Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (765)
- Doctoral Thesis (282)
- Preprint (35)
- Conference Proceeding (11)
- Part of a Book (2)
- Other (1)
- Working Paper (1)
Language
- English (1097) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (1097)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (1097)
Keywords
- crystal structure (37)
- hydrogen bonding (11)
- RNA (10)
- NMR spectroscopy (8)
- structural biology (8)
- Biochemistry (6)
- Membranproteine (6)
- NMR (6)
- Optogenetics (6)
- X-ray crystallography (6)
Institute
- Biochemie und Chemie (1097) (remove)
Na+/H+ exchange is essential for survival of all organisms, having a role in the regulation of the intracellular Na+ concentration, pH and cell volume. Furthermore, Na+/H+ exchangers were shown to be involved in the virulence of the bacterium Yersinia pestis, indicating they might be potential targets for novel antibiotic treatments. The model system for Na+/H+ exchangers is the NhaA transporter from Escherichia coli, EcNhaA. Therefore, the general transport mechanism of NhaA exchangers is currently well characterized. However, much less is known about NhaB exchangers, with only a limited number of studies available. The pathogen Klebsiella pneumoniae, which is a major source of nosocomial infection, possesses three electrogenic Na+/H+ exchangers, KpNhaA1, KpNhaA2 and KpNhaB, none of which have been previously investigated. Our aim in this study was to functionally characterize KpNhaB using solid supported membrane-based electrophysiology as the main investigation technique, and thus provide the first electrophysiological investigation of an NhaB Na+/H+ exchanger. We found that NhaB can be described by the same competition-based mechanism that was shown to be valid for electrogenic NhaA and NapA, and for electroneutral NhaP Na+/H+ exchangers. For comparison we also characterized the activity of KpNhaA1 and KpNhaA2 and found that the three exchangers have complementary activity profiles, which is likely a survival advantage for K. pneumoniae when faced with environments of different salinity and pH. This underlines their importance as potential antibiotic drug targets.
Proteinen die ExHepatitis C ist eine entzündliche Erkrankung der Leber, die durch das Hepatitis-C-Virus (HCV) verursacht wird. Trotz vieler Bemühungen ist heutzutage immer noch keine prophylaktische Vakzinierung verfügbar. Neuartige Therapien versprechen eine hohe Heilungsrate, sind aber mit hohen Kosten verbunden. HCV induziert oxidativen Stress, welcher für das Auftreten und die Progression der Pathogenese eine zentrale Rolle spielt. Um zellulären Stress (z.B. durch ROS) entgegenzuwirken, haben Zellen cytoprotective und detoxifizierende Mechanismen entwickelt, die die zelluläre Homöostase aufrechterhalten. Dabei kontrolliert der redoxsensitive Transkriptionsfaktor Nrf2 als Heterodimer zusammen mit sMaf- pression von cytoprotective und ROS-detoxifizierenden Genen. Vorherige Studien haben gezeigt, dass HCV den Nrf2/ARE-Signalweg beeinträchtigt. Dabei induziert HCV eine Translokation der sMaf-Proteine aus dem Zellkern in das Cytoplasma, wo diese das virale Protein NS3 binden. Im Cytoplasma lokalisierte sMaf-Proteine verhindern dadurch eine Translokation von Nrf2 in den Zellkern. Folglich ist die Expression von Nrf2/ARE-abhängigen cytoprotective Genen inhibiert und intrazelluläre ROS-Spiegel dauerhaft erhöht. Ein weiterer zentraler cytoprotective Mechanismus ist die Autophagie. Sie dient der Aufrechterhaltung der zellulären Homöostase durch den Abbau von defekten Proteinen und Organellen. Des Weiteren ist bekannt, dass Autophagie nicht nur im Laufe von Nährstoffmangel induziert wird, sondern auch durch erhöhte Mengen an ROS. In sämtlichen Studien konnte beobachtet werden, dass Autophagie für die Aufrechterhaltung des viralen Lebenszyklus eine wesentliche Rolle spielt, da sie mit der Ausbildung des membranous web, der Translation, der Replikation und der Freisetzung des Virus interferiert. Ausgehend davon sollte in dieser Arbeit zunächst die Relevanz von HCV-induziertem oxidativen Stress, resultierend aus der Nrf2/ARE-Signalweginhibition, als möglicher Aktivator der Autophagie untersucht werden. Dabei wurde in HCV-positiven Zellen eine Akkumulation von