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Structural characterization of stressosome complexes by single-particle cryo-electron microscopy
(2015)
The stressosome is a Mega Dalton macromolecular complex involved in stress adaptation in bacteria. Stressosomes are considered as stress signaling hubs. They are able to perceive a variety of different stress stimuli and transduce them into one single cellular answer, which is the initialization of a transcriptional up-regulation of hundreds of different genes encoding for universal but also very specific stress response proteins.
The stressosome of Bacillus subtilis became a prime example for this intriguing stress-triggered transcriptional regulation when its architecture was determined by Single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) in 2008. In Gram-positive Bacillus species, the stressosome complex senses changes in salt concentration, ethanol content, blue-light, heat or acid stress contributing to the general stress response by activation of the alternative σB factor. σB is a transcriptional promoter that initiates the transcription of over 150 general stress genes, e.g., genes that encode osmolyte transporters to counteract osmotic and chill stress. The B. subtilis stressosome (stressosome_Bc) is composed of multiple copies of the 3 proteins: RsbR, RsbS and RsbT. These three Rsb proteins (Regulator of Sigma B) are found clustered in one operon forming the conserved RST module. RsbS and RsbR are scaffold proteins comprising a STAS domain, respectively. Because these domains are dominantly associated to sulfate transporters and anti-sigma antagonist they were named STAS domains, however, they were also identified in other sensor proteins. In the stressosome they form the internal ball-shaped core, while the N-terminal globin-fold sensor domain of RsbR, protruding to the outside, facilitates stress sensing. It is assumed that the stress signal is transduced to the stressosome core via the STAS domain resulting in conformational changes of the core. These changes affect the binding of the third protein, RsbT, a serin-threonine kinase. As a direct consequence of stress sensing the RsbT kinase is released from the complex to start an activation cascade involving the stepwise activation of RsbU, V, W, and X, which are all part of the same operon, and finally of σB. In Bacillus species, several RsbR orthologs were identified varying mainly in the sequence of the N-terminal sensor domains. It is assumed that the stressosome_Bc assembles with a still unknown combination of RsbR orthologs allowing for the broad spectrum of stress stimuli that can be processed in vivo. The pathogenic bacteria Listeria monocytogenes is a close relative of Bacillus. Its potent stress response allows Listeria to survive the harsh environmental conditions during host infection and therefore the stress regulation machinery is contributing heavily to the virulence of this pathogen. In Listeria the Rsb operon is conserved and highly homologous to the Bacillus one. In the frame of this thesis, the in vitro assembly of Listeria innocua stressosomes was shown for the first time by Single-particle (SP) negative stain EM. Moreover, binding of Listeria RsbT to the assembled RsbR-RsbS complex was demonstrated biochemically.
Despite the conservation of the RST-module the entire Rsb operon is not conserved in the bacterial kingdom suggesting that signal transduction and regulation of gene expression might occur by very different mechanisms in stressosomes of different species. We have focused here on a stressosome type from the Gram-negative pathogen Vibrio vulnificus that is quite distinct from the Bacillus ones with respect to (1) the missing conservation of the Rsb operon, (2) the role of RsbT, (3) the activation of a different transcriptional promoter, and (4) the absence of additional RsbR orthologs. Interestingly, there is only one RsbR protein encoded in the genome. This one contains a Haem-group in its N-terminal domain being oxygen sensitive. It is assumed that the Vibrio stressosome perceive only oxidative stress and that regulation occurs via a diguanylate cyclase with a GAF domain that synthesizes the second messenger c-di-GMP from GTP.
We have started a structure determination of the Vibrio vulnificus stressosome by SP cryo-EM to elucidate the differences in the molecular mechanism of stress sensing in divers stressosome types. A 3D map of the oxidized (activated) Vibrio vulnificus stressosome was determined to 7.6 Å resolution revealing an increased flexibility of both the core and the N-terminal sensor domains in comparison to the Bacillus stressosome suggesting that our structure has trapped for the first time an active state of a stressosome complex. A 3D map of the stressosome core to 7 Å resolution allowed fitting of a homology model of the Vibrio stressosome based on the Bacillus stressosome as template. The conformational changes could be attributed to the entire core, which was confirmed by MD simulations.
Hepatitis B caused by infection with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) still ranks among the most challenging infectious diseases of our time. Despite the availability of an effective prophylactic vaccine, 240 million people worldwide are estimated to be chronically infected with HBV and are at risk of developing life-threatening liver diseases, including cirrhosis and liver cancer. The underlying pathogenic mechanisms of HBV-associated liver diseases are only incompletely understood. It is widely accepted that liver pathology results from long-term immune-mediated liver injury and inflammation as a consequence of inefficient viral elimination. This injury can be naturally compensated by liver regeneration. However, chronic liver damage and permanent inflammation debilitates the regenerative capacity of the liver and fosters fibrosis as well as accumulation of chromosomal aberrations, which both contribute to cirrhosis and liver cancer. Liver regeneration requires the presence of the redox-sensitive transcription factor Nrf2 and intact insulin receptor signaling. A lack of Nrf2 causes increased intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that inactivate insulin receptor signaling and induce insulin resistance. Interestingly, HBV was observed to activate Nrf2 and the expression of Nrf2-regulated genes. This argues against an inhibitory effect of HBV on insulin receptor signaling by increased ROS levels. However, chronic HBV infection is associated with dysregulation of hepatocyte proliferation and retardation of liver regeneration. Hence, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the influence of HBV on the process of liver regeneration with respect to the insulin receptor signaling pathway. After short-term carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced liver damage, HBV transgenic mice present prolonged liver damage and impaired liver regeneration as reflected by reduced hepatocyte proliferation and increased apoptosis. Impaired hepatocyte proliferation in HBV transgenic mice correlates with diminished activation of the insulin receptor. It was further observed in vitro that the activation of Nrf2 by HBV induces increased levels of the insulin receptor mRNA and protein in HBV-expressing cells. Strikingly, stably HBV-expressing cells as well as primary mouse hepatocytes from HBV transgenic mice bind less insulin due to reduced amounts of insulin receptor on the cell surface. This is caused by intracellular retention of the insulin receptor in HBV-expressing cells as a consequence of increased amounts of the cellular trafficking factor α-taxilin. The reduced amounts of insulin receptor on the cell surface impair insulin sensitivity in HBV-expressing cells and inactivate downstream signaling cascades that initiate insulin-dependent gene expression and glucose uptake. As a consequence of impaired hepatocyte proliferation and liver regeneration, HBV transgenic mice exhibit increased development of fibrosis after long-term CCl4-induced liver damage. Taken together, in this thesis, a novel pathomechanism could be uncovered that includes inactivation of insulin receptor signaling by HBV via intracellular retention of the insulin receptor leading to impaired liver regeneration after liver damage and promotion of liver fibrosis. These findings significantly contribute to an enhanced understanding of HBV-associated liver pathogenesis.
Molecular signaling networks, organized in discrete subsets of proteins in space and time, represent the major principle by which the cell achieves its functional specificity and homeostasis. Complex network organization is preserved by numerous mechanisms, including sequestration of proteins into specific subcellular compartments (eg. organelles), post-translational modifications and most importantly by balanced timing of their biosynthesis and turnover. Two routes of protein degradation, which are fundamentally quite different, are proteasomal and lysosomal-mediated destruction. The latter not only governs degradation of molecules that passed through endocytic or secretory process (trafficking from plasma membrane or Golgi compartment), but also the degradation of cytoplasmic molecules that have been sequestered by a process called macroautophagy (henceforth autophagy). Recently our understanding of autophagic regulatory mechanisms has increased significantly, as molecular details of how autophagy contributes to the degradation of proteins (old, misfolded or aggregated), damaged organelles or pathogens have been deciphered. Initially described as bulk, nonspecific membrane sequestration process induced primarily by nutrient deprivation, autophagy is now known to be selective in terms of cargo recognition and integration into dynamic cellular membrane trafficking system.
My work has addressed the fundamental question of how small ubiquitin-like modifiers LC3/GABARAP, that are conjugated to the autophagic membranes, function within the process of cargo selection and crosstalk between autophagic and endocytic membrane trafficking events. We have employed an initial yeast twohybrid screen to identify LC3/GABARAP interacting partners. Using this technique, we have identified several novel autophagy receptor proteins, mitochondrial protein Nix (BNIP3L), and adaptor proteins, including Rab GTPase activating proteins (TBC family of proteins). Through a conserved LC3 interacting region (LIR), Nix, Rab GAPs and other autophagy adaptor/receptor molecules share a common mode of binding to LC3/GABARAP. However, in contrast to Nix, which specifically facilitates removal of mitochondria in maturing erythrocytes, Rab GAP proteins preferably regulate the dynamics of autophagosome formation and maturation as well as sorting of cargo. Fourteen out of 36 screened Rab GAPs interacted with LC3/GABARAPs. Importantly, identified Rab GAPs are clustered in different regulatory nodes according to the conservation of their GAP domain hence they impact various cellular membrane compartments and organelles, marked by specific subsets of small Rab GTPases. Identification of Rab GAPs that are directly involved in autophagy via binding to LC3 was the first report that clearly pointed to a broader implication of autophagy in all aspects of cellular membrane trafficking. Currently, only few of Rab GAPs are studied in context of autophagy regulation, while large number of them requires further functional characterization.
I have identified two LIR motifs in TBC1D5, Rab7 GAP. LIR1 has also the ability to interact with retromer complex subunit, Vps29. Using several functional assays I have shown that this motif, as well as catalytic Arg within GAP domain are particularly important for function of TBC1D5 in retrograde transport of CI-M6PR from endosomes to the trans-Golgi network (TGN). I have also shown that TBC1D5 binds to LC3 and Vps29 in mutually exclusive way and that Thr at the position 1 and Phe at position 5 of LIR1 motif are both required for TBC1D5 interaction with Vps29. Upon autophagy induction TBC1D5 dissociates from retromer, and associates with autophagic vesicles, while silencing of TBC1D5 significantly impairs autophagic flux. These findings led to the hypothesis that LIR interacting surface on TBC1D5 acts as molecular switch for dual function of TBC1D5. This also indicated that similar surfaces for LIR interaction (similarly to ubiquitin-like domains) are present on proteins other than LC3, and pointed to a dual functionality of the LIR sequence within both endocytic and autophagic pathways.
Following these initial studies, I have also shown that TBC1D5 interacts with AP2 complex subunit AP2M1, and that this interaction plays critical role in TBC1D5-dependent trafficking of Atg9. It is known that Atg9, the only trans-membrane autophagic protein, plays essential role in initiation of autophagy and growth of nascent phagophore membranes. However, machinery that specifically recruits Atg9 traffic carriers to the site of autophagosomes was not known. I subsequently demonstrated that TBC1D5 associates not only with LC3, but also with Atg9 traffic carriers and major initiatory kinase ULK1 during autophagy, while retromer failed to do so. Association of TBC1D5 with Atg9 was dependent on presence of AP2 complex, and on functional clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME). Based on these and previous findings, model was proposed, that upon induction of autophagy TBC1D5 re-routes Atg9-containing clathrin vesicles from plasma membrane to the site of autophagosome. This led us to the better understanding of TBC1D5 function, but also to the first molecular cue that Atg9 traffics within clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs). In fact, mutation of Leu-Leu motif within N terminus of Atg9, that potentially mediates interaction with adaptor protein complexes, led to enrichment of Atg9 on plasma membrane and in TGN. This suggested that the sorting motif could be important for interaction of Atg9 with AP2 and AP1 complex, as well. More importantly, TBC1D5 and Atg9 could be directly involved in dynamic regulation of growth factor receptor sorting during autophagy, thus explaining vital role of autophagy in organism development and pathogenesis.
In summary, the work contained within my thesis provides data on the mechanism by which autophagy adaptor proteins participate in cargo selection and regulation of trafficking during autophagy. Firstly, the LIR motif can target proteins or organelles for autophagic degradation (eg. Nix). Secondly, specific LIR motifs can play essential function in recruiting membrane trafficking regulatory proteins that subsequently facilitate phagophore expansion (eg. TBC1D5). Thirdly, by means of reorganization of different protein assemblies (eg. TBC1D5-VPS29 vs. TBC1D5-LC3-Atg9), dynamics of membrane remodeling mediated by Rab GTPases is kept in control during autophagy, thus keeping the organelle integrity and balance within cellular lipid sources unaffected.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden zum Vergleich die Strukturen der ATP-Synthasen von Arabidopsis thaliana, Asparagus officinalis, Allium cepa, Helianthus annus, Solanum tuberosum, Bos taurus und Saccharomyces cerevisiae gelöst. Die ATP-Synthase von S. cerevisiae konnte mit einer Auflösung von 19 Å gelöst werden. Der Winkel zwischen den zwei ATP-Synthase-Monomeren in dem ATP-Synthase-Dimer hatte für jede Spezies einen bestimmten Wert. Dieser Winkel änderte sich innerhalb einer Spezies nur wenig im Gegensatz zu Untersuchungen mit Einzelpartikelanalyse.
Die ATP-Synthase-Dimere aus den untersuchten Spezies besitzen unterschiedliche Winkel zwischen 78˚ und 122˚. Der Winkel des ATP-Synthase-Dimers aus S. tuberosum (122˚) viel größer als der in anderen Pflanzen (~98˚), B. taurus (105˚) und S. cerevisiae (78˚). Die Proben von S. tuberosum und B. taurus waren jedoch dünner, was den Winkel eventuell beeinflussen könnte. Um dies auszuschließen müssen in Zukunft weitere Untersuchungen durchgeführt werden.
Des Weiteren wurde im peripheren Stiel der ATP-Synthasen von allen Pflanzenspezies eine Dichte entdeckt, die in B. taurus und S. cerevisiae nicht vorhanden ist. Die Dichte könnte durch eine zusätzliche Untereinheit oder veränderte Untereinheit im Vergleich zu B. taurus und S. cerevisiae kommen.
Weiterhin wurde die Bildung von Reihen aus ATP-Synthase-Dimeren untersucht. Es wurden ATP-Synthase-Dimere von Polytomella sp. gereinigt und in Lipid rekonstituiert. Es wurde das ATP-Synthase-Dimer von Polytomella sp. verwendet, da dieses besonders stabil ist und während der Reinigung nicht zum ATP-Synthase-Monomer zerfällt. Zur Rekonstitution wurde die milde GRecon-Methode verwendet. Hierbei werden Membranproteine in einem Zuckergradienten gleichzeitig in Lipid rekonstituiert und nach ihrer Dichte getrennt. Abhängig von der Dichte der Proteoliposomen ist die Konzentration an Membranproteinen unterschiedlich. In Proteoliposomen mit einer hohen Konzentration bilden sich dünne Schichten in denen die ATP-Synthase-Dimeren Zickzack-Muster formen. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass das ATP-Synthase-Dimer die Membran verformt. In Proteoliposomen mit einer niedrigeren Konzentration an ATP-Synthase-Dimeren wurden runde Vesikel detektiert, in denen die ATP-Synthase-Dimere lange Reihen bilden und die Membran innerhalb jedes ATP-Synthase-Dimer ebenfalls verformt ist. Molekulare Simulationen bestätigen dieses Ergebnis.
Zudem wurde das ATP-Synthase-Dimer in zwei verschiedene Lipide ohne Cardiolipin rekonstituiert, da Cardiolipin ein Lipid ist welches in der bakteriellen und mitochondrialen Membran gefunden wurde und in hohen Konzentrationen in Membrankrümmungen lokalisiert ist (Huang et al., 2006), wie auch die ATP-Synthase-Dimere. Ohne Cardiolipin ist die Rekonstitution nicht geglückt beziehungsweise sind die ATP-Synthase-Dimere weniger gut zueinander angeordnet. Das deutet auf die Wichtigkeit von Cardiolipin in der Stabilisierung der Reihen von ATP-Synthase-Dimeren hin. Weitere Experimente mit verschiedenen ATP-Synthase-Dimeren in verschiedenen Lipiden sind nötig um dies zu untermauern.
Ein weiteres Ziel dieser Arbeit war es ein klonierbares Label zu etablieren, um ein bestimmtes Protein in Kryo-Elektronentomogramme zu identifizieren. Das Label sollte klein sein, um das zu identifizierbare Protein nicht zu beeinflussen und groß genug um in Kryo-Elektronentomogramme identifizierbar zu sein. In Einzelbildern wurde das 6 kDa große Metallothionein gebunden mit Gold identifiziert, wenn zwei Metallothioneine an dem gewünschten Protein kloniert wurden. Metallothionein besteht zu 33 % aus Cysteinen, welche Schwermetalle binden.
In meinen Studien habe ich bewiesen, dass drei Metallothioneine, gebunden mit Gold, in Kryo-Elektronentomogramme detektiert werden können. Jedoch tritt bei der Verwendung von Metallothionein durch die hohe Anzahl an Cysteinen vermehrt Aggregation auf. Bei meinen Untersuchungen fand ich heraus, dass auch das Maltose-Binde-Protein (MBP) ein Signal gleicher Intensität erzeugt. Durch Verwendung von MBP tritt aber keine Aggregation auf und man kann MBP auch zum Reinigen des Proteins verwenden.
This thesis is concerned with protein structures determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and the text focuses on their analysis in terms of accuracy, gauged by the correspondence between the structural model and the experimental data it was calculated from, and in terms of precision, i.e. the degree of uncertainty of the atomic positions. Additionally, two protein structure calculation projects are described...
Photoinduzierte Energietransferprozesse und -reaktionen spielen in vielen Gebieten von Chemie, Physik und Biologie eine wichtige Rolle. Zu den prominentesten Beispielen zählen der Lichtsammelprozess in der Photosynthese und der Anregungsenergietransfer in funktionellen Materialien. Der Fokus dieser Arbeit liegt auf letzterem Bereich, genauer auf organischer Elektronik und flexiblen Donor-Akzeptor-Bausteinen und Schaltern. Im Besonderen werden hier zwei verschiedene Typen von funktionellen organischen Systemen betrachtet: zum einen oligomere Fragmente organischer halbleitender Polymere wie Oligo-p-Phenylen-Vinylen (OPV) und Oligo-Thiophen (OT), welche als Bausteine für neuartige organische Solarzellen dienen, und zum anderen kleine funktionelle Donor-Akzeptor-Einheiten wie Dithienylethen-Bordipyrromethen (DTE-BODIPY). Letzteres wurde in Kooperation mit den experimentellen Gruppen von K. Rück-Braun (TU Berlin) und J. Wachtveitl (Goethe Universität) untersucht. Um die relevanten Energietransfermechanismen genauer zu verstehen, wurden an diesen Systemen elektronische Strukturrechnungen und quantendynamische Untersuchungen durchgeführt. Hierzu wurden mittels ab initio-Methoden Modell-Hamiltonians parametrisiert und mit hochdimensionalen quantendynamischen oder semiklassischen Methoden kombiniert. Während die Parametrisierung für kleinere Fragmente durchgeführt wurde, lässt sich der so parametrisierte Hamiltonian ohne Weiteres auf größere Systeme erweitern. Die dynamischen Studien der betreffenden Systeme wurden mittels der Multikonfigurationellen Zeitabhängigen Hartree (MCTDH) Methode durchgeführt, welche eine vollständige quantendynamische Beschreibung des Systems zulässt. Für größere Systeme wurde die semiklassische Ehrenfest Methode in Verbindung mit dem Langevin-Ansatz zur Beschreibung von Umgebungseffekten genutzt. Hierzu wurde ein eigens für diese Methode und Systeme geschriebenes Programm eingesetzt. Im Falle der OT- und OPV-Oligomere wurde die Dynamik bei Vorliegen eines strukturellen Defekts untersucht. Ziel war es hierbei, die dynamischen Phänomene, welche durch die Photoanregung induziert werden, zu untersuchen. Des Weiteren wurde untersucht, ob das Konzept von „spektroskopischen Einheiten“, welche die Lokalisierung der Anregung durch strukturelle Defekte beschreibt, in diesen Systemen zutrifft. Hierzu wurden die Systeme in einer Frenkel-Basis definiert, welche ein auf einem Monomer lokalisiertes Elektron-Loch-Paar beschreibt. Delokalisierte elektronische Anregungen können somit als Superposition solcher Frenkel-Zustände beschrieben werden. Neben der Frenkel-Basis wurde aber auch eine verallgemeinerte Elektron-Loch-Basis verwendet, welche über zusätzliche Ladungstransferzustände eine räumliche Separation von Elektronen und Löchern erlaubt.Die Parametrisierung des OPV- und OT-Hamiltonians erfolgte mittels der Algebraischen Diagrammatischen Konstruktions (ADC(2))-Methode, welche in Kombination mit einer Übergangs-Dichte-Matrix-Analyse eine sehr akkurate Beschreibung der Frenkel- und Ladungstransferzustände basierend auf den supermolekularen Zuständen erlaubt. Um vibronische Effekte auf die Dynamik miteinzubeziehen,wurden nieder- und hochfrequente Torsions- und alternierende Bindungslängenmoden des Systems im Hamiltonian berücksichtigt. Hierzu wurden eindimensionale Schnitte der Potentialflächen entlang dieser Koordinaten berechnet und mittels einer Transformation in diabatische Potentialflächen überführt. Mit diesem Setup wurden die quantendynamischen und semiklassischen Simulationen für ein OPV/OT-Hexamer und ein 20-mer durchgeführt. Die Ergebnisse dieser Simulationen zeigen, dass der Energietransfer auf einer Subpikosekunden-Zeitskala stattfindet und eine starke Abhängigkeit vom Vorliegen eines strukturellen Defekts aufweist. Des Weiteren konnte auf einer Zeitskala von 100 Femtosekunden eine Lokalisierung des Exzitons beobachtet werden. Fluktuationseffekte werden zudem über Quantenfluktuationen im Falle von MCTDH bzw. über thermische Fluktuationen im Falle des Ehrenfest-/Langevin-Ansatzes berücksichtigt. Letzterer ist jedoch nicht in der Lage, die kohärente Charakteristik der mit den Schwingungsmoden gekoppelten Exziton- und Lokalisierungsdynamik wiederzugeben. Dagegen kann dieser Ansatz erfolgreich genutzt werden, um eine fluktuationsgetriebene „Hopping“-Dynamik des quasi- stationären Zustandes auf einer längeren Zeitskala in Abhängigkeit von der Temperatur zu beschreiben. Die Beschreibung der Photodynamik der DTE-BODIPY-Dyade zielt darauf ab, experimentell beobachtete vibrationelle Schwingungen des BODIPY-Fragments zu erklären, die ohne eine direkte Anregung dieses Fragments zustande kommen. Diese wurden nach einer selektiven Anregung des DTE-Fragments in zeitaufgelösten UV/Vis Anreg-Abtast-Experimenten beobachtet. Der Fokus der Untersuchung liegt daher auf der Beschreibung der photoinduzierten intramolekulare Energieumverteilung (IVR) auf einer Subpikosekunden-Zeitskala. Die DTE-BODIPY Dyade wurde mittels eines Hamiltonians, welcher durch TDDFT Rechnungen parametrisiert wurde, dargestellt. Basierend auf den Normalmoden des Systems, wurden lokale DTE- und BODIPY-Moden konstruiert, wobei einige dieser Moden miteinander gekoppelt sind und die Photoanregung des DTE auf das BODIPY-Fragment übertragen. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass die Zeitskala und die charakteristischen Frequenzen des Experiments mittels der hochdimensionalen MCTDH-Methode gut reproduziert wurden. Aus den Simulationen ergab sich zudem, dass der beobachtete Energietransfer stark von einem Reservoir von vibrationell angeregten lokalen DTE-Moden beeinflusst wird. Der untersuchte IVR- Prozess zeigt zudem eine ausgeprägte Abhängigkeit von lokalen Kopplungen und der Kopplung an eine Umgebung.
Recently, two of the most common types of bone cancers in children and young adults have been proven to exhibit vulnerability to poly(ADP)-ribose polymerase, (PARP) inhibitors (e.g. olaparib, talazoparib). Ewing’s sarcoma (ES) are reported to harbor a fusion gene EWS-FLI1 (85%), inducing tumorigenesis. Additional, as the fusion gene acts as aberrant transcription factor, it similarly induces elevated PARP expression levels sensitizing ES to PARP inhibition. Second, by an exome sequencing approach in a set of primary osteosarcomas (OS) we identified mutation signatures being reminiscent of BRCA deficiency. Therefore, the sensitivity of a panel of OS cell lines to either talazoparib single treatment or in combination with several chemotherapeutic drugs was investigated.
To screen ES tumor cell lines against PARP inhibitors we applied four different PARP inhibitors (talazoparib, olaparib, niraparib and veliparib) that are frequently being used for clinical studies. We combined those PARP inhibitors with a set of chemotherapeutics (temozolomide (TMZ), SN-38, etoposide, ifosfamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and actinomycin D) that are part of the first-line therapy of ES patients. Here, we demonstrate how PARP inhibitors synergize with TMZ or SN-38 to induce apoptosis, whereas the combination of PARP inhibitors with the other drugs are not favorable. By investigation of key checkpoints in the molecular mechanisms of cell death, the pivotal role of the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis mediating the synergy between olaparib and TMZ was revealed.
Employing talazoparib monotherapy in combination with or without several chemotherapeutic drugs (TMZ, SN-38, cisplatin, doxorubicin, methotrexate and etoposide/carboplatin), the correlation between homologous recombination (HR) repair deficiency (BRCAness) and the response to talazoparib as prototypical PARP inhibitor was validated in different OS cell lines. By calculation of combination indices (CI) and fraction affected (Fa) values, we identified TMZ as the most potent chemotherapeutic drug in combination with talazoparib inducing the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway in OS.
In our studies of two independent tumor entities with contrary genetic background we identified the combination of PARP inhibitor and TMZ as being most effective. Our studies point out that after TMZ induced DNA methylation and concomitant PARP trapping, DNA damage-imposed checkpoint kinase activation consequently induces G2-cell cycle arrest. Subsequent, PARP inhibitor/TMZ causes MCL-1 degradation, followed by activation of BAK and BAX, succeeding in loss of mitochondrial outer membrane potential (LMMP) and activation of downstream effector-caspases in mitochondrial apoptosis. Our findings emphasize the importance of PARP inhibition in order to chemosensitize ES, which express high PARP levels, or OS that bear features of BRCAness.
Functional dynamics of ribonucleic acids : development and application of spectroscopic tools
(2016)
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertation wird der Aufbau eines zeitaufgelösten Fluorimeters, die photophysikalische Grundcharakterisierung der drei 2-(Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (PyAs) und das Wechselwirkungsgeflecht des tetracyclinbindenden Aptamers (TC-Aptamer) mit seinem Liganden Tetracycyclin (TC) und Mg2+ dargestellt.
Das zeitaufgelöste Fluorimeter basiert auf der experimentellen Technik des zeitkorrelierten Einzelphotonenzählens. Es verfügt über zwei Anregungsquellen: gepulste UV-LEDs und einen frequenzverdoppelten titandotierten Saphirlaser. Diese Quellen Decken einen Wellenlängenbereich von (310 - 550) nm ab. Das Spektrometer kann unter günstigen Umständen eine Zeitauflösung von 50 ps erreichen bei einer zeitlichen Messungenauigkeit von weniger als 0,02 %.
Die Leistungsfähigkeit des Aufbaus wird anhand einer umfangreichen Studie an den drei PyAs demonstriert.
Die drei PyAs 2-(1-Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (1PyA), 2-(2-Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (2PyA) und 2-(4-Pyrenylethinyl)-Adenosine (4PyA) sind eine Gruppe fluoreszierender RNA-Nukleosidanaloga, welche die Gesamtheit aller möglichen Konfigurations-isomere der Grundverbindung PyA umfassen. Ihre zeitabhängigen Fluoreszenzzerfallseigenschaften werden ergänzt von stationären Absorptions- und Fluoreszenzspektren, ultraschneller transienter Absorptionsspektroskopie und quantenchemischen Rechnungen. Die Fluoreszenz von 1PyA und 4PyA gehorchen der Regel von Kasha, wohingegen 2PyA einen triexponentiellen Zerfall mit ausgeprägter Abhängigkeit von der Anregungswellenlänge zeigt. Die transienten Absorptionsspektren aller drei Isomere weisen im gesamten Spektrum dominante, wenig strukturierte Absorptionsbanden des ersten angeregten Zustands auf, welche im nahen UV in unterschiedlichem Maße vom Grundzustandsbleichen und stimulierter Emission überlagert werden. 2PyA zeigt eine deutlich ausgeprägte Signatur für eine interne Umwandlung hin zum S1, wenn es in höhere angeregte Zustände angeregt wird.
Das Fluoreszenzverhalten von 2PyA wird mithilfe eines lokal angeregten (LE) und zweier intramolekularer Ladungstransferzustände, von denen einer der koplanaren Orientierung von Pyren und Adenin (MICT) und der andere einer um 90 ° verdrehten Orientierung (TICT) entspricht. Der LE-Zustand ist hierbei verknüpft mit dem S2 von 2PyA, welcher einer rein pyrenlokalisierten Anregung entspricht. Dieser Zustand existiert so in 1PyA und 4PyA nicht. Der verdrehte TICT-Zustand ist nur in 2PyA bevölkerbar, weil für 2PyA die Barriere zur Bildung von Rotameren am niedrigsten ist und das Molekül nach Anregung daher in diese Geometrie kommen kann und dann durch die stärkere elektrostatische Anziehung stabilisiert wird. 1PyA und 4PyA emittieren hingegen nur aus dem MICT-Zustand.
Die Komplexbildung des TC-Aptamers mit seinem Liganden TC in Lösung wird empfindlich beeinflusst durch die-Konzentration von Magnesiumkationen. Dies wird untersucht durch Bindungs- und Faltungs- und Denaturierungsstudien mit verschiedenen Mg- und Harnstoffkonzentrationen. Als experimentelle Observable dienen hierbei die konformationsabhängige Nukleobasenabsorption und ihr Zirkulardichroismus im fernen UV, die Fluoreszenz des Liganden TC und die freiwerdende Wärme der exothermen Bindungsreaktion des Aptamers mit Mg in An- und Abwesenheit von TC.
Ohne Mg ist eine Interaktion des TC-Aptamers mit TC nicht nachweisbar. Dies liegt daran, dass Mg die notwendige elektrostatische Abschirmung der negativen elektrischen Ladung am RNA-Rückgrat zur Verfügung stellt. Die Abschirmung erlaubt es dem Aptamer kompakte Strukturen mit tertiären Kontakten auszubilden. Wenn die Mg-Konzentration die Faltung des Aptamers vollständig unterstützt (> 1 mM), so befindet sich das Aptamer weitgehend in einer vorgefalteten Konformation, welche der bindungskompetenten stark ähnelt. In diesem Zustand kann das Aptamer seinen Liganden extrem schnell, nämlich annähernd diffusionslimitiert binden. Unter diesen Bedingungen hat TC kaum Einfluss auf die Konformation seines Aptamers.
Bei physiologischen Mg-Konzentrationen (0,2 - 0,8 mM) kann das Aptamer kompakte Konformationen mit tertiären Strukturen einnehmen. Diejenige Konformation, welche der bindenden sehr stark ähnelt, dominiert das konformationelle Gleichgewicht jedoch noch nicht vollständig, es ist lediglich eine Konformation von vielen möglichen. Daher eröffnen physiologische Mg-Konzentrationen dem TC-Aptamer Teile des Konformationsraumes, welche andernfalls nicht zugänglich wären und TC stabilisiert selektiv die native Konformation. Diese konformationelle Verschiebung liefert kann hierbei zur robusten Signalgebung für die Funktion als Riboschalter dienen.
This thesis deals with the NMR characterization of the structure and the folding dynamics of DNA G quadruplexes as potential therapeutic target in cancer therapy and building block for DNA based nanotechnology.
The first part of this thesis (Chapters 1-5) introduces the reader to the world of G quadruplexes.
The main features of the classic Watson Crick double helix and alternative non B DNA structures are illustrated in Chapter 1. Many different base pairing schemes are possible, besides the canonical Watson Crick motif, thereby expanding the structural complexity of DNA. Non canonical base pairing, such as Hoogsteen hydrogen bonding, enables the assembly of triplets and quartets, which are the building blocks of triplex and quadruplex structures, respectively.
The structural characteristics of DNA G quadruplexes are delineated in detail in Chapter 2.
G quadruplex structures are extremely polymorphic, in terms of strands orientation, loops geometry, grooves width and arrangement of the glycosidic torsion angles. The various structural elements as well as the different cation coordination geometries are here presented, with a special emphasis on the diversity of conformations reported for the telomeric DNA G quadruplexes.
Chapter 3 describes the biological roles of G quadruplex structures in the genome. After introducing the architecture of the telomeric DNA and its interacting proteins, the mechanism of the telomeres elongation catalysed by the telomerase enzyme and its implications for cancer are discussed. The occurrence of G quadruplex structures in functional regions of the genome, such as promoter regions of oncogenes, and their possible roles in regulating the gene transcription are then outlined in the second part of the chapter.
The potential of G quadruplex as a novel anti cancer target is examined in Chapter 4 and the proposed anti cancer mechanisms for a ligand stabilizing G quadruplex structures are discussed.
RNA G quadruplexes and their putative role in gene regulation at the level of translation are briefly illustrated at the end of the chapter.
A general overview on the NMR methods to investigate the G quadruplex structures is presented in Chapter 5. The experimental set up used for the real time NMR studies of the G quadruplex folding is also described.
The second part of the thesis (Chapters 6-8), which is the cumulative part, comprises the original publications grouped in three Chapters according to the topic.
The state of the art on small molecules targeting G quadruplex structures is given at the beginning of Chapter 6, including a summary of the experimental structures of G quadruplexes in complex with ligands available up to date. The publications presented in Chapters 6.1-6.3 are concerned with the elucidation of the interaction modes between DNA G quadruplexes and selected ligands with potential therapeutic applications.
The binding ability of two natural alkaloids (berberine and sanguinarine) to telomeric G quadruplexes is examined in Chapter 6.1. The ability of carbazole and diguanosine derivatives (synthetized in the group of Prof. Dash, IISER, Kolkata) to interact with c-MYC G quadruplex and down regulate c-MYC expression is explored in Chapter 6.2 and Chapter 6.3, respectively.
The energy landscape of human telomeric G quadruplex structures is discussed in Chapter 7, in light of the experimental kinetic studies as well as molecular dynamics simulations reported in literature until now. Up to date there is no general consensus regarding the folding pathway of unimolecular human telomeric G quadruplex, in particular due to the lack of atomic resolution data on the species involved in the folding. Chapter 7.1 presents the first real time NMR study of the human telomeric G quadruplex folding kinetics.
The final chapter of this thesis (Chapter 8) outlines the potential of G-quadruplex structures as building blocks in nanotechnology. After illustrating briefly the additional possibilities offered by alternative non B DNA structures to programme nanomaterials, a number of applications employing G quadruplex structures in different fields of nanotechnology are described. The article presented in Chapter 8.1 investigates the structural and photoswitching properties of a novel intermolecular azobenzene containing G quadruplex synthetized in the group of Prof. Heckel (Goethe University, Frankfurt).
Tectonin β-propeller containing protein 2 (TECPR2) was first identified in a mass- spectrometric approach as an interactor of GABARAP, an ATG8-family protein playing a role in autophagy. The mammalian ATG8 protein family consists of seven members, namely MAP1LC3A (LC3A), MAP1LC3B (LC3B), MAP1LC3C (LC3C), GABARAP, GABARAPL1 and GABARAPL2. All share an ubiquitin-like core and possess two additional N-terminal α-helices, which are important for the distinct functions of the proteins. First determined in various organelles the ATG8 proteins are shown to be involved in autophagy, supporting the formation and cargo recruitment of autophagosomes, the vesicles transporting cargo for autophagic degradation.
Autophagy is the process of recycling cytoplasmic contents by degradation of misfolded proteins or damaged organelles in order to supply nutrients. Also clearance of pathogens can be achieved via autophagy. Importantly, LC3B is incorporated into the autophagosomal membrane and is therefore used as the main marker for autophagosomes. Previous studies exhibited that depletion of TECPR2 leads to a loss of LC3B-positive structures in cells, which suggests TECPR2 to positively regulate autophagic processes.
A frame shift deletion in the gene encoding for TECPR2 causes the generation of a premature stop codon and subsequent an unstable version of the protein, which is then degraded. Mutation in the TECPR2 gene triggers a neurodegenerative disorder termed hereditary spastic paraparesis (HSP). HSPs are a diverse group of neurodegenerative diseases that are characterized by spasticity in prevalent lower extremities and were mediated by a loss of axonal integrity of the corticospinal motor neurons. In the context of HSP more than 50 gene loci were identified by now. While TECPR2 is a human ATG8 binding protein and positive regulator of autophagy causing a form of HSP, the exact function of TECPR2 is unknown.
This study primarily focused on the determination of TECPR2’s binding mode to ATG8 proteins in vitro and in cells. The association of TECPR2 to all ATG8-family proteins was confirmed in in vitro pulldown experiments. Following fragment-based binding and peptide array experiments, the LC3-interacting region (LIR) of TECPR2 could be verified with mutants of TECPR2 lacking the LIR motif. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) were conducted to gain deeper insights into the binding preference to the different ATG8-family members. Moreover, the crystal structure of TECPR2-LIR was solved. In cells colocalization studies with overexpressed ATG8 proteins unraveled a preferential binding to the LC3-subfamily.
Further, mass spectrometric analysis revealed novel association partners of TECPR2: SEC24D, HOPS and BLOC-1, all of those participating in different endomembrane trafficking pathways. Interaction and colocalization of TECPR2 with these components was validated with several immunoprecipitation experiments and the N-terminal part of the protein comprising the WD40-domain could be defined as the binding site for all three of the association partners. In further approaches, the requirement of the LIR-motif and the necessity of the availability of LC3 protein for the particular interactions were determined. Interestingly, in the absence of LC3C the binding of TECPR2 to SEC24D was completely disrupted whereas a loss of LC3B only resulted in a decreased association. Notably, the binding proteins were not subjected to autophagosomal degradation, indicating that TECPR2 may operate as a multifunctional scaffold protein. While depletion of TECPR2 destabilized HOPS and BLOC-1, the autophagy defect observed in TECRP2-deficient cells could not be attributed to functional impairment of these two complexes.
