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Live-cell labelling techniques to visualize proteins with minimal disturbance are important; however, the currently available methods are limited in their labelling efficiency, specificity and cell permeability. We describe high-throughput protein labelling facilitated by minimalistic probes delivered to mammalian cells by microfluidic cell squeezing. High-affinity and target-specific tracing of proteins in various subcellular compartments is demonstrated, culminating in photoinduced labelling within live cells. Both the fine-tuned delivery of subnanomolar concentrations and the minimal size of the probe allow for live-cell super-resolution imaging with very low background and nanometre precision. This method is fast in probe delivery (∼1,000,000 cells per second), versatile across cell types and can be readily transferred to a multitude of proteins. Moreover, the technique succeeds in combination with well-established methods to gain multiplexed labelling and has demonstrated potential to precisely trace target proteins, in live mammalian cells, by super-resolution microscopy.
GABARAP belongs to an evolutionary highly conserved gene family that has a fundamental role in autophagy. There is ample evidence for a crosstalk between autophagy and apoptosis as well as the immune response. However, the molecular details for these interactions are not fully characterized. Here, we report that the ablation of murine GABARAP, a member of the Atg8/LC3 family that is central to autophagosome formation, suppresses the incidence of tumor formation mediated by the carcinogen DMBA and results in an enhancement of the immune response through increased secretion of IL-1β, IL-6, IL-2 and IFN-γ from stimulated macrophages and lymphocytes. In contrast, TGF-β1 was significantly reduced in the serum of these knockout mice. Further, DMBA treatment of these GABARAP knockout mice reduced the cellularity of the spleen and the growth of mammary glands through the induction of apoptosis. Gene expression profiling of mammary glands revealed significantly elevated levels of Xaf1, an apoptotic inducer and tumor-suppressor gene, in knockout mice. Furthermore, DMBA treatment triggered the upregulation of pro-apoptotic (Bid, Apaf1, Bax), cell death (Tnfrsf10b, Ripk1) and cell cycle inhibitor (Cdkn1a, Cdkn2c) genes in the mammary glands. Finally, tumor growth of B16 melanoma cells after subcutaneous inoculation was inhibited in GABARAP-deficient mice. Together, these data provide strong evidence for the involvement of GABARAP in tumorigenesis in vivo by delaying cell death and its associated immune-related response.
FUSE Binding Protein 1 (FUBP1) is a transcriptional regulator, which is overexpressed in various cancer entities, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and colorectal cancer (CRC). It fulfills pro-proliferative and anti-apoptotic functions in cancer cells, resulting in increased proliferation and reduced sensitivity towards apoptotic stimuli.
Previously, camptothecin (CPT) and its clinically used analog 7-ethyl 10hydroxycamptothecin (SN-38) were shown to inhibit FUBP1 in biophysical interaction displacement assays (AlphaScreen; surface plasmon resonance, SPR), and first insights into the cellular effects of FUBP1 inhibition were obtained. CPT and SN-38 are known to potently inhibit topoisomerase 1 (TOP 1), and until today, these inhibitors were thought to be specific for this target. This could be disproved by our FUBP1 binding studies. An open issue, which is addressed in this thesis, was the contribution of FUBP1 inhibition to SN-38-mediated apoptosis apoptosis.
During this thesis, a low micromolar efficacy of CPT/SN-38-induced inhibition of FUBP1 binding to the Far Upstream Sequence Element (FUSE) oligonucleotide of p21 was determined. Furthermore, FUBP1 was for the first time shown to directly interact with a potential FUSE sequence upstream of the transcription start in pro-apoptotic gene BIK. In proof of-principle experiments, an effective inhibition of the binding of FUBP1 to the FUSE BIK DNA by CPT/SN-38 was verified.
One of the main goals of this thesis was to further elucidate the contribution of cellular FUBP1-inhibition by CPT/SN-38 to the anti-cancer potential of these substances. For this purpose, the TOP 1 mutant and TOP 1 wild type colorectal cancer sub-cell lines HCT116 G7 and HCT116 S were used. CPT/SN-38 was shown to induce apoptosis in single and combinatorial treatments with mitomycin c (MMC), independently of the TOP 1 mutation status of the cells. Furthermore, a prominent induction of a FUBP1 target gene signature was observed upon treatment of both cell lines with CPT/SN-38. Consequently, CPT/SN-38 was able to fulfill its anticancer effects in these cells, although TOP 1 could not be the main target in the mutant cell line.
In a second approach to gain indirect evidence for FUBP1 dependent effects of CPT/SN-38, the TOP 1-specific inhibitors topotecan (TTN) and β lapachone (BL) were used for the treatment of HCC and CRC cell lines. Interestingly, the TOP 1 inhibitors TTN and BL exhibited a reduced potency in apoptosis induction compared to the dual (FUBP1 and TOP 1) inhibitor SN-38.
Finally, two independent screens for a specific FUBP1 inhibitor were performed. In the first approach, a small number of structural and functional CPT-derivatives that exhibited a reduced inhibitory potential against TOP 1, were tested for their ability to interfere with the FUBP1/FUSE binding. Two particular indenoisoquinoline derivatives revealed potent in vitro inhibition of FUBP1 with low micromolar IC50 values.
In a second approach, previously identified candidate FUBP1 inhibitors that had been isolated from the Maybridge Hit Finder library served as lead structures for a structure activity relationship (SAR) study of the inhibition of FUBP1 binding to the FUSE oligonucleotide. After two cycles of optimization, a medium-potent FUBP1 inhibitor was obtained that induced effective deregulation of FUBP1 target genes in cell culture experiments.
Cytochrome c oxidases (CcOs), members of the heme-copper containing oxidase (HCO) superfamily, are the terminal enzymes of aerobic respiratory chains. The cbb3-type cytochrome c oxidases (cbb3-CcO) form the C-family and have only the central catalytic subunit in common with the A- and B-family HCOs. In Pseudomonas stutzeri, two cbb3 operons are organized in a tandem repeat. The atomic structure of the first cbb3 isoform (Cbb3-1) was determined at 3.2 Å resolution in 2010 (S. Buschmann, E. Warkentin, H. Xie, J. D. Langer, U. Ermler, and H. Michel, Science 329:327-330, 2010, http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1187303). Unexpectedly, the electron density map of Cbb3-1 revealed the presence of an additional transmembrane helix (TMH) which could not be assigned to any known protein. We now identified this TMH as the previously uncharacterized protein PstZoBell_05036, using a customized matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI)-tandem mass spectrometry setup. The amino acid sequence matches the electron density of the unassigned TMH. Consequently, the protein was renamed CcoM. In order to identify the function of this new subunit in the cbb3 complex, we generated and analyzed a CcoM knockout strain. The results of the biochemical and biophysical characterization indicate that CcoM may be involved in CcO complex assembly or stabilization. In addition, we found that CcoM plays a role in anaerobic respiration, as the ΔCcoM strain displayed altered growth rates under anaerobic denitrifying conditions.om Pseudomonas stutzeri, a bacterium closely related to the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Post-translational modification of proteins with ubiquitin-like SUMO modifiers is a tightly regulated and highly dynamic process. The SENP family of SUMO-specific isopeptidases comprises six cysteine proteases. They are instrumental in counterbalancing SUMO conjugation, but their regulation is not well understood. We demonstrate that in hypoxic cell extracts, the catalytic activity of SENP family members, in particular SENP1 and SENP3, is inhibited in a rapid and fully reversible process. Comparative mass spectrometry from normoxic and hypoxic cells defines a subset of hypoxia-induced SUMO1 targets, including SUMO ligases RanBP2 and PIAS2, glucose transporter 1, and transcriptional regulators. Among the most strongly induced targets, we identified the transcriptional co-repressor BHLHE40, which controls hypoxic gene expression programs. We provide evidence that SUMOylation of BHLHE40 is reversed by SENP1 and contributes to transcriptional repression of the metabolic master regulator gene PGC-1α. We propose a pathway that connects oxygen-controlled SENP activity to hypoxic reprogramming of metabolism.
Mammalian oocytes are arrested in the dictyate stage of meiotic prophase I for long periods of time, during which the high concentration of the p53 family member TAp63α sensitizes them to DNA damage-induced apoptosis. TAp63α is kept in an inactive and exclusively dimeric state but undergoes rapid phosphorylation-induced tetramerization and concomitant activation upon detection of DNA damage. Here we show that the TAp63α dimer is a kinetically trapped state. Activation follows a spring-loaded mechanism not requiring further translation of other cellular factors in oocytes and is associated with unfolding of the inhibitory structure that blocks the tetramerization interface. Using a combination of biophysical methods as well as cell and ovary culture experiments we explain how TAp63α is kept inactive in the absence of DNA damage but causes rapid oocyte elimination in response to a few DNA double strand breaks thereby acting as the key quality control factor in maternal reproduction.
As a centerpiece of antigen processing, the ATP-binding cassette transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) became a main target for viral immune evasion. The herpesviral ICP47 inhibits TAP function, thereby suppressing an adaptive immune response. Here, we report on a thermostable ICP47-TAP complex, generated by fusion of different ICP47 fragments. These fusion complexes allowed us to determine the direction and positioning in the central cavity of TAP. ICP47-TAP fusion complexes are arrested in a stable conformation, as demonstrated by MHC I surface expression, melting temperature, and the mutual exclusion of herpesviral TAP inhibitors. We unveiled a conserved region next to the active domain of ICP47 as essential for the complete stabilization of the TAP complex. Binding of the active domain of ICP47 arrests TAP in an open inward facing conformation rendering the complex inaccessible for other viral factors. Based on our findings, we propose a dual interaction mechanism for ICP47. A per se destabilizing active domain inhibits the function of TAP, whereas a conserved C-terminal region additionally stabilizes the transporter. These new insights into the ICP47 inhibition mechanism can be applied for future structural analyses of the TAP complex.
The neuronal transcriptome changes dynamically to adapt to stimuli from the extracellular and intracellular environment. In this study, we adapted for the first time a click chemistry technique to label the newly synthesized RNA in cultured hippocampal neurons and intact larval zebrafish brain. Ethynyl uridine (EU) was incorporated into neuronal RNA in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Newly synthesized RNA granules observed throughout the dendrites were colocalized with mRNA and rRNA markers. In zebrafish larvae, the application of EU to the swim water resulted in uptake and labeling throughout the brain. Using a GABA receptor antagonist, PTZ (pentylenetetrazol), to elevate neuronal activity, we demonstrate that newly transcribed RNA signal increased in specific regions involved in neurogenesis.