LC3-II beobachtet, was auf eine Induktion der Autophagie schließen lässt. In Übereinstimmung damit wurde eine erhöhte Expression von Autophagie-Markerproteinen in HCV-infizierten PHHs detektiert. Im Laufe der Autophagie wird p62 abgebaut. Somit sollte eine Induktion der Autophagie in einer Verminderung der Menge an p62 resultieren. Nichtsdestotrotz ist eine Akkumulation von p62 in HCV-positiven Zellen nachzuweisen. Dies erscheint zunächst widersprüchlich. Aufgrund der Tatsache, dass die Expression der katalytischen Untereinheit des Proteasoms (PSMB5) Nrf2-abhängig ist, führt die beeinträchtigte Nrf2-Aktivität in HCV-positiven Zellen jedoch zu einer verringerten Aktivität des konstitutiven Proteasoms. Dieser Befund kann auch die erhöhte Halbwertzeit von p62 in HCV-positiven Zellen erklären. Kürzlich wurde ein Zusammenspiel des Nrf2/ARE-Signalwegs und der Autophagie beobachtet. Dabei kann Nrf2 nicht nur über den kanonischen Signalweg aktiviert werden, sondern auch durch eine direkte Interaktion des phosphorylierten Autophagie-Adaptorproteins p62 (pS[349] p62) mit Keap1. In HCV-positiven Zellen können nicht nur eine Zunahme der Gesamtmenge von p62 beobachtet werden, sondern auch erhöhte Mengen an pS[349] p62. Die Berechnung des Quotienten aus pS[349] p62 und p62 zeigt in etwa eine Verdopplung der Menge an pS[349] p62 , was auf eine vermehrte Phosphorylierung von p62 in HCV-positiven Zellen rückschließen lässt. Des Weiteren konnte beobachtet werden, dass erhöhte Mengen an ROS, wie sie auch in HCV-positiven Zellen vorkommen, Autophagie induzieren können, die durch eine Akkumulation von LC3-II und die Zunahme von LC3 Puncta charakterisiert ist. Auch eine Zunahme von pS[349] p62 konnte beobachtet werden. Ferner resultierte die Überexpression der phosphomimetischen Mutante (p62 [S351E]) in einer Akkumulation von LC3-II, was auf die Fähigkeit von pS[349] p62 rückschließen lässt, Autophagie zu induzieren. Eine Modulation der Autophagie mittels der Inhibitoren 3-Methyladenin und Bafilomycin führte zu einer inhibierten Freisetzung von infektiösen viralen Partikeln und unterstreicht damit, dass der Autophagie eine essentielle Bedeutung bei der Freisetzung viraler Partikel zukommt. Eine HCV-Infektion wird sowohl von erhöhten Mengen an ROS als auch von einer Induktion der Autophagie begleitet. Dementsprechend führte eine Verminderung des intrazellulären Radikalspiegels durch eine Inkubation mit den Radikalfängern PDTC und NAC zu geringeren Mengen an LC3-II und pS[349] p62. Dabei konnte auch eine Abnahme der freigesetzten infektiösen viralen Partikel beobachtet werden, was ein Zusammenspiel zwischen erhöhten Mengen an ROS, Induktion der Autophagie und Virusfreisetzung nahelegt. Vorschlag: Erhöhte Mengen an ROS werden durch eine Aktivierung des Nrf2/ARE-Signalwegs detoxifiziert und würden somit den zuvor beschriebenen viralen Mechanismus verhindern. HCV die Aktivierung Nrf2/ARE-regulierter Gene beeinträchtigt, wurde die Hypothese aufgestellt, dass in HCV-positiven Zellen dieser komplexe Mechanismus dazu dient, die Translokation des pS[349] p62-abhängig freigesetzte Nrf2 in den Zellkern zu verhindern. Das wiederum hat eine eingeschränkte Expression von Nrf2/ARE-abhängigen Genen und Detoxifizierung von ROS zur Folge. Um diese Hypothese experimentell zu untersuchen, wurden HCV-positive und negative Zellen cotransfiziert mit dem p62 Wildtyp (p62 [wt]), der p62 phosphomimetischen Mutante (p62 [S351E]) oder einem Kontrollplasmid in Kombination mit einem Reporterkonstrukt, welches die Nrf2-Aktivierung darstellt (OKD48). Während in HCV-negativen Zellen im Vergleich zum p62 [wt] eine Transfektion mit p62 [S351E] zu einer signifikanten Aktivierung des Nrf2-abhängigen Reportergens führt konnte dies in HCV-positiven Zellen nicht beobachtet werden. Zusammengenommen beschreiben diese Ergebnisse einen neuartigen Mechanismus wie HCV das Zusammenspiel zwischen dem Nrf2/ARE-Signalweg, erhöhten Mengen an ROS und Autophagie beeinflusst. Dabei übt HCV einen negativen Effekt auf den Nrf2/ARE-Signalweg aus, um dem pS[349] p62-abhängig freigesetzten Nrf2 zu entkommen. Folglich werden erhöhte Mengen an ROS aufrechterhalten, die eine Induktion der Autophagie ermöglichen, welche für die Freisetzung viraler Partikel essentiell ist.