Moreover, loss of TECPR2 led to a decline in protein levels of SEC24D and of its heterodimer partner SEC23A. Thus, TECPR2 is required to regulate the protein levels of SEC23A and SEC24D and subsequently the formation of the heterodimers. Together, SEC24D and SEC23A form the inner coat of COPII vesicles. These vesicles are responsible for the anterograde transport of cargo from the ER toward the Golgi compartment. COPII-coated vesicles are secreted form ER at distinct sites, termed ER exit sites (ERES). The small GTPase SAR1A maintains the vesicle budding, coating and secretion at the ERES. Together with SEC13, SEC31 forms the outer coat of the COPII vesicles and therefore serves as a general ERES marker.
Consistent with a defect in COPII coat assembly, the number of ERES diminished in the absence of TECPR2. These phenotypes could be rescued by the wildtype TECPR2 protein but not by the LIR-mutant. Intriguingly, these results were mimicked by depletion of LC3C, which localized to ERES. By monitoring the release of various cargos from ER in dependency of TECPR2 or LC3C, a role of both proteins in ER export was determined. These facts indicated that TECPR2 cooperates with LC3C to facilitate COPII assembly, ERES maintenance and ER export. Notably, fibroblast derived from a HSP patient carrying mutated TECPR2 showed diminished SEC24D protein levels and delayed ER export.
Concurrent with emerging evidence for a role of ERES in autophagosome formation, depletion of TECPR2 or LC3C or overexpression of a constitutive inactive SAR1 mutant reduced puncta formation of the early autophagosomal protein WIPI2.
In summary, this study uncovered a role for TECPR2 in ER export at ERES through interaction and stabilization of SEC24D, a COPII coat protein. This process also depended on ATG8-family protein LC3C, which is localized at ERES. Both proteins are required for correct COPII-mediated secretion. Moreover, the presence of TECPR2 and LC3C on ER allows development of omegasomes, membranous structures budding ER to form autophagosomes, by stabilization of WIPI2 and therefore contribute to autophagosome formation.
Transport processes across the membrane are essential to ensure survival of every living cell. Therefore, the exchange of membrane impermeable molecules is mediated by specific transport proteins, which are embedded in the lipid bilayer.
One important class comprises secondary active transporters, which couple very efficiently the uphill transport of the main substrate against its concentration gradient to the downhill transport of an additional substrate. These transporters are widely distributed among all kingdoms of life and accomplish many crucial functions. One function is to counteract the deleterious effect of hyperosmotic stress in bacteria. Several members of the BCCT (betaine-choline-carnitinetransport) family of secondary transporters mediate osmostress protection by the accumulation of the compatible solute betaine or its precursor choline (Lamark et al., 1991; Peter et al., 1996; Ziegler et al., 2010). Besides osmo-dependent sodium or proton-coupled symporters, the BCCT family includes few rare representatives of osmo-independent transporters such as the substrate:product antiporter CaiT from E. coli (Jung et al., 2002; Ziegler et al., 2010).
The best-characterized member of the BCCT family is the sodium-coupled betaine transporter BetP from Corynebacterium glutamicum. BetP together with the ABCtransporter OpuA and the H+-solute symporter ProP, became a paradigm for osmoregulated osmolyte transport. Although, all three transporters were extensively studied, the general mechanism of osmoregulation is still far from being understood. Thus, one task of this thesis was to elucidate further the regulatory properties of BetP.
BetP is tightly regulated by osmotic stress and is able to increase its basal betaine uptake activity dramatically upon elevated osmolalities within one second (Peter et al., 1998a). The osmotic stress is sensed by BetP via two stimuli, one is the increase of the internal K+ concentration above a threshold of 220 mM (Rübenhagen et al., 2001), the second is related to a change in the physical state of the membrane (Maximov et al., 2014). So far, several solved crystal structures in combination with functional and computational analysis provided insights into the coupling mechanism of betaine and its co-substrate sodium (Khafizov et al., 2012; Perez et al., 2012). Despite the wealth of data, the precise regulatory mechanism of trimeric BetP is still unclear.
Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) is a light-gated cation selective channel from the unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which is involved in phototaxis and photophobic responses. As other rhodopsins, ChR2 comprises a seven-transmembrane helix (TMH) motif and a retinal as the light-sensitive chromophore. The chromophore is covalently attached via a protonated Schiff base to the conserved lysine residue Lys257 located in TMH7. Based on its primary sequence and the all-trans configuration of the retinal in the ground state, ChR2 is assigned to the type I rhodopsins, also referred to as microbial-type rhodopsins. Upon light activation, the retinal isomerizes from the all-trans to the 13-cis form. This photoisomerization, which is accompanied by conformational changes of the protein, eventually leads to the opening of the channel and cation translocation. Cation flux during the conductive state leads to depolarization of the cell membrane and subsequent triggering of action potentials when expressed in neurons. Therefore, ChR2 has become the most versatile optogenetic tool, enabling a non-invasive investigation of neural circuits at high spatial and temporal resolution. With the rapidly increasing importance of ChR2 as a tool in neurobiology and cell biology, structural information is the prerequisite to an unambiguous understanding of the molecular mechanisms of this unique light-activated ion channel. The coupling between isomerization and structural alterations is well understood for other microbial-type rhodopsins, like bacteriorhodopsin (bR), halorhodopsin (HR) and sensory rhodopsin II (SRII). In case of ChR2, the first data on light-induced conformational changes came from spectroscopic studies and structural information is still missing. However, in order to fully understand the mechanism of light transduction by ChR2, it is necessary to determine the changes in the protein structure at specific steps in the photocycle.
By the time I started my PhD thesis, there was no structural information of ChR2 available. Therefore, the objective of this thesis was to obtain structural information of the transmembrane domain containing the first 315 amino acids of ChR2 by cryo electron crystallography. Besides revealing the structure of membrane proteins, cryo-EM of two-dimensional (2D) crystals is ideal for investigating conformational changes in membrane proteins induced by different stimuli. Therefore, the second objective of my thesis was the investigation of light-induced conformational changes in the slow C128T ChR2 mutant. The ~1,000 times longer lifetime of the open state of the C128T mutant compared to the wild-type allowed to trap different intermediates that accumulate during the photocycle.
In 2012, the X-ray structure of a channelrhodopsin-1/channelrhodopsin-2 chimaera (C1C2) at 2.3 Å resolution in the closed dark-adapted state was published (Kato et al., 2012). The structure revealed the essential molecular architecture of C1C2, including the retinal-binding pocket and the putative cation conduction pathway. Together with biochemical, spectroscopic, mutagenesis experiments, and the high-resolution model, some functionally important residues of ChR2 have been identified. However, unambiguous explanation of the molecular determinants that contribute to activation (gating) and transport were still mostly unknown.
RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS
The first half of my theses dealt with 2D crystallization of ChR2. I succeeded in obtaining 2D crystals of ChR2 of four different types, which differed in size, crystal packing, crystal contacts and resolution, yielding structure factors up to 6 Å resolution. The crystals were grown by reconstituting the protein with different lipids at various lipid-to-protein ratios. The best crystals formed with the synthetic lipid DMPC and EPL upon detergent removal by dialysis. The projection maps calculated from these crystals revealed the overall structure of C128T ChR2 at 6 Å resolution and were published in 2011 (Müller et al., 2011). Surprisingly, ChR2 was found to be a dimer in all crystal types. The ChR2 dimer was stable both in detergent solution and in the presence of lipids for 2D crystallization. The monomers clearly showed the expected densities for the seven TMHs.
The arrangement of the ChR2 dimers on the four 2D lattices was different. However, comparison of the individual rojection maps revealed no significant differences within the ChR2 interface in the four crystal forms. The observation that the structure of the dimer was the same in all four crystal forms and in different lipids suggested strong specific contacts between the two protomers and implied that the protein was also dimeric in the native membrane. These findings were in agreement with Western blot analysis of plasma membranes from oocytes expressing ChR2 and laser-induced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry, which both showed ChR2 as a dimer. The unusual stability of the ChR2 dimer contrasts with other microbial rhodopsins, which exist in different oligomeric states, i.e. monomers, trimers or dimers. These observations raised the question whether the functional unit is the monomer or the dimer.
The comparison of the projection map of the light-driven proton pump bR at the same resolution showed similar overall dimensions. Based on this comparison, the densities which became evident in the ChR2 projection maps could be assigned to the corresponding seven densities in bR. The shape of the densities near the dimer interface suggested that TMHs 2, 3, and 4 are oriented more or less perpendicular to the membrane plane, while the other four helices appear to be more tilted, as in bR.
Based on the high-resolution bR structure and the projection structures obtained, I have built a homology model. On the basis of this homology model, several residues found in the dimer interface were selected for mutational studies in order to disrupt the dimer interface.
The investigation of light-induced conformational changes in C128T ChR2 was the second part of my thesis. I designed an experimental setup for trapping light-induced conformational changes in C128T ChR2. In addition, I optimized the sample preparation in a way that the different illumination conditions did not alter the quality of the crystals. I have trapped two different functional states, namely the conductive open state and the non-conductive closed dark-adapted state.
In order to visualize the location and the extent of conformational changes, projection difference maps were calculated between the open and the closed state. Visual inspection of the difference maps between the open and the two closed states revealed three difference peaks that map to the TMHs 2, 6, and 7, indicating significant and specific rearrangements of these helices. The strong pair of positive/negative peaks at TMH6 suggests an outward tilt movement of approximately 2 Å. Close comparison of similar work on bR revealed that this movement is likely to occur at the cytoplasmic end of TMH6. A second highly significant negative peak is observed at TMH7, indicating a less pronounced tilt compared to TMH6. The third negative peak at TMH2 indicates a loss of density in this region. No significant differences were recorded at the TMH1, 5 and at the dimer interface formed by TMH3 and 4.
I succeeded in trapping and characterizing the open and closed state in the photocycle of ChR2 and could demonstrate that the transition from the closed to the open state is linked to significant light-induced tilt movements of TMH6 and 7, plus a loss of order in TMH2. These conformational changes are likely to create a large water-filled conducting pore, which seems to be required for the conductance of up to 2,000 ions per photocycle. The previously mentioned spectroscopic studies support the difference structures I obtained. This approach sets the stage for studying structural changes accompanying the formation and decay of other photocycle intermediates in ChR2. Future studies will aim at three-dimensional maps of the open and closed state at higher resolution.
The high selectivity of biological transformations taking place in Nature have long inspired synthetic chemists to develop analogous chemical processes. Similarly, transient intermediates identified in chemical transformations often provide a basis to understand biological processes. Therefore, new insights gained in biological studies are often useful for chemistry and vice versa.
Proteins, and catalytically active enzymes, are among the most essential units of living cells. Metalloproteins or -enzymes, i.e., proteins or enzymes that contain transition metal ions such as copper, nickel, iron or zinc are often involved in processes like (1) metal-ion storage and transport, (2) exchange of electrons with the environment in catalysis and electron transfer reactions, and (3) dioxygen storage, transport, and metabolization.
For decades, copper-mediated biological oxidations have spurred a great deal of interest among synthetic and catalytic chemists. Copper enzymes such as dopamine β-monooxygenase (DβM), peptidylglycine α-hydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM),particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) and tyrosinase activate molecular oxygen (O2) and incorporate one of the oxygen atoms selectively into C−H bonds yielding hydroxylated organic substrates. Remarkable progress in bioinorganic research has led to the development of a large number of copper-based model systems supported by various nitrogen donor ligands that bind O2, cleave the O−O bond, and/or afford hydroxylation reactions similar to copper enzymes. These synthetic model systems have helped to understand the structureactivity relationships of their biological role models and supporting theoretical studies have contributed substantially to the development of the field. Specifically, several density functional theory (DFT) studies have provided detailed mechanistic insights into coppermediated aliphatic and aromatic hydroxylation reactions. Until to date, however, pertinent quantum chemical research still suffers from severe problems as to identify sufficiently accurate and efficient methods for mechanistic studies, and conflicting literature reports have created confusions within the scientific community. Therefore, the first aim of this thesis is to identify a DFT method well suited to describe copper-mediated hydroxylation reactions. With this method at hand a number of interesting hydroxylation reactions is investigated aiming at a detailed understanding of the underlying reaction mechanisms.
The thesis is divided into four chapters of which the first, the introductory chapter, is further divided into three sections (1) copper proteins and enzymes, (2) copper-O2 reactivity in enzymes and (3) biomimetic Cu/O2 chemistry. The first section gives a brief overview of a number of copper enzymes. The second section provides a concise introduction to the biochemical transformations brought about by those copper enzymes that perform aliphatic and aromatic hydroxylation reactions. It is shown that such copper enzymes carry different types of active sites which are responsible for their specific biological functions. These copper enzymes with their biological function are the role models for synthetic chemistry. In the third section, biomimetic Cu/O2 chemistry, the insights gathered in the past 35 years of extensive research on copper-based synthetic model systems that mimic various aspects of copper-enzyme reactivity are reviewed. Various types of active copper sites have been realized in these synthetic model systems and a brief introduction to the respective reactivities towards C−H bonds is presented. We will specifically focus on isomerization processes of dinuclear active Cu2O2 sites and the specific reactivity aspects of these isomers, as these phenomena have been the subject of enormous research efforts aiming at the understanding of the function of the enzyme tyrosinase.
Theory has been integral part of this research and density functional theory (DFT) has effectively taken over the role as a working horse in most studies. Therefore, the second chapter is devoted to an exposition of earlier DFT applications in mechanistic studies of Cu/O2 chemistry. We specifically highlight the problems related to the use of DFT in this field and illustrate the present state of knowledge.
The third chapter of this thesis provides results and discussion of (1) DFT benchmark studies and (2) mechanistic studies. In the first section, the results of a careful benchmark study on the performance of various DFT methods to study the μ-η2:η2-peroxodicopper(II)/bis(μ-oxo)dicopper(III) core isomerization and the C–H hydroxylation processes are compared with available experimental reference data. We provide an assessment of the effects of relativity, counteranions, and dispersion on the reference reactions. The most suitable DFT method evolving from this study, BLYP-D/def2-TZVP including solvent and relativistic corrections, is applied in the next sections to investigate the mechanistic scenario underlying three copper-dioxygen mediated hydroxylation reactions of aliphatic and aromatic C–H bonds. Our mechanistic studies show that bis(μ-oxo)dicopper(III) complexes are capable of achieving selective aliphatic and aromatic C–H hydroxylations. The study of substituent effects in these reactions has further shown that the bis(μ-oxo)dicopper complex acts as an electrophile in hydroxylation.
The fourth chapter presents the conclusions of our investigations. Part of the work presented in this thesis has been published in a peer reviewed journal and enclosed in appendix 1. Further research work, not presented in chapters 1-4, was conducted during my PhD time. This has led to two publications which are added in the appendix.
Small molecule inhibitors sensitize neuroblastoma cells for chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis
(2015)
Neuroblastoma (NB) is one of the most common solid extracranial pediatric tumors, deriving from undifferentiated cells of the peripheral nervous system. It accounts for approximately 10% of all childhood cancers. High stage tumors usually show poor prognosis despite aggressive treatment such as radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Therefore, it is of utmost importance to find novel treatment strategies in order to improve existing chemotherapy protocols. Combination treatment offers advantages, as chemotherapeutic drugs can be applied in low and subtoxic doses, reducing possible side-effects. Here, we report in a two-part study that small molecule inhibitors (SMI), namely BI 2536, a PLK1 inhibitor and BV6, a SMAC mimetic (SM), sensitize neuroblastoma cells for chemotherapeutic drug-induced cell death. By using i) BI 2536 in combination with vinca alkaloids and ii) BV6 in combination with either doxorubicin or vinca alkaloids, we show that cell death is synergistically enhanced compared to monotherapy. Furthermore, combination treatment significantly reduces survival of NB cells in long-term assays, compared to single treatment. We identify that vinca alkaloid/SMI combinations induce mitotic arrest, as shown by phosphorylation of histone H3, which results in the induction of intrinsic apoptosis and inhibition of CDK1 by RO-3306 could abolish these findings. Mechanistically, upon vinca alkaloid/SMI-induced mitotic arrest, anti-apoptotic BCL-2 proteins such as MCL-1, BCL-2 or BCL-XL are degraded or inactivated by phosphorylation, which induces the activation of the proapoptotic BCL-2 family proteins BAX and BAK. The importance of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway in vinca alkaloid/SMI-induced cell death was further highlighted by the fact that ectopic expression of BCL-2 inhibits vinca alkaloid/SMI-induced DNA fragmentation and BAK- and caspase-activation. In contrast to the vinca alkaloid/SMI cotreatment, DOX/SMI (DOX/BV6)-induced apoptosis only partially involves the mitochondrial pathway. Instead, we clarify that RIP1 is required for DOX/BV6-induced apoptosis, as pharmacological and genetic inhibition of RIP1 rescues from apoptosis induction. Although it has been shown in previous studies that SM-treatment (e.g. BV6) can induce the NF-κB pathway and auto-/paracrine TNFα production through cIAP1/2 depletion, DOX/BV6-induced apoptosis is completely independent of NF-κB activation in our setting, despite fast cIAP1 depletion. This conclusion is based on the fact that inhibition of the NF-κB pathway by exogenously expressed dominant-negative IκBα as well as application of a TNFα blocking antibody does not reduce DOX/BV6-induced cell death. In summary, we unravel two new promising treatment strategies for neuroblastoma patients by using a combination treatment of two different small molecule inhibitors, combined with well-characterized chemotherapeutic agents. Furthermore we give detailed insights into cell death pathways induced by these combination treatments, in which mitochondria and RIP1 have a differential role in chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis.
Cardiac progenitor cells hold great potential for regenerative therapies in heart disorders. However, the molecular mechanisms regulating cardiac progenitor cell expansion and differentiation remain poorly defined. Here we show that the multi- adaptor protein Ldb1, which mediates interactions between different classes of LIM domain transcription factors, is a multifunctional regulator of cardiac progenitor cell differentiation. Ldb1-deficient embryonic stem cells (ESCs) show a markedly decreased expression of second heart field (SHF) marker genes and subsequently impaired cardiomyocyte differentiation. Conditional ablation of Ldb1 in the early SHF using an Isl1-Cre driver led to embryonic lethality at Embryonic day (E)10.5 with cardiac abnormalities including a significantly smaller right ventricle and a shortened outflow tract, supporting a crucial role of Ldb1 in the SHF. Mechanistically we show that the importance of Ldb1 for SHF development is two-fold: On the one hand, Ldb1 binds to Isl1 and protects it from proteasomal degradation, as a consequence of which Ldb1-deficiency leads to an almost complete loss of Isl1+ cardiovascular progenitor cells. On the other hand the Isl1/Ldb1 complex promotes long-range promoter-enhancer interactions at the loci of the core cardiac transcription factors Mef2c and Hand2. Chromosome conformation capture followed by sequencing (3C- seq) identified specific Ldb1-mediated interactions of the Isl1/Ldb1 responsive Mef2c anterior heart field enhancer with genes which play key roles in cardiac progenitor cell function and cardiovascular development. These interactions are of critical importance to regulate the expression of the downstream target genes since their expression levels are strongly dependent on the Ldb1/Isl1 levels. Overexpression of an Ldb1 mutant, which contains the LIM interaction domain and thereby can protect Isl1 protein from degradation, but lacks the dimerization domain and thus cannot promote long-range interactions, does not collaborate with Isl1 to regulate the expression of their common targets and results in defects in Isl1+ cardiac progenitor differentiation. In this thesis we show one of the first examples of genome-wide chromatin reorganization mediated by a developmental regulated, cell type specific, transcription complex. Ldb1 in concert with Isl1 promotes long range promoter- enhancer and enhancer-enhancer interactions in order to create active chromatin hub where gene important for heart development can be co-regulated. Moreover, Isl1 and Ldb1 genetically interact during heart development, as Isl1/Ldb1 haplodeficient embryos show various cardiac anomalies. The dosage-sensitive interdependence between Isl1 and Ldb1 in the expression of these key factors in cardiogenesis, further supports a key role of the Isl1/Ldb1 complex in coordinating a three dimensional genome organization, upstream of a regulatory network driving cardiac differentiation and heart development.
In conclusion, the Isl1/Ldb1 complex orchestrate a genome-wide three dimensional chromatin reorganization resulting in a transcriptional program responsible for the differentiation of multipotent cardiac progenitor cells into cardiomyocytes.
Small molecule drug discovery is strongly supported by biophysical data. In the reach of this thesis, cell free protein expression was used to produce human target proteins for ligand binding assays using Surface Plasmon Resonance spectroscopy (SPR). In the second step the binding and interaction characteristics of small molecules and fragments were analyzed using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy (NMR).
The first target protein was the human acid sensing channel 1 (ASIC1a). ASIC1a was expressed in a cell free expression system based on E.coli lysate. To optimize the expression, several parameters including fusion tags, ion concentrations and different hydrophobic environments were tested.
The adaption of the folding environment for ASIC1a needed more optimization, because it is a very challenging target to express in an in vitro system. Three different expression modes were employed to find a suitable folding environment.
SPR binding studies with ASIC1a were performed with chicken ASIC1a expressed in insect cells. The immobilization of cASIC1a and the used buffer conditions were tested using Psalmotoxin 1, a naturally occurring peptide venom which binds strong to the trimeric form of ASIC1a. Compound characterization experiments were performed with a variety of different ligands including amiloride, a general blocker of the whole ENaC protein family. None of the used ligands showed titration curves that would match a simple 1:1 binding model. The experiments either show no binding signal or signal that could be interpreted as unspecific binding. Even amiloride that should be binding the protein shows no signals that fit a simple binding model.
Another target protein that was investigated is the soluble prolyl cis/trans isomerase Cyclophilin D (or peptidyl prolyl isomerase F – PPIF). This protein is involved in the regulation of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore and therefore a potential drug target to treat neurodegenerative diseases. Small molecule binding was tested with CypD using SPR. Following the kinetic analysis of small molecule ligands, the binding position of different binding fragments was analyzed. These fragments originated from a SPR based fragment screen and gave no co-crystal structures with CypD. Therefore NMR was used to investigate the binding position of these fragments. An analysis of the chemical shift perturbations upon ligand addition revealed that the NMR analysis was in line with the results gathered by x-ray crystallography. The fragments with unknown binding position however, all bind to a specific patch slightly outside the binding pocket.
The ligand CL1 showed a special behavior in the NMR experiments. Upon addition to CypD, it produced large shifts on many signals of the protein, accompanied by a severe line broadening. The shift perturbations were so numerous and large that the spectrum had to be reassigned in complex with the ligand. Triple selective labeling was applied to allow a fast and nearly complete signal assignment. The possibility to use highly sophisticated labeling schemes, is one of the advantages of cell free protein expression. After the assignment of the complex spectrum, the chemical shift perturbations were analyzed and quantified. The residues showing the strongest CSPs are also identified in the crystal structure to be involved in the binding of CL1, giving a consistent picture. The numerous and large shift perturbations, produced by CL1 led to the assumption, that the ligand induces a conformational change in CypD, which is not represented in the co-crystal structure. This conformational change was characterized by a NMR based structure determination. CypD apo yielded a defined bundle, whose folded regions overlap well with the corresponding crystal structure.
For the calculation of the CypD-CL1 complex structure, the sidechain resonances were assigned using an automated assignment approach with the software FLYA. The calculation of the CypD-CL1 complex structure did not result in a defined bundle. While parts of the protein converge in a well folded state, the region around the active site shows no defined folding. Careful analysis of the structure calculation suggests that the problems during structure calculation did not originate from an incorrect resonance assignment, but rather from a lack of NOE crosspeaks. This might be due to a broadening of the corresponding NOE crosspeaks or the coexistence of many different conformations. This leads to the conclusion, that the protein conformation is not defined by the NMR data and could be in a dynamic interchange between multiple structures.
This hypothesis is supported by other observations. The line broadening of the signals in the complex is pronounced in the area around the active site and the substrate binding pocket, hinting to a connection between catalytic activity and protein dynamics. In addition many NMR signals are sensitive to changes in the measurement field strength and the temperature. This field dependent signal splitting suggests dynamic conformational changes in the protein between at least two different conformations on a millisecond timescale.
The current working model is that CL1 binds to CypD and induces the catalytic cycle and the connected conformational changes in CypD. As a result the proline like moiety in CL1 is constantly switching between the cis and the trans conformation. Due to the high affinity of CL1, the inhibitor does not leave the binding pocket after successful catalysis, but stays bound in the pocket stimulating further catalytic cycles. These findings as well as the working model are well in line with data published for Cyclophilin A, another member of the cyclophilin family, thereby supporting the model.
During the last decade of the 20th century, the field of mass spectrometry has seen a revolutionary change in its application and scope. The introduction of soft ionization methods for the analysis of biological molecules has expanded the area of mass spectrometry from its early roots in the analysis of inorganic and organic species into the fields of biology and medicine.
Today, the use of the mass spectrometry is extended to a wide range of applications in biotechnology and pharmaceutical industry, in geological, environmental and clinical research. In biochemistry, the principles of mass spectrometry are, however, broadly applicable in accurate molecular weight determination, reaction monitoring, amino acid sequencing, oligonucleotide sequencing and protein structure.
In order to carry out their biological activities, proteins interact most often to each other and form transient or stable complexes. In addition, some proteins specifically interact also with other proteins or with non-protein molecules, such as DNA, RNA or metabolites, these interactions being critical for their function. Hence, defining the composition of protein complexes, as well as understanding how protein complexes are assembled and regulated yield invaluable insights into protein function. Coupled with an isolation technique to purify a specific protein complex of interest, mass spectrometry can rapidly and reliably identify the components of complexes. In addition, quantitative MS techniques offer the possibility of studying dynamically regulated interactions....
Rotary adenosine triphosphate (ATP)ases are ubiquitous, membrane-bound enzyme complexes involved in biological energy conversion. The first subtype, the so-called F1Fo ATP synthase, predominantly functions as an ATP synthesizing machinery in most bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplasts. The vacuolar subtype of enzyme, the V1Vo ATPase, operates as an ATP driven ion pump in eukaryotic membranes. The subtype found in archaea and some bacteria is called A1Ao ATP (synth)ase and is capable of working in both directions either to synthesize ATP or to generate an ion motive force by consuming the same.
All the three above-mentioned subtypes of rotary ATPases work as nanomolecular machines sharing a conserved mechanism to perform the energy conservation process. The simplest form of these enzymes is the bacterial F1Fo ATP synthase. Here, ions are channelled via the membrane stator subunit a to the rotor ring of the enzyme. After almost a complete rotation of the ring the ions are released again on the other side of the membrane. This rotation is further transmitted via the central stalk to the soluble part of the enzyme, the F1-complex, where conformational changes within the nucleotide binding sites result in the synthesis of ATP from ADP and Pi.
The rotor or c-ring of the enzyme is the key protein complex in mediating transmembrane ion translocation. Several structural and biochemical methods have been applied in the past years to study the rotor rings from many different organisms. The results revealed that the stoichiometry of a c-ring of a given species is constant while it can vary between different species within a range of 8 to 15 c subunits. The c-ring stoichiometry determines directly the number of ions transported through Fo per rotation whereby three molecules of ATP are concurrently synthesized in the water-soluble F1 headgroup. Hence the number of c subunits has an important influence on the bioenergetics of the corresponding enzyme and thus the entire organism.
The c-ring of a rotary ATPase is able to specifically bind either protons (H+) or sodium ions (Na+) as the coupling ion for the enzyme. Several structures are already available revealing the coordination network of both types of rotor rings. In each case ion binding includes a highly-conserved carboxylic acid residue (glutamate or aspartate), in addition to a more varying combination of amino acid residues, whereby Na+ coordination is structurally more demanding than H+ binding.
In the first part of my PhD thesis, I aimed to characterize the F1Fo ATP synthase rotor ring of the opportunistic pathogenic bacterium Fusobacterium nucleatum on a functional and structural level. F. nucleatum is an anaerobic bacterium which uses peptides and amino acids as a primary energy source. It is one of the most frequently occuring bacteria in human body infections and involved in human periodontal diseases.
The protein complex was heterologously expressed within a hybrid ATP synthase in Escherichia coli and purified without an affinity tag for further analysis. Two high resolution X-ray structures of the c-ring were solved at low (5.3) and high (8.7) pH to 2.2 and 2.64 Å, respectively. In both structures, the conserved glutamate is in an ion-locked conformation, revealing that the conformational state of the ion binding carboxylate is not depending on the pH of the crystallization condition, which is in good agreement with previous structural and biochemical studies of other c-rings.
A Na+ ion is present within the c-ring binding site and directly coordinated by four amino acid residues and a structural water molecule. Remarkably, the Na+ is bound by two glutamate residues instead of one as is the case in the I. tartaricus Na+ binding c-ring, of which the first high resolution X-ray structure of a c-ring has been solved in 2005. Thus, a new type of Na+ coordination in an ATP synthase rotor ring with a two-carboxylate ion binding motif is described here, which also occurs in other bacteria, including several pathogens. Na+ specificity of the investigated c-ring was further confirmed by a competitive biochemical labeling reaction performed with a fluorescent ATP synthase inhibitor molecule (N-cyclohexyl-N`-[4(dimethylamino)-α-naphtyl] carbodiimide, NCD-4).
We furthermore complemented our functional and structural data of the F. nucleatum c-ring by computational studies to explore the ion translocation mechanism of this enzyme in more details. We therefore analyzed the protonation state of the second, additional glutamate in the ion binding site. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and free-energy calculations indicated that this glutamate is constitutively protonated, in the ion-locked as well as in a simulated, more hydrated open-conformation of the ion binding glutamate as when it is travelling through the a/c-ring interface upon c-ring rotation.
During my thesis, I worked on two different membrane proteins. One is a bacterial secondary transporter and the second is a human mitochondrial calcium channel.
The first part of my thesis involves the structural and biochemical characterization of an L-carnitine/ γ-butyrobetaine antiporter from bacteria called CaiT. The aim of the project was to understand the Na+ independence of CaiT and to determine the crystal structures of CaiT in different conformations to expand the mechanistic understanding of substrate/ product antiport in CaiT.
The study revealed how a positively charged amino acid side chain (arginine 262) in CaiT could structurally and functionally mimic a sodium ion. Additionally, various crystal structures of CaiT obtained in this study demonstrate that the central substrate-binding site is highly dynamic and can accommodate the substrate in various orientations.
In the second part of my thesis, I was able to optimize the expression and purification conditions for the human mitochondrial calcium uniporter or the MCU. Understanding how this channel functions can help us unravel the mechanism of calcium uptake by mitochondria. Secondary structure prediction analysis in combination with mass spectrometry of degraded MCU products obtained during the purification of the full-length protein led to the identification of a stable MCU construct. This study resulted in the successful purification of milligram quantities of stable MCU protein for the first time. Further optimization may be required to obtain more homogenous protein that is amenable for crystallization.
Disturbances in lipid metabolism are responsible for many chronic disorders, such as type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis. Regulation of lipid metabolism occurs by activated transcription factors peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor δ (PPARδ) and liver X receptor α (LXRα) mediating transcription of different target genes involved in regulation of fatty acid uptake and oxidation or cellular cholesterol homeostasis. This is especially relevant for the macrophages, since pathways regulated by PPARδ and LXRα affect foam cell formation, a process driving the progression of atherosclerotic lesion. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a central role in energy homeostasis in every type of eukaryotic cell, but its role in human macrophages, particularly with regard to lipid metabolism, is not precisely defined yet. Thus, I investigated the impact of AMPK activity on PPARδ and LXRα and the expression of their target genes involved in fatty acid oxidation (FAO) and cholesterol metabolism.
As PPARδ has been described as a potential target for prevention and treatment of several disorders and AMPK as interesting drug target for diabetes and metabolic syndrome, the aim of the first part of my studies was to investigate their interaction in primary human macrophages. Completing the first challenge successfully, I was able to establish a lentiviral transduction system for constitutively active AMPK (consisting of a truncated catalytic AMPKα1 subunit bearing an activating T198D mutation) in primary human macrophages.
Using genome-wide microarray analysis of gene expression, I demonstrate FAO as the strongest affected pathway during combined AMPKα1 overexpression and PPARδ activation.
The most influenced genes were validated by quantitative PCR as well as by Western analysis. I found that AMPK increases the expression of FAO-associated genes targeted by PPARδ. Corroborating the results obtained using AMPKα1 overexpression, PPARδ target gene expression was increased not only by PPARδ agonist GW501516, but also by pharmacological allosteric AMPK activator A-769662. Additional enhancement of target gene mRNA expression was achieved upon co-activation of PPARδ and AMPK. Silencing PPARδ expression increased basal expression of target genes, confirming the repressive nature of ligand-free PPARδ, abolishing the increased target gene expression upon AMPK or PPARδ activation. Measurements of triglyceride contents of human macrophages incubated with VLDL following PPARδ activation demonstrated a reduction of intracellular triglyceride accumulation in cells, which may reflect the enhancement of fat catabolism.
In the second part of my studies, I concentrated on the regulation of cholesterol transporter ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) expression by AMPK. ABCA1 facilitates
cholesterol efflux from macrophages thus, preventing atherosclerosis progression. For the first time, AMPK implication in the regulation of the ABCA1 pathway could be presented. Both AMPK overexpression and activation lead to significantly increased ABCA1 expression, whereas AMPKα1 knock-down strongly reduced this effect. Besides, I was able to prove an enhanced activity of ABCA1 during AMPK activation in human THP-1 macrophages by measuring cholesterol efflux into apolipoprotein AI-containing medium.
Previous findings showed regulation of ABCA1 by LXRα. I confirmed these results by silencing experiments indicating an essential role of LXRα in ABCA1 regulation pathway.
Here, ABCA1 mRNA as well as protein expression were positively mediated by LXRα. LXRα activation elevated ABCA1 levels, whereas its silencing down-regulated this effect.
Interestingly, ABCA1 was found to be regulated only by LXRα and not through LXRα. At the same time, knock-down of PPARδ, -γ or -δ, which may be also involved in the regulation of LXR/ABCA1 axis, did not influence the activation of ABCA1 expression by an AMPK activator. To confirm that LXRE on Abca1 promoter is essential for ABCA1 regulation, I performed luciferase reporter assay using constructs based on Abca1 promoter with or without LXRE mutation. Mutation of LXRE abolished reporter activity, whereas AMPK activation increased luciferase activity of wild-type LXRE construct. Furthermore, I demonstrate AMPK-dependent LXRα binding to the LXRE site of Abca1 promoter using the method of chromatin immunoprecipitation. AMPK activation significantly increased, whereas silencing of AMPK significantly attenuated LXRα binding, indicating AMPK as one of the most important regulators of ABCA1 expression.
In summary, I provided an evidence for AMPK involvement into lipid and cholesterol metabolism in human macrophages showing the regulation of PPARδ and LXRα target genes. The understanding of AMPK and PPARδ interaction allows the development of new approaches for treatment of metabolic syndrome and related diseases. Increased FAO during the activation of both proteins may exhibit better therapeutic benefit. On the other hand, I have shown the impact of AMPK activation on ABCA1 via LXRα up-regulation leading to increased cholesterol efflux in human macrophages for the first time. These findings thus may impact future improving of anti-atherosclerosis therapies.
Since Inhibitor of Apoptosis (IAP) proteins are frequently dysregulated in different cancer entities and contribute to apoptosis resistance, pharmacological IAP antagonists are considered to be promising agents for the future development of cancer treatment strategies. IAP antagonists are small-molecule drugs that have been designed to mimic the interaction site of IAP proteins with their endogenous inhibitor Second mitochondrial activator of caspases (SMAC). Thus, they are frequently referred to as SMAC mimetics. Treatment with SMAC mimetics engages an apoptotic program in cancers by affecting different components of the apoptotic machinery. Besides disinhibition of caspases, SMAC mimetics trigger non-canonical nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) signaling, which induces upregulation of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α and other NF-κB target genes. In particular, TNFα production has been closely linked to the induction of SMAC mimetic-mediated cell death. The TNFα-dependent para/autocrine loop facilitates the formation of a cytosolic complex consisting of caspase-8, Fas-associated death domain (FADD) and Receptor-interacting protein (RIP) 1, which serves as caspase-8 activation platform and ultimately triggers induction of apoptosis. In the present study, we use the small-molecule bivalent SMAC mimetic BV6 to analyze SMAC-stimulated NF-κB signaling in cancer cell lines of different entities. Interestingly, we identify two novel NF-κB-regulated factors that are both required for SMAC mimetic-induced apoptosis in a context-dependent manner. First, we show that NF-κB-dependent upregulation of death receptor 5 (DR5) can serve as an alternative mechanism of BV6-mediated cell death. We demonstrate that BV6 treatment induces NF-κB-dependent but largely TNFα -independent apoptosis in A172 glioblastoma cells. By using an unbiased whole genome expression analysis approach, we identify DR5 as a critical NF-κB target gene, which substitutes TNFα and is indispensable for BV6-initated cell death in A172 cells. Second, we demonstrate that Interferon regulatory factor (IRF) 1 is required for BV6-induced TNFα production and apoptosis. Our study provides evidence that IRF1 closely cooperates with the NF-κB network in BV6-mediated cell death and additionally alters expression of selective SMAC mimetic-induced target genes. Furthermore, we show that BV6 treatment triggers secretion of a set of proinflammatory cytokines and increases attraction of monocytes to BV6-treated tumor cells in an IRF1-dependent manner. In summary, our work supports the notion that NF-κB-regulated factors are critically required for SMAC mimetic-initiated apoptosis. We show that IRF1 is indispensable for TNFα production and cell death in BV6-sensitive cell lines and that also DR5 can serve as a proapoptotic NF-κB-controlled factor in BV6-induced apoptosis besides TNFα. Furthermore, this study contributes to an improved understanding on non-apoptotic functions of SMAC mimetics, as IRF1 additionally influences expression levels of proinflammatory cytokines and attraction of immune cells. Thus, our work provides novel insights into the regulation of SMAC mimetic-induced signaling events, which is crucial for the translation of SMAC mimetics for use in clinical application.
