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Locomotion, the way animals independently move through space by active muscle contractions, is one of the most apparent animal behaviors. However, in many situations it is more beneficial for animals to actively prevent locomotion, for instance to briefly stop before reorienting with the aim of avoiding predators, or to save energy and recuperate from stress during sleep. The molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying such locomotion inhibition still remain elusive. So, the aim of this study was to utilize the practical genetic model organism Caenorhabditis elegans to efficiently tackle relevant questions on how animals are capable of suppressing locomotion.
Nerve cells, mostly called neurons, are known to control locomotion patterns by activating some and inhibiting other muscle groups in a spatiotemporal manner via local secretion of molecules known as neurotransmitters. This study particularly focuses on whether neuropeptides modulate such neurotransmission to prevent locomotion. Neuropeptides are small protein-like molecules that are secreted by specific neurons and that act in the brain by activating G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) expressed in other target neurons. They can act as hormones, neuromodulators or neurotransmitters. DNA sequences coding for neuropeptides and their cognate receptors are similar across diverse species and thus indicate evolutionary conservation of their molecular signaling pathways. This could potentially also imply that regulatory functions of specific neuropeptides are also similar across species and are thus meaningful to unravel more general mechanisms for instance underlying locomotion inhibition.
Specifically, we find that the modulatory interneuron RIS constitutes a dedicated stop neuron of which the activity is sufficient to initiate rapid locomotion arrest in C. elegans while maintaining its body posture. Similar to its known function in larval sleep, RIS requires RFamide neuropeptides encoded by the flp 11 gene for this activity, in addition to GABA. Furthermore, we find that spontaneous calcium activity transients in RIS are compartmentalized and correlated with locomotion stop. These findings illustrate that a single neuron can regulate both stopping and sleeping phenotypes.
Secondly, we show that C. elegans RPamide neuropeptides encoded by nlp-22 and nlp-2 regulate sleep and wakefulness, respectively. We unexpectedly find that these peptides activate gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-like receptors dose dependently and we highlight their sequence resemblance to other bilaterian GnRH-like neuropeptides. In addition, we show that these receptors are expressed in distinct subsets of neurons that are associated with motor behavior. Finally, we show that nlp 22 encoded peptides signal through GNNR 6 receptors to regulate larval sleep and that nlp 2 encoded peptides require both GNRR 3 and GNRR 6 receptors to promote wakefulness.
In sum, we find that locomotion inhibition in C. elegans is regulated by multiple, but evolutionary conserved RFamide and GnRH-like RPamide neuropeptidergic signaling pathways.
Prokaryotische Organismen werden in ihrer natürlichen Umgebung mit schwankenden Umwelteinflüssen konfrontiert oder müssen gegebenenfalls extremen Bedingungen standhalten. Um sich an derartige Veränderungen anpassen zu können und damit ein weiteres Überleben zu sichern, ist es wichtig neue genetische Informationen zu akquirieren. Die molekulare Basis dieser Anpassung sind Genmutationen, Genverlust, intramolekulare Rekombination und/oder horizontaler Gentransfer. Der vorliegende Selektionsdruck der Umwelt begünstigt schlussendlich die Spezialisierung und damit die Erschließung neuer Standorte aufgrund des Erwerbs neuer metabolischer Eigenschaften, Resistenzgene oder Pathogenitätsfaktoren. Vergleichende Analysen bakterieller Genome, welche auf Analysen der GC-Gehalte, der Codon- und Aminosäurenutzung und der Genlokalisation beruhen, zeigten, dass bei diesem evolutiven Prozess bzw. der Weiterentwicklung der bakteriellen Genome der horizontale Gentransfer als treibende Kraft eine entscheidende Rolle spielt. So indizieren Genomstudien, dass 0-22% der gesamten bakteriellen und 5-15% der archaeellen Gene horizontal erworben wurden, wobei der DNA-Transfer nicht ausschließlich zwischen Vertretern einer Domäne, sondern ebenfalls zwischen Organismen unterschiedlicher Domänen stattgefunden hat. So sind z.B. 24 bzw. 16% der Gene von Genomen hyperthermophiler Organismen wie Thermotoga maritima oder Aquifex aeolicus archaeellen Ursprungs. Ebenso finden sich Gene für Chaperone und DNA-Reparaturenzyme im Genom des thermophilen Bakteriums Thermus thermophilus wieder, welche wahrscheinlich ebenfalls durch horizontalen Gentransfer aus hyperthermophilen und archaeellen Genomen erworben wurden um eine Anpassung an extreme Standorte zu ermöglichen. Durch vergleichende Genomstudien wurde ebenfalls festgestellt, dass die durch horizontalen Gentransfer erworbenen Gene oftmals zu einer Neuorganisation von Transkriptionseinheiten und zu einer veränderten Genomorganisation führten. Dennoch finden sich immer wieder Beispiele von horizontal erworbenen Operonen in den verschiedenen Organismen. Gut charakterisierte Vertreter horizontal übertragener Operone sind dabei z.B. das archaeelle H+-ATPase-Operon, das Operon der Na+-translozierenden NADH:Ubichitonoxidoreduktase oder das Nitratreduktase-Operon.
Man unterscheidet bei dem horizontalen Gentransfer zwischen drei Mechanismen der DNAAufnahme: Konjugation, Transduktion und Transformation. Die DNA-Übertragung durch Konjugation ist durch einen spezifischen Zell-Zell-Kontakt definiert, der durch einen von der Donorzelle ausgehenden, sogenannten F-Pilus hergestellt wird. Die Donorzelle überträgt schließlich Plasmid-kodierte genetische Informationen und oftmals Eigenschaften für die eigenständige Konjugation auf eine Rezipientenzelle. Die Transduktion hingegen beschreibt die DNA-Übertragung von Bakteriophagen auf eine Wirtszelle, wobei hier eine hohe Wirtsspezifität Voraussetzung ist. Die Übertragung der DNA von einer Bakterienzelle in eine andere erfolgt dabei ohne Kontakt der Zellen. Die natürliche Transformation ist definiert als Transfer von freier DNA und ermöglicht damit im Gegensatz zu den beiden ersten spezifischen Mechanismen der DNA-Übertragung ein größeres Spektrum der Verbreitung genetischer Informationen. Freie DNA, welche entweder durch Zelllyse oder Typ-IVSekretion ausgeschieden wird und aufgrund von Adsorption an mineralische Oberflächen über längere Zeiträume stabil in der Umgebung vorliegen kann, kann unter der Voraussetzung der Existenz eines speziellen Aufnahmesystems von Bakterien aufgenommen werden. Mittlerweile sind über 44 Bakterien aus unterschiedlichen taxonomischen Gruppen beschrieben, die eine natürliche Kompetenz ausbilden können. Die bekanntesten Beispiele für natürlich transformierbare Gram-negative Bakterien sind Heliobacter pylori, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Pseudomonas stutzeri, Haemophilus influenzae, T. thermophilus und Acinetobacter baylyi. Auch unter den Gram-positiven Bakterien finden sich einige Vertreter, die natürlich kompetent sind, wie Deinococcus radiodurans, Bacillus subtilis und Streptococcus pneumoniae. Ungeachtet der relevanten Rolle der Transformation im horizontalen Gentransfer, ist über die Struktur und Funktion der komplexen DNA-Aufnahmesysteme wenig bekannt.
The ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase is a key component of several aerobic respiratory chains in different organisms. It is an integral membrane protein complex, made up of three catalytic subunits (cytochrome b, cytochrome c1 and Rieske iron sulphur protein) and up to eight additional subunits in mitochondria. The complex oxidizes one quinol molecules and reduces two cytochrome c during the Q cycle, originally described by Peter Mitchell. Electrons are split between the low and the high potential chain and protons are released on the positive side of the membrane, increasing the protonmotive force needed by the ATP-synthase for energy transduction. The cytochrome bc1 complex from P. denitrificans is a perfect model for structural and functional studies. Bacteria are easy to grow and the genetic material is readily accessible for genetic manipulation. Moreover, the P. denitrificans aerobic respiratory chain is very close to the mitochondrial one: the complexes involved in electron transfer resemble the ones found in mitochondria, but lack most of the additional subunits. As a unique feature, P. denitrificans has a strongly acidic domain at the N-terminal region of the cytochrome c1, a sequence of 150 aminoacids which does not correlate with any known protein. An analogous composition can be found in the eukaryotic cytochrome bc1 complex as a part of an accessory subunit, proposed to be involved in facilitating electron transfer between the complex and the electron acceptor cytochrome c. In order to study the function of this domain in the P. denitrificans cytochrome bc1 complex, a deletion mutant has been previously cloned and modified with an affinity tag as a C-terminal extension of cytochrome b. The complex is purified by affinity chromatography and characterized by steady-state kinetics using not only horse heart cytochrome c but also the endogenous electron acceptor, the membrane bound cytochrome c552, employed here as a soluble fragment. Steady–state kinetics indicate that the deletion of the long acidic domain had effects neither on the turnover rate nor on the apparent affinity for the substrate. To understand wether the deletion affects the reaction between the cytochrome bc1 complex and the substrate, laser flash photolysis experiments are performed, showing that the interaction observed was not changed in the complex missing the acidic domain. The results presented in this work confirm the ones previously obtained by Julia Janzon using soluble fragments of the same interaction partners. The deletion, however, affected the oligomerization state of the complex, as shown by LILBID (Laser Induced Liquid Bead Ion Desorption) analysis. The wild type complex has a tetrameric structure, better described as a “dimer of dimers”. The deletion of the acidic domain on the cytochrome c1 results in the separation of the two dimers, yielding the canonical dimer. Therefore, the complex deleted in the acidic domain is used for cloning and expression of a heterodimeric complex, containing an inactivating mutation in the quinol oxidation site in only one monomer, thus allowing a selective switch-off for half the complex. Such a complex is needed for the verification of an internal regulation mechanism, the half-of-the-sites reactivity. According to it, the dimeric structure of the cytochrome bc1 complex has functional implications, since the two monomers can communicate and work in a coordinated manner. This approach confirms that substrate oxidation does effectively take place only in one of the two monomers constituting the dimer, and that the binding of substrate at the Qo and Qi site regulates the switch between active and inactive monomer. Moreover, this mechanism works also as an effective protection against the reaction of quinone intermediates with oxygen and the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), responsable for cellular aging. The motion of the ISP head domain is also addressed in this work; in particular the mechanism which regulates the movements towards the cytochrome c1 and the electron bifurcation at the quinol oxidation site. Laser flash kinetics in presence of several inhibitors and the substrate allow studying the response of the ISP to the binding of different species at the quinol oxidation site. The binding of ligand at the Qo site in the complex triggers the conformational switch in the ISP head domain, supporting the mechanism proposed in the literature according to which the Qo site is able to “sense” the presence of substrate and transfer the information to the ISP, regulating its mobility. The internal electron pathway between the ISP and the cytochrome c1 has been analyzed also by stopped-flow kinetics, in presence and absence of inhibitors. The results indicate that two kinetic phases describe the reduction of cytochrome c1 by the ISP, and a model for the simulation of the data is proposed.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters constitute an omnipresent superfamily of integral membrane proteins, which catalyze the translocation of a multitude of chemically diverse substrates across biological membranes. In humans, ABC transporters typically act as highly promiscuous exporters, responsible for many physiological processes, multi-drug resistance, and severe diseases, such as hypercholesterolemia, lipid trafficking disorders, and immune deficiency. In all ABC transporters, ATP-driven movements within two highly conserved nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) are coupled to conformational changes of two transmembrane domains (TMDs), which provide a framework for substrate binding and release on the opposite side of the membrane and enable the transporter to cycle between inward-facing and outward-facing orientations. Several structures of ABC transporters determined either by X-ray crystallography or single-particle electron cryo-microscopy (cryo-EM) have been reported, mostly exhibiting a variation of the inward-facing state, which highlights their dynamic behavior. However, for a complete understanding of the conformational dynamics, further structural information on intermediates is needed – especially for heterodimeric ABC transporters, which are predominant in humans and for which only limited structural information is available.
One prime example of such human heterodimeric ABC transport complexes is the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). TAP is a key player of the adaptive immune response, because it translocates proteasomal degradation products into the ER lumen for loading of MHC I molecules. Many functional aspects of TAP have been disclosed in recent years. However, structural information is lacking far behind and a major challenge in the field of medical relevant transporters. Recently, the heterodimeric ABC export system TmrAB (Thermus thermophilus multidrug resistance proteins A and B) was identified as an ortholog of TAP, by sharing structural homology with TAP and, intriguingly, being able to restore antigen presentation in human TAP-deficient cells. Thus, TmrAB is a biochemically well-characterized ABC exporter that can be regarded as a functional ortholog of TAP and serves as a model system for (heterodimeric) ABC export systems in general.
Thus, to illuminate the molecular basis of substrate translocation by single-particle cryo-EM, one of the main objectives of this work was the generation of stabilizing chaperones (synthetic antibodies, nanobodies, cyclic peptides) to reduce the conformational heterogeneity of TAP and TmrAB. Selected antibodies were analyzed with respect to stable complex formation, conformational trapping, and the ability to serve as alignment tools for structural studies by single-particle cryo-EM. Both antibody types were shown to form sufficiently stable complexes to serve as a rigid body for EM analyses. However, all selected antibodies bound to the inward-facing state exclusively.
Hence, for EM studies, various ligands were added to elucidate the full spectrum of conformational states during the catalytic cycle. For TAP, first attempts by negative-stain EM revealed a homogenous distribution of particles on the grid. Surprisingly, no transporter-like features were observed although various attempts were applied to increase the overall sample quality.
For TmrAB, in contrast, the complete conformational space in a native-like lipid environment under turnover conditions was mapped. Cryo-EM analysis of TmrAB incubated with ATP-Mg2+ and substrate revealed two distinct inward-facing conformations (IFwide and IFnarrow) as well as two asymmetric conformations with dimerized NBDs, which were markedly different from all previously reported structures. Here, the catalytically active site was slightly wider and contained ADP, while ATP was still bound at the catalytically-inactive site within the NBDs, demonstrating an asymmetric post-hydrolysis state. Intriguingly for the inward-facing conformations, a weak additional density close to residues M139TmrB and W297TmrB was observed in the inward-facing conformation, which displayed a higher degree of cytosolic gate opening (IFwide) indicating the presence of substrate. To verify that this density corresponds to substrate, single alanine mutations of M139TmrB and W297TmrB were introduced, leading to a strong reduction in substrate binding and transport. Since substrate release requires the opening of the extracellular gate, the absence of an outward-facing open conformation indicated that the opening must be highly transient. In order to explore the outward-facing open conformation, a cryo-EM analysis of the catalytically-inactive TmrAE523QB mutant upon incubation with ATP-Mg2+ was performed. Remarkably, within the same dataset, two different outward-facing conformations (occluded and open) were resolved, both in an ATP-bound state, which indicated that binding of ATP is sufficient to drive the large-scale conformational transition from inward-facing to outward-facing open. To explore the effect of nucleotide hydrolysis, TmrAB was trapped by vanadate. Again, two populations were observed, representing the outward-facing open and outward-facing occluded conformation.
Based on several structures of key intermediates, determined under turnover conditions or trapped in the pre-hydrolysis and hydrolysis transition state, for the first time the complete description of the ATP hydrolysis and translocation cycle of a heterodimeric ABC transport complex was elucidated in one single study. By mapping the conformational landscape during active turnover, aided by mutational and chemical modulation of kinetic rates, fundamental and so-far hidden steps of the substrate translocation cycle of asymmetric ABC transporters were resolved and a general template for (heterodimeric) ABC exporter-catalyzed substrate translocation was provided.
Rotary adenosine triphosphate (ATP)ases are ubiquitous, membrane-bound enzyme complexes involved in biological energy conversion. The first subtype, the so-called F1Fo ATP synthase, predominantly functions as an ATP synthesizing machinery in most bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplasts. The vacuolar subtype of enzyme, the V1Vo ATPase, operates as an ATP driven ion pump in eukaryotic membranes. The subtype found in archaea and some bacteria is called A1Ao ATP (synth)ase and is capable of working in both directions either to synthesize ATP or to generate an ion motive force by consuming the same.
