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The ability of some knotless phytochromes to photoconvert without the PHY domain allows evaluation of the distinct effect of the PHY domain on their photodynamics. Here, we compare the ms dynamics of the single GAF domain (g1) and the GAF-PHY (g1g2) construct of the knotless phytochrome All2699 from cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme. While the spectral signatures and occurrence of the intermediates are mostly unchanged by the domain composition, the presence of the PHY domain slows down the early forward and reverse dynamics involving chromophore and protein binding pocket relaxation. We assign this effect to a more restricted binding pocket imprinted by the PHY domain. The photoproduct formation is also slowed down by the presence of the PHY domain but to a lesser extent than the early dynamics. This indicates a rate limiting step within the GAF and not the PHY domain. We further identify a pH dependence of the biphasic photoproduct formation hinting towards a pKa dependent tuning mechanism. Our findings add to the understanding of the role of the individual domains in the photocycle dynamics and provide a basis for engineering of phytochromes towards biotechnological applications.
Bei saurer Hydrolyse wird aus den 5-Halogenuracildesoxyribosiden die DR ** etwa 3 -4-mal rascher abgespalten als aus TdR oder UdR. CdR wird unter den gleichen Bedingungen 16-fach schneller hydrolysiert. Im Gegensatz dazu ist die Ribose im Cytidin um ein Mehrfaches fester gebunden als im Uridin. Im TdR-Dimeren wird durch die Absättigung der 5.6-Doppelbindung die Stabilität der N-glykosidischen Bindung stark erniedrigt. Aus diesen Befunden ergibt sich ein Hinweis auf die Elektronendichte-Verteilung im Pyrimidinring und damit eine chemische Basis für das mutagene Verhalten verschiedener unnatürlicher Desoxyriboside.
Bei der UV-Bestrahlung von Uracil-[5.6-3H] bilden sich je nach eingestrahlter Energie dimeres Uracil und Uracil-Wasseranlagerungsprodukt [5.6-Dihydro-6-hydroxyuracil] als radioaktive Photoprodukte. Während bei der Synthese des Wasseranlagerungsproduktes ein beträchtlicher sekundärer Isotopeneffekt wirksam wird, verändert sich die Radioaktivität des dimeren Uracils gegenüber der des Ausgangsuracils kaum.
Wird das Wasseranlagerungsprodukt durch Erwärmen zu Uracil zurückgewandelt, so dehydratisiert das Molekül ebenfalls unter Mitwirkung eines Isotopeneffektes. Wird das Uracildimere zu Uracil rückgewandelt, so beobachtet man keinen Isotopeneffekt.
Bei der Bestrahlung von Uracil in Tritium-haltigem Wasser werden nur sehr geringe Radioaktivitäten in die Photoprodukte eingebaut. Der Isotopeneffekt beträgt ca. 8. — Durch Synthese der Photoprodukte aus spezifisch an C-5 oder C-6 Tritium-markiertem Uracil bzw. durch Bromierung von 5.6-Tritium-markiertem Uracil bzw. dessen Photoprodukten zu den 5-Brom-Derivaten erhält man Hinweise, daß der Geschwindigkeits-bestimmende Schritt der Wasseraddition an C-6 des Uracils verläuft. Die inversen sekundären Isotopeneffekte betragen für Tritium an C-6 etwa 0,65, für Tritium an C-5 dagegen nur 0,95.
The photodynamic inactivation of nucleic acids with pyronin, methylene blue, thiopyronin and furocoumarines has been studied. The template efficiency of DNA in RNA-Polymerase reaction was found to be decreased after the treatment of DNA with these compounds. However, the magnitude of their inhibiting capacity varied from one compound to the other. Psoralen and thiopyronin were found to be the most active inhibitors followed by xanthotoxin and methylene blue respectively. At a lower temperature the inhibiting capacity of thiopyronin was considerably decreased but that of psoralen remained nearly unaffected. We have also tried to show evidence for a complimentary code in t-RNA through a specific destruction of guanine with thiopyronin.
Es wird das Mikrowellenspektrum von Fluorwasserstoffassoziaten im X-und K-Band bei -70 °C und 0,01 Torr gemessen und analysiert. Dazu wird ein erstelltes Frequenzprogramm für den asymmetrischen Kreisel verwendet, sowie ein Extrapolationsprogramm, das eine in der Literatur angegebene druck-und temperaturabhängige Verteilung der Fluorwasserstoffassoziate auf für Mikrowellenspektroskopie geeignete Drücke und Temperaturen umzurechnen erlaubt. Es zeigt sich, daß planare hexamere und heptamere Fluorwasserstoffassoziate vorliegen mit F-F-F-Winkeln von etwa 104° und H-F-Bindungslängen von 0,9997 Å bzw. 0,9640 Å. Die Längen der Wasserstoff brücken sind 1,4998 Å bzw. 1,6105 Å. Ein Vergleich der Bindungslängen zeigt, daß bei Anlagerung von H-F an (HF)6 eine Kontraktion der Fluorwasserstoffbindung um 3,5% und eine Dilatation der Wasserstoffbrückenbindung um 1% stattfindet. Dieses Ergebnis steht im Einklang mit der oben erwähnten Assoziatverteilung, die eine Minderung der Kettenstabilität beim Übergang von hexamerer zu heptamerer Kette erwarten läßt.
In the course of systematic investigations on sila-substituted parasympatholytics the diphenyl(2-aminoethoxymethyl)silanols 3b and 4b (and its carbon analogue 4a) were synthesized and characterized by their physical and chemical properties. In the solid state 4a and 4b form strong O-H---N hydrogen bonds, which are intramolecular (4a) and intermolecular (4b), respectively. 4a and 4b were found to be weak antimuscarinic agents (4b >4a) and strong papaverine-like spasmolytics (4a ≈4b).
The absolute configurations of the diastereomeric 10-hydroxyaloins, which may be regarded as parent structures for other naturally occurring oxanthrone-C-glucosyls, have been established as 10R, 16 R (A) and 10 S, 16 R (B) by an X-ray structure analysis of the A-octaacetyl derivative (C 16 is the anomeric glucosyl carbon atom). The determination was confirmed by CD spectroscopic comparison with the structural analogues aloins A and B, which should prove useful for making future configurational assignments within this class of compounds. A conformational analysis by the use of a molecular modeling method based on force-field calculations reveals the presence of an extra- and an intra-form, the extra-form of which is energetically preferred.
From the leaf exudate of Aloe lateritia ENGLER the C-glucosyl com pounds homonataloin, aloeresin A and aloesin (synon. aloeresin B) were isolated together with the anthraquinone nataloeem odin-8-methylether and spectroscopically identified. Hom onataloin, widely distributed in Aloe species, was separated into homonataloin A and B by combined TLC and DCCC. In their 1 D and 2D 1H NMR spectra only the shifts of the 2′-hydroxyl protons of both glucosyl residues differ significantly, indicative of 10 S (A) resp. 10 S (B) configurations. In both com pounds the anthrone is in β-position of the D-glucopyranosyl, as determined by the large coupling constants of the anomeric protons. The 13C NMR signals are unambiguously assigned by the use of DEPT, APT and gated-decoupling methods. Only the chemical shifts of C -11 and C -14 show significant differences between both diastereomers due to the adjacent 2′-sugar hydroxyls. The two homonataloins differ mostly in optical rotation and circulardichroism due to different configurations at C - 10 of the anthrone part. The absolute configurations of the diastereomers are determined by correlation of their CD spectra with the CD spectra of the structural analogues 7-hydroxyaloins A and B, which shows that hom onataloin A is the 10 S, 1′S-compound and that homonataloin B has 10 R, 1′S-configuration.
The accumulation and distribution of characteristic secondary products in the different organs of an Aloe plant (A. succotrina Lam.) were studied by high performance liquid chromatography for the first time. In the leaves of the Aloe plant, only anthrone-C-glycosyls of the 7-hydroxyaloin type and, for the first time in plant material, the free anthraquinone 7-hydroxyaloeemodin were found. In contrast to previous reports on the distribution of secondary products in Aloe plants, anthrone-C-glycosyls were also detected in flowers, bracts and the inflorescence axis of the species examined. Aloesaponol I, a tetrahydroanthracene aglycone, was only present in the underground organs and in the stem. The 2-alkylchromone-C-glucosyl aloeresin B showed no specific occurrence as it was found in every type of organ. Based on these results and the findings of recent studies on Aloe roots and flowers, a distribution scheme of polyketide types in the Aloe plant was established. It suggests a separate and independent anthranoid metabolism for underground Aloe organs and stem on the one hand, and for leaves and inflorescence organs on the other hand. In the latter structures anthranoid metabolism seems to be additionally compartmentalized as the anthranoid pro files of inflorescence organs and leaves differ in two points relevant to anthranoid biosynthe sis: firstly, the occurrence of anthrone aglycones and secondly, the individual content of corresponding anthrone-C-glucosyl diastereomers.