In mitochondria, biogenesis of oxidase is a crucial process involving the participation of an array of assembly factors. Studying the process of biogenesis in eukaryotes is highly complicated due to the presence and partaking of two genetic systems. Employing a bacterial model such as Paracoccus denitrificans that utilizes only one genetic system enables easy studying of the assembly process. The aa3 cytochrome c oxidase of P. denitrificans shows high structural and functional homology to its mitochondrial counterpart despite its simple subunit composition. The assembly of the core subunits I and II that house the active redox centers (heme a, and heme a3.CuB centre in subunit I; and the binuclear CuA centre in subunit II) along with the chaperons responsibly for their incorporation form the crux of this work. This work concentrates particularly on CtaG, a chaperone previously speculated to be involved in the delivery of copper to the CuB center in subunit I. As the full length structure of CtaG or its structural homologues have not been solved, attempts were made to obtain high-diffracting crystals of CtaG by heterologously expressing it in E. coli. Growth media, expression strains and induction parameters were some of the conditions screened in order to obtain optimal yield. Additives, pH and detergent were screened to yield a homogeneous preparation of CtaG. Crystallization trials were conducted by employing the sitting drop, vapour diffusion, method and later the bicelles were employed. Preliminary crystals obtained were further optimized employing seeding, detergent and additives, to improve diffraction. The diffraction improved from 30 Å to 15 Å. BN PAGE (Blue Native Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis) analysis and cross-linking studies were undertaken to decipher the oligomeric condition of CtaG. Both the methods indicate that the protein is a dimer under native conditions. To study the importance of CtaG in the process of oxidase assembly, two deletion mutants were obtained from the lab; one with only ctaG deleted and the other with ctaG and most of the upstream ORF. The effect of the deletion was assayed on the assembly and activity of oxidase. The deletion mutants showed residual activity of approx. 20 %, while displaying a very low heme signal (both in membranes and in purified COX). In order to exclude polar effects arising due to gene manipulation, complementation strains were prepared, reintroducing ctaG alone into both the deletion strains. Complementation strains, where only ctaG was deleted and re-introduced assayed for COX activity showed a restoration in activity to approx. 70 %. Further, calculating the heme:protein ratio, the deletion strains displayed a value of 7 nmol/mg of oxidase which was increased to wild type levels of 16 nmol/mg in the complementation strains. To further confirm the absence of the copper in subunit I, total reflection X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy analysis was carried out, which showed a decrease in the copper content in the deletion strain, restored on complementation. The strain lacking in the ORF and ctaG when complemented with ctaG alone illustrated no increase in activity or heme signal in comparison to that of the deletion strain. These point at a possible role for ORF in the assembly of COX, which is still absent in the complementation strains. To further characterize the ORF, a series of bioinformatical analysis was carried out, the results from which were insufficient to characterize the ORF conclusively. In order to enlist the proteins involved in the biosynthesis of COX, two independent approaches were employed. Two-dimensional gel examinations of solubilised membranes from untreated and cross-linked cells were analyzed by Western blotting. The CtaG-COX interaction was observed in untreated membranes, which was additionally strengthened by cross-linking. To further confirm this association, pull-down assays were done employing protein A coated magnetic beads coated with different antibodies and incubated with solubilised membranes derived from untreated or cross-linked cells. The elutions were assayed by Western blotting and confirmed for the CtaG-COX interaction. These fractions were further analysed by mass spectrometry to identify other chaperons involved in biogenesis of oxidase. Along with CtaG, I also noticed Sco, Surf1c and other factors involved in the recruitment and transport of heme (CtaB, CtaA, and Ccm proteins). Interestingly, protein components of both ribosomal subunits and protein translocation factors were observed, which indicated a co-translational approach for co-factor insertion into COX.
Necroptosis is a programmed cell death pathway that is implicated in a variety of human diseases. In recent years, increasing knowledge has been gained on the necroptotic signaling cascade. Nevertheless, the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in necroptosis is still ambiguous. In this study, we reveal that ROS critically regulate BV6/TNFα-induced necroptotic signaling in FADD-deficient Jurkat cells and in zVAD-treated MV4-11 cells. We show that several ROS scavengers such as butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), N-acetylcysteine (NAC), α-tocopherol (αToc) and ethyl pyruvate (EP) significantly reduce ROS production and BV6/TNFα–induced cell death. Importantly, ROS are produced prior to cell death induction and promote the assembly of the Receptor-interacting protein kinase (RIP)1/RIP3 necrosome complex via a potential positive feedback loop since on the one hand radical scavengers diminish RIP1/RIP3 necrosome formation and since on the other hand RIP1 or RIP3 silencing attenuates ROS production. Furthermore, the deubiquitinase CYLD contributes to BV6/TNFα-induced ROS generation, necrosome assembly and cell death since CYLD knockdown attenuates all these events. Of note, knockdown of the downstream effector protein mixed lineage kinase domain like (MLKL) only partly reduces BV6/TNFα-triggered ROS production and cell death and does not affect necrosome formation. Contrary to expectations, the MLKL inhibitor Necrosulfonamide (NSA) not only decreases BV6/TNFα-stimulated ROS production and cell death but also attenuates RIP1/RIP3 necrosome assembly pointing to additional and MLKL-independent anti-necroptotic effects of NSA. Interestingly, silencing of the potential necroptotic excecutors mitochondrial proteins phosphoglycerate mutase family member 5 (PGAM5) or Dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) does not affect BV6/TNFα-induced cell death. Consistently, mitochondrial perturbations are not implicated in BV6/TNFα-induced cell death since mitochondrial membrane potential and respiration remain stable along with to BV6/TNFα-triggered necroptosis induction. Interference with the mitochondrial potential by depolarizing agents such as FCCP reduces BV6/TNFα-induced necroptosis indicating that proper mitochondrial function or a well-defined redox status is required for necroptotic cell death execution. This study demonstrates that ROS are critically involved in BV6/TNFα-induced necroptosis and thus provides novel insights into the redox regulation of necroptotic signaling.
To overcome poor treatment response of pediatric high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), novel treatment strategies are required to reactivate programmed cell death in this malignancy. Therefore, we take advantage of using small-molecule antagonists of Inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins, so called Smac mimetics such as BV6, which are described to overcome apoptosis resistance and thereby sensitize tumor cells for several apoptotic stimuli. To address the question whether redox alterations can sensitize leukemic cells for Smac mimetic-mediated cell death, we interfered with the cellular redox status in different ALL cell lines. Here, we show for the first time that redox alterations, mediated by the glutathione depleting agent Buthioninesulfoximine (BSO), prime ALL cells for BV6-induced apoptosis. Besides ALL cell lines, BV6/BSO cotreatment similarly synergizes in cell death induction in patient-derived primary leukemic samples. In contrast, the combination treatment does not exert any cytotoxicity against peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) or mesenchymal stroma cells (MSCs) from healthy donors, suggesting some tumor selectivity of this treatment. We also identify the underlying molecular mechanism of the novel synergistic drug interaction of BSO and BV6. We demonstrate that both agents act in concert to increase reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, lipid peroxidation and finally apoptotic cell death. Enhanced ROS levels in the combination treatment account for cell death induction, since several ROS scavengers, like NAC, MnTBAP and Trolox attenuate BSO/BV6-induced apoptosis. BSO/BV6-induced ROS can be mainly classified as lipid peroxides, since the vitamin E derivate α-Tocopherol as well as Glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4), which both specifically reduce lipid-membrane peroxides, prevent lipid peroxidation, caspase activation and cell death induction. Vice versa, GPX4 knockdown and pharmacological inhibition of GPX4 by RSL3 or Erastin enhance BV6-induced cell death. Importantly, cell death induction critically depends on the formation of a complex consisting of RIP1/FADD/Caspase-8, since all complex components are required for ROS production, lipid peroxidation and cell death induction. Taken together, we demonstrate that BSO and BV6 cooperate to induce ROS production and lipid peroxidation which are eventually required for caspase activation and cell death execution. Collectively, findings of this study indicate that BV6-induced apoptosis is mediated via redox alterations offering promising new treatment strategy to overcome apoptosis resistance in ALL.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common malignant tumor and third leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Most cases arise as a consequence of underlying liver disease, e.g. developed from chronic hepatitis B or C infectionsalcohol abuse or obesity, and are most often associated with liver cirrhosis. Hypoxiand the hypoxia inducible factors (HIF)-1α and -2α promote tumor progression of HCC, not only affecting tumor cell proliferation and invasion, but also angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis and thus, increasing the risk of metastasis.
HCC is characterized as one of the most vascularized solid tumors. While HIF-1α and HIF-2α are frequently up-regulated in HCC only HIF-2α is correlated with high patientlethality. HIF-dependent regulation of HCC angiogenesis is controversially discussed.VEGFA, for example, as the most prominent factor inducing tumor angiogenesis represents not only a HIF-1 target, but also a HIF-2 target gene in HCC. This questions whether both isoforms have overlapping functions in regulating the angiogenic switch in HCC.
Besides angiogenesis also tumor-associated lymphangiogenesis significantly influences patient survival in HCC. Lymphatic spread is an important clinical determinant for the prognosis of HCC, but little is known how lymphangiogenesis is controlled in this context. To date, mainly HIF-1α was positively correlated with olymphatic invasion and metastasis in HCC, while a defined role of HIF-2α is missing. Thus, although HIF-1α and HIF-2α are structurally alike and regulate overlapping but not identical sets of target genes, they promote highly divergent outcomes in cancer progression and may even have counteracting roles. The aim of my work was to characterize the specific role of HIF-1α and HIF-2α in the angiogenic switch and lymphangiogenesis induction during HCC development.
Therefore, I created a stable knockdown of HIF-1α and HIF-2α in HepG2 cells and generated cocultures of HepG2 spheroids and embryonic bodies derived from embryonic mouse stem cells as an in vitro tumor model mimicking the cancer microenvironment to analyze which HIF isoform has key regulatory functions in HCC (lymph)angiogenesis. In cocultures with a HIF-2α knockdown angiogenesis was attenuated but lymphangiogenesis increased, while the knockdown of HIF-1α was without effect. Microarray analysis identified plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1)and insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 (IGFBP1) as HIF-2 target genes.However, prominent angiogenic and lymphangiogenic factors such as VEGFs, PDGFB, ANG and their receptors were not regulated in a HIF-dependent manner. As PAI-1 was linked to angiogenesis in literature and IGF-signaling, which is negatively regulated by IGFBP-1, was correlated with lymphangiogenesis, I decided to investigate their HIF-2α-dependent influence on HCC (lymph)angiogenesis. The knockdown of PAI-1 in HepG2 cells also lowered angiogenesis in PAI-1k/d cocultures similar to the HIF-2α k/d phenotype. PAI-1 as the potent inhibitor of tPA and uPA, both inducing the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, also inhibits plasmin directly. Therefore, I assumed an increase of plasmin in HIF-2α k/d and PAI-1 k/d cocultures as a result of the reduced PAI-1 levels. Blocking plasmin with aprotinin in HIF-2α k/d cocultures restored angioge nesis, suggesting that HIF-2α increases PAI-1 to lower concentrations of active plasmin, thereby supporting angiogenesis. In further experiments I could exclude PAI-1 to reduce angiogenesis by inducing plasmin-mediated apoptosis of differentiating stem cells in PAI-1 k/d and HIF-2α k/d cocultures, but demonstrated an increase of VEGFA165 degradation in these cocultures, suggesting plasmin-catalyzed proteolysis of VEGF as an additional layer of regulation required to explain the angiogenic phenotype. Besides the pivotal role of PAI-1 in angiogenesis I also investigated its potentialinfluence in lymphangiogenesis. Indeed, the knockdown of PAI-1 reduced lymphaticstructures and implied an important but opposing role in lymphangiogenesis comparedto induced lymphangiogenesis in HIF-2α k/d cocultures. However, blocking plasmin again with aprotinin in HIF-2α k/d cocultures restored lymphangiogenesis to the level of control virus, which indicates a divergent lymphangiogenic role of plasmin in PAI-1 k/d and HIF-2α k/d cocultures, possibly because of other essential pathways masking the lymphangiogenic effects of PAI-1 in HIF-2α k/d cocultures.
HIF-2α resulting in reduced IGFBP1 expression induced the differentiation of stem cells toward a lymphatic cell type and significantly enhanced the assembly of human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells into tubes. These data point the first time to an important impact of HIF-2 in the regulatin of lymphangiogenesis in vitro by inducing IGFBP1 and thus, scavenging IGF-1. Furthermore, matrigel plug assays to investigate the in vivorelevance of these observations confirmed HIF-2α as a crucial factor in the regulation of lymphangiogenesis in vivo
In conclusion, this work provides evidence that HIF-2α is a key regulator of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis in HCC by regulating PAI-1 and IGFBP1. HIF-2α positively influences the angiogenic switch via PAI-1 and negatively affects lymphangiogenesis via IGFBP1 expression. Targeting HIF-2α in HCC to reduce tumor angiogenesis should be approached carefully, as it might be overcome by induced lymphangiogenesis and metastasis.
The RAF family of kinases constitutes the members A, B and CRAF. They mediate RAS signaling by linking it to the MEK/ERK transduction module, which regulates cellular processes such as cell proliferation, migration, survival and cell death. As the RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK (MAPK) pathway is found to be activated in human cancers, the RAF kinases have been exploited as valuable therapeutic targets and RAF inhibitors show promising results in the clinic, esp. with tumors harboring an activating BRAFV600E mutation. However, RAF inhibitors paradoxically accelerate metastasis in RAS mutant and BRAF wildtype tumors. They also become ineffective over time in BRAFV600E tumors because of reactivation of downstream mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling by promoting RAF dimerization. Aims of the present work were 1) to investigate the role of ARAF kinase in the paradoxical activation of the enzymatic cascade by RAF inhibitors downstream of mutated RAS and 2) to study the consequences of the loss of ARAF function on signal transduction in vitro and in vivo (nude mice). We have engineered several cell lines that would allow the study of basal and RAF inhibitor induced effects on MAPK activation, tumor cell migration and invasion.
In summary, we were able to show that the RAF isoform ARAF has an obligatory role in promoting MAPK activity and tumor cell invasion in a cell type dependent manner. In these cell types, ARAF depletion prevented the activation of MAPK kinase 1 (MEK1) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) and led to a significant decrease of protrusions growing out of tumor cell spheroids in a three-dimensional (3D) culture that were otherwise induced by BRAFV600E-specific or BRAF/CRAF inhibitors (GDC-0879 and sorafenib, respectively). RAF inhibitors stimulated homodimerization of ARAF and heteromerization of BRAF with CRAF and the scaffolding protein KSR1. However, induced oligomerization was not sufficient to activate MAPK signaling if ARAF was depleted. By employing full length recombinant kinases, we were able to show for the first time that the three RAF isoforms competed for the binding to MEK1. In cell culture models, the overexpression of dimer-deficient ARAF mutants impaired the interaction between ARAF and endogenous MEK1 and thus prevented the subsequent phosphorylation of MEK1 and ERK1/2. Our findings reveal a new role for ARAF in directly activating the MAPK cascade through homodimerization and thereby promoting tumor cell invasion, suggesting the conserved RAF-dimer interface as a target for RAS- and RAF mediated cancer therapy.
Collectively, we provide evidence for the dual role ARAF plays in controlling MAPK signaling and cancer as loss of ARAF promoted strong lung metastasis formation in nude mice. Preliminary data describing the underlying mechanisms behind ARAF-regulated metastases have been presented and discussed.
The four subunit (SU) aa3 cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) from Paracoccus denitrificans is one of the terminal enzymes of the respiratory chain. It uses electrons from cytochrome c to reduce molecular oxygen to water. Its binuclear active center, residing in SU I, contains hemeÊa3 and CuB, the latter being liganded by three histidine residues. Apart from its oxygen reductase activity, the protein possesses a peroxidase and a catalase activity.
To compare variants and the wild type (WT) protein in a more stringent way, a recombinant (rec.) WT CcO was constructed, carrying the gene for SUÊI on a low copy number plasmid. This rec. WT showed, as expected, no difference in oxygen reductase activity compared to the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) WT CcO but surprisingly its catalase activity was increased by a factor of 20. The potential overproduction of SUÊI due to plasmid coding and the resulting deficiency in metal inserting chaperones might impair the correct insertion of hemeÊa3 and CuB because of a deficiency in metal inserting chaperones. This in turn might lead to differences in side chain orientation and to changes in the water network. However, slight changes might cause an increased accessibility of the active center for hydrogen peroxide, resulting in an increased catalase activity. The availability of chaperones and therefore the proposed structural reasons for the difference was improved by cloning the genes for the two metal inserting chaperones CtaG and Surf1c on the same plasmid together with SUÊI. This new rec. WT CcO showed in fact a reduced catalase activity. Another WT with a deletion in the chromosomal second, non expressing gene of SU I was analysed to prove plasmid coding as the reason for the difference of the ATCC WT and the rec. WT. This strain showed an increased kcat of the catalase activity as well, additionally pointing to a regulatory effect of the non expressed gene for SU I in the chromosome. To fathom the structural difference of the increased catalase activity, differential scanning calorimetry was used, but no significant difference in thermal stability between the ATCC WT CcO and the rec. WT CcO was detected. However, upon aging, the thermal stability of the rec. WT CcO declined faster than that of the ATCC WT CcO pointing to a decreased structural stability of the rec. WT CcO.
To characterize the catalase reaction, several known inhibitors were used to probe the contribution of the different metal cofactors in the catalase reaction. In addition variants in aromatic amino acids near the active center were constructed to conclude on a possible reaction mechanism of the catalase activity of CcO. These variants in combination with the wild type forms were analysed for radical signals by EPR-spectroscopy. A radical relevant for the catalase reaction of CcO was found in the F-intermediate of all variants and all wild type forms. This narrow 12 G radical signal was assigned to a porphyrine radical probably involved in the catalase reaction of CcO. Moreover, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry measurements were used to analyse isotopically labelled oxygen produced in the catalase reaction.
As a result of these experiments, a reaction cycle of the catalase activity of CcO is postulated and the structural difference between the ATCC and rec. WT CcO is outlined. The catalase activity appears to be a true catalase activity and not a "pseudocatalase" activity.
The knowledge of three-dimensional structures of biomolecules is fundamental for the understanding of their function. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy represents besides X-ray crystallography one of the two most widely used techniques to study macromolecules at atomic resolution. Its application has long been a laborious task that could take months and required the expertise of an experienced scientist, however, owing to the tremendous effort that has been put into the development of respective computer algorithms, structure determination by NMR spectroscopy of small- to medium sized proteins is nowadays routinely performed. CYANA is one widely used software package, which combines the majority of individual steps towards a three-dimensional structure. The most common application of the program, however, restricts to the combined automated NOE assignment and structure calculation based on NOESY peak lists and an existing chemical shift assignment. Completely automated structure determination starting from NMR spectra is to date technically possible with CYANA, however, not yet routinely applied. In order to achieve this long-term goal, the individual steps need to become more robust with regard to data imperfections such as peak overlap, spectral artifacts or a limited amount of NMR data. The work presented in this thesis should be placed within the context of increasing the reliability and improving the accuracy of structures determined by CYANA on the basis of solution- as well as solid-state NMR data.
The chapter “Systematic evaluation of combined automated NOE assignment and structure calculation with CYANA” comprises an extensive study on the robustness of the combined automated NOE assignment and structure calculation algorithm based on experimental solution NMR data sets that were modified in multiple ways to mimic different kinds of data imperfections. The results show that the algorithm is remarkably robust with regard to imperfections of the NOESY peak lists and the chemical shift tolerances but susceptible to lacking or erroneous resonance assignments, in particular for nuclei that are involved in many NOESY cross peaks.
In the chapter “Peakmatch – A simple and robust tool for peaklist matching” a method to achieve self-consistency of the chemical shift referencing among a set of peak lists is presented. The Peakmatch algorithm matches a set of peak lists to a specified reference peak list, neither of which have to be assigned, by optimizing an assignment-free match-score function. The algorithm has been extensively tested on the basis of experimental NMR data sets of five different proteins. The results show that peak lists from many different types of spectra can be matched reliably as long as they contain at least two corresponding dimensions.
NMR structures are represented by bundles of conformers whose spread indicates the precision of the atomic coordinates. However, there is as yet no reliable measure of structural accuracy, i.e. how close NMR conformers are to the “true” structure. Instead, the precision of structure bundles is widely (mis)interpreted as a measure of structural quality. Attempts to increase the precision thus often yield tight structure bundles where the precision overestimates the accuracy. To overcome this problem, the chapter “Increased reliability of NMR protein structures by consensus structure bundles” introduces a new protocol for NMR structure determination with the software package CYANA that produces bundles of conformers with a realistic precision that is throughout a large number of test data sets a much better estimate of the structural accuracy than the precision of conventional structure bundles.
Solid-state NMR is a powerful technique to study molecules which are not amenable to either solution NMR or X-ray crystallography. Despite the reporting of individual atomic resolution structures of membrane proteins and amyloid fibrils based on solid-state NMR data, the application is far from routine. One major obstacle that hinders structure determination by solid-state NMR is the overall lower quality of the solid-state NMR spectra. It is therefore necessary to increase the robustness of the computer algorithms in order to improve the results when using lower quality solid-state NMR spectra. The chapter “Structure calculations of the model protein GB1 from solid-state NMR data” presents structure calculations on the basis of a set of two-dimensional solid-state NMR experiments of the model protein GB1. The most important result obtained from these test calculations is that the limitation of structural accuracy can be attributed to inaccurate distance information resulting from the limited correlation between peak intensities and distance, which is especially severe in spin diffusion-based solid-state NMR experiments.
The chapter “Full relaxation matrix-based correction of relayed polarization transfer for solid-state NMR structure calculation” therefore introduces a method which corrects experimental peak intensities for spin diffusion in order to improve the distance information from solid-state NMR spectra. The results show that the structural accuracy can be significantly improved when using the corrected distance information, however, strongly dependent on the preliminary structural model that is required as input for the method.
Die Sulfonyl-Gruppe (-SO2-) ist ein weit verbreitetes Strukturmotiv in der organischen Chemie und Bestandteil vieler biologisch aktiver Moleküle, insbesondere Arzneistoffen. Zwei der am häufigsten auftretenden Gruppen sind Sulfone und Sulfonamide, die in über 100 zugelassenen Medikamenten und 10% der meistverkauften Medikamente sind. Insofern kommt der Entwicklung neuer Synthesemethoden eine große Bedeutung zu. Dabei stehen besonders einfache, wirtschaftliche und zeitsparende Vorgehensweisen im Vordergrund, die eine große Bandbreite an neuen Substanzen generieren können. Ein Ansatz hierfür sind Multikomponenten- oder Eintopfreaktionen.
Aufgrund der Wichtigkeit dieser zwei Strukturklassen, sollen im Rahmen der hier vorliegenden Doktorarbeit neue Syntheserouten für Sulfone und Sulfonamide entwickelt werden. Besonderes Augenmerk wird auf die die Einführung der SO2-Einheit während der Reaktionsführung gelegt. Im Vergleich zu bereits existierenden Verfahren ist dies ein enormer Fortschritt, da die Mehrheit der bekannten Routen auf Schwefel- oder Schwefeldioxid-haltige Startmaterialien zurückgreift.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit gelang es, einen synthetischen Zugang zu Arylsulfonen basierend auf von Natrium-, Lithium-, Magnesium- und Zinksulfinaten zu finden. Diese Reaktion besitzt eine sehr große Anwendungsbandbreite und setzt sowohl Aryl- als auch Alkylsulfinate effizient um. Außerdem weisen Reaktionen mit unsymmetrischen Diaryliodoniumsalzen hohe Chemoselektivitäten auf.
Auf der Grundlage auf der Reaktion zwischen Natriumsulfinaten und Iodoniumsalzen wurde eine simple Route zur Synthese von Diarylsulfonen abgeleitet, jedoch war hierbei die Sulfonylgruppe noch Bestandteil eines der Edukte. Um die SO2-Einheit während der Reaktion einführen zu können, wurde ein praktisches Eintopf-Protokoll entwickelt, welches die direkte Umsetzung von (hetero)aromatischen und alkylischen Halogeniden zu Arylsulfonen gestattet. Diese innovative Methode besteht aus folgenden vier Schritten: (1) Generierung des Organometallreagenzes via Halogen-Metall-Austausch, direkte Metallinsertion oder Deprotonierung; (2) Reaktion des Organometallreagenzes mit SO2 zum Sulfinat; (3) Entfernen des SO2-Überschusses und flüchtiger Komponenten und (4) Umsetzung des nicht aufgereinigten Sulfinates mit einem Iodoniumsalz.
Desweiteren wird in dieser Arbeit ein neuartiger Übergangsmetall-katalysierter Ansatz zur Darstellung von Diarylsulfonen ausgehend von Arylhalogeniden und Sulfinaten diskutiert. Erste Experimente deuten auf Nickel-Katalysatoren als gute Wahl für die Reaktion. Optimierungsreaktionen zeigten eine starke Abhängigkeit der Ausbeute in Hinsicht auf die Bisswinkel der an das zentrale Nickelatom koordinierten Liganden. Da die bis dato besten Ergebnisse mit dem Komplex [o-tol-Ni(PPh2Me)2Cl] erzielt wurden, wird der [o-tol-Ni(PMe3)2Cl]-Komplex momentan in unserem Labor weiteren Studien unterzogen. Bislang ist davon auszugehen, dass dieser Katalysator hervorragende Ergebnisse liefert und zu einer allgemein gültigen Methode führt.
In weiteren Kapiteln wird die Anwendbarkeit von SO2-Surrogaten, Metabisulfiten „S2O52-„ oder DABSO; untersucht; mit dem Ziel eine Eintopf- oder Multikomponentenreaktion zu entwickeln.
Zum einen wird die Entwicklung einer Ein-Topf-Reaktion von Alkylhalogeniden mit Metabisulfiten und Organozinkreagenzien zur Darstellung von Alkylarylsulfonen vorgestellt. Darüber hinaus wird eine Übergangsmetall-katalysierte Multikomponenten Reaktion zur Synthese von Sulfonsäureamiden vorgestellt. Eine Reaktion zwischen Aminen, Arylhalogeniden und DABSO als SO2-Quelle wurde in Form einer Palladium-katalysierten Aminosulfonylierung entwickelt.
In Reaktion auf zellulären Stress wie etwa Schädigungen der DNA oder die vermehrte Aktivität von Onkogenen aktivieren vorgeschaltete Signalkaskaden den Transkriptionsfaktor (TF) p53. Dieser kann über die Aktivierung der Expression von Zielgenen wiederum die Zellteilung stoppen, die Reparatur von DNA Schäden initiieren oder in schweren Fällen die Eliminierung der Zelle durch Apoptose einleiten. Ist p53 durch Mutationen deaktiviert, können sich entartete somatische Zellen vermehren und in der Folge Krebs entstehen.
In Wirbeltieren finden sich neben p53 mit p63 und p73 zwei weitere TFs, welche während der Evolution aus dem gleichen gemeinsamen Vorläufer durch Genduplikationen hervorgegangen sind. Die drei TFs sind modular aufgebaut und alle Isoformen verfügen jeweils minimal über eine DNA Bindungsdomäne (DBD) und eine Tetramerisierungsdomäne (TD). Werden die p53 ähnlichen TFs aktiviert, lagern sie sich über die TD vermittelt zu Tetrameren zusammen, wodurch ihre DBDs kooperativ an DNA Sequenzmotive binden können. Die DBD ist auch über große phylogenetische Abstände hinweg hoch konserviert, wodurch bereits gezeigt werden konnte, dass auch primitive vielzellige Tiere bereits Homologe dieser TF Familie besitzen. Im Vergleich zur DBD variiert die Proteinsequenz der TD deutlich stärker, was andeutet, dass deren Struktur im Laufe der Evolution erhebliche Veränderungen durchlaufen hat. Diese Veränderungen aufzuklären ist das übergeordnete Forschungsvorhaben zu dem diese Dissertationsschrift beiträgt.
Ciona intestinalis (C.int.) ist eine Spezies aus dem Unterstamm der Manteltiere. Diese sind die engsten lebenden Verwandten der Wirbeltiere und C.int. ist ein populärer Modelorganismus für die Erforschung der Embryonalentwicklung. Sein Genom kodiert für zwei p53 ähnliche TFs, welche mit p53/p73-a und p53/p73-b bezeichnet werden. Die Struktur ihrer TDs wurde im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit mittels Kernspinresonanz (NMR) Spektroskopie untersucht.
Die TD von menschlichem p53 (hp53) ist ein Dimer aus Dimeren. Jedes Monomer formt einen beta-Strang und eine alpha-Helix. Im primären Dimer lagern diese sich so zusammen, dass ein beta-Faltblatt entsteht und die alpha-Helices mit entgegen gesetzter Orientierung der Länge nach aneinander packen. Zwei dieser Dimer lagern sich dann so zum Tetramer zusammen, dass zwischen pol-ständigen beta-Faltblättern ein Bündel aus vier Helices entsteht. Dieses Motiv ist auch in den TDs der Ciona Proteine hochkonserviert und wird im Folgenden als Kern?TD bezeichnet. In den TDs von menschlichem p63 und p73 (hp63 und hp73) verfügt jedes Monomer an seinem C-terminus noch über eine zweite Helix. Die zweiten Helices eines jeden Dimers greifen wie Klammern um das jeweils andere primäre Dimer und stabilisieren so das Tetramer. Entscheidend für die stabile Anbindung an die Kern?TD ist dabei ein charakteristisches Tyrosin-Arginin (YR) Motiv in der zweiten Helix, welches sich auch in der Sequenz der TD von C.int. p53/p73-a wiederfindet. Analysen der Sekundärstruktur auf Basis von NMR Experimenten ergaben jedoch, dass die TD von C.int. p53/p73-a bei 25°C keine zweite Helix ausbildet. Mit Hilfe von chimären TD Peptiden, in denen Teile der Ciona Sequenz gegen die entsprechenden Abschnitte von hp73 ausgetauscht wurden, konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Kern TD von C.int. p53/p73-a fähig ist eine zweite Helix zu stabilisieren und hierfür neben dem YR Motiv auch der Sequenzabschnitt zwischen erster und zweiter Helix entscheidend ist. Stabilisierende Substitutionen in diesem Bereich bewirkten ebenso wie ein Absenken der Temperatur die Ausbildung einer zweiten Helix, welche jedoch im Gegensatz zu jener in hp73 nur transient faltet und auch nicht essentiell für die Bildung des Tetramers ist, wohl aber dessen Stabilität erhöht.
Spezifisch in der Entwicklungslinie von Ciona kam es dazu, dass eine, für eine entsprechende Vorläuferversion von C.int. p53/p73-a kodierende, mRNA spontan zurück in DNA übersetzt und ins Genom eingefügt wurde. Die durch diese Retrotransposition erzeugte neue Genkopie C.int. p53/p73-b muss demnach ursprünglich einmal für die gleiche Proteinsequenz kodiert haben, innerhalb der TD finden sich konservierte Reste jedoch nur im Bereich der Kern TD.
Von der TD von C.int. p53/p73-b wurde die molekulare Struktur in freier Lösung mittels NMR ermittelt. Diese zeigte, dass interessanterweise in der TD von C.int. p53/p73-b jedes Monomer am C-terminus eine stabil gefaltete, zweite Helix besitzt. Obwohl diese zweite Helix sich aus einer Sequenz faltet, die keinerlei Sequenzhomologie zu homologen Proteinen aus Wirbeltieren aufweist, lagert sie sich in einer Position auf die Kern TD, welche der in hp73 sehr nahe kommt. Da die primären Dimere der Kern TD aber anders als in hp63 und hp73 durch Salzbrücken miteinander verbunden sind, ist die zweite Helix jedoch nicht essentiell, um das Tetramer zu stabilisieren. Vermutlich kommt der zweiten Helix von C.int. p53/p73-b vielmehr u.a. die Aufgabe zu die Bildung von Heterotetrameren aus C.int. p53/p73-a und –b zu unterbinden.
Zusammengenommen zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass die Architektur der TD mit zweiter Helix bereits der Prototyp für die TDs aller p53 ähnlichen Proteine der Wirbel- und Manteltiere war und die als eine Art Klammer das Tetramer stabilisierende zweite Helix sich nicht erst während der Evolution der Wirbeltiere entwickelt hat.
ATP synthases are multi-subunit membrane enzymes, which utilize the energy stored in a transmembrane electrochemical ion gradient to produce adenosine-5´-triphosphate (ATP), the universal energy carrier in biological systems. Research on these important enzymes goes back more than 50 years and has produced innumerable studies. The F-type ATP synthase consists of two functionally distinct, but tightly coupled subcomplexes, the water-soluble F1 and the membrane-embedded Fo complex. In its simplest form, F1 consists of five different subunits with a stoichiometry of α 3β3γδε, and harbors three catalytic centers in the α 3β3-headpiece, while Fo consists of three different subunits in a stoichiometry of ab2cn, where n varies between 8 to 15 depending on the species. From a mechanistic standpoint, the complex can also be divided into two different units, namely a stator, α3β3δ-ab2, and a rotor, γε-cn. The enzyme utilizes the energy stored in a transmembrane electrochemical gradient of protons, or in some cases Na+, to drive ATP synthesis. In particular, the downhill translocation of these ions across the Fo complex drives rotation of the γε-cn unit, which is then transduced to the active centers, catalyzing the phosphorylation of adenosine-5`-diphosphate (ADP) with inorganic phosphate (Pi), and the release of ATP....
So far clinical human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) therapy is limited to non-curative treatments. However, as recently shown, alternative approaches such as HIV gene therapy have the potential to functionally cure the disease (e.g. the hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)-transplantation with a CCR5Δ32 homozygous transplant) (1). In contrast to the highly personalized medical treatment applied in the ‘Berlin case’, more broadly applicable approaches are currently under intensive investigation.
One example is the adeno-associated-virus (AAV)-mediated delivery of in vivo secreted antiviral entry inhibitors (iSAVE), the concept of which is based on the direct in vivo administration of a broadly applicable highly potent antiviral gene (here: a C46-derived entry inhibitory peptide interfering with HIV-1 membrane fusion). The AAV-based gene delivery is believed to overcome several limitations of gene therapeutic treatments based on ex vivo lentiviral trials in the past. It is (i) targeting differentiated HIV target cells (i.e. liver and differentiated lymphatic cells) reducing the risk of genotoxicity compared to stem cell-based trials, (ii) overcoming the limitation of a low number of genetically modifiable cells as in lentivirally based ex vivo transduction strategies (i.e. limited modifiable cell number due to culture conditions and lower vector titers) and (iii) using the safe AAV vector system, which has not been associated with major genotoxicity in men. (iv) Most importantly, the concept of secretable entry inhibitors does not require transduction of large amounts of cells due to the protective bystander effect. Thus, iSAVE might be a treatment principle for HIV infection that might be able to cure patients irrespective of their viral isolates or adherence.
Accordingly, the iSAVE concept could aim at two different sites in the patient for the production of antiviral transgenes, either the systemic production via suitable producer cells (e.g. hepatocytes) or the local production in the lymphatic system.
In a first approach, we are able to efficiently target hepatocytes using the natural AAV serotype 8 to express high plasma levels of secretable antiviral entry inhibitors in order to systemically suppress viral replication. In this setting we could show that iSAVE peptides are highly expressed in hepatocytes. However, plasma levels of iSAVE were insufficient when using a secretable peptide as sole antiviral transgene.
As a second treatment strategy, the iSAVE project aimed to deliver antiviral genes directly to the site of viral replication, the lymphatic system. Here, (i) a panel of naturally occurring AAV serotypes as well as (ii) AAV retargeting approaches were employed to design a highly efficient and selective AAV vector variant for gene delivery into the lymphatic system after intravenous vector administration.
In detail, (i) screening of the natural occurring serotypes revealed that the AAV serotype 1 (AAV-1) was best in targeting splenic tissue in two humanized mouse models, however at a very low level. After systemic AAV-1 vector administration neither transduction of human lymphocytes did occur nor was iSAVE expressed in the lymphatic system in a humanized mouse model.
(ii) In a second approach, we modified the well-characterized AAV-2 serotype in a tropism-defining region of its capsid gene by insertion of human peripheral blood lymphocytes (hPBL)-tropic peptide ligands. These in turn were selected by M13 in vivo phage display and by in vivo AAV peptide display. Selected variants were cloned and tested for hPBL transduction in vitro. Although the selected variants did not show increased expression efficacies compared to AAV-2 WT, it still might be possible that the selected variant are more specific for hPBLs as these conditions have not been tested.
As these selection processes required a humanized mouse model that comprises a functional lymphatic system, we established the previously described Trimera mouse model in our lab (2). We found that this mouse model could be further improved to allow engraftment of a lower number of gene-modified (gm) human T cells as in the classical Trimera model. These modified Trimera mice (mT3 mice) were conditioned by inclusion of cyclophosphamide (CTX) to the irradiation-conditioning scheme of the classical Trimera model.
Comparison of mT3 mice with established NSG and DKO mice in an adoptive gm T cell transplantation setting revealed that NSG mice were the most robust model providing high reproducibility in human T cell engraftment. MT3 mice allowed a substantial, yet more variable engraftment of gm T cells. Besides comparing engraftment kinetics, the graft quality (i.e. clonality and cytokine milieu) was analyzed. Again, NSG mice showed the most balanced homeostatic repopulation three weeks after transplantation, while mT3 mice were prone to Th1-type, oligloclonal repopulation, indicating an early onset of xenograft-versus-host disease. Finally, the lymphatic infiltration was analyzed. As expected, mT3 mice provided the most intact lymphatic structures, although the normal lymphatic morphology was not restored.