All the three above-mentioned subtypes of rotary ATPases work as nanomolecular machines sharing a conserved mechanism to perform the energy conservation process. The simplest form of these enzymes is the bacterial F1Fo ATP synthase. Here, ions are channelled via the membrane stator subunit a to the rotor ring of the enzyme. After almost a complete rotation of the ring the ions are released again on the other side of the membrane. This rotation is further transmitted via the central stalk to the soluble part of the enzyme, the F1-complex, where conformational changes within the nucleotide binding sites result in the synthesis of ATP from ADP and Pi.
The rotor or c-ring of the enzyme is the key protein complex in mediating transmembrane ion translocation. Several structural and biochemical methods have been applied in the past years to study the rotor rings from many different organisms. The results revealed that the stoichiometry of a c-ring of a given species is constant while it can vary between different species within a range of 8 to 15 c subunits. The c-ring stoichiometry determines directly the number of ions transported through Fo per rotation whereby three molecules of ATP are concurrently synthesized in the water-soluble F1 headgroup. Hence the number of c subunits has an important influence on the bioenergetics of the corresponding enzyme and thus the entire organism.
The c-ring of a rotary ATPase is able to specifically bind either protons (H+) or sodium ions (Na+) as the coupling ion for the enzyme. Several structures are already available revealing the coordination network of both types of rotor rings. In each case ion binding includes a highly-conserved carboxylic acid residue (glutamate or aspartate), in addition to a more varying combination of amino acid residues, whereby Na+ coordination is structurally more demanding than H+ binding.
In the first part of my PhD thesis, I aimed to characterize the F1Fo ATP synthase rotor ring of the opportunistic pathogenic bacterium Fusobacterium nucleatum on a functional and structural level. F. nucleatum is an anaerobic bacterium which uses peptides and amino acids as a primary energy source. It is one of the most frequently occuring bacteria in human body infections and involved in human periodontal diseases.
The protein complex was heterologously expressed within a hybrid ATP synthase in Escherichia coli and purified without an affinity tag for further analysis. Two high resolution X-ray structures of the c-ring were solved at low (5.3) and high (8.7) pH to 2.2 and 2.64 Å, respectively. In both structures, the conserved glutamate is in an ion-locked conformation, revealing that the conformational state of the ion binding carboxylate is not depending on the pH of the crystallization condition, which is in good agreement with previous structural and biochemical studies of other c-rings.
A Na+ ion is present within the c-ring binding site and directly coordinated by four amino acid residues and a structural water molecule. Remarkably, the Na+ is bound by two glutamate residues instead of one as is the case in the I. tartaricus Na+ binding c-ring, of which the first high resolution X-ray structure of a c-ring has been solved in 2005. Thus, a new type of Na+ coordination in an ATP synthase rotor ring with a two-carboxylate ion binding motif is described here, which also occurs in other bacteria, including several pathogens. Na+ specificity of the investigated c-ring was further confirmed by a competitive biochemical labeling reaction performed with a fluorescent ATP synthase inhibitor molecule (N-cyclohexyl-N`-[4(dimethylamino)-α-naphtyl] carbodiimide, NCD-4).
We furthermore complemented our functional and structural data of the F. nucleatum c-ring by computational studies to explore the ion translocation mechanism of this enzyme in more details. We therefore analyzed the protonation state of the second, additional glutamate in the ion binding site. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and free-energy calculations indicated that this glutamate is constitutively protonated, in the ion-locked as well as in a simulated, more hydrated open-conformation of the ion binding glutamate as when it is travelling through the a/c-ring interface upon c-ring rotation.
Mechanistic and structural insights into the quality control of the MHC I antigen processing pathway
(2022)
The human body is permanently exposed to its environment and thus to viruses and other pathogens, which require a flexible response and defense. Alongside to the innate immune system, the adaptive immune system provides highly specialized protection against these threats. The major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) antigen presentation system is a cornerstone of the adaptive immune system and a major constituent of cellular immunity. Pathogens such as viruses that invade a cell will leave traces in the form of proteins and peptides which are degraded and loaded onto MHC I molecules. MHC I peptide loading is performed by peptide loading complex (PLC) in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum as part of a multifaceted and comprehensive quality control machinery. Monitored by multiple layers of quality assurance, the MHC I molecules consequently display the immune status of the cell on its surface. In this context, the captured fragment of the virus serves as a call for help issued by the cell, alerting the adaptive immune system to the infection to mount an appropriate immune response.
The three-dimensional structure as well as the mechanistic details of parts of this complex machinery were characterized in the context of this dissertation. Among other tools, light-modulable nanotools were developed in this thesis, which permit external regulation of cellular processes in temporal and spatial resolution. Furthermore, methods and model systems for the biochemical characterization of cellular signaling cascades, proteins, as well as entire cell organelles were developed, which are likely to influence the field of cellular immunity and protein biochemistry in the future.
This cumulative work comprises a total of six publications whose scientific key advances will be briefly outlined in this abstract. In the introduction, the scientific background as well as the current state of research and methodological background knowledge are conveyed. The results section condenses the main aspects of the publications and links them to each other. Further details can be retrieved from the attached original publications.
In “Semisynthetic viral inhibitor for light control of the MHC I peptide loading complex, Winter, Domnick et al., Angew Chem Int Ed 2022” a photocleavable viral inhibitor of the peptide loading complex was produced by semi-synthesis. This nanotool was shown to be suitable for both purifying the PLC from human Raji cells as well as reactivating it in a light-controlled manner. Thus, this tool establishes the isolation of a fully intact and functional peptide loading complex for biochemical characterization. In addition, a novel flow cytometric analysis pipeline for microsomes was developed, allowing cellular vesicles to be characterized with single organelle resolution, similar to cells.
In “Molecular basis of MHC I quality control in the peptide loading complex, Domnick, Winter et al., Nat Commun 2022” the peptide loading complex was reconstituted into large nanodiscs, and a cryo-EM structural model of the editing module at 3.7 Å resolution was generated. By combining the structural model with in vitro glycan editing assays, an allosteric coupling between peptide-MHC I assembly and glycan processing was revealed, extending the known model of MHC I loading and dissociation from the PLC. These mechanisms provide a prototypical example for endoplasmic reticulum quality control.
In a related context, in “Structure of an MHC I–tapasin–ERp57 editing complex defines chaperone promiscuity, Müller, Winter et al., Nat Commun 2022” a recombinantly assembled editing module comprised of MHC I-tapasin-ERp57 was crystallized for X-ray structural biology. The resulting crystal structure at a resolution of 2.7 Å permitted the precise identification of characteristic features of the editing module and particularly of the peptide proofreading mechanism of tapasin. This study provided pivotal insights into the tapasin-mediated peptide editing of different MHC I allomorphs as well as similarities to TAPBPR-based MHC I peptide proofreading.
In “TAPBPR is necessary and sufficient for UGGT1-mediated quality control of MHC I, Sagert, Winter et al. (in preparation)” novel insights concerning the peptide proofreader TAPBPR and its close interplay with the folding sensor and glucosyltransferase UGGT1 were obtained. It was shown that TAPBPR is an integral part of the second level of endoplasmic quality control and is indispensable for effective MHC I coordination by UGGT1.
In “Light-guided intrabodies for on-demand in situ target recognition in human cells, Joest, Winter et al., Chem Sci 2021” intracellular nanobodies were equipped with a photocaged target recognition domain by genetic code expansion via amber suppression. These intrabodies, acting as high-affinity binding partners endowed with a fluorophore, could be used in a light-triggered approach to instantaneously visualize their target molecule...
Solute carrier (SLC) are related to various diseases in human and promising pharmaceutical targets but more structural and functional information on SLCs is required to expand their use for drug design and therapy. The 7-transmembrane segment inverted (7-TMIR) fold was identified for the SLC families 4, 23 and 26 in the last decade thus detailed analysis of the structure function relationship of one of these families might also yield insights for the other two. SVCT1 and SVCT2 from the SLC23 family are sodium dependent ascorbic acid transporters in human but structural analysis of the SLC23 family is exclusively based on two homologs – UraA from E. coli and UapA from A. nidulans – yielding two inward-facing and one occluded conformation. In combination with outward-facing conformations from SLC4 transporters, and additional information from the SLC26 family, an elevator transport mechanism for all 7-TMIR proteins was identified but detailed mechanistic features of the transport remain elusive due to the lack of multiple conformations from individual transporters.
