Picture of Gerhard Wagner

Gerhard Wagner, Ph.D.

Elkan Blout Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

Our research is concerned with structures of proteins and protein complexes and their functional roles. We use NMR spectroscopy, other biophysical techniques, computational tools and small molecule inhibitors to reveal mechanisms and cellular significance of protein interactions.

The primary structural focus is on how eukaryotic translation initiation regulates the fate of cells. In particular, we are interested in the interaction of the cap-binding proteins eIF4E with the mRNA cap, the scaffold protein eIF4G, and the regulatory 4E-BPs, and how these interactions are related to cell transformation and apoptosis. To address this, we have identified small-molecule inhibitors of the eIF4E/eIF4G interaction and found that these may have anti-tumor activity. We are also interested in interactions of other eukaryotic initiation factors including eIF4G, eIF4A, eIF4B, eIF3, and in identifying  small-molecule inhibitors as potential therapeutic agents.

We also seek to understand mechanisms of T-cell function from structural studies. This includes the abTCR and the associated CD3 complexes. In addition, we try to understand mechanisms of downstream signaling at the level of nuclear translocation of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) through de-phosphorylation by calcineurin.

We are interested in protein-protein interactions in apoptosis. These include molecules from the Bcl-2 family and the mitochondrial membrane protein VDAC, and proteins that interact with VDAC. Recently we have developed procedures for incorporating membrane proteins in covalently circularized phospholipid nanodiscs creating stable membrane protein preparations usable for numerous membrane protein studies and membrane protein complexes.

Address: 

Room C1-112

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
Identification of DNA primase inhibitors via a combined fragment-based and virtual screening.
Authors: Authors: Ilic S, Akabayov SR, Arthanari H, Wagner G, Richardson CC, Akabayov B.
Sci Rep
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Overexpression of eIF5 or its protein mimic 5MP perturbs eIF2 function and induces ATF4 translation through delayed re-initiation.
Authors: Authors: Kozel C, Thompson B, Hustak S, Moore C, Nakashima A, Singh CR, Reid M, Cox C, Papadopoulos E, Luna RE, Anderson A, Tagami H, Hiraishi H, Slone EA, Yoshino KI, Asano M, Gillaspie S, Nietfeld J, Perchellet JP, Rothenburg S, Masai H, Wagner G, Beeser A, Kikkawa U, Fleming SD, Asano K.
Nucleic Acids Res
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An accurately preorganized IRES RNA structure enables eIF4G capture for initiation of viral translation.
Authors: Authors: Imai S, Kumar P, Hellen CU, D'Souza VM, Wagner G.
Nat Struct Mol Biol
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Analytical optimization of active bandwidth and quality factor for TOCSY experiments in NMR spectroscopy.
Authors: Authors: Coote P, Bermel W, Wagner G, Arthanari H.
J Biomol NMR
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Conformational dynamics of a G-protein a subunit is tightly regulated by nucleotide binding.
Authors: Authors: Goricanec D, Stehle R, Egloff P, Grigoriu S, Plückthun A, Wagner G, Hagn F.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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The Role of Dynamics and Allostery in the Inhibition of the eIF4E/eIF4G Translation Initiation Factor Complex.
Authors: Authors: Salvi N, Papadopoulos E, Blackledge M, Wagner G.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
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Backbone resonance assignment of N15, N30 and D10 T cell receptor ß subunits.
Authors: Authors: Mallis RJ, Reinherz EL, Wagner G, Arthanari H.
Biomol NMR Assign
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Inhibiting fungal multidrug resistance by disrupting an activator-Mediator interaction.
Authors: Authors: Nishikawa JL, Boeszoermenyi A, Vale-Silva LA, Torelli R, Posteraro B, Sohn YJ, Ji F, Gelev V, Sanglard D, Sanguinetti M, Sadreyev RI, Mukherjee G, Bhyravabhotla J, Buhrlage SJ, Gray NS, Wagner G, Näär AM, Arthanari H.
Nature
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Nitrogen-detected TROSY yields comparable sensitivity to proton-detected TROSY for non-deuterated, large proteins under physiological salt conditions.
Authors: Authors: Takeuchi K, Arthanari H, Imai M, Wagner G, Shimada I.
J Biomol NMR
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Solution Structure of the Cuz1 AN1 Zinc Finger Domain: An Exposed LDFLP Motif Defines a Subfamily of AN1 Proteins.
Authors: Authors: Sun ZJ, Bhanu MK, Allan MG, Arthanari H, Wagner G, Hanna J.
PLoS One
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