Mistakes in translation of messenger RNA into protein are clearly a detriment to the recombinant production of pure proteins for biophysical study or the biopharmaceutical market. However, they may also provide insight into mechanistic details of the translation process. Mistakes often involve the substitution of an amino acid having an abundant codon for one having a rare codon, differing by substitution of a G base by an A base, as in the case of substitution of a lysine (AAA) for arginine (AGA). In these cases one expects the substitution frequency to depend on the relative abundances of the respective tRNAs, and thus, one might expect frequencies to be similar for all sites having the same rare codon. Here we demonstrate that, for the ADP-ribosylation factor from yeast expressed in E. coli, lysine for arginine substitutions frequencies are not the same at the 9 sites containing a rare arginine codon; mis-incorporation frequencies instead vary from less than 1 to 16%. We suggest that the context in which the codons occur (clustering of rare sites) may be responsible for the variation. The method employed to determine the frequency of mis-incorporation involves a novel mass spectrometric analysis of the products from the parallel expression of wild type and codon-optimized genes in 15N and 14N enriched media, respectively. The high sensitivity and low material requirements of the method make this a promising technology for the collection of data relevant to other mis-incorporations. The additional data could be of value in refining models for the ribosomal translation elongation process.
Riboswitches are an important class of regulatory RNA elements that respond to cellular metabolite concentrations to regulate gene expression in a highly selective manner. 2’-deoxyguanosine-sensing (2’dG) riboswitches represent a unique riboswitch subclass only found in the bacterium Mesoplasma florum and are closely related to adenine- and guanine-sensing riboswitches. The I-A type 2’dG-sensing riboswitch represses the expression of ribonucleotide reductase genes at high cellular concentrations of 2’dG as a result of premature transcription termination.
Increasing evidence within the last decade suggests that transcriptional regulation by riboswitches is controlled kinetically and emphasizes the importance of co-transcriptional folding.2–4 Addition of single nucleotides to nascent transcripts causes a continuous shift in structural equilibrium, where refolding rates are competing with the rate of transcription.5,6
For transcriptional riboswitches, both ligand binding and structural rearrangements within the expression platform are precisely coordinated in time with the rate of transcription. The current thesis investigates the mechanistic details of transcriptional riboswitch regulation using the I-A 2’dG-sensing riboswitch as an example for a riboswitch that acts under kinetic control.
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.
Respiration is one of the key processes of energy transduction used by the cell. It consists of two components: electron transfer and ATP production. The electron transfer chain converts the energy released from several biochemical redox reactions into an electrochemical proton gradient across membranes. This stored energy is used as the driving force for the production of ATP by the ATP synthase. The mitochondrial electron transfer chain contains four major protein complexes called complexes I-IV, with counting starting at the lower side of the redox potentials. It has been discussed for a long time how these protein complexes are organized in the membranes. Do they diffuse freely in the membrane? Alternatively, do they form a supercomplex built up of several neighboring complexes? The evidence supporting the free diffusion mode is that both electron transfer intermediates (cytochrome c and quinone) behave as “pool”. However, respiratory supercomplexes have been detected in membranes from bacteria, fungi, yeast, plant and animal during the last decade, and sometimes the respiratory complexes are only stable inside a supercomplex. Therefore, the idea of supercomplex formation has become more popular. The argument that the supercomplex arises from solubilization and is a detergent artifact could be rejected because: 1) supercomplexes can be isolated from many organisms in an active form; 2) supercomplexes have been proven to stabilize the individual complexes in some cases; 3) supercomplexes can be very stable after chromatographic isolation in some cases....
