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In this study, we describe the synthesis of 1,4-disustituted-1,2,3-triazolo-quinazoline ribonucleosides or acyclonucleosides by means of 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between various O or N-alkylated propargyl-quinazoline and 1'-azido-2',3',5'-tri-O-benzoylribose or activated alkylating agents under microwave conditions. None of the compounds selected showed significant anti-HCV activity in vitro.
To overcome poor treatment response of pediatric high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), novel treatment strategies are required to reactivate programmed cell death in this malignancy. Therefore, we take advantage of using small-molecule antagonists of Inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins, so called Smac mimetics such as BV6, which are described to overcome apoptosis resistance and thereby sensitize tumor cells for several apoptotic stimuli. To address the question whether redox alterations can sensitize leukemic cells for Smac mimetic-mediated cell death, we interfered with the cellular redox status in different ALL cell lines. Here, we show for the first time that redox alterations, mediated by the glutathione depleting agent Buthioninesulfoximine (BSO), prime ALL cells for BV6-induced apoptosis. Besides ALL cell lines, BV6/BSO cotreatment similarly synergizes in cell death induction in patient-derived primary leukemic samples. In contrast, the combination treatment does not exert any cytotoxicity against peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) or mesenchymal stroma cells (MSCs) from healthy donors, suggesting some tumor selectivity of this treatment. We also identify the underlying molecular mechanism of the novel synergistic drug interaction of BSO and BV6. We demonstrate that both agents act in concert to increase reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, lipid peroxidation and finally apoptotic cell death. Enhanced ROS levels in the combination treatment account for cell death induction, since several ROS scavengers, like NAC, MnTBAP and Trolox attenuate BSO/BV6-induced apoptosis. BSO/BV6-induced ROS can be mainly classified as lipid peroxides, since the vitamin E derivate α-Tocopherol as well as Glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4), which both specifically reduce lipid-membrane peroxides, prevent lipid peroxidation, caspase activation and cell death induction. Vice versa, GPX4 knockdown and pharmacological inhibition of GPX4 by RSL3 or Erastin enhance BV6-induced cell death. Importantly, cell death induction critically depends on the formation of a complex consisting of RIP1/FADD/Caspase-8, since all complex components are required for ROS production, lipid peroxidation and cell death induction. Taken together, we demonstrate that BSO and BV6 cooperate to induce ROS production and lipid peroxidation which are eventually required for caspase activation and cell death execution. Collectively, findings of this study indicate that BV6-induced apoptosis is mediated via redox alterations offering promising new treatment strategy to overcome apoptosis resistance in ALL.
Tumor development usually follows predictable paths where tumor cells acquire common characteristics and features known as the hallmarks of cancer. Recently, additional characteristics have been added to these hallmarks since solid tumors are composed of a very heterogeneous population of transformed, formerly normal tissue cells and stromal cells, e.g. immune cells and fibroblasts. Compelling evidence suggests that stromal cells and tumor cells maintain a symbiotic relationship to build up the tumor microenvironment and to fuel tumor growth. In cancer therapies, common features of tumors such as unrestricted cell growth, suppression of immunological responses, and the ability to form new blood vessels (angiogenesis) have emerged as the main targets of interest. The lipid mediator prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) is known to promote all these features and thus, is connected to cancer progression in general. Its synthesis is triggered in response to stress factors or during inflammation. Inducible PGE2 production relies on the enzymes cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) and microsomal prostanglandin E synthase 1 (mPGES-1), which are simultaneously expressed in response to a variety of different stimuli and are functionally coupled. Inhibition of COX-2 with non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for cancer treatment is, however, limited by cardiovascular risks, since selective COX-2 inhibition disrupts the prostacyclin/thromboxane balance. Therefore targeting mPGES-1 downstream of COX-2 for PGE2 inhibition was evaluated in this work in different steps of carcinogenesis. Knockdown of mPGES-1 in DU145 prostate cancer cells revealed that the mPGES-1 status did not affect growth of monolayer tumor cells, but significantly impaired 3D growth of multi-cellular tumor spheroids (MCTS). Spheroid formation induced COX-2 in DU145 and other prostate cancer spheroids. High levels of PGE2 were detected in supernatants of DU145 MCTS as opposed to monolayer DU145 cells. Pharmacological inhibition of COX-2 and mPGES-1 confirmed the pivotal role of PGE2 for DU145 MCTS growth. Besides promoting spheroid growth, MCTS-derived PGE2 also inhibited cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activation. When investigating the mechanisms of COX-2 induction during spheroid formation, the typical tumor microenvironmental factors such as glucose deprivation, hypoxia or tumor cell apoptosis failed to enhance COX-2. Interestingly, when interfering with apoptosis in DU145 spheroids, the pan-caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK triggered a Summary 12 shift towards necrosis, thus enhancing COX-2 expression. Coculturing viable DU145 monolayer cells with isolated heat-shocked-treated necrotic DU145 cells, but not with necrotic cell supernatants, induced COX-2 and PGE2, confirming the impact of necrosis for MCTS growth and CTL inhibition. As mentioned, in vivo tumors are very heterogenous mixtures of tumor cells and stromal cells e.g. immune cells. Hence, the interaction of the immune system with tumors was investigated in further experiments. When coculturing MCF-7 breast cancer spheroids with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), only low levels of PGE2 were detected, since MCF-7 cells did not upregulate COX-2 during spheroid formation and did not induce PGE2 production by PBMCs. Under inflammatory conditions, by adding the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) agonist lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to cocultures, PGE2 production was triggered, spheroid sizes were reduced, and numbers of high levels of granzyme B expressing (GrBhi) CTLs were increased, while CD80 expression by tumor-associated phagocytes was also elevated. Inhibition of CD80 but not CD86 diminished numbers of GrBhi CTLs and attenuated spheroid lysis. To determine the role of ctivation-induced PGE2 production, use of the COX-2 inhibitor celecoxib and the experimental mPGES-1 inhibitor C3 further increased CD80 expression. Addition of PGE2, the prostaglandin E2 (EP2) receptor agonist butaprost, and the phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4) inhibitor rolipram reduced LPS/C3-triggered CD80 expression, confirming the impact of COX- 2/mPGES-1-derived PGE2 on shaping phagocyte phenotypes in an EP2/cAMP-dependent manner. In a spontaneous breast cancer model (MMTV-PyMT), mPGES-1-deficiency significantly delayed tumor growth in mice, confirming an overall protumorigenic role of mPGES-1 in breast cancer development in vivo. However in tumors of mPGES-1-/- mice, tumor-infiltrating phagocytes expressed low levels of CD80 similar to their wildtype counterparts. These data suggest that the immunosuppressive microenvironment does not allow for immunostimulatory effects by mPGES-1 inhibition without an activating stimulus. Evidences in this study recommend the application of mPGES-1 inhibitors for treating cancer diseases, since mPGES-1 promotes tumor growth in multiple steps of carcinogenesis, ranging from well-characterized effects of tumor cell growth to immune suppression of CTL activity and phagocyte polarization. Regarding the latter, blunting PGE2 during immune activation may limit the tumor-favoring features of inflammation and improve the efficiency of TLR4 based immune therapies.
In mitochondria, biogenesis of oxidase is a crucial process involving the participation of an array of assembly factors. Studying the process of biogenesis in eukaryotes is highly complicated due to the presence and partaking of two genetic systems. Employing a bacterial model such as Paracoccus denitrificans that utilizes only one genetic system enables easy studying of the assembly process. The aa3 cytochrome c oxidase of P. denitrificans shows high structural and functional homology to its mitochondrial counterpart despite its simple subunit composition. The assembly of the core subunits I and II that house the active redox centers (heme a, and heme a3.CuB centre in subunit I; and the binuclear CuA centre in subunit II) along with the chaperons responsibly for their incorporation form the crux of this work. This work concentrates particularly on CtaG, a chaperone previously speculated to be involved in the delivery of copper to the CuB center in subunit I. As the full length structure of CtaG or its structural homologues have not been solved, attempts were made to obtain high-diffracting crystals of CtaG by heterologously expressing it in E. coli. Growth media, expression strains and induction parameters were some of the conditions screened in order to obtain optimal yield. Additives, pH and detergent were screened to yield a homogeneous preparation of CtaG. Crystallization trials were conducted by employing the sitting drop, vapour diffusion, method and later the bicelles were employed. Preliminary crystals obtained were further optimized employing seeding, detergent and additives, to improve diffraction. The diffraction improved from 30 Å to 15 Å. BN PAGE (Blue Native Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis) analysis and cross-linking studies were undertaken to decipher the oligomeric condition of CtaG. Both the methods indicate that the protein is a dimer under native conditions. To study the importance of CtaG in the process of oxidase assembly, two deletion mutants were obtained from the lab; one with only ctaG deleted and the other with ctaG and most of the upstream ORF. The effect of the deletion was assayed on the assembly and activity of oxidase. The deletion mutants showed residual activity of approx. 20 %, while displaying a very low heme signal (both in membranes and in purified COX). In order to exclude polar effects arising due to gene manipulation, complementation strains were prepared, reintroducing ctaG alone into both the deletion strains. Complementation strains, where only ctaG was deleted and re-introduced assayed for COX activity showed a restoration in activity to approx. 70 %. Further, calculating the heme:protein ratio, the deletion strains displayed a value of 7 nmol/mg of oxidase which was increased to wild type levels of 16 nmol/mg in the complementation strains. To further confirm the absence of the copper in subunit I, total reflection X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy analysis was carried out, which showed a decrease in the copper content in the deletion strain, restored on complementation. The strain lacking in the ORF and ctaG when complemented with ctaG alone illustrated no increase in activity or heme signal in comparison to that of the deletion strain. These point at a possible role for ORF in the assembly of COX, which is still absent in the complementation strains. To further characterize the ORF, a series of bioinformatical analysis was carried out, the results from which were insufficient to characterize the ORF conclusively. In order to enlist the proteins involved in the biosynthesis of COX, two independent approaches were employed. Two-dimensional gel examinations of solubilised membranes from untreated and cross-linked cells were analyzed by Western blotting. The CtaG-COX interaction was observed in untreated membranes, which was additionally strengthened by cross-linking. To further confirm this association, pull-down assays were done employing protein A coated magnetic beads coated with different antibodies and incubated with solubilised membranes derived from untreated or cross-linked cells. The elutions were assayed by Western blotting and confirmed for the CtaG-COX interaction. These fractions were further analysed by mass spectrometry to identify other chaperons involved in biogenesis of oxidase. Along with CtaG, I also noticed Sco, Surf1c and other factors involved in the recruitment and transport of heme (CtaB, CtaA, and Ccm proteins). Interestingly, protein components of both ribosomal subunits and protein translocation factors were observed, which indicated a co-translational approach for co-factor insertion into COX.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common malignant tumor and third leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Most cases arise as a consequence of underlying liver disease, e.g. developed from chronic hepatitis B or C infectionsalcohol abuse or obesity, and are most often associated with liver cirrhosis. Hypoxiand the hypoxia inducible factors (HIF)-1α and -2α promote tumor progression of HCC, not only affecting tumor cell proliferation and invasion, but also angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis and thus, increasing the risk of metastasis.
