, R&D Status and Technology Source, Raw Materials Sources AnalysisSections 3: Market Analysis, Sales Examination, sales Value InvestigationSections 4: Regional Market Investigation that incorporates North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Middle East & Africa Market ExaminationSections 5: The L-Citrulline Segment Market Analysis (by Application) Major Manufacturers Analysis of L-CitrullineSections 6: Market Trend Analysis, Regional Market Trend, Market Trend by Product TypeSections 7: Regional Promoting Type Investigation, Inventory network InvestigationSections 8: The Customers Examination of global L-CitrullineSections 9: L-Citrulline Research Findings and Conclusion, Appendix, system and information sourceSections 10: L-Citrulline deals channel, wholesalers, merchants, traders, Exploration Discoveries and End, appendix and data source.Continued..

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L-Citrulline Market Overview | Key Vendor Landscape, Demand By Countries And Future Growth | Nutra Green Biotechnology Co.Ltd, MH2 BIOCHEMICAL, Alfa...

Shoe giveaway is good for the sole in Youngstown – Youngstown Vindicator

YOUNGSTOWN By merely being in the right place at the right time, Lisa Johnson found herself as a recipient of a 100-percent off sale.

Most of the time, I spend $50 or $60 for shoes for her, Johnson, of Youngstown, said about buying shoes for her granddaughter, Destiny Johnson, 4.

Johnson might as well have kept her money at home this time, however, because as she was driving on Belmont Avenue, a young woman holding a sign that mentioned a shoe giveaway caught her eye. A short time later, Johnson was being handed a free pair of size 12 Geer brand shoes, courtesy of the third annual giveaway event Friday afternoon at Union Baptist Church, 528 Lincoln Ave.

Hosting the one-hour outdoor driveup event was Relaced330, a Liberty boutique shop that opened late last year and specializes in restoring numerous brands of tennis and dress shoes, as well as purses, hats and designer bags.

In early 2015, Maeson Green, Relaced330s owner, developed an interest in and became talented at repairing his own shoes to always look new. Soon after, he began his own business called MBG Restoring, which has repaired and restored more than 1,500 pairs of tennis shoes, boots and dress shoes, according to its website.

In February 2020, MBG Restoring announced its decision to expand to Relaced330, the website states.

We make shoes look brand new, Green said Friday.

He and a team of five volunteers, most of whom are fellow Austintown Fitch High School graduates, were on hand to give away 150 pairs of new and restored shoes of all sizes for those age 1 to 18, as part of their effort to also give back to the community, he explained.

People need help, and this is just the avenue for you to get some help and go on about your day, Green said.

The merchandise included pairs of popular and special brand names such as Nike, Reebok, Puma, Skechers, Rock & Republic, Stacy Adams, Dockers, Totes, Catapult, Sonoma and Fila, along with special ones named after singer Marc Anthony and basketball legend LeBron James. Also on one of two long tables were pairs of Crocs.

Among those happy to assist with the effort was Lainie Simons of Austintown, an Ohio State University sophomore majoring in biochemistry.

Ive known Maeson since elementary school, and hes always been trying to do whats right, and Youngstown is struggling a bit, Simons said in explaining her main desire to be part of the giveaway.

A highlight of her experience was giving a 5- or 6-year-old girl in a vehicle a free pair of Adidas tennis shoes, Simons added.

Green and his team of volunteers also were happily surprised when Sydney Hull of Boardman pulled into the church parking lot.

I had them in the back seat and saw the sign and decided to donate, Hull said about having dropped off a pair of size 7 Nike Free Running shoes she had owned.

Green recalled that during the first event he hosted, only about 25 pairs of shoes were given away.

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Originally posted here:
Shoe giveaway is good for the sole in Youngstown - Youngstown Vindicator

Staying calm and teaching biochemistry to postgraduates in COVID-19 times: Pros and cons – DocWire News

This article was originally published here

Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2021 Apr 27. doi: 10.1002/bmb.21518. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

While we have been looking for alternative educational materials for our undergraduate students, we found ourself in Covid-19 pandemic and had to think postgraduate education. On the first day of restrictions, our major problem was to learn and find the best communication tool. The first experiences for online meetings were boring, we were not feeling our emotions but as days past we got used to it. We all understand the importance of having alternatives and have to be ready for second choices. During those challenging days, all had more time to work on our completed data, time to write, complete the proofreading of written materials. Other vital scientific activities for career development and profile building such as reading (every meeting with new articles/reviews), publishing and preparing oral presentation were fully completed during the online meetings as a part of lab meeting activities. They learned to improve communication skills, be active participants, and fight.

PMID:33904644 | DOI:10.1002/bmb.21518

Read the original:
Staying calm and teaching biochemistry to postgraduates in COVID-19 times: Pros and cons - DocWire News