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Prion diseases, also called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, are a group of fatal neurodegenerative conditions that affect humans and a wide variety of animals. To date there is no therapeutic or prophylactic approach against prion diseases available. The causative infectious agent is the prion, also termed PrPSc, which is a pathological conformer of a cellular protein named prion protein PrPc. Prions are thought to multiply upon conversion of PrPc to PrPSc in a self-propagating manner. Immunotherapeutic strategies directed against PrPc represent a possible approach in preventing or curing prion diseases. Accordingly, it was already shown in animal models, that passive immunization delays the onset of prion diseases. The present thesis aimed at the development of a candidate vaccine towards the active immunization against prion diseases, an immune response, which has to be accompanied by the circumvention of host tolerance to the self-antigen PrPc. The vaccine development was approached using virus-like particles (retroparticles) derived from either the murine leukemia (MLV) or the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The display of PrP on the surface of such particles was addressed for both the cellular and the pathogenic form of PrP. The display of PrPc was achieved by either fusion to the transmembrane domain of the platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) or to the N-terminal part of the viral envelope protein (Env). In both cases, the corresponding PrPD- and PrPE-retroparticles were successfully produced and analyzed via immune fluorescence, Western Blot analysis, immunogold electron microscopy as well as by ELISA methods. Both, PrPD- and PrPE-retroparticles showed effective incorporation of N-terminally truncated forms of PrPc but not for the complete protein. PrPc at this revealed the typical glycosylation pattern, which was specifically removed by a glycosidase enzyme. Upon display of PrPc on retroparticles the protein remained detectable by PrP-specific antibodies under native conditions. Electron microscopy analysis of PrPc-variants revealed no alteration of the characteristic retroviral morphology of the generated particles. MLV-derived PrPD-retroparticles were successfully used in immunization studies. Contrary to approaches using bacterially expressed PrPc, the immunization of mice resulted in a specific antibody response. The display of the pathogenic isoform was aimed by two different strategies. The first one was directed at the conversion of the proteinase K (PK) sensitive from of PrP on the surface of PrPD-retroparticles into the PK resistant form. Albeit specific adaption of the PK digestion assay detecting resistant PrP, no PrP conversion was observed for PrPD-retroparticles. The second approach utilized a replication competent variant of the ecotropic MLV displaying PrPc on the viral Env protein. This MLV variant was stable in cell culture for six passages but did not replicate on scrapie-infected, PrPSc-propagating neuroblastoma cells. Thus, besides PrPc-displaying virus-like particles a replication competent MLV variant was obtained, which stably incorporated PrPc at the N-terminus of the viral Env protein. The incorporation of the cell-surface located PrPc into particles was expected from previously obtained data on protein display in the context of retrovirus-derived particles. Thus, the lack of incorporation observed for the complete PrPc sequence was rather unexpected and was found to be inhibited at both, fusion to PDGFR and the viral Env. In contrast to N-terminally truncated PrPc, the complete PrPc was shown to exhibit increased cell surface internalization rates and half-life times eventually contributing to the observed results. The PrP-vaccination approach described in this work represents the first successful system inducing PrP-specific antibody responses against the prion protein in wt mice. Explanations at this are based on the induction of specific T cell help or effects of the innate immunity, respectively. MLV-and HIV-derived particles bearing the PrP-coding sequence or being replication competent variants generated during this thesis might help to further improve the PrP-specific immune response.
In dieser Arbeit werden Untersuchungen über die Anwendbarkeit von vier Methoden zur selektiven Einführung von Radikalen in DNA vorgestellt. Hierzu wurde die EPR-Spektroskopie (Elektronen-paramagnetische Resonanz) benutzt. Die selektive Einführung und Erzeugung von Radikalen in DNA ist nötig, um J-Kopplungen in DNA zu untersuchen. Vor dem Fernziel der Bestimmung der Austauschkopplungskonstanten J in biradikalischer DNA und deren Korrelation mit der charge-transfer-Geschwindigkeitskonstanten kCT stellen diese Untersuchungen einen wichtigen Ausgangspunkt dar. Stabile aromatische Nitroxide. Simulationen von Raumtemperatur-CW-X-Band-EPRSpektren fünf verschiedener aromatischer Nitroxide, welche potentielle DNA-Interkalatoren sind, wurden durchgeführt. Die aromatischen Nitroxide zeigen aufgelöste Hyperfeinkopplungen, welche zu dem Schluss führen, dass die Spindichte in hohem Maße delokalisiert ist, was die Verwendung dieser Verbindungen zur Messung von J-Kopplungen in biradikalischer DNA erlaubt. Transiente Guanin-Radikale. Transiente Guanin-Radikale werden in DNA selektiv durch die Flash-Quench-Technik erzeugt, bei der optisch anregbare Ruthenium-Interkalatoren verwendet werden. Transiente Thymyl-Radikale aus UV-bestrahltem 4'-Pivaloyl-Thymidin. Es werden photoinduzierte Prozesse untersucht, welche durch Bestrahlung von Thymin-Nukleosiden, die an der 4’-Position die optisch spaltbare Pivaloyl-Gruppe tragen, erzeugt werden. Dieses Nukleosid wurde speziell dafür entworfen, um Elektronenlöcher in DNA zu injizieren. In dieser Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass diese Verbindung benutzt werden kann, um selektiv eine Thymin-Base zu reduzieren. Transiente Thymyl-Radikale erzeugt durch ein neuartig modifiziertes Thymin nach UV-Bestrahlung. Photoinduzierte Prozesse, welche durch Bestrahlung eines ähnlichen Thymidin-Nukleosids erzeugt wurden, werden hier untersucht. Dieses Thymidin- Nukleosid wurde modifiziert, indem die optisch spaltbare Pivaloyl-Gruppe an eine Seitenkette angehängt wurde, welche an der C6-Position der Thymin-Base sitzt. Die Thymin-Base wurde speziell dafür entworfen, um Elektronen in DNA zu injizieren. In dieser Arbeit wurde bestätigt, dass ein Überschuss-Elektron selektiv auf eine Thymin-Base transferiert werden kann.
Die Ermittlung von Proteinstukturen mittels NMR-Spektroskopie ist ein komplexer Prozess, wobei die Resonanzfrequenzen und die Signalintensitäten den Atomen des Proteins zugeordnet werden. Zur Bestimmung der räumlichen Proteinstruktur sind folgende Schritte erforderlich: die Präparation der Probe und 15N/13C Isotopenanreicherung, Durchführung der NMR Experimente, Prozessierung der Spektren, Bestimmung der Signalresonanzen ('Peak-picking'), Zuordnung der chemischen Verschiebungen, Zuordnung der NOESY-Spektren und das Sammeln von konformationellen Strukturparametern, Strukturrechnung und Strukturverfeinerung. Aktuelle Methoden zur automatischen Strukturrechnung nutzen eine Reihe von Computeralgorithmen, welche Zuordnungen der NOESY-Spektren und die Strukturrechnung durch einen iterativen Prozess verbinden. Obwohl neue Arten von Strukturparametern wie dipolare Kopplungen, Orientierungsinformationen aus kreuzkorrelierten Relaxationsraten oder Strukturinformationen, die sich in Gegenwart paramagnetischer Zentren in Proteinen ergeben, wichtige Neuerungen für die Proteinstrukturrechnung darstellen, sind die Abstandsinformationen aus NOESY-Spektren weiterhin die wichtigste Basis für die NMR-Strukturbestimmung. Der hohe zeitliche Aufwand des 'peak-picking' in NOESY-Spektren ist hauptsächlich bedingt durch spektrale Überlagerung, Rauschsignale und Artefakte in NOESY-Spektren. Daher werden für das effizientere automatische 'Peak-picking' zuverlässige Filter benötigt, um die relevanten Signale auszuwählen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird ein neuer Algorithmus für die automatische Proteinstrukturrechnung beschrieben, der automatisches 'Peak-picking' von NOESY-Spektren beinhaltet, die mit Hilfe von Wavelets entrauscht wurden. Der kritische Punkt dieses Algorithmus ist die Erzeugung inkrementeller Peaklisten aus NOESY-Spektren, die mit verschiedenen auf Wavelets basierenden Entrauschungsprozeduren prozessiert wurden. Mit Hilfe entrauschter NOESY-Spektren erhält man Signallisten mit verschiedenen Konfidenzbereichen, die in unterschiedlichen Schritten der kombinierten NOE-Zuordnung/Strukturrechnung eingesetzt werden. Das erste Strukturmodell beruht auf stark entrauschten Spektren, die die konservativste Signalliste mit als weitgehend sicher anzunehmenden Signalen ergeben. In späteren Stadien werden Signallisten aus weniger stark entrauschten Spektren mit einer größeren Anzahl von Signalen verwendet. Die Auswirkung der verschiedenen Entrauschungsprozeduren auf Vollständigkeit und Richtigkeit der NOESY Peaklisten wurde im Detail untersucht. Durch die Kombination von Wavelet-Entrauschung mit einem neuen Algorithmus zur Integration der Signale in Verbindung mit zusätzlichen Filtern, die die Konsistenz der Peakliste prüfen ('Network-anchoring' der Spinsysteme und Symmetrisierung der Peakliste), wird eine schnelle Konvergenz der automatischen Strukturrechnung erreicht. Der neue Algorithmus wurde in ARIA integriert, einem weit verbreiteten Computerprogramm für die automatische NOE-Zuordnung und Strukturrechnung. Der Algorithmus wurde an der Monomereinheit der Polysulfid-Schwefel-Transferase (Sud) aus Wolinella succinogenes verifiziert, deren hochaufgelöste Lösungsstruktur vorher auf