Cytochrome c oxidase catalyzes the reduction of oxygen to water. This process is accompanied by the vectorial transport of protons across the mitochondrial or bacterial membrane (“proton pumping”). The mechanism of proton pumping is still a matter of debate. Many proposed mechanisms require structural changes during the reaction cycle of cytochrome c oxidase. Therefore, the structure of the cytochrome c oxidase was determined in the completely oxidized and in the completely reduced states at a temperature of 100 K. No ligand exchanges or other major structural changes upon reduction of the cytochrome coxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans were observed. The three histidine CuB ligands are well defined in the oxidized and in the reduced states. These results are hardly compatible with the “histidine cycle” mechanisms formulated previously.
P2X1 receptor subunits assemble in the ER of Xenopus oocytes to homotrimers that appear as ATP-gated cation channels at the cell surface. Here we address the extent to which N-glycosylation contributes to assembly, surface appearance, and ligand recognition of P2X1receptors. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) analysis of glycan minus mutants carrying Gln instead of Asn at five individual NXT/S sequons reveals that Asn284 remains unused because of a proline in the +4 position. The four other sites (Asn153, Asn184, Asn210, and Asn300) carryN-glycans, but solely Asn300 located only eight residues upstream of the predicted reentry loop of P2X1acquires complex-type carbohydrates. Like parent P2X1, glycan minus mutants migrate as homotrimers when resolved by blue native PAGE. Recording of ATP-gated currents reveals that elimination of Asn153 or Asn210 diminishes or increases functional expression levels, respectively. In addition, elimination of Asn210 causes a 3-fold reduction of the potency for ATP. If three or all four N-glycosylation sites are simultaneously eliminated, formation of P2X1 receptors is severely impaired or abolished, respectively. We conclude that at least oneN-glycan per subunit of either position is absolutely required for the formation of P2X1 receptors and that individual N-glycans possess marked positional effects on expression levels (Asn154, Asn210) and ATP potency (Asn210).
The potential of a protein-engineered His tag to immobilize macromolecules in a predictable orientation at metal-chelating lipid interfaces was investigated using recombinant 20 S proteasomes His-tagged in various positions. Electron micrographs demonstrated that the orientation of proteasomes bound to chelating lipid films could be controlled via the location of their His tags: proteasomes His-tagged at their sides displayed exclusively side-on views, while proteasomes His-tagged at their ends displayed exclusively end-on views. The activity of proteasomes immobilized at chelating lipid interfaces was well preserved. In solution, His-tagged proteasomes hydrolyzed casein at rates comparable with wild-type proteasomes, unless the His tags were located in the vicinity of the N termini of α-subunits. The N termini of α-subunits might partly occlude the entrance channel in α-rings through which substrates enter the proteasome for subsequent degradation. A combination of electron micrographs and atomic force microscope topographs revealed a propensity of vertically oriented proteasomes to crystallize in two dimensions on fluid lipid films. The oriented immobilization of His-tagged proteins at biocompatible lipid interfaces will assist structural studies as well as the investigation of biomolecular interaction via a wide variety of surface-sensitive techniques including single-molecule analysis.
5-lipoxygenase (5-LO), the key enzyme in leukotriene biosynthesis, is expressed in a tissue- and cell differentiation-specific manner. The 5-LO core promoter required for basal promoter activity has a unique (G+C)-rich sequence that contains five tandem Sp1 consensus sequences. The mechanisms involved in the regulation of cell type-specific 5-LO expression are unknown. Here we show that 5-LO expression is regulated by DNA methylation. Treatment of the 5-LO-negative cell lines U937 and HL-60TB with the demethylating agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (AdC) up-regulated expression of 5-LO primary transcripts and mature mRNA in a similar fashion, indicating that AdC stimulates 5-LO gene transcription. Analysis of the methylation status of the 5-LO promoter revealed that the core promoter region was methylated in U937 and HL-60TB cells, whereas it was unmethylated in the 5-LO-positive parent HL-60 cell line. Reporter gene assays with 5-LO promoter constructs gave up to 68- and 655-fold repression of 5-LO promoter activity in HeLa and Mono Mac 6 cells by methylation. 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta), potent inducers of the 5-LO pathway in myeloid cell lines, increased 5-LO RNA expression in HL-60TB and U937 cells, but co-treatment with AdC was required to achieve 5-LO expression levels in HL-60TB cells that were comparable with wild-type HL-60 cells. In reporter gene assays, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and TGFbeta were unable to induce promoter activity when the 5-LO promoter constructs were methylated, which suggests that 5-LO promoter demethylation is a prerequisite for the high level induction of 5-LO gene expression by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and TGFbeta and that the effects of both agents on 5-LO mRNA expression are not related to DNA methylation.
We demonstrated previously that 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO), a key enzyme in leukotriene biosynthesis, can be phosphorylated by p38 MAPK-regulated MAPKAP kinases (MKs). Here we show that mutation of Ser-271 to Ala in 5-LO abolished MK2 catalyzed phosphorylation and clearly reduced phosphorylation by kinases prepared from stimulated polymorphonuclear leukocytes and Mono Mac 6 cells. Compared with heat shock protein 27 (Hsp-27), 5-LO was a weak substrate for MK2. However, the addition of unsaturated fatty acids (i.e. arachidonate 1-50 microm) up-regulated phosphorylation of 5-LO, but not of Hsp-27, by active MK2 in vitro, resulting in a similar phosphorylation as for Hsp-27. 5-LO was phosphorylated also by other serine/threonine kinases recognizing the motif Arg-Xaa-Xaa-Ser (protein kinase A, Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase II), but these activities were not increased by fatty acids. HeLa cells expressing wild type 5-LO or S271A-5-LO, showed prominent 5-LO activity when incubated with Ca(2+)-ionophore plus arachidonate. However, when stimulated with only exogenous arachidonic acid, activity for the S271A mutant was significantly lower as compared with wild type 5-LO. It appears that phosphorylation at Ser-271 is more important for 5-LO activity induced by a stimulus that does not prominently increase intracellular Ca(2+) and that arachidonic acid stimulates leukotriene biosynthesis also by promoting this MK2-catalyzed phosphorylation.
Rat renal mesangial cells express high levels of matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) in response to inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta). We tested whether ligands of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPARalpha) could influence the cytokine-induced expression of MMP-9. Different PPARalpha agonists dose-dependently inhibited the IL-1beta-triggered increase in gelatinolytic activity mainly by decreasing the MMP-9 steady-state mRNA levels. PPARalpha agonists on their own had no effects on MMP-9 mRNA levels and gelatinolytic activity. Surprisingly, the reduction of MMP-9 mRNA levels by PPARalpha activators contrasted with an amplification of cytokine-mediated MMP-9 gene promoter activity and mRNA expression. The potentiation of MMP-9 promoter activity functionally depends on an upstream peroxisome proliferator-responsive element-like binding site, which displayed an increased DNA binding of a PPARalpha immunopositive complex. In contrast, the IL-1beta-induced DNA-binding of nuclear factor kappaB was significantly impaired by PPARalpha agonists. Most interestingly, in the presence of an inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOS) inhibitor, the PPARalpha-mediated suppression switched to a strong amplification of IL-1beta-triggered MMP-9 mRNA expression. Concomitantly, activators of PPARalpha potentiated the cytokine-induced iNOS expression. Using actinomycin D, we found that NO, but not PPARalpha activators, strongly reduced the stability of MMP-9 mRNA. In contrast, the stability of MMP-9 protein was not affected by PPARalpha activators. In summary, our data suggest that the inhibitory effects of PPARalpha agonists on cytokine-induced MMP-9 expression are indirect and primarily due to a superinduction of iNOS with high levels of NO reducing the half-life of MMP-9 mRNA.
Recently, we reported that in crude enzyme preparations, a monocyte-derived soluble protein (M-DSP) renders 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) activity Ca2+-dependent. Here we provide evidence that this M-DSP is glutathione peroxidase (GPx)-1. Thus, the inhibitory effect of the M-DSP on 5-LO could be overcome by the GPx-1 inhibitor mercaptosuccinate and by the broad spectrum GPx inhibitor iodoacetate, as well as by addition of 13(S)-hydroperoxy-9Z,11E-octadecadienoic acid (13(S)-HPODE). Also, the chromatographic characteristics and the estimated molecular mass (80-100 kDa) of the M-DSP fit to GPx-1 (87 kDa), and GPx-1, isolated from bovine erythrocytes, mimicked the effects of the M-DSP. Intriguingly, only a trace amount of thiol (10 micro M GSH) was required for reduction of 5-LO activity by GPx-1 or the M-DSP. Moreover, the requirement of Ca2+ allowing 5-LO product synthesis in various leukocytes correlated with the respective GPx-1 activities. Mutation of the Ca2+ binding sites within the C2-like domain of 5-LO resulted in strong reduction of 5-LO activity by M-DSP and GPx-1, also in the presence of Ca2+. In summary, our data suggest that interaction of Ca2+ at the C2-like domain of 5-LO protects the enzyme against the effect of GPx-1. Apparently, in the presence of Ca2+, a low lipid hydroperoxide level is sufficient for 5-LO activation.