HCC is characterized as one of the most vascularized solid tumors. While HIF-1α and HIF-2α are frequently up-regulated in HCC only HIF-2α is correlated with high patientlethality. HIF-dependent regulation of HCC angiogenesis is controversially discussed.VEGFA, for example, as the most prominent factor inducing tumor angiogenesis represents not only a HIF-1 target, but also a HIF-2 target gene in HCC. This questions whether both isoforms have overlapping functions in regulating the angiogenic switch in HCC.
Besides angiogenesis also tumor-associated lymphangiogenesis significantly influences patient survival in HCC. Lymphatic spread is an important clinical determinant for the prognosis of HCC, but little is known how lymphangiogenesis is controlled in this context. To date, mainly HIF-1α was positively correlated with olymphatic invasion and metastasis in HCC, while a defined role of HIF-2α is missing. Thus, although HIF-1α and HIF-2α are structurally alike and regulate overlapping but not identical sets of target genes, they promote highly divergent outcomes in cancer progression and may even have counteracting roles. The aim of my work was to characterize the specific role of HIF-1α and HIF-2α in the angiogenic switch and lymphangiogenesis induction during HCC development.
Therefore, I created a stable knockdown of HIF-1α and HIF-2α in HepG2 cells and generated cocultures of HepG2 spheroids and embryonic bodies derived from embryonic mouse stem cells as an in vitro tumor model mimicking the cancer microenvironment to analyze which HIF isoform has key regulatory functions in HCC (lymph)angiogenesis. In cocultures with a HIF-2α knockdown angiogenesis was attenuated but lymphangiogenesis increased, while the knockdown of HIF-1α was without effect. Microarray analysis identified plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1)and insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 (IGFBP1) as HIF-2 target genes.However, prominent angiogenic and lymphangiogenic factors such as VEGFs, PDGFB, ANG and their receptors were not regulated in a HIF-dependent manner. As PAI-1 was linked to angiogenesis in literature and IGF-signaling, which is negatively regulated by IGFBP-1, was correlated with lymphangiogenesis, I decided to investigate their HIF-2α-dependent influence on HCC (lymph)angiogenesis. The knockdown of PAI-1 in HepG2 cells also lowered angiogenesis in PAI-1k/d cocultures similar to the HIF-2α k/d phenotype. PAI-1 as the potent inhibitor of tPA and uPA, both inducing the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, also inhibits plasmin directly. Therefore, I assumed an increase of plasmin in HIF-2α k/d and PAI-1 k/d cocultures as a result of the reduced PAI-1 levels. Blocking plasmin with aprotinin in HIF-2α k/d cocultures restored angioge nesis, suggesting that HIF-2α increases PAI-1 to lower concentrations of active plasmin, thereby supporting angiogenesis. In further experiments I could exclude PAI-1 to reduce angiogenesis by inducing plasmin-mediated apoptosis of differentiating stem cells in PAI-1 k/d and HIF-2α k/d cocultures, but demonstrated an increase of VEGFA165 degradation in these cocultures, suggesting plasmin-catalyzed proteolysis of VEGF as an additional layer of regulation required to explain the angiogenic phenotype. Besides the pivotal role of PAI-1 in angiogenesis I also investigated its potentialinfluence in lymphangiogenesis. Indeed, the knockdown of PAI-1 reduced lymphaticstructures and implied an important but opposing role in lymphangiogenesis comparedto induced lymphangiogenesis in HIF-2α k/d cocultures. However, blocking plasmin again with aprotinin in HIF-2α k/d cocultures restored lymphangiogenesis to the level of control virus, which indicates a divergent lymphangiogenic role of plasmin in PAI-1 k/d and HIF-2α k/d cocultures, possibly because of other essential pathways masking the lymphangiogenic effects of PAI-1 in HIF-2α k/d cocultures.
HIF-2α resulting in reduced IGFBP1 expression induced the differentiation of stem cells toward a lymphatic cell type and significantly enhanced the assembly of human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells into tubes. These data point the first time to an important impact of HIF-2 in the regulatin of lymphangiogenesis in vitro by inducing IGFBP1 and thus, scavenging IGF-1. Furthermore, matrigel plug assays to investigate the in vivorelevance of these observations confirmed HIF-2α as a crucial factor in the regulation of lymphangiogenesis in vivo
In conclusion, this work provides evidence that HIF-2α is a key regulator of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis in HCC by regulating PAI-1 and IGFBP1. HIF-2α positively influences the angiogenic switch via PAI-1 and negatively affects lymphangiogenesis via IGFBP1 expression. Targeting HIF-2α in HCC to reduce tumor angiogenesis should be approached carefully, as it might be overcome by induced lymphangiogenesis and metastasis.
Halobacillus halophilus, a moderately halophilic bacterium isolated from salt marshes, produces various compatible solutes to cope with osmotic stress. Glutamate and glutamine are dominant compatible solutes at mild salinities. Glutamine synthetase activity in cell suspensions of Halobacillus halophilus wild type was shown to be salt dependent and chloride modulated. A possible candidate to catalyze glutamine synthesis is glutamine synthetase A2, whose transcription is stimulated by chloride. To address the role of GlnA2 in the biosynthesis of the osmolytes glutamate and glutamine, a deletion mutant (ΔglnA2) was generated and characterized in detail. We compared the pool of compatible solutes and performed transcriptional analyses of the principal genes controlling the solute production in the wild type strain and the deletion mutant. These measurements did not confirm the hypothesized role of GlnA2 in the osmolyte production. Most likely the presence of another, yet to be identified enzyme has the main contribution in the measured activity in crude extracts and probably determines the total chloride-modulated profile. The role of GlnA2 remains to be elucidated.
Poster presentation at 1st International Workshop on Odor Spaces.
Mice are exceptional in their ability to capture their chemical environment, mapping the olfactory world into a basic sensory representation with over one thousand different types of chemical sensors, that is, olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs). OSNs of each type converge in the olfactory bulb onto exclusive distinct physiological areas called glomeruli. The glomeruli constitute the first relay station of olfactory stimulus representation in the mouse brain. Thus, the stimulus induced glomerular input pattern spatially embodies an important part of the sensory representation in the olfactory bulb. Still, topographic organization principles (chemotopy, tunotopy) are under debate. One reason might be that investigation are, due to experimental limitations, only performed on stimuli sets in the size of one hundred odors. But this represents only a tiny snapshot of the vast amount of molecules in the olfactory world and topographic relationships might be disguised in the incomplete representation of molecular receptive ranges (MRR). Therefore we investigated the problem with the MOR18-2 glomerulus as point of reference: First we determined it's MRR. Then, based on a measurement set covering this MRR, we elucidated the topographic embedding. It shows that MOR18-2 is embedded in a hierarchy of patchy tunotopic domains.
Focus on quantum efficiency
(2014)
Technologies which convert light into energy, and vice versa, rely on complex, microscopic transport processes in the condensed phase, which obey the laws of quantum mechanics, but hitherto lack systematic analysis and modeling. Given our much improved understanding of multicomponent, disordered, highly structured, open quantum systems, this ‘focus on’ collection collects cuttingedge research on theoretical and experimental aspects of quantum transport in truly complex systems as defined, e.g., by the macromolecular functional complexes at the heart of photosynthesis, by organic quantum wires, or even photovoltaic devices. To what extent microscopic quantum coherence effects can (be made to) impact on macroscopic transport behavior is an equally challenging and controversial question, and this "focus on" collection provides a setting for the present state of affairs, as well as for the "quantum opportunities" on the horizon.
We demonstrate high-density labelling of cellular DNA and RNA using click chemistry and perform confocal and super-resolution microscopy. We visualize the crescent and ring-like structure of densely packed RNA in nucleoli. We further demonstrate click chemistry with unnatural amino acids for super-resolution imaging of outer-membrane proteins of E. coli.