In conclusion, it was demonstrated in this work that AAV-mediated iSAVE gene therapy faces specific limitations depending on the respective targeting approach
In the systemic approach, iSAVE peptides have to be further optimized in terms of transgene design itself, as high-level accumulation in murine plasma was not feasible for the short iSAVE precursor. In the local, lymphatic targeting approach, AAV-mediated expression faces its limits in targeting specificity but foremost expression efficacy. Thus, the AAV vector itself needs further optimization for sufficient local iSAVE expression levels. Independently from the AAV-related approaches, a novel humanized mouse model was established in this work. Despite drawbacks regarding repopulation variability and set-up complexity, the novel mT3 mouse model comprised improved secondary lymphatic structures for adoptive T cell transfer, which might be an interesting platform for studies in lymphoma or leukemia therapy.
Nichtribosomale Peptid Synthetasen sind Quelle für eine Vielzahl an Sekundärmetaboliten mit antibiotischer Wirkung. Jede Synthetase besteht aus einer Abfolge von Modulen, wobei jedes Modul die nötigen Domänen für den Einbau eines Bausteins in das gebildeten Peptids enthält. Ein Ansatz zur Gewinnung neuer Peptidantibiotika, die angesichts der steigenden Zahl multiresistenter Keime dringend benötigt werden, ist der Austausch von Domänen oder Modulen. Aufgrund bisher noch nicht verstandener Selektivitäten, entweder zwischen den Domänen oder zwischen einzelnen Domänen und Zwischenstufen des gebildeten Peptids, führt dieser Ansatz jedoch in der Praxis oft zu keiner oder nur geringer Ausbeute.
Ziel der vorgelegten Arbeit war es, einige dieser Selektivitäten zu untersuchen, wobei der Fokus auf Peptidyl Carrier Proteinen Domänen (PCPs) lag. An diese Domänen sind alle Intermediate während der Reifung des Peptids kovalent über einen Phosphopantethein-Kofaktor (Ppan-Arm) gebunden.
Im ersten Teil der Arbeit sollte die Struktur einer mit einem Heptapeptid beladenen PCP mittels Lösungs-Kernspinresonanzspektroskopie (NMR) bestimmt werden. Hierbei konnte die natürliche Verknüpfung zwischen Ppan-Arm und Peptid über einen Thioester nicht verwendet werden, da diese Bindung zu Hydrolyse-anfällig war. Es konnte jedoch gezeigt werden, dass die Substitution des Thioesters durch eine nicht hydrolysierbare Amidbindung keinen Einfluss auf die Struktur hat, wodurch die Strukturbestimmung möglich war. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass die Peptid-beladene PCP in der sogenannten A/H state Konformation vorliegt, wobei das an sie gebundene Peptid frei beweglich ist. Somit scheint es wahrscheinlich, dass die PCP keine Selektivität für das an sie gebundene Peptid aufweist. Dies ist ein Unterschied zu den strukturell ähnlichen Acyl Carrier Proteinen (ACPs) aus der bakteriellen Fettsäurebiosynthese, da diese eine Bindungstasche für die an sie gebundenen Fettsäuren ausbilden.
Untersuchungen der Selektivität der Kondensationsdomäne (C Domäne) für das PCP gebundene Peptid mittels NMR-Titrationen und biochemischer Analysen konnten nicht durchgeführt werden, da sich im Laufe des Projekts zeigte, dass die aus der Synthetase herausgetrennte C Domäne katalytisch nicht aktiv war. Stattdessen sollte die Kristallstruktur einer Peptid-beladenen PCP-C Bidomäne, für welche eine katalytische Aktivität bereits gezeigt worden war, gelöst werden. Da aber bereits ein signifikanter Anteil der Bidomäne während der Expression mit dem Ppan-Arm beladen wurde, war die nötige quantitative Beladung mit dem Peptid gekoppelten Ppan-Arm in vitro nicht möglich. Eine quantitative Modifizierung mit dem Ppan-Arm in vitro war hingegen erfolgreich, und die Struktur der Ppan-beladenen Bidomäne konnte gelöst werden. Aufgrund des großen Abstands zwischen den aktiven Zentren der beiden Domänen kann es sich bei der beobachteten Orientierung nicht um jene handeln, die die beiden Domänen zueinander annehmen, wenn die C Domäne das PCP-gebundene Peptid bindet.
Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Modifizierung einer PCP durch eine Gruppe II Phosphopantetheintransferase (PPT) untersucht. PPTs katalysieren die Übertragung des Ppan Arms auf die Seitenkette eines in PCPs konservierten Serins. In dieser Magnesium-abhängigen Reaktion dient Coenzym A (CoA) als Quelle für den Ppan-Arm. Durch Mutation des konservierten Serins in der PCP zu Alanin konnte ein stabiler Komplex aus PCP und PPT in Anwesenheit von CoA und Magnesium kristallisiert und seine Struktur bestimmt werden.
In einem Strukturmodell für den PCP/PPT Komplex war eine andere Konformation für die PCP postuliert worden, als sie in der Kristallstruktur des Komplexes zu beobachten ist. Durch Strukturbestimmung der PCP mittels Lösungs-NMR und anschließender Titrationsexperimente konnte jedoch gezeigt werden, dass sowohl die freie als auch die komplexierte PCP in Lösung ebenfalls die in der Kristallstruktur beobachtete Konformation einnehmen.
Aufgrund der gelösten Kristallstruktur konnten zwei Bereiche identifiziert werden, in denen die beiden Proteine im Komplex in direktem Kontakt zueinander stehen. Der eine Bereich ist durch eine intermolekulare Wasserstoffbrücke, der andere durch hydrophobe Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Proteinen gekennzeichnet. Durch ortsspezifische Mutagenese konnten beide Wechselwirkungen gestört werden, was sich in einer Abnahme der Komplexstabilität und einer veränderten Geschwindigkeit der Übertragung des Ppan-Arms äußerte.
Die große strukturelle Ähnlichkeit zwischen dem in dieser Arbeit untersuchten Komplex aus zwei in Bacillus vorkommenden Proteinen und einem humanen ACP/PPT Komplex legt die Vermutung nahe, dass die beobachteten Wechselwirkungen in vielen Organismen konserviert sind.
Pulsed Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is the most powerful tool to investigate structural properties and dynamics of paramagnetic substances. Up to date the electron spin is almost exclusively manipulated by rectangular shaped microwave pulses generated with switches. These pulses are unselective which means they excite outside their nominal bandwidth which is in most cases shallow compared to the overall spectral width of the spin system. Shaped pulses which are widely applied in NMR promise higher bandwidth and selectivity. The use of amplitude and phase modulated pulses was not possible for EPR due to the three orders of magnitude faster timescale compared to NMR. In this work, for the first time, an AWG (arbitrary waveform generator) operating with a 1 ns time resolution and 14 bit amplitude resolution was implemented into a commercial Bruker pulsed EPR spectrometer.
First results were obtained with broadband excitation pulses derived by optimum control theory (OCT). The OCT-pulse used excites transverse magnetization with 98% efficiency over a more than four times larger bandwidth than common rectangular pulse generating the same 1 B field. The benefit of such a pulse was demonstrated for magnitude FT-EPR spectroscopy on organic radicals in liquid phase.
Due to Spectrometer deadtime an FID cannot be observed for most inhomogeneous spin systems. For that reason prefocused pulses have been evaluated for their applicability to EPR spectroscopy. OCT-derived prefocused pulses can be understood as a compact Hahn Echo sequence in one monolithic pulse. Here, two problems have been encountered. 1) The limited bandwidth of the active and passive microwave components in the excitation path as well as microwave resonator cause linear distortions of the pulse shape which results in inferior pulse performance. This could be circumvented by measuring the impulse response function of the whole spin excitation path and including this information in the pulse optimization procedure. 2) Anisotropic hyperfine interaction which was not taken into account during the pulse optimization also caused efficiency losses.
PELDOR spectroscopy is a valuable tool to measure distance distributions between two or more paramagnetic centers in the range from 2-8 nm. It is demonstrated that the S/N ratio of PELDOR experiments can be substantially increased by substituting the rectangular shaped pump pulse by an adiabatic inversion pulse. The damping of the dipolar oscillations introduced by the prolonged pump pulse towards shorter distances could be circumvented by introducing a second time reversed pump pulse.
By substituting the refocused echo of the well-known 4-pulse PELDOR with a CPMG sequence the dipolar evolution time and thus the validity of PELDOR experiments would be increased. To achieve the maximum dipolar evolution time in a CPMG PELDOR for each refocusing pulse one pump pulse has to be applied. This could only be achieved with the new adiabatic inversion pulses since multiple inversions with efficiency close to one are not possible with rectangular pulses. Even with adiabatic pump pulses a reduced efficiency was observed due to hardware limitations thus limiting the sequence to three refocusing pulses. An iterative method was developed to remove the residual dipolar signals attributed to the reduced inversion efficiency.
The new 7-pulse CPMG PELDOR sequence enabled measuring reliable distance distributions between the protomers of the trimeric betaine transporter BetP. With these it could be shown that the asymmetries found for the 2 and 3-dimensional crystal structures are even larger in frozen detergent.
Heme-copper oxidases (HCOs) are the terminal enzymes of the aerobic respiratory chain in the inner mitochondrial membrane or the plasma membrane in many prokaryotes. These multi-subunit membrane protein complexes catalyze the reduction of oxygen to water, coupling this exothermic reaction to the establishment of an electrochemical proton gradient across the membrane in which they are embedded. The energy stored in the electrochemical proton gradient is used e.g. by the FOF1-ATP synthase to generate ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. The superfamily of HCOs is phylogenetically classified into three major families: A, B and C. The A-family HCOs, represented by the well-studied aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases (aa3-CcOs), are found in mitochondria and many bacteria. The B-family of HCOs contains a number of bacterial and archaeal oxidases. The C-family comprises only the cbb3-type cytochrome c oxidase (cbb3-CcO) and is most distantly related to the mitochondrial respiratory oxidases.
Physical Biology is a field of life sciences dealing with the extraction of quantitative data from biophysical or molecular biological experiments with different levels of complexity. Such data are further used as parameters for mathematical models of the biological system. These models allow to predict reactions on external stimuli by describing the relevant molecular interactions and are therefore used for example to generate a deeper comprehension of complex human diseases. An essential technique in biophysical research on human diseases is fluorescence microscopy. This is a constantly developed toolbox comprising a large number of specific labeling strategies, as well as a broad spectrum of fluorescent probes. It is further minimal invasive and therefore suitable for measurements in living cells or organisms. The sensitivity of modern photo-detectors even allows for the detection of a single fluorescent probe with an accuracy of approximately 10 nm.
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The model-prediction was further verified by two color SMLM experiments. In this work the development and application of imaging-systems are described which provide quantitative data with single-molecule resolution for systems biological model approaches with a low degree of abstractness. In the near future, the impact of mathematical models in the research field of complex human diseases will increase. The predictions of these models will be more exact, the more detailed and accurate the input parameters will become. This work gives an impression of how quantitative data obtained by SMLM may serve as input parameters for mathematical models at the single-cell level.
Characterization of mouse NOA1 : subcellular localizaion, G-Quadruplex binding and proteolysis
(2013)
Mitochondria contain their own protein synthesis machinery with mitoribosomes that are similar to prokaryotic ribosomes. The thirteen proteins encoded in the mitochondrial genome are members of the respiratory chain complexes that generate a proton gradient, which is the electromotoric force for ATP synthesis.
NOA1 (Nitric Oxide Associated Protein-1) is a nuclear encoded GTPase that positively influences mitochondrial respiration and ATP production. Although a role in mitoribosome assembly was assigned to NOA1 the underlying molecular mechanism is poorly understood. This work shows that the multi-domain protein NOA1 serves multiple purposes for the function of mitochondria. NOA1 is a dual localized protein that makes a detour through the nucleus before mitochondrial import. The nuclear shuttling is mediated by a nuclear localization signal and the now identified nuclear export signal. SELEX (Systemic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment) analysis revealed a G-quadruplex binding motif that characterizes NOA1 as ribonucleoprotein (RNP). G-quadruplex binding was coupled to the GTPase activity and increased the GTP hydrolysis rate. The sequence of localization events and the identification of NOA1 being a RNP lead to the discussion of an alternative import pathway for RNPs into mitochondria. The short-lived NOA1 contains ClpX recognition motifs and is specifically degraded by the mitochondrial matrix protease ClpXP. NOA1 is the first reported substrate of ClpXP in higher eukaryotes and augments the contribution of the ClpXP protease for mitochondrial metabolism. To assess the direct action of NOA1 on the mitoribosome co-sedimentation assays were performed. They showed that the interaction of NOA1 and the mitoribosome is dependent on the GTPase function and the nascent peptide chain. In vitro, NOA1 facilitated the membrane insertion of newly translated and isotope labeled mitochondrial translation products into inverted mitochondrial inner membrane vesicles. In conclusion, NOA1 is a G-quadruplex-RNP that acts as mitochondrial membrane insertion factor for mtDNA-encoded proteins.
This thesis provides a comprehensive model of the molecular function of NOA1 and is the basis for future research. The identification of NOA1 as ClpXP substrate is a major contribution to the field of mitochondrial research.
The human endothelin receptors, ETA and ETB, are two members of the G-protein coupled receptors family (GPCRs) and they are key players in cardiovascular regulation. The characterization of their functionality in vitro has been limited by the possibility to obtain high quality samples using conventional expression systems. The Cell-Free expression system is an alternative technique for the production of membrane protein as well as GPCRs and can overcome some of the limitations that are commonly encountered using an in vivo approach. Cell-Free expression protocols for the two receptors ETA and ETB have been optimized by implementing post- and co-translational association to lipid bilayers. The efficiency of the reconstitution or association to liposomes and nanodiscs has systematically been studied and the ligand binding properties of the two receptors have been analyzed using a set of different complementary techniques. In several different conditions a high affinity binding of the peptide ligand ET-1 to both endothelin receptors could be obtained and the highest activity values were detected in sample prepared using a co-translational approach in presence of nanodiscs. Furthermore, the characteristic differential binding pattern of selected agonists and antagonists to the two receptors was confirmed. In samples obtained from several Cell-Free expression conditions, two intrinsic properties of the functionally folded ETB receptor, such as the proteolytic processing based on conformational recognition as well as the formation of SDS-resistant complexes with the peptide ligand ET-1, were detected. ETA and ETB are able to induce in vivo the activation of hetrotrimeric G proteins upon stimulation with an agonist, leading to the dissociation of the heterotrimeric complex and the exchange of GDP to GTP in the Galpha subunit. The Cell-Free expression system was chosen for the production of two G alpha subunit, Galpha s and Galpha q. Soluble expression of the two proteins was achieved and the production of active Galpha s was confirmed using fluorescent as well as radioactive assays. In conclusion, the obtained results document a new process for the production of ligand binding competent endothelin receptors, as well as Galpha proteins, using a Cell-Free expression system. The combination of this expression system and the nanodiscs technology appears to be a promising tool for the further characterization of membrane proteins as well as GPCRs.
5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) is an enzyme with a substantial role in inflammatory processes. In vitro kinase assays using [32P]-ATP in combination with mutagenesis have revealed that serine residues 271, 523 and 663 can be phosphorylated by MK2, PKA and ERK2 kinases, respectively. A few available reports regarding 5-LO protein sequence have covered up to 30% of the sequence after amino acid sequencing including Ser663. In LCMS/MS analyses of 5-LO tryptic digests from different cellular sources different peptides have been detected; however, none of the three phosphorylations has been detected and only Ser663 was included in the covered sequence.
As there was no comprehensive mass spectrometric analysis of 5-LO, the purpose of this study was to optimize the experimental conditions under which detection of the aforementioned phosphorylation events, as well as other possible post-translational modifications (PTMs), would be feasible. Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-MS) was used for peptide analysis of 5-LO cleaved either by chemical reagents or by proteases. Sequence coverage of 5-LO could be enhanced to be close to completion by combination of results from digestions by trypsin, AspN and chymotrypsin. In-gel trypsin digestion followed by in-solution AspN digestion proved to be a useful sample treatment for reproducible detection of the Ser271-containing peptide.
Nevertheless, in none of the examined cleavage protocols the sequence around Ser523 was detected reproducibly or with acceptable signal intensity for subsequent peptide fragmentation. Propionic anhydride and sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin cross-linker (EZ-linkTM), were used for derivatization of lysine side chains and hindrance of lysine residue recognition by trypsin. Phosphopeptide enrichment became possible after tryptic digestion of these samples, not only due to formation of an individual Ser523-containing peptide, but also because TiO2-mediated enrichment, which is performed in acidic pH, was not impaired by positively charged free lysine side chains. Additionally, biotinylation of lysine residues was exploited for an intermediate enrichment step of the lysine containing peptides, prior to TiO2 phosphopeptide enrichment.
MALDI-MS analysis after in-vitro phosphorylation of 5-LO by the three kinases showed that Ser271 was phosphorylated in the MK2 and PKA kinase assays, while Ser523 was phosphorylated only in the PKA kinase assay. Surpisingly, no phosphopeptides were detected in the in-vitro kinase assays with ERK2, even though the unmodified counterpart of the Ser663-containing peptide was easily detected. The detection limit for each of the three phosphorylation sites was determined by the use of custom made phosphopeptides and an amount of 0.06 pmol of phosphopeptide in 1 μg 5-LO (representing 0.5% phosphorylation rate) was sufficient in all cases for successful enrichment and detection by MS.
In-vitro kinase assays with [32P]-ATP were performed for some kinases that were expected to phosphorylate 5-LO according to in-silico data. Three members of the Src tyrosine kinase family (Fgr, Hck and Yes) and the Ser/Thr specific kinase DNA-PK used 5-LO as their substrate and mainly residues at the N-terminal part of 5-LO were detected phosphorylated by MS (e.g. Y42, Y53). Additional in-vitro assays for recombinant 5-LO modification included incubation with glutathione or compound U73122, previously described as inhibitor of 5-LO.
Since in-vitro assays might have generated artifacts, a method for 5-LO purification from human cells was sought, in order to examine the modification state of the protein in the cellular context. ATP-agarose affinity purification and anti-5-LO immunoprecipitation proved inappropriate for sample purification for MALDI-MS analysis. Consequently, two human cell lines that are able to express 5-LO (Rec-1 Blymphocytes and MM6 monocytes) were transduced with a DNA cassette that contained recombinant human 5-LO sequence with an attached N-terminal FLAG-tag. Anti-FLAG immunoprecipitation was then performed effectively in cell lysates and the precipitated FLAG-5-LO was separated by SDS-PAGE before MALDI-MS analysis.
The examined cell stimuli were expected to result to phosphorylation of 5-LO at Ser523 by PKA in Rec-1 cells and to phosphorylation of Ser271 and/or Ser663 in MM6 cells by activated MK2 and ERK2, respectively. Additionally, under the conditions of MM6 cell stimulation, Fgr, Hck and Yes kinases, which phosphorylated 5-LO in vitro, were expected to be activated and the possibility of 5-LO phosphorylation on tyrosine was investigated. Although immunoblotting results indicated that all the aforementioned phosphorylation events existed in the examined samples, MALDI-MS analysis verified only phosphorylation on Ser271 in differentiated MM6 cells, interestingly regardless of cell stimulation.
Finally, the primary amine derivatization procedure by EZ-linkTM was utilized for MS analysis of lysine rich proteins. In the past, chemical propionylation of histones had been employed prior to trypsin digestion; however it was easily confused in MS with combinations of other PTMs (e.g. acetylation, methylation). Moreover, propionylation is a PTM for histone H3 and this information was lost. Consequently, the EZ-link reagent was more useful for analysis of histones, as unambiguous assignment of PTMs and detection of native propionylation on bovine H3 became possible.
Tumor development usually follows predictable paths where tumor cells acquire common characteristics and features known as the hallmarks of cancer. Recently, additional characteristics have been added to these hallmarks since solid tumors are composed of a very heterogeneous population of transformed, formerly normal tissue cells and stromal cells, e.g. immune cells and fibroblasts. Compelling evidence suggests that stromal cells and tumor cells maintain a symbiotic relationship to build up the tumor microenvironment and to fuel tumor growth. In cancer therapies, common features of tumors such as unrestricted cell growth, suppression of immunological responses, and the ability to form new blood vessels (angiogenesis) have emerged as the main targets of interest. The lipid mediator prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) is known to promote all these features and thus, is connected to cancer progression in general. Its synthesis is triggered in response to stress factors or during inflammation. Inducible PGE2 production relies on the enzymes cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) and microsomal prostanglandin E synthase 1 (mPGES-1), which are simultaneously expressed in response to a variety of different stimuli and are functionally coupled. Inhibition of COX-2 with non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for cancer treatment is, however, limited by cardiovascular risks, since selective COX-2 inhibition disrupts the prostacyclin/thromboxane balance. Therefore targeting mPGES-1 downstream of COX-2 for PGE2 inhibition was evaluated in this work in different steps of carcinogenesis. Knockdown of mPGES-1 in DU145 prostate cancer cells revealed that the mPGES-1 status did not affect growth of monolayer tumor cells, but significantly impaired 3D growth of multi-cellular tumor spheroids (MCTS). Spheroid formation induced COX-2 in DU145 and other prostate cancer spheroids. High levels of PGE2 were detected in supernatants of DU145 MCTS as opposed to monolayer DU145 cells. Pharmacological inhibition of COX-2 and mPGES-1 confirmed the pivotal role of PGE2 for DU145 MCTS growth. Besides promoting spheroid growth, MCTS-derived PGE2 also inhibited cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activation. When investigating the mechanisms of COX-2 induction during spheroid formation, the typical tumor microenvironmental factors such as glucose deprivation, hypoxia or tumor cell apoptosis failed to enhance COX-2. Interestingly, when interfering with apoptosis in DU145 spheroids, the pan-caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK triggered a Summary 12 shift towards necrosis, thus enhancing COX-2 expression. Coculturing viable DU145 monolayer cells with isolated heat-shocked-treated necrotic DU145 cells, but not with necrotic cell supernatants, induced COX-2 and PGE2, confirming the impact of necrosis for MCTS growth and CTL inhibition. As mentioned, in vivo tumors are very heterogenous mixtures of tumor cells and stromal cells e.g. immune cells. Hence, the interaction of the immune system with tumors was investigated in further experiments. When coculturing MCF-7 breast cancer spheroids with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), only low levels of PGE2 were detected, since MCF-7 cells did not upregulate COX-2 during spheroid formation and did not induce PGE2 production by PBMCs. Under inflammatory conditions, by adding the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) agonist lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to cocultures, PGE2 production was triggered, spheroid sizes were reduced, and numbers of high levels of granzyme B expressing (GrBhi) CTLs were increased, while CD80 expression by tumor-associated phagocytes was also elevated. Inhibition of CD80 but not CD86 diminished numbers of GrBhi CTLs and attenuated spheroid lysis. To determine the role of ctivation-induced PGE2 production, use of the COX-2 inhibitor celecoxib and the experimental mPGES-1 inhibitor C3 further increased CD80 expression. Addition of PGE2, the prostaglandin E2 (EP2) receptor agonist butaprost, and the phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4) inhibitor rolipram reduced LPS/C3-triggered CD80 expression, confirming the impact of COX- 2/mPGES-1-derived PGE2 on shaping phagocyte phenotypes in an EP2/cAMP-dependent manner. In a spontaneous breast cancer model (MMTV-PyMT), mPGES-1-deficiency significantly delayed tumor growth in mice, confirming an overall protumorigenic role of mPGES-1 in breast cancer development in vivo. However in tumors of mPGES-1-/- mice, tumor-infiltrating phagocytes expressed low levels of CD80 similar to their wildtype counterparts. These data suggest that the immunosuppressive microenvironment does not allow for immunostimulatory effects by mPGES-1 inhibition without an activating stimulus. Evidences in this study recommend the application of mPGES-1 inhibitors for treating cancer diseases, since mPGES-1 promotes tumor growth in multiple steps of carcinogenesis, ranging from well-characterized effects of tumor cell growth to immune suppression of CTL activity and phagocyte polarization. Regarding the latter, blunting PGE2 during immune activation may limit the tumor-favoring features of inflammation and improve the efficiency of TLR4 based immune therapies.
In Nervensystemen werden zahlreiche Informationen wahrgenommen und verarbeitet um ein adäquates Verhalten hervorzurufen. Für die Untersuchung der funktionellen Zusammenhänge hierbei wurden verschiedene Methoden entwickelt, die eine gezielte Manipulation neuronaler Prozesse ermöglichen. Durch Analyse der resultierenden Effekte können dabei synaptische Proteine, einzelne Neuronen oder neuronale Netzwerke funktionell charakterisiert werden. Bisherige Ansätze verfügen jedoch nur über eine geringe zeitliche und räumliche Auflösung oder erlauben lediglich eine eingeschränkte Anwendung im frei beweglichen Tier.
Diese Nachteile können durch die heterologe Expression von lichtgesteuerten, mikrobiellen Rhodopsinen zur gezielten Manipulation des Membranpotentials umgangen werden. So induziert die Photoaktivierung des Kationenkanals Channelrhodopsin 2 (ChR2; (Nagel et al., Curr Biol 2005)) eine Depolarisation, während die Chloridpumpe Halorhodopsin (NpHR; (Zhang et al., Nature 2007)) für die Hyperpolarisation verwendet werden kann. Dabei ermöglichen die schnellen Kinetiken der Rhodopsine eine zeitlich präzise Steuerung des Membranpotentials. Durch Auswahl geeigneter Promotoren ist zudem oftmals eine zell spezifische Expression möglich. Dieser Ansatz wird daher allgemein als Optogenetik bezeichnet.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden zunächst konventionelle Techniken genutzt, um die Funktion von zwei assoziierten Proteinen eines Acetylcholin Rezeptors in C. elegans zu untersuchen. Des Weiteren wurden verschiedene Methoden für den Fadenwurm entwickelt und angewendet, die die Vorteile optogenetischer Techniken für die funktionelle Charakterisierung synaptischer Proteine und neuronaler Netzwerke nutzbar machen. Hierbei erlaubt die Transparenz von C. elegans die optogenetische Stimulation im lebenden Organismus unter nicht invasiven Bedingungen. Weitere Vorteile von C. elegans als neurobiologischem Modellorganismus liegen in seiner einfachen Handhabung (Hope, 1999) und der stereotypen Entwicklung seines Nervensystems mit bekannten anatomischen Ausprägungen (Sulston and Horvitz, Dev Biol 1977; Varshney et al., PLoS Comput Biol 2011; White et al., Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 1986). Durch ihre Häufigkeit und die experimentelle Zugänglichkeit wird hierbei die neuromuskuläre Synapse oftmals zur Erforschung der synaptischen Reizweiterleitung genutzt (Von Stetina et al., Int Rev Neurobiol 2006). Durch pharmakologische (Lewis et al., Neuroscience 1980; McIntire et al., Nature 1993; Miller et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1996; Richmond and Jorgensen, Nat Neurosci 1999) und elektrische Stimulation (Richmond and Jorgensen, Nat Neurosci 1999) können dabei Defekte der Transmission hervorgehoben werden, während Verhaltensexperimente oder elektrophysiologische Messungen der post synaptischen Ströme in Muskelzellen eine quantitative Analyse ermöglichen (Richmond and Jorgensen, Nat Neurosci 1999).
Diese Methoden wurden für die funktionelle Charakterisierung von NRA 2 und NRA 4 verwendet, die beide als akzessorische Proteine zusammen mit dem Levamisol sensitiven Acetylcholin Rezeptor der Körperwandmuskelzellen aufgereinigt wurden (Gottschalk et al., EMBO J 2005). Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass NRA 2 und NRA 4 im Endoplasmatischen Retikulum (ER) der Muskelzellen einen Komplex bilden, der die Sensitivität von beiden nikotinischen Acetylcholin Rezeptoren gegenüber verschiedenen cholinergen Agonisten verändert. In diesem Zusammenhang wurde auch nachgewiesen, dass die Oberflächenexpression einzelner Untereinheiten der beiden Rezeptoren durch NRA 2/4 beeinflusst wird. Diese Resultate legen die Vermutung nahe, dass beide Proteine die Zusammensetzung der Rezeptoren und somit ihre pharmakologischen Eigenschaften modulieren. Denkbar ist dabei eine regulatorische Funktion bei der Assemblierung verschiedener Untereinheiten zu einem funktionellen Rezeptor oder bei der Kontrolle des ER Austritts von Rezeptoren mit bestimmter Zusammensetzung. In dieser Hinsicht konnte jedoch keine Interaktion von NRA 2/4 mit der Notch Signalkaskade nachgewiesen werden, wie sie für die homologen Proteine nicalin und NOMO in Vertebraten gezeigt wurde (Haffner et al., J Biol Chem 2007; Haffner et al., EMBO J 2004).
Für die Untersuchung synaptischer Proteine durch optogenetische Techniken wurde ChR2(H134R) selektiv in cholinergen oder GABAergen Motorneuronen exprimiert, um die akute und lichtgesteuerte Freisetzung des jeweiligen Neurotransmitters zu ermöglichen. Die resultierende Stimulation bzw. Inhibition von Muskelzellen wurde hierbei durch elektrophysiologische Messungen der post synaptischen Ströme und durch Analyse von Kontraktionen respektive Relaxationen untersucht. Dabei wurde gezeigt, dass Störungen der synaptischen Reizweiterleitung die Ausprägung und Dynamik dieser lichtinduzierten Effekte beeinflussen und dadurch charakterisiert werden können. So zeigten beispielsweise Mutanten von Synaptojanin und Endophilin nachlassende Effekte bei anhaltender oder wiederholter Stimulation, was durch die gestörte Regeneration synaptischer Vesikel erklärt werden kann (Harris et al., J Cell Biol 2000; Schuske et al., Neuron 2003; Verstreken et al., Neuron 2003).
Die hohe Sensitivität dieser Methode wurde im Nachfolgenden dazu verwendet, die Inhibition cholinerger Motorneuronen durch den metabotropen GABAB Rezeptor zu untersuchen, der in C. elegans aus den beiden Untereinheiten GBB 1 und GBB 2 gebildet wird (Dittman and Kaplan, J Neurosci 2008; Vashlishan et al., Neuron 2008). Dabei konnte zunächst gezeigt werden, dass diese heterosynaptische Inhibition verschiedene lokomotorische Verhaltensweisen der Tiere beeinflusst. Für die mechanistische Untersuchung wurden anschließend cholinerge Motorneuronen durch ChR2(H134R) photoaktiviert, während resultierende Kontraktionseffekte in Abhängigkeit von GBB 1/2 analysiert wurden. Um hierbei die Funktion von GBB 1/2 durch erhöhte GABA Konzentrationen hervorzuheben, wurden zusätzlich GABAerge Motorneuronen optogenetisch stimuliert oder die Wiederaufnahme von GABA aus dem synaptischen Spalt durch Mutation des Membran ständigen GABA Transporters blockiert. So konnte gezeigt werden, dass GBB 1/2 eine akute Inhibition der cholinergen Motorneuronen bewirken, was vermutlich für die Regulation von Bewegungsabläufen eine wichtige Rolle spielt. Die geringe Dynamik der GBB 1/2 induzierten Effekte deutet allerdings darauf hin, dass die synaptische Aktivität durch den metabotropen Rezeptor kaum nachhaltig moduliert wird.
In nachfolgenden Versuchen wurde die optogenetische Stimulation von Motorneuronen außerdem mit der elektronenmikroskopischen Analyse der präsynaptischen Feinstruktur kombiniert. Dadurch konnte die Dynamik der Exozytose und Endozytose synaptischer Vesikel (SV) in Abhängigkeit von neuronaler Aktivität untersucht werden. So wurde gezeigt, dass synaptische Vesikel nahe der aktiven Zone während einer 30 sekündigen Hyperstimulation nahezu komplett aufgebraucht waren. Die vollständige Regeneration der SV Pools benötigte anschließend etwa 12 Sekunden und erfolgte zunächst in der Peripherie der aktiven Zone, was auf eine laterale Heranführung der Vesikel schließen lässt. Nach etwa 20 Sekunden erholte sich ebenfalls die Wirksamkeit der Stimulation von Muskelzellen durch die Motorneuronen, was durch elektrophysiologische Messungen der photo induzierten post synaptischen Ströme gezeigt wurde. Während der Hyperstimulation bildeten sich außerdem große vesikuläre Strukturen, die sich anschließend nach etwa acht Sekunden wieder aufgelöst hatten. In Analogie zu vergleichbaren Experimenten in anderen Organismen liegt die Vermutung nahe, dass es sich dabei um Zwischenprodukte der so genannten Bulk Phase Endozytose handelt, die das Clathrin abhängige Recycling von synaptischen Vesikeln bei starker neuronaler Aktivität ergänzt (Heuser and Reese, J Cell Biol 1973; Miller and Heuser, J Cell Biol 1984; Richards et al., Neuron 2000). Bemerkenswerterweise war der Abbau der vesikulären Strukturen in Synaptojanin und Endophilin defizienten Tieren stark verzögert. Denkbar ist, dass beide Proteine für die Synthese von synaptischen Vesikeln aus den vesikulären Zwischenprodukten der Bulk Phase Endozytose wichtig sind, analog zur ihrer Funktion bei der Clathrin abhängigen Endozytose an der Plasmamembran.
Durch die zielgerichtete Manipulation der Zellaktivität ermöglichen optogenetische Techniken außerdem die funktionelle Charakterisierung von Neuronen und neuronalen Netzwerken. Um die zelluläre Spezifität dieses Ansatzes zu erhöhen, wurde ein Tracking System entwickelt das die Position frei beweglicher Tiere in Echtzeit bestimmt und nachverfolgt. Dadurch konnte die Photoaktivierung optogenetischer Proteine auf definierte Bereiche der Fadenwürmer und somit auf ausgewählte Neuronen innerhalb der Expressionsmuster von verwendeten Promotoren eingeschränkt werden. Des Weiteren ermöglichte hierbei die Auswertung translatorischer Parameter die Analyse verschiedener lokomotorischer Merkmale wie Geschwindigkeit, Bewegungsbahn oder Ausprägung der Körperbiegungen. Dieses System wurde beispielhaft für die konzertierte Photoaktivierung durch ChR2(H134R) bzw. Photoinhibition durch MAC von zwei verschiedenen Gruppen von Neuronen angewendet, um die Integration mechanosensorischer Informationen durch Command Interneuronen zu untersuchen. In diesem Zusammenhang wurde zudem eine Rekombinase basierte Methode für optogenetische Proteine adaptiert, die die Transkription auf die zelluläre Schnittmenge von zwei verschiedenen Promotoren einschränkt und somit die Spezifität der Expression erhöht. Idealerweise kann dieser Ansatz außerdem mit der gezielten Photoaktivierung kombiniert werden, um die zelluläre Selektivität optogenetischer Anwendungen weiter zu verbessern.
Weiterhin ist die Anwendung optogenetischer Techniken bisher durch intrinsische Eigenschaften der verwendeten Rhodopsine auf die relativ kurzzeitige Manipulation des Membranpotentials von Zellen beschränkt. So benötigt ChR2 durch die schnelle Schließung seines offenen Kanals eine kontinuierliche Photoaktivierung, um eine andauernde Depolarisation hervorzurufen. Dies ist jedoch potentiell mit phototoxischen und – besonders bei C. elegans – phototaktischen Nebeneffekten verbunden. Deswegen wurden diverse Mutanten von ChR2 mit stark verlangsamter Inaktivierung (Berndt et al., Nat Neurosci 2009) für ihren Nutzen zur Langzeit Stimulation von erregbaren Zellen im Nematode getestet. Dabei wurde gezeigt, dass ChR2(C128S) durch einen kurzen Photostimulus mit vergleichsweise niedriger Intensität eine anhaltende Depolarisation über mehrere Minuten auslösen kann. Die wiederholte Stimulation in ASJ Neuronen ermöglichte zudem eine langzeitige Depolarisation über mehrere Tage, wodurch die genetisch veranlagte Entwicklung von Tieren manipuliert werden konnte. Durch gezielte Punktmutation konnten außerdem relevante Eigenschaften von ChR2(C128S) für die Langzeit Stimulation weiter verbessert werden.
Als weiteres optogenetisches Werkzeug wurde zudem die Photoaktivierbare Adenylatzyklase alpha (PACa) aus Euglena gracilis (Iseki et al., Nature 2002; Ntefidou et al., Plant Physiol 2003; Schroder-Lang et al., Nat Methods 2007) für die akute und lichtgetriebene Synthese des sekundären Botenstoffs cAMP in C. elegans etabliert. Die Photoaktivierung von PACa in cholinergen Motorneuronen verstärkte dabei die Neurotransmitterfreisetzung und induzierte hyperlokomotorische Phänotypen, vergleichbar zu Mutanten mit erhöhten cAMP Konzentrationen.
Zusammengefasst wurden diverse optogenetische Techniken für C. elegans entwickelt und optimiert, die die zellspezifische und nicht invasive Manipulation des Membranpotentials beziehungsweise die Synthese des sekundären Botenstoffs cAMP durch Licht im frei beweglichen Tier ermöglichen. Diese Methoden können zur gezielten Störung neuronaler Aktivität angewendet werden, um dadurch neurobiologische Fragestellungen im Fadenwurm zu untersuchen. Dies wurde beispielhaft für die Erforschung der synaptischen Reizweiterleitung und die funktionelle Analyse neuronaler Netzwerke demonstriert. Denkbar ist außerdem, diese für C. elegans etablierten Methoden vergleichbar in anderen Modellorganismen anzuwenden. So sind die Fruchtfliege ebenso wie der Zebrafisch Embryo bereits für optogenetische Techniken erprobt (Arrenberg et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2009; Schroll et al., Curr Biol 2006). Für Säugetiere wie die Maus, die Ratte und den Makaken wurden zudem bereits Ansätze entwickelt, die die gezielte Photostimulation in lebenden und frei beweglichen Tieren ermöglichen (Han et al., Neuron 2009; Wentz et al., J Neural Eng 2011; Yizhar et al., Nature 2011; Zhang et al., Nat Rev Neurosci 2007).