The ABC transporter Mdl1p, a structural and functional homologue of the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) plays an important role in intracellular peptide transport from the mitochondrial matrix of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To characterize the ATP hydrolysis cycle of Mdl1p, the nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The isolated NBD was active in ATP binding and hydrolysis with a turnover of 25 ATP per minute and a Km of 0.6 mm and did not show cooperativity in ATPase activity. However, the ATPase activity was non-linearly dependent on protein concentration (Hill coefficient of 1.7), indicating that the functional state is a dimer. Dimeric catalytic transition states could be trapped either by incubation with orthovanadate or beryllium fluoride, or by mutagenesis of the NBD. The nucleotide composition of trapped intermediate states was determined using [alpha-32P]ATP and [gamma-32P]ATP. Three different dimeric intermediate states were isolated, containing either two ATPs, one ATP and one ADP, or two ADPs. Based on these experiments, it was shown that: (i) ATP binding to two NBDs induces dimerization, (ii) in all isolated dimeric states, two nucleotides are present, (iii) phosphate can dissociate from the dimer, (iv) both nucleotides are hydrolyzed, and (v) hydrolysis occurs in a sequential mode. Based on these data, we propose a processive-clamp model for the catalytic cycle in which association and dissociation of the NBDs depends on the status of bound nucleotides.
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) plays a key role in the adaptive immune response by pumping antigenic peptides into the endoplasmic reticulum for subsequent loading of major histocompatibility complex class I molecules. TAP is a heterodimer consisting of TAP1 and TAP2. Each subunit is composed of a transmembrane domain and a nucleotide-binding domain, which energizes the peptide transport. To analyze ATP hydrolysis of each subunit we developed a method of trapping 8-azido-nucleotides to TAP in the presence of phosphate transition state analogs followed by photocross-linking, immunoprecipitation, and high resolution SDS-PAGE. Strikingly, trapping of both TAP subunits by beryllium fluoride is peptide-specific. The peptide concentration required for half-maximal trapping is identical for TAP1 and TAP2 and directly correlates with the peptide binding affinity. Only a background level of trapping was observed for low affinity peptides or in the presence of the herpes simplex viral protein ICP47, which specifically blocks peptide binding to TAP. Importantly, the peptide-induced trapped state is reached after ATP hydrolysis and not in a backward reaction of ADP binding and trapping. In the trapped state, TAP can neither bind nor exchange nucleotides, whereas peptide binding is not affected. In summary, these data support the model that peptide binding induces a conformation that triggers ATP hydrolysis in both subunits of the TAP complex within the catalytic cycle.
Synthese und Struktur-Wirkungsbeziehungen neuer rezeptorselektiver Dopamin-D 2- und -D 3-Liganden
(2003)
Dopaminrezeptoren gehören zur Familie der G-Protein-gekoppelten Rezeptoren, der bisher größten Rezeptorklasse. Seit der Identifizierung der zuvor unbekannten Rezeptorsubtypen D3-D5 in den Jahren 1990 und 1991 hat die Erforschung des dopaminergen Systems neuen Anschub erhalten, der maßgeblich auf das spezifische Vorkommen jeweiliger Subrezeptoren in diskreten Hirnarealen zurückzuführen ist. Während dopaminerge Neuronen an neurologischen und psychiatrischen Störungen wie Morbus Parkinson, Schizophrenie und Drogenmißbrauch bzw. -abhängigkeit seit geraumer Zeit in einen ursächlichen Zusammenhang gebracht werden, begründen die unterschiedlichen Charakteristika der Rezeptorsubtypen hinsichtlich Lokalisation, Aminosäuresequenz und pharmakologischem Verhalten die Hoffnung, mit subrezeptorselektiven Wirkstoffen neue therapeutische Ansätze verwirklichen zu können, die eine Reduktion der gravierenden, mit bisherigen Therapiekonzepten korrelierten Nebenwirkungen erlauben. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden, ausgehend von den D2- und D3-rezeptorbevorzugenden Wirkstoffen ST 177, L-741,626, ST 314, NAN190, ST 198 und BP 897, gezielte Modifikationen an unterschiedlichen Molekülteilen unternommen, um ihre jeweils charakteristischen pharmakologischen Eigenschaften stärker zu profilieren.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschreibt die Herstellung von codierten Peptidbibliotheken durch kombinatorische Synthese, sowie deren Selektion auf Wechselwirkung mit einer verkürzten Sequenz der TAR-RNA des HI-Viruses.
Die zur Selektion benötigte RNA wurde dazu auf chemischem Wege hergestellt und mit einem Fluoreszensfarbstoff für eine optische Selektion markiert. Ausgehend von dieser RNA wurde ein Anfärbeassay entwickelt. Bei der Anwendung des Assays auf Tri- und Pentapeptide, die auf einem Polymerträger immobilisiert waren, zeigten sich einige intensiv leuchtende Polymerkügelchen. Die hellsten unter ihnen wurden selektiert. Die Synthese der Trimeren und Pentamerenbibliothek erfolgte zuvor an wasserquellbarem, polymerem Trägermaterial. Die Identifizierung der polymergebundenen Verbindungen erfolgte über die Codierung nach W.C. Still, welche im Rahmen dieser Dissertation in der Arbeitsgruppe von Hr. Prof. Göbel erfolgreich etabliert wurde und die einfache Unterscheidung zwischen Enantiomeren ermöglicht. Drei der am häufigsten auftretenden Trimerensequenzen wurden im Nachhinein erneut synthetisiert und Experimenten an Zellen zugeführt. Unabhängig davon, wurde ihre Wechselwirkung mit RNA als auch mit RNA-Peptid Komplexen direkt getestet.
Weiterhin wurde exemplarisch anhand von Aminopyridinen die Möglichkeit getestet, neuartige Synthesemonomere für die automatische Synthese polymergebundener Verbindungen darzustellen.
Die vorliegende Arbeit macht deutlich, dass man durch kombinatorische Synthese im Verbund mit gerichteter Selektion, die Entwicklung von in vitro RNA-Liganden für RNA mit bekannter Struktur vorantreiben kann. Umgekehrt müsste dies auch bald die Selektion von Liganden für strukturell nicht charakterisierte RNA ermöglichen.
Das nächste Ziel sollte, die Entwicklung weiterer Selektionstests sein und die Etablierung von NMR-Methoden, welche die genauen Bindungsmodi der selektierten Verbindungen an RNA aufklären, um somit die gezielte Synthese neuartiger Liganden vorantreiben zu können, da letztendlich das "Wie", für die Weiterentwicklung einer Leitstruktur ausschlaggebend ist.
Weiterhin sollten die Transportmechanismen von körperfremden Substanzen zu dem gewünschten Wirkort studiert werden, damit die vorab in vitro getestete Substanz auch im späteren Entwicklungsstadium in vivo die gewünschten Eigenschaften zeigen kann.
The purification and functional reconstitution of a five-component oligopeptide ATP-binding cassette transporter with a remarkably wide substrate specificity are described. High-affinity peptide uptake was dependent on liganded substrate-binding protein OppA, which interacts with the translocator OppBCDF with higher affinity than unliganded OppA. Transport screening with combinatorial peptide libraries revealed that (i) the Opp transporter is not selective with respect to amino acid side chains of the transported peptides; (ii) any peptide that can bind to OppA is transported via Opp, including very long peptides up to 35 residues long; and (iii) the binding specificity of OppA largely determines the overall transport selectivity.
The transcriptional regulator RcsB controls the expression of a minimum of 20 different genes having diverse functionalities and biosynthetic operons in the family of Enterobacteriaceae. While in the heterodimeric complex with the co activator RcsA, the RcsAB box consensus is recognized, DNA binding sites for RcsB without RcsA have also been identified. The conformation of RcsB might therefore be modulated upon interaction with various co activators, resulting in recognition of different DNA targets. In this study the interaction of RcsB with some of these DNA targets have been analysed by a diverse array of techniques including gel shift assay and SPR. The solution structure of the C-terminal DNA-binding domain of RcsB from Erwinia amylovora spanning amino acid residues 129-215 has been solved in this study by heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. The C-terminal domain is composed of four α-helices where the two central helices of the H-T-H motif are similar to the structures of the regulatory proteins GerE, NarL and TraR. The DNA-binding activity of the C-terminal domain alone is established for the first time in this study and was specified by fluorescence spectroscopy, SPR and NMR titration experiments. The molecular interaction between the individual RcsB domains was analysed by cross-linking experiments and heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy and the amino acid residues of the C-terminal domain involved in this interaction were identified precisely. Another important part of this project was the cell-free production of different Trp analogue labelled RcsB protein. RcsB protein was produced in quite a good yield with different Trp analogue having spectrally enhanced properties. The isolated RcsB alloproteins proved to be ideal for protein interaction studies by fluorescence spectroscopy and the very first evidence of an oligomerization of RcsB due to molecular association has been put forth from these studies. The phosphorylated state of the RcsB protein was mimicked by a beryllofluoride complex in order to study its role in transcriptional regulation. It was found that RcsB alone could bind to DNA targets upon this modification by the beryllofluoride complex. Thus the phosphorylation of the protein that involves the Asp 56 residue induces a structural change of the protein followed probably by a domain movement also, so that the C-terminal domain having the H-T-H DNA binding motif that was previously eclipsed by the N-terminal domain is relieved of this constraint.