The high selectivity of biological transformations taking place in Nature have long inspired synthetic chemists to develop analogous chemical processes. Similarly, transient intermediates identified in chemical transformations often provide a basis to understand biological processes. Therefore, new insights gained in biological studies are often useful for chemistry and vice versa.
Proteins, and catalytically active enzymes, are among the most essential units of living cells. Metalloproteins or -enzymes, i.e., proteins or enzymes that contain transition metal ions such as copper, nickel, iron or zinc are often involved in processes like (1) metal-ion storage and transport, (2) exchange of electrons with the environment in catalysis and electron transfer reactions, and (3) dioxygen storage, transport, and metabolization.
For decades, copper-mediated biological oxidations have spurred a great deal of interest among synthetic and catalytic chemists. Copper enzymes such as dopamine β-monooxygenase (DβM), peptidylglycine α-hydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM),particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) and tyrosinase activate molecular oxygen (O2) and incorporate one of the oxygen atoms selectively into C−H bonds yielding hydroxylated organic substrates. Remarkable progress in bioinorganic research has led to the development of a large number of copper-based model systems supported by various nitrogen donor ligands that bind O2, cleave the O−O bond, and/or afford hydroxylation reactions similar to copper enzymes. These synthetic model systems have helped to understand the structureactivity relationships of their biological role models and supporting theoretical studies have contributed substantially to the development of the field. Specifically, several density functional theory (DFT) studies have provided detailed mechanistic insights into coppermediated aliphatic and aromatic hydroxylation reactions. Until to date, however, pertinent quantum chemical research still suffers from severe problems as to identify sufficiently accurate and efficient methods for mechanistic studies, and conflicting literature reports have created confusions within the scientific community. Therefore, the first aim of this thesis is to identify a DFT method well suited to describe copper-mediated hydroxylation reactions. With this method at hand a number of interesting hydroxylation reactions is investigated aiming at a detailed understanding of the underlying reaction mechanisms.
The thesis is divided into four chapters of which the first, the introductory chapter, is further divided into three sections (1) copper proteins and enzymes, (2) copper-O2 reactivity in enzymes and (3) biomimetic Cu/O2 chemistry. The first section gives a brief overview of a number of copper enzymes. The second section provides a concise introduction to the biochemical transformations brought about by those copper enzymes that perform aliphatic and aromatic hydroxylation reactions. It is shown that such copper enzymes carry different types of active sites which are responsible for their specific biological functions. These copper enzymes with their biological function are the role models for synthetic chemistry. In the third section, biomimetic Cu/O2 chemistry, the insights gathered in the past 35 years of extensive research on copper-based synthetic model systems that mimic various aspects of copper-enzyme reactivity are reviewed. Various types of active copper sites have been realized in these synthetic model systems and a brief introduction to the respective reactivities towards C−H bonds is presented. We will specifically focus on isomerization processes of dinuclear active Cu2O2 sites and the specific reactivity aspects of these isomers, as these phenomena have been the subject of enormous research efforts aiming at the understanding of the function of the enzyme tyrosinase.
Theory has been integral part of this research and density functional theory (DFT) has effectively taken over the role as a working horse in most studies. Therefore, the second chapter is devoted to an exposition of earlier DFT applications in mechanistic studies of Cu/O2 chemistry. We specifically highlight the problems related to the use of DFT in this field and illustrate the present state of knowledge.
The third chapter of this thesis provides results and discussion of (1) DFT benchmark studies and (2) mechanistic studies. In the first section, the results of a careful benchmark study on the performance of various DFT methods to study the μ-η2:η2-peroxodicopper(II)/bis(μ-oxo)dicopper(III) core isomerization and the C–H hydroxylation processes are compared with available experimental reference data. We provide an assessment of the effects of relativity, counteranions, and dispersion on the reference reactions. The most suitable DFT method evolving from this study, BLYP-D/def2-TZVP including solvent and relativistic corrections, is applied in the next sections to investigate the mechanistic scenario underlying three copper-dioxygen mediated hydroxylation reactions of aliphatic and aromatic C–H bonds. Our mechanistic studies show that bis(μ-oxo)dicopper(III) complexes are capable of achieving selective aliphatic and aromatic C–H hydroxylations. The study of substituent effects in these reactions has further shown that the bis(μ-oxo)dicopper complex acts as an electrophile in hydroxylation.
The fourth chapter presents the conclusions of our investigations. Part of the work presented in this thesis has been published in a peer reviewed journal and enclosed in appendix 1. Further research work, not presented in chapters 1-4, was conducted during my PhD time. This has led to two publications which are added in the appendix.
The geminal frustrated Lewis pair tBu2PCH2B(Fxyl)2 (1; Fxyl=3,5-(CF3)2C6H3) is accessible in 65 % yield from tBu2PCH2Li and (Fxyl)2BF. According to NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography, 1 is monomeric both in solution and in the solid state. The intramolecular P⋅⋅⋅B distance of 2.900(5) Å and the full planarity of the borane site exclude any significant P/B interaction. Compound 1 readily activates a broad variety of substrates including H2, EtMe2SiH, CO2/CS2, Ph2CO, and H3CCN. Terminal alkynes react with heterolysis of the C−H bond. Haloboranes give cyclic adducts with strong P−BX3 and weak R3B−X bonds. Unprecedented transformations leading to zwitterionic XP/BCX3 adducts occur on treatment of 1 with CCl4 or CBr4 in Et2O. In less polar solvents (C6H6, n-pentane), XP/BCX3 adduct formation is accompanied by the generation of significant amounts of XP/BX adducts. FLP 1 catalyzes the hydrogenation of PhCH=NtBu and the hydrosilylation of Ph2CO with EtMe2SiH.
This thesis deals with the NMR characterization of the structure and the folding dynamics of DNA G quadruplexes as potential therapeutic target in cancer therapy and building block for DNA based nanotechnology.
The first part of this thesis (Chapters 1-5) introduces the reader to the world of G quadruplexes.
The main features of the classic Watson Crick double helix and alternative non B DNA structures are illustrated in Chapter 1. Many different base pairing schemes are possible, besides the canonical Watson Crick motif, thereby expanding the structural complexity of DNA. Non canonical base pairing, such as Hoogsteen hydrogen bonding, enables the assembly of triplets and quartets, which are the building blocks of triplex and quadruplex structures, respectively.
The structural characteristics of DNA G quadruplexes are delineated in detail in Chapter 2.
G quadruplex structures are extremely polymorphic, in terms of strands orientation, loops geometry, grooves width and arrangement of the glycosidic torsion angles. The various structural elements as well as the different cation coordination geometries are here presented, with a special emphasis on the diversity of conformations reported for the telomeric DNA G quadruplexes.
Chapter 3 describes the biological roles of G quadruplex structures in the genome. After introducing the architecture of the telomeric DNA and its interacting proteins, the mechanism of the telomeres elongation catalysed by the telomerase enzyme and its implications for cancer are discussed. The occurrence of G quadruplex structures in functional regions of the genome, such as promoter regions of oncogenes, and their possible roles in regulating the gene transcription are then outlined in the second part of the chapter.
The potential of G quadruplex as a novel anti cancer target is examined in Chapter 4 and the proposed anti cancer mechanisms for a ligand stabilizing G quadruplex structures are discussed.
RNA G quadruplexes and their putative role in gene regulation at the level of translation are briefly illustrated at the end of the chapter.
A general overview on the NMR methods to investigate the G quadruplex structures is presented in Chapter 5. The experimental set up used for the real time NMR studies of the G quadruplex folding is also described.
The second part of the thesis (Chapters 6-8), which is the cumulative part, comprises the original publications grouped in three Chapters according to the topic.
The state of the art on small molecules targeting G quadruplex structures is given at the beginning of Chapter 6, including a summary of the experimental structures of G quadruplexes in complex with ligands available up to date. The publications presented in Chapters 6.1-6.3 are concerned with the elucidation of the interaction modes between DNA G quadruplexes and selected ligands with potential therapeutic applications.
The binding ability of two natural alkaloids (berberine and sanguinarine) to telomeric G quadruplexes is examined in Chapter 6.1. The ability of carbazole and diguanosine derivatives (synthetized in the group of Prof. Dash, IISER, Kolkata) to interact with c-MYC G quadruplex and down regulate c-MYC expression is explored in Chapter 6.2 and Chapter 6.3, respectively.
The energy landscape of human telomeric G quadruplex structures is discussed in Chapter 7, in light of the experimental kinetic studies as well as molecular dynamics simulations reported in literature until now. Up to date there is no general consensus regarding the folding pathway of unimolecular human telomeric G quadruplex, in particular due to the lack of atomic resolution data on the species involved in the folding. Chapter 7.1 presents the first real time NMR study of the human telomeric G quadruplex folding kinetics.
The final chapter of this thesis (Chapter 8) outlines the potential of G-quadruplex structures as building blocks in nanotechnology. After illustrating briefly the additional possibilities offered by alternative non B DNA structures to programme nanomaterials, a number of applications employing G quadruplex structures in different fields of nanotechnology are described. The article presented in Chapter 8.1 investigates the structural and photoswitching properties of a novel intermolecular azobenzene containing G quadruplex synthetized in the group of Prof. Heckel (Goethe University, Frankfurt).
The arachidonic acid cascade is a key player in inflammation, and numerous well-established drugs interfere with this pathway. Previous studies have suggested that simultaneous inhibition of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) and soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) results in synergistic anti-inflammatory effects. In this study, a novel prototype of a dual 5-LO/sEH inhibitor KM55 was rationally designed and synthesized. KM55 was evaluated in enzyme activity assays with recombinant enzymes. Furthermore, activity of KM55 in human whole blood and endothelial cells was investigated. KM55 potently inhibited both enzymes in vitro and attenuated the formation of leukotrienes in human whole blood. KM55 was also tested in a cell function-based assay. The compound significantly inhibited the LPS-induced adhesion of leukocytes to endothelial cells by blocking leukocyte activation.