Biophysical studies of the translation-regulating add adenine riboswitch from Vibrio vulnificus
(2017)
Bacterial gene expression can be regulated at mRNA level by cis-acting mRNA elements termed riboswitches. Riboswitches operate by conformational switching between a ligand-free and a ligand-bound state with different structures that either activate or inhibit gene expression. This PhD thesis contributes to the molecular level understanding of full-length purine riboswitches. It presents biophysical investigations on the ligand-dependent folding of the full-length translation-regulating add adenine riboswitch from the gram-negative human pathogenic marine bacterium Vibrio vulnificus (Asw). Asw has the typical bipartite riboswitch architecture with a 5’ ligand-sensing aptamer domain and a 3’ regulatory domain termed expression platform. According to the working hypothesis, Asw employs a unique thermodynamically-controlled 3-state conformational switching mechanism between an apoB, an apoA and a holo conformation to regulate translation initiation in a temperature-compensated manner. The two apo conformations are the putative translation-OFF states and the holo conformation is the putative translation-ON state of Asw. In the main project of this PhD thesis, an integrated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and smFRET spectroscopic study of the full-length 112-nucleotide Asw (112Asw) was performed. The adenine-dependent folding of 112Asw was monitored at the level of base pairing interactions by NMR of the RNA imino protons, and at the level of three long-range intramolecular distances by smFRET of immobilized molecules. The integrated NMR and smFRET spectroscopic study of 112Asw yielded two major findings. First, NMR and smFRET both revealed that adenine binding to 112Asw impedes apoB formation by stabilizing the apoA secondary structure in the holo conformation without modulating tertiary structural interactions between the two riboswitch domains. This highlights the central role of competitive P1 and P4 helix formation at the interface of the aptamer and the expression platform for switching the accessibility of the ribosome binding site of 112Asw. Moreover, it strongly corroborates the hypothesis that purine riboswitches in general operate according to the key principle of a spatially decoupled secondary structural allosteric switch that proceeds without ligand-induced tertiary structural interactions between the aptamer domain and the expression platform. Second, it was uncovered by smFRET that the apoA and the holo conformation of 112Asw do not adopt a single folding state at near-physiological Mg2+ concentration. Instead, apoA and holo exhibit a persistent dynamic equilibrium between substates with an undocked (U), a short-lived docked (D1; ~s) and a Mg2+-bound long-lived docked (D2; ~10 s) aptamer kissing loop motif. In the holo conformation, the fractional population of the long-lived docked substate is ~2-fold increased compared to the apoA conformation, but undocked and docked substates are still comparably stable. The here described multiple folding states of the apoA and the holo conformation might have regulatory properties that are in between the apoB translation-OFF state and the holo-D2 translation-ON state. Additonally, an integrated NMR and smFRET analysis of 127-nucleotide Asw (127Asw) is presented. Compared to 112Asw, 127Asw is 3’-elongated by 15 nucleotides of the adenosine deaminase encoding sequence of the add gene from Vibrio vulnificus. 127Asw was chosen as mRNA template for future investigations of the interaction between Asw and the 30S ribosomal subunit. The NMR spectra of 127Asw demonstrated that 127Asw has the same overall secondary structure as 112Asw. Like for 112Asw, the combined NMR and smFRET analysis of 127Asw showed that adenine binding impedes apoB formation and stabilizes a long-lived docked aptamer kissing loop fold. However, compared to 112Asw, 127Asw has a destabilized aptamer kissing loop motif and a stabilized P4 helix in the expression platform. Finally, ligand-observed studies of the transient encounter complex between Asw and the near-cognate ligand hypoxanthine are described. By competition binding WaterLOGSY NMR experiments with hypoxanthine and the adenine analogue 2,6-diaminopurine, it could be shown that hypoxanthine binds to the same binding site of 112Asw as the cognate ligand adenine. The hypoxanthine binding constant measured with the WaterLOGSY method is in the low mM range (1.8 mM) and substantially exceeds the physiological hypoxanthine concentration in E. coli (~0.3 mM), thus ruling out that hypoxanthine binding can significantly impact the translational regulation of Asw in vivo. Also, preliminary FTIR difference spectra of 13C,15N-labelled and unlabelled hypoxanthine in complex with the pbuE adenine riboswitch aptamer and the xpt guanine riboswitch aptamer are discussed. These spectra showed a pattern of multiple IR bands that appeared to be characteristic for the respective complex.