Der retinoid-related orphan receptor α (RORα) ist ein nukleärer Rezeptor, der nach Bindung an sein Responselement die Transkription zahlreicher Gene reguliert. Pharmazeutisches Interesse erlangt der Rezeptor vor allem durch seine Verwicklung in pathophysiologische Prozesse wie Osteoporose und Arteriosklerose sowie durch seine antiinflammatorische Wirkung, die auf der negativen Interferenz mit dem NF-κB-Signalweg beruht. Bisher konnten vier RORα-Isoformen isoliert werden, die durch alternatives Spleißen sowie durch die Regulation über unterschiedliche Promotorregionen entstehen. In verschiedenen Studien konnte eine isoformspezifische Regulation als Antwort auf pathophysiologische Veränderungen der Zellen festgestellt werden, wie beispielsweise die Induktion der RORα4-Transkription in Leberzellen infolge einer Sauerstoffunterversorgung. Um Einblicke in die Mechanismen zu gewinnen, die der spezifischen Regulation der RORα4-Expression zugrunde liegen, wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit der RORα4-Promotor als erster Promotor einer RORα-Isoform identifiziert und analysiert.
Sechs Fragmente mit einer Länge von bis zu 5,1 kbp der aus Datenbanken entnommenen, putativen Promotorsequenz wurden in einen Reportergenvektor kloniert. Transiente Transfektionsexperimente und Reportergenanalysen deckten die Promotoraktivität der gewählten Sequenz auf.
In dem durch einen hohen Gehalt an den Nukleotiden G und C auffallenden Promotor wurden drei einzelne GC-Boxen (A, B und C) sowie eine Viererkette (Box D) und eine Tandem-GCBox (Box E) als mögliche Bindungsmotive für Sp-Transkriptionsfaktoren gefunden. Mithilfe von Kotransfektionen konnte eine Induktion der Promotoraktivität durch die Transkriptionsfaktoren Sp1 und Sp4 nachgewiesen werden, während Sp3 die Promotoraktivität in diesen Experimenten nicht beeinflusste.
Durch die gezielte Mutation oder Deletion, bzw. die Inkubation mit verschiedenen Substanzen konnten diesen GC-Boxen unterschiedliche Funktionen zugeordnet werden. Durch transiente Transfektionen stark verkürzter Promotorfragmente wurde ein für die Promotoraktivität nötiger Sequenzbereich von 170 Basenpaaren eingegrenzt. In Mutationsanalysen wurde demonstriert, dass die beiden proximalen GC-Boxen A und B für die basale Promotoraktivität essentiell sind.
Die RORα4-Promotoraktivität ließ sich zelltypabhängig durch den Phorbolester TPA induzieren. In Deletionsanalysen ließ sich dieser Effekt teilweise auf die GC-Boxen C und D zurückführen. Der distalen GC-Box E konnte ebenfalls eine Funktion zugeordnet werden. In Reportergenanalysen konnte demonstriert werden, dass sie die Induktion der Promotoraktivität durch den HDAC-Inhibitor Trichostatin A vermittelt.
Durch die Untersuchungen an den TK-luc-Konstrukten mit RORα-Responselementen konnte gezeigt werden, dass der virale Promotor aufgrund der einklonierten RORα-Responselemente sehr stark auf die Kotransfektion der RORα-Isoformen reagiert. Die Reportergenanalyse mit diesen Konstrukten stellt daher eine effiziente Methode dar, um die RORα-vermittelte Transaktivierung zu bestimmen.
Obwohl der RORα4-Promotor zahlreiche RORα-Responselemente trägt, konnte in den Kotransfektionen mit Expressionsplasmiden für die einzelnen Isoformen in keiner der drei Zelllinien eine Autoregulation gefunden werden. Ebensowenig zeigte sich ein Einfluss des putativen RORα-Liganden Melatonin auf die Promotoraktivität.
Des Weiteren wurde gezeigt, dass die RORα4-Promotoraktivität in HeLa und MCF-7-Zellen durch das cAMP-Analogon DbcAMP induzierbar ist, während in HEK 293 keine Beeinflussung der Promotoraktivität erzielt wurde. Neben der Steigerung der Promotoraktivität durch TPA, konnte mit der DbcAMP-Induktion folglich ein zweiter, zelltypabhängiger Effekt auf die RORα4-Promotoraktivität identifiziert werden.
Chemieunterricht in der Schule wird von Schülerinnen und Schülern in weiten Bereichen als schwer verstehbar, für das Alltagsleben als unnütz und wenig motivierend erlebt. Dies hat zur Folge, dass der Chemieunterricht von einer großen Zahl Lernender in der Oberstufe abgewählt wird. Dabei wird bewusst die Bedeutung der Chemie für die Industriegesellschaft ignoriert und die Konsequenz des Nachwuchsmangels nicht ernst genommen.
Bei der Suche nach Lösungsansätzen aus der Krise des schulischen Chemieunterrichts gibt es viele Ansätze, die sich seit einigen Jahrzehnten mit der Kontextorientierung und der Erschließung neuer Felder für den Chemieunterricht befasst haben und befassen. Ausgehend von Themen, deren Bedeutung für das Individuum und die Gesellschaft einen hohen Stellenwert haben, wird der Chemieunterricht mehr an die Lebenswelt der heranwachsenden Generation angepasst. Diese Vorgaben sind in der vorliegenden Arbeit einbezogen worden und haben das Thema HIV für den Chemieunterricht der gymnasialen Oberstufe als sinnvoll erscheinen lassen.
Vor dem Hintergrund der kognitionspsychologischen Erkenntnisse der vergangenen fünfzehn Jahre ist ein Weg der Unterrichtsgestaltung gewählt worden, mit dem die Selbständigkeit der Lernenden unterstützt, gefördert und weiterentwickelt werden kann. Kognitionspsychologische Untersuchungen der Eingangskanäle bei Lernvorgängen stellen die hohe Bedeutung mehrer Sinnesmodalitäten in den Vordergrund, durch die eine verbesserte Behaltensleistung erzielbar ist. Nach diesen Erkenntnissen kann Wissen nur dann als aktives Wissen in neuen Zusammenhängen eingesetzt werden, wenn Lernern die Möglichkeit geboten wird ihr individuelles Gedankengebäude zu konstruieren. Besonders effizient sind nach diesen Untersuchungen kombinierte Sinnesmodalitäten mit guter Behaltensleistung bei der Nutzung von Sprache, Text und Bewegtbildern. Hier gilt die alte Erkenntnis "ein Bild sagt mehr als tausend Worte" auch im übertragenem Sinne. Besonders die konstruktivistischen Überlegungen für den Vorgang des Wissensaufbaus wurden in dieser Arbeit berücksichtig.
Diese Forschungsergebnisse waren ein Grund für die multimediale Aufbereitung des Themas. Hoher Verbreitungsgrad, gesellschaftliche Bedeutung und Motivation durch Multimedia sind weitere Gründe für diese Entscheidung.
Sowohl curriculare als auch gesellschaftliche Entwicklungen fordern darüber hinaus das Denken in vernetzten Systemen, dies bedeutet ein über die Grenzen des Fachs Chemie hinausgehendes Planen und Realisieren von Unterricht. Mit der Themenwahl werden direkt die Fächer Chemie und Biologie angesprochen, Fächer wie Kunst, Religion, Ethik, Sozialkunde und Sprachen können einbezogen werden. Mit dem der Unterrichtseinheit, die von fünf Kursen mit insgesamt 60 Schülerinnen und Schülern erprobt wurde, zu Grunde liegenden Programm zum Thema HIV verknüpfen sich die Fragen:
* Ist der Einsatz von Computern als Medium bereits die Norm?
* Welche medialen Angebote werden schulisch/außerschulisch genutzt?
* Welche Informationsquellen werden verwendet?
* Welche Medien sind für die Testpersonen beim Lernprozess bedeutend?
* Wird die Lehrperson bei dem Einsatz der modernen Medien ersetzt?
* Fördert das Projekt die Selbstbestimmung beim Lernprozess?
* Welche Effekte hat das multimediale Projekt auf den Lernprozess?
* Welche Probleme treten beim Umgang mit dem verwendeten Programm auf?
Diese Punkte wurden mit einem Fragebogen vor und einem nach der Durchführung des Projektes bearbeitet...
Ferroelektrische Strontium-Wismut-Tantalat- (SBT) Filme werden in der Mikroelektronik als nicht-flüchtige Speichermedien verwendet und weiterentwickelt. Informationen werden durch Polarisation des Materials gespeichert und bleiben ohne weiteren Energieaufwand über einen Zeitraum von Jahren in solchen Speichern erhalten – sogenannten FeRAMs (Ferroelectric Random Access Memories). Darüber hinaus können gespeicherte Daten innerhalb von wenigen Nanosekunden wieder ausgelesen werden. Zusammengefasst ist eine Langzeitspeicherung kombiniert mit niedrigem Energieverbrauch und schneller Informationsverarbeitung durch den Einzug ferroelektrischer Materialien in die Computertechnologie möglich geworden.