Plant-released flavonoids induce the transcription of symbiotic genes in rhizobia and one of the first bacterial responses is the synthesis of so called Nod factors. They are responsible for the initial root hair curling during onset of root nodule development. This signal exchange is believed to be essential for initiating the plant symbiosis with rhizobia affiliated with the Alphaproteobacteria. Here, we provide evidence that in the broad host range strain Sinorhizobium fredii NGR234 the complete lack of quorum sensing molecules results in an elevated copy number of its symbiotic plasmid (pNGR234a). This in turn triggers the expression of symbiotic genes and the production of Nod factors in the absence of plant signals. Therefore, increasing the copy number of specific plasmids could be a widespread mechanism of specialized bacterial populations to bridge gaps in signaling cascades.
Protein synthesis is a central process within every living cell, where information embodied in the nucleotide sequence of the mRNA is translated into the primary sequence of proteins. The translation procedure comprises four steps: initiation, elongation, termination, and recycling. Ribosome recycling orchestrated by the ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) protein ABCE1, renders mRNA translation into a cyclic process, connecting termination with re initiation. In Archaea and Eukarya, the ABC protein ABCE1 catalyzes ribosome recycling by splitting the ribosome (80S/70S) into the small 40S/30S and large 60S/50S subunits, providing them for the next translation round.
The ABC‐type ATPase one of the most conserved proteins, present in all Archaea and Eukarya, but not in Bacteria, is essential for life in all organisms examined so far. ABCE1 was initially identified as RNase L inhibitor (Rli1), involved in the antiviral RNA immunity, and as host protein 68 (HP68) playing a role in HIV capsid assembly. However, the strong sequence conservation of ABCE1 points towards a more fundamental function within cell homeostasis, which was found by its involvement in various translation processes. ABCE1 turned out to be the major ribosome recycling factor indispensable for life in Eukarya and Archaea, being involved in canonical translation, mRNA surveillance, ribosome biogenesis, and translation initiation.
Recent functional and structural data provided first insights into the mechanism of ABCE1 in ribosome recycling. The nucleotide‐binding domains (NBDs) sandwich two ATP molecules in the NBD1‐NBD2 interface causing an NBD engagement, which is released upon ATP hydrolysis. In case of ABCE1, this ATP‐dependent tweezer‐like motion of the NBDs transfers mechanical energy to the ribosome and tears the subunits apart. The FeS‐cluster domain may swing out of the NBD cleft into the inter‐subunit space of the ribosome, which drives the subunits apart either directly or via the bound a/eRF1. Hence, the subunits are released and the post‐splitting complex (PSC, 40S/30S∙ABCE1∙ATP) is available for re‐initiation events, presumably occurring via the known interactions of ABCE1with initiation factors.
One of the most crucial aspects of this model is the nucleotide‐dependent conformational switch of ABCE1, which drives ribosomal subunit splitting. However, the conformational states, which ABCE1 undergoes during ribosome recycling, including their mechanistic importance for its diverse functions, remain unknown. Further, the exact role and movement of the essential FeScluster domain during ribosome recycling are not yet understood. Additional, it remains elusive where ABCE1 is bound in the post‐splitting complex and how the splitting mechanism is regulated concerning the asymmetric NBDs and the coupling of nucleotide binding with NBD closing and ATP hydrolysis.
Thus, in order to monitor the conformational dynamics of the ribosome recycling factor ABCE1 two complementing methods in structural biology, namely single‐molecule based Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) and pulsed electron‐electron double resonance (PELDOR) spectroscopy were applied.
Single‐molecule FRET as an integrated biophysical approach based on Förster resonance energy transfer and single‐molecule detection was used to understand the fundamental molecular principles of ABCE1. Contrary to the anticipated two‐state model of ABC proteins, it was shown in this thesis that both nucleotide‐binding sites of ABCE1 are always in a dynamic equilibrium between conformational states with distinct properties: open, intermediate, and closed. The equilibrium in the two nucleotide‐binding sites is distinctly affected when ABCE1 interacts with ribosomal subunits and nucleotides. While ABCE1 can adopt all three conformational states in its free or 30S bound situation, the closed state has the highest affinity for 30S subunit. Further, dissociation of ABCE1 from the small ribosomal subunit, a step that completes the recycling process, is followed by the opening of the NBSs. Hence, the current findings have important implications not only for ribosome recycling but represent a new paradigm for the molecular mechanisms of twin‐ATPases.
The complementing PELDOR measurements provide the advantage of high distance precision and reliability studying macromolecular complexes. Distance distributions of a number of ABCE1 variants even bound to the 1‐MDa post‐splitting complex (30S∙ABCE1∙AMP‐PNP), composed of the 16S rRNA, 28 ribosomal proteins, and ABCE1, was analyzed. Thus, the available crystal structures of ABCE1 in the open state were validated, since all distances of ABCE1 measured in this study perfectly correspond to this crystallized state. Unfortunately, ABCE1 could not be trapped in the closed state under the experimental conditions applied, although plenty different approaches to stabilize this state were performed.
In the second part of this study the architecture yet unknown of the 1‐MDa post splitting complex (40S/30S∙ABCE1∙ATP), concerning especially the ABCE1 binding site and its interactions with translational proteins, was probed by a method, which combines chemical cross linking with mass‐spectrometry (XL‐MS). Following this approach, it was demonstrated that ABCE1 remains bound at the translational GTPase‐binding site after ribosome splitting, contacting the S24e protein of the small subunit. The platform for the intensive contacts to the small ribosomal subunit is thereby provided by the unique helix‐loop‐helix motif of ABCE1. Notably, the FeScluster domain of ABCE1 undergoes a large rotational and translational rearrangement towards the small ribosomal subunit S12 upon nucleotide‐dependent closure of the NBDs. Thus, a key complex in the translational cycle, resembling the link between translation initiation and ribosome recycling processes, was reconstituted and structurally analyzed.
Functional dynamics of ribonucleic acids : development and application of spectroscopic tools
(2016)
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertation wird der Aufbau eines zeitaufgelösten Fluorimeters, die photophysikalische Grundcharakterisierung der drei 2-(Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (PyAs) und das Wechselwirkungsgeflecht des tetracyclinbindenden Aptamers (TC-Aptamer) mit seinem Liganden Tetracycyclin (TC) und Mg2+ dargestellt.
Das zeitaufgelöste Fluorimeter basiert auf der experimentellen Technik des zeitkorrelierten Einzelphotonenzählens. Es verfügt über zwei Anregungsquellen: gepulste UV-LEDs und einen frequenzverdoppelten titandotierten Saphirlaser. Diese Quellen Decken einen Wellenlängenbereich von (310 - 550) nm ab. Das Spektrometer kann unter günstigen Umständen eine Zeitauflösung von 50 ps erreichen bei einer zeitlichen Messungenauigkeit von weniger als 0,02 %.
Die Leistungsfähigkeit des Aufbaus wird anhand einer umfangreichen Studie an den drei PyAs demonstriert.
Die drei PyAs 2-(1-Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (1PyA), 2-(2-Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (2PyA) und 2-(4-Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (4PyA) sind eine Gruppe fluoreszierender RNA-Nukleosidanaloga, welche die Gesamtheit aller möglichen Konfigurations-isomere der Grundverbindung PyA umfassen. Ihre zeitabhängigen Fluoreszenzzerfallseigenschaften werden ergänzt von stationären Absorptions- und Fluoreszenzspektren, ultraschneller transienter Absorptionsspektroskopie und quantenchemischen Rechnungen. Die Fluoreszenz von 1PyA und 4PyA gehorchen der Regel von Kasha, wohingegen 2PyA einen triexponentiellen Zerfall mit ausgeprägter Abhängigkeit von der Anregungswellenlänge zeigt. Die transienten Absorptionsspektren aller drei Isomere weisen im gesamten Spektrum dominante, wenig strukturierte Absorptionsbanden des ersten angeregten Zustands auf, welche im nahen UV in unterschiedlichem Maße vom Grundzustandsbleichen und stimulierter Emission überlagert werden. 2PyA zeigt eine deutlich ausgeprägte Signatur für eine interne Umwandlung hin zum S1, wenn es in höhere angeregte Zustände angeregt wird.
Das Fluoreszenzverhalten von 2PyA wird mithilfe eines lokal angeregten (LE) und zweier intramolekularer Ladungstransferzustände, von denen einer der koplanaren Orientierung von Pyren und Adenin (MICT) und der andere einer um 90 ° verdrehten Orientierung (TICT) entspricht. Der LE-Zustand ist hierbei verknüpft mit dem S2 von 2PyA, welcher einer rein pyrenlokalisierten Anregung entspricht. Dieser Zustand existiert so in 1PyA und 4PyA nicht. Der verdrehte TICT-Zustand ist nur in 2PyA bevölkerbar, weil für 2PyA die Barriere zur Bildung von Rotameren am niedrigsten ist und das Molekül nach Anregung daher in diese Geometrie kommen kann und dann durch die stärkere elektrostatische Anziehung stabilisiert wird. 1PyA und 4PyA emittieren hingegen nur aus dem MICT-Zustand.
Die Komplexbildung des TC-Aptamers mit seinem Liganden TC in Lösung wird empfindlich beeinflusst durch die-Konzentration von Magnesiumkationen. Dies wird untersucht durch Bindungs- und Faltungs- und Denaturierungsstudien mit verschiedenen Mg- und Harnstoffkonzentrationen. Als experimentelle Observable dienen hierbei die konformationsabhängige Nukleobasenabsorption und ihr Zirkulardichroismus im fernen UV, die Fluoreszenz des Liganden TC und die freiwerdende Wärme der exothermen Bindungsreaktion des Aptamers mit Mg in An- und Abwesenheit von TC.
Ohne Mg ist eine Interaktion des TC-Aptamers mit TC nicht nachweisbar. Dies liegt daran, dass Mg die notwendige elektrostatische Abschirmung der negativen elektrischen Ladung am RNA-Rückgrat zur Verfügung stellt. Die Abschirmung erlaubt es dem Aptamer kompakte Strukturen mit tertiären Kontakten auszubilden. Wenn die Mg-Konzentration die Faltung des Aptamers vollständig unterstützt (> 1 mM), so befindet sich das Aptamer weitgehend in einer vorgefalteten Konformation, welche der bindungskompetenten stark ähnelt. In diesem Zustand kann das Aptamer seinen Liganden extrem schnell, nämlich annähernd diffusionslimitiert binden. Unter diesen Bedingungen hat TC kaum Einfluss auf die Konformation seines Aptamers.