Translation fidelity and efficiency require multiple ribosomal (r)RNA modifications that are mostly mediated by small nucleolar (sno)RNPs during ribosome production. Overlapping basepairing of snoRNAs with pre-rRNAs often necessitates sequential and efficient association and dissociation of the snoRNPs, however, how such hierarchy is established has remained unknown so far. Here, we identify several late-acting snoRNAs that bind pre-40S particles in human cells and show that their association and function in pre-40S complexes is regulated by the RNA helicase DDX21. We map DDX21 crosslinking sites on pre-rRNAs and show their overlap with the basepairing sites of the affected snoRNAs. While DDX21 activity is required for recruitment of the late-acting snoRNAs SNORD56 and SNORD68, earlier snoRNAs are not affected by DDX21 depletion. Together, these observations provide an understanding of the timing and ordered hierarchy of snoRNP action in pre-40S maturation and reveal a novel mode of regulation of snoRNP function by an RNA helicase in human cells.
Antigenic and 3D structural characterization of soluble X4 and hybrid X4-R5 HIV-1 Env trimers
(2014)
Background: HIV-1 is decorated with trimeric glycoprotein spikes that enable infection by engaging CD4 and a chemokine coreceptor, either CCR5 or CXCR4. The variable loop 3 (V3) of the HIV-1 envelope protein (Env) is the main determinant for coreceptor usage. The predominant CCR5 using (R5) HIV-1 Env has been intensively studied in function and structure, whereas the trimeric architecture of the less frequent, but more cytopathic CXCR4 using (X4) HIV-1 Env is largely unknown, as are the consequences of sequence changes in and near V3 on antigenicity and trimeric Env structure.
Results: Soluble trimeric gp140 Env constructs were used as immunogenic mimics of the native spikes to analyze their antigenic properties in the context of their overall 3D structure. We generated soluble, uncleaved, gp140 trimers from a prototypic T-cell line-adapted (TCLA) X4 HIV-1 strain (NL4-3) and a hybrid (NL4-3/ADA), in which the V3 spanning region was substituted with that from the primary R5 isolate ADA. Compared to an ADA (R5) gp140, the NL4-3 (X4) construct revealed an overall higher antibody accessibility, which was most pronounced for the CD4 binding site (CD4bs), but also observed for mAbs against CD4 induced (CD4i) epitopes and gp41 mAbs. V3 mAbs showed significant binding differences to the three constructs, which were refined by SPR analysis. Of interest, the NL4-3/ADA construct with the hybrid NL4-3/ADA CD4bs showed impaired CD4 and CD4bs mAb reactivity despite the presence of the essential elements of the CD4bs epitope. We obtained 3D reconstructions of the NL4-3 and the NL4-3/ADA gp140 trimers via electron microscopy and single particle analysis, which indicates that both constructs inherit a propeller-like architecture. The first 3D reconstruction of an Env construct from an X4 TCLA HIV-1 strain reveals an open conformation, in contrast to recently published more closed structures from R5 Env. Exchanging the X4 V3 spanning region for that of R5 ADA did not alter the open Env architecture as deduced from its very similar 3D reconstruction.
Conclusions: 3D EM analysis showed an apparent open trimer configuration of X4 NL4-3 gp140 that is not modified by exchanging the V3 spanning region for R5 ADA.
Transcription factor IIS (TFIIS) is a protein known for catalyzing the cleavage reaction of the 3′-end of backtracked RNA transcript, allowing RNA polymerase II (Pol II) to reactivate the transcription process from the arrested state. Recent structural studies have provided a molecular basis of protein-protein interaction between TFIIS and Pol II. However, the detailed dynamic conformational changes of TFIIS upon binding to Pol II and the related thermodynamic information are largely unknown. Here we use computational approaches to investigate the conformational space of TFIIS in the Pol II-bound and Pol II-free (unbound) states. Our results reveal two distinct conformations of TFIIS: the closed and the open forms. The closed form is dominant in the Pol II-free (unbound) state of TFIIS, whereas the open form is favorable in the Pol II-bound state. Furthermore, we discuss the free energy difference involved in the conformational changes between the two forms in the presence or absence of Pol II. Additionally, our analysis indicates that hydrophobic interactions and the protein-protein interactions between TFIIS and Pol II are crucial for inducing the conformational changes of TFIIS. Our results provide novel insights into the functional interplay between Pol II and TFIIS as well as mechanism of reactivation of Pol II transcription by TFIIS.
Pulsed Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is the most powerful tool to investigate structural properties and dynamics of paramagnetic substances. Up to date the electron spin is almost exclusively manipulated by rectangular shaped microwave pulses generated with switches. These pulses are unselective which means they excite outside their nominal bandwidth which is in most cases shallow compared to the overall spectral width of the spin system. Shaped pulses which are widely applied in NMR promise higher bandwidth and selectivity. The use of amplitude and phase modulated pulses was not possible for EPR due to the three orders of magnitude faster timescale compared to NMR. In this work, for the first time, an AWG (arbitrary waveform generator) operating with a 1 ns time resolution and 14 bit amplitude resolution was implemented into a commercial Bruker pulsed EPR spectrometer.
First results were obtained with broadband excitation pulses derived by optimum control theory (OCT). The OCT-pulse used excites transverse magnetization with 98% efficiency over a more than four times larger bandwidth than common rectangular pulse generating the same 1 B field. The benefit of such a pulse was demonstrated for magnitude FT-EPR spectroscopy on organic radicals in liquid phase.
Due to Spectrometer deadtime an FID cannot be observed for most inhomogeneous spin systems. For that reason prefocused pulses have been evaluated for their applicability to EPR spectroscopy. OCT-derived prefocused pulses can be understood as a compact Hahn Echo sequence in one monolithic pulse. Here, two problems have been encountered. 1) The limited bandwidth of the active and passive microwave components in the excitation path as well as microwave resonator cause linear distortions of the pulse shape which results in inferior pulse performance. This could be circumvented by measuring the impulse response function of the whole spin excitation path and including this information in the pulse optimization procedure. 2) Anisotropic hyperfine interaction which was not taken into account during the pulse optimization also caused efficiency losses.
PELDOR spectroscopy is a valuable tool to measure distance distributions between two or more paramagnetic centers in the range from 2-8 nm. It is demonstrated that the S/N ratio of PELDOR experiments can be substantially increased by substituting the rectangular shaped pump pulse by an adiabatic inversion pulse. The damping of the dipolar oscillations introduced by the prolonged pump pulse towards shorter distances could be circumvented by introducing a second time reversed pump pulse.
By substituting the refocused echo of the well-known 4-pulse PELDOR with a CPMG sequence the dipolar evolution time and thus the validity of PELDOR experiments would be increased. To achieve the maximum dipolar evolution time in a CPMG PELDOR for each refocusing pulse one pump pulse has to be applied. This could only be achieved with the new adiabatic inversion pulses since multiple inversions with efficiency close to one are not possible with rectangular pulses. Even with adiabatic pump pulses a reduced efficiency was observed due to hardware limitations thus limiting the sequence to three refocusing pulses. An iterative method was developed to remove the residual dipolar signals attributed to the reduced inversion efficiency.
The new 7-pulse CPMG PELDOR sequence enabled measuring reliable distance distributions between the protomers of the trimeric betaine transporter BetP. With these it could be shown that the asymmetries found for the 2 and 3-dimensional crystal structures are even larger in frozen detergent.
Nichtribosomale Peptid Synthetasen sind Quelle für eine Vielzahl an Sekundärmetaboliten mit antibiotischer Wirkung. Jede Synthetase besteht aus einer Abfolge von Modulen, wobei jedes Modul die nötigen Domänen für den Einbau eines Bausteins in das gebildeten Peptids enthält. Ein Ansatz zur Gewinnung neuer Peptidantibiotika, die angesichts der steigenden Zahl multiresistenter Keime dringend benötigt werden, ist der Austausch von Domänen oder Modulen. Aufgrund bisher noch nicht verstandener Selektivitäten, entweder zwischen den Domänen oder zwischen einzelnen Domänen und Zwischenstufen des gebildeten Peptids, führt dieser Ansatz jedoch in der Praxis oft zu keiner oder nur geringer Ausbeute.
Ziel der vorgelegten Arbeit war es, einige dieser Selektivitäten zu untersuchen, wobei der Fokus auf Peptidyl Carrier Proteinen Domänen (PCPs) lag. An diese Domänen sind alle Intermediate während der Reifung des Peptids kovalent über einen Phosphopantethein-Kofaktor (Ppan-Arm) gebunden.
Im ersten Teil der Arbeit sollte die Struktur einer mit einem Heptapeptid beladenen PCP mittels Lösungs-Kernspinresonanzspektroskopie (NMR) bestimmt werden. Hierbei konnte die natürliche Verknüpfung zwischen Ppan-Arm und Peptid über einen Thioester nicht verwendet werden, da diese Bindung zu Hydrolyse-anfällig war. Es konnte jedoch gezeigt werden, dass die Substitution des Thioesters durch eine nicht hydrolysierbare Amidbindung keinen Einfluss auf die Struktur hat, wodurch die Strukturbestimmung möglich war. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass die Peptid-beladene PCP in der sogenannten A/H state Konformation vorliegt, wobei das an sie gebundene Peptid frei beweglich ist. Somit scheint es wahrscheinlich, dass die PCP keine Selektivität für das an sie gebundene Peptid aufweist. Dies ist ein Unterschied zu den strukturell ähnlichen Acyl Carrier Proteinen (ACPs) aus der bakteriellen Fettsäurebiosynthese, da diese eine Bindungstasche für die an sie gebundenen Fettsäuren ausbilden.