To increase the understanding of 7-TMIR protein structure and function in this study, the transport mechanism of SLC23 transporters was analyzed by two strategies including selection of alpaca derived nanobodies and synthetic nanobodies against UraA as prokaryotic model protein of the SLC23 family. The second strategy involved mutagenesis of UraA at functional relevant positions regarding the conformational change during transport. Therefore, available structures of 7-TMIR proteins and less related elevator transporters were analyzed and a common motif identified – the alpha helical inter-domain linkers. The proposed rigid body movement for transport in combination with the characteristic alpha helical secondary structure of the linkers connecting both rigid bodies led to the hypothesis of functional relevance of the linkers and a conformational hinge being located in close proximity to the linkers. These positions were identified and used to modulate the biophysical properties of the transporter. Mutagenesis at three relevant positions led to loss of transport functionality and these UraA variants could be recombinantly produced and purified to further examine the underlying mechanistic effects. The variants UraAG320P and UraAP330G from the periplasmic inter-domain linker showed increased dimerization and thermal stability as well as substrate binding in solution. The substrate affinity of UraAG320P was identified to be 5-fold higher compared to the wildtype. The solvent accessibility of the substrate binding site in UraAG320P and UraAP330G revealed reduced open probability that indicated an altered conformational space compared to UraAWT. This phenomenon was analyzed in more detail by differential hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry and the results supported the hypothesis of a reduced open probability and gave further insights into the impact of the two mutations in the periplasmic inter-domain linker in UraA.
This thesis further presents strategies for phage display selection of nanobodies with epitope bias and a post selection analysis pipeline to identify nanobodies with desired binding characteristics. Thereby, whole cell transport inhibition highlighted periplasmic epitope binders and conformational selectivity. A cytoplasmic epitope could be identified by pulldown with inside-out membrane vesicles for one cytoplasmic side binder. Thermal stabilization analysis of the target protein in differential scanning fluorometry was performed in presence of two different nanobodies to identify simultaneous binding by additional thermal stabilization respectively competition by intermediate melting temperatures. Combination of epitope information with simultaneous DSF could be used to identify the stabilization of different UraA conformations by a set of binders and presents a general nanobody selection strategy for other SLCs. Synthetic nanobodies (sybodies) were also included in the analysis pipeline and Sy45 identified as promising candidate for co-crystallization that gave rise to UraAWT crystals in several conditions in presence or absence of uracil. Similar crystals could be obtained in combination with UraAG320P that were further optimized to gain structural information on this mutant. The structure was solved by molecular replacement and the model refined at 3.1 Å resolution confirming the cytoplasmic epitope of Sy45 as predicted by the selection pipeline. The stabilized conformation was inward-facing similar to the reported UapA structure but significantly different to the previously reported inward-facing structure of UraA. The structure further confirmed the structural integrity of the UraA mutant G320P. Despite the monomeric state of UraA in the structure, the gate domain aligned reasonably well with the gate domain of the previously published dimeric UraA structure in the occluded conformation and allowed detailed analysis of the conformational transition in UraA from inward-facing to occluded by a single rigid body movement. Thereby little movement in the gate domain of UraA was observed in contrast to a previously reported transport mechanism. Core domain rotation around a rotation axis parallel to the substrate barrier was found to explain the major part of conformational transition from inward-facing to occluded and experimentally supported the hypothesized mechanism by Chang et al. (2017). Additionally, the conformational hinge around position G320 in UraA could be identified as well as the impact of the backbone rigidity introduced by the highly conserved proline residue at position 330 in UraA on the conformational transition. This position was found to serve as anchoring point the inter-domain linker and determines the coordinated movement of inter-domain linker and core domain. The functional analysis further highlighted the requirement of alpha helical secondary structure within the inter-domain linker that serves as amphipathic structural entity that can adjust to changed core-gate domain distances and angles during transport by extension/compression or bending while preserving the rigid linkage.
The applied strategies to modulate the conformational space of UraA by mutagenesis at the hinge positions in the inter-domain linkers is transferrable to other transporters and might facilitate their structural and functional characterization.
Further, this study discusses the conformational thermostabilization of UraA that is based on increased melting temperatures upon restriction of its conformational freedom. The term ‘conformational thermostabilization’ introduced by Serrano-Vega et al. (2007) could be experimentally supported and the direct correlation between the conformational freedom and thermostabilization was qualitatively analyzed for UraA. The concept of conformational thermostabilization might help in characterization of other dynamic transport systems as well.
Die mitochondriale Atmungskette und insbesondere die Cytochrom c Oxidase als deren terminales Enzym sind essentiell für den Energiestoffwechsel eukaryotischer Zellen. Die Assemblierung der mitochondrialen Cytochrom c Oxidase mit ihren bis zu 13 Untereinheiten ist noch nicht bis ins Detail aufgeklärt, aber es handelt sich um einen geordneten, stark regulierten Prozess, und Defekte der Assemblierung sind häufig Ursache für neurodegenerative und myopathische Erkrankungen. In Eukaryoten sind bisher mehr als 30 Proteine identifiziert worden, die an der Biogenese der Cytochrom c Oxidase beteiligt sind, darunter Surf1. Beim Menschen führt der Verlust von Surf1 zu einer letalen neurodegenerativen, als Leigh-Syndrom bezeichneten Krankheit, wobei die genaue Rolle von Surf1 bei der Assemblierung der Cytochrom c Oxidase unklar ist. Das Bodenbakteriums Paracoccus denitrificans kann als Modellorganismus für die mitochondriale Atmungskette dienen, da seine aeroben Atmungskettenkomplexe eine deutliche Homologie zu denen der Mitochondrien auf weisen. P. dentrificans besitzt zwei homologe Gene für Surf1, die in Operons mit terminalen Oxidasen assoziiert sind: surf1c ist im cta-Operon lokalisiert, das für Untereinheiten der aa3-Cytochrom c Oxidase kodiert, und surf1q im qox-Operon, das die Gene für die ba3-Ubichinoloxidase enthält. Vorrangiges Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, diese beiden Gene und ihre Translationsprodukte zu charakterisieren und auf ihre Funktion hin zu untersuchen. Chromosomale Einzel- und Doppeldeletionen beider surf1-Gene führten zu einem spezifischen Aktivitätsverlust der jeweiligen Oxidase in Membranen, wobei surf1c und surf1q unabhängig von einander für ihre korrespondierenden Oxidasen zuständig sind und keine überlappenden Funktionen besitzen. Dies war der erste experimentelle Hinweis, dass ein Surf1-Protein auch bei der Assemblierung einer Chinoloxidase eine Rolle spielt. Untersuchungen an aufgereinigter aa3-Cytochrom c Oxidase ergaben, dass der Hämgehalt im Fall der surf1c-Deletion stark vermindert ist. Diese Ergebnisse bestätigten frühere Vermutungen, dass Surf1 eine Rolle beim Häm-Einbau in UEI spielt. Diese Arbeit untersuchte zum ersten Mal aufgereinigtes Surf1-Protein und lieferte mit der Charakterisierung weitere Hinweise auf seine Rolle beim Häm a-Einbau in terminale Oxidasen. So konnte gezeigt werden, dass sowohl Surf1c und als auch Surf1q Häm a in vivo binden. Mit Hilfe spektroskopischer Methoden und der isothermen Titrationskalorimetrie konnte die Bindung von Häm a an apo-Surf1c und Apo-Surf1q quantifiziert werden. Beide Proteine binden Häm a mit submikromolaren Affinitäten in einer 1:1 Stöchiometrie. Ligandenbindungspektren wiesen weiterhin darauf hin, dass das Eisenatom des Häm a in Surf1 nur über fünf Liganden koordiniert ist. Über gerichtete Mutagenese konnte der konservierte Histidinrest His193 für Surf1c und His202 für Surf1q als möglicher fünfter Ligand des Eisenatoms identifiziert werden. Untersuchungen zur Wechselwirkung mit anderen Proteinen zeigten eine direkte Interaktion zwischen der Häm a Synthase und den beiden Surf1-Proteinen in vivo und in vitro, die zuvor noch für kein anderes Surf1-Homolog beschrieben war. Zusätzlich konnte ein Transfer von Häm von der Häm a Synthase auf Surf1c bzw. Surf1q in vitro erreicht werden. Für Surf1c ließ sich außerdem eine Interaktion mit Untereinheit I der Cytochrom c Oxidase nachweisen. Obwohl die Funktion von Surf1 im Rahmen der Biogenese der Cytochrom c Oxidase noch nicht abschließend geklärt werden konnte, liefern die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit nichtsdestotrotz klare Hinweise auf eine direkte Beteiligung von Surf1 beim Einbau der Häm a-Kofaktoren, und ein neues Modell für die Funktion von Surf1 konnte erstellt werden.