Bei physiologischen Mg-Konzentrationen (0,2 - 0,8 mM) kann das Aptamer kompakte Konformationen mit tertiären Strukturen einnehmen. Diejenige Konformation, welche der bindenden sehr stark ähnelt, dominiert das konformationelle Gleichgewicht jedoch noch nicht vollständig, es ist lediglich eine Konformation von vielen möglichen. Daher eröffnen physiologische Mg-Konzentrationen dem TC-Aptamer Teile des Konformationsraumes, welche andernfalls nicht zugänglich wären und TC stabilisiert selektiv die native Konformation. Diese konformationelle Verschiebung liefert kann hierbei zur robusten Signalgebung für die Funktion als Riboschalter dienen.
Abstract
Indoor air pollution with harmful particulate matter (PM) is mainly caused by cigarette smoke. Super-Slim-Size-Cigarettes (SSL) are considered a less harmful alternative to King-Size-Cigarettes (KSC) due to longer filters and relatively low contents. We ask if “Combined Mainstream and Sidestream Smoke” (CMSS)-associated PM levels of SSL are lower than of KSC and thus are potentially less harmful. PM concentrations in CMSS (PM10, PM2.5, and PM1) are measured from four cigarette types of the brand Vogue, using an “automatic-environmental-tobacco-smoke-emitter” (AETSE) and laser aerosol spectrometry: SSL-BLEUE, -MENTHE, -LILAS and KSC-La Cigarette and -3R4F reference. This analysis shows that SSL MENTHE emitted the highest amount of PM, and KSC-La Cigarette the lowest. 3R4F reference emitted PM in the middle range, exceeding SSL BLEUE and falling slightly below SSL LILAS. It emerged that PM1 constituted the biggest proportion of PM emission. The outcome shows significant type-specific differences for emitted PM concentrations. Our results indicate that SSL are potentially more harmful for passive smokers than the respective KSC. However, this study cannot give precise statements about the general influence of the size of a cigarette on PM. Alarming is that PM1 is responsible for the biggest proportion of PM pollution, since smaller particles cause more harmful effects.
Development and implementation of novel optogenetic tools in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans
(2016)
Optogenetics, though still only a decade old field, has revolutionized research in neurobiology. It comprises of methods that allow control of neural activity by light in a minimally-invasive, spatio-temporally precise and genetically targeted manner. The optogenetic actuators or the genetically encoded light sensitive elements mediate light driven manipulation of membrane potential, intracellular signalling, neuronal network activity and behaviour (Fenno et al. 2011; Dugué et al. 2012). These techniques have been particularly useful for dissecting neural circuits and behaviour in the transparent and genetically amenable nematode model system Caenorhabditis elegans (Husson et al. 2013; Fang-yen et al. 2015).
In fact, C. elegans was the first living organism in which microbial rhodopsin based optogenetic tools (Channelrhodopsin-2 or ChR2, and Halorhodopsin or NpHR) were successfully implemented and bimodal 'remote' control of behaviour was achieved (Nagel et al. 2005; Zhang et al. 2007). Since then it has been a prominent model for the development and application of novel optogenetic tools and techniques, especially in the nervous system which comprises of 302 neurons and is organised in a hierarchical organization. The environmental stimuli are sensed by the sensory neurons, leading to the processing of information by the downstream interneurons, that relay to motor neurons which in-turn synapse onto muscles that drive the movement-based responses.
The microbial rhodopsins like ChR2 and NpHR mediate light driven depolarization and hyperpolarization, respectively and thereby activate or inhibit neural activity. However, they do not allow local control of membrane potential as they are expressed all over the plasma membrane of the cell rather than being restricted to specific domains, for example synaptic sites. Moreover, they completely over-ride the intrinsic activity of the cell, completely bypassing the signal transduction processes inside the cell. Thus, in order to study intracellular signalling and to answer questions pertaining to the endogenous role of receptors and channels in an in-vivo context, the optogenetic tool-kit needs to be expanded.
This thesis aimed at developing and implementing novel optogenetic tools in C. elegans that allow for sub-cellular signalling control as well as endogenous receptor control. These are: two light activated guanylyl cyclases (bPGC and BeCyclOp) to modify cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) mediated signalling in the sensory neurons, as well as attempts towards rendering endogenous C. elegans receptors - glutamate receptor (GLR-3/-6), acetylcholine receptor (ACR-16), glutamate gated chloride channel (GLC-1) light switchable and to understand their biological function in-vivo.
Organisms respond to sensory cues by activation of a primary receptor followed by relay of information downstream to effector targets by secondary signalling molecules. cGMP is a widely used 2nd messenger in cellular signaling, acting via protein kinase G or cyclic nucleotide gated (CNG) channels. In sensory neurons, cGMP allows for signal modulation and amplification, before depolarization. Chemo-, thermo-, and oxygen-sensation in C. elegans involve sensory neurons that use cGMP as the main 2nd messenger. For example, ASJ is the pheromone sensing neuron regulating larval development, AWC is the chemosensory neuron responding to volatile odours and BAG senses oxygen and carbon dioxide in the environment. In these neurons, cGMP acts downstream of the GPCRs and functions by activating cationic TAX-2/-4 CNG channels, thereby depolarising the sensory neuron. Manipulating cGMP levels is required to access signalling between sensation and sensory neuron depolarization, thereby provide insights into signal encoding. We achieve this by implementing two photo-activatable guanylyl cyclases - 1) a mutated version of Beggiatoa sp. bacterial light-activated adenylyl cyclase, with specificity for GTP (Ryu et al. 2010), termed BlgC or bPGC (Beggiatoa photoactivated guanylyl cyclase) and 2) guanylyl cyclase rhodopsin (Avelar et al. 2014) from Blastocladiella emersonii (BeCyclOp).
bPGC is a BLUF (blue light sensing using flavin) domain containing cyclase which uses FAD as the co-factor and catalyses the synthesis of cGMP from GTP upon activation by blue light. Prior to implementation in sensory neurons, a simpler heterologous system with co-expression of the TAX-2/-4 CNG channel in C. elegans body wall muscle (BWM) was used. The cGMP generated by the light activated cyclases activates the CNG channel leading to the muscle depolarization, thereby causing changes in body length which can be easily scored.
Fettsäuresynthasen vom Typ I (FAS I), hier bezeichnet als Fettsäuremegasynthasen,sind Multienzymkomplexe, in denen sämtliche funktionellen Domänen für die de-novo-Synthese von Fettsäuren einen strukturellen Verbund eingehen. Auch das für den Transport von Edukten und Intermediaten nötige Acyl Carrier Protein (ACP) ist kovalent gebundener Teil dieses Komplexes, der so zu einer hocheffizienten molekularen Maschine zur Massenproduktion dieser grundlegend essentiellen Zellbausteine wird. Die FAS I aus Pilzen (fFAS), als Gegenstand dieser Arbeit, mit einer Masse von bis zu 2,7 MDa ist heute in ihrer Struktur durch Röntgenkristallographische sowie elektronenmikroskopische Methoden gut charakterisiert. 48 funktionelle Domänen sind zu einem geschlossenen Reaktionskörper angeordnet, indem sie in einer strukturgebenden Matrix aus Expansionen und Insertionen bzgl. der enzymatischen Kerndomänen eingebettet sind, die 50% des gesamten Proteins ausmacht. Neben den zahlreichen strukturellen Informationen über fFAS ist jedoch noch wenig über ihre Assemblierung verstanden. Dabei ist sie nicht nur als ein Beispiel für das generelle Verständnis von Assemblierungsmechanismen von Multienzymkomplexen interessant, sondern wird hier auch als Ziel eines inhibitorischen Eingriffs betrachtet, um eine neue antimykotische Wirkstrategie abseits des Ausschaltens aktiver Zentren zu evaluieren. Nur wenn die Mechanismen und Wechselwirkungen im Assemblierungsprozess offen gelegt sind, lassen sie sich später gezielt attackieren. Essentielle Sekundärstrukturmotive müssen identifiziert und bewertet werden, um sie einer weiteren Evaluation als Drug-Target-Kandidaten zugänglich zu machen. In dieser Arbeit werden Resultate aus in-vivo-Experimenten an rational mutierten fFAS-Konstrukten unter Zuhilfenahme einer evolutionären Betrachtung der fFAS gemeinsam mit Erkenntnissen aus andernorts geleisteten in-vitro-Experimenten an fFAS-Fragmenten zu einem geordneten Assemblierungsweg der fFAS zusammengeführt. Dabei werden Evidenzen aus den Kausaltäten zentraler Anforderungen an einen Assemblierungsmechanismus der fFAS zu drei konsequenten Schlüsselschritten verdichtet, die (i) eine frühe Interaktion zweier komplementärer Polypeptidketten zu einer Pseudo-Einzelkette, (ii) eine posttranslationale Modifikation von ACP und (iii) die geordnete Reifung zum fertigen Komplex durch Selbstassemblierung der beteiligten Domänen umfassen. Durch rationale Mutationen an den Schnittstellenmotiven für die Pseudo-Einzelkettenbildung, werden diese als Schwachstelle der Assemblierung unterschiedlicher fFAS-Typen charakterisiert, wobei für S. cerevisiae nicht weniger als zwei gezielte Punktmutationen ausreichen, um die Assemblierung des gesamten Komplexes zu verhindern. Darüber hinaus zeigen Experimente mit fFAS-Konstrukten, deren Schnittstellenmotive einer intramolekular kompetitiven Wechselwirkung ausgesetzt sind, prinzipiell die Möglichkeit zur Inhibierung der fFAS-Assemblierung durch Störung der Pseudo-Einzelkettenbildung.
The ability of endothelial cells to properly adapt to changes in a dynamic blood perfused environment is essential to maintain the physiological function of the vascular system and of the organs. Epigenetic control of gene expression is believed to be the mechanism controlling cell-fate determination and cell-phenotype maintenance. In the thesis, two JmjC demethylases were screened for their function in endothelial biology. Both of them were proved to play a central role in angiogenesis.
The histone 3 lysine 4 demethylase JARID1B was identified as the most highly expressed demethylase in endothelial cell. Knockdown of JARID1B in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) attenuated cell migration, angiogenic sprouting and tube formation. Jarid1b null mice exhibited attenuated retinal angiogenesis and reduced endothelial sprout outgrowth from aortic segments. Microarray data identified that the antiangiogenic transcription factor HOXA5 was suppressed by JARID1B. Consistently, chromatin immunoprecipitation experiment revealed that JARID1B occupies and reduces the histone 3 lysine 4 methylation levels at the HOXA5 promoter, demonstrating a direct function of JARID1B in endothelial HOXA5 gene regulation. Hence, as a highly expressed JmjC protein in endothelial cells, JARID1B fundamentally maintains endothelial angiogenic phenotypes perhaps through suppression of HOXA5.