konventionelle Weise bestimmt wurde. Neben der Möglichkeit zur Bestimmung von Proteinlösungsstrukturen bietet sich die NMR-Spektroskopie auch als wirkungsvolles Werkzeug zur Untersuchung von Protein-Ligand- und Protein-Protein-Wechselwirkungen an. Sowohl NMR Spektren von isotopenmarkierten Proteinen, als auch die Spektren von Liganden können für das 'Screening' nach Inhibitoren benutzt werden. Im ersten Fall wird die Sensitivität der 1H- und 15N-chemischen Verschiebungen des Proteinrückgrats auf kleine geometrische oder elektrostatische Veränderungen bei der Ligandbindung als Indikator benutzt. Als 'Screening'-Verfahren, bei denen Ligandensignale beobachtet werden, stehen verschiedene Methoden zur Verfügung: Transfer-NOEs, Sättigungstransferdifferenzexperimente (STD, 'saturation transfer difference'), ePHOGSY, diffusionseditierte und NOE-basierende Methoden. Die meisten dieser Techniken können zum rationalen Design von inhibitorischen Verbindungen verwendet werden. Für die Evaluierung von Untersuchungen mit einer großen Anzahl von Inhibitoren werden effiziente Verfahren zur Mustererkennung wie etwa die PCA ('Principal Component Analysis') verwendet. Sie eignet sich zur Visualisierung von Ähnlichkeiten bzw. Unterschieden von Spektren, die mit verschiedenen Inhibitoren aufgenommen wurden. Die experimentellen Daten werden zuvor mit einer Serie von Filtern bearbeitet, die u.a. Artefakte reduzieren, die auf nur kleinen Änderungen der chemischen Verschiebungen beruhen. Der am weitesten verbreitete Filter ist das sogenannte 'bucketing', bei welchem benachbarte Punkte zu einen 'bucket' aufsummiert werden. Um typische Nachteile der 'bucketing'-Prozedur zu vermeiden, wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit der Effekt der Wavelet-Entrauschung zur Vorbereitung der NMR-Daten für PCA am Beispiel vorhandener Serien von HSQC-Spektren von Proteinen mit verschiedenen Liganden untersucht. Die Kombination von Wavelet-Entrauschung und PCA ist am effizientesten, wenn PCA direkt auf die Wavelet-Koeffizienten angewandt wird. Durch die Abgrenzung ('thresholding') der Wavelet-Koeffizienten in einer Multiskalenanalyse wird eine komprimierte Darstellung der Daten erreicht, welche Rauschartefakte minimiert. Die Kompression ist anders als beim 'bucketing' keine 'blinde' Kompression, sondern an die Eigenschaften der Daten angepasst. Der neue Algorithmus kombiniert die Vorteile einer Datenrepresentation im Wavelet-Raum mit einer Datenvisualisierung durch PCA. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass PCA im Wavelet- Raum ein optimiertes 'clustering' erlaubt und dabei typische Artefakte eliminiert werden. Darüberhinaus beschreibt die vorliegende Arbeit eine de novo Strukturbestimmung der periplasmatischen Polysulfid-Schwefel-Transferase (Sud) aus dem anaeroben gram-negativen Bakterium Wolinella succinogenes. Das Sud-Protein ist ein polysulfidbindendes und transferierendes Enzym, das bei niedriger Polysulfidkonzentration eine schnelle Polysulfid-Schwefel-Reduktion katalysiert. Sud ist ein 30 kDa schweres Homodimer, welches keine prosthetischen Gruppen oder schwere Metallionen enthält. Jedes Monomer enhält ein Cystein, welches kovalent bis zu zehn Polysulfid-Schwefel (Sn 2-) Ionen bindet. Es wird vermutet, dass Sud die Polysulfidkette auf ein katalytischen Molybdän-Ion transferiert, welches sich im aktiven Zentrum des membranständigen Enzyms Polysulfid-Reduktase (Psr) auf dessen dem Periplasma zugewandten Seite befindet. Dabei wird eine reduktive Spaltung der Kette katalysiert. Die Lösungsstruktur des Homodimeres Sud wurde mit Hilfe heteronuklearer, mehrdimensionaler NMR-Techniken bestimmt. Die Struktur beruht auf von NOESY-Spektren abgeleiteten Distanzbeschränkungen, Rückgratwasserstoffbindungen und Torsionswinkeln, sowie auf residuellen dipolaren Kopplungen, die für die Verfeinerung der Struktur und für die relative Orientierung der Monomereinheiten wichtig waren. In den NMR Spektren der Homodimere haben alle symmetrieverwandte Kerne äquivalente magnetische Umgebungen, weshalb ihre chemischen Verschiebungen entartet sind. Die symmetrische Entartung vereinfacht das Problem der Resonanzzuordnung, da nur die Hälfte der Kerne zugeordnet werden müssen. Die NOESY-Zuordnung und die Strukturrechnung werden dadurch erschwert, dass es nicht möglich ist, zwischen den Intra-Monomer-, Inter-Monomer- und Co-Monomer- (gemischten) NOESY-Signalen zu unterscheiden. Um das Problem der Symmetrie-Entartung der NOESY-Daten zu lösen, stehen zwei Möglichkeiten zur Verfügung: (I) asymmetrische Markierungs-Experimente, um die intra- von den intermolekularen NOESY-Signalen zu unterscheiden, (II) spezielle Methoden der Strukturrechnung, die mit mehrdeutigen Distanzbeschränkungen arbeiten können. Die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellte Struktur wurde mit Hilfe der Symmetrie-ADR- ('Ambigous Distance Restraints') Methode in Kombination mit Daten von asymetrisch isotopenmarkierten Dimeren berechnet. Die Koordinaten des Sud-Dimers zusammen mit den NMR-basierten Strukturdaten wur- den in der RCSB-Proteindatenbank unter der PDB-Nummer 1QXN abgelegt. Das Sud-Protein zeigt nur wenig Homologie zur Primärsequenz anderer Proteine mit ähnlicher Funktion und bekannter dreidimensionaler Struktur. Bekannte Proteine sind die Schwefeltransferase oder das Rhodanese-Enzym, welche beide den Transfer von einem Schwefelatom eines passenden Donors auf den nukleophilen Akzeptor (z.B von Thiosulfat auf Cyanid) katalysieren. Die dreidimensionalen Strukturen dieser Proteine zeigen eine typische a=b Topologie und haben eine ähnliche Umgebung im aktiven Zentrum bezüglich der Konformation des Proteinrückgrades. Die Schleife im aktiven Zentrum umgibt das katalytische Cystein, welches in allen Rhodanese-Enzymen vorhanden ist, und scheint im Sud-Protein flexibel zu sein (fehlende Resonanzzuordnung der Aminosäuren 89-94). Das Polysulfidende ragt aus einer positiv geladenen Bindungstasche heraus (Reste: R46, R67, K90, R94), wo Sud wahrscheinlich in Kontakt mit der Polysulfidreduktase tritt. Das strukturelle Ergebnis wurde durch Mutageneseexperimente bestätigt. In diesen Experimenten konnte gezeigt werden, dass alle Aminosäurereste im aktiven Zentrum essentiell für die Schwefeltransferase-Aktivität des Sud-Proteins sind. Die Substratbindung wurde früher durch den Vergleich von [15N,1H]-TROSY-HSQC-Spektren des Sud-Proteins in An- und Abwesenheit des Polysulfidliganden untersucht. Bei der Substratbindung scheint sich die lokale Geometrie der Polysulfidbindungsstelle und der Dimerschnittstelle zu verändern. Die konformationellen Änderungen und die langsame Dynamik, hervorgerufen durch die Ligandbindung können die weitere Polysulfid-Schwefel-Aktivität auslösen. Ein zweites Polysulfid-Schwefeltransferaseprotein (Str, 40 kDa) mit einer fünffach höheren nativen Konzentration im Vergleich zu Sud wurde im Bakterienperiplasma von Wolinella succinogenes entdeckt. Es wird angenommen, dass beide Protein einen Polysulfid-Schwefel-Komplex bilden, wobei Str wässriges Polysulfid sammelt und an Sud abgibt, welches den Schwefeltransfer zum katalytischen Molybdän-Ion auf das aktive Zentrum der dem Periplasma zugewandten Seite der Polysulfidreduktase durchführt. Änderungen chemischer Verschiebungen in [15N,1H]-TROSY-HSQC-Spektren zeigen, dass ein Polysulfid-Schwefeltransfer zwischen Str und Sud stattfindet. Eine mögliche Protein-Protein-Wechselwirkungsfläche konnte bestimmt werden. In der Abwesenheit des Polysulfidsubstrates wurden keine Wechselwirkungen zwischen Sud und Str beobachtet, was die Vermutung bestätigt, dass beide Proteine nur dann miteinander wechselwirken und den Polysulfid-Schwefeltransfer ermöglichen, wenn als treibende Kraft Polysulfid präsent ist.
The cytochrome bc1 complex is a cornerstone in bioenergetic electron transfer chains, where it carries out tasks as diverse as respiration, photosynthesis, and nitrogen fixation. This homodimeric multisubunit membrane protein has been studied extensively for several decades and the enzyme mechanism is described with the modified protonmotive Q cycle. Still, the molecular and kinetic description of the catalytic cycle is not complete and questions remain regarding the bifurcation of electron transfer at the quinol oxidation (Qo) site, substrate occupancy, pathways of proton conduction, and the nature of the Rieske protein domain movement. We used competitive inhibitors to study the molecular architecture at the Qo site with X-ray crystallography. The structure of the enzyme with the substrate analog 5-n-heptyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (HHDBT) bound at the Qo site was determined at 2.5 Å resolution. Spectroscopic studies showed that HHDBT is negatively charged when bound at the active site. Mechanistic interpretations from inhibitor binding are in line with single occupancy model for quinol oxidation and structural analysis supports the proposed proton transfer pathway. For functional insight into the enzyme mechanism, redox-sensitive protonation changes were studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The protein purification procedure was optimized for less delipidation and the isolated enzyme was more active. Furthermore, two new phospholipids were identified in the X-ray structures, including a cardiolipin. Strikingly, conserved lipid binding cavities were observed in structural comparison with homologous enzymes. The functional role of tightly bound phospholipids will be discussed. Finally, the Qo site is a target for various compounds of agricultural and pharmaceutical importance. Importantly, the X-ray structures permit detailed analysis of the molecular reasons for acquired resistance to and treatment failure of Qo site inhibitors, such as atovaquone, that is used to treat malaria and pneumonia, as discussed herein.