Untersuchungen der Selektivität der Kondensationsdomäne (C Domäne) für das PCP gebundene Peptid mittels NMR-Titrationen und biochemischer Analysen konnten nicht durchgeführt werden, da sich im Laufe des Projekts zeigte, dass die aus der Synthetase herausgetrennte C Domäne katalytisch nicht aktiv war. Stattdessen sollte die Kristallstruktur einer Peptid-beladenen PCP-C Bidomäne, für welche eine katalytische Aktivität bereits gezeigt worden war, gelöst werden. Da aber bereits ein signifikanter Anteil der Bidomäne während der Expression mit dem Ppan-Arm beladen wurde, war die nötige quantitative Beladung mit dem Peptid gekoppelten Ppan-Arm in vitro nicht möglich. Eine quantitative Modifizierung mit dem Ppan-Arm in vitro war hingegen erfolgreich, und die Struktur der Ppan-beladenen Bidomäne konnte gelöst werden. Aufgrund des großen Abstands zwischen den aktiven Zentren der beiden Domänen kann es sich bei der beobachteten Orientierung nicht um jene handeln, die die beiden Domänen zueinander annehmen, wenn die C Domäne das PCP-gebundene Peptid bindet.
Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Modifizierung einer PCP durch eine Gruppe II Phosphopantetheintransferase (PPT) untersucht. PPTs katalysieren die Übertragung des Ppan Arms auf die Seitenkette eines in PCPs konservierten Serins. In dieser Magnesium-abhängigen Reaktion dient Coenzym A (CoA) als Quelle für den Ppan-Arm. Durch Mutation des konservierten Serins in der PCP zu Alanin konnte ein stabiler Komplex aus PCP und PPT in Anwesenheit von CoA und Magnesium kristallisiert und seine Struktur bestimmt werden.
In einem Strukturmodell für den PCP/PPT Komplex war eine andere Konformation für die PCP postuliert worden, als sie in der Kristallstruktur des Komplexes zu beobachten ist. Durch Strukturbestimmung der PCP mittels Lösungs-NMR und anschließender Titrationsexperimente konnte jedoch gezeigt werden, dass sowohl die freie als auch die komplexierte PCP in Lösung ebenfalls die in der Kristallstruktur beobachtete Konformation einnehmen.
Aufgrund der gelösten Kristallstruktur konnten zwei Bereiche identifiziert werden, in denen die beiden Proteine im Komplex in direktem Kontakt zueinander stehen. Der eine Bereich ist durch eine intermolekulare Wasserstoffbrücke, der andere durch hydrophobe Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Proteinen gekennzeichnet. Durch ortsspezifische Mutagenese konnten beide Wechselwirkungen gestört werden, was sich in einer Abnahme der Komplexstabilität und einer veränderten Geschwindigkeit der Übertragung des Ppan-Arms äußerte.
Die große strukturelle Ähnlichkeit zwischen dem in dieser Arbeit untersuchten Komplex aus zwei in Bacillus vorkommenden Proteinen und einem humanen ACP/PPT Komplex legt die Vermutung nahe, dass die beobachteten Wechselwirkungen in vielen Organismen konserviert sind.
Observation and tracking of fluorescently labeled molecules and particles in living cells reveals detailed information about intracellular processes on the molecular level. Whereas light microscopic particle observation is usually limited to two-dimensional projections of short trajectory segments, we report here image-based real-time three-dimensional single particle tracking in an active feedback loop with single molecule sensitivity. We tracked particles carrying only 1-3 fluorophores deep inside living tissue with high spatio-temporal resolution. Using this approach, we succeeded to acquire trajectories containing several hundred localizations. We present statistical methods to find significant deviations from random Brownian motion in such trajectories. The analysis allowed us to directly observe transitions in the mobility of ribosomal (r)RNA and Balbiani ring (BR) messenger (m)RNA particles in living Chironomus tentans salivary gland cell nuclei. We found that BR mRNA particles displayed phases of reduced mobility, while rRNA particles showed distinct binding events in and near nucleoli.
Since Inhibitor of Apoptosis (IAP) proteins are frequently dysregulated in different cancer entities and contribute to apoptosis resistance, pharmacological IAP antagonists are considered to be promising agents for the future development of cancer treatment strategies. IAP antagonists are small-molecule drugs that have been designed to mimic the interaction site of IAP proteins with their endogenous inhibitor Second mitochondrial activator of caspases (SMAC). Thus, they are frequently referred to as SMAC mimetics. Treatment with SMAC mimetics engages an apoptotic program in cancers by affecting different components of the apoptotic machinery. Besides disinhibition of caspases, SMAC mimetics trigger non-canonical nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) signaling, which induces upregulation of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α and other NF-κB target genes. In particular, TNFα production has been closely linked to the induction of SMAC mimetic-mediated cell death. The TNFα-dependent para/autocrine loop facilitates the formation of a cytosolic complex consisting of caspase-8, Fas-associated death domain (FADD) and Receptor-interacting protein (RIP) 1, which serves as caspase-8 activation platform and ultimately triggers induction of apoptosis. In the present study, we use the small-molecule bivalent SMAC mimetic BV6 to analyze SMAC-stimulated NF-κB signaling in cancer cell lines of different entities. Interestingly, we identify two novel NF-κB-regulated factors that are both required for SMAC mimetic-induced apoptosis in a context-dependent manner. First, we show that NF-κB-dependent upregulation of death receptor 5 (DR5) can serve as an alternative mechanism of BV6-mediated cell death. We demonstrate that BV6 treatment induces NF-κB-dependent but largely TNFα -independent apoptosis in A172 glioblastoma cells. By using an unbiased whole genome expression analysis approach, we identify DR5 as a critical NF-κB target gene, which substitutes TNFα and is indispensable for BV6-initated cell death in A172 cells. Second, we demonstrate that Interferon regulatory factor (IRF) 1 is required for BV6-induced TNFα production and apoptosis. Our study provides evidence that IRF1 closely cooperates with the NF-κB network in BV6-mediated cell death and additionally alters expression of selective SMAC mimetic-induced target genes. Furthermore, we show that BV6 treatment triggers secretion of a set of proinflammatory cytokines and increases attraction of monocytes to BV6-treated tumor cells in an IRF1-dependent manner. In summary, our work supports the notion that NF-κB-regulated factors are critically required for SMAC mimetic-initiated apoptosis. We show that IRF1 is indispensable for TNFα production and cell death in BV6-sensitive cell lines and that also DR5 can serve as a proapoptotic NF-κB-controlled factor in BV6-induced apoptosis besides TNFα. Furthermore, this study contributes to an improved understanding on non-apoptotic functions of SMAC mimetics, as IRF1 additionally influences expression levels of proinflammatory cytokines and attraction of immune cells. Thus, our work provides novel insights into the regulation of SMAC mimetic-induced signaling events, which is crucial for the translation of SMAC mimetics for use in clinical application.
The human endothelin receptors, ETA and ETB, are two members of the G-protein coupled receptors family (GPCRs) and they are key players in cardiovascular regulation. The characterization of their functionality in vitro has been limited by the possibility to obtain high quality samples using conventional expression systems. The Cell-Free expression system is an alternative technique for the production of membrane protein as well as GPCRs and can overcome some of the limitations that are commonly encountered using an in vivo approach. Cell-Free expression protocols for the two receptors ETA and ETB have been optimized by implementing post- and co-translational association to lipid bilayers. The efficiency of the reconstitution or association to liposomes and nanodiscs has systematically been studied and the ligand binding properties of the two receptors have been analyzed using a set of different complementary techniques. In several different conditions a high affinity binding of the peptide ligand ET-1 to both endothelin receptors could be obtained and the highest activity values were detected in sample prepared using a co-translational approach in presence of nanodiscs. Furthermore, the characteristic differential binding pattern of selected agonists and antagonists to the two receptors was confirmed. In samples obtained from several Cell-Free expression conditions, two intrinsic properties of the functionally folded ETB receptor, such as the proteolytic processing based on conformational recognition as well as the formation of SDS-resistant complexes with the peptide ligand ET-1, were detected. ETA and ETB are able to induce in vivo the activation of hetrotrimeric G proteins upon stimulation with an agonist, leading to the dissociation of the heterotrimeric complex and the exchange of GDP to GTP in the Galpha subunit. The Cell-Free expression system was chosen for the production of two G alpha subunit, Galpha s and Galpha q. Soluble expression of the two proteins was achieved and the production of active Galpha s was confirmed using fluorescent as well as radioactive assays. In conclusion, the obtained results document a new process for the production of ligand binding competent endothelin receptors, as well as Galpha proteins, using a Cell-Free expression system. The combination of this expression system and the nanodiscs technology appears to be a promising tool for the further characterization of membrane proteins as well as GPCRs.
In Reaktion auf zellulären Stress wie etwa Schädigungen der DNA oder die vermehrte Aktivität von Onkogenen aktivieren vorgeschaltete Signalkaskaden den Transkriptionsfaktor (TF) p53. Dieser kann über die Aktivierung der Expression von Zielgenen wiederum die Zellteilung stoppen, die Reparatur von DNA Schäden initiieren oder in schweren Fällen die Eliminierung der Zelle durch Apoptose einleiten. Ist p53 durch Mutationen deaktiviert, können sich entartete somatische Zellen vermehren und in der Folge Krebs entstehen.
In Wirbeltieren finden sich neben p53 mit p63 und p73 zwei weitere TFs, welche während der Evolution aus dem gleichen gemeinsamen Vorläufer durch Genduplikationen hervorgegangen sind. Die drei TFs sind modular aufgebaut und alle Isoformen verfügen jeweils minimal über eine DNA Bindungsdomäne (DBD) und eine Tetramerisierungsdomäne (TD). Werden die p53 ähnlichen TFs aktiviert, lagern sie sich über die TD vermittelt zu Tetrameren zusammen, wodurch ihre DBDs kooperativ an DNA Sequenzmotive binden können. Die DBD ist auch über große phylogenetische Abstände hinweg hoch konserviert, wodurch bereits gezeigt werden konnte, dass auch primitive vielzellige Tiere bereits Homologe dieser TF Familie besitzen. Im Vergleich zur DBD variiert die Proteinsequenz der TD deutlich stärker, was andeutet, dass deren Struktur im Laufe der Evolution erhebliche Veränderungen durchlaufen hat. Diese Veränderungen aufzuklären ist das übergeordnete Forschungsvorhaben zu dem diese Dissertationsschrift beiträgt.
