Professor Ian Collinson
B.Sc.(Warw.), Ph.D.(Cantab.)
Current positions
Professor of Biochemistry
School of Biochemistry
Contact
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Research interests
The Collinson Lab explore the molecular mechanisms underlying protein translocation across biological membranes for the purposes of transport across (protein secretion and mitochondrial import) and into phospholipid bilayers (membrane protein insertion).
The group studies the ubiquitous Sec machinery using the tractable model organism E. coli by a comprehensive characterisation of function and structure. The structure of the core-SecY translocon responsible for secretion, both alone and in complex with a pre-protein mimic, has been determined in collaboration with Profs Tom Rapoport and Werner Kühlbrandt. Current efforts explore how the free energy available from ATP hydrolysis and the trans-membrane proton motive force (PMF) produce the drive responsible for protein passage into and across the membrane.
Recent developments have identified and produced the holo-translocon capable of both secretion and membrane insertion. New projects exploit the availability of this complex towards the understanding of the cellular mechanisms for membrane protein insertion by a wide ranging analysis of its structure and function (collaboration with recent School of Biochemistry, Bristol appointments: Profs Christiane Schaffitzel and Imre Berger).
A Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award has just been initiated in order to utilise the methods and expertise employed for the bacterial translocation system to the much more complex (and interesting!) process governing mitochondrial protein import, membrane protein insertion, folding and assembly.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Structure, Dynamics and Activity of the Bacterial Secretosome
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/06/2024 to 31/05/2027
Hijacking the Sec machinery to kill bacteria
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/04/2021 to 31/03/2024
Dynamic allostery of Sec machinery in protein transport and folding
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/11/2020 to 31/10/2022
The Bacterial Secretosome
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/03/2019 to 31/05/2023
Deciphering the allosteric mechanism of protein translocation through membranes
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/10/2016 to 30/11/2018
Thesis supervisions
Investigating the Role of a Putative Chaperone Complex in Ciliary Dynein Assembly
Supervisors
The bacterial Sec-machinery as an antibiotic target
Supervisors
Investigating Interactions Of The SecYEG Holotranslocon With Periplasmic Chaperones And Outer Membrane Proteins
Supervisors
Genetic and molecular analysis of lawd-1, an essential gene in epithelial development and morphogenesis
Supervisors
The bacterial holo-translocon and friends
Supervisors
Mitochondrial import failure and rescue
Supervisors
Toward a thorough mechanistic understanding of PINK1 mitochondrial import
Supervisors
Baculoviral Nanosystems for DNA Delivery and Energy Sensing
Supervisors
Dissecting the Role of the PARylation Stress Response During Tissue Repair and Inflammation in Drosophila
Supervisors
The impact of respiratory complex dysfunction in Caenorhabditis elegans
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
14/03/2024MitoLuc
Transmembrane β-Barrel Proteins
Chapter Eighteen - The MitoLuc assay for the analysis of the mechanism of mitochondrial protein import
Methods in Enzymology
Cyclic Ion Mobility for Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange-Mass Spectrometry Applications
Analytical Chemistry
Dynamic coupling of fast channel gating with slow ATP-turnover underpins protein transport through the Sec translocon
EMBO Journal
Rescue of mitochondrial import failure by intercellular organellar transfer
Nature Communications