Da die fortschreitende Miniaturisierung in der Mikroelektronik von zentraler Bedeutung ist, sind zur Charakterisierung der verwendeten Materialien Untersuchungsmethoden mit hoher Ortsauflösung unverzichtbar. Das Rasterkraftmikroskop – engl. Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) – ist eine solche Technik, mit der im Submikrometerbereich die Topographie sowie physikalische Eigenschaften von Materialien abgebildet werden können. Die vorliegende Arbeit widmet sich der Untersuchung von SBT-Filmen mit solchen AFM-Methoden.
Besonders die Rauhigkeit der einzelnen Filme in schichtartig aufgebauten Mikrochips ist bei der Herstellung von Halbleiterbauelementen von großer Bedeutung, wobei möglichst glatte Filme favorisiert werden. Deshalb wurden zunächst verschiedene SBT-Filme auf ihre topographischen Merkmale hin charakterisiert. Die Rauhigkeiten von SBT Filmen verschiedener Herstellungsverfahren wie der Metal Organic Decomposition (MOD) und der Metal Organic Chemical Vapour Deposition (MOCVD) wurden gegenübergestellt. Außerdem ist der Einfluss der SBT-Schichtdicke sowie der des Ferro-Anneals untersucht worden – Ferro-Anneal ist ein Temperungs-Schritt während der Filmherstellung, der zur Bildung der ferroelektrischen Aurivillius-Phase durchgeführt werden muss. Zudem wurde das unterschiedliche Kurzschlussverhalten zweier SBT-Filme in Zusammenhang mit ihren verschiedenen RMS-Rauhigkeitsdaten gebracht.
Der größte Teil der Arbeit setzt sich mit einer Methode auseinander, mit der die Polarisationseigenschaften von ferroelektrischen SBT-Filmen charakterisiert werden sollen – dem AFM/EFM-Polarisationsexperiment – engl. Electrostatic Force Microscope (EFM). Die SBT-Filme werden dabei mit einer AFM-Spitze polarisiert und in einem zweiten Schritt die daraus resultierenden elektrostatischen Felder mit einem EFM über der Probe abgebildet. Es wurde dabei kritisch hinterfragt, in wieweit diese Methode als Beurteilungskriterium der Materialeigenschaften herangezogen werden kann. Zudem wurden Aufladungsphänomene bei dieser Versuchsführung dokumentiert.
Außerdem wurde das Leckstromverhalten von SBT-Filmen auf der Submikrometerskala mit einer relativ neuen Messmethode, dem conducting-AFM (C-AFM), untersucht.
Die Ergebnisse aller Untersuchungen sind im folgenden stichpunktartig dargestellt.
Topographieuntersuchungen:
• Die RMS-Rauhigkeit von MOD/SBT-Filmen ist größer als die der MOCVD/SBTFilme. Mit steigender Prozesstemperatur des Ferro-Anneals wird die Oberflächenrauhigkeit von SBT-Filmen erhöht.
• SBT-Filme, die mit niedrigen Prozesstemperaturen hergestellt wurden, hier als Niedrigtemperatur-Filme bezeichnet, erfahren mit zunehmender Schichtdicke eine Glättung. Sie ist auf die Einbettung der Kristallite in die verhältnismäßig glatte FluoritPhase zurückzuführen, die wegen der geringen Temperaturen während des FerroAnneal-Prozesses noch nicht vollständig in die rauere ferroelektrische AurivilliusPhase umgesetzt wurde.
• Die unterschiedliche Zusammensetzung der Filme SrxBi2.2Ta2O8,3+x mit X1 = 0.9 und X2 = 1,0, im Text als Sr0,9-Film und Sr1,0-Film bezeichnet, führte zu höheren Kurzschlussraten des Sr0,9-Films in fertiggestellten FeRAM-Kondensatoren. Die Ursache kann auf die höhere Oberflächenrauhigkeit des Sr0,9-Films zurückgeführt werden. EFM-Untersuchungen:
• Bei der Polarisation ferroelektrischer SBT-Filme mit einer elektrisch gepolten AFMSpitze werden Ladungen in undefinierbarer Anzahl auf die Oberflächen gebracht. Diese Ladungen sind mehr oder weniger auf den Oberflächen beweglich. Mit zunehmender Polarisierbarkeit des ferroelektrischen Films wird die Ladung stärker am Polarisationsort durch elektrostatische Anziehung zwischen den orientierten Dipolen und der Oberflächenladung fixiert.
Das positions-spezifisch integrierende TRE5-A Retrotransposon besitzt zwei Promotorregionen (A- und C-Modul). Für das C-Modul konnte ein spezifisch bindendes Protein (CbfA) gefunden werden, das vermutlich über die Expression des Minusstrang-Transkripts regulativ in den Transpositionsmechanismus eingreift. Gleichzeitig stellt CbfA in D. discoideum einen kritischen Faktor dar, der sowohl auf das Wachstum als auch auf die Differenzierung Einfluss nimmt.
Es konnte gezeigt werden:
• Der AT-Haken in CbfA ist für die DNA-Bindung essentiell. Die Inaktivierung hat zur Folge, dass keine Differenzierung stattfindet. Es scheint, dass primär der AT-Haken für die DNA-Bindung sorgt und von den Zinkfingern unterstützt wird.
• Die JmjC-Domäne in CbfA ist essentiell. Transformanden mit CbfA ohne aktive JmjC-Domäne zeigen Defekte sowohl in Wachstum als auch Differenzierung.
• CbfA ist ein nukleares Protein. Es konnte zwar keine Kernlokalisationssequenz identifiziert werden, jedoch weisen die Versuche auf zumindest eine Kernlokalisierungssequenz im C-Terminus des cbfA hin.
• Ein C-terminal verkürztes CbfA ist funktionslos: wahrscheinlich aufgrund fehlender Kernlokalisation und somit fehlender DNA-Bindung.
• Ein N-terminal verkürztes CbfA ist teilweise funktionsfähig: die Komplementation in JH.D2-Zellen führt zu einer partiellen Revertierung hin zum Phänotyp der AX2-Zellen.
• Struktur-Homologien der JmjC-Domäne in CbfA zu Mitgliedern aus der Familie der Fe(II)/2OG-Oxygenasen, DNA-bindende Motive und die Lokalisation im Zellkern weisen auf eine Funktion des CbfAs als Chromatin-Remodeller im Zellkern hin.
• In der Transit von Wachstums- zu Entwicklungsphase kann der CbfA-Mangel durch artifizielle Proteinase A-Expression ausgeglichen werden, aber nicht durch Komplementation mit YakA, Adenylat-Zyklase oder cAMP Rezeptor 1.
• CbfA fungiert wahrscheinlich als Regulator der acaA-Transkription auf Ebene der chromosomalen Strukturen.
• cbfB, ein weiteres Gen mit einer JmjC-Domäne wurde in D. discoideum identifiziert, die Gensequenz vervollständigt und vom Dictyostelium Genom-Projekt verifiziert.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a potent mediator with pleiotropic functions such as inhibition of platelet aggregation, smooth muscle relaxation and regulation of neuronal transmission. These effects are mostly mediated by intracellular NO-sensitive guanylyl cyclases (GCs) which convert GTP into the second messenger, cGMP. This messenger in turn activates multiple downstream effectors such as cGMP-dependent protein kinases, cGMP-regulated ion channels and cGMPdependent phosphodiesterases. Mammalian NO-sensitive GCs are obligate heterodimers of an α and β subunit each. Given that these enzymes play a key role in cGMP-mediated pathways, one may anticipate that mechanisms other than allosteric activation via NO may exist to regulate the production and turnover of cGMP. In this thesis, novel aspects of the regulation of the most abundantly expressed GC heterodimer α1β1 are presented.
A possible mechanism of regulation that was tested here, is tyrosine phosphorylation. Using anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies, the phosphorylation of the β1 subunit was detected after incubation of β1-overexpressing COS-1 cells with protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) inhibitors such as pervanadate and bpV(phen). β1 phosphorylation on tyrosines was also observed in PC-12 cells which endogenously express GC and in rat aorta after inhibition of PTPs. Furthermore, hydrogen peroxide was found to be a physiological stimulus for the induction of reversible β1 tyrosine phosphorylation in intact cells. Using phenylalanine mutants of different tyrosines, residue 192 (Y192) of β1 was identified as the major phosphorylation site. Consistent with this finding, sequence analyses showed that Y192 forms part of a motif that resembles a preferential target site for Src-like kinases. When tyrosine-phosphorylated, this motif exposes a typical SH2 docking site for members of the Src kinase family.