As second enzyme it was identified that the histone plant homeodomain finger protein 8 (PHF8) plays a role in endothelial angiogenic sprouting as well as tube formation and cell migration. Overexpression of PHF8 catalyzed the removal of methyl-groups from histone 3 lysine 9 (H3K9) and H4K20, whereas knockdown of the enzyme increased H3K9 methylation. Knockdown of PHF8 by RNAi also attenuated endothelial proliferation and survival. To characterize the underlying mechanism, E2F transcription factors were screened, which led to the identification of the gene repressor E2F4 to be controlled by PHF8. Importantly, PHF8 maintains E2F4, but not E2F1, expression in endothelial cells. Likewise, chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed that PHF8 reduces the H3K9me2 level at the E2F4 transcriptional start site, demonstrating a direct function of PHF8 in endothelial E2F4 gene regulation. Thus, it is proposed that PHF8 maintains endothelial function by controlling E2F4 expression. On the other hand, microarray and subsequent qPCR validation revealed that the expressions of small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs) were regulated by PHF8. Co-immunoprecipitation experiment demonstrated that PHF8 interacts with spliceosome related proteins SNRP70 and SRPK1 as well as snRNA. Indeed, PHF8 contributed to splicing: GLS and VEGF-A displayed alternative splicing in PHF8 depleted cells. In addition, c-FOS introns were showed to be retained after knockdown of PHF8 in endothelial cells. These results demonstrated that, by controlling angiogenic mRNA splicing, PHF8 could affect endothelial properties.
Collectively, the results uncover the important roles of JARID1B and PHF8 in endothelial cells in the control of angiogenesis. Changing histone modifiers appears as an attractive concept for pro- and antiangiogenic therapy. The present work adds JARID1B and PHF8 as novel potential targets to this emerging field.
Phenytoin (PHT), valproic acid, and modern antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), eg, remacemide, loreclezole, and safinamide, are only effective within a maximum of 70%-80% of epileptic patients, and in many cases the clinical use of AEDs is restricted by their side effects. Therefore, a continuous need remains to discover innovative chemical entities for the development of active and safer AEDs. Ligands targeting central histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) for epilepsy might be a promising therapeutic approach. To determine the potential of H3Rs ligands as new AEDs, we recently reported that no anticonvulsant effects were observed for the (S)-2-(4-(3-(piperidin-1-yl)propoxy)benzylamino)propanamide (1). In continuation of our research, we asked whether anticonvulsant differences in activities will be observed for its R-enantiomer, namely, (R)-2-(4-(3-(piperidin-1-yl)propoxy)benzylamino)propaneamide (2) and analogs thereof, in maximum electroshock (MES)-, pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-, and strychnine (STR)-induced convulsion models in rats having PHT and valproic acid (VPA) as reference AEDs. Unlike the S-enantiomer (1), the results show that animals pretreated intraperitoneally (ip) with the R-enantiomer 2 (10 mg/kg) were moderately protected in MES and STR induced models, whereas proconvulsant effect was observed for the same ligand in PTZ-induced convulsion models. However, animals pretreated with intraperitoneal doses of 5, 10, or 15 mg/kg of structurally bulkier (R)-enantiomer (3), in which 3-piperidinopropan-1-ol in ligand 2 was replaced by (4-(3-(piperidin-1-yl)propoxy)phenyl)methanol, and its (S)-enantiomer (4) significantly and in a dose-dependent manner reduced convulsions or exhibited full protection in MES and PTZ convulsions model, respectively. Interestingly, the protective effects observed for the (R)-enantiomer (3) in MES model were significantly greater than those of the standard H3R inverse agonist/antagonist pitolisant, comparable with those observed for PHT, and reversed when rats were pretreated with the selective H3R agonist R-(α)-methyl-histamine. Comparisons of the observed antagonistic in vitro affinities among the ligands 1-6 revealed profound stereoselectivity at human H3Rs with varying preferences for this receptor subtype. Moreover, the in vivo anticonvulsant effects observed in this study for ligands 1-6 showed stereoselectivity in different convulsion models in male adult rats.
A chiral analog of the bicyclic guanidine TBD : synthesis, structure and Brønsted base catalysis
(2016)
Starting from (S)-β-phenylalanine, easily accessible by lipase-catalyzed kinetic resolution, a chiral triamine was assembled by a reductive amination and finally cyclized to form the title compound 10. In the crystals of the guanidinium benzoate salt the six membered rings of 10 adopt conformations close to an envelope with the phenyl substituents in pseudo-axial positions. The unprotonated guanidine 10 catalyzes Diels–Alder reactions of anthrones and maleimides (25–30% ee). It also promotes as a strong Brønsted base the retro-aldol reaction of some cycloadducts with kinetic resolution of the enantiomers. In three cases, the retro-aldol products (48–83% ee) could be recrystallized to high enantiopurity (≥95% ee). The absolute configuration of several compounds is supported by anomalous X-ray diffraction and by chemical correlation.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden zum Vergleich die Strukturen der ATP-Synthasen von Arabidopsis thaliana, Asparagus officinalis, Allium cepa, Helianthus annus, Solanum tuberosum, Bos taurus und Saccharomyces cerevisiae gelöst. Die ATP-Synthase von S. cerevisiae konnte mit einer Auflösung von 19 Å gelöst werden. Der Winkel zwischen den zwei ATP-Synthase-Monomeren in dem ATP-Synthase-Dimer hatte für jede Spezies einen bestimmten Wert. Dieser Winkel änderte sich innerhalb einer Spezies nur wenig im Gegensatz zu Untersuchungen mit Einzelpartikelanalyse.
Die ATP-Synthase-Dimere aus den untersuchten Spezies besitzen unterschiedliche Winkel zwischen 78˚ und 122˚. Der Winkel des ATP-Synthase-Dimers aus S. tuberosum (122˚) viel größer als der in anderen Pflanzen (~98˚), B. taurus (105˚) und S. cerevisiae (78˚). Die Proben von S. tuberosum und B. taurus waren jedoch dünner, was den Winkel eventuell beeinflussen könnte. Um dies auszuschließen müssen in Zukunft weitere Untersuchungen durchgeführt werden.
Des Weiteren wurde im peripheren Stiel der ATP-Synthasen von allen Pflanzenspezies eine Dichte entdeckt, die in B. taurus und S. cerevisiae nicht vorhanden ist. Die Dichte könnte durch eine zusätzliche Untereinheit oder veränderte Untereinheit im Vergleich zu B. taurus und S. cerevisiae kommen.
Weiterhin wurde die Bildung von Reihen aus ATP-Synthase-Dimeren untersucht. Es wurden ATP-Synthase-Dimere von Polytomella sp. gereinigt und in Lipid rekonstituiert. Es wurde das ATP-Synthase-Dimer von Polytomella sp. verwendet, da dieses besonders stabil ist und während der Reinigung nicht zum ATP-Synthase-Monomer zerfällt. Zur Rekonstitution wurde die milde GRecon-Methode verwendet. Hierbei werden Membranproteine in einem Zuckergradienten gleichzeitig in Lipid rekonstituiert und nach ihrer Dichte getrennt. Abhängig von der Dichte der Proteoliposomen ist die Konzentration an Membranproteinen unterschiedlich. In Proteoliposomen mit einer hohen Konzentration bilden sich dünne Schichten in denen die ATP-Synthase-Dimeren Zickzack-Muster formen. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass das ATP-Synthase-Dimer die Membran verformt. In Proteoliposomen mit einer niedrigeren Konzentration an ATP-Synthase-Dimeren wurden runde Vesikel detektiert, in denen die ATP-Synthase-Dimere lange Reihen bilden und die Membran innerhalb jedes ATP-Synthase-Dimer ebenfalls verformt ist. Molekulare Simulationen bestätigen dieses Ergebnis.
Zudem wurde das ATP-Synthase-Dimer in zwei verschiedene Lipide ohne Cardiolipin rekonstituiert, da Cardiolipin ein Lipid ist welches in der bakteriellen und mitochondrialen Membran gefunden wurde und in hohen Konzentrationen in Membrankrümmungen lokalisiert ist (Huang et al., 2006), wie auch die ATP-Synthase-Dimere. Ohne Cardiolipin ist die Rekonstitution nicht geglückt beziehungsweise sind die ATP-Synthase-Dimere weniger gut zueinander angeordnet. Das deutet auf die Wichtigkeit von Cardiolipin in der Stabilisierung der Reihen von ATP-Synthase-Dimeren hin. Weitere Experimente mit verschiedenen ATP-Synthase-Dimeren in verschiedenen Lipiden sind nötig um dies zu untermauern.
Ein weiteres Ziel dieser Arbeit war es ein klonierbares Label zu etablieren, um ein bestimmtes Protein in Kryo-Elektronentomogramme zu identifizieren. Das Label sollte klein sein, um das zu identifizierbare Protein nicht zu beeinflussen und groß genug um in Kryo-Elektronentomogramme identifizierbar zu sein. In Einzelbildern wurde das 6 kDa große Metallothionein gebunden mit Gold identifiziert, wenn zwei Metallothioneine an dem gewünschten Protein kloniert wurden. Metallothionein besteht zu 33 % aus Cysteinen, welche Schwermetalle binden.
In meinen Studien habe ich bewiesen, dass drei Metallothioneine, gebunden mit Gold, in Kryo-Elektronentomogramme detektiert werden können. Jedoch tritt bei der Verwendung von Metallothionein durch die hohe Anzahl an Cysteinen vermehrt Aggregation auf. Bei meinen Untersuchungen fand ich heraus, dass auch das Maltose-Binde-Protein (MBP) ein Signal gleicher Intensität erzeugt. Durch Verwendung von MBP tritt aber keine Aggregation auf und man kann MBP auch zum Reinigen des Proteins verwenden.
Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy revolutionizes cell biology research and provides novel insights on how proteins are organized at the nanoscale and in the cellular context. In order to extract a maximum of information, specialized tools for image analysis are necessary. Here, we introduce the LocAlization Microscopy Analyzer (LAMA), a comprehensive software tool that extracts quantitative information from single-molecule super-resolution imaging data. LAMA allows characterizing cellular structures by their size, shape, intensity, distribution, as well as the degree of colocalization with other structures. LAMA is freely available, platform-independent and designed to provide direct access to individual analysis of super-resolution data.