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden verschiedene metabolische Anpassungsmechanismen des humanpathogenen Bakteriums Acinetobacter baumannii an seinen Wirt untersucht. Im ersten Teil wurde die Rolle von verschiedenen Trimethylammoniumverbindungen (Cholin, Glycinbetain und Carnitin) und den zugehörigen Aufnahmesystemen, sowie ihren Stoffwechselwegen während dieses Prozesses analysiert. Für die Analyse der Transportsysteme wurde eine markerlose Vierfachmutante (Δbcct) von A. baumannii generiert, sodass alle bekannten Transportsysteme für die genannten Verbindungen deletiert vorlagen. Wachstumsversuche mit dieser Mutante zeigten, dass es in A. baumannii keine weiteren Transporter für die Aufnahme von Cholin gibt, jedoch weitere primär aktive oder sekundär aktive Transporter für die Aufnahme von Glycinbetain. Weiterhin konnten innerhalb dieser Arbeit die KM-Werte der Transporter bestimmt werden. Verschiedene Virulenz- und Infektionsanalysen führten zu dem Schluss, dass die Transporter keine Rolle bei der Virulenz von A. baumannii spielen. In Genomanalysen konnten die Gene, die für die Enzyme des Oxidationsweges von Cholin zu Glycinbetain kodieren identifiziert werden (Cholin-Dehydrogenase (betA), GlycinbetainAldehyd-Dehydrogenase (betB) und ein potenzieller Regulator (betI)). Es wurden Deletionsmutanten innerhalb dieses Genclusters generiert, mit dessen Hilfe gezeigt werden konnte, dass Cholin unter Salzstress ausschließlich als Vorläufer für das kompatible Solut Glycinbetain fungiert und nicht als kompatibles Solut von A. baumannii genutzt werden kann. Virulenz- und Infektionsstudien mit den Deletionsmutanten zeigten, dass der Cholin-Oxidationsweg keine Rolle bei der Virulenz von A. baumannii spielt.
Die Cholin-Dehydrogenase BetA wurde zusätzlich in E. coli produziert und anschließend mittels NiNTA-Affinitätschromatographie aufgereinigt. Die biochemische Charakterisierung des Enzyms zeigte, dass BetA membranständig ist und die höchste Aktivität bei einem pH-Wert von 9,0 hat. Salze wie NaCl oder KCl hatten keinen Effekt auf die Aktivität des Enzyms, während Glutamat die Aktivität stimulierte.
Weiterhin konnte FAD als Cofaktor identifiziert werden und der KM-Wert ermittelt werden. Zudem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Oxidation von Cholin zu Glycinbetain unter isoosmotischen Bedingungen zu einem Anstieg der ATP-Konzentration in A. baumannii-Zellsuspensionen führt und damit, dass Cholin als alternative Energiequelle genutzt wird. Das Phospholipid Phosphatidylcholin konnte als natürliche Cholinquelle identifiziert werden. Eine Rolle der Phospholipasen D bei der Abspaltung der Cholin-Kopfgruppe des Phosphatidylcholins konnte ausgeschlossen werden. Die Gene für die Oxidation von Cholin zu Glycinbetain werden ausschließlich in Anwesenheit von Cholin exprimiert, jedoch unabhängig von der extrazellulären Salzkonzentration. Diese Studien zeigten, dass der Cholin-Oxidationsweg eine Rolle in der metabolischen Adaptation von A. baumannii an den Wirt spielt. Phosphatidylcholin kann hier als natürliche Cholinquelle im Wirt genutzt werden, da die Wirtsmembranen aus bis zu 70 % Phosphatidylcholin bestehen. Transportstudien mit Carnitin führten zu dem Schluss, dass der Transporter Aci01347 aus A. baumannii neben Cholin ebenfalls Carnitin transportiert. Wachstumsversuche mit einer aci01347-Mutante bestätigen, dass Aci01347 essenziell für die Aufnahme und anschließende Verwertung von Carnitin als Kohlenstoffquelle ist. Es konnte weiterhin gezeigt werden, dass das Transportergen mit essenziellen Genen für den Carnitin-Abbau in einem Operon liegt. Für die Analyse des Abbauweges von Carnitin wurden markerlose Deletionsmutanten innerhalb des Operons generiert. In Wachstumsstudien mit diesen Mutanten konnte der Abbauweg aufgeklärt werden und der Regulator des Operons identifiziert werden. Carnitin wird hier über Trimethylamin und Malat-Semialdehyd zu D-Malat umgewandelt und anschließend über Pyruvat in den TCA-Zyklus eingespeist. Der Regulator wurde zusätzlich in E. coli produziert und mittels Ni-NTA-Affinitätschromatographie aufgereinigt. Mithilfe von EMSA-Studien konnte die Bindestelle des Regulators auf eine 634 Bp lange DNA-Sequenz stromaufwärts des CarnitinOperons eingegrenzt werden. Durch Transkriptomanalysen konnte gezeigt werden, dass bei Wachstum mit Acetylcarnitin, Carnitin und D-Malat die Expression des Carnitin-Operons induziert wurde. Darüber hinaus wurden die Gene konservierter Aromatenabbauwege wie z. B. des Homogentisatweges, des Phenylacetatweges und des Protocatechuat-Abbaus, verstärkt exprimiert. In G. mellonellaVirulenzstudien konnte eine Rolle des Abbaus von Carnitin bei der Virulenz von A. baumannii nachgewiesen werden. Zusätzlich konnte dieser Effekt dem entstehenden Trimethylamin zugesprochen werden...
Zika-virus (ZIKV), a flavivirus mainly transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, is a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA virus. The viral genome is surrounded by a nucleocapsid and a lipid bilayer, in which membrane and envelope proteins are embedded. ZIKV disease is mainly characterized by mild symptoms, such as fever, rash as well as pain in head and joints. However, after epidemics it caused in the Americas in 2015/16, ZIKV infections were also associated with severe neurological complications like the Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and microcephaly in fetuses and newborns. So far there are no specific antiviral treatments or vaccines available against ZIKV. This strengthens the need for a detailed understanding of the viral life cycle and virus-host interactions.
The antiviral host factor tetherin (THN) is an interferon-stimulated protein and therefore part of the cellular innate immune response. It comprises an N-terminal cytoplasmic domain, followed by a transmembrane helix, an extracellular coiled-coil domain and a C-terminal glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor. Containing two sites for membrane insertion linked by a flexible structure, THN is able to integrate into the membrane of budding viruses, thereby attaching them to each other and to the cell membrane and preventing their further release and spread.
In this study, the crosstalk of ZIKV and THN was analyzed. Previous gene expression analyses by microarray and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) had revealed a strong upregulation of the BST2 gene encoding for THN in ZIKV-infected cells. However, this enhanced expression did not correlate with an enhanced THN protein level. On the contrary, the amount of THN in THN-overexpressing cells was after infection even heavily reduced. Furthermore, immunofluorescence analyses revealed a loss of THN membrane localization in these cells. By performing a cycloheximide assay, this loss could be traced back to a reduced protein half-life of THN in infected versus uninfected cells. Treatment with inhibitors of different protein degradation pathways as well as colocalization analyses with markers of several subcellular compartments indicated an involvement of the endo-lysosomal route. A knock-down of the ESCRT-0 protein HRS however prevented the sorting of THN for lysosomal degradation and led to a stabilization of THN protein levels. After HRS depletion, the release and spread of viral particles was reduced in THN-overexpressing compared to wildtype cells.