The cytochrome bc1 complex or ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (QCR) catalyses electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c in respiration and photosynthesis coupled to a vectorial proton transport across the membrane, in which the enzyme resides. In both bacteria and eukaryotic organisms, QCR participates in supramolecular assembly of membrane proteins that comprise the respiratory or photosynthetic chain. In the present work, proton transfer pathways, substrate binding and the supramolecular assembly of the respiratory chain in yeast were probed by structure-based site-directed mutagenesis and characterization of the variants. Both active sites centre P, the place of quinol oxidation, and centre N, where quinone reduction takes place, lack direct access to the bulk solvent necessary for proton release and uptake. Based on the X-ray structure, proton transfer pathways were postulated. Analysis at centre P showed, that E272 and Y132 of cytochrome b are important for QCR catalysis as indicated by increased superoxide production and lowered Cyc1p reductase activity in these variants. Pre-steady state heme reduction kinetics in combination with stigmatellin resistance indicated that charge and length of the side chain at position 272 are crucial for efficient docking of the ISP to form the enzyme substrate complex and for electron bifurcation at centre P. Variants of Y312 and F129, both residues of cytochrome b, showed an increased Km indicating participation of these residues in coordination of ubiquinol or the possible intermediate semiquinone anion radical. F129 proved to be crucial for a functional Q-cycle as indicated by respiratory negative growth phenotype and a lowered H+/e- stoichiometry of F129 variants. At centre N, the postulated CL/K and E/R proton transfer pathways are located at opposite sites of the bound ubiquinone. Variants in the surface residues R218 (cytochrome b) and E52 (Qcr7) of the E/R pathway and E82 (Qcr7) of the CL/K pathway showed instability upon purification indicating an important role of these residues for QCR integrity. The slowed down centre N reduction kinetics in H85 (CL/K), R218 and N208 (both E/R) variant was attributed to a destabilised semiquinone anion consistent with the observed decreased sensitivity towards the site-specific inhibitor antimycin and an increased Km. Variants of residues of both pathway, E82Q and R218M, exhibited a decreased H+/e- stoichiometry indicating a crucial role of both residue for maintaining a working Q-cycle and supporting the proposed protonation of the substrate via the Cl/K and the E/R pathway. Long-range interaction between centre N and centre P were observed by altered reduction kinetics of the high potential chain and increased superoxide production in the centre N variants. The role of the cation-pi-interaction between F230 of Cyt1p and R19 of cytochrome c in binding of the redox carrier to QCR was analysed. In F230L hydrophobic interaction were partially lost as was deduced from the ionic strength dependence of Cyc1p reductase activity and Cycp1 binding, as detected by ionic strength sensitive Kd and Km for Cyc1p. The decreased enzymatic rate of F230W could be explained by a disturbed binding of Cyc1p to the variant enzyme. F230 may influence the heme mid point potential and thereby the electron transfer rate to Cyc1p. Reduction of Cobp via both centre P and centre N was disturbed suggesting an interaction between high and low potential chain. Supramolecular association between QCR and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) in yeast mitochondria was probed by affinity chromatography of a his-tagged QCR in the presence of the mild detergent digitonin. In comparison to purification with laurylmaltoside, the presence of both QCR and COX subunits was detected in the elution fractions by SDS-PAGE, Cyc1p reductase and TMPD oxidase activity assays and immunoblot analysis. The CL-dependent formation of the supercomplex between QCR and COX was analysed by replacement variants in the CL-binding site of QCR in CL containing and CL free environment. With an increasing number of replacements of the three lysines the CL-binding pocket supercomplex formation was not abolished, when CL is present as shown by BN-PAGE analysis. This was supported by the synergetic decrease in enzyme activity for both enzymes upon increased number of replacements. In the CL-free environment, no supracomplex formation was observed for a wildtype CL binding site. By replacements of two lysines in the CL-binding pocket, supercomplex formation could be recovered as revealed by BN-PAGE. This indicates, that CL may serve as a charge neutralizer for the lysines near the presumed interaction domain between complex III and complex IV. The obtained results for centre P provide new information of residues critical for stabilisation of ubiquinol and controlling electron short circuit reactions. The observations for centre N variants clearly support the proposed two proton transfer pathways and the role of the bound phospholipids in centre N kinetics. Variants in the Cyc1p binding site suggest a role for F230 both in Cyc1p binding and electron transfer. Clear interaction between the high and low potential chain in both Cyt1p and centre N variants strongly support long-range interactions in the complex. Studies on the supramolecular association of complex III and complex IV indicate a new role of Cl in stabilising a supracomplex.
Proton-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) transports two electrons from NADH to membranal ubiquinone: in this process protons are translocated across the membrane, producing 40% of the total proton gradient between matrix side and intermembrane space. Mitochondrial complex I contains at least 46 subunits in mammals, and has a molecular weight of around 1000 kDa. Electronic microscopy analysis showed that complex I has an L-form, which consists of two domains: a peripheral “arm” (hydrophilic domain) and a membrane “arm” (hydrophobic domain). The peripheral domain, which protrudes into the matrix, contains one non-covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and the iron-sulfur clusters N1a, N1b, N2, N3, N4 and N5 as redox active groups. They transport electrons from NADH to ubiquinone. Cluster N2 is supposed to be the immediate electron donor to ubiquinone by virtue of its highest and pH dependent redox midpoint potential (Em,7 –150 mV). The exact location of the tetra-nuclear cluster N2 is still object of discussion. The TYKY and the PSST subunits contain three binding motifs for tetranuclear clusters which are formed by twelve cysteins. In an effort to investigate the “ubiquinone reduction module” of complex I, in the first part of this work site directed mutagenesis of the TYKY and PSST subunits has been carried out. Mutant strains were characterised in terms of complex I content, catalytic activity and EPR signature of cluster N2. The second part of this work was aimed at developing a substrate inducible version of the internal alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (NDH2i). A substrate inducible NDH2i is expected to offer a “switch” between complex I activity dependent (no NDH2i activity) and independent (NDH2i activity) cell growth, by changing between activating and non-activating substrates. This strategy would allow the screening for two types of complex I mutants, which is a prerequisite for realising a random PCR mutagenesis of single subunits of complex I, that allows the production of a high number of point mutations in relatively short time. Y. lipolytica complex I deficiency mutant strains could be easily identified, by virtue of their inability to survive under complex I dependent growth conditions (no NDH2i activity). By this way, amino acids that have an important role for complex I structure or function could be identified by subsequent sequence analysis. Each of the twelve cysteines that form the above mentioned three binding motifs for iron-sulfur cluster have been mutagenised. In mutant mitochondrial membranes, no assembled complex I could be detected. From these data one may conclude that the mutagenised 6 SUMMARY 92 cysteines play an important role for complex I stability, or that are a prerequisite for complex I assembly in Y. lipolytica, but there is not direct evidence indicating that any of the four mutagenised residues acts as a ligand. Two aspartates in the PSST subunit, Asp-99 and Asp-115, were found to be essential for complex I catalytic activity. EPR spectroscopic analysis indicated that the electron transfer to N2 cluster was not blocked and implied that this was not the reason for the loss of catalytic activity. From these data it can be concluded that D99 and D115 play a vital role for complex I NADH:ubiquinone reductase activity, but are not ligands for cluster N2 and that their position is not close enough to the cluster to influence directly its electromagnetic environment. Three mutations, identified in the PSST and TYKY homologous subunits of patients affected with Leigh syndrome (V119M in PSST, P78L and R101H in TYKY) were reconstructed in the obligate aerobic yeast Y. lipolytica. This approach may help to understand the aetiology of the Leigh syndrome, in terms of the ability of complex I to oxidize NADH and to transport electrons. In fact, all three mutations showed effects on electron transport, reducing the VMax by about 50%. Mutant V119M in the PSST subunit, which had a lethal effect in two patients that were homozygous for this mutation, affects a fully conserved residue. Overall, the results from site directed mutagenesis carried out so far support the theory that the “catalytic core ” (N2 cluster and quinone binding site) of complex I has been evolved from the electron transfer module of the [Ni-Fe] hydrogenases. In fact, mutagenesis of residues that are fully conserved between complex I and [Ni-Fe] hydrogenases, showed dramatic effects on complex I in terms of assembly (cysteine mutants) or catalytic activity (D99-D115). Differently, changing aspartate 174 and glutamic acid 185 (not fully conserved, Fig 4.1A) had little or no effect on the Michaelis-Menten parameters and N2 EPR signal. In recent years Y. lipolytica has been developed as a yeast genetic system to study mitochondrial complex I. The present work introduced the promoter for the isocitrate lyase (pICL1) as a useful tool for the substrate selective expression of the internal version of the alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (pICL1-NDH2i). This allows to rescue complex I deficiencies “in vivo” selectively by growth on acetate (or ethanol) medium. The integration of the pICL1-NDH2i construct into the genome of Y. lipolytica and subsequent deletion of nuclear-coded subunits like PSST, TYKY and 49 kDa, would contribute to further develop this organism as a useful genetic model for studying subunits of mitochondrial complex I by site directed mutagenesis.