Experiments with inhibitors of Src kinases, PP1 and PP2, clearly showed that phosphorylation of Y192 is Src-dependent. Preincubation of β1-expressing cells with these inhibitors significantly reduced the level of phosphorylated β1 after bpV(phen) treatment. Furthermore, co-expression of β1 with Src led to a strong phosphorylation of this subunit. Co-precipitation experiments showed that Src interacts with GC. Interestingly, kinases of the Src family are recruited to β1 via the SH2 domain upon phosphorylation of Y192. Together, these results indicate that Src kinases phosphorylate tyrosine 192 thereby creating a docking site for their own SH2 domains. Kinase bound to GC may then catalyze phosphorylation of GC or other downstream effectors. Inhibition of PTPs altered GC activity in two ways: it increased both the basal activity and the YC-1- and BAY 41-2272-stimulated activity two-fold, and it reduced the sensitivity of the enzyme towards NO. The detailed mechanism of action is still unknown, but experiments using the mutant β1[Y192F] demonstrated that residue 192 is not responsible for these effects.
Another major focus of this thesis was the identification of novel GC binding proteins. Using the yeast two-hybrid approach, the carboxy-terminal portion of a protein named AGAP1 (amino acid (aa) 399-804) was found to interact with the catalytic domain of α1 (aa 466-690) and with the regulatory domain of β1 (aa 1-348). Human AGAP1 is a multidomain protein of 804 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 89,1 kDa comprising an Arf-GAP (GAP:GTPase activating protein), a putative GTPase domain, two Ankyrin repeats and a PHdomain. Co-precipitation experiments using lysates from mammalian cells overexpressing both binding partners confirmed the interaction of AGAP1 with the GC subunits. Immunofluorescence analyses demonstrated that AGAP1 co-localizes with GC in the cytoplasm of COS-1 cells.
In Northern blots, AGAP1 mRNA was detected in various human and murine tissues showing a comparable expression pattern described for the mRNA of α1 and β1. Using an AGAP1-specific antibody, endogenous protein was precipitated from lysates of HEK-293 cells derived from human embryonic kidney. The same antibody efficiently cross-reacted with the rat homologue (rAGAP1) and immunoprecipitated endogenous rAGAP1 from lysates of PC-12 cells, aorta and heart. The molecular mass of rAGAP1 is larger than that of the human protein, possibly due to an additional exon present in the rat genome. Like β1, AGAP1 is a substrate for tyrosine kinases. Phosphorylation of AGAP1 was detected after inhibition of PTPs or by coexpression of Src. Furthermore, the kinase inhibitor PP2 strongly impaired phosphorylation of AGAP1 after pervanadate treatment suggesting that tyrosine kinases of the Src family are involved. Measurements of cGMP production showed that AGAP1 has no influence on the activity of NO-sensitive GC. Interestingly, inhibition of PTPs potently increased the complex formation between AGAP1 and GC indicating that the interaction between these two proteins is modulated by reversible tyrosine phosphorylation. Whether this effect is due to the phosphorylation of AGAP1 or GC is still unknown. AGAP1 associates with endosomes and exposes Arf-GAP activity towards Arf1 and Arf5 which are involved in vesicular transport. Thus, one may hypothesize that binding of α1β1 to AGAP1 targets GC to distinct subcellular compartments in close proximity to cGMP-dependent effectors, thereby optimizing cGMP generation and fostering cGMP-driven actions.
Taken together, these results demonstrate that beside the modulation of GC by NO the enzyme is regulated by tyrosine phosphorylation and interaction with AGAP1.
Aim of the present study was the characterization of the RORa receptor (Retinoidrelated Orphan Receptor a). RORa is a member of the nuclear receptor family and is involved into the differentiation of Purkinje cells, inflammation, arteriosclerosis, and bone mineralization. Nuclear receptors are transcription factors and mediate biological responses within target cells to outer signals such as lipophilic hormones. They are involved in development, growth, differentiation, proliferation, apoptosis, and maintenance of homeostasis. Ligand binding, posttranslational modifications, and cofactor recruitment control their activity. Nearly all nuclear receptors share a common modular structure with an Nterminal A/B region, a DNA-binding domain (DBD) that is composed of two zinc finger motifs, a hinge region, and a C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD). The RORs comprise the subtypes RORa, RORb, and RORg, which are encoded by different genes. All isoforms of the respective subtypes only differ in their A/B domain. This study focused mainly on the exploration of the gene structure, expression, and subcellular distribution of RORa...
5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) catalysis is positively regulated by Ca2+ ions and phospholipids that both act via the N-terminal C2-like domain of 5-LO. Previously, we have shown that 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol (OAG) functions as an agonist for human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) in stimulating 5-LO product formation. Here we have demonstrated that OAG directly stimulates 5-LO catalysis in vitro. In the absence of Ca2+ (chelated using EDTA), OAG strongly and concentration-dependently stimulated crude 5-LO in 100,000 x g supernatants as well as purified 5-LO enzyme from PMNL. Also, the monoglyceride 1-O-oleyl-rac-glycerol and 1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycerol were effective, whereas various phospholipids did not stimulate 5-LO. However, in the presence of Ca2+, OAG caused no stimulation of 5-LO. Also, phospholipids or cellular membranes abolished the effects of OAG. As found previously for Ca2+, OAG renders 5-LO activity resistant against inhibition by glutathione peroxidase activity, and this effect of OAG is reversed by phospholipids. Intriguingly, a 5-LO mutant lacking tryptophan residues (Trp-13, -75, and -102) important for the binding of the 5-LO C2-like domain to phospholipids was not stimulated by OAG. We conclude that OAG directly stimulates 5-LO by acting at a phospholipid binding site located within the C2-like domain.
Die Bande q23 auf Chromosom 11 ist in zahlreiche reziproke chromosomale Translokationen verwickelt. Diese sind dominant mit dem Krankheitsphänotyp einer AML, ALL und seltener mit malignen Lymphomen und myelodysplastischen Syndromen assoziiert. Mittlerweile sind fünfundachtzig cytogenetische Aberrationen der Bande 11q23 bekannt. Das auf 11q23 betroffene Gen wird als das Mixed Lineage Leukemia (MLL), Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL-1), Human Homolog of trithorax (HRX) oder als Human Trithorax 1 (Htrx1) bezeichnet. Die häufigsten Partnergene des MLL sind AF4 (40 %), AF9 (27 %), sowie ENL, AF6, ELL und AF10 (4-7 %).
Die Bruchpunkte von t(11;V) Translokationen sind nicht gleichmäßig über das gesamte, 92 kb große humane MLL-Gen verteilt, sondern liegen alle in der 8,3 kb großen Bruchpunktsregion Bpr. Auch innerhalb der Bpr ist die Verteilung der Translokationsbruchpunkte nicht homogen. Die Bruchpunkte von Patienten mit de novo Leukämien und einem Alter über einem Jahr liegen mehrheitlich in der 5’-Hälfte der Bpr, dem Subcluster I. Dagegen liegen die Bruchpunkte von Patienten mit therapiebedingten Leukämien und einem Alter unter einem Jahr überwiegend in der 3’-Hälfte der Bpr, dem Subcluster II.
Neuere Forschungsergebnisse zeigten, daß DNA-Doppelstrangbrüche auf zwei verschiedenen Chromosomen eine hinreichende Voraussetzung für das Entstehen chromosomaler Translokationen sind. Aufgrund der inhomogenen Verteilung der Translokationsbruchpunkte im MLL-Gen stellte sich die Frage, ob bestimmte Regionen dieses Gens für DNA-Doppelstrangbrüche prädisponiert sind. Interessanterweise ist Subcluster II extrem sensitiv gegenüber DNA-Doppelstrangbrüchen, die durch cytotoxische Agenzien oder Apoptose-auslösende Ereignisse induziert werden können. In unserer Arbeitsgruppe konnte eine etwa 200 bp große Region lokalisiert werden, über die sich nahezu alle Etoposid-induzierten DNA-Doppelstrangbrüche verteilten.
In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, daß die Bildung von DNA-Doppelstrangbrüchen in dieser Region durch die Gabe eines Caspase-Inhibitors gehemmt werden kann. Eine Etoposid-induzierte Protein-DNA-Wechselwirkung konnte allerdings nicht nachgewiesen werden. In der Literatur fanden sich Hinweise darauf, daß Subcluster II im Gegensatz zu Subcluster I eine verstärkte Histonacetylierung aufweist. Basierend auf diesen Hinweisen sollte die Arbeitshypothese untersucht werden, ob Subcluster II einen geninternen Promotor des MLL-Gens darstellt.
Die potentielle Promotorregion wurde zunächst durch Computeranalysen eingegrenzt. Mit RT-PCR Experimenten wurde anschließend der potentielle geninterne Promotor des murinen Mll-Gens in einer murinen Fibroblastenzellinie lokalisiert, die einen Transkriptionsstop und eine Polyadenylierungssequenz in Exon 4 des Mll-Gens trug. Um die am Mausmodell gewonnenen Erkenntnisse auch im humanen System zu überprüfen, wurde die geninterne Promotorregion des humanen MLL Gens vor ein Luciferasereportergen kloniert. Durch RTPCR konnte der geninterne Transkriptionsstart im Subcluster II des humanen MLL-Gens lokalisiert werden. Damit konnte zum ersten Mal gezeigt werden, daß Transkriptionsinitiation und genetische Instabilität im Subcluster II des humanen MLL-Gens kolokalisieren.
