Michael F Brown

Michael F Brown

Professor, Chemistry and Biochemistry-Sci
Professor, Applied Mathematics - GIDP
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Member of the General Faculty
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Primary Department
Department Affiliations
Contact
(520) 621-2163

Research Interest

Michael F. Brown is Professor of Chemistry & Biochemistry at the University of Arizona. He is co-director of the Biological Physics Program and the Chemical Physics Program, and was a co-founder of the Biological Chemistry Program at the University of Arizona. He is internationally renowned for his work on the molecular basis of activation of G-protein-coupled receptors that are the targets for the majority of pharmaceuticals and medicines used by humans. The focus of his work is on biomembranes, with a particular emphasis on lipid-protein interactions in relation to potential drug targets involving membrane proteins. He is involved with investigation of the molecular basis of visual signaling involving rhodopsin. Moreover, Professor Brown is an expert in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. His activities in the area of biomolecular NMR spectroscopy involve the devolvement and application of methods for studying the structure and dynamics of biomolecules. Michael Brown has authored over 130 original research papers, 10 book chapters, 4 book reviews, and has published more than 275 abstracts. His current H-index is 43. He numbers among his coworkers various prominent scientists worldwide. He presents his work frequently at national and international conferences, and is the recipient of a number of major awards. Professor Brown's many contributions have established him as a major voice in the area of biomembrane research and biomolecular spectroscopy. He is frequently a member of various review panels and exerts an influence on science policy at the national level. Among his accolades, he is an elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Physical Society; Japan Society for the Promotion of Science; and the Biophysical Society. He is a Fellow of the Galileo Circle of the University of Arizona. Most recently, he received the Avanti Award of the Biophysical Society. This premier honor recognizes his vast and innovative contributions to the field of membrane biophysics, and groundbreaking work in the development of NMR techniques to characterize lipid structure and dynamics. Most recently he presented the 2014 Avanti lecture of the Biophysical Society.

Publications

Perera, S. M., Chawla, U., Struts, A. V., & Brown, M. F. (2017). Energy Landscape and Spatial Motion Models in Rhodopsin Activation. Biophysical Journal.
Molugu, T. R., Chawla, U., Oita, R. C., Wang, T., Brown, M. F., & Garcia, J. G. (2016). Thermal Denaturation and Domain Stability of NAMPT Protein. Biophysical Journal, 110, 44a.
Brown, M., Brown, M. F., Mertz, B., Struts, A. V., & Feller, S. E. (2012). Molecular simulations and solid-state NMR investigate dynamical structure in rhodopsin activation. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1818(2).

Rhodopsin has served as the primary model for studying G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs)-the largest group in the human genome, and consequently a primary target for pharmaceutical development. Understanding the functions and activation mechanisms of GPCRs has proven to be extraordinarily difficult, as they are part of a complex signaling cascade and reside within the cell membrane. Although X-ray crystallography has recently solved several GPCR structures that may resemble the activated conformation, the dynamics and mechanism of rhodopsin activation continue to remain elusive. Notably solid-state ((2))H NMR spectroscopy provides key information pertinent to how local dynamics of the retinal ligand change during rhodopsin activation. When combined with molecular mechanics simulations of proteolipid membranes, a new paradigm for the rhodopsin activation process emerges. Experiment and simulation both suggest that retinal isomerization initiates the rhodopsin photocascade to yield not a single activated structure, but rather an ensemble of activated conformational states. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Membrane protein structure and function.

Brown, M. F., Mertz, B., & Ritter, E. (2017). Soft Matter Influences on G-Protein-Coupled-Receptor Activation Probed by FTIR and UV-Visible Spectroscopy. Biophysical Journal.
Brown, M. F. (1993). Lipid headgroup and acyl chain composition modulate the MI-MII equilibrium of rhodopsin in recombinant membranes. Biochemistry, 32(9), 2438-2454.

PMID: 8443184;Abstract:

A current paradigm for visual function centers on the metarhodopsin I (MI) to metarhodopsin II (MII) conformational transition as the trigger for an intracellular enzyme cascade leading to excitation of the retinal rod. We investigated the influences of the membrane lipid composition on this key triggering event in visual signal transduction using flash photolysis techniques. Bovine rhodopsin was combined with various phospholipids to form membrane recombinants in which the lipid acyl chain composition was held constant at that of egg phosphatidylcholine (PC), while the identity of the lipid headgroups was varied. The ratio of MII/MI produced in these recombinants by an actinic flash at 28°C was studied as a function of pH. The results were compared to the photochemical function observed for rhodopsin in native retinal rod outer segment (ROS) membranes, in total native ROS lipid recombinants, and in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) recombinants. In membrane recombinants incorporating lipids derived from egg PC, as well as in the total ROS lipids control and the native ROS disk membranes, MI and MII were found to coexist in a pH-dependent, acid-base equilibrium on the millisecond time scale. The recombinants of rhodopsin with egg PC, either alone or in combination with egg PC-derived phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) or phosphatidylserine (PS), exhibited substantially reduced photochemical activity at pH 7.0. However, all recombinants comprising phospholipids with unsaturated acyl chains were capable of full native-like MII production at pH 5.0, confirming previous results [Gibson, N. J., & Brown, M. F. (1990) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 169, 1028-1034]. It follows that energetic constraints on the MI and MII states imposed by egg PC-derived acyl chains can be offset by increased activity of H+ ions. The data reveal that the major effect of the membrane lipid composition is to alter the apparent pK for the MI-MII conformational equilibrium of rhodopsin [Gibson, N. J., & Brown, M. F. (1991) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 176, 915-921]. Recombinants containing only phosphocholine headgroups exhibited the lowest apparent pK values, whereas the presence of either 50 mol % PE or 15 mol % PS increased the apparent pK. The inability to obtain full native-like function in recombinants having egg PC-derived chains and a native-like headgroup composition indicates a significant role of the polyunsaturated docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) chains (22:6ω3) of the native retinal rod membrane lipids. Temperature studies of the MI-MII transition enabled an investigation of lipid influences on the thermodynamic parameters of a membrane protein conformational change linked directly to function. The changes in thermodynamic state variables suggest that rhodopsin may be partially unfolded in the MII state, leading to exposure of recognition sites for the signal transducing G protein. Finally, the results are discussed in terms of properties of the membrane lipid bilayer, including the influences of bilayer electrostatics as well as bulk material properties associated with the protein/lipid and lipid/water interfaces. Relatively small changes due to lateral and/or curvature stresses involving the lipid/water interface are sufficient to explain the free energy shifts for the MI-MII transition among the recombinants. The combination of PE headgroups together with bulky DHA chains in the native retinal rod lipids promotes formation of nonlamellar phases; one possibility is that the curvature free energy of the membrane- lipid/water interface is involved. These findings indicate that the membrane lipid composition influences directly the photochemical activity of rhodopsin, thereby implicating properties of the membrane lipid bilayer in the molecular mechanism of the visual process. © 1993 American Chemical Society.