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.
Structural characterization of a polymethylsilsesquioxane (PMSQ) and a DT-type methyl silicone resin (MeDT) has been carried out by various instrumental analyses including GPC, NMR, gas chromatography, and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Although the PMSQ had a Mw around 5000, the resin contained a significant amount of low molecular weight species consisting of T2 [MeSi(OH)O2/2] and T3 [MeSiO3/2] units, ranging from T34T23 to T38T22 including many isomers. One isomer of T36T22 was isolated of which structure was determined as a cage structure. The species are supposed to consist mainly of cyclotetra- and cyclopentasiloxanes, but presence of strained rings such as cyclotrisiloxane rings also was suggested. In MeDT, species in which the T2 units in the molecules from PMSQ is replaced with D2 [Me2SiO2/2] were found, for example, T36D22, suggesting that general silicone resins consist of similar structures as silsesquioxanes. The Mark-Houwink exponent for these methyl resins was ~0.3, indicating the molecular shape to be compact. Investigation on the formation chemistry of the cubic octamers indicates that siloxane bond rearrangement is an important mechanism in the molecule build-up process.
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.
To study the implications of highly space-demanding organic moieties on the properties of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), triptycyl thiolates and selenolates with and without methylene spacers on Au(111) surfaces were comprehensively studied using ultra-high vacuum infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Due to packing effects, the molecules in all monolayers are substantially tilted. In the presence of a methylene spacer the tilt is slightly less pronounced. The selenolate monolayers exhibit smaller defect densities and therefore are more densely packed than their thiolate analogues. The Se–Au binding energy in the investigated SAMs was found to be higher than the S–Au binding energy.
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.
The asymmetric unit of the title compound, C18H18I2N2O2, consists of one half-molecule, completed by the application of inversion symmetry. The molecule adopts the typical structure for this class of bis-benxozazines, characterized by an anti orientation of the two benzoxazine rings around the central C—C bond. The oxazinic ring adopts a half-chair conformation. In the crystal, molecules are linked by C—I⋯N short contacts [I⋯N = 3.378 (2) Å], generating layers lying parallel to the bc plane.
Denisovite is a rare mineral occurring as aggregates of fibres typically 200–500 nm diameter. It was confirmed as a new mineral in 1984, but important facts about its chemical formula, lattice parameters, symmetry and structure have remained incompletely known since then. Recently obtained results from studies using microprobe analysis, X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), electron crystallography, modelling and Rietveld refinement will be reported. The electron crystallography methods include transmission electron microscopy (TEM), selected-area electron diffraction (SAED), high-angle annular dark-field imaging (HAADF), high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), precession electron diffraction (PED) and electron diffraction tomography (EDT). A structural model of denisovite was developed from HAADF images and later completed on the basis of quasi-kinematic EDT data by ab initio structure solution using direct methods and least-squares refinement. The model was confirmed by Rietveld refinement. The lattice parameters are a = 31.024 (1), b = 19.554 (1) and c = 7.1441 (5) Å, β = 95.99 (3)°, V = 4310.1 (5) Å3 and space group P12/a1. The structure consists of three topologically distinct dreier silicate chains, viz. two xonotlite-like dreier double chains, [Si6O17]10−, and a tubular loop-branched dreier triple chain, [Si12O30]12−. The silicate chains occur between three walls of edge-sharing (Ca,Na) octahedra. The chains of silicate tetrahedra and the octahedra walls extend parallel to the z axis and form a layer parallel to (100). Water molecules and K+ cations are located at the centre of the tubular silicate chain. The latter also occupy positions close to the centres of eight-membered rings in the silicate chains. The silicate chains are geometrically constrained by neighbouring octahedra walls and present an ambiguity with respect to their z position along these walls, with displacements between neighbouring layers being either Δz = c/4 or −c/4. Such behaviour is typical for polytypic sequences and leads to disorder along [100]. In fact, the diffraction pattern does not show any sharp reflections with l odd, but continuous diffuse streaks parallel to a* instead. Only reflections with l even are sharp. The diffuse scattering is caused by (100) nanolamellae separated by stacking faults and twin boundaries. The structure can be described according to the order–disorder (OD) theory as a stacking of layers parallel to (100).