A new experimental setup, for pump-probe fs DFWM measurements, which is based on a femtosecond laser system, has been constructed. It allows for the investigation of molecular species in the gas phase at different temperatures, from ~30 K in a seeded supersonic jet up to ~500 K in a heat-pipe oven. In comparison to other RCS methods the employed fs DFWM technique is less complicated and gives much higher signal-to-noise ratio [BFZ86, FeZ95a, CKS89, CCH90, HCF91, WRM02, Rie02]. A general computer code for the simulation of fs DFWM spectra of nonrigid asymmetric top molecules has been developed. This new DFWM code in combination with a non-linear fitting routine allows one to determine rotational and centrifugal distortion constants and obtain information on the polarizability tensor components from the experimental spectra. Fs DFWM spectroscopy was successfully applied to the medium-sized molecules benzene and benzene-d6 in a gas cell and in a supersonic jet. The spectrum from a seeded expansion has been measured up to delay time of 3.9 ns (restricted by the length of the delay stage) with excellent signal-to-noise ratio (102-103). In that way 87 and 72 J-type transients have been recorded for benzene and benzene-d6, correspondingly. A relative accuracy on the order of 10-5 has been achieved for the rotational constant. From the room temperature experiments, precise values of centrifugal distortion constants DJ and DJK have been extracted. The literature data for cyclohexane have been revised and a new precise rotational constant B0 has been obtained, which is (+5.5 MHz) shifted from the one reported in the former Raman investigation by Peters et al. [PWW73]. Additionally, high-level ab initio calculations of cyclohexane have been carried out using a large number of basis sets at several levels of theory. In particular, the vibrational averaging effects have been examined in order to critically compare the experimentally determined and theoretically evaluated rotational constants. The contribution of highly symmetric vibrational modes to vibrational averaging effects was clarified. More structural information could be obtained from fs DFWM measurements of asymmetric top species, since different type of rotational recurrences can appear, and all three rotational constants (A, B, C) can be extracted. On the other hand the analysis of the asymmetric top spectra is no longer trivial. In fact the simple formula for rotational recurrence periods of symmetric top species (Tab. 2.1) can not be applied to asymmetric top molecules. Thus, in order to extract high-resolution data for asymmetric species, a complete fitting of the experimental spectra is necessary. The fs DFWM and (1+2') PPI method have been applied to the asymmetric top molecules pyridine in the ground (S0) and pDFB in the S0 and electronically excited (S1) states. By fitting the measured fs DFWM spectra the rotational and centrifugal distortion constants have been extracted with good precision and the value of the parametrized polarizability angle of pDFB was obtained. In this work, the first application of fs DFWM spectroscopy to a molecular cluster has been reported. Also, the chemical equilibrium between monomeric and dimeric species was studied. In particular formic and acetic acid have been investigated in a gas cell and in a supersonic expansion. Many spectral features have been observed and analized in the fs DFWM spectrum of formic acid vapor in a gas cell at room temperature. Most of them were attributed to rotational recurrences of the formic acid monomer, but also spectral feature originating from the formic acid dimer of O-H×××O/O×××H-O type have been detected and analyzed. From the fitted simulation, the rotational and centrifugal distortion constants, and parametrized polarizability angle were extracted for the dimeric structure of O-H×××O/O×××HO type. With the assumption of unperturbed monomers a center-of-mass distance of R = 2.990 ± 0.001 Å for the monomers within the dimer has been calculated from the spectroscopic results. This distance is 0.028 Å smaller than that reported from electron diffraction [ABM69]. Thus, the centers-of-mass distance was assigned as the main point of disagreement between results of fs DFWM and electron diffraction experiments. In contrast to formic acid, acetic acid shows strong recurrences from dimeric species even in the fs DFWM spectra at room temperature. This is explained in terms of different symmetry of the moments-of-inertia tensor, which modulates the intensity of RRs (the fs DFWM signal is in general stronger from symmetric species). Due to the symmetric nature of the acetic acid dimer, only the sum (B+C) of the rotational constants has been extracted. The changes of geometrical parameters upon dimer formation have been analyzed for, both, formic and acetic acid. A heat-pipe oven has been used in order to overcome the main drawback of fs DFWM spectroscopy – the square dependence of the signal intensity on the sample number density. Two-ring molecules (cyclohexylbenzene, para-cyclohexylaniline and nicotine) with low vapor pressure (<0.1 mbar) at room temperature have been investigated. From the analysis of the experimental and ab-initio results for CHB and pCHA a nearly perpendicular conformation of the aromatic vs. cyclohexane ring for both system is inferred. The enlargement of the benzene ring of CHB in the electronically excited state (S1) has been found to cause the smaller rotational constants in S1. This conclusion has been drawn from the comparison of the ground and electronically excited state experimental rotational constants in combination with ab-initio calculations. The extraction of precise structural information for nicotine was not possible due to it weak fs DFWM signal. However, the fact that fs DFWM technique can be applied to conformational analysis of molecular species in an equilibrium mixture opens other applications for this kind of spectroscopy. In general the results obtained in this work show that the fs DFWM technique, being an experimental implementation of RCS, provides one with an important tool for structural analysis of molecular species in the gas phase in particular for the species to which microwave spectroscopy can not be applied. It gives spectra with excellent signal-to-noise ratio even at low number density samples expanded in a seeded supersonic jet. It provides an alternative and innovative approach towards rotational Raman spectroscopy of large polyatomic molecules applicable under various experimental conditions (broad temperature and pressure range). With the introduction of femtosecond (10-15s) laser pulses (usually picosecond (10-12s) laser pulses were used in RCS) an improvement in time-resolution and therefore in precision for the rotational constants by more than one order of magnitude has been achieved. Molecular systems in the ground electronic state without permanent dipole moment and chromophore can be studied with high precision, providing thereby molecular benchmark systems for the electronic structure theory. As has been shown, the study of molecular clusters by fs DFWM spectroscopy is possible, but its potential are restricted by the square dependence of the fs DFWM signal from the sample number density, which is even more important for supersonic jet expansions. Here, the application of near-resonant and resonant FWM schemes should help in order to compensate for the low sample concentration. With the introduction of the heat pipe oven for fs DFWM experiments, the investigation of large nonvolatile molecules under equilibrium conditions is possible now. In our laboratory the first results on the structural analysis of different conformers of pyrrolidine in the gas phase have been obtained [MaR04]. This method can have even more prospects for the structural investigations of large molecular species in combination with new non-thermal gas phase sources for nonvolatile molecules, like laser desorption [CTL89], laser oblation [MHL83], electrospray [FMM90], laser induced liquid beam ion desorption [KAB96, Sob00] etc. A very recent application of the fs DFWM technique is the investigation of the influence of strong laser fields on molecular gas phase sample, which could range from active alignment [PPB03] over molecular deformation to field ionization [CSD03]. In regards to future development in fs DFWM spectroscopy for more complex molecules one has to take into account, how large amplitude motions such as the van der Waals vibrations or internal rotation (see section 6.4.2) affect the rotational coherences. In any case, femtosecond Degenerate Four-Wave Mixing as experimental implementation of Rotational Coherence Spectroscopy can be considered as an innovative, developing, and powerful method for the structural investigation of the molecular species, which are hard to study by classical frequency-resolved spectroscopy [FeZ95a, Dan01, Rie02].
Nitric oxide (NO) represents a short-lived mediator that pivotally drives keratinocyte movements during cutaneous wound healing. In this study, we have identified p68 DEAD box RNA helicase (p68) from a NO-induced differential keratinocyte cDNA library. Subsequently, we have analyzed regulation of p68 by wound-associated mediators in the human keratinocyte cell line HaCaT. NO, serum, growth factors and pro-inflammatory cytokines were potent inducers of p68 expression in the cells. p68 was constitutively expressed in murine skin, but rapidly down-regulated upon injury. The down-regulation appeared to be transient, as p68 protein expression increased again after the inflammatory phase of repair. However, p68 protein expression did not completely disappear during wound inflammation, as immunohistochemistry and cell fractiona tion analysis revealed a restricted localization of p68 in keratinocyte nuclei of the developing epithelium. In line, cultured human (HaCaT) and murine (PAM 212) keratinocyte cell lines showed a nuclear localization of the helicase. Moreover, confocal microscopy revealed a strong localization of p68 protein within the nucleoli of the keratinocytes. Functional analyses demonstrated that p68 strongly participates in keratinocyte proliferation and gene expression. Keratinocytes that constitutively overexpressed p68 protein were characterized by a marked increase in serum-induced proliferation and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression, whereas down-regulation of endogenous p68 using small interfering RNA (siRNA) markedly attenuated serum-induced proliferation and VEGF expression. Altogether, our results suggest a tightly controlled expression and nucleolar localization of p68 in keratinocytes in vitro and during skin repair in vivo that functionally contributes to keratinocyte proliferation and gene expression.
The detailed mechanism of the 20 S proteasome from Thermoplasma acidophilum is unknown. Substrates are degraded processively to small fragments without the release of intermediates, but the basis for this unique degradation mode remains obscure. The proteasome is a molecular machine, but how the different nanocompartments interplay and whether more than one substrate can be treated simultaneously has not been elucidated yet. To address these questions we had to disable the functionality of one aperture in order to dissect whether the other pore can compensate for the loss. As it is challenging to introduce mutations solely around one pore aperture of the highly symmetrical construct, we chose a novel approach by unique orientation of the proteasome at interfaces. For this purpose we purified recombinant 20 S proteasomes, where hexahistidine tags were fused either around the entrances or at the sides. According to electron microscopic studies we immobilized these constructs uniformly either end-on or side-on at metal-chelating interfaces (lipid vesicles, lipid monolayers and self-assembled thiol monolayers). Degradation of small fluorogenic peptides and large proteins like casein was analyzed. Small substrates were degraded with comparable activity by free and immobilized proteasomes, irrespective of their orientation. Thus it can be assumed that peptides can pass the sealed entrance of the 'dead-end' proteasome. However, larger substrates like fluorescently labeled casein were processed near the temperature optimum by side-on immobilized and soluble proteasomes with threefold activity compared to end-on immobilized proteasomes. Hence it can be concluded that one pore is sufficient for substrate entry and product release. In other words, the pore and antechamber can fulfil a triple function in the import and unwinding of substrates and the egress of products. With means of surface plasmon resonance the exact substrate/proteasome stoichiometry could be determined to ~1 for 'dead-end' proteasomes and ~2 for side-on immobilized (active and inactive) proteasomes. Most importantly, a fit with the Hill equation revealed positive cooperativity for side-on immobilized (Hill coefficient ~2) in contrast to end-on immobilized proteasomes (Hill coefficient ~1). Thus in case of soluble proteasomes two substrates bind presumably in opposite antechambers with positive cooperativity. The off-rate of casein as substrate is twofold for the active side-on immobilized proteasome in comparison to the end-on immobilized proteasome. The exact 2:1 stoichiometry of the off-rates equals the ratio of exit pathways amenable in case of side-on orientated versus 'dead-end' immobilized proteasomes. Thus crevices along the cylindrical body of the 20 S proteasome seem not to participate in the egress of small products. An inactive proteasome mutant displays a concentration-dependent off-kinetic against casein. Accordingly, the off-rate of the bisubstrate:proteasome complex can be attributed around half the value of the monosubstrate:proteasome complex. Consequently, substrates exit the inactive proteasome via the route of access due to obstruction of the trans side with an entering substrate. Hence the active proteasomes have to chop substrates down to small fragments prior to release through both pores. Thus the processive degradation mode might result from positive binding cooperativity. The on-rate constants for casein suggested that substrate association represents a two-step process comprising a rate-limiting translocation step and a fast binding step. As fluorescence cross-correlation revealed that two substrates can be co-localized in the proteasome and bind successively with increasing affinity (KD,1 = 8 µM versus KD,2 = 700 nM), an allosteric transition in the proteasome can be assumed. Combining our results with the data from other research groups led to a mechanistic model for the 20 S proteasome. Accordingly, the first substrate undergoes a slow translocation step, binds in the antechamber and diffuses subsequently to the catalytic centers, where it is degraded. By switching on the catalytic activity, the pores at both termini are dilated via conformational changes. Hence entry of the second substrate into the proteasome is facilitated due to omission of the rate-determining translocation step. The second substrate is either accommodated in the antechamber before it is processed (alternating degradation) or, most probably, is directly threaded into the central cavity (simultaneous degradation). As effusing peptides compete with entering proteins for binding in the antechamber, the pores are kept in an open state. After finishing digestion the pores are closed and a new degradation cycle can be reinitiated. In summary, substrate association with the proteasome underlies an ordered alternating binding mechanism in contrast to the random mode of degradation. Thus the two-stroke engine offers the advantage of speeding up degradation without enhancing complexity.