Das Hauptziel dieser Dissertation lag in der Verbesserung einzelner Schritte im Prozess der automatischen Proteinstrukturbestimmung mittels Kernmagnetischer Resonanz (NMR). Dieser Prozess besteht aus einer Reihe von sequenziellen Schritten, welche zum Teil bereits erfolgreich automatisiert wurden. CYANA ist ein Programmpaket, welches routinemäßig zur automatischen Zuordnung der chemischen Verschiebungen, der Nuclear Overhauser Enhancement (NOE) Signalen und der Strukturrechnung von Proteinen verwendet wird. Einer der Schritte, der noch nicht erfolgreich automatisiert wurde, stellt die Signalidentifizierung von NMR Spektren dar. Dieser Schritt ist besonders wichtig, da Listen von NMR-Signalen Grundlage aller Folgeschritte sind. Fehler in den Signallisten pflanzen sich in allen Folgeschritten der Datenauswertung fort und können am Ende in falschen Strukturen resultieren. Daher war ein Ziel dieser Arbeit, einen robusten und verlässlichen Algorithmus zur Signalidentifizierung von NMR Spektren in CYANA zu implementieren. Dieser Algorithmus sollte mit dem in FLYA implementierten Ansatz zur automatischen Resonanzzuordnung, der automatischen NOE-Zuordnung und der Strukturrechnung mit CYANA kombiniert werden. Der in CYANA implementierte CYPICK Algorithmus ahmt den von Hand durchgeführten Ansatz nach. Bei der manuellen Methode schaut sich der Wissenschaftler zweidimensionale Konturliniendarstellungen der NMR Spektren an und entscheidet anhand verschiedener Geomtrie- und Ähnlichkeitskriterien, ob es sich um ein Signal des Proteins oder um einen Artefakt handelt. Proteinsignale sind ähnlich zu konzentrischen Ellipsen und erfüllen bestimmte geometrische Kriterien, wie zum Beispiel ungefähr kreisförmiges Aussehen nach entsprechender Skalierung der spektralen Achsen und gänzlich konvexe Formen, die Artefakte nicht aufzeigen. CYPICK bewertet die Konturlinien lokaler Extrema nach diesen Bedingungen und entscheidet anhand dieser, ob es sich um ein echtes Signal handelt oder nicht. Das zweite Ziel dieser Arbeit war es ein Maß zur Quantifizierung der Information von strukturellen NMR Distanzeinschränkungen zu entwickeln. Der sogenannte Informationsgehalt (I) ist vergleichbar mit der Auflösung in der Röntgenkristallographie. Ein weiteres Projekt dieser Dissertation beschäftigte sich mit der strukturbasierten Medikamentenentwicklung (SBDD). SBDD wird meist von der Röntgenkristallographie durchgeführt. NMR hat jedoch einige Vorteile gegenüber der Röntgenkristallographie, welche interessant für SBDD sind. Daher wurden Strategien entwickelt, die NMR für SBDD zugänglicher machen sollen.
The spliceosomal protein SF3b49, a component of the splicing factor 3b (SF3b) protein complex in the U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein, contains two RNA recognition motif (RRM) domains. In yeast, the first RRM domain (RRM1) of Hsh49 protein (yeast orthologue of human SF3b49) reportedly interacts with another component, Cus1 protein (orthologue of human SF3b145). Here, we solved the solution structure of the RRM1 of human SF3b49 and examined its mode of interaction with a fragment of human SF3b145 using NMR methods. Chemical shift mapping showed that the SF3b145 fragment spanning residues 598-631 interacts with SF3b49 RRM1, which adopts a canonical RRM fold with a topology of β1-α1-β2-β3-α2-β4. Furthermore, a docking model based on NOESY measurements suggests that residues 607-616 of the SF3b145 fragment adopt a helical structure that binds to RRM1 predominantly via α1, consequently exhibiting a helix-helix interaction in almost antiparallel. This mode of interaction was confirmed by a mutational analysis using GST pull-down assays. Comparison with structures of all RRM domains when complexed with a peptide found that this helix-helix interaction is unique to SF3b49 RRM1. Additionally, all amino acid residues involved in the interaction are well conserved among eukaryotes, suggesting evolutionary conservation of this interaction mode between SF3b49 RRM1 and SF3b145.
Entwicklung neuer Multikomponentenreaktionen zur Synthese von Amin- und α-Aminosäurederivaten
(2016)
Die Entwicklung neuer Synthesemethoden ist von enormer Bedeutung hinsichtlich der Darstellung von neuen Verbindungen mit speziellen, anwendungsorientierten Eigenschaften und in Bezug auf die Suche nach ökologisch verträglicheren und effizienteren Herstellungsmethoden. Multikomponentenreaktionen (MCRs) bieten hierbei eine gute Ansatzmöglichkeit. Gegenüber den klassischen, linear verlaufenden 2-Stufen-Reaktionen weisen MCRs eine hohe Atom-Ökonomie und effiziente Bindungsbildung auf, können zur Minimierung von Zeit-, Energie-, Material- und Kostenaufwand sowie zur geringeren Generierung von Abfallmengen beitragen und ermöglichen einen schnellen Aufbau diverser Molekülstrukturen. Vor diesem Hintergrund gelang im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit die Entwicklung mehrerer 3-Komponentenreaktionen basierend auf der nukleophilen Addition von Arylboronsäuren an in situ gebildete N-Acyl- bzw. N-Sulfonylimine, womit die Synthese von diversen alpha-substituierten Amiden, chiralen, alpha-substituierten Sulfonamiden, chiralen alpha-Arylglycinen sowie von Arylmethylsulfonamiden erfolgte. Der Schlüssel zu einer erfolgreichen Umsetzung hinsichtlich der Methode mit Amiden war die Verwendung eines dualen Katalysatorsystems aus Lewis-Säure und Pd(II) sowie die Anwesenheit von Wasser. Die enantioselektiven Varianten konnten mittels Sulfonamide anstelle der Amide sowie unter Einsatz von Pd(II) und einem chiralen Oxazolin-Liganden erreicht werden. Die neuen Methoden sind einfach in der Durchführung, weisen einen breiten Substrat-bereich auf und im Falle der asymmetrischen Varianten hohe Enantioselektivitäten.
Allerdings besitzt die Reaktionsführung über Organoboronsäuren zwei entscheidende Nachteile: Zum einen bedarf es der Verwendung vorfunktionalisierter Boronsäuren und zum anderen werden stöchiometrische Mengen borhaltiger Abfälle erzeugt. Daher wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit auch Prozesse untersucht, bei denen hinsichtlich der Atom-Ökonomie keine unnötig vorfunktionalisierten Startmaterialien eingesetzt werden und bei denen keine oder nur ökologisch vollkommen unbedenkliche Nebenprodukte entstehen. Ein erster Ansatz in diese Richtung gelang dabei mit der Entwicklung einer neuen 3-Komponentenreaktion basierend auf einer Brønsted-Säurekatalysierten, benzylischen C–H-Bindungsfunktionalisierung von 2-Alkylazaarenen.
This thesis is concerned with protein structures determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and the text focuses on their analysis in terms of accuracy, gauged by the correspondence between the structural model and the experimental data it was calculated from, and in terms of precision, i.e. the degree of uncertainty of the atomic positions. Additionally, two protein structure calculation projects are described...
Investigating three-dimensional (3D) structures of proteins in living cells by in-cell nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy opens an avenue towards understanding the structural basis of their functions and physical properties under physiological conditions inside cells. In-cell NMR provides data at atomic resolution non-invasively, and has been used to detect protein-protein interactions, thermodynamics of protein stability, the behavior of intrinsically disordered proteins, etc. in cells. However, so far only a single de novo 3D protein structure could be determined based on data derived only from in-cell NMR. Here we introduce methods that enable in-cell NMR protein structure determination for a larger number of proteins at concentrations that approach physiological ones. The new methods comprise (1) advances in the processing of non-uniformly sampled NMR data, which reduces the measurement time for the intrinsically short-lived in-cell NMR samples, (2) automatic chemical shift assignment for obtaining an optimal resonance assignment, and (3) structure refinement with Bayesian inference, which makes it possible to calculate accurate 3D protein structures from sparse data sets of conformational restraints. As an example application we determined the structure of the B1 domain of protein G at about 250 μM concentration in living E. coli cells.
Retrograde transport of NF-κB from the synapse to the nucleus in neurons is mediated by the dynein/dynactin motor complex and can be triggered by synaptic activation. The caliber of axons is highly variable ranging down to 100 nm, aggravating the investigation of transport processes in neurites of living neurons using conventional light microscopy. We quantified for the first time the transport of the NF-κB subunit p65 using high-density single-particle tracking in combination with photoactivatable fluorescent proteins in living mouse hippocampal neurons. We detected an increase of the mean diffusion coefficient (Dmean) in neurites from 0.12±0.05 to 0.61±0.03 μm2/s after stimulation with glutamate. We further observed that the relative amount of retrogradely transported p65 molecules is increased after stimulation. Glutamate treatment resulted in an increase of the mean retrograde velocity from 10.9±1.9 to 15±4.9 μm/s, whereas a velocity increase from 9±1.3 to 14±3 μm/s was observed for anterogradely transported p65. This study demonstrates for the first time that glutamate stimulation leads to an increased mobility of single NF-κB p65 molecules in neurites of living hippocampal neurons.
Bacterial sugar symporters in the Major Facilitator Superfamily (MFS) use the H+ (and in a few cases Na+) electrochemical gradients to achieve active transport of sugar into the cell. Because a number of structures of MFS sugar symporters have been solved recently, molecular insight into the transport mechanism is possible from detailed functional analysis. We present here a comparative electrophysiological study of the lactose permease (LacY), the fucose permease (FucP) and the xylose permease (XylE), which reveals common mechanistic principles and differences. In all three symporters energetically downhill electrogenic sugar/H+ symport is observed. Comparison of the pH dependence of symport at symmetrical pH exhibits broad bell-shaped pH profiles extending over 3 to 6 pH units and a decrease at extremely alkaline pH ≥ 9.4 and at acidic to neutral pH = 4.6–7.5. The pH dependence can be described by an acidic to neutral apparent pK (pKapp) and an alkaline pKapp. Experimental evidence suggests that the alkaline pKapp is due to H+ depletion at the protonation site, while the acidic pKapp is due to inhibition of deprotonation. Since previous studies suggest that a single carboxyl group in LacY (Glu325) may be the only side chain directly involved in H+ translocation and a carboxyl side chain with similar properties has been identified in FucP (Asp46) and XylE (Asp27), the present results imply that the pK of this residue is switched during H+/sugar symport in all three symporters.