Ciona intestinalis (C.int.) ist eine Spezies aus dem Unterstamm der Manteltiere. Diese sind die engsten lebenden Verwandten der Wirbeltiere und C.int. ist ein populärer Modelorganismus für die Erforschung der Embryonalentwicklung. Sein Genom kodiert für zwei p53 ähnliche TFs, welche mit p53/p73-a und p53/p73-b bezeichnet werden. Die Struktur ihrer TDs wurde im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit mittels Kernspinresonanz (NMR) Spektroskopie untersucht.
Die TD von menschlichem p53 (hp53) ist ein Dimer aus Dimeren. Jedes Monomer formt einen beta-Strang und eine alpha-Helix. Im primären Dimer lagern diese sich so zusammen, dass ein beta-Faltblatt entsteht und die alpha-Helices mit entgegen gesetzter Orientierung der Länge nach aneinander packen. Zwei dieser Dimer lagern sich dann so zum Tetramer zusammen, dass zwischen pol-ständigen beta-Faltblättern ein Bündel aus vier Helices entsteht. Dieses Motiv ist auch in den TDs der Ciona Proteine hochkonserviert und wird im Folgenden als Kern?TD bezeichnet. In den TDs von menschlichem p63 und p73 (hp63 und hp73) verfügt jedes Monomer an seinem C-terminus noch über eine zweite Helix. Die zweiten Helices eines jeden Dimers greifen wie Klammern um das jeweils andere primäre Dimer und stabilisieren so das Tetramer. Entscheidend für die stabile Anbindung an die Kern?TD ist dabei ein charakteristisches Tyrosin-Arginin (YR) Motiv in der zweiten Helix, welches sich auch in der Sequenz der TD von C.int. p53/p73-a wiederfindet. Analysen der Sekundärstruktur auf Basis von NMR Experimenten ergaben jedoch, dass die TD von C.int. p53/p73-a bei 25°C keine zweite Helix ausbildet. Mit Hilfe von chimären TD Peptiden, in denen Teile der Ciona Sequenz gegen die entsprechenden Abschnitte von hp73 ausgetauscht wurden, konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Kern TD von C.int. p53/p73-a fähig ist eine zweite Helix zu stabilisieren und hierfür neben dem YR Motiv auch der Sequenzabschnitt zwischen erster und zweiter Helix entscheidend ist. Stabilisierende Substitutionen in diesem Bereich bewirkten ebenso wie ein Absenken der Temperatur die Ausbildung einer zweiten Helix, welche jedoch im Gegensatz zu jener in hp73 nur transient faltet und auch nicht essentiell für die Bildung des Tetramers ist, wohl aber dessen Stabilität erhöht.
Spezifisch in der Entwicklungslinie von Ciona kam es dazu, dass eine, für eine entsprechende Vorläuferversion von C.int. p53/p73-a kodierende, mRNA spontan zurück in DNA übersetzt und ins Genom eingefügt wurde. Die durch diese Retrotransposition erzeugte neue Genkopie C.int. p53/p73-b muss demnach ursprünglich einmal für die gleiche Proteinsequenz kodiert haben, innerhalb der TD finden sich konservierte Reste jedoch nur im Bereich der Kern TD.
Von der TD von C.int. p53/p73-b wurde die molekulare Struktur in freier Lösung mittels NMR ermittelt. Diese zeigte, dass interessanterweise in der TD von C.int. p53/p73-b jedes Monomer am C-terminus eine stabil gefaltete, zweite Helix besitzt. Obwohl diese zweite Helix sich aus einer Sequenz faltet, die keinerlei Sequenzhomologie zu homologen Proteinen aus Wirbeltieren aufweist, lagert sie sich in einer Position auf die Kern TD, welche der in hp73 sehr nahe kommt. Da die primären Dimere der Kern TD aber anders als in hp63 und hp73 durch Salzbrücken miteinander verbunden sind, ist die zweite Helix jedoch nicht essentiell, um das Tetramer zu stabilisieren. Vermutlich kommt der zweiten Helix von C.int. p53/p73-b vielmehr u.a. die Aufgabe zu die Bildung von Heterotetrameren aus C.int. p53/p73-a und –b zu unterbinden.
Zusammengenommen zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass die Architektur der TD mit zweiter Helix bereits der Prototyp für die TDs aller p53 ähnlichen Proteine der Wirbel- und Manteltiere war und die als eine Art Klammer das Tetramer stabilisierende zweite Helix sich nicht erst während der Evolution der Wirbeltiere entwickelt hat.
A consistent muscle activation strategy underlies crawling and swimming in Caenorhabditis elegans
(2014)
Although undulatory swimming is observed in many organisms, the neuromuscular basis for undulatory movement patterns is not well understood. To better understand the basis for the generation of these movement patterns, we studied muscle activity in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Caenorhabditis elegans exhibits a range of locomotion patterns: in low viscosity fluids the undulation has a wavelength longer than the body and propagates rapidly, while in high viscosity fluids or on agar media the undulatory waves are shorter and slower. Theoretical treatment of observed behaviour has suggested a large change in force–posture relationships at different viscosities, but analysis of bend propagation suggests that short-range proprioceptive feedback is used to control and generate body bends. How muscles could be activated in a way consistent with both these results is unclear. We therefore combined automated worm tracking with calcium imaging to determine muscle activation strategy in a variety of external substrates. Remarkably, we observed that across locomotion patterns spanning a threefold change in wavelength, peak muscle activation occurs approximately 45° (1/8th of a cycle) ahead of peak midline curvature. Although the location of peak force is predicted to vary widely, the activation pattern is consistent with required force in a model incorporating putative length- and velocity-dependence of muscle strength. Furthermore, a linear combination of local curvature and velocity can match the pattern of activation. This suggests that proprioception can enable the worm to swim effectively while working within the limitations of muscle biomechanics and neural control.
Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) is a cation-selective light-gated channel from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Nagel G, Szellas T, Huhn W, Kateriya S, Adeishvili N, Berthold P, et al. Channelrhodopsin-2, a directly light-gated cation-selective membrane channel. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2003;100:13940-5), which has become a powerful tool in optogenetics. Two-dimensional crystals of the slow photocycling C128T ChR2 mutant were exposed to 473 nm light and rapidly frozen to trap the open state. Projection difference maps at 6Å resolution show the location, extent and direction of light-induced conformational changes in ChR2 during the transition from the closed state to the ion-conducting open state. Difference peaks indicate that transmembrane helices (TMHs) TMH2, TMH6 and TMH7 reorient or rearrange during the photocycle. No major differences were found near TMH3 and TMH4 at the dimer interface. While conformational changes in TMH6 and TMH7 are known from other microbial-type rhodopsins, our results indicate that TMH2 has a key role in light-induced channel opening and closing in ChR2.
Heme-copper oxidases (HCOs) are the terminal enzymes of the aerobic respiratory chain in the inner mitochondrial membrane or the plasma membrane in many prokaryotes. These multi-subunit membrane protein complexes catalyze the reduction of oxygen to water, coupling this exothermic reaction to the establishment of an electrochemical proton gradient across the membrane in which they are embedded. The energy stored in the electrochemical proton gradient is used e.g. by the FOF1-ATP synthase to generate ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. The superfamily of HCOs is phylogenetically classified into three major families: A, B and C. The A-family HCOs, represented by the well-studied aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases (aa3-CcOs), are found in mitochondria and many bacteria. The B-family of HCOs contains a number of bacterial and archaeal oxidases. The C-family comprises only the cbb3-type cytochrome c oxidase (cbb3-CcO) and is most distantly related to the mitochondrial respiratory oxidases.
Background: Advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents a significant unmet medical need. Despite advances with targeted therapies in a small subset of patients, fewer than 20% of patients survive for more than two years after diagnosis. Cancer vaccines are a promising therapeutic approach that offers the potential for durable responses through the engagement of the patient's own immune system. CV9202 is a self-adjuvanting mRNA vaccine that targets six antigens commonly expressed in NSCLC (NY ESO-1, MAGEC1, MAGEC2, 5 T4, survivin, and MUC1).
Methods/Design: The trial will assess the safety and tolerability of CV9202 vaccination combined with local radiation designed to enhance immune responses and will include patients with stage IV NSCLC and a response or stable disease after first-line chemotherapy or therapy with an EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Three histological and molecular subtypes of NSCLC will be investigated (squamous and non-squamous cell with/without EGFR mutations). All patients will receive two initial vaccinations with CV9202 prior to local radiotherapy (5 GY per day for four successive days) followed by further vaccinations until disease progression. The primary endpoint of the study is the number of patients experiencing Grade >3 treatment-related adverse events. Pharmacodynamic analyses include the assessment of immune responses to the antigens encoded by CV9202 and others not included in the panel (antigen spreading) and standard efficacy assessments.
Discussion: RNActive self-adjuvanted mRNA vaccines offer the potential for simultaneously inducing immune responses to a wide panel of antigens commonly expressed in tumors. This trial will assess the feasibility of this approach in combination with local radiotherapy in NSCLC patients.
The asymmetric unit of the title compound, C28H42N2O5·H2O, consists of one half of the organic molecule and one half-molecule of water, both of which are located on a mirror plane which passes through the central C atoms and the hydroxyl group of the heterocyclic system. The hydroxyl group at the central ring is disordered over two equally occupied positions. The six-membered ring adopts a chair conformation, and the 2-hydroxybenzyl substituents occupy the sterically preferred equatorial positions. The aromatic rings make dihedral angles of 75.57 (9)° with the mean plane of the heterocyclic ring. The dihedral angle between the two aromatic rings is 19.18 (10)°. The molecular structure features two intramolecular phenolic O-H...N hydrogen bonds with graph-set motif S(6). In the crystal, molecules are connected via O-H...O hydrogen bonds into zigzag chains running along the a-axis direction.