Taken together, the data obtained in this study revealed the potential of THN to restrict ZIKV release and spread. The enhanced degradation of THN in ZIKV-infected cells via the endo-lysosomal pathway could therefore be explained as an effective viral escape strategy. This could be circumvented by knockdown of the ESCRT-0 protein HRS, which highlighted HRS as a potential target for the development of antiviral treatments.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der vergleichenden funktionalen Charakterisierung der E.coli Transporter LacY, FucP und XylE und des Glucose-Transporters GlcP aus Staphylococcus epidermidis sowie funktionsrelevanter Mutanten. Sie katalysieren in vivo den PMF-gekoppelten Zuckertransport und repräsentieren die major facilitator superfamily (MFS), einer der größten Transporter-Familien überhaupt. Die Studien wurden mithilfe einer elektrophysiologischen Methode auf Basis Festkörper-unterstützter Membranen (SSM) durchgeführt. Komplementär dazu wurden radioaktive Transportassays, fluorometrische Messungen, kinetische Simulationen und theoretische Berechnungen auf Basis der 3D-Strukturen durchgeführt. Experimentell bestimmte Zucker- und pH-Abhängigkeiten elektrogener steady-state und pre steady-state Reaktionen wurden verwendet, um ein allgemeingültiges kinetisches Modell aufzustellen.
Insgesamt konnten bei allen Transportern zwei elementare elektrogene Reaktionen identifiziert werden. Eine schnelle Zucker-induzierte Konformationsänderung wurde dem induced fit des Zuckermoleküls zugeordnet. Die Elektrogenität im steady-state wird dagegen durch den langsamen Transfer der negativ geladenen Protonenbindestelle bestimmt. Die für den Symport ratenlimitierende Reaktion ist abhängig von den äußeren Bedingungen wie pH-Werten, Zuckerkonzentrationen, Substrat-Spezies und Membranpotential meist die Konformationsänderung des leeren (P) oder des beladenen (PSH) Carriers, welche die Substratbindestellen im Zuge des Alternating Access über die Membran transferieren. Ein Wechsel zwischen hohen Protonenbindungs-pK-Werten und niedrigen Protonenfreisetzungs-pK-Werten durch weitere lokale Konformationsänderungen ist zentraler Bestandteil des Transportmechanismus. Ein weiterer wichtiger Aspekt ist die Kopplung zwischen Zucker- und Protonen-Translokation, die sich zwischen E.coli Transportern und GlcP strikt unterscheidet. In E.coli Transportern erfolgt eine kooperative Bindung von Zucker und Proton. Zudem erfolgt keine Konformationsänderung im Zucker-gebundenen, unprotonierten Carrier (PS). In GlcP ist die Kopplung erheblich reduziert. Der Transport-Modus selbst ist abhängig von den äußeren Bedingungen. So katalysiert GlcP abhängig vom pH-Gradienten Uniport, Symport oder Antiport.
Die vorliegende Arbeit leistet einen wichtigen Beitrag zum Verständnis des PMF-gekoppelten Zuckertransports und zeigt die Grenzen des für LacY formulierten 6-Zustands-Modells mit nur zwei Konformationsänderungen auf. Ein erweitertes 8-Zustands-Modell mit vier Konformationsänderungen, die unterschiedliche Ratenkonstanten aufweisen können, erklärt sowohl Symport, Antiport als auch Uniport und berücksichtigt zudem die zahlreichen Ergebnisse für LacY aus der Literatur.
1. Das Wachstum und die Fähigkeit zur Butyratproduktion von E. callanderi KIST612 wurde in geschlossenen Batch-Kulturen mit den Substraten Glukose, Methanol, Formiat, H2 + CO2 und CO untersucht. E. callanderi KIST612 zeigte sich nur bei Wachstum auf 20 mM Glukose oder 20 mM Methanol in der Lage, Butyrat in größeren Mengen (3,7 – 4,3 mM) zu produzieren. Das Hauptprodukt bei allen untersuchten Wachstumssubstraten war jedoch Acetat.
2. In bioinformatischen Analysen des Genoms von E. callanderi KIST612 konnte nur eine A1AO-ATP-Synthase gefunden werden, welche eine V-typ c-Untereinheit bestehend aus 4 TMH‘s mit nur einer Na+-Bindestelle aufweist. Diese konnte aus gewaschenen Membranen von E. callanderi durch Saccharose-Dichtegradientenzentrifugation, Anionenaustausch-Chromatographie (DEAE) sowie einer Größenausschluss-Chromatographie (Superose 6) bis zur apparenten Homogenität gereinigt werden. Nach Produktion einzelner Untereinheiten (A, B, C, D, E, F und H) in E. coli und Generierung von Antikörpern, konnten alle Untereinheiten (A, B, C, D, E, F, H, a sowie c) in der gereinigten Enzympräparation immunologisch oder mittels „Peptide-Mass-Fingerprinting“ nachgewiesen werden. Es konnte somit erstmals eine A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus einem mesophilen Organismus ohne Verlust von Untereinheiten gereinigt werden.
3. Der Gesamtkomplex wies unter nativen Bedingungen eine molekulare Masse von ca. 670 kDa auf. In elektronenmikroskopischen Aufnahmen zeigte sich anhand der hantelförmigen Strukturen, dass die A1AO-ATP-Synthase als intakter Gesamtkomplex gereinigt werden konnte.
4. Die gereinigte A1AO-ATP-Synthase wurde zunächst anhand ihrer ATP-Hydrolyse-Aktivität biochemisch charakterisiert. Die ATP-Hydrolyse-Aktivität hatte ein pH-Optimum von 7 – 7,5 und ein Temperaturoptimum bei 37 °C. Durch Messung der ATPase-Aktivität in Abhängigkeit von verschiedenen Mengen an Na+ konnte die vorhergesagte Na+-Abhängigkeit des Enzyms nachgewiesen werden. Zudem zeigten Hemmstoffexperimente mit DCCD, dass dieser Inhibitor mit Na+ um die gemeinsame Bindestelle in der c-Untereinheit konkurriert. Dies bestätigte nochmals, dass das Enzym funktionell gekoppelt gereinigt werden konnte.
5. Zur weiteren Untersuchung der Ionenspezifität wurde der an die ATP-Hydrolyse gekoppelte Ionentransport durch Rekonstitution des Enzyms in Liposomen und anschließender Messung des Na+- oder H+-Transports gemessen. In den Proteoliposomen konnte mit Hilfe von 22Na+ gezeigt werden, dass das Enzym Natriumionen translozieren kann. Während in Anwesenheit des Natriumionophors ETH 2120 kein 22Na+-Transport beobachtet werden konnte, führte die Anwesenheit des Protonophors TCS zu einer geringfügigen Stimulation der 22Na+-Translokation. Insgesamt konnte ein primärer Na+-Transport nachgewiesen werden, welcher von der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi katalysiert wird.
6. Durch Rekonstitution der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi in Liposomen konnte erstmals biochemisch nachgewiesen werden, dass ein solches Enzym trotz seiner V-Typ c-Untereinheit in der Lage ist, ATP zu synthetisieren. Durch die Zugabe von Ionophoren (ETH 2120 und TCS) konnte der elektrochemische Ionengradient aufgehoben werden, wodurch keine ATP-Synthese beobachtet werden konnte. Der erstmalige Nachweis der ATP-Synthese wurde bei einem ΔµNa+ von 270 mV erbracht.
7. Die ATP-Synthese zeigte sich ebenfalls abhängig von der Na+-Konzentration. Der KM-Wert lag bei 1,1 ± 0,4 mM und war vergleichbar mit dem für die ATP-Hydrolyse ermittelten Wert. Ebenso konnte für die ATP-Synthese-Richtung gezeigt werden, dass DCCD mit Na+ um die gemeinsame Bindestelle in der c-Untereinheit konkurriert.