Structural determinants for substrate specificity of the promiscuous multidrug efflux pump AcrB
(2013)
Opportunistic Gram-negative pathogens such as Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter Baumanii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa are becoming more and more multiresistant against many commonly available antibiotics [39, 40]. An important resistance mechanism of Gram-negative bacteria is the efflux of noxious compounds by tripartite systems [39, 41-44]. The best studied and most clinically relevant tripartite system is the AcrA-AcrB-TolC system of Escherichia coli, where substrate recognition and energy transduction takes place in the inner membrane protein AcrB. AcrB has a remarkably huge substrate spectrum and can recognize structurally diverse molecules, such as hexan in contrast to erythromycin, as its substrates [45]. Therefore, overproduction of the tripartite system can render a Gram-negative pathogen resistant against multiple antibiotics at once. The mechanisms of how AcrB is able to recognize such an enormous spectrum of molecules as substrates, without compromising its specificity (e.g. by neglecting essential compounds like lipids or gluclose as its susbtates), remained puzzling. Structural insight into substrate specificity was so far limited to two co-crystal structures of AcrB, where minocycline and doxorubicin, respectively, were identified bound to an internal binding pocket of AcrB. This binding pocket is particularly deeply buried into internal parts of the T monomer of AcrB and was, therefore, denoted deep binding pocket (DBP). Analysis of several AcrB co-crystal structures with substrate molecules bound to the DBP [4, 23, 25] indicated that the substrate promiscuity involved multisite binding modes within the DBP. Multisite binding modes, where different substrate molecules can bind to slightly different positions and orientations to the same binding pocket, is a common feature of multidrug recognizing proteins such as QacR or BmrR [27-29]. Nevertheless, AcrB's substrate spectrum is much broader than substrate spectra of most other multidrug recognizing proteins. Therefore, it is likely that additional mechanisms are involved in mediating the observed high substrate promiscuity of AcrB. In our recently published high-resolution AcrB/doxorubicin co-crystal structure (pdb entry: 4DX7 [23]) we were able to identify two additional substrate binding pockets in the L monomer of AcrB: i) the access pocket (AP), with an opening towards the periplasm, and ii) a putative binding site in a groove between transmembrane helices 8 and 9 (TM8/TM9 groove), accessible from the lipid layer of the inner membrane. Both binding pockets are likely to be access sites for substrates towards AcrB. Furthermore, each of the binding pockets are possibly specialized to recognize a specific subset of the entire substrate spectrum of AcrB, i.e. highly hydrophobic substrates (e.g. n-dodecyl-ß-d-maltoside or sodium dodecylsulfate) might access AcrB towards the TM8/TM9 groove and water soluble substrates (e.g. berberine) might access AcrB towards the AP. Since substrates will accumulate in the membrane or the periplasm according to their hydrophilic or hydrophobic nature, substrates will be "pre-selected" by the medium, rather than by the protein itself, and guided to their appropriate access site. This process is proposed to be called "medium- mediated pre-selection". The AcrB/doxorubicin co-crystal structure (pdb entry: 4DX7 [23]) furthermore revealed that the AP and DBP are in next neighborhood to each other and are separated by a switch loop. This switch loop adopts distinct conformations in the L, T and O monomers. Specific switch loop conformations are strongly involved in coordinating the selective occupation of both binding pockets, the AP and the DBP. The conformation of the switch loop in the L monomer (L-switch loop) opens the AP and closes the DBP, whereas the conformation of the switch loop in the T monomer (T-switch Loop) opens the DBP and closes the AP. An analysis of all asymmetric AcrB structures indicated that the L-switch loop is able to adopt multiple distinct conformations, whereas the conformation of T-switch loop remained largely congruent in all crystal structures. Moreover, each distinct switch loop conformation, observed in co-crystal structures of AcrB with occupied AP [4, 23], was perfectly adapted to the bound substrate molecule. Therefore, the putatively flexible switch loop is likely to act as an adaptive module and mediates a high binding pocket plasticity without altering the global protein structure. This binding mode is called adaptor-mediated binding mechanism, where an flexible adaptive module (like the switch loop) is able to adapt the surface shape of an binding pocket to different substrate molecules. Furthermore, structural and biochemical analyses of an AcrB G616N variant, revealed the involvement of specific switch loop conformations in the substrate specificity of AcrB. A substitution of G616, located on the switch loop, to N616 was able to alter the conformation of the switch loop exclusively in the L monomers of AcrB, whereas the switch loop conformations in T and O monomers remained congruent to the conformations observed in crystal structures of wildtype AcrB. Moreover, cells producing the AcrB G616N and MexB, both bearing the G616N amino acid substitution, exhibited a reduced resistance against certain substrates, whereas the resistance against most other substrates remained on the level of wildtype AcrB. Correlations of the phenotypes with minimal projection areas, a novel 2-spatiodimensional parameter which approximates the size of a substrate molecule, revealed that AcrB variants with a G616N substitution have a reduced efflux activity for exclusively large substrate molecules. The rejection of large substrates is most likely connected with altered L-switch loop conformations....
In the past century, scientists have realized that venoms are a source of a number of natural substances presenting a wide range of pharmacological properties and often displaying a high specificity for their targets. Thus, the field of toxinology came into being, which is defined as the study of toxic substances of biological origin. Toxins are found in a wide variety of animals, including fish, cone snails, scorpions, snakes, and even some mammals. To be classified as venom, these must contain substances, i.e. toxins, which disturb physiological processes and must be deliberately delivered to the target animal. Snakes have evolved one of the most sophisticated mechanisms for venom delivery. Envenomation by snakebite can induce and inhibit aggregation/agglutination of platelets as well as inhibit/activate hemostasis, but also disrupt other physiological functions via neurotoxins and angioneurin growth factors. Snake venoms contain a substantial amount of C-type lectin-related proteins (CLRPs) which are known to function, notably, as integrin inhibitors. CLRPs are heterodimers composed of homologous α and β subunits which can assemble either covalently or noncovalently to oligomers, resulting in αβ, (αβ)2 and (αβ)4 structures. Some of the main targets of CLRPs are membrane receptors, coagulation factors, and proteins essential to hemostasis. The platelet collagen receptors GPVI and α2β1 integrin as well as the von Willebrand factor receptor GPIb play important roles in platelet activation and aggregation and are considered main targets of antithrombotic drugs. In this thesis, the integrin α2β1 is particularly considered as it is the sole collagen-binding integrin on platelets. Reduced expression of this platelet receptor results in dysfunction of platelet responses. Equivalently, overexpression of α2β1 integrin results in an increased risk of thrombosis. As a result, selective inhibitors of the collagen-α2β1 interaction could give rise to effective antithrombotic drugs. Integrins are large receptors which mediate cell-cell contacts and the binding of cells to the extracellular matrix (ECM). Therefore, they play a role in physiological processes, e.g. hemostasis and immunity, as well as in pathological processes, e.g. tumor angiogenesis and atherosclerosis. 18 α and 8 β integrin subunits, with nine α subunits containing an additional A domain, associate non-covalently to form 24 heterodimers with distinct binding specificities. Integrin collagen receptors are a subclass of four receptors which all utilize the β1 subunit. The α2β1 integrin is a collagen-binding receptor expressed not only on platelets, but also on endothelial and epithelial cells. Consequently, this integrin is also essential for cell adhesion and migration playing a role in angiogenesis as well as tumor metastasis. To date, there are five known antagonists of α2β1 integrin: EMS16, rhodocetin, vixapatin, and most recently rhinocetin and flavocetin-A. The first four have been shown to be specific for the integrin α2A domain, the major collagen-binding domain. All these antagonists are CLRPs and present new leads for drug design. In the past few years, many insights into the structure and function of rhodocetin were obtained. Monoclonal antibodies proved to be advantageous in disclosing this information, making them not only useful as therapeutic agents, but also as tools for protein characterization. The venom of the Vipera palaestinae snake was recently shown to contain an α2β1 integrin inhibitor, which prevented the integrin from binding collagen. This inhibitor, called vixapatin, was the initial focus of this dissertation. Vixapatin’s interaction with the α2β1 integrin needed further characterization on a molecular and cellular level to assess its medical potential and monoclonal antibodies were to be used as a tool. Originally, vixapatin had been isolated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. To avoid the stringency of this method, for this study, it was replaced with gentler chromatographic methods. First, the α2β1 integrin inhibitor was isolated from the crude snake venom with affinity chromatography using the α2A domain as bait, establishing a method to quickly screen venoms for α2β1-binding proteins which affect the collagenintegrin interaction. The applicability of this method to other snake venoms was shown by isolating an α2A domain-specific toxin from the venom of Trimeresurus flavoviridis. To allow further characterization of both these toxins, gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography were employed to purify the protein without the α2A domain. These classical protein purification methods resulted in similar separation patterns of both the V. palaestinae and T. flavoviridis venom proteins. Purified proteins exhibiting the potential of inhibiting integrinbinding to collagen were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Both VP-i and flavocetin-A, the integrin inhibitors from V. palaestinae and T. flavoviridis, respectively, were shown to have more complex structures than was evident from the purification. Each consisted of four low-molecular-weight proteins which assembled into two bands (for VP-i) or one single band (for flavocetin-A) under non-reducing conditions. Mass spectrometry analyses revealed VP-i to belong to the family of CLRPs, just like vixapatin does. However, these two proteins differed in their primary sequences and only showed homology to one another. The toxin purified from T. flavoviridis revealed this toxin to be flavocetin-A, a heterodimeric CLRP which had so far only been shown to have GPIb-binding activity. At the time of flavocetin-A’s purification, flavocetin-B was co-purified; flavocetin-B consists of the same two α and β subunits, plus an additional γ subunit. As no sequence information is known to date for the γ subunit, it may be one of the additional proteins purified here, along with an additional δ subunit. Therefore, the toxin isolated here may actually consist of four different subunits forming a tetramer of two different heterodimers, generating an (αβ)2(γδ)2 structure. This proposed (αβ)2(γδ)2 flavocetin-A structure has binding sites for both α2β1 integrin and GPIb, with no sterical overlap, as shown by affinity chromatography using the α2A domain and the extracellular domain of the GPIb receptor. The potential of VP-i and flavocetin-A to inhibit integrin-binding to type I collagen was shown during purification: Both toxins efficiently bind to the integrin α2A domain; also, VP-i and vixapatin bind to the A domain with the same affinity. Surface plasmon resonance showed the interaction of flavocetin-A with the α2β1 integrin to be extremely strong and association to be very fast. Furthermore, both toxins were shown to inhibit binding of the wildtype integrin to collagen: VP-i and flavocetin-A acted antagonistically on cell adhesion and cell migration. Initially, the interaction between VP-i and α2β1 integrin was to be further characterized with the help of monoclonal antibodies. However, this proved problematic, the procedure requiring various optimizations. Although, after expert consultation, some monoclonal antibodies could be obtained, the cells were extremely sensitive and gave unsatisfactory results when tested as detection tools in Western blot and immunoassays. Concluding, two novel α2β1 integrin inhibitors were discovered: VP-i and flavocetin-A, which were purified using the same procedure and which have similar functions. Both are Ctype lectin-related proteins which effectively inhibit cell adhesion and migration. This underlines that nature has instrumentalized CLRPs to specifically inhibit α2β1 integrin. Further characterization of VP-i and flavocetin-A will be able to provide leads for future drug development.
Plants absorb sunlight via photosynthetic pigments and convert light energy intochemical energy in the process of photosynthesis. These pigments are mainly bound to antenna protein complexes that funnel the excitation energy to the photosynthetic reaction centres. The peripheral antenna of plant photosystem II (PSII) consists of the major light-harvesting complex of PSII (LHC-II) and the minor LHCs CP29, CP26 and CP24. Light intensity can change frequently and plants need to adapt to high-light conditions in order to avoid photodamage. When more photons are absorbed than can be utilised by the photosynthetic machinery, excessive excitation energy is dissipated as heat by short-term adaptation processes collectively known as non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). A decrease in PSII antenna chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence yield and a reduction in the average Chl fluorescence lifetime are associated with NPQ. The main component of NPQ is the so-called energy-dependent quenching (qE), and it is triggered by the rapid drop in thylakoid lumenal pH resulting from the plant’s photosynthetic activity. This process is thought to take place at the PSII antenna complexes, which therefore not only capture and transfer light energy but are also involved in balancing the energy flow. The decrease in lumenal pH acivates the enzyme violaxanthin de-epoxidase (VDE), which converts the xanthophyll violaxanthin (Vio) into zeaxanthin (Zea) in the xanthophyll cycle. In addition, the PSII subunit PsbS was discovered to be essential for qE by screening qE-deficient Arabidopsis thaliana mutants. This membrane protein is considered a member of the LHC superfamily, which also includes LHC-II and the minor LHCs. Previous studies on PsbS isolated either from native source or refolded in vitro have produced inconsistent results on its pigment binding capacity. Interestingly, a pH-dependent change in the quaternary structure of PsbS under high light conditions has been reported. This observed dimer-tomonomer transition very likely follows the protonation of lumenal glutamates upon the drop in pH and is accompanied by a change in PSII supercomplex localisation. PsbS dimers are preferentially found in association with the PSII core, whereas PsbS monomers co-localise with LHC-II.Despite the identification of !pH, Zea and PsbS as key players in qE, both the nature of the quencher(s) as well as the underlying molecular mechanism leading to excess energy dissipation still remain unknown. Several models have been put forward to explain the reversible switch in the antenna from an energy-transmitting to a quenched state. Proposals include a simple pigment exchange of Vio for Zea, and aggregation or an internal conformational change of LHC-II. Charge transfer (CT)quenching in the minor LHCs or quenching by carotenoid dark state (Car S1)-Chl interactions have also been suggested. However, none of these qE models has so far been capable of accommodating all the physiological observations and available experimental data. Most importantly, the function of PsbS remains an enigma. A recent qE model suggested that monomerisation of PsbS enables the protein to transiently bind a carotenoid and form a quenching unit with a Chl of a PSII LHC. In view of the various proposed qE mechanisms, this thesis aimed at understanding the interplay of the different qE components and the contribution of the PSII subunits LHC-II, the minor LHCs and PsbS to qE. The initial approach was to investigate the properties of the PSII subunits in the most simple in vitro model system, namely in detergent solution. For this purpose, LHC-II was isolated either from native source or refolded from recombinantly produced protein. Investigation of the minor LHCs and PsbS required heterologous expression and refolding. In addition, experiments were performed on aggregated LHC-II. Aggregates of LHC-II have been used as a popular model system for qE because they exhibit highly quenched Chl fluorescence. At the final stage of this doctoral work, a more sophisticated model system to approximate the thylakoid membrane was developed by reconstitution of the PSII subunits LHC-II and PsbS into liposomes. This system not only allowed for investigation of these membrane proteins in their native environment, but also for mimicking the xanthophyll cycle by distribution of Zea within the membrane as well as !pH by outside buffer exchange. The role of Zea in qE was first investigated with detergent solubilised antenna proteins. The requirement of this xanthophyll for qE is well-known, but the specific contribution to the molecular quenching mechansim is unclear. Previous work had shown that replacement of Vio for Zea in LHC-II was not sufficient to induce Chl fluorescence quenching in Zea-LHC-II, as suggested by the so-called molecular gearshift mechanism. However, by means of selective two-photon excitation spectroscopy, an increase in electronic interactions between Car S1 and Chls was observed for LHC-II upon lowering the pH of the detergent buffer. Electronic Car S1-Chl coupling became even stronger when Zea-LHC-II was probed. The extent of Car S1-Chl coupling correlated directly with the extent of Chl fluorescence quenching, in a similar way as observed previously in live plants under high-light conditions. However, very similar results were obtained with LHC-II aggregates. This implied that the increase in electronic interactions and fluorescence quenching was independent of Zea and low pH. Further experiments on aggregates of LHC-II Chl mutants indicated that the targeted pigments were also not essential for the observed effects. It is proposed that the same molecular mechanism causes an increase in electronic Car S1-Chl interactions and Chl fluorescence quenching in Zea-LHC-II at low pH as well as in aggregated LHC-II. Most likely, surface exposed pigments form random quenching centres in both cases. On the other hand, it was possible that Zea could act as a direct quencher of excess excitation energy in the minor LHCs. However, enrichment of refolded CP29, CP26 and CP24 with Zea did not lead to a change in the Chl excited state lifetime. Formation of a carotenoid radical cation, previously implied in CT quenching, was also not observed, although artificial generation of such a radical cation was principally possible as shown for CP29. During the course of this work, a study reporting the formation of Zea radical cations in minor LHCs was published. Therefore, Zea-enriched minor LHCs were again investigated on the experimental apparatus used in the reported study. Indeed, the presence of at least one carotenoid radical cation for each minor complex was detected. It is suggested that either the preparation method of incubating the refolded minor LHCs with Zea in contrast to refolding the complexes with only Zea and lutein causes the observed differences or that the observed spectral radical cation signatures are due to experimental artifacts. While the experiments with LHC-II and the minor LHCs gave useful insights into the putative qE mechanism, the quencher site and the mode of action of Zea could still not be unambiguously identified. Most importantly, these studies could not explain the function of the qE keyplayer PsbS. Therefore, the focus of the work was shifted to PsbS protein production, purification and characterisation. In view of inconsistent reports on the pigment binding capacity of this PSII subunit, refolding trials with and without photosynthetic pigments were conducted. The formation of a specific pigmentprotein complex typical for other LHCs was not observed and neither was the earlier reported “activation” of Zea for qE by binding to this protein. Nevertheless, PsbS refolded without pigments displayed secondary structure content in agreement with previous studies, indicating pigment-independent folding. Reconstitution of pigmentfree, refolded PsbS into liposomes confirmed that the protein is stable in the absence of pigments. Zea distributed in PsbS-containing liposomes also showed no spectral alteration that would indicate its “activation”. With the ability to reconstitute PsbS, it was then possible to proceed to modelling qE in a proteoliposome system. For this purpose, PsbS was co-reconstituted with LHC-II, which has been reported to interact with PsbS. One-photon excitation (OPE) and two-photon excitation (TPE) spectroscopy measurements were performed on LHC-II- and LHC-II/PsbS-containing liposomes. This enabled both quantification of Chl fluorescence quenching as well as determination of the extent of electronic Car S1-Chl interactions. The effect of Zea was investigated by incorporating it in the proteoliposome membrane. It was shown that Zea alone was not able to induce significant Chl fluorescence quenching when only LHC-II was present. However, when LHC-II and PsbS were co-reconstituted, pronounced Chl fluorescence quenching and an increase in electronic Car S1-Chl interactions were observed and both effects were enhanced when Zea was present. Western blot analysis indicated the presence of a LHC-II/PsbS-heterodimer in these proteoliposomes. In addition to the OPE and TPE measurements, the average Chl fluorescence lifetime was determined in detergent-free buffer at neutral pH and directly after buffer exchange to low pH. No significant changes in the average lifetime were observed for LHC-II proteoliposomes when either Zea was present or after exchange for low pH buffer. This indicated that Zea alone cannot act as a direct quencher, which concurs with the OPE measurements. Moreover, the complex was also properly reconstituted as no aggregation or significant Chl fluorescence quenching were observed. The average lifetime was not significantly affected in LHC-II/PsbS-proteoliposomes, independent of Zea or pH. However, a shortlived component in the presence of a long-lived component was not resolvable with the time resolution of the fluorescence lifetime apparatus.
Implications for qE model systems and the in vivo quenching mechanism are discussed based on the experiments in detergent solution, on LHC-II aggregates and with the proteoliposome model system.
Biological membranes separate the cell interior from the outside and have diverse functions from signal transduction, apoptosis to transportations of ions and small molecules in and out of the cell. Most of these functions are fulfilled by proteins incorporated in the membrane. However, lipids as the main component of membrane not only serve as structural element for bilayer formation but they are also directly involved e.g. signalling processes and bilayer properties are important to mediate protein interactions. To fully understand the role of lipids, it is necessary to develop a molecular understanding of how certain membrane components modify bulk bilayer structure and dynamics. Membranes are known to have many different motions in different conditions and time scales. Temperature, pH, water content and many other conditions change membrane dynamics in a high degree. In addition to this, time scales of motions in membranes vary from ns to ms range corresponding to fast motion and slow motion, respectively. Therefore, membranes are needed to be studied systematically by varying the conditions and using methods to investigate motions in various time scales separately. The aim of this study was therefore perform a combined solid-state NMR / molecular dynamics study on model membranes. Different substrates, such as potential drugs, polarizing agents and signaling lipids were incorporated into bilayers and their location within the membrane and their effect onto the membrane was probed. NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), pirinixic acid derivatives, ceramides and polarizing agents were the substrates for membranes in this study. There were several experimental methods that were applied in order to investigate effects of these substrates on membrane dynamics. Different kind of phospholipids including POPC, DMPC and DPPC were used. In addition to experimental work, with the information gathered from solid state NMR experiments molecular dynamics simulations were performed to obtain more information about the membranes at the molecular level. As a result, combination of solid-state NMR with molecular dynamics simulations provides very systematic way of investigating membrane dynamics in a large range of time scales.
Pirinixic acid derivatives were special interest of this study because of their activity on peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) as an agonist as well as on enzymes of microsomal prostaglandin E2 synthase-1 (PGE2s) -1 and 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) as dual inhibitor. Two potent pirinixic acid derivatives, 2-(4-chloro-6-(quinolin-6-ylamino)pyrimidin-2-ylthio)octanoic acid (compound 2) and 2-(4-chloro-6-(quinolin-6-ylamino)pyrimidin-2-ylthio)octanoate (compound 3), have been worked and their insertion depts were investigated by combining of solid state NMR and molecular dynamics simulations. Both experimental and theoretical results pointed out that compound 3 was inserted the phospholipid bilayer more deeply than 2. NSAIDs – lipid mixtures have been also studied here. It is known that consumption of NSAIDs as in mixture with lipids results much fewer side effects than consumption of the drugs alone. Thus, it is crucial to understand interactions of NSAIDs with lipids and investigate the possible complex formation of drugs with lipids. In this study, interactions of three widely used NSAIDs, ibuprofen, diclofenac and piroxicam, with DPPC were investigated by solid-state NMR. 1H and 31P NMR results depicted that ibuprofen and diclofenac had interactions with lipids, which is an indication of drug-lipid complex formation whereas piroxicam didn’t show any interactions with lipids suggesting that no complex formation occurred in the case of piroxicam. Ceramides are known to play key roles in many cell processes and many studies showed that the functions of ceramides are related with the ceramide effects on biological membranes. Therefore, in this study, influences of ceramides on biophysics of lipid bilayers were investigated by using various solid state NMR techniques and molecular dynamics simulations. Results from molecular dynamics simulations clearly showed that ceramide and lipids have strong interactions. More evidences about ceramide-lipid interactions were provided from 1H and 14N NMR results. In addition, it was indicated by both simulation and experimental methods that ceramide increased the rigidity of DMPC by increasing chain order parameters. BTbk is a biradical, which is used as polarizing agent for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments and found to be more efficient than other widely used polarizing agents such as TOTAPOL. Since it is a hydrophobic compound, which prefers to stay inside lipid bilayer it is important to investigate the location and orientation of bTbk along the bilayer in order to understand its enhancement profile in DNP measurements. In this study, both NMR relaxation time measurements and molecular dynamics simulations revealed that bTbk tends to stay more close to hydrophobic chain of lipids than the interfacial part of lipids at bilayer surface.
In the first part of this work, a brief introduction on lipid membranes as well as a theoretical summary on both methods of solid-state NMR and molecular dynamics simulations is given. Then, in the second part methodology is introduced for both solid-state NMR spectrometer and theoretical calculations. Afterwards, results of different membrane systems are discussed in the following parts for both solid state NMR and MD. Finally, in the last part, a summary and the conclusion of the overall results together with some future plans are explained.
In this thesis the integral membrane protein diacylglycerol kinase (DAGK) from E.coli is investigated with solid-state NMR. The aim is to gain an insight into the enzyme’s mechanism through integration of kinetic, structural and dynamic data. The biological function of DAGK is the transfer of the γ-phosphate group from Mg*ATP to diacylglycerol (DAG) building phosphatidic acid (PA)[6] as port of the membrane-derived oligosaccharide cycle[31,34]. Surprisingly, DAGK does not share structural or sequential similarities with other kinases[12]. Typical sequence motives found in other kinases, which catalyze phosphoryl transfer reactions, are not found[13]. In its physiological form DAGK is a homo-trimer with nine transmembrane helices, three catalytic centers and a size of 39.6 kDa.
First, the set-up of a real-time 31P MAS NMR experiment is shown. This experiment allows measuring in real-time the simultaneous ATP hydrolysis in the aqueous phase and lipid substrate phos-phorylation in the membrane phase with atomic resolution under magic angle spinning[56]. After fast transfer of the sample into the NMR spectrometer the enzymatic reaction is started with a temperature jump. This approach of real-time MAS NMR in a dual-phase system was demonstrated for the lipid substrate analogs dioleoyl- (DOG) and dibutyrylglycerol (DBG), with a C8 and C4 aliphatic chain, respectively. The combination of 31P direct and cross polarization functions as a dynamic filter. In the 31P direct polarized experiment nuclei in both phases are detected, while in the 31P cross polar-ized experiment, only nuclei in the membrane phase are detected. Rates for substrate turnover, i.e. degradation of γP-, βP, αP-ATP and build-up of βP-, αP-ADP, free phosphate as side reaction, and PA are obtained, which reveal a Michaelis-Menten behavior with regard to Mg*ATP and DBG. Here Mg*ATP and DBG follow a random-equilibrium model, where every substrate can bind indepen-dently from the other substrate. Analyses of the peak integrals from educts and products of the enzymatic reaction, revealed the stoichiometry of the reaction: 1.5 ATP molecules are used to phos-phorylate one DBG molecule. The excess of ATP is attributed to the basal ATPase activity. Further-more, experiments with ATPγS, usually regarded as a non-hydrolysable ATP-analog, where carried out. Surprisingly, DAGK hydrolyzes ATPγS and also transfers the thio-phosphate group to the lipid acceptor DBG, which points to a certain degree of plasticity in the active center. A phosphorylated enzyme intermediate was not detected. These results suggest the building of a ternary complex of Mg*ATP, DBG and DAGK performing a direct-phosphoryl transfer reaction, without passing through a phosphorylated enzyme intermediate. Experiments with the transition state analog ortho-vanadate (Vi) showed a decoupling of the ATP hydrolysis activity from lipid substrate phosphorylation. This indicates a specific transfer site for the γ-phosphate group from ATP to DAG, which can be blocked by Vi.
A general disadvantage of NMR spectroscopy compared to other spectroscopic methods is its inherent low sensitivity. One possible starting point for the improvement of signal-to-noise per unit time is the reduction of the spin-lattice relaxation time of protons[209]. Usually 95 % of the experi-mental time is required for the relaxation of the 1H to equilibrium. The addition of paramagnetic species can be used to reduce the 1H T1[233]. In a comprehensive study four different paramagnetic agents were tested: Cu2+-EDTA, Cu2+-EDTA-tag, Gd3+-TTAHA and Gd3+-DOTA. The titration of these paramagnetic complexes showed the principle feasibility of this approach, but differences between the tested species exist. The most promising complex is Gd3+-DOTA which, at a concentration of 2 mM, causes a 10-time improvement of signal-to-noise ratio per unit time. This allowed measuring 2D 13C-13C correlation spectra of proteoliposomes in one tenth of the usual required experimental time (i.e. 10 hours vs. 4 days) with good signal-to-noise.
For the investigation of structural or dynamic changes in the protein upon substrate interaction with MAS NMR, the spectral properties CP efficiency and resolution of the DAGK in liposomes needed to be improved. The most critical step during sample preparation is the reconstitution of the membrane protein from detergent micelles into a membrane of synthetic lipids under detergent removal. For this procedure the important criteria are enzymatic activity, measured in a coupled ATPase assay[55], and homogeneity of the proteoliposomes, which was tested e.g. on a discontinuous sucrose step gradient. Therefore an extensive study was carried out, in which different detergents, lipids and lipid mixtures, techniques for detergent removal and different protein-to-lipid ratios were tested. A direct correlation between high ATPase activity and good resolution was not found. Moreover, active DAGK in a mixture of DMPC and cholesterol, which emulates the membrane features of a membrane containing DAG, showed the best CP efficiency and resolution.
The assignment of the protein backbone and amino acid side chains the first mandatory step towards the investigation of structural and dynamical features influencing and defining the enzymatic mechanism by MAS NMR. As the assignment procedure is very time consuming for a total protein, a special labeling scheme for DAGK was developed, which allows assigning most of the protein areas presumably involved in enzyme catalysis. The assignment of DAGK with solution NMR[132] was not transferable to the MAS NMR spectra. Most important for the assignment process were the unique pairs[335], two consecutive amino acids which only appear once in the amino acid sequence. These unique pairs served as anchor points. Five different multinuclear MAS NMR experiments (DARR, NCO, NCA, NCACX, NCOCX) were required for the sequential assignment. It was possible to assign 35 % of the total amino acid sequence with one sample and 8 experiments acquired at 850 MHz. The secondary structure analysis showed subtle differences to the DAGK assignment with solution NMR[132], which can be attributed to the different environment in lipid bilayers and detergent micelles.
Data about structural and dynamical changes under substrate interaction can reveal details about the enzymatic mechanism. Therefore changes in chemical shift in 2D heteronuclear correlation experiments in the apo-state and under substrate saturated conditions with the substrates Mg*AMP-PNP, a non-hydrolysable ATP-analog, DOG, a mixture of Mg*AMP-PNP and DOG as well as inhibited by Vi were recorded. The most significant peak changes were observed at the interface membrane-cytoplasm as well as the the N-terminal amphipathic helix. The residues revealing chemical shift perturbations correlate with conserved residues or such residues, for which importance for catalysis and/or folding could be shown in mutation studies[8]. Especially noticeable were the changes at the amino acids Asn 72, Lys 64, His 87, Tyr 86 and Asp 95.
Beside changes of the chemical shift, changes of line width or signal doubling were observable. These changes can point to a correlation with dynamic reorientations in the μs-ms time regime, which are most relevant for enzymatic processes. The protein backbone dynamics in the apo-state as well as saturated with the substrates or inhibited with Vi were investigated with a 15N-CODEX experiment, which is based on the reorientation of the CSA tensor upon dynamical changes[350]. Specific effects of the different substrates or analogs on the protein backbone dynamic were revealed complementing the structural data and the chemical shift perturbation experiments.
This work presents a biochemical, functional and structural characterization of Aquifex aeolicus F1FO ATP synthase obtained using both a native form (AAF1FO) and a heterologous form (EAF1FO) of this enzyme.
F1FO ATP synthases catalyze the synthesis of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate driven by ion motive forces across the membrane and therefore play a key cellular function. Because of their central role in supporting life, F1FO ATP synthases are ubiquitous and have been remarkably conserved throughout evolution. For their biological importance, F1FO ATP synthases have been extensively studied for many decades and many of them were characterized from both a functional and a structural standpoint. However, important properties of ATP synthases – specifically properties pertaining to their membrane embedded subunits – have yet to be determined and no structures are available to date for the intact enzyme complex. Therefore, F1FO ATP synthases are still a major focus of research worldwide. Our research group had previously reported an initial characterization of AAF1FO and had indicated that this enzyme presents unique features, i.e. a bent central stalk and a putatively heterodimeric peripheral stalk. Based on such a characterization, this enzyme revealed promising for structural and functional studies on ATP synthases and became the focus of this doctoral thesis. Two different lines of research were followed in this work.
First, the characterization of AAF1FO was extended by bioinformatic, biochemical and enzymatic analyses. The work on AAF1FO led to the identification of a new detergent that maintains a higher homogeneity and integrity of the complex, namely the detergent trans-4-(trans-4’-propylcyclohexyl)cyclohexyl-α-D-maltoside (α-PCC). The characterization of AAF1FO in this new detergent showed that AAF1FO is a proton-dependent, not a sodium ion-dependent ATP synthase and that its ATP hydrolysis mechanism needs to be triggered and activated by high temperatures, possibly inducing a conformational switch in subunit γ. Moreover, this approach suggested that AAF1FO may present unusual features in its membrane subunits, i.e. short N-terminal segments in subunits a and c with implications for the membrane insertion mechanism of these subunits.
Investigating on these unique features of A. aeolicus F1FO ATP synthase could not be done using A. aeolicus cells, because these require a harsh and dangerous environment for growth and they are inaccessible to genetic manipulations. Therefore, a second approach was pursued, in which an expression system was created to produce the enzyme in the heterologous host E. coli. This second approach was experimentally challenging, because A. aeolicus F1FO ATP synthase is a 500-kDa multimeric membrane enzyme with a complicated and still not entirely determined stoichiometry and because its encoding genes are scattered throughout A. aeolicus genome, rather than being organized in one single operon. However, an artificial operon suitable for expression was created in this work and led to the successful production of an active and fully assembled form of Aquifex aeolicus F1FO ATP synthase. Such artificial operon was created using a stepwise approach, in which we expressed and studied first individual subunits, then subcomplexes, and finally the entire F1FO ATP synthase complex. We confirmed experimentally that subunits b1 and b2 form a heterodimeric subcomplex in the E. coli membranes, which is a unique case among ATP synthases of non-photosynthetic organisms. Moreover, we determined that the b1b2 subcomplex is sufficient to recruit the soluble F1 subcomplex to the membranes, without requiring the presence of the other membrane subunits a and c. The latter subunits can be produced in our expression system only when the whole ATP synthase is expressed, but not in isolation nor in the context of smaller FO subcomplexes. These observations led us to propose a novel mechanism for the assembly of ATP synthases, in which first the F1 subcomplex attaches to the membrane via subunit b1b2, and then cring and subunits a assemble to complete the FO subcomplex. Furthermore, we could purify the heterologous ATP synthase (EAF1FO) to homogeneity by chromatography and electro-elution. Enzymatic assays showed that the purified form of EAF1FO is as active as AAF1FO. Peptide mass fingerprinting showed that EAF1FO is composed of the same subunits as AAF1FO and all soluble and membrane subunits could be identified. Finally, single-particle electron microscopy analysis revealed that the structure of EAF1FO is identical to that of AAF1FO. Therefore, the EAF1FO expression system serves as a reliable platform for investigating on properties of AAF1FO.
Specifically, in this work, EAF1FO was used to study the membrane insertion mechanism of rotary subunit c. Subunits c possess different lengths and levels of hydrophobicity across species and by analyzing their N-terminal variability, four phylogenetic groups of subunits c were distinguished (groups 1 to 4). As a member of group 2, the subunit c from A. aeolicus F1FO ATP synthase is characterized by an N-terminal segment that functions as a signal peptide with SRP recognition features, a unique case for bacterial F1FO ATP synthases. By accurately designing mutants of EAF1FO, we determined that such a signal peptide is strictly necessary for membrane insertion of subunit c and we concluded that A. aeolicus subunit c inserts into E. coli membranes using a different pathway than E. coli subunit c. Such a property may be common to other ATP synthases from extremophilic organisms, which all cluster in the same phylogenetic group.
In conclusion, the successful production of the fully assembled and active F1FO ATP synthase from A. aeolicus in E. coli reported in this work provides a novel genetic system to study A. aeolicus F1FO ATP synthase. To a broader extent, it will also serve in the future as a solid reference for designing strategies aimed at producing large multi-subunit complexes with complicated stoichiometry.
Silicon wafers such as Silicon on Insulator (SOI) and strained silicon on Insulator (sSOI) are the essential and basic materials of advanced microelectronic devices. However, they often show various kinds of crystal defects which impair the function of these devices. The most efficient method to date, for detecting such defects and for determining their density, is to delineate them by etching the wafers with a suitable etching solution and characterise them via light optical microscopy. Etch pits are formed at defect sites which are etched at a faster rate than at the perfect lattice. The standard etching solution used for SOI and sSOI is a dilute version of Secco. As Secco contains carcinogenic and environmentally hazardous chromium (VI), the use of which is or will be restricted by law in many countries, suitable chromium (VI)-free etching solutions like Organic Peracid Etches (OPE), modified Chemical Polishing Etches (CP) like CP4 mod and mixtures with organic oxidizing agents like chloranil (CA) have been developed for the successful delineation of various types of crystal defects.
However there are still nanometer-sized defects which are hard to detect or escape detection by this method. Copper decoration is a well known method to magnify these defects. It consists in applying a copper nitrate solution to the back of the SOI or sSOI wafer. On annealing, copper diffuses through the substrate and the BOX (buried oxide) to the SOI/sSOI film and on quenching to room temperature, copper precipitates as copper silicide, SiCu3, foremost at crystal defects where the lattice strain is greater than at perfect lattice sites. These silicides increase the volume in these parts of the crystal lattice and defect magnification occurs. A considerable disadvantage of this method is its tendency for artefact formation, when the copper concentration used is too high, with the copper precipitating at the film surface. The consequence is a higher density of etch pits whereby true defect etch pits cannot be differentiated from those caused by artefacts.
The aim of this thesis is to show that the processes of decorating and etching can be combined successfully to delineate all crystal defects in SOI and sSOI. An ideal result would have been to find a copper decoration procedure that decorates all existing crystal defects at a copper concentration that avoids artefact formation.
Modern computational molecular quantum chemical studies, such as the present one, typically employ a wide range of theoretical techniques. The latter are often rather complicated and one should not generally expect that an experimental scientist in the area of physical chemistry, a potential reader of this work, should be familiar with all these techniques. To simplify the reading of the Thesis and to make it self-sufficient, it is supplied with an overview of the employed theoretical methodologies (Chapter 1). The overview explains basic quantum-chemical terminology referred to throughout the Thesis, introduces theoretical foundations of the methods and outlines their properties and limitations. In Part 1.1 of Chapter 1, methods for the solution of the molecular Schrödinger equation are introduced, while in the subsequent Parts 1.2 and 1.3 methods for the solution of the electronic Schrödinger equation are presented to find the ground and excited states, respectively. Part 1.4 is dedicated to basis-set effects which are omnipresent in electronic-structure calculations. It contains a number of unusual insights and concepts proposed by the author and, thus, may be insightful also to experts in quantum chemistry.
