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Michael Brigham‐Burke

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Publishes on Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research, Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, Immune Cell Function and Interaction. 35 papers and 3.1k citations.

35Publications
3.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Energetics of the HIV gp120-CD4 binding reaction
David G. Myszka, Raymond W. Sweet, Preston Hensley et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2000
Cited by 420Open Access

HIV infection is initiated by the selective interaction between the cellular receptor CD4 and gp120, the external envelope glycoprotein of the virus. We used analytical ultracentrifugation, titration calorimetry, and surface plasmon resonance biosensor analysis to characterize the assembly state, thermodynamics, and kinetics of the CD4-gp120 interaction. The binding thermodynamics were of unexpected magnitude; changes in enthalpy, entropy, and heat capacity greatly exceeded those described for typical protein-protein interactions. These unusual thermodynamic properties were observed with both intact gp120 and a deglycosylated and truncated form of gp120 protein that lacked hypervariable loops V1, V2, and V3 and segments of its N and C termini. Together with previous crystallographic studies, the large changes in heat capacity and entropy reveal that extensive structural rearrangements occur within the core of gp120 upon CD4 binding. CD spectral studies and slow kinetics of binding support this conclusion. These results indicate considerable conformational flexibility within gp120, which may relate to viral mechanisms for triggering infection and disguising conserved receptor-binding sites from the immune system.

Herpesvirus Entry Mediator Ligand (HVEM-L), a Novel Ligand for HVEM/TR2, Stimulates Proliferation of T Cells and Inhibits HT29 Cell Growth
Jeremy Harrop, Peter McDonnell, Michael Brigham‐Burke et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1998
Cited by 241Open Access

Herpesvirus entry mediator (HVEM), a member of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor family, mediates herpesvirus entry into cells during infection. Upon overexpression, HVEM activates NF-kappaB and AP-1 through a TNF receptor-associated factor (TRAF)-mediated mechanism. Using an HVEM-Fc fusion protein, we screened soluble forms of novel TNF-related proteins derived from an expressed sequence tag data base. One of these, which we designated HVEM-L, specifically bound to HVEM-Fc with an affinity of 44 nM. This association was confirmed with soluble and membrane forms of both receptor and ligand. HVEM-L mRNA is expressed in spleen, lymph nodes, macrophages, and T cells and encodes a 240-amino acid protein. A soluble, secreted form of the protein stimulates proliferation of T lymphocytes during allogeneic responses, inhibits HT-29 cell growth, and weakly stimulates NF-kappaB-dependent transcription.