Durch Deletionsmutanten wurde die Bedeutung der einzelnen Module dieser Promotorregion ermittelt. Dabei zeigte sich, daß die Anwesenheit von zwei retromobilen Elementen eine Enhancer-Funktion haben. Demgegenüber zeigte die homologe murine Sequenz, die in unserer Arbeitsgruppe gleichzeitig von S. Scharf untersucht wurde und für die keine erhöhte Anfälligkeit für DNA-Doppelstrangbrüche bekannt ist, nur eine schwache Promotoraktivität. Dies weist auf einen Zusammenhang zwischen der genetischen Instabilität von Subcluster II und der Rate geninterner Transkriptionsinitiationsprozesse hin.
Das Protein, für das das Transkript des geninternen murinen Promotors kodiert, wurde mittels immunhistologischer und Western Blot Experimente nachgewiesen. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, daß dieses Protein, wie auch das MLL-Protein, proteolytisch durch Taspase1 und daß sich ein Mini-MLL-Komplex bildet.
Gephyrin is an ubiquitously expressed protein that, in the nervous system, is essential for synaptic anchoring of glycine receptors (GlyRs) and major GABAA receptor subtypes. The binding of gephyrin to the GlyR depends on an amphipathic motif within the large intracellular loop of the GlyRβ subunit. The mouse gephyrin gene consists of 30 exons. Ten of these exons, encoding cassettes of 5–40 amino acids, are subject to alternative splicing (C1–C7, C4′–C6′). Since one of the cassettes, C5′, has recently been reported to exclude GlyRs from GABAergic synapses, we investigated which cassettes are found in gephyrin associated with the GlyR. Gephyrin variants were purified from rat spinal cord, brain, and liver by binding to the glutathione S-transferase-tagged GlyRβ loop or copurified with native GlyR from spinal cord by affinity chromatography and analyzed by mass spectrometry. In addition to C2 and C6′, already known to be prominent, C4 was found to be abundant in gephyrin from all tissues examined. The nonneuronal cassette C3 was easily detected in liver but not in GlyR-associated gephyrin from spinal cord. C5 was present in brain and spinal cord polypeptides, whereas C5′ was coisolated mainly from liver. Notably C5′-containing gephyrin bound to the GlyRβ loop, inconsistent with its proposed selectivity for GABAA receptors. Our data show that GlyR-associated gephyrin, lacking C3, but enriched in C4 without C5, differs from other neuronal and nonneuronal gephyrin isoforms.
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) translocates antigenic peptides from the cytosol into the endoplasmic reticular lumen for subsequent loading onto major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules. These peptide-MHC complexes are inspected at the cell surface by cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. Assembly of the functional peptide transport and loading complex depends on intra- and intermolecular packing of transmembrane helices (TMs). Here, we have examined the membrane topology of human TAP1 within an assembled and functional transport complex by cysteine-scanning mutagenesis. The accessibility of single cysteine residues facing the cytosol or endoplasmic reticular lumen was probed by a minimally invasive approach using membrane-impermeable, thiol-specific fluorophores in semipermeabilized “living” cells. TAP1 contains ten transmembrane segments, which place the N and C termini in the cytosol. The transmembrane domain consists of a translocation core of six TMs, a building block conserved among most ATP-binding cassette transporters, and a unique additional N-terminal domain of four TMs, essential for tapasin binding and assembly of the peptide-loading complex. This study provides a first map of the structural organization of the TAP machinery within the macromolecular MHCI peptide-loading complex.
The Na+/K+-ATPase maintains the physiological Na+ and K+ gradients across the plasma membrane in most animal cells. The functional unit of the ion pump is comprised of two mandatory subunits including the α-subunit, which mediates ATP hydrolysis and ion translocation, as well as the β-subunit, which acts as a chaperone to promote proper membrane insertion and trafficking in the plasma membrane. To examine the conformational dynamics between the α- and β-subunits of the Na+/K+-ATPase during ion transport, we have used fluorescence resonance energy transfer, under voltage clamp conditions on Xenopus laevis oocytes, to differentiate between two models that have been proposed for the relative orientation of the α- and β-subunits. These experiments were performed by measuring the time constant of irreversible donor fluorophore destruction with fluorescein-5-maleimide as the donor fluorophore and in the presence or absence of tetramethylrhodamine-6-maleimide as the acceptor fluorophore following labeling on the M3-M4 or M5-M6 loop of the α-subunit and the β-subunit. We have also used fluorescence resonance energy transfer to investigate the relative movement between the two subunits as the ion pump shuttles between the two main conformational states (E1 and E2) as described by the Albers-Post scheme. The results from this study have identified a model for the orientation of the β-subunit in relation to the α-subunit and suggest that the α- and β-subunits move toward each other during the E2 to E1 conformational transition.
To evade the host's immune response, herpes simplex virus employs the immediate early gene product ICP47 (IE12) to suppress antigen presentation to cytotoxic T-lymphocytes by inhibition of the ATP-binding cassette transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). ICP47 is a membrane-associated protein adopting an alpha-helical conformation. Its active domain was mapped to residues 3-34 and shown to encode all functional properties of the full-length protein. The active domain of ICP47 was reconstituted into oriented phospholipid bilayers and studied by proton-decoupled 15N and 2H solid-state NMR spectroscopy. In phospholipid bilayers, the protein adopts a helix-loop-helix structure, where the average tilt angle of the helices relative to the membrane surface is approximately 15 degrees (+/- 7 degrees ). The alignment of both structured domains exhibits a mosaic spread of approximately 10 degrees . A flexible dynamic loop encompassing residues 17 and 18 separates the two helices. Refinement of the experimental data indicates that helix 1 inserts more deeply into the membrane. These novel insights into the structure of ICP47 represent an important step toward a molecular understanding of the immune evasion mechanism of herpes simplex virus and are instrumental for the design of new therapeutics.
The ATP-binding cassette half-transporter Mdl1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been proposed to be involved in the quality control of misassembled respiratory chain complexes by exporting degradation products generated by the m-AAA proteases from the matrix. Direct functional or structural data of the transport complex are, however, not known so far. After screening expression in various hosts, Mdl1 was overexpressed 100-fold to 1% of total mitochondrial membrane protein in S. cerevisiae. Based on detergent screens, Mdl1 was solubilized and purified to homogeneity. Mdl1 showed a high binding affinity for MgATP (Kd = 0.26 μm) and an ATPase activity with a Km of 0.86 mm (Hill coefficient of 0.98) and a turnover rate of 2.6 ATP/s. Mutagenesis of the conserved glutamate downstream of the Walker B motif (E599Q) or the conserved histidine of the H-loop (H631A) abolished ATP hydrolysis, whereas ATP binding was not affected. Mdl1 reconstituted into liposomes showed an ATPase activity similar to the solubilized complex. By single particle electron microscopy, a first three-dimensional structure of the mitochondrial ATP-binding cassette transporter was derived at 2.3-nm resolution, revealing a homodimeric complex in an open conformation.
By translocating proteasomal degradation products into the endoplasmic reticulum for loading of major histocompatibility complex I molecules, the ABC transporter TAP plays a focal role in the adaptive immunity against infected or malignantly transformed cells. A key question regarding the transport mechanism is how the quality of the incoming peptide is detected and how this information is transmitted to the ATPase domains. To identify residues involved in this process, we evolved a Trojan horse strategy in which a small artificial protease is inserted into antigenic epitopes. After binding, the TAP backbone in contact is cleaved, allowing the peptide sensor site to be mapped by mass spectrometry. Within this sensor site, we identified residues that are essential for tight coupling of peptide binding and transport. This sensor and transmission interface is restructured during the ATP hydrolysis cycle, emphasizing its important function in the cross-talk between the transmembrane and the nucleotide-binding domains. This allocrite sensor may be similarly positioned in other members of the ABC exporter family.
The lysosomal ABC transporter associated with antigen processing-like (TAPL, ABCB9) acts as an ATP-dependent polypeptide transporter with broad length selectivity. To characterize in detail its substrate specificity, a procedure for functional reconstitution of human TAPL was developed. By intensive screening of detergents, ideal solubilization conditions were evolved with respect to efficiency, long term stability, and functionality of TAPL. TAPL was isolated in a two-step procedure with high purity and, subsequently, reconstituted into proteoliposomes. The peptide transport activity of reconstituted TAPL strongly depends on the lipid composition. With the help of combinatorial peptide libraries, the key positions of the peptides were localized to the N- and C-terminal residues with respect to peptide transport. At both ends, TAPL favors positively charged, aromatic, or hydrophobic residues and disfavors negatively charged residues as well as asparagine and methionine. Besides specific interactions of both terminal residues, electrostatic interactions are important, since peptides with positive net charge are more efficiently transported than negatively charged ones.