In Chapter 2, the phenomenon of acetone-water proton exchange catalyzed by tubular as well as amorphous aggregates of calix[4]hydroquinone (CHQ) macromolecules, which has been observed previously in NMR experiments (Ref. D1D), is investigated by means of correlated quantum-chemical methods. The first part of the study (Section 2.3-2.7) considers concerted proton transfer, assisted by several initially neutral OH-groups in the hydrogen-bonded networks of CHQ aggregates. The second part of the study (Section 2.8-2.13) is dedicated to a second mechanism of proton exchange: step-wise proton transfer via formation of ionic intermediates resulting from CHQ pre-dissociation. CHQ application-specific as well as general conclusions, relevant to the main topic of the Thesis (i.e. influence of specific microsolvation on the considered proton transfer processes), are presented in Section 2.14.
The phenomenon of dual fluorescence observed in clusters of methyl 4-N,N-dimethylaminobenzoate ester (DMABME) and two water molecules in the gas phase, is studied in Chapter 3. Experimentally, the dual fluorescence was detected in experiments combining optical and ground-state ion-depletion infrared spectroscopies in ultracold molecular beams (Ref. D2D). In Section 3.3, calculated ground-state infrared spectra are presented that allow to identify the structures of those isomers, which are present in the gas-phase, as well as the structure of the isomer responsible for dual fluorescence. To further understand the reaction mechanism of dual fluorescence, excited-state potential energy surfaces of the identified isomers were computed along the relevant twisted intermolecular charge-transfer formation coordinate and the mechanism of energy dissipation in these complexes was investigated (Section 3.4-3.5) (Ref. D3D). A brief summary of the main results of this chapter and conclusions are given in Section 3.6. Finally, in Section 3.7 a complementary benchmark study of the quality of ground-state potential energy surfaces of prototypical hydrogen-bonded systems (ammonia-water and formic acid-water dimers) obtained at the level of BSSE-corrected MP2 combined with moderate basis sets, has been conducted. The quality of potential energy surfaces was tested with respect to basis-set size, level of electron correlation and anharmonicity effects and the applied methodology to identify the IR spectrum of hydrated DMABME complexes (Section 3.3) has been found to be sufficient to uniquely assign the IR spectra.
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which was first reported more than a century ago by Alhzeimer, is one of the commonest forms of dementia which affects >30 million people globally (>8 million in Europe). The origin and pathogenesis of AD is poorly understood and there is no cure available for the disease. AD is characterized by the accumulation of senile plaques composed of amyloid beta peptides (Ab 37-43) which is formed by the gamma secretase (GS) complex by cleaving amyloid precursor protein. Therefore GS can be an attractive drug target. Since GS processes several other substrates like Notch, CD44 and Cadherins, nonspecific inhibition of GS has many side effects. Due to the lack of crystal structure of GS, which is attributed to the extreme difficulties in purifying it, molecular modeling can be useful to understand its architecture. So far only low resolution cryoEM structures of the complex has been solved which only provides a rough structure of the complex at low 12-15 A resolution Furthermore the activity of GS in vitro can be achieved by means of cell-free (CF) expression.
GS comprises catalytic subunits namely presenilins and supporting elements containing Pen-2, Aph-1 and Nicastrin. The origin of AD is hidden in the regulated intramembrnae proteolysis (RIP) which is involved in various physiological processes and also in leukemia. So far growth factors, cytokines, receptors, viral proteins, cell adhesion proteins, signal peptides and GS has been shown to undergo RIP. During RIP, the target proteins undergo extracellular shredding and intramembrane proteolysis.
This thesis is based on molecular modeling, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, cell-free (CF) expression, mass spectrometry, NMR, crystallization, activity assay etc of the components of GS complex and G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs).
First I validated the NMR structure of PS1 CTF in detergent micelles and lipid bilayers using coarse-grained MD simulations using MARTINI forcefield implemented in Gromacs. CTF was simulated in DPC micelles, DPPC and DLPC lipid bilayer. Starting from random configuration of detergent and lipids, micelle and lipid bilyer were formed respectively in presence of CTF and it was oriented properly to the micelle and bilyer during the simulation. Around DPC molecules formed micelle around CTF in agreement of the experimental results in which 80-85 DPC molecules are required to form micelles. The structure obtained in DPC was similar to that of NMR structure but differed in bilayer simulations showed the possibility of substrate docking in the conserved PAL motif. Simulations of CTF in implicit membrane (IMM1) in CHAMM yielded similar structure to that from coarse grained MD.
I performed cell-free expression optimization, crystallization and NMR spectroscopy of Pen-2 in various detergent micelles. Additionally Pen-2 was modeled by a combination of rosetta membrane ab-initio method, HHPred distant homology modeling and incorporating NMR constraints. The models were validated by all atom and coarse grained MD simulations both in detergent micelles and POPC/DPPC lipid bilayers using MARTINI forcefield.
GS operon consisting of all four subunits was co-expressed in CF and purified. The presence of of GS subunits after pull-down with Aph-1 was determined by western blotting (Pen-2) and mass spectrometry (Presenilin-1 and Aph-1). I also studied interactions of especially PS1 CTF, APP and NTF by docking and MD.
I also made models and interfaces of Pen-2 with PS1 NTF and checked their stability by MD simulations and compared with experimental results. The goal is to model the interfaces between GS subunits using molecular modeling approaches based on available experimental data like cross-linking, mutations and NMR structure of C-terminal fragment of PS1 and transmembrane part of APP. The obtained interfaces of GS subunits may explain its catalysis mechanism which can be exploited for novel lead design. Due to lack of crystal/NMR structure of the GS subunits except the PS1 CTF, it is not possible to predict the effect of mutations in terms of APP cleavage. So I also developed a sequence based approach based on machine learning using support vector machine to predict the effect of PS1 CTF L383 mutations in terms of Aβ40/Aβ42 ratio with 88% accuracy. Mutational data derived from the Molgen database of Presenilin 1 mutations was using for training.
GPCRs (also called 7TM receptors) form a large superfamily of membrane proteins, which can be activated by small molecules, lipids, hormones, peptides, light, pain, taste and smell etc. Although 50% of the drugs in market target GPCRs , only few are targeted therapeutically. Such wide range of targets is due to involvement of GPCRs in signaling pathways related to many diseases i.e. dementia (like Alzheimer's disease), metabolic (like diabetes) including endocrinological disorders, immunological including viral infections, cardiovascular, inflammatory, senses disorders, pain and cancer.
Cannabinoid and adrenergic receptors belong to the class A (similar to rhodopsin) GPCRs. Docking of agonists and antagonists to CB1 and CB2 cannabinoid receptors revealed the importance of a centrally located rotamer toggle switch, and its possible role in the mechanism of agonist/antagonist recognition. The switch is composed of two residues, F3.36 and W6.48, located on opposite transmembrane helices TM3 and TM6 in the central part of the membranous domain of cannabinoid receptors. The CB1 and CB2 receptor models were constructed based on the adenosine A2A receptor template. The two best scored conformations of each receptor were used for the docking procedure. In all poses (ligand-receptor conformations) characterized by the lowest ligand-receptor intermolecular energy and free energy of binding the ligand type matched the state of the rotamer toggle switch: antagonists maintained an inactive state of the switch, whereas agonists changed it. In case of agonists of β2AR, the (R,R) and (S,S) stereoisomers of fenoterol, the molecular dynamics simulations provided evidence of different binding modes while preserving the same average position of ligands in the binding site. The (S,S) isomer was much more labile in the binding site and only one stable hydrogen bond was created. Such dynamical binding modes may also be valid for ligands of cannabinoid receptors because of the hydrophobic nature of their ligand-receptor interactions. However, only very long molecular dynamics simulations could verify the validity of such binding modes and how they affect the process of activation.
Human N-formyl peptide receptors (FPRs) are G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) involved in many physiological processes, including host defense against bacterial infection and resolving inflammation. The three human FPRs (FPR1, FPR2 and FPR3) share significant sequence homology and perform their action via coupling to Gi protein. Activation of FPRs induces a variety of responses, which are dependent on the agonist, cell type, receptor subtype, and also species involved. FPRs are expressed mainly by phagocytic leukocytes. Together, these receptors bind a large number of structurally diverse groups of agonistic ligands, including N-formyl and nonformyl peptides of different composition, that chemoattract and activate phagocytes. For example, N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLF), an FPR1 agonist, activates human phagocyte inflammatory responses, such as intracellular calcium mobilization, production of cytokines, generation of reactive oxygen species, and chemotaxis. This ligand can efficiently activate the major bactericidal neutrophil functions and it was one of the first characterized bacterial chemotactic peptides. Whereas fMLF is by far the most frequently used chemotactic peptide in studies of neutrophil functions, atomistic descriptions for fMLF-FPR1 binding mode are still scarce mainly because of the absence of a crystal structure of this receptor. Elucidating the binding modes may contribute to designing novel and more efficient non-peptide FPR1 drug candidates. Molecular modeling of FPR1, on the other hand, can provide an efficient way to reveal details of ligand binding and activation of the receptor. However, recent modelings of FPRs were confined only to bovine rhodopsin as a template.
To locate specific ligand-receptor interactions based on a more appropriate template than rhodopsin we generated the homology models of FPR1 using the crystal structure of the chemokine receptor CXCR4, which shares over 30% sequence identity with FPR1 and is located in the same γ branch of phylogenetic tree of GPCRs (rhodopsin is located in α branch). Docking and model refinement procedures were pursued afterward. Finally, 40 ns full-atom MD simulations were conducted for the Apo form as well as for complexes of fMLF (agonist) and tBocMLF (antagonist) with FPR1 in the membrane. Based on locations of the N- and C-termini of the ligand the FPR1 extracellular pocket can be divided into two zones, namely, the anchor and activation regions. The formylated M1 residue of fMLF bound to the activation region led to a series of conformational changes of conserved residues. Internal water molecules participating in extended hydrogen bond networks were found to play a crucial role in transmitting the agonist-receptor interactions. A mechanism of initial steps of the activation concurrent with ligand binding is proposed.
I accurately predicted the structure and ligand binding pose of dopamine receptor 3 (RMSD to the crystal structure: 2.13 Å) and chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4, RMSD to the crystal structure 3.21 Å) in GPCR-Dock 2010 competition. The homology model of the dopamine receptor 3 was 8 th best overall in the competition.
Pulsed electron–electron double resonance (PELDOR) spectroscopy is a powerful tool for measuring nanometer distances in spin-labeled systems and recently is increasingly applied to membrane proteins. However, after reconstitution of labeled proteins into liposomes, spin labels often exhibit a much faster transversal relaxation (Tm) than in detergent micelles, thus limiting application of the method in lipid bilayers. In the first part of the thesis, optimization of transversal relaxation in phospholipid membranes was systematically investigated by use of spin-labeled derivatives of stearic acid and phosphatidylcholine as well as spin-labeled derivatives of the channel-forming peptide gramicidin A under the conditions typically employed for PELDOR distance measurements. Our results clearly show that dephasing due to instantaneous diffusion that depends on dipolar interaction among electron spins is an important contributor to the fast echo decay in cases of high local concentrations of spin labels in membranes. The main difference between spin labels in detergent micelles and membranes is their local concentration. Consequently, avoiding spin aggregation and suppressing instantaneous diffusion is the key step for maximizing PELDOR sensitivity in lipid membranes. Even though proton spin diffusion is an important relaxation mechanism, only in samples with low local concentrations does deuteration of acyl chains and buffer significantly prolong Tm. In these cases, values of up to 7 μs have been achieved. Furthermore, our study revealed that membrane composition and labeling position in the membrane can also affect Tm, either by promoting the segregation of spin-labeled species or by altering their exposure to matrix protons. Effects of other experimental parameters including temperature (<50 K), presence of oxygen, and cryoprotectant type are negligible under our experimental conditions.
In the second part of the thesis, inhomogeneous distribution of spin-labels in detergent micelles has been studied. A common approach in PELDOR is measuring the distance between two covalently attached spin labels in a macromolecule or singly-labeled components of an oligomer. This situation has been described as a spin-cluster. The PELDOR signal, however, does not only contain the desired dipolar coupling between the spin-labels of the molecule or cluster under study. In samples of finite concentration the dipolar coupling between the spin-labels of the randomly distributed molecules or spin-clusters also contributes significantly. In homogeneous frozen solutions or lipid vesicle membranes this second contribution can be considered to be an exponential or stretched exponential decay, respectively. In this study, it is shown that this assumption is not valid in detergent micelles. Spin-labeled fatty acids that are randomly partitioned into different detergent micelles give rise to PELDOR time traces which clearly deviate from stretched exponential decays. As a main conclusion a PELDOR signal deviating from a stretched exponential decay does not necessarily prove the observation of specific distance information on the molecule or cluster. These results are important for the interpretation of PELDOR experiments on membrane proteins or lipophilic peptides solubilized in detergent micelles or small vesicles, which often do not show pronounced dipolar oscillations in their time traces.
In the third part, PELDOR has been utilized to study the structural flexibility of the Toc34 GTPase homodimer, a preprotein receptor of the translocon of the outer envelope of chloroplasts (TOC). Toc34 belongs to GAD subfamily of G-proteins that are regulated and activated by nucleotide-dependent dimerization. However, the function of Toc34 dimerization is not yet fully understood. Previous structural investigations of the Toc34 dimer yielded only marginal structural changes in response to different nucleotide loads. PELDOR revealed a nucleotide-dependent transition of the dimer flexibility from a tight GDP to a flexible GTP-loaded state. Substrate-binding stabilizes the dimer in the transition state mimicked by GDP-AlFx, but induces an opening in the GDP or GTP-loaded state. Thus, the structural dynamics of bona fide GTPases induced by GTP hydrolysis is replaced by substrate-dependent dimer flexibility, which represents the regulatory mode for dimerizing GTPases.
In the fourth part of the thesis, conformational flexibility and relative orientation of the N-terminal POTRA domains of a cyanobacterial Omp85 from Anabaena sp. PCC 7120, a key component of the outer membrane protein assembly machinery, were investigated by PELDOR spectroscopy. Membrane proteins of the Omp85-TpsB superfamily are composed of a C-terminal β-barrel and a different number of N-terminal POTRA domains, three in the case of cyanobacterial Omp85. It has been suggested that the N-terminal POTRA domains (P1 and P2) might have functions in substrate recognition. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations predicted a fixed orientation for P2 and P3 and a flexible hinge between P1 and P2. The PELDOR distances measured between the P2 and P3 POTRA domains are in good agreement with the structure determined by X-ray, and compatible with the MD simulations suggesting a fixed orientation between these domains. PELDOR constraints between the P1 and P2 POTRA domains imply a rather rigid structure with a slightly different relative orientation of these domains compared with the X-ray structure. Moreover, the large mobility predicted from MD is not observed in the frozen solution. The PELDOR results further highlight the restricted relative orientation of the POTRA domains of the Omp85-TpsB proteins as a conserved characteristic feature that might be important for the processive sliding of the unfolded substrate towards the membrane.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) assembly and production is closely linked to lipid metabolism. Indeed, lipid droplets (LD) have been shown to serve as a platform for HCV assembly. To investigate the effect of HCV on the host cell proteome, 2D-gelelectrophoresis with subsequent MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry of HCV replicating and the corresponding control cells were done. Based on this analysis, it was found out that HCV-replicating Huh7.5 cells revealed lower amounts of TIP47 (tail interacting protein of 47kD) compared to HCV-negative cells. TIP47, a cytoplasmic sorting factor, has been shown to be associated with lipid droplets. As it is known that HCV-replication and assembly takes place at the so called ”membranous web” that is composed of LDs and rearranged ER-derived membranes, it was tempting to investigate the role of TIP47 in HCV life-cycle. Western blot analysis did reveal that overexpression of TIP47 in HCV replicating Huh7.5 cells leads to decreased amounts of the HCV core protein while the levels of non-structural protein (NS)5A and intracellular HCVgenomes are increased. Moreover, in TIP47 overproducing cells higher amounts of infectious HCV particles are secreted. Vice versa, inhibition of TIP47 expression by siRNA results in a decreased level of intracellular NS5A, increased amounts of intracellular core and less infectious viral particles in the supernatant. In addition, complete silencing of TIP47 by lentiviral transduction abolishes HCV replication that can be restored by transfection of these cells with a TIP47 expression construct. It has been shown recently that apoE binds to NS5A and that this interaction plays an important role for the HCV life cycle (Benga et al., 2010). The C-terminal part of TIP47 harbours a 4 helix bundle motif and displays high homology to the N-terminus of apoE. Therefore, we investigated the interaction of NS5A and TIP47. Confocal double immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that a fraction of NS5A colocalizes with TIP47. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments and a yeast-two-hybrid screening confirmed the interaction between NS5A and TIP47 and deletion of the N-terminal-TIP47-PAT domain abolishes this interaction. From this we conclude that the TIP47-NS5A interaction is required for virus morphogenesis. Moreover, TIP47 can bind to Rab9 and this is relevant for targeting the viral particle out of the cell. In accordance to this, TIP47 was identified to be associated to the viral particle. Mutants of TIP47 that fail to bind Rab9 reveal lower amounts and a changed distribution of the HCV core protein. Furthermore, we could see that the core staining colocalizes with subcellular structures that were identified as autophagosomes using a p62-specific antibody which is a specific autophagosome-marker. Based on this, we hypothized that destruction of the Rab9 binding domain misdirects the viral particle towards the lysosomal compartment.
For the first time it could be shown that TIP47 interacts with NS5A and is associated to the viral particle, therefore plays a crucial role for the virus morphogenesis and secretion of the viral article.
Taken together, these results indicate that TIP47 is an essential cellular factor for the life cycle of HCV Abstract and might be used as target for antiviral treatment, e.g. by targeting the NS5A-TIP47 interaction, based on small molecules that mimic the NS5A-specific sequence that binds to TIP47 which might result in a competition of the TIP47/NS5A interaction.
The universal biological energy currency adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is synthesized by the F1Fo-ATP synthase in most living organisms. The overall structure and function of F-type ATPases is conserved in the different organisms. The F1Fo-ATP synthase consist of two domains; the soluble F1 complex has the subunit stoichiometry α3β3γδε and the membrane embedded Fo complex consists of subunits ab2c10-15 in its simplest form found in bacteria. F1 and Fo both function as reversible rotary motors that are connected by a central stalk (γε) and a peripheral stalk (b2δ).
For ATP synthesis, the electrochemical energy formed by a proton or sodium ion gradient is required. The ion translocation across the Fo subcomplex induces torque in the motor part of the enzyme (cnγε), which causes conformational changes in the α3β3 domain leading to ATP synthesis from ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) catalyzed in the β-subunits. ATP hydrolysis causes a reverse torque in the Fo subcomplex triggering uphill ion translocation from cytoplasm to periplasm, and the enzyme functions as an ion pump.
The ATP synthesis mechanism is well understood, since several high-resolution structures of F1 are available. In contrast, the ion translocation mechanism across the membrane, mediated by the Fo subcomplex, is not understood in its structural detail.
Subunit a and the c-ring form an ion pathway, but subunit b is needed to form an active ion translocation pathway in both H+- and Na+-dependent systems. Several high-resolution structures of c-rings have provided insights in the ion translocation mechanism. The different ion translocation models based on biochemical, biophysical and structural analysis are in agreement in the fact that ions are translocated through a periplasmic ion access pathway in subunit a to the middle of the membrane and there to the binding site of a c-subunit. After almost a whole rotation of the c-ring the ion returns into the a-c interface, where it can be released to the cytoplasm. In the different models the cytoplasmic access pathway has been proposed to be located in subunit a, at the a-c interface or within the c-ring. The driving force of torque generation has been proposed to be the pH gradient or membrane potential. Several biochemical studies show that a conserved arginine in helix four of subunit a (R226 in Ilyobacter tartaricus or R210 in Escherichia coli)plays a critical role in the ion translocation. The arginine has been proposed to function as an electrostatic separator between the cytoplasmic and periplasmic pathways and as a mediator of the ion exchange into the c-ring ion-binding site.
Structural data of a related enzyme (V1Vo-ATPase from Thermus thermophilus) has provided insight into the helical arrangement of the ion translocating subunits I and Lring (related to subunit a and the c-ring). These structures indicated a small interface between subunit I and the L-ring, and two four-helix bundles in the N-terminal domain of subunit I were proposed to build the periplasmic and cytoplasmic ion pathways. To comprehend the ion-translocation and torque generation mechanism in F1Fo-ATP synthase, structural data of an intact a-c complex is needed.
The goal of this work was to obtain structural data of subunit a, most preferably in a complex with the c-ring or additionally with subunit b. Therefore, a new purification procedure for the I. tartaricus Fo-subcomplex, heterologously expressed in E. coli cells, was established. The purified Fo was characterized biochemically and by Laserinduced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry (LILBID-MS). These analyses showed that pure and completely assembled Fo containing all its subunits in the correct stoichiometry (ab2c11) was obtained. The purified Fo complex was stable at 4°C for several months and at room temperature in the presence of lipids for several weeks. A lipid analysis was performed by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) to investigate the qualitative lipid composition of I. tartaricus whole lipid extract and various I. tartaricus F1Fo isolates. The whole lipid extract contained PC, PG and PE lipids and probably cardiolipin. PC, PG and PE lipids were bound to wild type I. tartaricus F1Fo, whereas recombinant I. tartaricus F1Fo did not have any bound lipids, but was able to bind the synthetic lipids POPC and POPG if they were provided during the purification.
For subsequent structural studies the purified Fo was subjected to two-dimensional (2D) crystallization trials. Vesicles and sheets tightly packed with protein and crystals with a rare plane group for I. tartaricus c11 (p121) were obtained. The c-ring was visible in the CCD images, and immunogold-labeling revealed the presence of the His-tagged a-subunit in the reconstituted vesicles. Furthermore, atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging showed protein densities next to the c-rings, which protruded less from the membrane (0.4±0.1 nm) than the c-ring (0.7±0.1 nm). These protein densities presumably belonged to subunit a.
Cryo-electronmicroscopy (cryo-EM) was used to collect data of the p121 crystals and a merged projection density map was calculated to 7.0 Å resolution. The unit cell of the crystals (81 × 252 Å) contained two asymmetric units with three c-rings in each and next to the c11-rings new prominent densities were visible. In each extra density up to 7 transmembrane helices were visible, belonging to the stator subunit a and/or subunit b. To elucidate whether there are conserved elements in the three extra densities non-crystallographic averaging was applied using a single-particle approach.
Six possible arrangements for the c-rings and the extra densities were identified and used for the averaging. The extra densities were enhanced only in one of the possible arrangements. The average showed a four-helix bundle and a fifth helix in close proximity to the c-ring. Two more helices were present in each position but their position was ambivalent. The data obtained in this work provides the first insight in the helical arrangement in the a-c interface of F1Fo-ATP synthase.
In the absence of apparent mutations, alteration of gene expression patterns represents the key mechanism by which normal cells evolve to cancer cells.
Gene expression is tightly regulated by posttranscriptional processes. Within this context, RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) represent fundamental factors, since they control mechanisms, such as mRNA-stabilization, -translation and -degradation. Human antigen R (HuR) was among the first RBPs that have been directly associated to carcinogenesis. HuR modulates the stability and translation of mRNAs which encode proteins facilitating various ‘hallmarks of cancer’, namely proliferation, evasion of growth suppression, angiogenesis, cell death resistance, invasion and metastasis. Furthermore, it is well established that tumor-promoting inflammation contributes to tumorigenesis. In this process, monocytes are attracted to the site of the tumor and educated towards a tumor-promoting macrophage phenotype. While HuR has been extensively studied in various tumor cell types, little is known about HuR in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Thus, the aim of my work was to characterize the contribution of HuR to the development of cancer characteristics in HCC. I was particularly interested to investigate if HuR facilitates tumor-promoting inflammation, since a role for HuR has not been described in this context. To this end, I depleted HuR in HepG2 cells (HuR k/d) and used a co-culture model of HepG2 tumor spheroids and infiltrating monocytes to study the impact of HuR on the tumor microenvironment. I could show that depletion of HuR resulted in the reduction of cell numbers. Additionally, the expression of proliferation marker KI-67 and proto-oncogene c-Myc was reduced, supporting a proliferative role of HuR. Furthermore, exposure to cytotoxic staurosporine elevated apoptosis in HuR k/d cells compared to control cells. Concomitantly, the expression of the anti-apoptotic mediator B-cell lymphoma protein-2 (Bcl-2) was markedly reduced in the HuR k/d cells, pointing to an involvement of HuR in cell survival processes.
Accordingly, a pro-survival function of HuR was also observed in tumor spheroids, since HuR k/d spheroids exhibited a larger necrotic core region at earlier time points and showed elevated numbers of dead cells compared to control (Ctr.) spheroids. Interestingly, HuR k/d spheroids isplayed reduced numbers of infiltrated macrophages, suggesting that HuR contributes to a tumor-promoting, inflammatory microenvironment by recruiting monocytes/macrophages to the tumor site. Aiming at identifying HuR-regulated factors responsible for the recruitment of monocytes, I found reduced levels of the chemokine interleukin 8 (IL-8) in supernatants of HuR k/d spheroids, supporting a critical involvement of HuR in the chemoattraction of monocytes. Analyzing supernatants of co-cultures of macrophages and HuR k/d or Ctr. spheroids revealed additional differences in chemokine secretion patterns. Interestingly, protein levels of many chemokines were elevated in co-cultures of HuR k/d spheroids compared to control co-cultures. Albeit enhanced chemokine secretion was observed, less monocytes are recruited into HuR k/d spheroids, further underlining the necessity of HuR in cancer related monocyte/macrophage attraction and infiltration. Differences between chemokine profiles of mono- and co-cultured spheroids could be attributable to changes in spheroid-derived chemokines as a result of the crosstalk with the immune cells. Provided the chemokines originate from monocytes/macrophages, the different secretion patterns suggest that HuR contributes to the modulation of the functional phenotype of infiltrated macrophages, since the tumorenvironment is critically involved in the shaping of macrophage phenotypes. Regions of low-oxygen (hypoxia) represent another critical feature of tumors. Therefore, I next analyzed the impact of HuR on the hypoxic response. Loss of HuR attenuated hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) 2α expression after exposure to hypoxia, while HIF-1α protein levels remained unaltered. Considering previous results of our group, showing that HIF-2α depletion (HIF-2α k/d) resulted in the enhanced expression of HIF-1α protein, I aimed to determine the involvement of HuR in the compensatory upregulation of HIF-1α protein in HIF-2α k/d cells. I could demonstrate that not only total HuR protein levels, but specifically cytoplasmic HuR was elevated in HIF-2α depleted cells pointing to enhanced HuR activity. Silencing HuR in HIF-2α deficient cells attenuated enhanced HIF-1α protein expression, thus confirming a direct role of HuR in the compensatory upregulation of HIF-1α. This as also reflected on HIF-1α target gene expression. I further investigated the mechanism underlying the compensatory HIF-1α expression in HIF-2α deficient cells. Analyzing HIF-1α mRNA expression, I excluded enhanced HIF1-α transcription and stability to account for elevated HIF-1α expression in HIF-2α k/d cells. HIF-1α promoter activity assays confirmed the mRNA data. Furthermore, HIF-1α protein half-life was not elevated in HIF-2α k/d cells compared to control cells, indicating that HIF-1α protein stability is not altered in HIF-2α k/d cells. Analysis of the association of HIF-1α with the translational machinery using polysomal fractionation finally revealed an increased istribution of HIF-1α mRNA in the heavier polysomal fractions in HIF-2α k/d cells compared to control cells. Since augmented ribosome occupancy is an indicator for more efficient translation, I propose enhanced HIF-1α translation as underlying principle of the compensatory increase in HIF-1α protein levels in HIF-2α k/d cells. In summary, my results demonstrate that HuR is critical for the development of cancer characteristics in HCC. Future work analyzing the impact of HuR on tumor-promoting inflammation, specifically macrophage attraction and activation could provide new trategies to inhibit macrophage-driven tumor progression. Furthermore, I provide evidence that HuR contributes to the hypoxic response by regulating the expression of HIF-1α and HIF-2α. Targeting single HIF-isoforms for tumor therapy should be carefully considered, because of their compensatory regulation when one α-subunit is depleted. Thus, therapeutic strategies targeting factors such as HuR that control both α-subunits and at the same time prevent compensation might be more promising.
The tumor suppressor programmed cell death 4 (Pdcd4) exerts its function by inhibiting protein translation initiation. Specifically, it displaces the scaffold protein eukaryotic initiation factor 4G (eIF4G) from its binding to the eukaryotic initiation factor 4A (eIF4A). Thereby, Pdcd4 inhibits the helicase activity of eIF4A, which is necessary for the unwinding of highly structured 5’ untranslated regions (UTRs) of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) often found in oncogenes like c-myc to make them accessible for the translation machinery and subsequent protein production. Overexpression of Pdcd4 inhibits tumorigenesis in vitro and in vivo and inversely, Pdcd4 knockout mice show enhanced tumor formation. In line, Pdcd4 is lost in various tumor types and proposed as prognostic factor in colon carcinomas. Unlike most other tumor suppressors that are rendered nonfunctional by mutations (e.g., p53), Pdcd4 loss is not attributable to mutational inactivation. It is regulated via translational repression by microRNAs and increased degradation of the protein under tumor promoting, inflammatory conditions and mitogens. Specifically, proteasomal degradation of Pdcd4 is controlled by p70 S6 Kinase (p70S6K)-mediated phosphorylation in its degron sequence (serines 67, 71 and 76). Stimulation of the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway by growth factors, hormones and cytokines initiates p70S6K activity. Phosphorylated Pdcd4 is subsequently recognized by the E3 ubiquitin ligase beta-transducin repeats-containing protein (β-TrCP) and marked with a polyubiquitin tail to be detected by the 26S proteasome for degradation. β-TrCP represents the substrate specific recognition subunit of the ubiquitin ligase complex responsible for protein-protein interaction with Pdcd4 as substrate for ubiquitin transfer and subsequent proteasomal disassembly.
The first part of the present work aimed at identifying novel stabilizers of the tumor suppressor Pdcd4 in a high throughput screen (HTS). As assay design, a fragment of Pdcd4 from amino acid 39 to 91, containing the phosphorylation sensitive degron sequence, was fused to a luciferase reporter gene construct. Stable expression of this Pdcd4(39-91)luciferase (Pdcd4(39-91)luc) fusion protein in HEK 293 cells served as read-out for the Pdcd4 protein amount to be detected in a high throughput compatible cell-based assay. Loss of Pdcd4(39-91)luc was induced by treatment with 12-O-
tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), a phorbolester, which activates the PI3K signaling cascade leading to degradation of Pdcd4. The cut-off for hit definition was set at >50% activity in rescuing the Pdcd4(39-91)luc signal from TPA-induced degradation. Activity was calculated relative to the difference of DMSO- and TPA-treated cells (ΔDMSO-TPA = RLUDMSO-RLUTPA). Initial screening of a protein kinase inhibitor library (PKI) revealed hit substances expected to show Pdcd4 stabilizing activity by inhibition of kinases involved in Pdcd4 downregulation, e.g., the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin, the PI3K inhibitors wortmannin and LY294002 and the PKC inhibitors GF 109203X and Ro 31-8220.
The Molecular Targets Laboratory (MTL) of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in Frederick, USA, hosts one of the largest collections of crude natural product extracts as well as a big substance libraries from pure synthetic sources. Screening of over 15 000 pure compounds and over 135 000 natural product extracts identified 46 pure and 42 extract hits as Pdcd4 stabilizers. For nine synthetic and six natural product derived compounds (after bioassay-guided fractionation), dose-dependent activities for recovering the TPA-induced Pdcd4(39-91)luc loss defined IC50s in the low micromolar range. Most importantly, these compounds were confirmed to stabilize endogenous Pdcd4 protein levels from forced degradation as well. This result proved the assay design to be highly representative for endogenous cellular mechanisms regulating Pdcd4 protein stability. The next step was to stratify the hit substances according to their likely mechanism of action to be located either up- or downstream of the p70S6K-mediated phosphorylation of Pdcd4. Therefore, phosphorylation of S6, as proto-typical p70S6K target, was analyzed and uncovered two natural derived compounds to influence p70S6K activity. Four substances did not affect p70S6K phosphorylation activity and were therefore considered to stabilize Pdcd4 by acting downstream, i.e. on the β-TrCP-mediated proteasomal degradation.
In the second part of this work, one of these compounds, namely the sesquiterpene lactone erioflorin, isolated by bioassay-guided fraction from the active extract of Eriophyllum lanatum, Asteraceae, was further characterized in detail with respect to its molecular mechanism of action. Erioflorin dose-dependently protected both Pdcd4(39-91)luc and endogenous Pdcd4 protein from TPA-induced degradation with IC50s of 1.28 and 2.64 μM, respectively. Pdcd4 stabilizing activity was maximal at 5 μM erioflorin. Up to this concentration, erioflorin was verified not to inhibit p70S6K activity. In addition, it was observed that erioflorin rescued Pdcd4(39-91)luc from both, wild type and constitutively active p70S6K-mediated downregulation. Only wild type p70S6K was inhibitable by the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin which served as an upstream acting control. To study the next section of Pdcd4 regulation, i.e. recognition by the E3 ubiquitin ligase β-TrCP, Pdcd4(39-91)luc and endogenous Pdcd4 were immunoprecipitated from whole cell extracts with the corresponding antibodies. In this key experiment, treatment with TPA increased overexpressed β-TrCP binding to both and this coimmunoprecipitation could be strongly reduced by erioflorin treatment. This result strongly pointed to an inhibitory mechanism of the β-TrCP specific binding to Pdcd4 by erioflorin. In addition, erioflorin disrupted the binding of in vitro transcribed/translated β-TrCP to Pdcd4 in an in vitro interaction assay to exclude nonspecific intracellular signals. Furthermore, polyubiquitination of Pdcd4 was decreased by erioflorin treatment as well. To clarify questions regarding specificity of erioflorin for the E3 ubiquitin ligase β-TrCP, stability of another important β-TrCP target was explored, i.e. the tumor suppressor inhibitor of kappa B alpha (IκBα). Indeed, the tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα)-mediated loss of IκBα could be prevented by erioflorin cotreatment. On the other hand, the E3 ubiquitin ligase von Hippel Lindau protein (pVHL) was left unaffected as its target hypoxia inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1α) could not be stabilized from oxygen-dependent degradation by erioflorin treatment. These results argued strongly for erioflorin being a specific inhibitor of β-TrCP-mediated protein degradation. Functional consequences of erioflorin treatment were investigated by observing its influence on the transcriptional activities of the transformation marker activator protein 1 (AP-1, an indirect downstream target of Pdcd4) and nuclear factor κB (NF-κB which is directly inhibited by IκBα). Indeed, erioflorin showed significant inhibition of AP-1 and NF-κB reporter constructs at 5 μM, a concentration for which an impact on cell viability was excluded. Finally to characterize the significance of erioflorin in a cell-based tumorigenesis assay, the highly invasive colon carcinoma cell line RKO was tested in a two dimensional migration assay. Erioflorin was discovered to significantly lower cell migration in a wound closure assay.
In conclusion, development of a high throughput compatible cell-based reporter assay successfully identified novel substances from pure synthetic and natural product derived background as potent stabilizers of the tumor suppressor Pdcd4. In addition, this work aimed at elucidating the detailed mechanism of action of the sesquiterpene lactone erioflorin from Eriophyllum lanatum, Asteraceae. Erioflorin was discovered to inhibit the E3 ubiquitin ligase β-TrCP, thereby preventing protein degradation of tumor suppressors like Pdcd4 and IκBα. This may offer the possibility to more specifically target protein degradation and generate less adverse side effects by blocking a particular E3 ubiquitin ligase compared to general proteasome inhibition.
The adaptive immune system protects against daily infections and malignant transformation. In this, the translocation of antigenic peptides by the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) into the ER lumen is an essential step in the antigen presentation by MHC I molecules. The heterodimeric ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABC) TAP consist of the two halftransporters TAP1 and TAP2. Each monomer contains an N-terminal transmembrane domain (TMD) and a conserved C-terminal nucleotide-binding domain (NBD). Together, the TMDs build the translocation core and the NBDs bind and hydrolyze ATP, energizing the peptide transport. TAP features an asymmetry in the two ATP-binding sites that are built of several conserved motifs. One motif is the D-loop with the consensus sequence SALD. The highly conserved aspartate of the D-loop of TAP1 reaches into the canonic ATP-binding site and contacts the Walker A motif and the H-loop of the opposite NBD, while the Asp of D-loop of TAP2 is part of the non-canonic ATP-binding site.
To examine this ABC transport complex in mechanistic detail, a purification and reconstitution procedure was established with the function of TAP being preserved. The heterodimeric TAP complex was purified via a His10-tag at TAP1 in a 1:1 ratio of the subunits. Nucleotide binding to the purified transporter was elucidated by tryptophan quenching assays and the affinity constants for MgADP and MgATP were determined to be 1.0 μM and 0.7 μM, respectevely. In addition, the TAP complex shows strict coupling between peptide binding and ATP hydrolysis, revealing no basal ATPase activity in the absence of peptides. Furthermore, TAP was reconstituted into proteoliposomes and the activity was tested by peptide transport and ATP hydrolysis. Interestingly, the kinetic parameters of the transporter in the reconstituted state are comparable to the data gained for TAP in microsomes.