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) plays a pivotal role in the adaptive immune response against virus-infected or malignantly transformed cells. As member of the ABC transporter family, TAP hydrolyzes ATP to energize the transport of antigenic peptides from the cytosol into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. TAP forms a heterodimeric complex composed of TAP1 and TAP2 (ABCB2/3). Both subunits contain a hydrophobic transmembrane domain and a hydrophilic nucleotide-binding domain. The aim of this work was to study the ATP hydrolysis event of the TAP complex and gain further insights into the mechanism of peptide transport process. To analyze ATP hydrolysis of each subunit I developed a method of trapping 8- azido-nucleotides to TAP in the presence of phosphate transition state analogs followed by photocross-linking, immunoprecipitation, and high-resolution SDS-PAGE. Strikingly, trapping of both TAP subunits by beryllium fluoride is peptide-specific. The peptide concentration required for half-maximal trapping is identical for TAP1 and TAP2 and directly correlates with the peptide-binding affinity. Only background levels of trapping were observed for low affinity peptides or in the presence of the herpes simplex viral protein ICP47, which specifically blocks peptide binding to TAP. Importantly, the peptideinduced trapped state is reached after ATP hydrolysis and not in a backward reaction of ADP binding and trapping. In the trapped state, TAP can neither bind nor exchange nucleotides, whereas peptide binding is not affected. In summary, these data support the model that peptide binding induces a conformation that triggers ATP hydrolysis in both subunits of the TAP complex within the catalytic cycle. The role of the ABC signature motif (C-loop) on the functional non-equivalence of the NBDs was investigated. The C-loops of TAP transporter contain a canonical C-loop (LSGGQ) for TAP1 and a degenerated ABC signature motif (LAAGQ) for TAP2. Mutation of the leucine or glycine (LSGGQ) in TAP1 fully abolished peptide transport. TAP complexes with equivalent mutations in TAP2 showed however still residual peptide transport activity. To elucidate the origin of the asymmetry of the NBDs of TAP, we further examined TAP complexes with exchanged C-loops. Strikingly, the chimera with two canonical C-loops showed the highest transport rate whereas the chimera with two degenerated C-loops had the lowest transport rate, demonstrating that the ABC signature motifs control the peptide transport efficiency. All single-site mutants and chimeras showed similar activities in peptide or ATP binding, implying that these mutations affect the ATPase activity of TAP. In addition, these results prove that the serine of the C-loop is not essential for TAP function, but rather coordinates, together with other residues of the C-loop, the ATP hydrolysis in both nucleotide-binding sites. To study the coupling between the ATP binding/hydrolysis and the peptide binding, the putative catalytic bases of the TAP complex were mutated to generate the so-called EQ mutants. The mutations did not influence the peptide-binding ability. Dimerization of the NBDs of EQ mutants upon ATP binding does not alter the peptide binding property. At 27°C, both ATP and ADP could induce the loss of peptide-binding ability (Bmax) only in the variants bearing a mutated TAP2. Further studies are required to deduce at which stage in the catalytic cycle the peptide-binding site is affected. In addition, mutation of the putative catalytic base of both subunits showed a magnesium-dependent peptide transport activity, demonstrating these mutants did not abolish the ATP hydrolysis. Thus, the function of this acidic residue as the catalytic base is not likely to be universe for all ABC transporters.
Ligands of Iron-Sulphur Cluster N2: In this work the ubiquinone reducing catalytic core of NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from Y. lipolytica was studied by a series of point mutations replacing conserved histidines or arginines in the 49-kDa subunit. Although the missing 4th ligand of cluster N2 could not be found in the 49-kDa subunit of complex I, it was clearly demonstrated that iron-sulphur cluster N2 resides directly on the interface between the PSST and 49-kDa subunits. The results presented in this work show that residues in the 49-kDa subunit have strong influence on this redox centre and also on catalytic activity. The strong influence of Arg-141 and His-226 residues in 49-kDa subunit on this cluster can be deducted from complete loss of N2 signals in EPR spectra such as in case of mutants H226A and R141A. In the case of mutant H226M the EPR signal from cluster N2 was shifted and cluster N2 even lost the pH dependence of its redox midpoint potential and became more similar to the other so called 'isopotential' clusters. Specifically in the case of mutants R141M and R141K the characteristic signature of cluster N2 became undetectable in EPR spectra. However, specific dNADH:DBQ oxidoreductase activity that could be inhibited with the specific complex I inhibitors DQA and rotenone was not absolutely abolished but rather reduced. These reductions in complex I activity did not correspond to similar reductions in the specific EPR signal of cluster N2 as it was observed in the His-226 mutant series. No indications could be found that these mutations had modified the magnetic properties of cluster N2, resulting in different EPR spectra. From these observations it could be concluded that both mutants R141K and R141M virtually or entirely lack iron-sulphur cluster N2. The rates in complex I activity could be reconciled with electron transfer theory: After removal of a single redox centre in a chain, electron transfer rates are predicted to be still much faster than steady-state turnover of complex I. These results from mutants R141K, R141M and also the result from mutant H226M that protons are being pumped even if the redox midpoint potential of cluster N2 is not pH dependent questions the prominent role in the catalytic mechanism of complex I that has been ascribed to cluster N2. Histidine 91 and 95 were found to be absolutely essential for activity of complex I since in both mutants complex I was fully assembled and artificial NADH:HAR activity was parental whereas complex I specific dNADH:DBQ activity was abolished. The signal from cluster N2 in EPR spectra was parental for all His-91 and -95 mutants. Mutations at the C-terminal arginine 466 affected ubiquinone affinity and inhibitor sensitivity but also destabilised complex I. All these results provide further support for a high degree of structural conservation between the 49-kDa subunit of complex I and the large subunit of water soluble [NiFe] hydrogenases. Remodelling of Human Pathogenic 49-kDa Mutations in Y. lipolytica: Y. lipolytica has been proven a good system for studying complex I properties and thus also for studying defects that occur in humans. In this work pathogenic mutations in the 49-kDa subunit of complex I were recreated and studied. The P232Q mutant showed non-assembly of complex I and this is probably the cause why this mutation was lethal in patients. The mutants R231Q and S416P were parental for the content, artificial and also specific complex I activity, Km for DBQ and IC50 for DQA. From these results we can conclude that these two residues Arg-228 and Ser-413 in mammalian cells have specific structural importance for the 49-kDa subunit even if they are not directly involved in catalytic process.
The endothelin B receptor belongs to the rhodopsin-like G-protein coupled receptors family. It plays an important role in vasodilatation and is found in the membranes of the endothelial cells enveloping blood vessels. During the course of this work, the production of recombinant human ETB receptor in yeast, insect and mammalian cells was evaluated. A number of different receptor constructs for production in the yeast P. pastoris was prepared. Various affinity tags were appended to the receptor N-and C-termini to enable receptor detection and purification. The clone pPIC9KFlagHisETBBio, with an expression level of 60 pmol/mg, yielded the highest amount of active receptor (1.2 mg of receptor per liter of shaking culture). The expression level of the same clone in fermentor culture was 17 pmol/mg, and from a 10L fermentor it was possible to obtain 3 kg of cells that contained 20-39 mg of the receptor. For receptor production in insect cells, Sf9 (S. frugiperda) suspension cells were infected with the recombinant baculovirus pVlMelFlagHisETBBio. The peak of receptor production was reached at 66 h post infection, and radioligand binding assays on insect cell membranes showed 30 pmoL of active receptor /mg of membrane protein. Subsequently, the efficiency of different detergents in solubilizing the active receptor was evaluated. N-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside (LM), lauryl-sucrose and digitonine/cholate performed best, and LM was chosen for further work. The ETB receptor was produced in mammalian cells using the Semliki Forest Virus expression system. Radioligand binding assays on membranes from CHO cells infected with the recombinant virus pSFV3CAPETBHis showed 7 pmol of active receptor /mg of membrane protein. Since the receptor yield from mammalian cells was much lower than in yeast and insect cells, this system was not used for further large-scale receptor production. After production in yeast and insect cells, the ETB receptor was saturated with its ligand, endothelin-1, in order to stabilize its native form. The receptor was subsequently solubilized with n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside and subjected to purification on various affinity matrices. Two-step affinity purification via Ni2+-NTA and monomeric avidin proved the most efficient way to purify milligram amounts of the receptor. The purity of the receptor preparation after this procedure was over 95%, as judged from silver stained gels. However, the tendency of the ETB receptor produced in yeast to form aggregates was a constant problem. Attempts were made to stabilize the active, monomeric form of the receptor by testing a variety of different buffer conditions, but further efforts in this direction will be necessary in order to solve the aggregation problem. In contrast to preparations from yeast, the purification of the ETB receptor produced in insect cells yielded homogeneous receptor preparations, as shown by gel filtration analysis. This work has demonstrated that the amounts of receptor expressed in yeast and insect cells and the final yield of receptor, isolated by purification, represent a good basis for beginning 3D and continuing 2D crystallization trials.
In the recent years, high-resolution conditions have been established in solid-state NMR by the combination of magic angle spinning, state-of-the-art r.f. pulse schemes and the introduction of ultra-high magnetic fields. Similar to what is now routine in solution-state NMR, this has opened the way for structure determination by HR-SSNMR methods. Complete structural or dynamical characterization of the biomolecule of interest is most easily achieved if multiple or even uniformly [13C, 15N]-labeled versions are studied. In a first step, experiments that allow the complete assignment of the 13C and 15N resonances have been recently designed. To date, nearly complete chemical shift assignments were reported for two well-ordered proteins, the ±-spectrin SH3 domain and the Crh protein. The SSNMR analysis of the later protein has been presented in Section 4.1. For SSNMR applications, not the molecular size or solubility, but the spectral resolution can be of crucial importance. Experimental parameters and sample inherent conditions such molecular disorder may reduce the overall spectral dispersion. In these circumstances, techniques that allow for spectral simplification without the need of elaborated biochemical procedures (of isotopelabeling) are of special importance. In Section 2, several spectral editing methods have been proposed. These methods not only select resonances due to changesin the physical and chemical environment of the nucleus but they can also directly probe molecular properties such as dynamics and conformational heterogeneity. Once the chemical shifts are available for the biomolecule of interest, methods that permit to obtain structural restraints can be applied. In the case of multiply isotope labeled proteins, such techniques can in principle result in multiple structural parameters. In Section 3.1, we have shown that, similar to solution-state NMR, secondary chemical shifts can be readily employed to study the local backbone conformation. Inaddition, distance constraints between protons may be encoded in high-resolution on rare spins like 13C and 15N and measured. Finally, carbon-carbon constraints may be probed by employing frequency selective r.f. pulse schemes. These dihedral and distance constraints may subsequently lead to the determination of protein secondary to tertiary structure from a single protein sample. In Section 4.2,we have shown that high-affinity ligand binding to membrane proteins can be investigated with solid-state NMR. Here, the neuropeptide neurotensin which binds to the Gprotein coupled receptor NTS1 in sub-nanomolar affinity was investigated.Except for the case of rhodopsin, there is currently no information on the high-resolution structure of any other GPCR or a corresponding high-affinity ligand.Our SSNMR results identify, for the first time, a distinct binding mode of neurotensin that could be of considerable relevance for further pharmacological studies. As exemplified in section 4.3, HR-SSNMR based structural studies can also assist in refining existing (X-ray or solution-state NMR) membrane-protein structures. The presented results provide, for the first time, direct experimental evidence for a double occupancy of the Q0 binding site in the ubiquinone-bc1 complex and may provide the basis for the complete 3D structural determination of the ubiquinone binding pocket. Advancements regarding sample preparation (for example, including modular labeling, in vitro expression and intein technology) and improvements in NMR hardware instrumentation could open up new areas of solid-state NMR research such as the investigation of large protein-protein complexes or the complete 3D characterization of larger membrane proteins. Solid-state NMR studies of multiply-labeled biomolecules will furthermore profit from improved procedures for calculating 3D structures, in particular in the presence of ambiguousor a limited number of structural constraints. Unlike X-ray crystallography, protein motion does not hinder solid-state NMR methods. In fact, complementary to solution-state NMR, it may provide a very efficient means to study protein folding, flexibility and function under biologically relevant conditions. Hand in hand with solution-state techniques and crystallographic methods, solid-state NMR could provide insight into protein function and the chemistry of life with unprecedented accuracy and flexibility.
Mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are found in all eukaryotic cells and represent crucial elements in the signal transduction from the plasma membrane to the nucleus. Although a broad variety of extracellular stimuli activate MAPKs, they evoke very distinct cellular responses. The amplitude and duration of MAPK activation determine signal identity and ultimately cell fate. A tight and finely tuned regulation is therefore critical for a specific cellular response. The role and the regulation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 5 (ERK5), a MAPK with a large and unique C-terminal tail, were studied in different cellular systems. The study highlights two aspects of ERK5 regulation: control of the phosphorylation state and regulated protein stability. In analogy to other MAPKs ERK5 is activated by dual phosphorylation of threonine and tyrosine residues in its activation motif. A first part of the study concentrates on whether and how the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP-SL is involved in the downregulation of the ERK5 signal. The direct interaction of both proteins is shown to result in mutual modulation of their enzymatic activities. PTP-SL is a substrate of ERK5 and, independent of its phosphorylation, binding to the kinase enhances its catalytic phosphatase activity. On the other hand, interaction with PTP-SL does not only downregulate enzymatic ERK5 activity but also effectively impedes its translocation to the nucleus. The second part of this study focuses on the interaction of ERK5 with c-Abl and its oncogenic variants Bcr/Abl and v-Abl. In this study these tyrosine kinases are demonstrated to regulate ERK5 by two mechanisms: first, by induction of kinase activity and secondly, by stabilisation of the ERK5 protein. Stabilisation involves the direct interaction of unique ERK5 domains with Abl kinases and is independent of MAPK cascade activation. The level of ERK5 and its intrinsic basal activity – rather than its activation – are essential for v-Abl-induced transformation as well as for survival of Bcr/Abl-positive leukaemia cells. Stabilisation of ERK5 thus contributes to cell survival and should therefore be considered as an additional aspect in therapy of chronic myeloid leukaemia. Taken together, the results obtained in this study demonstrate that diverse pathways regulate ERK5 signalling by affecting kinase activity, localisation and protein stability. While the phosphatase PTP-SL is involved in negative regulation of ERK5, Abl kinases potently activate ERK5 and increase its half-life. Protein stabilisation thus is presented as a novel mechanism in the regulation of MAPKs.
Periplasmic Sud protein encoded by the Wolinella succinogenes catalyses the transfer of bound polysulfide-sulfur to the active site of the membrane bound polysulfide reductase. The homodimeric protein consists of 131 residues per monomer, each with one cysteine residue in the active site. Polysulfide-sulfur is covalently bound to the catalytic Cys residues of the Sud protein. In order to understand the structure-function relationship of this protein, the features of its solution structure determined by heteronuclear multidimensional NMR techniques are reported here. The first step of structure determination leads to resonance assignments using 15N/13C/2H- and 15N/13C-labeled protein. The sequential backbone and side chain resonance assignments have been successfully completed. Structure calculations were carried out using the ARIA program package. The structure is based on 2688 NOE-derived distance restraints, 68 backbone hydrogen bond restraints derived from 34 slow-exchanging backbone amide protons and 334 torsion angle restraints obtained from the TALOS program as well as 158 residual dipolar coupling restraints for the refinement of relative vector orientations. The three-dimensional structure of the Sud protein was determined with an averaged rootmean- square deviation of 0.72 Å and 1.28 Å for the backbone and heavy atoms, respectively, excluding the terminal residues. Without the poorly defined segment between residues 90-94 the average r.m.s.d. value drops down to 0.6 Å and 1.14 Å. The ensemble refined with residual dipolar coupling (rdc) restraints shows good convergence. The r.m.s.d. value for the backbone heavy atoms, excluding residues 90- 94, drops down from 0.97 to 0.66 for the rdc-refined ensemble. The relative orientation of the two monomers in the protein structures refined with residual dipolar coupling restraints are also different from those without residual dipolar coupling restraints. The structure determination of the dimeric protein has been hampered by the high molecular mass (30 kDa), severe peak degeneracy, and by the small number of experimental intermonomer NOEs (relative orientation problem of two monomers). For the resonance assignments of aliphatic side chain, many resonances were ambiguously assigned because of severe overlap of signals. The Sud dimer protein contains 17 Lys, 14 Leu and one His tag for each monomer. It complicated the resonance assignments. The conventional 3D 15N-separated TOCSY HSQC experiment failed because of the large molecular weight which results in line broadening and hence made the resonance assignments of side chains more difficult. The determined structure contains a five-stranded parallel ß-sheet enclosing a hydrophobic core, a two-stranded anti-parallel ß-sheet and seven a-helices. The dimer structure is stabilized predominantly by hydrophobic residues. Sud catalyses the transfer of the polysulfide-sulfur to cyanide, similar to rhodanese encoded by Azotobacter vinelandii (Bordo et al., 2000). The two proteins are similar in the active site environment primarily owing to the main-chain conformation of the active-site loop with the cysteine residue and with respect to the surrounding positively charged residues. The active-site loop (residues 89-95) in the Sud protein appears to be flexible, reflected by few assigned proton resonances of residues 90-94 in the active site. Despite their similarity in function and their similar structure in active site, the amino acid sequences and the folds of the two proteins are remarkably different. The negatively charged polysulfide interacts with positively charged R46, R67, and R94 and hence may be stabilized in structure. The mutation of one of the three arginines that are also conserved in rhodanese from A. vinelandii leads to a loss of sulfur-transfer activity. The polysulfide chain extends from inside of Sud protein to outside, where Sud may form contacts with polysulfide reductase. These contacts provide the possible polysulfide-sulfur transfer from Sud protein to the active site of polysulfide reductase.
The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex (LHC-II) is the major collector of solar energy in all plants and it binds about half of the chlorophyll in green plants. LHCII is a trimer in the photosynthetic membrane; each monomer consists of 232 amino acids, binds and orients a minimum of 12 chlorophyll molecules and three caroteinoids (two luteins and one neoxanthin) for light-harvesting and energy transfer. Although, the structure of LHC-II has been determined at 3.4 Å resolution by electron microscopy of two-dimensional crystals (Kühlbrandt et al., 1994), this is not sufficient to allow a complete understanding of the mechanism of energy transfer from LHC-II to the reaction centre, since the effective resolution in the z dimension is 4.9 Å. In fact, the chemical difference between Chl a and Chl b, which has a formyl group instead of the methyl group at the 7-position in the chlorin ring, is too small to be detected at this level of resolution. In addition, the orientation of the chlorophyll tetrapyrroles have not been determined unambiguously. This information is essential for a detailed understanding of the energy transfer within the complex and to the reaction centres of photosystem II and I (PSII and PSI). X-ray crystallography of three dimensional (3D) crystals may yield a more complete structure at high resolution. 3D crystals have been grown from LHC-II isolated from pea leaves using a standard purification procedure (Burke et al., 1978). The thylakoid membranes are solubilised in Triton X-100 and further purified by sucrose gradient ultra centrifugation. The LHC-II fraction is salt precipitated and pellets resuspended at the chlorophyll a/b ratio 2.8 mg/ml in 0.9 % Nonyl-glucoside. Crystals are currently obtained by vapour diffusion in hanging drops. These crystals are thin hexagonal plates, have a fairly large unit cell and diffract quite weakly. The high level of the background is due both to the detergent, necessary for protein solubilisation, and lipids, required for the trimer and crystals formation. However, three data sets, each from one single crystal have been collected up to 3.2 Å resolution over a rotation range of 135°. The crystals were exposed to a very highly collimated and brilliant beam (ID-14 EH1 at ESRF, Grenoble, France) and were kept under a stream of cold nitrogen to prevent radiation damage. Data were successfully integrated using the program XDS by Kabsch (1993). The crystals were found to belong to the space group P6 22 3 and have unit cell dimensions of a=128.45, b=128.45, c=135.32, a= ß=90º, ?=120. The solution of the phase problem was tackled by molecular replacement using, as a search model, the LHC-II structure solved by electron cryo-microscopy studies of twodimensional crystals (Kühlbrandt et al. 1994). Three different programs were tested: the most used AMoRe (Navaza et al., 1994) and the brute force based program Brute (Fujinaga
