Andrew P Capaldi

Andrew P Capaldi

Associate Professor, Molecular and Cellular Biology
Associate Professor, Genetics - GIDP
Associate Professor, BIO5 Institute
Member of the General Faculty
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Primary Department
Contact
(520) 626-9376

Research Interest

Andrew Capaldi, PhD, researches the signaling pathways and transcription factors in a cell that are organized into circuits. They allow cells to process information and make decisions. For Dr. Capaldi, the work arises in understanding both how these circuits are built from their components, and how they function and malfunction. To address these questions, he is working to reverse engineer the circuitry that controls cell growth in budding yeast using a combination of genomic, proteomic and computational methods. http://capaldilab.mcb.arizona.edu

Publications

Capaldi, A. P., Ferguson, S. J., & Radford, S. E. (1999). The Greek key protein apo-pseudoazurin folds through an obligate on-pathway intermediate. Journal of Molecular Biology, 286(5), 1621-1632.

PMID: 10064719;Abstract:

Folding of the 123 amino acid residue Greek key protein apo-pseudoazurin from Thiosphaera pantotropha has been examined using stopped-flow circular dichroism in 0.5 M Na2SO4 at pH 7.0 and 15°C. The data show that the protein folds from the unfolded state with all eight proline residues in their native isomers (seven trans and one cis) to an intermediate within the dead-time of the stopped-flow mixing (50 ms). The urea dependence of the rates of folding and unfolding of the protein were also determined. The ratio of the folding rate to the unfolding rate (extrapolated into water) is several orders of magnitude too small to account for the equilibrium stability of the protein, consistent with the population of an intermediate. Despite this, the logarithm of the rate of folding versus denaturant concentration is linear. These data can be rationalised by the population of an intermediate under all refolding conditions. Accordingly, kinetic and equilibrium measurements were combined to fit the chevron plot to an on-pathway model (U⇆I⇆N). The fit shows that apo-pseudoazurin rapidly forms a compact species that is stabilised by 25 kJ/mol before folding to the native state at a rate of 2 s-1. Although the data can also be fitted to an off-pathway model (I⇆U⇆N), the resulting kinetic parameters indicate that the protein would have to fold to the native state at a rate of 86,000 s-1 (a time constant of only 12 μs). Similarly, models in which this intermediate is bypassed also lead to unreasonably fast refolding rates. Thus, the intermediate populated during the refolding of apo-pseudoazurin appears to be obligate and on the folding pathway. We suggest, based on this study and others, that some intermediates play a critical role in limiting the search to the native state.

Spence, G. R., Capaldi, A. P., & Radford, S. E. (2004). Trapping the on-pathway folding intermediate of Im7 at equilibrium. Journal of Molecular Biology, 341(1), 215-226.

PMID: 15312774;Abstract:

The four-helical protein Im7 folds via a rapidly formed on-pathway intermediate (kUI=3000 s-1 at pH 7.0, 10 °C) that contains three (helices I, II and IV) of the four native α-helices. The relatively slow (kIN=300 s-1) conversion of this intermediate into the native structure is driven by the folding and docking of the six residue helix III onto the developing hydrophobic core. Here, we describe the structural properties of four Im7* variants designed to trap the protein in the intermediate state by disrupting the stabilising interactions formed between helix III and the rest of the protein structure. In two of these variants (I54A and L53AI54A), hydrophobic residues within helix III have been mutated to alanine, whilst in the other two mutants the sequence encompassing the native helix III was replaced by a glycine linker, three (H3G3) or six (H3G6) residues in length. All four variants were shown to be monomeric, as judged by analytical ultracentrifugation, and highly helical as measured by far-UV CD. In addition, all the variants denature co-operatively and have a stability (ΔGUF) and buried hydrophobic surface area (M UF) similar to those of the on-pathway kinetic intermediate. Structural characterisation of these variants using 1-anilino-8-napthalene sulphonic acid (ANS) binding, near-UV CD and 1D 1H NMR demonstrate further that the trapped intermediate ensemble is highly structured with little exposed hydrophobic surface area. Interestingly, however, the structural properties of the variants I54A and L53AI54A differ in detail from those of H3G3 and H3G6. In particular, the single tryptophan residue, located near the end of helix IV, and distant from helix III, is in a distinct environment in the two sets of mutants as judged by fluorescence, near-UV CD and the sensitivity of tryptophan fluorescence to iodide quenching. Overall, the results confirm previous kinetic analysis that demonstrated the hierarchical folding of Im7 via an on-pathway intermediate, and show that this species is a highly helical ensemble with a well-formed hydrophobic core. By contrast with the native state, however, the intermediate ensemble is flexible enough to change in response to mutation, its structural properties being tailored by residues in the sequence encompassing the native helix III. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Capaldi, A. P., Kaplan, T., Liu, Y., Habib, N., Regev, A., Friedman, N., & O'Shea, E. K. (2008). Structure and function of a transcriptional network activated by the MAPK Hog1. Nature Genetics, 40(11), 1300-1306.

PMID: 18931682;PMCID: PMC2825711;Abstract:

Cells regulate gene expression using a complex network of signaling pathways, transcription factors and promoters. To gain insight into the structure and function of these networks, we analyzed gene expression in single- and multiple-mutant strains to build a quantitative model of the Hog1 MAPK-dependent osmotic stress response in budding yeast. Our model reveals that the Hog1 and general stress (Msn2/4) pathways interact, at both the signaling and promoter level, to integrate information and create a context-dependent response. This study lays out a path to identifying and characterizing the role of signal integration and processing in other gene regulatory networks. © 2008 Nature Publishing Group.

Sullivan, A., Wallace, R., Wellington, R., Luo, X., & Capaldi, A. P. (2018). EGOC and Pib2 Control Kog1-body Formation in S. Cerevisiae. eLife.

Paper describing a detailed mechanism underlying regulation of Kog1 body formation-explaining how both known and newly identified TORC1 regulators cooperate to control the reversible aggregation of the TOR complex will be submitted to eLife before Summer 2018

Capaldi, A. P., & Radford, S. E. (2001). An unfolding story. Trends in Biochemical Sciences, 26(12), 753-.