To characterize the functional importance of the D-loop, D-loop mutants of either TAP1 or TAP2 were analyzed. Strikingly, TAP containing a mutated D-loop in TAP1 (D674A) shows an ATP-hydrolysis independent peptide translocation. Accordingly, the MHC I surface expression is similar to the wildtype situation. However, the same mutation in TAP2 (D638A) results in an ATPase dependent peptide transport similar to wildtype, whereas TAP containing mutations in both subunits leads to an inactive transporter. Although all D-loop mutants showed no altered peptide binding activity, the TAP1 mutant is inactive in peptide-stimulated ATPase activity. Strikingly, ATP or ADP binding is strictly required for the peptide translocation. Experiments carried out in proteoliposomes demonstrate that wildtype TAP can export peptides against their gradient when low peptide concentrations are offered. In contrast, the D674A mutant can facilitate peptide translocation along their concentration gradient in the two directions. At high peptide concentrations, TAP is trapped in a transport incompetent state induced by trans-inhibition. In conclusion, a TAP mutant that uncouples solute translocation from ATP hydrolysis was created. Since this passive substrate movement is strictly dependent on binding of ATP or ADP, an active transporter was turned into a “nucleotide-gated facilitator”.
In a cysteine cross-linking approach the conformational changes of TAP during peptide transport and the flexibility of the nucleotide binding domains were examined. Single cysteines were introduced in the D-loops of TAP1 and TAP2. Cross-linking by copper-phenantroline (CuPhe) was possible for all combinations. However, by adding ATP, ADP or peptide to the TAP complex no differences in the cross-linking efficiency were detected. By CuPhe cross-linking TAP was trapped in a conformation, in which the peptide binding site was not accessible. To complete a transport cycle, a flexibility of at least 17.8 Å of the NBDs is needed, since TAP cross-linked by CuPhe (2.0 Å) or bismaleimidoethane (BMOE, 8.0 Å) was transport inactive but when TAP was cross-linked by 1,11-bismaleimido-triethyleneglycol (BM[PEG]3, 17.8 Å) transport activity was preserved.
5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) catalyzes the two initial steps in the biosynthesis of leukotrienes, a group of inflammatory lipid mediators derived from arachidonic acid. Here, the regulation of 5-LO mRNA expression by alternative splicing and nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) was investigated. In the present study, the identification of two truncated transcripts and four novel 5-LO splice variants containing premature termination codons (PTC) was reported. The characterization of one of the splice variants, 5-LOΔ3, revealed that it is a target for NMD since knockdown of the NMD factors UPF1, UPF2 and UPF3b in the human monocytic cell line Mono Mac 6 (MM6) altered the expression of 5-LOΔ3 mRNA up to 2-fold in a cell differentiation-dependent manner suggesting that cell differentiation alters the composition or function of the NMD complex. In contrast, the mature 5-LO mRNA transcript was not affected by UPF knockdown. Thus, the data suggest that the coupling of alternative splicing and NMD is involved in the regulation of 5-LO gene expression.
RT-PCR analysis of different cell types revealed the existence of a large number of 5-LO splice variants. The most interesting splice variants were observed in BL41-E95A cells, which give a raise to novel 5-LO protein isoforms. This leads to the hypothesis of a novel regulatory mechanism in which the dimerization of 5-LO with 5-LO isoforms might regulate the 5-LO activity.
The 5-LO protein expression was reduced on translational level in UPF1 knock down cells, suggesting that UPF1 has a positive influence on 5-LO translation. Therefore, a mass spectrometry based proteomics study was started to identify compartment specific protein expression changes upon UPF1 knockdown in differentiated and undifferentiated MM6 cells. The proteomics analysis demonstrated that the knockdown of UPF1 results in numerous protein changes in the microsomal fraction (~ 21%) but not in the soluble fraction (< 1%). Western blot data confirmed the trend of the proteomics analysis. This data suggest that UPF1 is a critical gene expression regulator in a compartment specific way. During differentiation by TGFβ and calcitriol the majority of UPF1 regulated proteins was adjusted to normal level. It appears that that not only the NMD mechanism alters its composition during differentiation. Also the gene expression regulation on translational level by UPF1 seems to be also cell differentiation dependent. An interesting group of UPF1 target genes represent the downregulated proteins. qRT-PCR analysis of randomly chosen genes revealed no effect on mRNA expression upon UPF1 knockdown, suggesting that UPF1 positively influences the translation of these genes. Computational sequence analysis identified a conserved C-rich sequence which might be a hnRNP E2-binding site. hnRNP E2 has been characterized as a translational repressor in myeloid cells. Western blot analysis revealed a differentiation independent up regulation of hnRNP E2 by UPF1 knockdown. Additionally, microRNA-328 (miR-328) has been described as an RNA decoy modulating hnRNP E2 regulation. Due to this, stem loop qRT-PCR showed an up regulation of miR-328 in TGFβ and calcitriol differentiated MM6 cells. Based on this data we suggest a model in which downregulation of UPF1 increases hnRNP E2 expression, leading to translation inhibition. During differentiation, miRNA-328 is upregulated thereby competing with hnRNP E2 leading to an efficient translation
Seit einigen Jahrzehnten ist Lysozym eines der am meisten erforschten Proteine in der Literatur und wird hauptsächlich als Modell Protein zur Aufklärung der Faltungs- und Entfaltungsprozesse genutzt. Da die Frage nach Fehlfaltung und deren Verknüpfung mit neurodegenerativen Krankheiten bis zum heutigen Tag nicht vollständig geklärt ist, besteht hier ein großer Spielraum für weitere Forschungsansätze. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden daher zwei Modellsysteme verwendet, Hühereiweiß-Lysozym und menschliches Lysozym, jeweils in ihrem nicht-nativen ungefalteten Zustand. Diese ungefalteten Ensembles wurden mit Hilfe NMR spektroskopischer Methoden untersucht und ergaben sehr detaillierte, zum Teil auch überraschende neue Einblicke in Struktur und Dynamik der beiden Proteine und liefern somit wichtige Erkenntnisse zu Faltungs- und Aggregationsprozessen. ...
The display of foreign polypeptides and proteins on the surface of viruses or cells provides an important tool for the engineering of biomolecules and the analysis of their interactions with binding partners. The most extensively used display platform is the coat protein of the filamentous bacteriophage (Smith, 1985). Phage display libraries have often been selected for polypeptides, e.g. single chain (sc) antibodies that bind to a protein of interest, but in vivo selection could only be demonstrated for peptides so far. An alternative display platform is the retrovirus murine leukemia virus (MLV). Here, polypeptides are displayed at the N-terminus of the viral envelope glycoprotein. Proof of principle for this platform was demonstrated for protease substrate libraries, which can be selected through coupling proteolytic activation with viral infectivity (Buchholz et al., 1998). Selection of the library CX4A on living cells resulted in viruses with more than three orders of magnitude improved spreading efficiency through tumor cells (Hartl et al., 2005). Also scAb libraries have recently been displayed and selected using retroviruses (Urban et al., 2005). The library scFvlibxMo displays the repertoire of phage display preselected sc antibodies for laminin-1 binding. The retrovirus based selection process resulted in laminin-specific sc antibodies with improved expression levels in mammalian cells.
This thesis describes the in vivo (i.e. in mouse tumor models) selection of the C-X4-A and scFvlibxMo for tumor homing upon systemic delivery.
For selection of the protease substrate library C-X4-A a subcutaneous tumor was induced in SCID mice followed by three systemic injections of the library. The selection process was monitored over a period of 34 days. After the incubation period mice were sacrificed and virus load in organs and tumor determined. PCR analysis after 34 days showed that virus from the library had preferentially infected the tumor. Sequence analysis showed the selection of protease substrates with the most prominent one with a frequency of over 65%. The four most prominent protease substrate variants where reconstituted into the original viral backbone for further investigation (C-SK-A, C-HI-A, C-HM-A and C-HS-A). Interestingly, these viruses exhibited a reduced spreading capacity in vitro on HT1080 cells as compared to the C-AK-A virus, which had previously been selected on HT1080 cells. When assayed for tumor homing, however, viruses C-HI-A and C-HS-A had clearly improved in comparison to C-AK-A. Tumor tissue had been infected at rates of over 55% while virus load of extratumoral organs was very low (infection rates <0.7 for C-HS-A and <0.02 for C-HI-A). Tumor targeting capacity had thus been improved over 10-fold by the in vivo selection of the C-X4-A library.
The experimental set up for the in vivo selection of the scFvlibxMo library was performed according to that of the C-X4-A library. Fingerprint analysis of the selected viruses that infected tumor tissue resulted in the identification of seven antibody variants showing unique CDR3 sequences. Two prominent clones (M49T-A and M49T-B) were cloned back into the MoMLV genome for further analysis of the reconstituted viruses. While variant B bound laminin-1 efficiently, variant A was unable to do so, although it was selected at highest frequency (76%). Both reconstituted viruses were equally well infectious and spread through HT1080rec1 cells at a similar efficiency as MoMLV. In an in vivo competition experiment the selected viruses clearly out-competed a laminin-1 binding reference virus L36xMo for tumor homing. To understand the molecular driving forces behind the in vivo selection process the epitope of the selected scFv M49T-A was identified using a phage peptide library approach. In silico analysis led to the identification of a small group of possible antigens, including tenascin, fibronectin and collagen.
The data described in this thesis demonstrate that the retrovirus display platform is capable of allowing the in vivo selection of protease substrates and scFvs. Notably, the replication competence of the system introduced an additional level of complexity to the library. The performed in vivo selections significantly enhanced tumor tropism. Selective infection of tumor cells combined with transfer of anti-tumoral genes is an attractive strategy for cancer therapy being in focus of current research. The viruses selected in this thesis build prime candidates for targeted retrovirus based tumor therapy.
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance ("NMR") is a powerful and versatile technique relying on nuclei that posses a spin. Since its discovery more than 6 decades ago, NMR and related techniques has become a tool with innumerable applications throughout the fields of Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Medicine. Numerous Nobel Prizes have been awarded for work in the field and a multi billion dollar industry has developed on its basis.
One of NMR's major shortcomings is its inherent lack of sensitivity. Because it relies on the Boltzmann populations of spin states with a minuscule Zeeman splitting, this is particularly true for room temperature experiments.
As a result, in an enormous technological effort to enlarge the Zeeman splitting NMR magnets have been moving to higher and higher magnetic fields. However, even for proton spins possessing the largest magnetic moment of all nuclei, the degree of polarization that can be achieved in the strongest spectroscopic magnets available today (~24 T) at room temperature is merely ~ 8*(10 exp (-5)). In other words, this low polarization theoretically allows a sensitivity enhancement of 104 towards full polarization.
Since Magnetic Resonance Imaging ("MRI") is based on the same principle, it shares this problem with NMR. Furthermore, for technical and physiological reasons full body MRI tomographs do not reach the magnetic field strengths of spectroscopic NMR magnets, making this even more of an issue for MRI.
In consequence, MRI is chiefly restricted to detecting protons, while both MRI and NMR detection of 13C (or other low nuclei) under physiological conditions, i.e. low natural abundance of 13C and a low concentration of the respective substance, suffer from long acquisitions times that are necessary to obtain adequate signal to noise ratios ("SNR").
However, this drawb of NMR can be overcome. The enormous potential sensitivity increase of four orders of magnitude can - at least partially - be exploited by several hyperpolarization techniques, creating entirely new applications and fields of research.
These hyperpolarization techniques comprise chemical approaches like Parahydrogen Induced Polarization ("PHIP") or Photochemically Induced Dynamic Nuclear Polarization ("Photo-CIDNP"), as well as physical techniques like optically pumped (noble) gases13, 14 or Dynamic Nuclear Polarization ("DNP"), which will be the focus of this work. A hyperpolarized substance will render a larger signal without being physically or chemically altered in any other way. It is therefore "marked" without any marker, making it an agent free contrast agent for MRI.
DNP is a technique, in which hyperpolarization of nuclear spins is achieved by microwave (\MW") irradiation of unpaired electron spins in radicals, which are coupled to these nuclei, e.g. 1H, 13C or 15N. The electron spin population is perturbed if the microwave irradiation is resonant with the electron spin transition, which affects the polarization of hyperfine-coupled close nuclei. For large microwave power (i.e. saturating the electron spin transition) the orders of magnitude larger thermal electron spin polarization is effectively transferred to these nuclear spins in the sample. For proton spins the maximum polarization gain amounts to 660, whereas for 13C the sensitivity gain can be as large as 2600. In contrast to e.g. PHIP, which is restricted to specific reaction precursors, DNP is not limited to specific nuclei or hyperpolarization target molecules, making it a very versatile technique. DNP has been first proposed by Overhauser in 1953,15 and experimentally observed shortly thereafter in metals16 and liquids,17 both being systems with mobile electrons. In the 1960s and 70s, DNP was used as a spectroscopic tool in liquids, thoroughly mapping the effect in the low field regime. As well, several other transfer mechanisms were discovered, which are active in the solid state with localized electrons, namely the solid effect the cross effect and thermal mixing. The theory for all three of these mechanisms predicts reduced transfer efficiencies at higher magnetic fields. This fact and the lack of high frequency microwave sources to excite electron spins at magnetic field strengths above 1 T, effectively relegated DNP to a position of an interesting scientifi curiosity.
In the early 1990s, DNP came to a renaissance, when DNP was performed at high field in solid state magic angle spinning ("MAS") experiments using high power gyrotron microwave sources. This pioneering work sparked a surge of new developments and applications.
As well, this success triggered attempts to investigate also the potential of DNP in the liquid state at high magnetic fields, e.g. at 3.4 T35{38 and 9.2 T. To date, DNP can be considered one of the "hot topics" in the field of magnetic resonance, bringing about special issue in magnetic resonance journals and DNP sections on magnetic resonance conferences.
This thesis deals with the development of an in-bore liquid state DNP polarizer for MRI applications operating in ow through mode at a magnetic field strength of 1.5 T. Following this introductory chapter, the theoretical background necessary to understand and interpret the experimental results is explained in chapter 2. Subsequently, chapter 3 deals with the issue of performing liquid state DNP at high magnetic fields and its challenges. The chapter comprises a quick overview of the necessary hardware, the experimental findings for various samples and the interpretation of these findings. along with the ramifications for the aim of this work. Chapter 4 deals with the issue of increasing sensitivity and contrast in MRI, in particular by means of DNP. The chapter illustrates the development of our polarizer by presenting the hardware that was developed and demonstrating its performance under various conditions. As well, several alternative approaches are introduced and compared to our approach. Finally, chapter 5 summarizes the findings and gives an outlook on further developments.
The adaptive immune system of jawed vertebrates is based on recognition and elimination of cells that are either invaded by intracellular pathogens or malignantly transformed. One essential component of these processes is the cell surface presentation of antigenic peptides via major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules to cytotoxic T-cells (CTLs). Cells degrade defective ribosomal products and misfolded or unwanted proteins by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. The resulting degradation products are recognized and translocated by the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen, where they are loaded onto MHC I molecules. Assembled peptide-MHC complexes are then shuttled by the secretory pathway to the cell surface for antigen presentation to CTLs, leading in the case of viral infection or malignant transformation to lysis and apoptosis of the target cell. Due to the fact that the TAP complex represents a key control point within the antigen presentation pathway, several viruses have evolved sophisticated strategies to evade immune surveillance by interfering with TAP function.
Detailed studies of the TAP mechanism or its viral inhibition have been severely impeded by difficulties in expressing sufficient amounts of functional heterodimeric TAP complex. Thus, the overexpression of TAP in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris was established for functional analysis of this important ABC complex. Biomass production was scaled up by fermentation using classical batch and feed methods. Extensive screening of optimal solubilization and purification conditions allowed the isolation of the heterodimeric transport complex. Notably, only the very mild detergent digitonin preserved TAP function. Hereby, the optimal solubilization and purification strategy yielded in 30 mg TAP transporter per liter culture. Remarkably, the protein amount was 50-fold increased compared to previously described expression/purification in cultured insect cells.
The high yield and quality of TAP produced in P. pastoris allowed an extensive analysis of substrate binding and transport kinetics of the transport complex in the membrane, its solubilized and purified state, as well as the reconstituted state. Thereby, a strong and direct effect of the lipid bilayer on ATP hydrolysis and peptide transport was discovered. These important results were extended further by successful functional reconstitution of the antigen translocation machinery in different lipid environments. For the first time, a stimulation of the transport activity by phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) was observed, whereas cholesterol was identified as an inhibitor of TAP activity.
Purification of TAP and subsequent thin-layer chromatography (TLC)/liquid chromatography Fourier transform-mass spectrometry (LC FT-MS) fingerprinting of residual lipids exhibited specifically associated glycerophospholipids; mainly PC, PE, and PI species. Strikingly, these lipids not only represent the primary class of phospholipids of the ER but were also shown to be essential for functional reactivation of delipidated, and thus inactive, TAP. The results demonstrate that transport of antigenic peptides by the ABC transporter TAP strictly requires specific glycerophospholipids.
In addition to the biochemical characterization of heterologous produced TAP, the soluble domain of the viral inhibitor US6 from human cytomegalovirus was expressed in E. coli. Optimization of the purification and refolding strategy yielded in functional protein, with a 35-fold increased protein amount compared to previous purification procedures. Protein activity was analyzed by specific inhibition of ATP binding to TAP. Furthermore, high protein yields allowed detailed investigation of TAP-dependent spatial and mechanistic separation of MHC I restricted cross-presentation in professional antigen presenting cells (pAPC).
Proteomic analysis is the large-scale identification and characterization of proteins including post translational modifications. Proteomics encompasses a number of approaches including bottom-up and top-down workflows which are widely used independently and complementary as tools for the successful study of protein species. However, up to the present day these techniques have not been able to overcome every analytical limitation. Mass spectrometry has played a vital role alongside proteomics in providing the required analytical means of detecting protein amounts down to the atomole range. Soft ionization methods such as matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) have permitted the transfer of peptides and intact proteins into the gas phase without extensive degradation. The introduction of recent developments in MALDI technology such as the highly sensitive 4-chloro-alpha-cyanocinnamic acid matrix (Cl-CCA) as well as the commercial availability of a MALDI-LTQ-Orbitrap which boosts peptide mass accuracy below 3 parts per million (ppm), have offered new prospective in protein analysis. The aim of the current study is to incorporate these new aspects and provide further advancements in gel-based as well as gel-free proteomic workflows.
Peptides of proteolytically digested proteins are routinely analyzed by means of peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) often combined with MS/MS analyses to complement and substantiate PMF results by peptide sequence information. The most widely used protease for enzymatic digestion is trypsin, since it exhibits a very specific cleavage behavior limited to C-terminal hydrolyses after basic amino acids. However, less specific enzymes such as chymotrypsin, elastase and pepsin have emerged as useful tools in the analysis of particular protein classes e.g. membrane, cereal, and phosphorylated proteins. In this work a comprehensive bottom-up proteomic investigation including in-solution and in-gel protein digestions of analytes covering small to large, acidic to basic, and hydrophobic to hydrophilic proteins in combination with a series of less specific enzymes are presented in order to show the superiority of the novel MALDI matrix Cl-CCA. The Cl-CCA matrix proved to be highly superior compared to standard α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) since an average detection of more than 2- to 3-fold peptide amount was possible depending on the used protease and, therefore, resulting in strongly increased sequence coverage. Additionally, protein identification of chymotrypsin and elastase in-gel digested protein standards was evaluated. The MALDI-LTQ-Orbitrap providing peptide mass accuracy below and up to 3 ppm in combination with Cl-CCA as matrix and newly optimized digestion conditions led to unambiguous protein identifications of all chymotryptic digests outperforming its tryptic counterparts in the case of hydrophobic bacteriorhodopsin and α-globin from hemoglobin A (α-HgbA). In addition, significantly higher sequence coverage and increased number of detected peptides was acquired. Moreover, a proposed workaround for elastase digestions was capable of providing a solution for successful identification results.
Apart from digestions of singly separated proteins, solution isoelectic focusing (sIEF) was evaluated. OFFGEL fractionation is an efficient means of fractionating peptides and proteins according to their isoelectric point (pI) values through immobilized pH gel (IPG) strips after which samples are recovered in solution. Consequently, an issue of peptide recovery arises as a category of peptides relatively insoluble to the recovery solution should be present. A method was developed including the scraping of gel matrix from the IPG strips and peptide extraction using acetonitrile as organic solvent in combination with analytical techniques such as nLC-MALDI-MS/MS for peptide identification. The nature of the peptide species remaining in-gel was analysed and attributed to peptide solubility. A general trend in which a high percentage of neutral and hydrophobic peptides remaining entrapped in the IPG gel strip was observed.
The present work also examines a new top-down proteomic workflow involving protein elution from cleavable gels containing the labile crosslinker ethylene-glycol-diacrylate (EDA). Protein amounts of as low as 100 ng loaded onto EDA gels were detected using MALDI-TOF MS in the linear acquisition mode. Proteins from 8.5 up to 78 kDa were successfully measured including a hydrophobic 15 kDa core protein attaining a GRAVY score of +0.079. Additionally, the method was compatible with one dimensional protein separation as well as for 2-D IEF/SDS-PAGE. Lastly, two methods for protein identification were tested and found to be compatible to the proposed technique.
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) involves spatially and temporally restricted molecular dynamics.
Although protein kinases and the actin cytoskeleton contribute to the process, whether and how
functions of kinases and actin are integrated remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that neural
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) and protein kinase CK2 form a complex and localize on
clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs). N-WASP binds to and is phosphorylated by CK2, thereby reducing the
kinase activity of CK2. By contrast, N-WASP-promoted actin polymerization is decreased upon both
phosphorylation and binding of CK2. Knockdown of N-WASP and CK2, alone or in combination, results
in impaired endocytosis of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and increased cell-surface levels of EGF
receptor (EGFR). In order to rescue the phenotype of N-WASP-CK2 knockdown cells, both N-WASP and
CK2 activities and abilities to assemble in a complex are required. In summary, this study shows that the
N-WASP-CK2 complex integrates in a single circuit different activities contributing to CME of EGFR and
that the interplay between the two proteins optimizes this process.
During the last years, chemopreventive activity of NSAIDs against a great variety of tumors was highly investigated. COX-2 seemingly plays a major part in tumorigensis and tumor development, underlined by several studies in animals and humans. At first, NSAIDs were thought to accomplish chemoprevention by inhibition of COX-2 as their so far known mode of action comprises unselective inhbition of COX-enzymes. However, further studies revealed COX-independent mechanisms. Sulindac is known as a well established drug used to treat inflammation and pain exerting the most prominent chemopreventive action, mainly in colorectal cancer or FAP and can be classified into the group of NSAIDs inhibting both COX-isoformes. As interference with the AA metabolism is evident, it was speculated whether Ssi has targets other than COX-enzymes providing evidence and explanation of its beneficial side effect profile and its ability to reduce tumor growth. 5-LO is another master enzyme in the AA cascade which produces inflammatory lipid mediators (LTs) upon stimulation in inflamed tissues. The present work should answer the question if Ssi targets the 5-LO pathway and should examine the molecular mechanisms behind Ssi-mediated 5-LO inhibiton. As COX-2 is upregulated during carcinogenesis and is inhibited by Ssi, further investigations should show regulatory effects of Ssi on 5-LO gene expression in MM6-cells and whether Sp1 as a common transcriptional factor is involved in such a regulation. As the use of NO-NSAIDs seem to be a promising strategy concerning their chemopreventive and gastroprotective effects compared to the parent NSAIDs, a possible interaction with the 5-LO pathway as a second, potent target should additionally be elucidated. In the first section it was demonstrated that the pharmacologically active metabolite of sulindac, Ssi, targets 5-LO. Ssi inhibited 5-LO in ionophore A23187- and LPS/fMLP-stimulated human PMNL (IC50 ≈ 8 -10 μM). Importantly, Ssi efficiently suppressed 5-LO in human whole blood at clinically relevant plasma levels (IC50 = 18.7 μM). Ssi was 5-LO-selective as no inhibition of related lipoxygenases (12-LO, 15-LO) was observed. The sulindac prodrug and the other metabolite, sulindac sulfone, failed to inhibit 5-LO. Mechanistic analysis demonstrated that Ssi directly suppresses 5-LO with an IC50 of 20 μM. Together, these findings may provide a novel molecular basis to explain the COX-independent pharmacological effects of sulindac under therapy. In the second part of the work dealing with the analysis of Ssi’s inhibitory mechanism on 5-LO it was presented that Ssi shows a lack of potency in cellular systems where membrane constituents are existent. The addition of microsomal fractions of PMNLto crude 5-LO enzyme were able to recover enzyme activity to ~ 100 %. Selectively 5-LO activity stimulating lipids like PC, participating in 5-LO membrane interactions within the regulatory C2-like domain of 5-LO, counteracted the Ssimediated inhibition on 5-LO-wt in a concentration-dependent manner. Lastly, a protein mutant lacking three trp resudies essential for linking the enzyme to nuclear membranes and deploying catalytic activity was not influenced by Ssi and shows enzyme activity in a cell-free assay. Ssi displays the first 5-LO inhibitor on the market interacting with the C2-like domain of the enzyme and therfore can stand for a novel lead structure of 5-LO inhibitors. An influence on 5-LO gene expression by Ssi could be detected in differentiated MM6-cells, described in the results chapter 3 (4.3). Ssi downregulated the 5-LO mRNA level after 72 hrs of incubation in differentiated MM6-cells to ~ 20 % of output control at concentrations of 10 μM. Concomitantly, mRNA levels of Sp1 were suppressed. Reporter gene studies revealed Sp1 most probably as a regulating agent involved in the Ssi-mediated 5-LO mRNA downregulation as co-transfection of increasing amounts of Sp1 could abrogate the effect. A ChIP assay could identify Sp1 as a critical transcriptional factor as Sp1 binding to the 5-LO promoter decreased in presence of Ssi. Lastly, three NO-NSADIs (NO-sulindac, NOnaproxen, NO-aspirin) were tested for the ability of 5-LO product inhibition. In intact PMNL, all compounds showed effective inhibition of 5-LO activity and NO-sulindac was most potent with an IC50 value of ~ 3 μM. NO-ASA inhibited 5-LO with IC50 values of ~ 30 μM and showed a non-competitive mode of action in cell-based assays. On human recombinant 5-LO all compounds again showed inhibitory potency whereas NO-sulindac again suppressed LT biosynthesis with an IC50 vaue comparable to intact cellular systems. Unfortunately, all inhibitors showed a loss of potency when tested for inhibition of 5-LO product synthesis in human whole blood as higher concentrations up to 100 μM were needed to reach at least 55 % enzyme inhibition. However, this strategy of 5-LO inhibition seems promising and needs further experimental approaches to gain more insight into the mechanism of 5-LO inhibition by NONSAIDs.
5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) catalyzes the first two steps in leukotriene (LT) biosynthesis. In a two step reaction the enzyme oxygenates arachidonic acid (AA) to form the highly unstable epoxide leukotriene A4 (LTA4) in dehydrating a hydroperoxide intermediate (20). LTA4 can then be further metabolized by two terminal synthases yielding either the potent chemoattractant leukotriene B4 (LTB4) or the cysteinyl leukotrienes (CysLTs). 5-LO enzyme expression is primarily found in mature leukocytes (22) where it can either reside in the cytoplasm or in the nucleus associated with euchromatin (29). Its enzymatic activity is embedded in a complicated network in intact cells regulating LT synthesis by various factors dependent on the cell type and nature of stimulus. Factors such as the amount of free AA released by phospholipase A2 enzymes, levels of enzymes involved, catalytic activity per enzyme molecule and availability of different small molecules influence 5-LO activity (36).
The 5-LO derived LTs are lipid mediators which were shown to primarily mediate inflammatory and allergic reactions and their role in the pathogenesis of asthma is well defined. CysLTs are among the most potent bronchoconstrictors yet studied in man and play an important role in airway remodeling. LTB4 has no bronchoconstrictory effects in healthy and asthmatic humans but displays potent chemoattractant properties on neutrophils and increases leukocyte adhesion to the vessel wall endothelium (22). Therefore, LTB4 enhances the capacity of macrophages and neutrophils to ingest and kill microbes. In concert with LTB4, histamine and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) CysLTs are thought to maintain the tone of the human airways (82).
Besides their well studied role in asthma, 5-LO derived LTs have also been implicated to play a role in cardiovascular diseases and cancer. In contrast to healthy tissues, LT pathway enzymes and receptors were found to be abundantly expressed in cancer tissues, atherosclerotic lesions in the aorta, heart and carotid artery (86). Pharmacological inhibition of 5-LO potently suppressed tumour cell growth by inducing cell cycle arrest and triggering cell death via the intrinsic apoptotic pathway (92, 93). In several studies LTs were found to exhibit cardiovascular actions by promotion of plasma leakage in postcapillary venules, coronary artery vasoconstriction and impaired ventricular contraction leading to reduced coronary blood flow and cardiac output (24). Unfortunately, the precise molecular mechanisms through which LTs influence carcinogenesis and cardiovascular diseases are still incompletely understood.
In contrast, an increasing number of studies questions the correlation between 5-LO and cancer (95-97) since extreme LT concentrations were applied to induce proliferative effects in the majority of the publications. A few studies exist which show susceptibility towards 5-LO products in physiological concentrations or achieve anti-proliferation by applying low concentrations of 5-LO inhibitors (98) ...
According to the World Health Organization (WHO) bacterial resistance to antibiotic drug therapy is emerging as a major public health problem around the world. Infectious diseases seriously threaten the health and economy of all countries. Hence, the preservation of the effectiveness of antibiotics is a world wide priority. The key to preserving the power of antibiotics lies in maintaining their diversity. Many microorganisms are capable of producing these bioactive products, the so called antibiotics. Specifically in microorganisms, polyketide synthases (PKS) and non-ribosomal peptide synthases (NRPS) produce these natural bioactive compounds. Besides being used as antibiotics these non-ribosomal peptides and polyketides display an even broader spectrum of biological activities, e.g. as antivirals, immunosuppressants or in antitumor therapy. The wide functional spectrum of the peptides and ketides is due to their structural diversity. Mostly they are cyclic or branched cyclic compounds, containing non-proteinogenic amino acids, small heterocyclic rings and other unusual modifications such as epimerization, methylation, N‐formylation or heterocyclization. It is has been shown that these modifications are important for biological activity, but little is known about their biosynthetic origin.
PKS and NRPS are multidomain protein assembly lines which function by sequentially elongating a growing polyketide or peptide chain by incorporating acyl units or amino acids, respectively. The growing product is attached via a thioester linkage to the 4’-phosphopantetheine (4’-Ppant) arm of a holo acyl carrier protein (ACP) in PKSs or holo peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) in NRPSs and is passed from one module to another along the chain of reaction centers. The modular arrangement makes PKS and NRPS systems an interesting target for protein engineering. More than 200 novel polyketide compounds have already been created by module swapping, gene deletion or other specific manipulations. Unfortunately, however, engineered PKS often fail to produce significant amounts of the desired products. Structural studies may faciliate yield improvement from engineered systems by providing a more complete understanding of the interface between the different domains. While some information about domain-domain interactions, involving the most common enzymatic modules, ketosynthase and acyltransferase, is starting to emerge, little is known about the interaction of ACP domains with other modifying enzymes such as methyltransferases, epimerases or halogenases.
To further improve the understanding of domain-domain interactions this work focuses on the curacin A assembly line. Curacin A, which exhibits anti-mitotic activity, is from the marine cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula. This outstanding natural product contains a cyclopropane ring, a thiazoline ring, an internal cis double bond and a terminal alkene. The biosynthesis of curacin A is performed by a 2.2 Mega Dalton (MDa) hybrid PKS-NRPS cluster. A 10-enzyme assembly catalyzes the formation of the cyclopropane moiety as the first building block of the final product. Interestingly, for these enzymes the substrate is presented by an unusual cluster of three consecutive ACPs (ACPI,II,III). Little is known about the function of multiple ACPs which are supposed to increase the overall flux for enhanced production of secondary metabolites.
The first task in this work was to elucidate the structural effect of the triplet ACP repetition by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The initial data show that the excised ACPI, ACPII or ACPIII proteins resulted in [15N, 1H]-TROSY spectra with strong chemical shift perturbations (CSPs), suggesting an effect on the structure. The triplet ACP domains display a high sequence identity (93- 100%) making structural investigation using usual NMR techniques due to high peak overlap impossible. To enable the investigation of the triplet ACP in its native composition we developed a powerful method, the three fragment ligation. Segmental labeling allows incorporating isotopes into one single domain in its multidomain context. As a result we could prepare the triplet ACP with only one domain isotopically labeled and therefore assign the full length protein. In this way our method paved the way to study the structural effects of the triplet ACP repetition. We could show unexpectedly, that, despite the fact that the triplet repeat of CurA ACPI,II,III has a synergistic effect in the biosynthesis of CurA, the domains are structurally independent.
In the second part of this work, we studied the structure of the isolated ACPI domain. Our results show that the CurA ACPI undergoes no major conformational changes upon activation via phosphopantetheinylation and therefore contradicts the conformational switching model which has been proposed for PCPs. Further we report the NMR solution structures of holo-ACPI and 3-hydroxyl-3-methylglutaryl (HMG)-ACPI. Data obtained from filtered nuclear overhauser effect (NOE) experiments indicate that the substrate HMG is not sequestered but presented on the ACP surface.
In the third part of this work we focussed on the protein-protein interactions of the isolated ACPI with its cognate interaction partners. We were especially interested in the interaction with the halogenase (Cur Hal), the first enzyme within the curacin A sub-cluster, acting on the initial hydroxyl-methyl-glutaryl (HMG) attached to ACPI. Primarily we studied the interaction using NMR titration and fluorescence anisotropy measurements. Surprisingly no complex between ACPI and Cur Hal could be detected. The combination of an activity assay using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectroscopy and mutational analysis revealed several amino acids of ACPI that strongly decrease the activity of CurA Hal. Mapping these mutations according to their effect on the Cur Hal activity onto the structure of HMG-ACPI displays that these amino acids surround the substrate and form a consecutive surface. These results suggest that this surface is important for Cur Hal recognition and selectivity. Our research presented herein is an excellent example for protein-protein interactions in PKS systems underlying a specific recognition process.
Membrane proteins (MPs) constitute about 30% of the genome and are essential in many cellular processes. In particular structural characterisation of MPs is challenged by their hydrophobic nature resulting in expression difficulties and structural instability upon extraction from the membrane. Despite these challenges, progress in sample preparation and the techniques to solve MP structures has led to 281 unique MP structures as of January 2011. Through the combination of a cell-free expression system and selective labelling strategies, this thesis aimed to advance the structure determination of α-helical MPs by NMR spectroscopy and resulted in the structure determination of a seven-ransmembrane-helix protein. Results were obtained for the 5-lipoxygenase-activating protein (FLAP) and proteorhodopsin (PR). The detergent-based cell-free expression mode proved most efficient for production of both targets, but optimisation of FLAP and PR followed different routes. The presence of a retinal cofactor in PR greatly facilitated the search for an appropriate hydrophobic environment. For structural studies, NMR spectra of FLAP indicated favourable properties of the lysolipid LPPG. In contrast, PR was stable and homogenous in the short-chain lipid diC7PC. As NMR spectra of α-helical MPs are generally characterised by broad lines and signal overlap, selective labelling strategies were essential in the assignment process of both targets. For the backbone assignment of FLAP the transmembrane segment-enhanced (TMS) labelling was developed, employing the six amino acids AFGILV. These residues cluster predominantly in transmembrane helices and form long stretches allowing a large extent of backbone assignment. Besides that, the combinatorial labelling enables identification of unique pairs in the sequence based on a mixture of 15N and 1-13C-labelled amino acids. To find the optimal labelling pattern for a given primary structure, the UPLABEL algorithm has been made available and successfully applied in the backbone assignment of PR. Both selective labelling approaches greatly benefitted from the use of a cell-free expression system to reduce isotope scrambling. Additionally, the de novo structure of PR was determined with an average backbone rmsd of 1.2 Å based on TALOS-derived backbone torsion angles, intrahelical hydrogen bond restraints and distance restraints from the NOE and paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE). A major bottleneck in the NMR structure determination of MPs concerns the number of long-range distances which are often limited. In PR, side chain assignment was enabled by stereo-array isotope labelling as well as selective labelling which provided 33 long-range NOEs. These NOEs stabilised the symmetry of the seven helix bundle. With a total number of 1031, the majority of long-range distances were derived from PREs. The structure of PR reveals differences to its homologues such as the absence of an anti-parallel β-sheet between helices B and C and allows conclusions towards the mechanism of colour tuning.
Ubiquitin is a highly conserved protein involved in several cellular processes like protein degradation, endocytosis, signal transduction and DNA repair. The discovery of ubiquitin-like proteins (UBL) and ubiquitin-like domains (ULD) increases the number of regulation pathways where the property of the ubiquitin-fold is profitable.
Autophagy is the catabolic pathway used in cells to deliver cytosolic components and dysfunctional organelles to the lysosome for degradation. MAP1LC3 proteins are ubiquitin-like proteins involved in one hand for the expansion of the autophagosome, which sequesters cytosolic substrates. In the other hand, these proteins (LC3- and GABARAP- subfamilies) bind to autophagic receptors linked to polyubiquitinated proteins aggregates. For this project, the 3D structure of the GABARAPL-1/NBR1-LIR complex was determined and confirmed that GABARAPL-1 belongs to the MAP1LC3 proteins family, structurally characterized by an ubiquitin-fold, consisting of a central beta-sheet formed by four beta-strands and two alpha-helices on one side of the beta-sheet, preceded N terminally by two alpha-helices, resulting in the formation of two hydrophobic pockets, hp1 and hp2. The autophagic receptor NBR1 interacts with GABARAPL-1 through the hp1 and hp2 with its LIR motif taking an extended beta conformation upon binding, forming an intermolecular beta-sheet with the second beta-strand of GABARAPL 1. This LC3- interacting region (LIR) consists of an Theta XX Gamma sequence preceded by acidic amino acids, with Theta and Gamma represented by any aromatic and hydrophobic residues, respectively. Interaction studies of the LIR domains of p62, Nix and NBR1 with different members of the MAP1LC3 proteins family indicate that the presence of a tryptophan in the LIR motif increases the binding affinity. Substitution to other aromatic amino acids or increasing the number of negatively charged residues at the N-terminus of the LIR motif, however, has little effect on the binding affinity due to enthalpy-entropy compensation, suggesting that effector proteins can interact with a wide variety of different sequences with similar and moderate binding affinities.