Diese Zusammenfassung ist in zwei Abschnitte gegliedert. Im Abschnitt 6.1. wird die physiologische Bedeutung der Glutamatrezeptoren (GluR) und ihr biologischer Hintergrund kurz erklärt. Am Ende dieses Abschnitts wird der Stand der Strukturanalyse des GluR-B Ionenkanals zu Beginn des Projektes zusammengefasst. Im nachfolgenden Abschnitt 6.2. sind die wesentlichen Ergebnisse der hier vorgelegten Arbeit zusammengefasst. 6.1. Die Bedeutung von Glutamatrezeptoren - Stand der Strukturanalyse zum Beginn dieser Arbeit Die Kommunikation zwischen Nervenzellen erfolgt vorwiegend an hochspezialisierten Kontaktstellen den chemischen Synapsen. Der enge Raum zwischen sendender und empfangender Nervenzelle wird auch als synaptischer Spalt bezeichnet. Der Prozess der synaptischen Übertragung beruht auf der präsynaptischen Freisetzung von chemischen Botenstoffen, sogenannten Neurotransmittern in den synaptischen Spalt. Die Aminosäure L- Glutamat (Glu) ist der wichtigste erregende Neurotransmitter im menschlichen Gehirn und Rückenmark. Dementsprechend bedeutend ist die Rolle der ionotropen Glutamatrezeptoren (iGluRs), die sie bei der elektrochemischen Erregungsübertragung am synaptischen Spalt spielen (Seeburg, 1993), (Hollmann and Heinemann, 1994), (Dingledine et al., 1999). Die Freisetzung von Neurotransmittern wird durch ein elektrisches Signal (Aktionspotential) ausgelöst, das sich entlang der Nervenfaser, dem Axon, bis zur Nervenendigung, der Synapse, fortpflanzt. Nach der Freisetzung diffundieren die Neurotransmitter durch den synaptischen Spalt und binden an sogenannte Rezeptoren. Ionotrope Glutamatrezeptoren sind Ionenkanäle, die in die Membran der nachgeschalteten (postsynaptischen) Nervenzelle eingebaut sind. Sie zählen deshalb zu den Membranproteinen. Als ligandgesteuerte kationenselektive Ionenkanäle machen Glutamatrezeptoren (GluRs) die postsynaptische Membran nach Aktivierung durch Ligandbindung für bestimmte Kationen durchlässig. Der Einstrom von Ionen bewirkt eine Änderung des Membranpotentials. Die Stärke der synaptischen Übertragung ist lebenslang modulierbar; die sogennante synaptische Plastizität wird als eine entscheidende Grundlage für die Erklärung von Lernen und Gedächtnis angesehen. Drei synthetische Agonisten aktivieren die GluRs selektiv und wurden deshalb für die Klassifizierung der ionotropen Glutamatrezeptoren herangezogen. Bei den Agonisten handelt es sich um -Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazol-4-propionat (AMPA), Kainat and N- Methyl-D-Aspartat (NMDA). Die ersten beiden Subtypen werden auch als non-NMDA- Rezeptoren zusammengefasst. Die Aktivierung und Desensitivierung der non-NMDA Rezeptoren ist schneller als die der NMDA-Rezeptoren. Aus molekularbiologischer Sicht (siehe Kapitel 1.3.2.) zeigen die drei Klassen der ionotropen Glutamatrezeptoren eine beträchliche Diversität. So gibt es vier verschiedene Unterheiten vom AMPA-Subtyp, nämlich GluR-A, GluR-B, GluR-C und GluR-B. In dieser Arbeit steht die Strukturanalyse eines aus GluR-B Untereinheiten bestehenden AMPA-Rezeptors im Vordergrund. (Die weitere Unterteilung der NMDA- und Kainatrezeptoren kann dem Kapitel 1.3.2. auf Seite 6 entnommen werden.) Bestimmte Abschnitte der Aminosäurensequenz von Glutamatrezeptoren sind durch hydrophobe Bereiche gekennzeichnet ((M1-M4) in Abbildung 6.1.A (A.)). Das durch verschiedene Untersuchungen etablierte Modell der Glutamatrezeptor-Topologie zeigt 3 Transmembrandomänen (M1, M3 und M4) und eine Membranschleife (M2) (Hollmann et al., 1994), (Kuner et al., 1996). Der Aminoterminus ist extrazellulär, der Carboxyterminus hingegen intrazellulär. Daraus ergibt sich die in Abbildung 6.1.A (B.) abgebildete Topologie (Paas, 1998). S1 und S2 kennzeichnen die Ligandbindungsdomäne. Glutamatrezeptoren (GluR) sind Oligomere, die sich mit grosser Wahrscheinlichkeit aus vier Untereinheiten (Rosenmund et al., 1998), (Ayalon and Stern-Bach, 2001) zusammensetzen (siehe Kapitel 1.3.3.). Die Zusammenlagerung verschiedener Untereinheiten zu einem funktionellen Kanal setzt voraus, dass die Untereinheiten zum gleichen Subtyp gehören, d.h. AMPA Untereinheiten können nur mit anderen AMPA Untereinheiten einen Ionenkanal bilden. Das gleiche gilt für die Zusammensetzung von NMDA und Kainat-Rezeptoren. Das Modell eines tetrameren Glutamatrezeptors ist im Bild C. der Abbildung 6.1.A zu sehen. Die Bestimmung der Quartärstruktur eines vollständigen Glutamatrezeptors ist bislang nicht veröffentlicht. Die strukturelle Analyse von Proteinen erfordert die Isolierung von reinem und funktionellem Protein. Im Vergleich zu den meisten löslichen Proteinen erfordert die Isolierung von Membranproteinen oft besonderer Optimierung. Falls das Vorkommen des Proteins in natürlichem Gewebe gering ist, so kann die strukturelle Analyse durch rekombinante Expression in einem geeigneten Wirtsorganismus zugänglich gemacht werden. Die Isolierung von Milligramm-Mengen eines rekombinanten homomeren GluR-B Rezeptors aus dem entsprechenden Baculovirusexpressionssystem (Keinänen et al., 1994) wurde in unserem Labor etabliert (Safferling et al., 2001) und wurde im ersten Jahr dieses Projektes fortgeführt. Durch zonale Ultrazentrifugation konnte gezeigt werden, dass die molekulare Masse des GluR-B Proteinkomplexes ca. 495 kD beträgt. Dieser Wert liegt in der Nähe des theoretischen Molekulargewichts eines tetrameren Ionenkanals, dessen Molmasse sich aus vier GluR-B Untereinheiten (104 kD) und einer Detergenzmizelle von ca. 63-97 kD zusammensetzt (Safferling et al., 2001). Die elektronenmikroskopische Analyse des Proteinkomplexes von W. Tichelaar aus unserer Gruppe erfolgte 1999 durch Negativfärbung. Für die Strukturanalyse mit Hilfe der Software IMAGIC wurden 10 000 Proteinteilchen selektiert. Das Ergebnis der Bildrekonstruktion ist in der folgenden Abbildung 6.1.B gezeigt. Die projezierten Dimensionen des Models entsprechen einem Molekül mit den Dimensionen 17 nm × 11 nm × 14 nm. Das Model zeigt keine ausgezeichnete Symmetrie, die auf die Stöchiometrie des GluR hinweisen könnte. Das Molekül zeigt mit Färbemittel gefüllte Vertiefungen und innere Strukturen, die vielleicht an der Ionenleitung beteiligt sind. 6.2. Funktionelle und strukturelle Charakterisierung des GluR-B Ionenkanals In der Fortsetzung des oben beschriebenen Projektes wurden für die rekombinante Expression desselben Rezeptors (GluR-B homomer) stabil transformierte Insektenzellen eingesetzt. Dazu wurde die für die GluR-B Untereinheit kodierende und in Plasmiden enthaltene DNA in Insektenzellen transformiert (siehe APPENDIX A.2.2.). Im Vergleich zu dieser auf Dauerhaftigkeit angelegten Integration der Rezeptor DNA wird die Proteinexpression beim Baculovirusexpressionssystem durch Infektion mit rekombinanten Baculoviren initiiert. Der Vergleich zeigte, dass die mit Baculoviren erzielten Ausbeuten bei GluR-B etwa doppelt so hoch waren als bei stabil transformierten Zellen. Allerdings fallen bei stabil transformierten Zellen die eventuellen Nachteile der viralen Belastung auf die zellulären Sekretionsprozesse weg. Im Verlauf der elektronenmikroskopischen Analyse von baculoviral erzeugtem GluR-B Protein hat sich gezeigt, dass Proteine viralen Ursprungs unter Umständen selbst doppelt aufgereinigte GluR-B Proben verunreinigen können (siehe APPENDIX A.2.1.). Dieser Punkt ist bei einer Einzelbildverarbeitung von grosser Relevanz, falls die virusspezifischen Proteinverunreinigungen eine ähnliche Grösse haben wie das eigentliche Zielprotein. Das Hauptziel dieser Arbeit war es, das Potenzial stabil transformierter Insektenzellen für die Expression von homomeren GluR-B Ionenkanälen zu bewerten und dabei die Stöchiometrie der Untereinheiten in diesem Ionenkanal aufzuklären. Zu diesem Zweck wurden biochemische und elektronenmikrosopische Techniken eingesetzt. Zur Isolierung des GluR-B Ionenkanals aus stabil transformierten Insektenzellen wurde das bestehende Aufreinigungsprotokoll für die Affinitätchromatographie an immobilisierten Metallionen (IMAC) (Safferling et al., 2001) optimiert, indem das Chargenverfahren durch das Durchflussverfahren ersetzt wurde (zur genaueren Erklärung der Optimierung siehe RESULTS 4.1.2.). Abbildung 6.C zeigt ein silbergefärbtes Gel mit den Eluaten der IMAC und Eluaten der abschliessenden Affinitätschromatographie mit immobilisiertem M1-Antikörper. Die auf den Bahnen 5-8 aufgetragen GluR-B Proben wurden auch für die Einzelteilchenanalyse mittels Elektronenmikroskopie verwendet. Die Ligandbindungsaktivität von GluR-B wurde durch Filterbindungsexperimente mit dem Radioliganden [3H]-AMPA vor und nach der Isolierung aus den Membranfragmenten bestimmt. Die KD-Werte sind für beide Proben ähnlich gross. Der Bmax-Werte ist für die aufgereinigte Probe wie erwartet sehr viel (mehr als 200×) höher. Die Ergebnisse der Ligandbindungsexperimente sind im Kapitel 4.2.1 tabellarisch zusammengefasst. Die oligomere Struktur des isolierten Ionenkanals wurde durch Quervernetzungsexperimente (Cross-linking) und Einzelteilchenanalyse von negativ gefärbten Proteinmolekülen bewertet. Die Quervernetzungsexerimente selbst erbrachten kein eindeutiges Ergebnis im Hinblick auf oligomere Struktur des komplett zusammengesetzten Rezeptors. Kontrollexperimente mit dem Lysat vom Rattenhippocampus zeigten, dass mit DTSSP ein geeigneter Cross-Linker verwendet wurde (siehe RESULTS 4.3.2.). Neben einem aus 4 Banden bestehenden Muster (siehe RESULTS 4.3.1.) lieferten die Quervernetzungsexperimente mit isoliertem GluR-B aber einen deutlichen Hinweis auf die Stabilität von dimeren GluR-B Strukturen, die im Einklang mit einer jüngst veröffentlichten Arbeit stehen (Ayalon and Stern-Bach, 2001). Diese Veröffentlichung liefert zusätzliche (Armstrong et al., 1998) Hinweise auf die Bedeutung von Dimeren in der Glutamatrezeptorstruktur und postuliert, dass sich ein kompletter Glutamaterezeptor aus einem Dimer-Paar zusmmensetzt, wobei die Dimere zuerst gebildet werden. Die nachfolgende Abbildung 