Na+/H+ antiporters are integral membrane proteins that are present in almost every cell and in every kingdom of life. They are essential for the regulation of intracellular pH-value, Na+-concentration and cell volume. These secondary active transporters exchange sodium ions against protons via an alternating access mechanism, which is not understood in full detail. Na+/H+ antiporters show distinct species-specific transport characteristics and regulatory properties that correlate with respective physiological functions. Here we present the characterization of the Na+/H+ antiporter NhaA from Salmonella enterica serovar Thyphimurium LT2, the causing agent of food-born human gastroenteritis and typhoid like infections. The recombinant antiporter was functional in vivo and in vitro. Expression of its gene complemented the Na+-sensitive phenotype of an E. coli strain that lacks the main Na+/H+ antiporters. Purified to homogeneity, the antiporter was a dimer in solution as accurately determined by size-exclusion chromatography combined with multi-angle laser-light scattering and refractive index monitoring. The purified antiporter was fully capable of electrogenic Na+(Li+)/H+-antiport when reconstituted in proteoliposomes and assayed by solid-supported membrane-based electrophysiological measurements. Transport activity was inhibited by 2-aminoperimidine. The recorded negative currents were in agreement with a 1Na+(Li+)/2H+ stoichiometry. Transport activity was low at pH 7 and up-regulation above this pH value was accompanied by a nearly 10-fold decrease of KmNa (16 mM at pH 8.5) supporting a competitive substrate binding mechanism. K+ does not affect Na+ affinity or transport of substrate cations, indicating that selectivity of the antiport arises from the substrate binding step. In contrast to homologous E. coli NhaA, transport activity remains high at pH values above 8.5. The antiporter from S. Typhimurium is a promising candidate for combined structural and functional studies to contribute to the elucidation of the mechanism of pH-dependent Na+/H+ antiporters and to provide insights in the molecular basis of species-specific growth and survival strategies.
Bacteria have adapted their NhaA Na(+)/H(+) exchangers responsible for salt homeostasis to their different habitats. We present an electrophysiological and kinetic analysis of NhaA from Helicobacter pylori and compare it to the previously investigated exchangers from Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. Properties of all three transporters are described by a simple model using a single binding site for H(+) and Na(+). We show that H.pylori NhaA only has a small acidic shift of its pH-dependent activity profile compared to the other transporters and discuss why a more drastic change in its pH activity profile is not physiologically required.
pH and Na+ homeostasis in all cells requires Na+/H+ antiporters. The crystal structure, obtained at pH 4, of NhaA, the main antiporter of Escherichia coli, has provided general insights into an antiporter mechanism and its unique pH regulation. Here, we describe a general method to select various NhaA mutants from a library of randomly mutagenized NhaA. The selected mutants, A167P and F267C are described in detail. Both mutants are expressed in Escherichia coli EP432 cells at 70–95% of the wild type but grow on selective medium only at neutral pH, A167P on Li+ (0.1 M) and F267C on Na+ (0.6 M). Surprising for an electrogenic secondary transporter, and opposed to wild type NhaA, the rates of A167P and F267C are almost indifferent to membrane potential. Detailed kinetic analysis reveals that in both mutants the rate limiting step of the cation exchange cycle is changed from an electrogenic to an electroneutral reaction.
Background: Simple peak-picking algorithms, such as those based on lineshape fitting, perform well when peaks are completely resolved in multidimensional NMR spectra, but often produce wrong intensities and frequencies for overlapping peak clusters. For example, NOESY-type spectra have considerable overlaps leading to significant peak-picking intensity errors, which can result in erroneous structural restraints. Precise frequencies are critical for unambiguous resonance assignments.
Results: To alleviate this problem, a more sophisticated peaks decomposition algorithm, based on non-negative matrix factorization (NMF), was developed. We produce peak shapes from Fourier-transformed NMR spectra. Apart from its main goal of deriving components from spectra and producing peak lists automatically, the NMF approach can also be applied if the positions of some peaks are known a priori, e.g. from consistently referenced spectral dimensions of other experiments.
Conclusions: Application of the NMF algorithm to a three-dimensional peak list of the 23 kDa bi-domain section of the RcsD protein (RcsD-ABL-HPt, residues 688-890) as well as to synthetic HSQC data shows that peaks can be picked accurately also in spectral regions with strong overlap.
A versatile synthetic procedure is described to prepare the benzimidazole-fused 1,2,4-thiadiazoles 2a–c via a methanesulfonyl chloride initiated multistep cyclization involving the intramolecular reaction of an in-situ generated carbodiimide with a thiourea unit. The structure of the intricate heterocycle 2a was confirmed by single-crystal X-ray analysis and its mechanism of formation supported by DFT computations.
Molecular signaling networks, organized in discrete subsets of proteins in space and time, represent the major principle by which the cell achieves its functional specificity and homeostasis. Complex network organization is preserved by numerous mechanisms, including sequestration of proteins into specific subcellular compartments (eg. organelles), post-translational modifications and most importantly by balanced timing of their biosynthesis and turnover. Two routes of protein degradation, which are fundamentally quite different, are proteasomal and lysosomal-mediated destruction. The latter not only governs degradation of molecules that passed through endocytic or secretory process (trafficking from plasma membrane or Golgi compartment), but also the degradation of cytoplasmic molecules that have been sequestered by a process called macroautophagy (henceforth autophagy). Recently our understanding of autophagic regulatory mechanisms has increased significantly, as molecular details of how autophagy contributes to the degradation of proteins (old, misfolded or aggregated), damaged organelles or pathogens have been deciphered. Initially described as bulk, nonspecific membrane sequestration process induced primarily by nutrient deprivation, autophagy is now known to be selective in terms of cargo recognition and integration into dynamic cellular membrane trafficking system.
My work has addressed the fundamental question of how small ubiquitin-like modifiers LC3/GABARAP, that are conjugated to the autophagic membranes, function within the process of cargo selection and crosstalk between autophagic and endocytic membrane trafficking events. We have employed an initial yeast twohybrid screen to identify LC3/GABARAP interacting partners. Using this technique, we have identified several novel autophagy receptor proteins, mitochondrial protein Nix (BNIP3L), and adaptor proteins, including Rab GTPase activating proteins (TBC family of proteins). Through a conserved LC3 interacting region (LIR), Nix, Rab GAPs and other autophagy adaptor/receptor molecules share a common mode of binding to LC3/GABARAP. However, in contrast to Nix, which specifically facilitates removal of mitochondria in maturing erythrocytes, Rab GAP proteins preferably regulate the dynamics of autophagosome formation and maturation as well as sorting of cargo. Fourteen out of 36 screened Rab GAPs interacted with LC3/GABARAPs. Importantly, identified Rab GAPs are clustered in different regulatory nodes according to the conservation of their GAP domain hence they impact various cellular membrane compartments and organelles, marked by specific subsets of small Rab GTPases. Identification of Rab GAPs that are directly involved in autophagy via binding to LC3 was the first report that clearly pointed to a broader implication of autophagy in all aspects of cellular membrane trafficking. Currently, only few of Rab GAPs are studied in context of autophagy regulation, while large number of them requires further functional characterization.
I have identified two LIR motifs in TBC1D5, Rab7 GAP. LIR1 has also the ability to interact with retromer complex subunit, Vps29. Using several functional assays I have shown that this motif, as well as catalytic Arg within GAP domain are particularly important for function of TBC1D5 in retrograde transport of CI-M6PR from endosomes to the trans-Golgi network (TGN). I have also shown that TBC1D5 binds to LC3 and Vps29 in mutually exclusive way and that Thr at the position 1 and Phe at position 5 of LIR1 motif are both required for TBC1D5 interaction with Vps29. Upon autophagy induction TBC1D5 dissociates from retromer, and associates with autophagic vesicles, while silencing of TBC1D5 significantly impairs autophagic flux. These findings led to the hypothesis that LIR interacting surface on TBC1D5 acts as molecular switch for dual function of TBC1D5. This also indicated that similar surfaces for LIR interaction (similarly to ubiquitin-like domains) are present on proteins other than LC3, and pointed to a dual functionality of the LIR sequence within both endocytic and autophagic pathways.
Following these initial studies, I have also shown that TBC1D5 interacts with AP2 complex subunit AP2M1, and that this interaction plays critical role in TBC1D5-dependent trafficking of Atg9. It is known that Atg9, the only trans-membrane autophagic protein, plays essential role in initiation of autophagy and growth of nascent phagophore membranes. However, machinery that specifically recruits Atg9 traffic carriers to the site of autophagosomes was not known. I subsequently demonstrated that TBC1D5 associates not only with LC3, but also with Atg9 traffic carriers and major initiatory kinase ULK1 during autophagy, while retromer failed to do so. Association of TBC1D5 with Atg9 was dependent on presence of AP2 complex, and on functional clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME). Based on these and previous findings, model was proposed, that upon induction of autophagy TBC1D5 re-routes Atg9-containing clathrin vesicles from plasma membrane to the site of autophagosome. This led us to the better understanding of TBC1D5 function, but also to the first molecular cue that Atg9 traffics within clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs). In fact, mutation of Leu-Leu motif within N terminus of Atg9, that potentially mediates interaction with adaptor protein complexes, led to enrichment of Atg9 on plasma membrane and in TGN. This suggested that the sorting motif could be important for interaction of Atg9 with AP2 and AP1 complex, as well. More importantly, TBC1D5 and Atg9 could be directly involved in dynamic regulation of growth factor receptor sorting during autophagy, thus explaining vital role of autophagy in organism development and pathogenesis.