8. Um den biochemischen Nachweis zu erbringen, dass die A1AO-ATP-Synthase auch unter physiologisch relevanten Potentialen zur ATP-Synthese befähigt ist, wurde der energetische Schwellenwert der ATP-Synthese bestimmt. Dieser betrug 87 mV als Triebkraft für ΔpNa, 94 mV als Triebkraft für Δψ und 90 mV als Triebkraft für ΔµNa+. Erstaunlicherweise konnte die ATP-Synthese der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi KIST612 sowohl durch Δψ als auch ΔpNa angetrieben werden. Unterschiedliche Kombinationen von Δψ und ΔpNa führten zu dem gleichen energetischen Schwellenwert; Δψ und ΔpNa waren im Enzym aus E. callanderi KIST612 äquivalente Triebkräfte.
9. Der energetische Schwellenwert der A1AO-ATP-Synthase aus E. callanderi KIST612 wurde mit dem der F1FO-ATP-Synthasen aus A. woodii, E. coli und P. modestum verglichen. Dazu wurden die Enzyme im ATP-Synthase-defizienten E. coli-Stamm DK8 produziert und anschließend durch Ni2+-NTA-Affinitätschromatographie gereinigt. Nach Einbau der Enzyme in Liposomen waren alle Enzyme in der Lage, ATP als Reaktion auf ΔµNa+ (A. woodii und P. modestum) oder ΔµH+ (E. coli) zu synthetisieren. Im Vergleich zum Enzym aus E. callanderi zeigten sich zwei auffällige Unterschiede. Erstens war keine der F1FO-ATP-Synthasen in der Lage, ΔpNa/ΔpH als alleinige Triebkraft zu nutzen. Während die ATP-Synthese in den Enzymen aus E. coli und P. modestum nur durch ΔµH+ bzw. ΔµNa+ angetrieben werden konnte, konnte das Enzym aus A. woodii zusätzlich auch durch Δψ als einzige Triebkraft angetrieben werden.
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Infections with multidrug resistant bacterial strains like Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Acinetobacter baumanii that can accumulate resistance mechanisms against different groups of drugs cause increasing problems for the health care system. Multidrug efflux pumps are able to transport different classes of substances, providing a basic resistance to different antibiotics. Especially when they are overexpressed they can keep bacterial cells alive under antibiotic pressure unless other high level resistance mechanisms like expression of β-lactamases are established. One example for a clinically relevant multidrug efflux pump is the AcrAB/TolC tripartite system of E. coli, that transports a variety of different substrates, including besides antibiotics dyes, detergents, bile salts and organic compounds from the periplasm or the inner membrane out of the cell. AcrB is the inner membrane component of the protein complex that determines not only the substrate specificity of the tripartite system but energises the transport through the whole system process via proton transduction as well. TolC is the outer membrane spanning protein that forms a pore in the outer membrane enabling the system to transport drugs over the latter out of the cell. The periplasmic membrane fusion protein AcrA connects AcrB and TolC in the periplasm completing the channel from the periplasm, respective the inner membrane to the extracellular space. AcrB assembles as trimers, in asymmetric crystal structures each of the protomers adapts a different conformation designated L(oose), T(ight) and O(pen). In the protomers tunnels open up and collaps in different conformations. In the L protomer a periplasmic cleft opens up that can initially bind substrates to the periplasmic part of AcrB. In the T conformation the deep binding pocket opens that is assumed to bind substrates tightly that were bound to the access pocket before. As well in the T conformation a second pathway leading to the deep binding pocket opens that can guide substrates from a groove between transmembrane helices TM7, TM8 and TM9, the TM8 groove, that is connected with socalled tunnel 1 that ends in the deep binding pocket. In the O conformation a new tunnel opens that connects the collapsing deep binding pocket with the periplasmic space, respective the channel through the periplasmic space formed from AcrA and TolC. Substrates were cocrystallised in access and deep binding pocket verifying their role in substrate transport. In the TM8 groove in high resolution crystal structures DDM molecules were cocrystallised in L and T conformation, indicating that the AcrB substrate DDM may utilise this entrance to the deep binding pocket. The asymmetry observed in the AcrB trimers trongly suggests a peristaltic pump mechanism. The functional rotation cycle demands communication between the subunits and tight control of substrate load of protomers during the transport to optimise the ration between protons that are transduced and substrates transported. Indeed it was shown that AcrB transport mechanism is positively cooperative for some β-lactam substrates. For the communication between the subunits it was assumed that ionic interaction between ion pairs established between charged amino acids at the interfaces of protomers in different conformations are of special importance. Thus the amino acids engaged in ionic interactions, respective ion pairs D73-K131, E130-K110, D174-K110, R168, R259-E734 were substituted with non-charged amino acids pairwise and phenotypes were determined in plate dilution assays and MIC experiments. No evidence for a general, substrate independent, reduction of AcrB activity, that would be expected when the ionic residues are of special importance for AcrB function, could be found with the methods applied. Substitutions were not only combined pairwise according to the putative ion pairs but as well in combinations of R168A with D174N, E130Q and K131M. AcrB activity is reduced for the variant R168A_D174N significantly, activity decreases further for quadruple variant E130Q_K131M_ R168A_D174N. Because the reduced activity is only observed in this combination of substitutions the phenotype must result from accumulation of small effects of the single substitutions. R168A may destabilise the protomer interfaces, as its side chain is oriented in direction to the neighbouring protomer at all interfaces, enhancing substratespecific effects of substitutions E130Q, K131M, D174N that are not in all conformations oriented towards the neighbouring protomer but as well along the substrate transport pathway. Further investigations to figure out the details of the effects observed were not conducted because fluctuating expression of the variants hindered experimental procedures.
In another approach TM8 was in focus of the interest. As mentioned above it is a possible substrate entrance in the inner membrane. The linker between TM8 and the periplasmic PC2 subdomain undergoes a coil-to-helix transition when AcrB cycles through L, T and O conformations. Linking the transmembrane part of AcrB that provides the energy for the transport process via proton transduction with the periplasmic part harbouring the major part of the substrate pathway assignes TM8 and the periplasmic linker (859-876) an important role in the function of AcrB. Thus it was investigated with an alanine-scan of residues 859 to 884 and G/P respective P/G exchange followed by phenotype characterisation in growth curve and plate dilution assays of selected variants. In the phenotype determinations none of the variants, except G861P that seems to cause massive sterical restriction in an α-helical region, displayed a general, substrate independent decrease of AcrB activity. Thus it is concluded that the individual properties of amino acids in TM8 and the periplasmic linker are not of general importance for the mechanism of AcrB. The substitution of individual amino acids had impact on uptake of different substrates in plate dilution assays in a substrate dependent manner. The uptake of some substrates, like erythromycin or chloramphenicol is more affected than that of others with rhodamine 6G resistance being only reduced for the G861P variant. A relation between the PSA of substrates and reduced activity of AcrB was observed. in Substrates with higher PSA values are more affected by substitutions in TM8 or periplasmic linker, resulting in the conclusion that substrates with higher PSA are more likely to be taken up via the TM8 groove/tunnel 1 pathway than those with lower PSA values.
Resistant microbes are a growing concern. It was estimated that about 33,000 of people die because of the infections caused by multidrug resistant bacteria each year in Europe (ECDC, 2018, https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/). Bacteria can acquire resistance against toxic compounds via different mechanisms and intrinsic active efflux is one of the first mechanisms deployed by bacterial cells. The membrane-localized efflux pumps catalysing this reaction, extract toxic compounds from the interior of the cell and transport these to the outside, thereby maintaining sub-lethal toxin levels in the cytoplasm, periplasm and membranes. Gram-negative three-component efflux pumps, analysed in this study, are composed of an inner membrane protein, a member of the Resistance-Nodulation cell Division (RND) superfamily, an Outer Membrane Factor (OMF) protein and a Membrane Fusion Protein (MFP) that connects the two afore mentioned components into an active efflux pump. The pumps described in this work, AcrAB-TolC and EmrAB-TolC, are drug efflux pumps belonging to the RND and MFS superfamilies, respectively, while CusCBA is an efflux pump that belongs to the RND heavy metal efflux family. Another efflux pump that was used as a model for the design of an in vitro assay for the silver ion transport studies, CopA, belongs to the P-type ATPase superfamily. All pumps analysed in this study are part of the resistance system of Escherichia coli, which is a highly clinically relevant pathogen.