The von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a glycoprotein in the blood that plays a central role in hemostasis. Among other functions, VWF is responsible for platelet adhesion at sites of injury via its A1 domain. Its adjacent VWF domain A2 exposes a cleavage site under shear to degrade long VWF fibers in order to prevent thrombosis. Recently, it has been shown that VWF A1/A2 interactions inhibit the binding of platelets to VWF domain A1 in a force-dependent manner prior to A2 cleavage. However, whether and how this interaction also takes place in longer VWF fragments as well as the strength of this interaction in the light of typical elongation forces imposed by the shear flow of blood remained elusive. Here, we addressed these questions by using single molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS), Brownian dynamics (BD), and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Our SMFS measurements demonstrate that the A2 domain has the ability to bind not only to single A1 domains but also to VWF A1A2 fragments. SMFS experiments of a mutant [A2] domain, containing a disulfide bond which stabilizes the domain against unfolding, enhanced A1 binding. This observation suggests that the mutant adopts a more stable conformation for binding to A1. We found intermolecular A1/A2 interactions to be preferred over intramolecular A1/A2 interactions. Our data are also consistent with the existence of two cooperatively acting binding sites for A2 in the A1 domain. Our SMFS measurements revealed a slip-bond behavior for the A1/A2 interaction and their lifetimes were estimated for forces acting on VWF multimers at physiological shear rates using BD simulations. Complementary fitting of AFM rupture forces in the MD simulation range adequately reproduced the force response of the A1/A2 complex spanning a wide range of loading rates. In conclusion, we here characterized the auto-inhibitory mechanism of the intramolecular A1/A2 bond as a shear dependent safeguard of VWF, which prevents the interaction of VWF with platelets.
Membrane proteins are biological macromolecules that are located in a cell’s membrane and are responsible for essential functions within an organism, which makes them to prominent drug targets. The extraction of membrane proteins from the hydrophobic membrane bilayer to determine high-resolution crystal structures is a difficult task and only 2% of all solved proteins structures are membrane proteins. Computational methods may help to gain deeper insights into membrane protein structures and their functions. This study will give an overview of such computational methods on a representative set of membrane proteins and will provide ideas for future computational and experimental research on membrane proteins.
In a first step (chapter 2), I updated an earlier, manually-curated data set of homologous membrane proteins (HOMEP) to more recent versions in 2010 (HOMEP2) and 2013 (HOMEP3) using an automated clustering approach. High-resolution structures of membrane proteins listed in the PDB_TM database were structurally aligned and subsequently clustered using structural similarity scores. Both data sets were used as a standard gold reference set for subsequent work.
Subsequently, I have updated and applied the sequence alignment program AlignMe to determine protein descriptors that are suitable for detecting evolutionary relationship between homologous a-helical membrane proteins. Single input descriptors were tested alone and in combination with each other in different modes of AlignMe by optimizing gap penalties on the HOMEP2 data set. Most accurate alignments and homology models on the HOMEP2 data set were observed when using position-specific substitution information (P), secondary structure propensities (S) and transmembrane propensities (T) in the AlignMe PST mode. An evaluation on an independent reference set of membrane protein sequence alignments from the BAliBASE collection showed that different modes of AlignMe are suitable for different sequence similarity levels. The AlignMe PST mode improved the alignment accuracy significantly for distantly related proteins, whereas for closely-related proteins from the BAliBASE set the AlignMe PS mode was more suitable. This work was published in March 2013 in PLOS ONE. In order to allow also an easier usage of the AlignMe program, I have implemented a web server of AlignMe (chapter 4) that provides the optimized settings and gap penalties for the AlignMe P, PS and PST modes. A comparison to other recent alignment web server shows that the alignments of AlignMe are similar or even more accurate than those of other methods, especially for very distantly related proteins for which the inclusion of membrane protein information has been shown to be suitable. This work was published in the NAR web server issue in July 2014.
Although membrane-specific information has been shown to be suitable for aligning distantly related membrane proteins on a sequence level, such information was not incorporated into structural alignment programs making it unclear which method is the most suitable for aligning membrane proteins. Thus, I compared 13 widely-used pairwise structural alignment methods on an updated reference set of homologous membrane protein structures (HOMEP3) and evaluated their accuracy by building models based on the underlying sequence alignments and used scoring functions (e.g., AL4 or CAD-score) to rate the model accuracy (chapter 5). The analysis showed that fragment-based approaches such as FR-TM-align are the most useful for aligning structures of membrane proteins that have undergone large conformational changes whereas rigid approaches were more suitable for proteins that were solved in the same or a similar state. However, no method showed a significant higher accuracy than any other. Additionally, all methods lack a measure to rate the reliability of the accuracy for a specific position within a structure alignment. In order to solve these problems, I propose a consensus-type approach that combines alignments from four different methods, namely FR-TM-align, DaliLite, MATT and FATCAT and assigns a confidence value to each position of the alignment that describes the agreement between the methods. This work has been published 2015 in the journal “PROTEINS: structure, function and bioinformatics”.