In summary, the work contained within my thesis provides data on the mechanism by which autophagy adaptor proteins participate in cargo selection and regulation of trafficking during autophagy. Firstly, the LIR motif can target proteins or organelles for autophagic degradation (eg. Nix). Secondly, specific LIR motifs can play essential function in recruiting membrane trafficking regulatory proteins that subsequently facilitate phagophore expansion (eg. TBC1D5). Thirdly, by means of reorganization of different protein assemblies (eg. TBC1D5-VPS29 vs. TBC1D5-LC3-Atg9), dynamics of membrane remodeling mediated by Rab GTPases is kept in control during autophagy, thus keeping the organelle integrity and balance within cellular lipid sources unaffected.
5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) is an enzyme with a substantial role in inflammatory processes. In vitro kinase assays using [32P]-ATP in combination with mutagenesis have revealed that serine residues 271, 523 and 663 can be phosphorylated by MK2, PKA and ERK2 kinases, respectively. A few available reports regarding 5-LO protein sequence have covered up to 30% of the sequence after amino acid sequencing including Ser663. In LCMS/MS analyses of 5-LO tryptic digests from different cellular sources different peptides have been detected; however, none of the three phosphorylations has been detected and only Ser663 was included in the covered sequence.
As there was no comprehensive mass spectrometric analysis of 5-LO, the purpose of this study was to optimize the experimental conditions under which detection of the aforementioned phosphorylation events, as well as other possible post-translational modifications (PTMs), would be feasible. Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-MS) was used for peptide analysis of 5-LO cleaved either by chemical reagents or by proteases. Sequence coverage of 5-LO could be enhanced to be close to completion by combination of results from digestions by trypsin, AspN and chymotrypsin. In-gel trypsin digestion followed by in-solution AspN digestion proved to be a useful sample treatment for reproducible detection of the Ser271-containing peptide.
Nevertheless, in none of the examined cleavage protocols the sequence around Ser523 was detected reproducibly or with acceptable signal intensity for subsequent peptide fragmentation. Propionic anhydride and sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin cross-linker (EZ-linkTM), were used for derivatization of lysine side chains and hindrance of lysine residue recognition by trypsin. Phosphopeptide enrichment became possible after tryptic digestion of these samples, not only due to formation of an individual Ser523-containing peptide, but also because TiO2-mediated enrichment, which is performed in acidic pH, was not impaired by positively charged free lysine side chains. Additionally, biotinylation of lysine residues was exploited for an intermediate enrichment step of the lysine containing peptides, prior to TiO2 phosphopeptide enrichment.
MALDI-MS analysis after in-vitro phosphorylation of 5-LO by the three kinases showed that Ser271 was phosphorylated in the MK2 and PKA kinase assays, while Ser523 was phosphorylated only in the PKA kinase assay. Surpisingly, no phosphopeptides were detected in the in-vitro kinase assays with ERK2, even though the unmodified counterpart of the Ser663-containing peptide was easily detected. The detection limit for each of the three phosphorylation sites was determined by the use of custom made phosphopeptides and an amount of 0.06 pmol of phosphopeptide in 1 μg 5-LO (representing 0.5% phosphorylation rate) was sufficient in all cases for successful enrichment and detection by MS.
In-vitro kinase assays with [32P]-ATP were performed for some kinases that were expected to phosphorylate 5-LO according to in-silico data. Three members of the Src tyrosine kinase family (Fgr, Hck and Yes) and the Ser/Thr specific kinase DNA-PK used 5-LO as their substrate and mainly residues at the N-terminal part of 5-LO were detected phosphorylated by MS (e.g. Y42, Y53). Additional in-vitro assays for recombinant 5-LO modification included incubation with glutathione or compound U73122, previously described as inhibitor of 5-LO.
Since in-vitro assays might have generated artifacts, a method for 5-LO purification from human cells was sought, in order to examine the modification state of the protein in the cellular context. ATP-agarose affinity purification and anti-5-LO immunoprecipitation proved inappropriate for sample purification for MALDI-MS analysis. Consequently, two human cell lines that are able to express 5-LO (Rec-1 Blymphocytes and MM6 monocytes) were transduced with a DNA cassette that contained recombinant human 5-LO sequence with an attached N-terminal FLAG-tag. Anti-FLAG immunoprecipitation was then performed effectively in cell lysates and the precipitated FLAG-5-LO was separated by SDS-PAGE before MALDI-MS analysis.
The examined cell stimuli were expected to result to phosphorylation of 5-LO at Ser523 by PKA in Rec-1 cells and to phosphorylation of Ser271 and/or Ser663 in MM6 cells by activated MK2 and ERK2, respectively. Additionally, under the conditions of MM6 cell stimulation, Fgr, Hck and Yes kinases, which phosphorylated 5-LO in vitro, were expected to be activated and the possibility of 5-LO phosphorylation on tyrosine was investigated. Although immunoblotting results indicated that all the aforementioned phosphorylation events existed in the examined samples, MALDI-MS analysis verified only phosphorylation on Ser271 in differentiated MM6 cells, interestingly regardless of cell stimulation.
Finally, the primary amine derivatization procedure by EZ-linkTM was utilized for MS analysis of lysine rich proteins. In the past, chemical propionylation of histones had been employed prior to trypsin digestion; however it was easily confused in MS with combinations of other PTMs (e.g. acetylation, methylation). Moreover, propionylation is a PTM for histone H3 and this information was lost. Consequently, the EZ-link reagent was more useful for analysis of histones, as unambiguous assignment of PTMs and detection of native propionylation on bovine H3 became possible.
Physical Biology is a field of life sciences dealing with the extraction of quantitative data from biophysical or molecular biological experiments with different levels of complexity. Such data are further used as parameters for mathematical models of the biological system. These models allow to predict reactions on external stimuli by describing the relevant molecular interactions and are therefore used for example to generate a deeper comprehension of complex human diseases. An essential technique in biophysical research on human diseases is fluorescence microscopy. This is a constantly developed toolbox comprising a large number of specific labeling strategies, as well as a broad spectrum of fluorescent probes. It is further minimal invasive and therefore suitable for measurements in living cells or organisms. The sensitivity of modern photo-detectors even allows for the detection of a single fluorescent probe with an accuracy of approximately 10 nm.
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The model-prediction was further verified by two color SMLM experiments. In this work the development and application of imaging-systems are described which provide quantitative data with single-molecule resolution for systems biological model approaches with a low degree of abstractness. In the near future, the impact of mathematical models in the research field of complex human diseases will increase. The predictions of these models will be more exact, the more detailed and accurate the input parameters will become. This work gives an impression of how quantitative data obtained by SMLM may serve as input parameters for mathematical models at the single-cell level.
Channelrhodopsin-1 from Chlamydomonas augustae (CaChR1) is a light-activated cation channel, which is a promising optogenetic tool. We show by resonance Raman spectroscopy and retinal extraction followed by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) that the isomeric ratio of all-trans to 13-cis of solubilized channelrhodopsin-1 is with 70:30 identical to channelrhodopsin-2 from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (CrChR2). Critical frequency shifts in the retinal vibrations are identified in the Raman spectrum upon transition to the open (conductive P2(380)) state. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) spectra indicate different structures of the open states in the two channelrhodopsins as reflected by the amide I bands and the protonation pattern of acidic amino acids.
The title compound, [Li2(C25H23BN4OP)2], features a centrosymmetric dimeric complex. The four-memberered Li2O2 ring is exactly planar due to symmetry. The Li atom is four-coordinated by two O atoms and by two N atoms of two different pyrazole rings. The dihedral angle between two pyrazole rings bonded to the same B atom is 45.66 (9)°. The B—N—N—Li—N—N metalla ring adopts a boat conformation. The crystal packing is stabilized by van der Waals interactions only.
In the title compound, C19H24N2O2, a di-Mannich base derived from 2-methylphenol and 1,3,6,8-tetraazatricyclo[4.4.1.13,8]dodecane, the imidazolidine ring adopts a twist conformation, with a twist about the ring N—C bond [C—N—C—C torsion angle = −44.34 (14)°]. The two 2-hydroxy-3-methylbenzyl groups are located in trans positions with respect to the imidazolidine fragment. The structure displays two intramolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, which each form an S(6) ring motif. In the crystal, the molecules are linked by weak C—H⋯O interactions with a bifurcated acceptor, forming a three-dimensional network.
In the title solvate, C14H12N2O·0.5C6H6, the complete benzene molecule is generated by a crystallographic inversion centre. The dihedral angle between the planes of the benzimidazole moiety and the phenol substituent is 75.28 (3)°. In the crystal, O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds link the molecules into parallel chains propagating along [100]. The molecules are further connected by C—H⋯π interactions.