In the title compound, C7H14N4·2C6H5ClO, which crystallized with two crystallographically independent 4-chlorophenol molecules and one 1,3,6,8-tetraazatricyclo[4.3.1.13,8]undecane (TATU) molecule in the asymmetric unit, the independent components are linked by two O-H...N hydrogen bonds. The hydrogen-bond acceptor sites are two non-equivalent N atoms from the aminal cage structure, and the tricyclic system distorts by changing the C-N bond lengths. In the crystal, these hydrogen-bonded aggregates are linked into chains along the c axis by C-H...N hydrogen bonds. The crystal structure also features C-H...[pi] contacts.
The excellent results of dispersion‐corrected density functional theory (DFT‐D) calculations for static systems have been well established over the past decade. The introduction of dynamics into DFT‐D calculations is a target, especially for the field of molecular NMR crystallography. Four 13C ss‐NMR calibration compounds are investigated by single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction, molecular dynamics and DFT‐D calculations. The crystal structure of 3‐methylglutaric acid is reported. The rotator phases of adamantane and hexamethylbenzene at room temperature are successfully reproduced in the molecular dynamics simulations. The calculated 13C chemical shifts of these compounds are in excellent agreement with experiment, with a root‐mean‐square deviation of 2.0 ppm. It is confirmed that a combination of classical molecular dynamics and DFT‐D chemical shift calculation improves the accuracy of calculated chemical shifts.
Crystal structure of 1,3-bis(3-tert-butyl-2-hydroxy-5-methylbenzyl)-1,3-diazinan-5-ol monohydrate
(2016)
In the title hydrate, C28H42N2O3·H2O, the central 1,3-diazinan-5-ol ring adopts a chair conformation with the two benzyl substituents equatorial and the lone pairs of the N atoms axial. The dihedral angle between the aromatic rings is 19.68 (38)°. There are two intramolecular O-H...N hydrogen bonds, each generating an S(6) ring motif. In the crystal, classical O-H...O hydrogen bonds connect the 1,3-diazinane and water molecules into columns extending along the b axis. The crystal structure was refined as a two-component twin with a fractional contribution to the minor domain of 0.0922 (18).
The title Schiff base, C19H22N2O3, was synthesized via the condensation reaction of 1,3-diaminopropan-2-ol with 4-methoxybenzaldehyde using water as solvent. The molecule exists in an E,E conformation with respect to the C=N imine bonds and the dihedral angle between the aromatic rings is 37.25 (15)°. In the crystal, O-H...N hydrogen bonds link the molecules into infinite C(5) chains propagating along the a-axis direction. The packing of these chains is consolidated by C-H...O interactions and C-H...[pi] short contacts, forming a three-dimensional network.
The title benzoxazine molecule, C18H18Br2N2O2, was prepared by a Mannich-type reaction of 4-bromophenol with ethane-1,2-diamine and formaldehyde. The title compound crystallizes in the monoclinic space group C2/c with a centre of inversion located at the mid-point of the C-C bond of the central CH2CH2 spacer. The oxazinic ring adopts a half-chair conformation. The structure is compared to those of other functionalized benzoxazines synthesized in our laboratory. In the crystal, weak C-H...Br and C-H...O hydrogen bonds stack the molecules along the b-axis direction.
The title fluorinated bisbenzoxazine, C18H18F2N2O2, crystallizes with one half-molecule in the asymmetric unit, which is completed by inversion symmetry. The fused oxazine ring adopts an approximately half-chair conformation. The two benzoxazine rings are oriented anti to one another around the central C-C bond. The dominant intermolecular interaction in the crystal structure is a C-H...F hydrogen bond between the F atoms and the axial H atoms of the OCH2N methylene group in the oxazine rings of neighbouring molecules. C-H...[pi] contacts further stabilize the crystal packing.
Solvent-free treatment of 1,3,6,8-tetraazatricyclo[4.3.1.13,8]undecano (TATU) with 4-chloro-3,5-dimethylphenol led to the formation of the title co-crystal, C7H14N4·2C8H9ClO. The asymmetric unit contains one aminal cage molecule and two phenol molecules linked via two O-H...N hydrogen bonds. In the aminal cage, the N-CH2-CH2-N unit is slightly distorted from a syn periplanar geometry. Aromatic [pi]-[pi] stacking between the benzene rings from two different neighbouring phenol molecules [centroid-centroid distance = 4.0570 (11) Å] consolidates the crystal packing.
In dieser Arbeit wurden die Strukturen von drei Membranproteinen mittels Einzelpartikel-Kryo‑Elektronenmikroskopie (Kryo‑EM) gelöst. Bei den Membranproteinen handelt es sich um den humanen TRP-Kanal Polycystin‑2, den sekundär-aktiven Transporter BetP aus Corynebacterium glutamicum und den Rotor-Ring der N‑Typ ATPase aus Burkholderia pseudomallei.
Kanäle sind Membranproteine, die Ionen durch eine Pore über die Membran diffundieren lassen. Durch einen präzisen, kanalabhängigen Regulationsmechanismus wird die Pore nur bei Bedarf geöffnet. TRP (transient receptor potential) Kanäle sind anhand von DNA-Sequenzvergleichen identifiziert worden und kommen ausschließlich in Eukaryonten vor. In dieser Arbeit lag der Fokus auf der Strukturbestimmung des humanen TRP Kanals Polycystin‑2 (PC‑2). PC‑2 wurde in einer Studie entdeckt, in der Patienten mit der autosomal dominanten Erbkrankheit „polyzystische Nierenerkrankung“ untersucht wurden. Patienten mit dieser Krankheit tragen eine Mutation in einem der beiden Gene PKD1 oder PKD2, welche für die Proteine Polycystin‑1 und ‑2 kodieren. In dieser Arbeit wurden verschiedene Deletionsmutanten von PC‑2 hergestellt und in das Genom menschlicher HEK293 GnTI‑ Zellen inseriert. Die Zellen, die PC‑2 bzw. die Deletionskonstrukte am stärksten synthetisierten, wurden isoliert und für die rekombinante Proteinherstellung verwendet. Die Expression von PC‑2 führte zu der Entstehung von kristalloidem endoplasmatischem Retikulum. Mutationsstudien in dieser Arbeit zeigen, dass diese morphologische Veränderung durch die Akkumulation von Membranproteinen, die mit sich selbst interagieren, begünstigt wird. Weiter ist es in dieser Arbeit gelungen, PC‑2 zu reinigen und die Struktur des Proteins mit Hilfe von Einzelpartikel Kryo-EM mit einer Auflösung von 4.6 Å zu bestimmen. Die Membrandomäne von PC‑2 ist sehr ähnlich zu den bekannten TRP Kanal Strukturen. Ein Vergleich der PC‑2 Struktur mit dem offenen und geschlossenen TRPV1 Kanal legt nahe, dass PC‑2 in seiner offenen Konformation gelöst wurde.
Der sekundär aktive Transporter BetP von C. glutamicum gehört zu der Familie der BCC- (betaine-carnitine-choline) Transporter und wird durch osmotischen Schock aktiviert. Nach seiner Aktivierung importiert BetP zwei Natriumionen und ein Glycinbetain Molekül. Durch die Akkumulierung von Glycinbetain in der Zelle steigt das osmotische Potential des Zytoplasmas, was den Wasserausstrom aus der Zelle stoppt. Viele Strukturen, die BetP in unterschiedlichen Stadien des Transportprozesses zeigen, konnten bereits mittels Röntgenkristallographie gelöst werden. Allerdings ist die N‑terminale Domäne für die Kristallisation entfernt worden und die C‑terminale Domäne, die komplett aufgelöst ist, ist an einem wichtigen Kristallkontakt beteiligt. Um strukturelle Informationen über die N‑ und C‑terminale Domäne ohne Kristallisationsartefakte zu erhalten, wurde in dieser Arbeit die Struktur von BetP mittels Einzelpartikel Kryo‑EM bestimmt. Die Struktur mit einer Auflösung von 6.8 Å zeigt BetP in einem zum Zytoplasma geöffneten Zustand. Der größte Unterschied zu allen Kristallstrukturen ist die Position der C‑terminalen α‑Helix, die um ~30° rotiert ist und dadurch deutlich enger am Protein zu liegen kommt. Da BetP in Abwesenheit von aktivierenden Stoffen analysiert wurde, wird vermutet, dass es sich bei der gelösten Struktur um den inaktiven Zustand von BetP handelt.
Rotierende ATPasen sind membrangebunden Enzymkomplexe, die bei der zellulären Energieumwandlung eine entscheidende Rolle einnehmen. Sie bestehen aus einem löslichen und einem membrangebundenen Teil. Während in dem löslichen Teil der zelluläre Energieträger Adenosintriphosphat (ATP) entweder synthetisiert oder hydrolysiert wird, baut der membrangebundene Teil entweder einen Ionengradienten auf oder nutzt die Energie eines existierenden Gradienten für die ATP Synthese. Ein wesentlicher Bestandteil des membrangebundenen Teils einer rotierenden ATPase ist der Rotor-Ring. Dieser transportiert Ionen über die Membran und rotiert dabei um seine eigene Achse. In dieser Arbeit wurde eine Studie fortgesetzt, die den Rotor-Ring der N‑Typ ATPase von B. pseudomallei mittels Kryo‑EM untersuchte und zeigte, dass der Rotor-Ring aus 17 identischen Untereinheiten aufgebaut ist. Damit hat die N‑Typ ATPase das größte Ionen-zu-ATP-Verhältnis aller bisher charakterisierten ATPasen. In dieser Arbeit wurde die c17 Stöchiometrie des N‑Typ ATPase Rotor-Rings bestätigt und die Struktur mittels Kryo‑EM bestimmt. Im besonderen Fokus lag dabei der Einfluss von Detergenzien auf die Strukturbestimmung. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die beiden Parameter Dichte und Mizellengröße der verwendeten Detergenzien ausschlaggebend für den Erfolg der Strukturbestimmung dieses sehr kleinen Membranproteins sind.