Consensus alignments were then generated for each pair of proteins of the HOMEP3 data set and subsequently analyzed for single evolutionary events within membrane spanning segments and for irregular structures (e.g., 310- and p-helices) (chapter 6). Interestingly, single insertions and deletions could be observed with the help of consensus alignments in the conserved membrane-spanning segments of membrane proteins in four protein families. The detection of such single InDels might help to identify crucial residues for a proteins function.
If the biotechnological production of chemicals can further replace or support regular synthetic chemistry, industry will be able to move away from fossil oils towards renewable sources. However, in many cases the much needed adaptation of biotechnological production systems is not yet developed to the necessary level.
For processes where short fatty acids (FA) are needed, as for example in the microbial production of biofuels in the gasoline range, protein engineering had not yet delivered feasible solutions. In this thesis, several approaches to introduce chain length control on type I fatty acid synthases (FAS) were established and made available in a publication and two patents. Therein, engineering was focused on rational design based on available structural information.
First, the type I FAS from C. ammoniagenes was used as a model enzyme to probe modifications on FAS in a low complex in vitro environment in order to gain information about structure-function relationships. At this stage, engineering was conducted in several rounds, first addressing possible ways to alter product distributions by changing substrate affinities through concise mutations in binding channels. Several FAS constructs were generated ranging from first successes, where short FA were produced as side products, to FAS where native chain length programming was overwritten and only short FA were produced.
Furthermore, another engineering target was addressed with the modification of domain-domain interactions on FAS. For its exploitation to direct synthesis, contact surfaces on catalytic domains were changed to interfere with acyl carrier protein binding. This channeling of the kinetic process on the enzyme led to similar successes and short FA became the primary product.
The two approaches have proven to be potent tools to introduce systems of chain length control in FAS. This rational engineering has the big advantage that it is mostly minimally invasive and due to the high conservation of de novo FA synthesis, individual mutations could easily be used in other FAS (and their organisms) as well. Even heterologous expression of modified FAS genes is feasible.
Engineering was not only tested in a defined in vitro environment and but also in S. cerevisiae as an exemplary in vivo system. The results eventually confirmed the in vitro findings and proved that the chosen engineering could be transferred to more complex systems. Even before any optimization for highest output, the titers of short FA from S. cerevisiae fermentation matched previous reports with 118 mg/L.
In sum, this work covers several layers from basic research to preliminary applications. The presented modifications to create short FA producing FAS can be a key step in synthesis pathways and will likely enable a whole range of new succeeding research. It can be seen as a valuable contribution towards establishing novel ways for the production of chemicals from renewable sources.
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) is a ligand that activates, through co-receptor GDNF family receptor alpha-1 (GFRα1) and receptor tyrosine kinase “RET”, several signaling pathways crucial in the development and sustainment of multiple neuronal populations. We decided to study whether non-mammalian orthologs of these three proteins have conserved their function: can they activate the human counterparts? Using the baculovirus expression system, we expressed and purified Danio rerio RET, and its binding partners GFRα1 and GDNF, and Drosophila melanogaster RET and two isoforms of co-receptor GDNF receptor-like. Our results report high-level insect cell expression of post-translationally modified and dimerized zebrafish RET and its binding partners. We also found that zebrafish GFRα1 and GDNF are comparably active as mammalian cell-produced ones. We also report the first measurements of the affinity of the complex to RET in solution: at least for zebrafish, the Kd for GFRα1-GDNF binding RET is 5.9 μM. Surprisingly, we also found that zebrafish GDNF as well as zebrafish GFRα1 robustly activated human RET signaling and promoted the survival of cultured mouse dopaminergic neurons with comparable efficiency to mammalian GDNF, unlike E. coli-produced human proteins. These results contradict previous studies suggesting that mammalian GFRα1 and GDNF cannot bind and activate non-mammalian RET and vice versa.
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.
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.