Glucokinase (GK) is a key enzyme of glucose metabolism in liver and pancreatic beta-cells, and small molecule activators of GK (GKAs) are under evaluation for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. In liver, GK activity is controlled by the GK regulatory protein (GKRP), which forms an inhibitory complex with the enzyme. Here, we performed isothermal titration calorimetry and surface plasmon resonance experiments to characterize GK-GKRP binding and to study the influence that physiological and pharmacological effectors of GK have on the protein-protein interaction. In the presence of fructose-6-phosphate, GK-GKRP complex formation displayed a strong entropic driving force opposed by a large positive enthalpy; a negative change in heat capacity was observed (Kd = 45 nm, DeltaH = 15.6 kcal/mol, TDeltaS = 25.7 kcal/mol, DeltaCp = -354 cal mol(-1) K(-1)). With k(off) = 1.3 x 10(-2) s(-1), the complex dissociated quickly. The thermodynamic profile suggested a largely hydrophobic interaction. In addition, effects of pH and buffer demonstrated the coupled uptake of one proton and indicated an ionic contribution to binding. Glucose decreased the binding affinity between GK and GKRP. This decrease was potentiated by an ATP analogue. Prototypical GKAs of the amino-heteroaryl-amide type bound to GK in a glucose-dependent manner and impaired the association of GK with GKRP. This mechanism might contribute to the antidiabetic effects of GKAs.
Human serum albumin (HSA) nanoparticles represent a promising tool for targeted drug delivery to tumor cells. The coupling of the antibody trastuzumab to nanoparticles uses the capability of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive cells to incorporate agents linked to HER2. In our present study, we developed targeted nanoparticles loaded with antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) against polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1). We evaluated the receptor-mediated uptake into HER2-positive and -negative breast cancer and murine cell lines. We performed quantitative real-time PCR and Western blot analyses to monitor the impact on Plk1 expression in HER2-positive breast cancer cells. Antibody-conjugated nanoparticles showed a specific targeting to HER2-overexpressing cells with cellular uptake by receptor-mediated endocytosis and a release into HER2-positive BT-474 cells. We observed a significant reduction of Plk1 mRNA and protein expression and increased activation of Caspase 3/7. Thus, this is the first report about ASO-loaded HSA nanoparticles, where an impact on gene expression could be observed. The data provide the basis for the further development of carrier systems for Plk1-specific ASOs to reduce off-target effects evoked by systemically administered ASOs and to achieve a better penetration into primary and metastatic target cells. Treatment of tumors using trastuzumab-conjugated ASO-loaded HSA nanoparticles could be a promising approach to reach this goal.
The β-subunits of Na,K-ATPase and H,K-ATPase have important functions in maturation and plasma membrane targeting of the catalytic α-subunit but also modulate the transport activity of the holoenzymes. In this study, we show that tryptophan replacement of two highly conserved tyrosines in the transmembrane domain of both Na,K- and gastric H,K-ATPase β-subunits resulted in considerable shifts of the voltage-dependent E1P/E2P distributions toward the E1P state as inferred from presteady-state current and voltage clamp fluorometric measurements of tetramethylrhodamine-6-maleimide-labeled ATPases. The shifts in conformational equilibria were accompanied by significant decreases in the apparent affinities for extracellular K+ that were moderate for the Na,K-ATPase β-(Y39W,Y43W) mutation but much more pronounced for the corresponding H,K-ATPase β-(Y44W,Y48W) variant. Moreover in the Na,K-ATPase β-(Y39W,Y43W) mutant, the apparent rate constant for reverse binding of extracellular Na+ and the subsequent E2P-E1P conversion, as determined from transient current kinetics, was significantly accelerated, resulting in enhanced Na+ competition for extracellular K+ binding especially at extremely negative potentials. Analogously the reverse binding of extracellular protons and subsequent E2P-E1P conversion was accelerated by the H,K-ATPase β-(Y44W,Y48W) mutation, and H+ secretion was strongly impaired. Remarkably tryptophan replacements of residues in the M7 segment of Na,K- and H,K-ATPase α-subunits, which are at interacting distance to the β-tyrosines, resulted in similar E1 shifts, indicating their participation in stabilization of E2. Thus, interactions between selected residues within the transmembrane regions of α- and β-subunits of P2C-type ATPases exert an E2-stabilizing effect, which is of particular importance for efficient H+ pumping by H,K-ATPase under in vivo conditions.
Biogenesis of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX) relies on a large number of assembly factors, among them the transmembrane protein Surf1. The loss of human Surf1 function is associated with Leigh syndrome, a fatal neurodegenerative disorder caused by severe COX deficiency. In the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans, two homologous proteins, Surf1c and Surf1q, were identified, which we characterize in the present study. When coexpressed in Escherichia coli together with enzymes for heme a synthesis, the bacterial Surf1 proteins bind heme a in vivo. Using redox difference spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry, the binding of the heme cofactor to purified apo-Surf1c and apo-Surf1q is quantified: Each of the Paracoccus proteins binds heme a in a 1:1 stoichiometry and with Kd values in the submicromolar range. In addition, we identify a conserved histidine as a residue crucial for heme binding. Contrary to most earlier concepts, these data support a direct role of Surf1 in heme a cofactor insertion into COX subunit I by providing a protein-bound heme a pool.
An efficient route for delivering specific proteins and peptides into neurons could greatly accelerate the development of therapies for various diseases, especially those involving intracellular defects such as Parkinson disease. Here we report the novel use of polybutylcyanoacrylate nanoparticles for delivery of intact, functional proteins into neurons and neuronal cell lines. Uptake of these particles is primarily dependent on endocytosis via the low density lipoprotein receptor. The nanoparticles are rapidly turned over and display minimal toxicity to cultured neurons. Delivery of three different functional cargo proteins is demonstrated. When primary neuronal cultures are treated with recombinant Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase as nanoparticle cargo, persistent enzyme activity is measured beyond the period of nanoparticle degradation. Delivery of the small GTPase rhoG induces neurite outgrowth and differentiation in PC12 cells. Finally, a monoclonal antibody directed against synuclein is capable of interacting with endogenous alpha-synuclein in cultured neurons following delivery via nanoparticles. Polybutylcyanoacrylate nanoparticles are thus useful for intracellular protein delivery in vitro and have potential as carriers of therapeutic proteins for treatment of neuronal disorders in vivo.
RcsF, a proposed auxiliary regulator of the regulation of capsule synthesis (rcs) phosphorelay system, is a key element for understanding the RcsC-D-A/B signaling cascade, which is responsible for the regulation of more than 100 genes and is involved in cell division, motility, biofilm formation, and virulence. The RcsC-D-A/B system is one of the most complex bacterial signal transduction pathways, consisting of several membrane-bound and soluble proteins. RcsF is a lipoprotein attached to the outer membrane and plays an important role in activating the RcsC-d-A/B pathway. The exact mechanism of activation of the rcs phosphorelay by RcsF, however, remains unknown. We have analyzed the sequence of RcsF and identified three structural elements: 1) an N-terminal membrane-anchored helix (residues 3-13), 2) a loop (residues 14-48), and 3) a C-terminal folded domain (residues 49-134). We have determined the structure of this C-terminal domain and started to investigate its interaction with potential partners. Important features of its structure are two disulfide bridges between Cys-74 and Cys-118 and between Cys-109 and Cys-124. To evaluate the importance of this RcsF disulfide bridge network in vivo, we have examined the ability of the full-length protein and of specific Cys mutants to initiate the rcs signaling cascade. The results indicate that the Cys-74/Cys-118 and the Cys-109/Cys-124 residues correlate pairwise with the activity of RcsF. Interaction studies showed a weak interaction with an RNA hairpin. However, no interaction could be detected with reagents that are believed to activate the rcs phosphorelay, such as lysozyme, glucose, or Zn(2+) ions.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) systems translocate a wide range of solutes across cellular membranes. The thermophilic Gram-negative eubacterium Thermus thermophilus, a model organism for structural genomics and systems biology, discloses ∼46 ABC proteins, which are largely uncharacterized. Here, we functionally analyzed the first two and only ABC half-transporters of the hyperthermophilic bacterium, TmrA and TmrB. The ABC system mediates uptake of the drug Hoechst 33342 in inside-out oriented vesicles that is inhibited by verapamil. TmrA and TmrB form a stable heterodimeric complex hydrolyzing ATP with a Km of 0.9 mm and kcat of 9 s−1 at 68 °C. Two nucleotides can be trapped in the heterodimeric ABC complex either by vanadate or by mutation inhibiting ATP hydrolysis. Nucleotide trapping requires permissive temperatures, at which a conformational ATP switch is possible. We further demonstrate that the canonic glutamate 523 of TmrA is essential for rapid conversion of the ATP/ATP-bound complex into its ADP/ATP state, whereas the corresponding aspartate in TmrB (Asp-500) has only a regulatory role. Notably, exchange of this single noncanonic residue into a catalytic glutamate cannot rescue the function of the E523Q/D500E complex, implicating a built-in asymmetry of the complex. However, slow ATP hydrolysis in the newly generated canonic site (D500E) strictly depends on the formation of a posthydrolysis state in the consensus site, indicating an allosteric coupling of both active sites.