Christopher F Harrison

University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

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Publications (5)22.92 Total impact

  • Article: Residues surrounding the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor attachment site of PrP modulate prion infection: insight from the resistance of rabbits to prion disease.
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    ABSTRACT: Prion diseases are a group of transmissible, invariably fatal neurodegenerative diseases that affect both humans and animals. According to the protein-only hypothesis, the infectious agent is a prion (proteinaceous infectious particle) that is composed primarily of PrP(Sc), the disease-associated isoform of the cellular prion protein, PrP. PrP(Sc) arises from the conformational change of the normal, glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein, PrP(C). The mechanism by which this process occurs, however, remains enigmatic. Rabbits are one of a small number of mammalian species reported to be resistant to prion infection. Sequence analysis of rabbit PrP revealed that its C-terminal amino acids differ from those of PrP from other mammals and may affect the anchoring of rabbit PrP through its GPI anchor. Using a cell culture model, this study investigated the effect of the rabbit PrP-specific C-terminal amino acids on the addition of the GPI anchor to PrP(C), PrP(C) localization, and PrP(Sc) formation. The incorporation of rabbit-specific C-terminal PrP residues into mouse PrP did not affect the addition of a GPI anchor or the localization of PrP. However, these residues did inhibit PrP(Sc) formation, suggesting that these rabbit-specific residues interfere with a C-terminal PrP(Sc) interaction site.
    Journal of Virology 07/2010; 84(13):6678-86. · 5.40 Impact Factor
  • Article: Conservation of a glycine-rich region in the prion protein is required for uptake of prion infectivity.
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    ABSTRACT: Prion diseases are associated with the misfolding of the endogenously expressed prion protein (designated PrP(C)) into an abnormal isoform (PrP(Sc)) that has infectious properties. The hydrophobic domain of PrP(C) is highly conserved and contains a series of glycine residues that show perfect conservation among all species, strongly suggesting it has functional and evolutionary significance. These glycine residues appear to form repeats of the GXXXG protein-protein interaction motif (two glycines separated by any three residues); the retention of these residues is significant and presumably relates to the functionality of PrP(C). Mutagenesis studies demonstrate that minor alterations to this highly conserved region of PrP(C) drastically affect the ability of cells to uptake and replicate prion infection in both cell and animal bioassay. The localization and processing of mutant PrP(C) are not affected, although in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrate that this region is not essential for interaction with PrP(Sc), suggesting these residues provide conformational flexibility. These data suggest that this region of PrP(C) is critical in the misfolding process and could serve as a novel, species-independent target for prion disease therapeutics.
    Journal of Biological Chemistry 03/2010; 285(26):20213-23. · 4.77 Impact Factor
  • Article: Changing the solvent accessibility of the prion protein disulfide bond markedly influences its trafficking and effect on cell function.
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    ABSTRACT: Prion diseases are fatal transmissible neurodegenerative diseases that result from structural conversion of the prion protein into a disease-associated isoform. The prion protein contains a single disulfide bond. Our analysis of all NMR structures of the prion protein (total of 440 structures over nine species) containing an explicit disulfide bond reveals that the bond exists predominantly in a stable low-energy state, but can also adopt a high-energy configuration. The side chains of two tyrosine residues and one phenylalanine residue control access of solvent to the disulfide bond. Notably, the side chains rotate away from the disulfide bond in the high-energy state, exposing the disulfide bond to solvent. The importance of these aromatic residues for protein function was analysed by mutating them to alanine residues and analysing the properties of the mutant proteins using biophysical and cell biological approaches. Whereas the mutant protein behaved similarly to wild-type prion protein in recombinant systems, the mutants were retained in the endoplasmic reticulum of mammalian cells and degraded by the proteasomal system. The cellular behaviour of the aromatic residue mutants was similar to the cellular behaviour of a disulfide bond mutant prion protein in which the cysteine residues were replaced with alanine, a result which is consistent with an unstable disulfide bond in the aromatic residue mutants. These observations suggest that the conformation of the prion protein disulfide bond may have implications for correct maturation and function of this protein.
    Biochemical Journal 03/2010; 428(2):169-82. · 4.90 Impact Factor
  • Article: Neurotoxic species in prion disease: a role for PrP isoforms?
    Christopher F Harrison, Kevin J Barnham, Andrew F Hill
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    ABSTRACT: Prion diseases such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cattle and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans are associated with the misfolding and accumulation of an abnormal conformation of the host-encoded prion protein (PrP). Despite intensive research efforts conducted on PrP, the toxic agent involved in neurodegeneration is as yet unidentified. Several potential candidates have been proposed, each of which may be relevant to subsets of the broad array of prion diseases. In this study, we review current knowledge on neurotoxic PrP species, including the importance of a central hydrophobic domain for mediating neurotoxicty.
    Journal of Neurochemistry 01/2008; 103(5):1709-20. · 4.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: Secondary structure assignment of mouse SOCS3 by NMR defines the domain boundaries and identifies an unstructured insertion in the SH2 domain.
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    ABSTRACT: SOCS3 is a negative regulator of cytokine signalling that inhibits Janus kinase-signal transduction and activator of transcription (JAK-STAT) mediated signal tranduction by binding to phosphorylated tyrosine residues on intracellular subunits of various cytokine receptors, as well as possibly the JAK proteins. SOCS3 consists of a short N-terminal sequence followed by a kinase inhibitory region, an extended SH2 domain and a C-terminal suppressor of cytokine signalling (SOCS) box. SOCS3 and the related protein, cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein, are unique among the SOCS family of proteins in containing a region of mostly low complexity sequence, between the SH2 domain and the C-terminal SOCS box. Using NMR, we assigned and determined the secondary structure of a murine SOCS3 construct. The SH2 domain, unusually, consists of 140 residues, including an unstructured insertion of 35 residues. This insertion fits the criteria for a PEST sequence and is not required for phosphotyrosine binding, as shown by isothermal titration calorimetry. Instead, we propose that the PEST sequence has a functional role unrelated to phosphotyrosine binding, possibly mediating efficient proteolytic degradation of the protein. The latter half of the kinase inhibitory region and the entire extended SH2 subdomain form a single alpha-helix. The mapping of the true SH2 domain, and the location of its C terminus more than 50 residues further downstream than predicted by sequence homology, explains a number of previously unexpected results that have shown the importance of residues close to the SOCS box for phosphotyrosine binding.
    FEBS Journal 01/2006; 272(23):6120-30. · 3.79 Impact Factor