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is a heterodimeric ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transport complex, which selects peptides for export into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and subsequent loading onto major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) molecules to trigger adaptive immune responses against virally or malignantly transformed cells. Due to its pivotal role in adaptive immunity, TAP is a target for infectious diseases and malignant disorders, such as bare lymphocyte syndrome type I and cancer. A detailed knowledge about the TAP structure and transport mechanism is fundamental for the development of therapies or drugs against such diseases, but numerous aspects are insufficiently determined to date. The aim of this PhD thesis was to elucidate several structural details of TAP using powerful biochemical and biophysical methods and thereby to contribute to the understanding of the translocation machinery functionality.
High protein yields, an efficient isolation from the lipid environment and subsequent purification of a stoichiometric, stable, and functional TAP complex are prerequisites to get detailed insights into TAP functionality. The natural product digitonin is typically used as detergent to isolate TAP, but suffered from fluctuating purity and high costs. The novel detergent GDN was selected from a number of potential detergents upon their ability to isolate and purify TAP overcoming the limitations of digitonin without compromising on functional integrity. State-of-the-art biophysical techniques, such as solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), require highly concentrated protein samples. A new and mild procedure to concentrate TAP was established within this thesis. Freeze drying is superior to conventional concentration techniques, such as ultrafiltration, resulting in TAP inactivation and aggregation already at concentrations of 10 mg/mL. This new procedure enables stabilizing TAP in a condensed glycerol matrix and to concentrate the transport complex up to 30 mg/mL active transporter. The functional integrity of the freeze-dried TAP complex was verified by determining equilibrium dissociation constants, peptide dissociation and ATP-hydrolysis rates as well as long-term stabilities identical to untreated TAP. The combined application of the detergent GDN and the freeze drying procedure facilitates the cost-efficient isolation of functional and highly concentrated TAP and enables to study the structure and mechanism of the peptide transporter TAP using modern analyses methods.
Information on peptide-TAP interactions at atomic level have not been obtained so far. This lack of knowledge hampered the mechanistic understanding of the initial steps of substrate translocation catalyzed by TAP. Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) enhanced magic angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR on highly concentrated TAP samples prepared with the freeze-drying procedure was used within this thesis to study this challenging membrane protein-substrate complex. The affinity and specificity of peptide binding by TAP are mediated by multiple recognition sites in the N- and C-terminal regions. Side-chains of positions 1, 3, and 9 are most substantially affected upon binding to TAP, revealing recognition principles of the translocation machinery. The nonamer peptide binds to TAP in an extended conformation with an N-to-C terminus distance of ~2.5 nm. Molecular docking revealed that the peptide substrate is locked with its N and C termini between TAP1 and TAP2 and adopts a tilted pose with respect to the membrane plane. The identified contact sites of TAP are consistent with results from earlier crosslinking and mutational analyses on the TAP complex.
The inadequate structure determination and insufficient knowledge about the dynamics of substrate translocation impedes a detailed comprehension of the TAP transport mechanism. Advanced biophysical methods, such as pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) or single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET), enable to locate the peptide-binding pocket and to elucidate dwell-times, conformational states and dynamics within the translocation cycle of TAP. The specific introduction of spin or fluorescent labels via single cysteines for such studies requires a cysteine-less TAP complex. The endogenous cysteine 213 in TAP2 remained to create a pseudo Cys-less TAP complex within this thesis due to its altered substrate repertoire when mutated to serine as shown in previous studies. Latter complex was used to introduce single-Cys mutations in the cytosolic extensions of transmembrane helices of TAP1. Their functional integrity with respect to peptide binding and translocation was comparable to pseudo Cys-less TAP. All pseudo single cysteines were efficiently labeled, but unintentionally C213TAP2 was labeled as well and TAP concomitantly inactivated. These unsatisfactory initial experiments required the generation of a functional, entirely Cys-less TAP transporter within this thesis. Therefore, C213TAP2 was replaced by all 19 proteinogenic amino acids. All analyzed mutants were capable to bind a high-affinity peptide of TAP, but with varying affinities and binding capacities. The replacement of C213 by isoleucine enabled the generation of a cysteine-less TAP complex with functional characteristics similar to the wild-type transporter and will promote the elucidation of the translocation mechanism of the peptide transporter TAP in future studies using pulsed EPR and single-molecule FRET.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, a superfamily of integral membrane proteins, catalyse the translocation of substrates across the cellular membrane by ATP hydrolysis. Here we demonstrate by nucleotide turnover and binding studies based on 31P solid-state NMR spectroscopy that the ABC exporter and lipid A flippase MsbA can couple ATP hydrolysis to an adenylate kinase activity, where ADP is converted into AMP and ATP. Single-point mutations reveal that both ATPase and adenylate kinase mechanisms are associated with the same conserved motifs of the nucleotide-binding domain. Based on these results, we propose a model for the coupled ATPase-adenylate kinase mechanism, involving the canonical and an additional nucleotide-binding site. We extend these findings to other prokaryotic ABC exporters, namely LmrA and TmrAB, suggesting that the coupled activities are a general feature of ABC exporters.
Ribosome recycling orchestrated by the ATP binding cassette (ABC) protein ABCE1 can be considered as the final—or the first—step within the cyclic process of protein synthesis, connecting translation termination and mRNA surveillance with re-initiation. An ATP-dependent tweezer-like motion of the nucleotide-binding domains in ABCE1 transfers mechanical energy to the ribosome and tears the ribosome subunits apart. The post-recycling complex (PRC) then re-initiates mRNA translation. Here, we probed the so far unknown architecture of the 1-MDa PRC (40S/30S·ABCE1) by chemical cross-linking and mass spectrometry (XL-MS). Our study reveals ABCE1 bound to the translational factor-binding (GTPase) site with multiple cross-link contacts of the helix–loop–helix motif to the S24e ribosomal protein. Cross-linking of the FeS cluster domain to the ribosomal protein S12 substantiates an extreme lever-arm movement of the FeS cluster domain during ribosome recycling. We were thus able to reconstitute and structurally analyse a key complex in the translational cycle, resembling the link between translation initiation and ribosome recycling.
CryoEM at IUCRJ: a new era
(2016)
Relative orientation of POTRA domains from cyanobacterial Omp85 studied by pulsed EPR spectroscopy
(2016)
Many proteins of the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria and of the outer envelope of the endosymbiotically derived organelles mitochondria and plastids have a β-barrel fold. Their insertion is assisted by membrane proteins of the Omp85-TpsB superfamily. These proteins are composed of a C-terminal β-barrel and a different number of N-terminal POTRA domains, three in the case of cyanobacterial Omp85. Based on structural studies of Omp85 proteins, including the five POTRA-domain-containing BamA protein of Escherichia coli, it is predicted that anaP2 and anaP3 bear a fixed orientation, whereas anaP1 and anaP2 are connected via a flexible hinge. We challenged this proposal by investigating the conformational space of the N-terminal POTRA domains of Omp85 from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 using pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR, or DEER) spectroscopy. The pronounced dipolar oscillations observed for most of the double spin-labeled positions indicate a rather rigid orientation of the POTRA domains in frozen liquid solution. Based on the PELDOR distance data, structure refinement of the POTRA domains was performed taking two different approaches: 1) treating the individual POTRA domains as rigid bodies; and 2) using an all-atom refinement of the structure. Both refinement approaches yielded ensembles of model structures that are more restricted compared to the conformational ensemble obtained by molecular dynamics simulations, with only a slightly different orientation of N-terminal POTRA domains anaP1 and anaP2 compared with the x-ray structure. The results are discussed in the context of the native environment of the POTRA domains in the periplasm.
Folding of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) according to the two-stage model (Popot, J. L., and Engelman, D. M. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4031–4037) is postulated to proceed in 2 steps: partitioning of the polypeptide into the membrane followed by diffusion until native contacts are formed. Herein we investigate conformational preferences of fragments of the yeast Ste2p receptor using NMR. Constructs comprising the first, the first two, and the first three transmembrane (TM) segments, as well as a construct comprising TM1–TM2 covalently linked to TM7 were examined. We observed that the isolated TM1 does not form a stable helix nor does it integrate well into the micelle. TM1 is significantly stabilized upon interaction with TM2, forming a helical hairpin reported previously (Neumoin, A., Cohen, L. S., Arshava, B., Tantry, S., Becker, J. M., Zerbe, O., and Naider, F. (2009) Biophys. J. 96, 3187–3196), and in this case the protein integrates into the hydrophobic interior of the micelle. TM123 displays a strong tendency to oligomerize, but hydrogen exchange data reveal that the center of TM3 is solvent exposed. In all GPCRs so-far structurally characterized TM7 forms many contacts with TM1 and TM2. In our study TM127 integrates well into the hydrophobic environment, but TM7 does not stably pack against the remaining helices. Topology mapping in microsomal membranes also indicates that TM1 does not integrate in a membrane-spanning fashion, but that TM12, TM123, and TM127 adopt predominantly native-like topologies. The data from our study would be consistent with the retention of individual helices of incompletely synthesized GPCRs in the vicinity of the translocon until the complete receptor is released into the membrane interior.
Methanogenic archaea share one ion gradient forming reaction in their energy metabolism catalyzed by the membrane-spanning multisubunit complex N5-methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin: coenzyme M methyltransferase (MtrABCDEFGH or simply Mtr). In this reaction the methyl group transfer from methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin to coenzyme M mediated by cobalamin is coupled with the vectorial translocation of Na+ across the cytoplasmic membrane. No detailed structural and mechanistic data are reported about this process. In the present work we describe a procedure to provide a highly pure and homogenous Mtr complex on the basis of a selective removal of the only soluble subunit MtrH with the membrane perturbing agent dimethyl maleic anhydride and a subsequent two-step chromatographic purification. A molecular mass determination of the Mtr complex by laser induced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry (LILBID-MS) and size exclusion chromatography coupled with multi-angle light scattering (SEC-MALS) resulted in a (MtrABCDEFG)3 heterotrimeric complex of ca. 430 kDa with both techniques. Taking into account that the membrane protein complex contains various firmly bound small molecules, predominantly detergent molecules, the stoichiometry of the subunits is most likely 1:1. A schematic model for the subunit arrangement within the MtrABCDEFG protomer was deduced from the mass of Mtr subcomplexes obtained by harsh IR-laser LILBID-MS.