6.2.B zeigt negativ gefärbte GluR-B Ionenkanäle bei einer 46000× Vergrösserung. Die Aufnahme stammt von einem Philips EM 400 Elektronenmikroskop. Für die 3D Rekonstruktion wurden 500 der in Abbildung 6.2.B gezeigten Rezeptormoleküle ausgewählt. Dieser relativ kleine Datensatz besteht aus GluR-B Ionenkanälen deren Präservierung in Uranylacetat als besonderes vielversprechend eingeschätzt wurde. Dieser positive Effekt wurde auf die Verwendung frisch von einer Wasseroberfläche aufgefischter Kohlefilme zurückgeführt (siehe RESULTS 4.4.3.3.). Während der Klassifizierung dieses Datensatzes fiel auf, dass die beim Band-Pass-Filtern für die niedrigen Frequenzen gesetzten Cut-offs einen deutlichen Einfluss auf die erste Klassifizierung der unterschiedlichen zweidimensionalen Ansichten des Proteinkomplexes haben (siehe RESULTS 4.4.3.4.). Aus diesem Grund wurde der gleiche Datensatz mit 5 verschiedenen low-frequency cut-offs (LFCO) gefiltert (siehe Table 4.4.3.4.) und getrennt klassifiziert. Von den 5 resultierenden Klassifikationen wurden 3 (LFCO 0,005, 0,03 und 0,05) für die weiterführende 3D Rekonstruktion ausgewählt. Die Evaluierung der resultiernden 3D Modelle ergab, dass der mit einem LFCO von 0,03 gefilterte Datensatz eine Klassifikationen erlaubte, die zu einem 3D Modell (Modell GluR-BII/a siehe RESULTS Figure 4.4.3.4.H) führte, das im Vergleich zu den beiden anderen Rekonstruktionen konsistenter war. Am stärksten spricht für dieses Modell die Übereinstimmung der Input-Projektionen mit den Reprojektionen der 3D Rekonstruktion (siehe siehe RESULTS Figure 4.4.3.4.H). Zur Verfeinerung des Modells GluR-BII/a wurden die beiden Projektionen mit der höchsten Standardabweichung vom Klassendurchschnitt (class average) eliminiert. Die verbleibenden 11 Projektionen bildeten die Input-Projektionen für die Berechung eines verfeinerten Modells, GluR-BII/b, das auf einer neuen Zuordnung der Euler-Winkel beruht. Das Ergebnis dieser Berechung ist in der nachfolgenden Abbildung gezeigt. Das Modell in Abbildung 6.2.C zeigt einen zentralen Kanal und hat die Dimensionen 18 nm × 14 nm × 11 nm. Die Stöchiometrie der Untereinheiten ist aus dem Modell, das mit grosser Wahrscheinlichkeit einen komplett zusammengesetzten GluR darstellt, nicht ablesbar. Ebensowenig zeigt das Modell eine eindeutig vierzählige oder fünfzählige Symmetrie. Allerdings ist die erkennbare zweizählige Symmetrie im Einklang mit dem vorgeschlagenen Pair-of-Dimer Modell (Ayalon and Stern-Bach, 2001), das auf eine teramere Struktur des oligomeren Ionenkanals schliessen lässt. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit zeigen, dass stabil transifzierte Insektenzellen eine durchaus geeignete Quelle für GluR-B Ionenkanäle sind. Nachteilig sind die geringen Ausbeuten. Allerdings kann durch weitere Selektion der Zellen die GluR Expression noch gesteigert werden (siehe APPENDIX A.2.2.). Bei höheren GluR-B Ausbeuten könnte zukünftig auch die Detektion des Rezeptors in vitrifizierten Proben in Verbindung mit Kryo-Elektronen- mikroskopie und auch die 2D-Kristallisation gelingen. Die während dieses Projekts gemachten Kristallisationsexperimente (siehe APPENDIX A.3.) und Kryo-Experimente mit GluR-B Protein aus dem Baculovirusexpressionssystem (siehe RESULTS 4.4.1. und 4.4.2.) ergaben negative Ergebnisse. Das Potential der Kryo-Methode konnte allerdings in Kontrollexperimenten mit Tabak-Mosaik-Virus (TMV) gezeigt werden. Kryo-Daten von GluR-B würden die Berechnung eines genaueren Strukurmodells erlauben. Die Reprojektionen des hier besprochenen Strukturmodells GluR-BII/b aus der Abbildung 6.2.C könnten als Referenzen für das Alignment der vitrifizierten GluR Ionenkanäle dienen. Für das langfristige Ziel der Rekonstituition des Rezeptors in Liposomen sollte die Delipidierung des Membranproteins während der Aufreinigung möglichst reduziert werden. Hier erscheinen zwei Ansätze sinnvoll. Die Aufreinigung des Proteins in einem Schritt durch die Erweiterung des tags am Carboxyterminus von nur 6 auf 10 Histidin-Reste. Ausserdem gibt es Hinweise, dass die Anwesenheit von Lipiden während der Aufreinigung für seine Rekonstituierbarkeit förderlich ist (Huganir and Racker, 1982).
Human epidermal-type fatty acid binding protein (E-FABP) belongs to a family of intracellular non-enzymatic 14-15 kDa lipid binding proteins (LBP) that specifically bind and facilitate the transport of fatty acids, bile acids or retinoids. Their functions have also been associated with fatty acid signalling, cell growth, regulation and differentiation. As a contribution to better understand the structure-function relationship of this protein, the features of its solution structure determined by NMR spectroscopy are reported here. Both unlabeled and 15N-enriched samples of recombinant human E-FABP were used for multidimensional high-resolution NMR. The sequential backbone as well as side-chain resonance assignments have been completed. They are reported here and are also available at the BioMagResBank under the accession number BMRB-5083. The presence of six cysteines in the amino acid sequence of human E-FABP is highly unusual for LBPs. Four of the six cysteines are unique to the E-FABPs: C43, C47, C67 and C87. In the three-dimensional structure of E-FABP, two cysteine pairs (C67/C87 and C120/C127) were identified by X-ray analysis to be close enough to allow disulfide bridge formation, but a S-S bond was actually found only between C120 and C127 [Hohoff et al., 1999]. Since the exclusion of a disulfide bridge between C67 and C87 improved the Rfree factor of the crystallographic model, the existence of a covalent bond between these two side- chains was considered unlikely. This agrees with the NMR data, where SCH resonances have been observed for the cysteine residues C43, C67 (tentative assignment) and C87, thus excluding the possibility of a second disulfide bridge in solution. Based on the NOE and hydrogen exchange data, an ensemble of 20 energy-minimized conformers representing the solution structure of human E-FABP complexed with stearic acid has been obtained. The analysis of homonuclear 2D NOESY and 15N-edited 3D NOESY spectra led to a total of 2926 NOE-derived distance constraints. Furthermore, 37 slow- exchanging backbone amide protons were identified to be part of the hydrogen-bonding network in the >-sheet and subsequently converted into 74 additional distance constraints. Finally, the disulfide bridge between C120 and C127 was defined by 3 upper and 3 lower distance bounds. The structure calculation program DYANA regarded 998 of these constraints as irrelevant, i.e., they did not restrict the distance between two protons. Out of the remaining 2008 non-trivial distance constraints, 371 were intraresidual (i = j), 508 sequential (|i - j| = 1), 233 medium-range (1 < |i - j| £ 4), and 896 long-range (|i - j| > 4) NOEs. The protein mainly consists of 10 antiparallel -strands forming a >-barrel structure with a large internal cavity. The three-dimensional solution structure of human E-FABP has been determined with a root-mean-square deviation of 0.92 ± 0.11 Å and 1.46 ± 0.10 Å for the backbone and heavy atoms, respectively, excluding the terminal residues. Without the portal region (i.e., for residues 4-26, 40-56, 63-75 and 83-134; the portal region apparently represents the only opening in the protein surface through which the fatty acid ligand can enter and exit the internal binding cavity), an average backbone RMSD of 0.85 ± 0.10 Å was obtained, thus reflecting the higher conformational dispersion in the portal region. Superposition with the X-ray structure of human E-FABP (excluding the terminal residues) yielded average backbone RMSD values of 1.00 ± 0.07 Å for the entire residue range and 0.98 ± 0.06 Å without the portal region. This indicates a close similarity of the crystallographic and the solution structures. The structure coordinates have been deposited at the RCSB data bank under PDB ID code 1JJJ. The measurement of 15N relaxation experiments (T1, T2 and heteronuclear NOE) at three different fields (500, 600 and 800 MHz) provided information on the internal dynamics of the protein backbone. Nearly all non-terminal backbone amide groups showed order parameters S2 > 0.8, with an average value of 0.88 ± 0.04, suggesting a uniformly low backbone mobility in the nanosecond-to-picosecond time range throughout the entire protein sequence. Moreover, hydrogen/deuterium exchange experiments indicated a direct correlation between the stability of the hydrogen-bonding network in the >-sheet structure and the conformational exchange (Rex) in the millisecond-to-microsecond time range. The features of E-FABP backbone dynamics elaborated here differ from those of the phylogenetically closely related heart-type FABP and the more distantly related ileal lipid binding protein. The results on protein dynamics obtained in this work allow to conclude that the different LBP family members E-FABP, H-FABP and ILBP are characterized by varying stabilities in the protein backbone structures. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange experiments displayed significant differences in the chemical exchange with the solvent for the backbone amide protons belonging to the hydrogen-bonding network in the >-sheets. The >-barrel structure of H- FABP appears to be the most rigid, with exchange processes presumably slower than the millisecond-to-microsecond time range. ILBP, on the other hand, shows the fastest hydrogen exchange as well as a significant number of exchange parameters (Rex), implying a decreased stability in the >-sheet structure. E-FABP, finally, appears to rank between these two proteins based on the hydrogen/deuterium exchange, with Rex terms in the >-strands indicating millisecond-to-microsecond exchange processes like in ILBP.