The structure of the title compound, C8H16N4, which consists of four fused seven-membered rings, has been redetermined at 173 K. This redetermination corrects the orientation of two H atoms, which were located at unrealistic positions in the original room-temperature study [Murray-Rust (1974[Murray-Rust, P. (1974). J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. 2, pp. 1136-1141.]). J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. 2, pp. 1136–1141]. The complete molecule is generated by -42m symmetry, with one quarter of a molecule [one N atom (site symmetry m), two C atoms (one with site symmetry m and the other with site symmetry 2) and two H atoms] in the asymmetric unit. No directional interactions beyond van der Waals contacts are apparent in the crystal structure.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a deadly primary brain malignancy. Glioblastoma stem cells (GSC), which have the ability to self-renew and differentiate into tumor lineages, are believed to cause tumor recurrence due to their resistance to current therapies. A subset of GSCs is marked by cell surface expression of CD133, a glycosylated pentaspan transmembrane protein. The study of CD133-expressing GSCs has been limited by the relative paucity of genetic tools that specifically target them. Here, we present CD133-LV, a lentiviral vector presenting a single chain antibody against CD133 on its envelope, as a vehicle for the selective transduction of CD133-expressing GSCs. We show that CD133-LV selectively transduces CD133+ human GSCs in dose-dependent manner and that transduced cells maintain their stem-like properties. The transduction efficiency of CD133-LV is reduced by an antibody that recognizes the same epitope on CD133 as the viral envelope and by shRNA-mediated knockdown of CD133. Conversely, the rate of transduction by CD133-LV is augmented by overexpression of CD133 in primary human GBM cultures. CD133-LV selectively transduces CD133-expressing cells in intracranial human GBM xenografts in NOD.SCID mice, but spares normal mouse brain tissue, neurons derived from human embryonic stem cells and primary human astrocytes. Our findings indicate that CD133-LV represents a novel tool for the selective genetic manipulation of CD133-expressing GSCs, and can be used to answer important questions about how these cells contribute to tumor biology and therapy resistance.
During the last decade of the 20th century, the field of mass spectrometry has seen a revolutionary change in its application and scope. The introduction of soft ionization methods for the analysis of biological molecules has expanded the area of mass spectrometry from its early roots in the analysis of inorganic and organic species into the fields of biology and medicine.
Today, the use of the mass spectrometry is extended to a wide range of applications in biotechnology and pharmaceutical industry, in geological, environmental and clinical research. In biochemistry, the principles of mass spectrometry are, however, broadly applicable in accurate molecular weight determination, reaction monitoring, amino acid sequencing, oligonucleotide sequencing and protein structure.
In order to carry out their biological activities, proteins interact most often to each other and form transient or stable complexes. In addition, some proteins specifically interact also with other proteins or with non-protein molecules, such as DNA, RNA or metabolites, these interactions being critical for their function. Hence, defining the composition of protein complexes, as well as understanding how protein complexes are assembled and regulated yield invaluable insights into protein function. Coupled with an isolation technique to purify a specific protein complex of interest, mass spectrometry can rapidly and reliably identify the components of complexes. In addition, quantitative MS techniques offer the possibility of studying dynamically regulated interactions....
Coevolution of viruses and their hosts represents a dynamic molecular battle between the immune system and viral factors that mediate immune evasion. After the abandonment of smallpox vaccination, cowpox virus infections are an emerging zoonotic health threat, especially for immunocompromised patients. Here we delineate the mechanistic basis of how cowpox viral CPXV012 interferes with MHC class I antigen processing. This type II membrane protein inhibits the coreTAP complex at the step after peptide binding and peptide-induced conformational change, in blocking ATP binding and hydrolysis. Distinct from other immune evasion mechanisms, TAP inhibition is mediated by a short ER-lumenal fragment of CPXV012, which results from a frameshift in the cowpox virus genome. Tethered to the ER membrane, this fragment mimics a high ER-lumenal peptide concentration, thus provoking a trans-inhibition of antigen translocation as supply for MHC I loading. These findings illuminate the evolution of viral immune modulators and the basis of a fine-balanced regulation of antigen processing.
In the search for novel organic charge transfer salts with variable degrees of charge transfer we have studied the effects of two modifications of the recently synthesized donor–acceptor system [tetramethoxypyrene (TMP)]–[tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ)]. One is of chemical nature by substituting the acceptor TCNQ molecules by F4TCNQ molecules. The second consists in simulating the application of uniaxial pressure along the stacking axis of the system. In order to test the chemical substitution, we have grown single crystals of the TMP–F4TCNQ complex and analyzed its electronic structure via electronic transport measurements, ab initio density functional theory (DFT) calculations and UV/VIS/IR absorption spectroscopy. This system shows an almost ideal geometrical overlap of nearly planar molecules stacked alternately (mixed stack) and this arrangement is echoed by a semiconductor-like transport behavior with an increased conductivity along the stacking direction. This is in contrast to TMP–TCNQ which shows a less pronounced anisotropy and a smaller conductivity response. Our band structure calculations confirm the one-dimensional behavior of TMP–F4TCNQ with pronounced dispersion only along the stacking axis. Infrared measurements illustrating the C[triple bond, length as m-dash]N vibration frequency shift in F4TCNQ suggest however no improvement in the degree of charge transfer in TMP–F4TCNQ with respect to TMP–TCNQ. In both complexes about 0.1e is transferred from TMP to the acceptor. Concerning the pressure effect, our DFT calculations on the designed TMP–TCNQ and TMP–F4TCNQ structures under different pressure conditions show that application of uniaxial pressure along the stacking axis of TMP–TCNQ may be the route to follow in order to obtain a much more pronounced charge transfer.
Correlative microscopy incorporates the specificity of fluorescent protein labeling into high-resolution electron micrographs. Several approaches exist for correlative microscopy, most of which have used the green fluorescent protein (GFP) as the label for light microscopy. Here we use chemical tagging and synthetic fluorophores instead, in order to achieve protein-specific labeling, and to perform multicolor imaging. We show that synthetic fluorophores preserve their post-embedding fluorescence in the presence of uranyl acetate. Post-embedding fluorescence is of such quality that the specimen can be prepared with identical protocols for scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM); this is particularly valuable when singular or otherwise difficult samples are examined. We show that synthetic fluorophores give bright, well-resolved signals in super-resolution light microscopy, enabling us to superimpose light microscopic images with a precision of up to 25 nm in the x-y plane on electron micrographs. To exemplify the preservation quality of our new method we visualize the molecular arrangement of cadherins in adherens junctions of mouse epithelial cells.
5-Lipoxygenase (5LO) is a key enzyme in biosynthesis of leukotrienes (LTs), lipid mediators of inflammation. To study the roles of the 5LO accessory proteins coactosin-like protein (CLP) and 5LO-activating protein (FLAP), we knocked down these proteins in human monocytic cells. Our results show that expression of CLP was required for full cellular 5LO activity when cells were activated with Ca2+ ionophore, as well as with a physiological stimulus (lipopolysaccharide followed by N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine). During LT biosynthesis in stimulated cells, 5LO typically translocates to the nuclear membrane. This redistribution, from cytosolic to perinuclear, was clearly compromised in both CLP- and FLAP-deficient cells. Our results suggest that the CLP–5LO interaction may be a target for reduced LT production.
Na(+)/H(+) exchangers are essential for regulation of intracellular proton and sodium concentrations in all living organisms. We examined and experimentally verified a kinetic model for Na(+)/H(+) exchangers, where a single binding site is alternatively occupied by Na(+) or one or two H(+) ions. The proposed transport mechanism inherently down-regulates Na(+)/H(+) exchangers at extreme pH, preventing excessive cytoplasmic acidification or alkalinization. As an experimental test system we present the first electrophysiological investigation of an electroneutral Na(+)/H(+) exchanger, NhaP1 from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii (MjNhaP1), a close homologue of the medically important eukaryotic NHE Na(+)/H(+) exchangers. The kinetic model describes the experimentally observed substrate dependences of MjNhaP1, and the transport mechanism explains alkaline down-regulation of MjNhaP1. Because this model also accounts for acidic down-regulation of the electrogenic NhaA Na(+)/H(+) exchanger from Escherichia coli (EcNhaA, shown in a previous publication) we conclude that it applies generally to all Na(+)/H(+) exchangers, electrogenic as well as electroneutral, and elegantly explains their pH regulation. Furthermore, the electrophysiological analysis allows insight into the electrostatic structure of the translocation complex in electroneutral and electrogenic Na(+)/H(+) exchangers.
Antigen presentation to cytotoxic T lymphocytes via major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) molecules depends on the heterodimeric transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). For efficient antigen supply to MHC I molecules in the ER, TAP assembles a macromolecular peptide-loading complex (PLC) by recruiting tapasin. In evolution, TAP appeared together with effector cells of adaptive immunity at the transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates and diversified further within the jawed vertebrates. Here, we compared TAP function and interaction with tapasin of a range of species within two classes of jawed vertebrates. We found that avian and mammalian TAP1 and TAP2 form heterodimeric complexes across taxa. Moreover, the extra N-terminal domain TMD0 of mammalian TAP1 and TAP2 as well as avian TAP2 recruits tapasin. Strikingly, however, only TAP1 and TAP2 from the same taxon can form a functional heterodimeric translocation complex. These data demonstrate that the dimerization interface between TAP1 and TAP2 and the tapasin docking sites for PLC assembly are conserved in evolution, whereas elements of antigen translocation diverged later in evolution and are thus taxon specific.
The title solvated salt, C29H41N2+·Br-·2CH2Cl2 was obtained from the reaction of the Arduengo-type carbene 1,3-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-1,3-dihydro-4,5-dimethyl-2H-imidazol-2-ylidene with Si2Br6 in dichloromethane. The complete cation is generated by a crystallographic mirror plane and the dihedral angle between the five-membered ring and the benzene ring is 89.8 (6)°; the dihedral angle between the benzene rings is 40.7 (2)°. The anion also lies on the mirror plane and both dichloromethane molecules are disordered across the mirror plane over two equally occupied orientations. In the crystal, the cations are linked to the anions via C-H...Br hydrogen bonds.
In the title compound, C40H76Si, the Si atom is located on a special position of site symmetry -4. Thus, there is just a quarter of a molecule in the asymmetric unit. The C=C double bonds exhibit a trans configuration. The Si atom and the tert-butyl group are located on the same side of the plane formed by the C=C double bond and its four substituents. The crystal packing shows no short contacts between the molecules and despite the low crystal density (0.980 Mg m−3), there are no significant voids in the structure.