In order to examine the AcrAB-TolC, CopA and CusA efflux pumps, the individual components were separately produced in E. coli, purified to monodispersity and reconstituted in large unilamellar vesicles, LUVs. Means for the optimized production and adequate conditions for efficient reconstitution were presented in this study. The activity of AcrB in LUVs was detected using fluorescence quenching of the dye 8-hydroxy-1,3,6 pyrenetrisulfonate (pyranine), which is incorporated inside the proteoliposomes and is sensitive to the pH changes in its surrounding. The inactive AcrB variant with a substitution in the proton relay network, D407N, showed no activity in proteoliposomes, which correlates with the measurements done in empty liposomes. When AcrA was co-reconstituted with AcrB D407N proteoliposomes it did not restore protein activity. To test the assembly of the AcrAB-TolC pump out of its single components, an in vitro assay was established where the complex assembly was tested with AcrAB- and TolC-containing liposomes. These experiments showed putative AcrAB-TolC formation in the presence or absence of a pump substrate, taurocholate, as well as in the presence of the pump inhibitor, MBX3132. The assembly appeared stable over time and results were invariant in the presence or absence of a pH gradient across the AcrAB-containing membrane.
After determination of the ATPase activity of the P-type ATPase, CopA, in detergent micelles, the protein was reconstituted in LUVs. Quenching of the Ag+-sensitive dye Phen Green SK (PGSK), present on the inside of the CopA-containing proteoliposomes, was observed in presence of ATP and Ag+. Under the same conditions, but in absence of Ag+-ions, quenching was reduced by 80 % after 300 seconds. No PGSK-quenching was observed in control liposomes in the presence of ATP and Ag+. The additional presence of sodium azide led to minimal reduction of the PGSK-quenching as expected since sodium azide is not an inhibitor of P-type ATPases, but the quenching rate was similar to that of the same experimental condition with control liposomes.
The RND superfamily member CusA, as part of the tripartite CusCBA efflux pump, has been proposed to sequester Ag+ or Cu+ from either the cytoplasmic or periplasmic side of the inner membrane. The periplasmic transport of silver ions was implied from an in vitro assay where the quenching of a pH sensitive dye, 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxyacridine (ACMA), indicates acidification of the lumen of the proteoliposomes containing CusA when an inwardly directed pH was imposed. The same experiment with the CusA D405N variant, which was previously reported to be an inactive variant, also led to ACMA quenching, although at a slightly lower rate. Under application of an inwardly directed pH and a (negative inside), CusA-containing proteoliposomes showed a strong quenching of the incorporated PGSK dye, suggesting strong Ag+ influx.
The Major Facilitator Superfamily-(MFS-) type EmrAB-TolC pump has an analogous structural setup as the RND-type AcrAB-TolC pump. To examine the efflux of one of its substrates, carbonyl - cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), a plate-based susceptibility assay was used. The presence of the EmrAB-TolC pump confers lower susceptibility levels towards CCCP in E. coli, compared to cells not expressing the pump or cells expressing only the MFS component, indicating that EmrAB-TolC extrudes CCCP.
The work done in this study opens up a path towards investigation of drug and metal resistance in vitro. The methodologies to obtain proteoliposomal samples of multicomponent efflux pumps and subsequent measurements of drug/metal ion and H+ fluxes, as well as the determination of pump assembly are crucial for the future research on pump catalysis and transport kinetics. The in vivo drug-plate assays done in this work provide initial insights for future investigations of the drug susceptibility of E. coli expressing the MFS-type tripartite efflux pumps.
Während meiner Promotion habe ich zwei Projekte unter der Aufsicht von Dr. Misha Kudryashev durchgeführt. Im ersten Projekt habe ich die Strukturen des Ryanodinrezeptors 1 (RyR1) in Apo- und Ryanodin-Bindungszuständen in der nativen Membran durch Tomographie und Subtomogramm-Mittelung bei 12,6 bzw. 17,5 Å bestimmt. Im Vergleich zur Struktur von gereinigtem RyR1 unter Verwendung der Einzelpartikel-Kryo-Elektronenmikroskopie (Cryo-EM) können zusätzliche Dichten in der cytoplasmatischen Domäne und der sarkoplasmatischen Retikulum (SR)-Membran bzw. im SR-Lumen beobachtet werden. Die Auflösung der Struktur von RyR1 im Apo-Zustand wurde von den Kollegen in meinem Labor mithilfe der Hybridmethode auf 9,5 Å verbessert. Diese Arbeit hat unser Verständnis für die Mechanismen von RyR1 in nativen Membranen erweitert. Im zweiten Projekt habe ich die Struktur des Proteins SdeC der SidE-Familie durch Einzelpartikel-Kryo-EM bei 4,6 Å bestimmt. Die Kristallstruktur des C-Terminus von SdeA wurde von meinem Forschungspartner Dr. Mohit Misra gelöst. Durch Überlagerung einer gemeinsamen Helix dieser beiden Strukturen konnten wir ein kombiniertes Modell erstellen und ein allgemeines Verständnis der Proteine der SidE-Familie erhalten.
Structure-function relationships in substrate binding protein dependent secondary transporters
(2023)
This work provides new insights into the relevance of SBP dependent secondary transport systems, especially in the thus far under-researched subgroup of TAXI transporters. Importantly, we identified and characterized the TAXI transport system TAXIPm-PQM from Proteus mirabilis. We demonstrated that, in contrast to previously characterized SBP dependent secondary transport systems, TAXIPm-PQM is a proton coupled system and transports the C5-dicarboxylate α- ketoglutarate. Since initially the transport of α-ketoglutarate could only be demonstrated in vivo but not in vitro using established protocols (Mulligan et al. 2009), we investigated in detail the differences between the in vivo and in vitro assay. This resulted in a bioinformatic analysis of TRAP and TAXI signal peptides, which strongly implied that TAXIPm-P requires a transmembrane anchor to allow for transport. We then provided TAXIPm-P surface tethered to the membrane in in vitro transport assays and confirmed the prediction of our bioinformatic analysis that TAXIPm-PQM deploys a membrane-anchored instead of a soluble SBP. Furthermore, the TAXI transport system TAXIMh-PQM from Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus transports fumarate only if both membrane domains Q and M are present. For further characterization, Michaelis-Menten kinetics and affinities were determined for both TAXI transport systems TAXIPm-PQM from Proteus mirabilis and TAXIMh-PQM from Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus. In addition, nanobodies were selected for the membrane domain TAXIPm-QM from Proteus mirabilis to stabilize different conformations which can serve in subsequent structural elucidation studies. Furthermore, the TRAP SBP TRAPHi-SiaP from Haemophilus influenzae was shown to interact not only with its corresponding membrane domain TRAPHi-SiaQM but with at least one additional transporter. It was thereby excluded that TRAPHi- SiaP transfers N-acetylneuraminic acid to the only native E. coli TRAP transporter TRAPEc-YiaMNO and suggested to rather interact with a SBP dependent ABC transport system as this protein family represents the largest SBP dependent protein group in E. coli (Moussatova et al. 2008).
This thesis investigates the structure of the translocase of the outer membrane (TOM) complex in mitochondria, focusing on the TOM holo complex through single-particle electron cryo-microscopy (cryoEM) complemented by mass spectrometry and computational structure prediction. Mitochondria, crucial for energy production in eukaryotic cells, import most of their proteins from the cytoplasm. These proteins enter through the TOM complex, which in its core form consists of a membrane-embedded homodimer of Tom40 pores, two Tom22 cytoplasmic receptors, and six small TOM stabilizing subunits (Tom7, Tom6, and Tom5). The holo complex includes two additional subunits, Tom70 and Tom20, whose stoichiometry and positioning are less understood due to their easy dissociation during isolation of the complex. CryoEM analysis revealed the high-resolution structure of the Neurospora crassa TOM core complex at 3.3 Å, containing all core subunits, and the presence of a central phospholipid causing the Tom40 dimer to tilt to 20°. Furthermore, a 4 Å resolution map indicated the binding of a precursor protein as it transitions through the translocation barrel. Finally, at 6-7 Å resolution, the structure of the TOM holo complex highlighted Tom20's flexibility as it interacts with the core complex, emphasizing its role in protein translocation. This work provides significant insights into the architecture and functioning of the TOM complex, contributing to the understanding of mitochondrial protein import mechanisms.