Additionally to be present in proteins dealing with protein folding and degradation, ubiquitin-like domain were found protein involved in the regulation of signal transduction like TBK1, a serine/threonine kinase responsible for induction of immune response. In this second project, based on the NMR chemical shifts of the TBK1 domain contained between amino acids 302 and 383, secondary structure prediction programs (TALOS and CSI) confirmed the presence of an Ubiquitin-like domain in TBK1 by identifying one alpha-helix and four beta-strands sequentially aligned like following beta-beta-alpha-beta-beta. This alignment corresponds perfectly with the secondary structure elements of Ubiquitin and proved that TBK1_ULD belongs to the UBL protein superfamily. The similarity to ubiquitin was even bigger by the presence in addition of a small beta-strand and a short helix, which are observed as the beta 5-strand and a 310-helix in Ubiquitin, respectively. The first attempts on the 3D structure determination confirmed the Ub-fold but due to the lack of assignment in TBK1_ULD, only a structure based on ubiquitin as a model was determined. Interaction studies of TBK1_ULD with the IAD-SRR domain of IRF3 showed that both side of the molecule seems involved and that the TBK1/IRF3 interaction is more complex than a one to one binding process. Unfortunately, the instability of TBK1_ULD associated to the difficulty in the purification of IAD-SRR did not allow to further study this interaction more precisely.
Finally, to overcome the difficulty encountered in NMR experiments because of low expression and/or poor solubility, an expression vector using the intrinsic property of ubiquitin was designed. Fused to proteins or peptides targets, this construct produced proteins and peptides in a larger amount than with traditional expression vectors and also with a less cost than chemical synthesis for pure labeled peptides for NMR structural studies. The presence of a hexa histidine tag was useful for the isolation and the purification of the constructs. The existence of a TEV cleavage site was created to keep the possibility of releasing the ubiquitin moiety from the expressed protein or peptide. Moreover, the ubiquitin-tag could also still be attached to the protein/peptide of interest when biophysical methods like NMR, ITC or CD spectroscopy are applied, providing the same results than for the protein/peptide moiety alone.
Time-resolved spectroscopic analysis of fucoxanthin-chlorophyll proteins and isolated carotenoids
(2011)
The aim of this thesis was to elucidate the excitation energy transfer in the fucoxanthin-chlorophyll proteins (FCPs) isolated from the diatom Cyclotella meneghiniana in detail and to clarify the role of the different pigments contained. In a first step the excited state dynamics of the free pigments were studied by means of time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. The FCPs contain three different carotenoid species. Besides the main light-harvesting carotenoid fucoxanthin (fx) the xanthophyll cycle pigments diadinoxanthin (ddx) and diatoxanthin (dtx) are found in substoichiometric amounts. Fx is contained in an unusual carotenoid-to-chlorophyll ratio of about one. In case of ddx and dtx, changing the solvent polarity showed no significant effects on the absorption spectrum and the excited state dynamics were hardly influenced. In contrast, a solvent dependence is observed in the absorption spectrum and excited state dynamics of fx. The S1 lifetime depends strongly on the solvent polarity and an additional broad excited state absorption band red shifted compared to the S1 excited state absorption appears. The occurrence of the described features can be explained with an intramolecular charge transfer state, which is stabilized in a polar environment and appears only in carotenoids with a conjugated carbonyl group. Despite its rather short excited state lifetimes of less than 200 fs (S2) and 30-60 ps (S1), fx acts as a very efficient energy donor in the FCPs. The ultrafast energy transfer dynamics of the isolated proteins FCPa and FCPb were investigated in a comprehensive study using transient absorption in the visible and NIR spectral region complemented with polarized transient absorption spectroscopy. The excitation energy transfer was not influenced significantly by changing the light conditions during the growth, which yields an altered amount of ddx and dtx. It can be concluded that the contribution of the xanthophyll cycle pigments to the energy transfer is not significant. The altered oligomerization state results in a more efficient energy transfer for the trimeric FCPa, which is also reflected in different Chl a fluorescence quantum yields. Thus, an increased quenching in the higher oligomers of FCPb can be assumed. The observed dynamics change drastically for two different excitation wavelengths λ = 500 nm and λ = 550 nm, which both lead to the population of the S2 excited state of individual carotenoids, namely blue and red absorbing fx molecules. The differing absorption maxima result from distinct microenvironments within the protein. For FCPa an additional slow time constant of 25 ps was found after excitation at 500 nm. By means of polarized transient absorption spectroscopy applied to FCPa different transition dipole moments for the S1 and the ICT state of fx could be identified. Based on the presented studies a detailed model explaining the excitation energy transfer pathways could be developed. In agreement with the faster overall transfer rate which is also evident in the anisotropy data in case of 550 nm excitation, upon excitation at 500 nm one slow transfer channel is active. It can be attributed to a blue absorbing fx not strongly associated with a Chl a molecule. Most likely excitation energy transfer takes place between the S1/ICT states of two different fx molecules before the energy is transferred to Chl a. Additional transient absorption experiments with an improved time resolution were performed to investigate the oscillations observed. These coherent effects superimposed the kinetics of isolated carotenoids as well as FCPs within the first 500 fs. The oscillations showed a very unusual damping behavior and vanished already after two oscillation periods. In case of fx, the solvent environment as well as the excitation wavelengths had an influence on the oscillations. The frequencies of the oscillations were 70-100 cm^-1 for fx in solvents with varying polarity and 50-80 cm^-1 for the FCPs. These results could further confirm the assumption that the red absorbing fx molecules are located in a more polar environment within the protein compared to the blue absorbing fx. To clarify the origin of the oscillations in more detail, further experiments with a controlled chirp of the applied pulses and comparison between different carotenoids in various solvents are required. This approach promises to give further insight in the excited state dynamics and to answer the question whether dark states are involved. Right now, the coherent excitation of the strongly coupled excited states 1Bu+ (S2) and 1Bu- resulting in electronic quantum beats and the existence of an additional short lived excited state absorption (S2-SN2) in the visible spectral region are the most reasonable explanations for the occurrence of the coherent effects in the transient absorption spectra of carotenoids.
Since combinatorial chemistry and high throughput screening have become a common technique in the drug discovery phase the number of compounds being considered has increased frequently. These structures are often characterized by high molecular weight, high lipophilicity and low solubility in aqueous and physiological media. Due to the generally poor bioavailability, new in vitro techniques were needed for screening of pharmacokinetic properties. An important parameter for these screening methods is the implementation at an early state of drug discovery phase, to find potential lead structures, before investment costs become significant. The established in vitro methods for the prediction of membrane interaction are not reliable especially for poorly soluble compounds. A new method that is fast and easy to use, requires only small amounts of NCE and which can provide more reliable predictions is needed. In this study, a new screening technique based on surface activity profiling for the prediction of oral drug absorption was evaluated with special emphasis on the predictability of biological membrane interaction of poorly soluble drug compounds. It was demonstrated that drug absorption through a bilayer membrane can be modeled by the orientation of compounds at the air/water interface. Thus amphilicity of a drug is generally related to both oral absorption and blood brain barrier penetration. In turn, amphiphilicity is influenced by the lipophilicity, size and charge distribution of a drug. Surface activity profiling was determined by analysis of surface pressure profiles using the Gibbs adsorption isotherm. The surface activity measurements were carried out using a multichannel tensiometer Delta 8, which was developed by Kibron to be utilized in conjugation high throughput screening in early drug discovery processes. For this study two test sets were analyzed, one for the prediction of gastrointestinal wall interaction and the second for the prediction of the penetration behavior at the blood brain barrier. Both test sets consist of drug compounds with a wide range of absorption properties and consist mainly of compounds with poor water solubility. Since the drugs characteristics varied, they were classified according to water solubility and surface activity and a sample preparation method for each group was established. For the prediction of oral drug absorption, three different methods were established to model the interaction of compound and gastrointestinal wall. For drug compounds with solubility above 1mmol/L the traditional shake-flask method enabled the determination of the amphiphilic properties of drug compounds in pure aqueous media. Compounds with solubility below 1mmol/L tend to not to exhibit any increase in surface activity. Thus surface tension measurements of compounds, which exhibited a limited surface activity due to poor aqueous solubility, were conducted from stock solutions prepared with various organic solvents. Mainly polar organic solvents were used. A mixture of DMSO and DMF resulted in the best combination of properties: the intensive solubility enhancing effect of DMF and the lower intrinsic surface activity of DMSO. The polar solvent ruptured the water clusters, so that highly lipophilic structures had a higher affinity to the solvent and higher concentrations could be obtained. For these compounds higher maximum surface pressure were generated than was possible in pure aqueous media. The surface pressure data were correlated with the fraction absorbed values in vivo. However it was found that poor water solubility is not the only limiting step to exhibiting any surface activity. Some compounds were showed no surface activity in either solvent system. Therefore a micelle vehicle method was established using short chain phospholipids to mimic the gastrointestinal wall. It could be concluded from the results, that non surface active drugs can interact with the phospholipids micelle vehicle in a way analogous to their interaction with the membrane bilayer. The relative critical micelle concentration was correlated with the fraction absorbed of this test set. A sample preparation schema based on the three types of drugs was established. This schema enabled us to predict the absorbance of slightly soluble and poorly soluble drugs with acceptable reliability for early compound screening. For the prediction of blood brain barrier penetration using surface activity profiling as analyzing method, a test set with very poorly soluble characteristics was chosen. The sample preparation method was based on a strictly aqueous approach using the ‘shake flask’ method. The surface tension measurements enabled correlation of the amphiphilic properties of the very poorly soluble drug compounds with BBB uptake. From the aqueous surface pressure profiles and the determination of physicochemical parameters, it was found that blood brain barrier is more likely when a drug provides a small cross-sectional area, As, at the interface. The cross-sectional area is the only parameter which is independent from the maximal concentration in aqueous media and it is particularly suitable for lower solubility compounds. In summary, it was shown that amphilicity is related to biological membrane interaction in the human body and that surface activity profiling with appropriate sample preparation can be used as a reliable screening tool for the prediction of oral drug absorption of poorly soluble drugs. Furthermore an in vitro screening method of blood-brain-barrier penetration was established.
Almost two decades ago, microRNAs were discovered as novel posttranscriptional regulators of gene expression. Since then, research efforts have uncovered their involvement in the control of various cellular processes including migration, proliferation and cell survival. Even more complex events, such as the formation of new blood vessels or organ development, have been shown to be tightly regulated and orchestrated by microRNAs. Due to their crucial regulatory role in tissue homeostasis in vertebrates, it does not come as a big surprise that dysregulated microRNA ex-pression is associated with pathology of diverse diseases. In this regard, the miR-17-92 cluster is a prime example since it has become famous for its amplified expression in tumours and its on-cogenic potential. Our lab demonstrated the expression of the members of the miR-17-92 cluster, namely miR-17, -18a, -19a, -20a, -19b and -92a, in endothelial cells and provided evidence for the anti-angiogenic activity of miR-92a in ECs as well as its important regulatory role in tissue re-covery after ischemia. In this work we addressed the function of the remaining members of the miR-17-92 cluster, i.e. miR-17, miR-18a, miR-19a and miR-20a, in endothelial cells and angiogenesis. Surprisingly, the individual members all displayed anti-angiogenic properties in endothelial cells in vitro, although overexpression of the whole cluster in transformed colonocytes was shown to promote tumour angiogenesis in a mouse model. In this context, we provide evidence that the individual miRs differentially affect the paracrine angiogenic activity of endothelial and tumour cells. Moreover, Antagomir-mediated inhibition of miR-17/20 in a mouse tumour model did not affect tumour angi-ogenesis, although miR-17/20 inhibition profoundly increased vascularization of Matrigel plugs. Thus, our research efforts suggest a differential involvement of the members of the miR-17-92 cluster in physiological and tumour angiogenesis. Additionally, we identified Janus kinase (JAK) 1 as a novel miR-17 target in endothelial cells and demonstrated the involvement of JAK1 in angio-genesis and in the phosphorylation of STAT3 in response to different cytokines in vitro. Overall, inhibition of specific members of the miR-17-92 cluster might represent an attractive therapeutic strategy to enhance angiogenesis in ischemic diseases. In the second part of the present work we investigated the therapeutic value of Antagomir-mediated microRNA inhibition in animal models of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Collectively, inhibition of miR-17 by the respective Antagomir revealed a significant improvement of pulmonary hemodynamics and cardiac function in both the chronic hypoxia mouse model and the mono-crotaline-induced lung injury rat model. Histomorphometric analysis of the lungs of the pulmonary hypertensive mice and rats uncovered a significant reduction of disease associated musculariza-tion of pulmonary arteries in Antagomir-17 treated animals compared to the control animals indicating interference with smooth muscle cell proliferation or survival. Probing of lung tissue of the pulmonary hypertensive rats for selected miR-17 targets uncovered a profound increase in the expression of the cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor p21 in the Antagomir-17 treated rats suggest-ing that inhibition of miR-17 impairs proliferation by impeding cell cycle progression. Analysis of miR-17 function in human smooth muscle cells in vitro corroborated the results from the animal experiments by demonstrating pro-proliferative activity of miR-17 and decreased levels of p21 in these cells. Collectively, our results indicate that Antagomir-17 improves pulmonary hemodyna-mics and cardiac function by interfering with vascular remodelling within the lung. Hence, inhibi-tion of miR-17 might be of therapeutic value to ameliorate the disease pattern in pulmonary arte-rial hypertension. In summary, the present work provides insights into the regulatory functions of members of the miR-17-92 cluster, especially miR-17, in blood vessels and suggests that specific inhibition of members of the miR-17-92 cluster might be a novel option to treat vascular diseases.
The enzyme quinol:fumarate reductase (QFR) from the anaerobic epsilon-proteobacterium Wolinella succinogenes is a membrane protein complex that couples the catalysis of the oxidation of menaquinol to menaquinone to that of the reduction of fumarate to succinate. This is the terminal step in fumarate respiration, a form of anaerobic respiration in which oxygen is replaced by fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor in many anaerobic microorganisms. In QFR, both the heme groups (low-potential distal and high-potential proximal heme b group in transmembrane subunit C) are part of the electron transport chain between the two catalytic sites of the redox enzyme. Although the reduction of fumarate by menaquinol is exergonic, it is not exergonic enough to support the generation of a transmembrane electrochemical proton potential delta p. Evidence has previously shown that this reaction is catalysed by a novel mechanism, involving the facilitation of transmembrane electron transfer by transmembrane proton transfer via an essential compensatory transmembrane proton transfer pathway ("E-pathway") which is inactive in the oxidized state of the enzyme. The two key constitutents of the the pathway are the amino acid residue Glu C180 of the transmembrane helix V (located in subunit C) and the ring C propionate of the distal heme bD. The aim of the project was to obtain, by employing a combination of time-resolved as well as static spectroscopic approaches, a detailed insight of the transmembrane electron coupled proton transfer mechanism. Minute changes in both the oxidized and reduced states of a redox protein system can be selectively and sensitively monitored by static Fourier Transformed Infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy. The technique employed in this context, electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectroscopy, is complemented by computer-based electrostatic calculations. In order to elucidate the catalytic mechanism of the important reactions in QFR, it is necessary to investigate these in a time-resolved manner. Rapid scan FTIR difference spectroscopy is a suitable technique that allows the course of the reaction to be monitored in a time dependent fashion. The techniques employed in this context are time-resolved (tr-FTIR) and transient absorption spectroscopy. In the following, the details of individual sub-projects are discussed in brief. ...
The ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase is a key component of several aerobic respiratory chains in different organisms. It is an integral membrane protein complex, made up of three catalytic subunits (cytochrome b, cytochrome c1 and Rieske iron sulphur protein) and up to eight additional subunits in mitochondria. The complex oxidizes one quinol molecules and reduces two cytochrome c during the Q cycle, originally described by Peter Mitchell. Electrons are split between the low and the high potential chain and protons are released on the positive side of the membrane, increasing the protonmotive force needed by the ATP-synthase for energy transduction. The cytochrome bc1 complex from P. denitrificans is a perfect model for structural and functional studies. Bacteria are easy to grow and the genetic material is readily accessible for genetic manipulation. Moreover, the P. denitrificans aerobic respiratory chain is very close to the mitochondrial one: the complexes involved in electron transfer resemble the ones found in mitochondria, but lack most of the additional subunits. As a unique feature, P. denitrificans has a strongly acidic domain at the N-terminal region of the cytochrome c1, a sequence of 150 aminoacids which does not correlate with any known protein. An analogous composition can be found in the eukaryotic cytochrome bc1 complex as a part of an accessory subunit, proposed to be involved in facilitating electron transfer between the complex and the electron acceptor cytochrome c. In order to study the function of this domain in the P. denitrificans cytochrome bc1 complex, a deletion mutant has been previously cloned and modified with an affinity tag as a C-terminal extension of cytochrome b. The complex is purified by affinity chromatography and characterized by steady-state kinetics using not only horse heart cytochrome c but also the endogenous electron acceptor, the membrane bound cytochrome c552, employed here as a soluble fragment. Steady–state kinetics indicate that the deletion of the long acidic domain had effects neither on the turnover rate nor on the apparent affinity for the substrate. To understand wether the deletion affects the reaction between the cytochrome bc1 complex and the substrate, laser flash photolysis experiments are performed, showing that the interaction observed was not changed in the complex missing the acidic domain. The results presented in this work confirm the ones previously obtained by Julia Janzon using soluble fragments of the same interaction partners. The deletion, however, affected the oligomerization state of the complex, as shown by LILBID (Laser Induced Liquid Bead Ion Desorption) analysis. The wild type complex has a tetrameric structure, better described as a “dimer of dimers”. The deletion of the acidic domain on the cytochrome c1 results in the separation of the two dimers, yielding the canonical dimer. Therefore, the complex deleted in the acidic domain is used for cloning and expression of a heterodimeric complex, containing an inactivating mutation in the quinol oxidation site in only one monomer, thus allowing a selective switch-off for half the complex. Such a complex is needed for the verification of an internal regulation mechanism, the half-of-the-sites reactivity. According to it, the dimeric structure of the cytochrome bc1 complex has functional implications, since the two monomers can communicate and work in a coordinated manner. This approach confirms that substrate oxidation does effectively take place only in one of the two monomers constituting the dimer, and that the binding of substrate at the Qo and Qi site regulates the switch between active and inactive monomer. Moreover, this mechanism works also as an effective protection against the reaction of quinone intermediates with oxygen and the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), responsable for cellular aging. The motion of the ISP head domain is also addressed in this work; in particular the mechanism which regulates the movements towards the cytochrome c1 and the electron bifurcation at the quinol oxidation site. Laser flash kinetics in presence of several inhibitors and the substrate allow studying the response of the ISP to the binding of different species at the quinol oxidation site. The binding of ligand at the Qo site in the complex triggers the conformational switch in the ISP head domain, supporting the mechanism proposed in the literature according to which the Qo site is able to “sense” the presence of substrate and transfer the information to the ISP, regulating its mobility. The internal electron pathway between the ISP and the cytochrome c1 has been analyzed also by stopped-flow kinetics, in presence and absence of inhibitors. The results indicate that two kinetic phases describe the reduction of cytochrome c1 by the ISP, and a model for the simulation of the data is proposed.
Pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR) is a pulsed EPR method that can reliably and precisely provide structural information regarding duplex RNAs and DNAs by measuring long-range distances (1.5-7 nm) utilizing distance-dependent magnetic dipole-dipole interaction between two nitroxide spin labels. In this thesis the application field of PELDOR spectroscopy has been expanded. For the first time the global architecture of tertiary folded RNA has been mapped in vitro. Moreover, the first application of PELDOR for determining structural aspects of RNA and DNA molecules inside cells has been presented. RNA has the central role in cellular processes and gene regulation. It can adopt complex three dimensional structures, which in combination with its conformational dynamics is essential for its function as biological catalyst, structural scaffold and regulator of gene expression. Riboswitches are cis-acting RNA segments that modulate gene expression by direct binding of small molecules with high affinity and specificity. Neomycin-responsive riboswitch is an engineered riboswitch developed by combination of in vitro selection and in vivo screening. Upon insertion into the 5‟ untranslated region of mRNA and binding the cognate ligand it is able to inhibit translational initiation in yeast. Using enzymatic probing the secondary structure had been postulated comprising global stem-loop architecture with a terminal and an internal loop. In the first part of this thesis, the global conformational arrangement of this 27 nucleotides long RNA element has been studied by means of site-directed spin labeling and PELDOR spectroscopy. Spin-labeled neomycin-responsive riboswitch mutants were synthesized via a Sonogashira cross-coupling reaction between 5-membered pyrroline ring based nitroxide radical (TPA) and 5-iodo-uridine. The labeling positions were chosen outside of the binding pocket and UV melting curves revealed that spin-labeling neither disturbs the secondary structure nor interferes with ligand binding. Efficient ligand binding was proven by thermal stabilization of 20.3±3.3 oC upon addition of neomycin, as well as by cw EPR spectra. PELDOR time traces with long observation time windows and with good signal to noise ratio and modulation depth were recorded for all double-labeled samples allowing a reliable data analysis. The fact that there were no shifts in the measured distances upon addition of neomycin implied the existence of a prearranged tertiary structure of the neomycin-sensing riboswitch without a significant global conformational change induced by ligand binding. Measured distances were in very good agreement with the NMR structure of the ligand-bound state of the riboswitch indicating the intrinsic propensity of the global RNA architecture toward its energetically favored ligand-bound form at low temperature. The results harvested in this work represent the first application of PELDOR for mapping the global structure of a tertiary folded RNA. In the second part of this thesis the possibility of applying PELDOR on nucleic acids (NAs) in cellular environment has been investigated. It was shown before that global NA structure depends on matrix conditions, such as concentration of ions and small molecules, molecular crowding, viscosity and interactions with proteins. Therefore, PELDOR spectroscopy on a double-labeled 12-base pair DNA duplex, the 14-mer cUUCGg tetraloop hairpin RNA and the 27-mer neomycin-sensing riboswitch has been used to obtain long-range distance constraints on such systems in Xenopus laevis oocytes and to compare them with in vitro measurements. The reduced lifetime of nitroxide spin labels under cellular conditions has been a major challenge in these measurements. Investigation of nitroxide reduction kinetics in-cell has revealed that the 5-membered pyrrolidine and pyrroline rings are significantly slower reduced compared to 6-membered piperidine ring based nitroxides. Due to prolonged lifetime of the TPA nitroxides covalently attached to NA molecules PELDOR signals could be measured with good signal-to-noise ratios up to 70 minutes of incubation time. The partial loss of coupled spin labels due to nitroxide reduction only led to a decrease in the modulation depth upon increasing the incubation time. No alterations in the measured distances between in vitro and in-cell experiments implies the existence of stable overall conformations of the 14-mer cUUCGg tetraloop hairpin RNA and the 27-mer neomycin-sensing riboswitch, whereas the 12-bp duplex DNA experiences stacking in-cell but retaining the secondary structure. Thus, for the first time nanometer distance measurements were performed inside cells, clearly laying a foundation for the application of PELDOR spectroscopy to study biological processes in cells, such as diffusion, interaction with proteins and other factors or chemical reactions.
Employing NMR spectroscopy, it is not only possible to calculate the three dimensional structures of single proteins, but also to study dynamics and conformational changes of protein-complexes. In fact that is an important aspect, since the protein function depends on dynamics and interactions with other molecules. Therefore the study of protein-protein interactions is of highest importance for a better understanding of biological processes. Based on NMR methods, in this thesis we were able to determine protein-protein interactions within the enterobacterial Rcs signalling complex which is regulated via a phosphorelay. Originally identified as regulator of capsule synthesis, the Rcs phosphorelay is now considered to be implicated in stress response caused by disturbances in the peptidoglycan layer. Beyond that the Rcs system is involved in multiplex transcriptional networks including cell division, motility, biofilm formation and virulence. Because of such global nature and its extraordinary structural organisation involving membrane integrated sensor proteins (RcsC, RcsD), coactivators (RcsF, RcsA) and a transcription factor (RcsB), the Rcs system is one of the most remarkable phosphorelays in the family of enterobacteriacaea. During the complex phosphotransfer the histidine phosphotransferase (HPt) domain of the intermediary RcsD protein mediates the phosphotransfer between RcsC and RcsB, and probably modulates the phosphorylation state of the response regulator RcsB. Therefore the present work has been focused on the interface between RcsD and RcsB in more detail. In the first part of the thesis a new domain within the RcsD protein has been identified and structurally analysed by liquid NMR spectroscopy. RcsD is an inner membrane bound hybrid sensor like-kinase composed of a periplasmic sensor domain and a cytoplasmic portion. The cytoplasmic part contains the histidine like-kinase (HK) domain and the histidine phosphotransferase (HPt) domain. By analysis of the secondary structure in more detail, it was shown here that the two domains are intermitted by an additional 13.3 kDa domain. Corresponding to the position of the ABL (α−β−loop) domain of RcsC, located C-terminal to the RcsC-HK domain, the new identified domain was named RcsD-ABL. The central structural element of RcsD-ABL is a β-sheet composed of six strands with a β1−β2−β3−β4−β6−β5 topology and surrounded by two α-helices α1 and α2. In the second part of the thesis, RcsD-ABL is identified as a binding domain for the response regulator RcsB by NMR titration experiments. Such a binding domain for a response regulator has so far only been described for the histidine kinase CheA. In reportergene assays with β-galactosidase and ONPG as substrate it was shown that overexpression of RcsD-ABL in high amounts inhibited binding of RcsB to its target promoter. The β-galactosidase activity was reduced by 80 % with respect to cells carrying no plasmid encoding RcsD-ABL. The mapping of the binding interface was successfully achieved by chemical shift perturbations, a fast mapping protocol and selective labelling. It was shown that the interaction between RcsD-ABL and RcsB takes place via a binding interface comprising mainly the two α-helices of RcsD-ABL and the α-helices α7, α8 and α10 in the effector domain of RcsB. In the third part of the thesis, the interaction of RcsB with RcsD-ABL was related to that with RcsD-HPt. Using NMR titration experiments and ITC measurements, a comparison of the binding constants (Kd) of RcsB interacting either with the isolated RcsD-ABL (2 PM) or the isolated RcsDHPt domain (40 PM) revealed a higher affinity of RcsD-ABL to RcsB. A conjugate of RcsD-ABL-HPt interacting with RcsB decreased the Kd in the one-site fitting mode to 10 PM. However, the two-site fitting mode applied for RcsD-ABL-HPt/RcsB interaction resulted in a Kd (RcsD-ABL) of 2 PM and a Kd (RcsD-HPt) of 8 PM, indicating that RcsD-ABL enhances the binding of RcsD-HPt to RcsB. In the last part of the thesis, it was partly possible together with the data obtained from NMR titration experiments, PRE measurements and a HADDOCK protocol to develop a geometrical model for the interaction of RcsD with RcsB. In this model the receiver domain of RcsB interacts with the RcsD-HPt domain and the RcsB effector domain interacts with the RcsD-ABL domain. These results lead to surprising insights on the regulation of phosphorelays, since normally the effector domain binds to DNA. Here the effector domain is recognized by the newly identified RcsD-ABL domain. Prospectively, further investigations of phosphorylation affects and mutational studies will be of great interest.
Die Familie der Proteorhodopsine (PR) besteht aus Hunderten von PR Molekülen, die unter Lichteinwirkung Protonen pumpen und somit eine bedeutende Rolle für die Energiegewinnung spielen könnten. Da der pKa Wert des Proton Akzeptors der Schiff‘schen Base (SB) (~7.2) dem pH Wertes der Ozeane (~7.9) ähnelt, wird auch über eine regulatorische Funktion spekuliert. Wird in Erwägung gezogen, dass 24 000 PR Moleküle pro SAR86 Zelle vorhanden sind (Beja et al. 2001) und dass 13% der Bakterien der Meeresoberfläche PR besitzen (Sabehi et al. 2005) liefert dieses Protein wahrscheinlich einen bedeutenden Energiebeitrag neben der Photosynthese. Einblicke in den Mechanismus der Energieumwandlung erfordern sowohl die Untersuchung des Chromophores, welches die Lichtenergie absorbiert als auch der Struktur des Apoproteins, das durch die Generierung eines Protonengradienten zur Energiegewinnung beiträgt. Der Fokus der Doktorarbeit liegt auf dem Chromophor und seiner Umgebung. Eine erste Charakterisierung der SB und des Retinals erfolgt durch UV/VIS und NMR Messungen (Pfleger et al. 2008). Die 13C chemische Verschiebungen von 10,11-13C2 Retinal und die 15N chemische Verschiebung der protonierten SB, gebildet durch K231, zeigt eindeutig, dass im Grundzustand nur eine Konformation der Retinals, all-trans, vorliegt. Die 15N chemische Verschiebung weist außerdem auf eine starke Wechselwirkung der SB mit ihren Gegenionen hin. Desweiteren kann durch Messungen der 15N chemischen Verschiebung der SB bei verschiedenen pH Werten der pKa Wert der SB abgeschätzt werden, auf ~12. Diese Stabilisierung der positiv geladenen protonierten Form der SB weist auf die Existenz eines Wasserclusters hin, das durch die hohe Dielektrizitätskonstante die protonierte Form der SB stabilisieren könnte. Um zu überprüfen, ob Wasser an der SB gebunden ist, wird ein sogenanntes 15N-1H HETCOR Experiment durchgeführt. Der Bereich der 15N chemischen Verschiebung der SB korreliert mit einer Protonenresonanz bei ~5 ppm, welche im Bereich einer Wasserresonanz liegt und die durch D2O austauschbar ist. Dies indiziert eine wichtige Bedeutung von Wasser in der Nähe der SB für die Funktion von PR. Der Einfluss von Mutationen des Histidins H75 und des Aspartats D97 auf die 15N chemische Verschiebung der SB sowie die Auswirkung von Histidinmutationen auf das Chromophor deuten eine direkte Wechselwirkung von Aspartat 97 und der SB an, nicht aber eine direkte Wechselwirkung von H75 und der SB. Neben dem Chromophor ist außerdem das Signalpeptid Gegenstand der Untersuchung der Doktorarbeit. Motivation für die Untersuchung war die Inhomogenität der Proben, die im Zusammenhang mit ungleich prozessiertem PR stehen könnten. Ein zweiter Teil beschäftigt sich mit neuen Konzepten der Datenaufnahme, da das S/R in der Festkörper NMR ein limitierender Faktor darstellt. Diese beinhalten Verstärkung der Relaxation (RELOAD) sowie die Refokussierung von T2 bei Verwendung eines Prozessierungsschrittes, der „half echo alternating transformation“ (HEAT).
In mitochondrial respiration, the soluble protein cytochrome c accepts an electron from the membrane bound cytochrome bc1. The interaction between cytochrome bc1 and cytochrome c is highly transient in nature, enabling turnover numbers greater than 160 s-1. Yeast cytochrome bc1 has been successfully crystallised with bound cytochrome c with the help of an antibody fragment (Lange and Hunte 2002; Solmaz and Hunte 2008). In all crystal structures of the complex, the homodimeric cytochrome bc1 binds only one cytochrome c, with the binding site located on subunit cytochrome c1. Univalent cytochrome c binding is correlated with conformational changes of the Rieske protein head domain and subunit QCR6p. The interface of the complex is small. The haem moieties are centrally located in a mainly non-polar contact site that includes a cation–! interaction and is surrounded by complementary charged residues. The crystal structure is in agreement with the general architecture of the interfaces of transient redox complexes and also reveals several interesting features unique to the cytochrome bc1. On the basis of the crystal structures, an extensive thermodynamic and kinetic characterisation of the interaction was carried out in this work to challenge the static snapshot of the bound proteins in the crystal structure as the relevant physiological electron transfer. The thermodynamic parameters of the interaction between the redox partners were determined using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). The association constant for cytochrome bc1 and cytochrome c in oxidised state under physiological ionic strength of 120 mM at 25 °C, was determined to be 5 " 103 M-1 by direct ITC titration. So, the partners interact with an affinity of 200 #M. In spite of the low affinity the complex has a life time ($ = 1/koff) of 5 #second, sufficiently long to enable the theoretically calculated electron transfer rates of 1.0 " 106 to 2.6 " 107 s%1 with a lifetime ($ = 1/rate) of 1-0.04 μseconds and experimentally determined rate of 7.7 " 104 s%1 with a lifetime of 13 μseconds. The low affinity makes it difficult to ascertain the stoichiometry of binding. The enthalpy of the interaction is endothermic, which is consistent with the nature of an interface where hydrophobic interactions are dominant. The enthalpy and entropy is 3.6 kJmol-1 and 83 kJmol-1K-1, respectively. The importance of key interface residues was also investigated. The role of the interface residue G89 of cytochrome c which might have a role in the dissociation of the complex has been probed by site-directed mutagenesis. The interface contains a cation-! interaction between F230 of cytochrome bc1 and R19 of cytochrome c, which is thought to provide the specificity to the interaction between the otherwise promiscuous partners. To analyse the role of this interaction pair in electron transfer, F230L and F230W mutants were used to measure direct electron transfer rates by flash photolysis and steady state kinetics. The findings indicate that another ! system can work as functional substitution of F230, while deleting the ! system has a deleterious effect on the complex formation. The inability of F230L to achieve the transient and steady state turnover rates as wild type protein indicates a scenario where the variant achieves an altered bound state with inefficient electron transfer pathways and higher edge-to-edge distance. The role of supernumerary subunit QCR6p in complex formation was investigated by steady state kinetics measurements. Subunit QCR6p does not interact directly with cytochrome c but is positioned in such a way that it could electrostatically steer cytochrome c in a reactive ensemble. The highly acidic and disordered N-terminus of QCR6p could interact with a patch of conserved lysine residues on cytochrome c. The role of subunit QCR6p has been assessed using QCR6p deleted cytochrome bc1 and a lysine variant of cytochrome c. The results show that QCR6p not only affects the kinetics of the interaction but is also important for the stability of cytochrome bc1. The kinetic and thermodynamic data obtained during this study provide evidence for the functional importance of non-catalytic cytochrome bc1 subunit QCR6p, show that the entropy driven interaction is indeed of low affinity and highly transient in nature and indicate that the interface is well suited to ensure the high turnover of the electron transfer chain where cytochrome c interacts with multiple partners using overlapping interfaces. The suggested role of the cation-! interaction as a highly specific interaction has been validated.
The analysis of biomolecular macrocomplexes requires certain preconditions to be fulfilled. The preparation of biomolecular samples usually results in low yields. Due to this constraint of low availability any method should provide a sufficient sensitivity to cope with typical sample amounts. Biomolecules also often show a reduced stability, i.e. a propensity for fragmentation upon ionisation, which requires reasonable soft methods for the investigation. Furthermore macromolecular complexes usually are composed by means of non-covalent interactions presenting additional demands on the softness. This holds true for specific complexes like protein-ligand or DNA double strand binding. For the formation of non-covalent, specific complexes the biomolecules’ native structure and environment are a basic prerequisite and hence crucial. Therefore it is desirable during analysis to keep the biomolecules in a native environment to preserve their structure and weak interactions. One suitable method for analysing biomolecules is mass spectrometry. Mass spectrometry is capable of high throughput screening as well as determining masses with high accuracy and high sensitivity. Especially since the availability of MALDI-MS and ESI-MS mass spectrometry evolved to a versatile tool to investigate biomolecular complexes. Both, MALDI- and ESI-MS are sufficiently soft methods to observe fragile biomolecules. Yet both methods have their advantages and disadvantages. During the recent years an alternative mass spectrometric approach has been developed in our group, termed LILBID-MS (Laser Induced Liquid Bead Ionisation/Desorption). In LILBID microdroplets of aqueous solution containing buffer, salt and further additives among the analyte molecules are injected into vacuum and irradiated one-by-one by mid-IR laser pulses. The absorption of the energy by the water leads to a rapid ablation of the preformed analyte ions. LILBID is highly tolerant for the addition of salts and detergents allowing to study biomolecular complexes in a native environment. As LILBID-MS is soft enough to avoid fragmentation, specific non-covalent complexes can be analysed directly from their native environment by this method. In addition dissociation can be induced on demand by increasing the laser intensity which allows for the study of subunit compositions. A further prominent property of LILBID is the possibility to study hydrophobic membrane proteins due to the tolerated use of detergents. During the course of this work, several instrumental improvements mostly concerning ion focussing and beam steering were introduced. Together with refinements of different modes of measurement the result is a significantly improved signal-to-noise ratio as well as a further improvement in sensitivity. In addition the accessible m/z range for a given flight time has been vastly increased. The new possibilities that LILBID now offers for the study of biomolecular complexes were investigated. The ability to detect specific binding in LILBID-MS was investigated by means of nucleic acids and their interaction with proteins. It could be shown that the stability of a 16bp dsDNA corresponds to that in solution phase regarding the dependency on concentration and type of the salts used. In addition a competitive experiment with the well-known transcription factor p50 was used to demonstrate the detection of sequence-specific binding with LILBID. The improved sensitivity allowed to detect single stranded DNA at nanomolar concentrations and even the 2686bp plasmid pUC19 could be easily detected without fragmentation using a concentration of only 80nM. In case of the transcription factor p63 the mass spectrometric analysis could help to identify a new model of activation and inhibition. For the first time known quarternary structures of membrane proteins like the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin and the potassium channel KcsA could be detected with mass spectrometry. For the light-driven proton pump proteorhodopsin the type and the concentration of the used detergents significantly influenced the stability of this protein as well as the preferred quarternary structure.
Der L-Carnitin/gamma-Butyrobetain Antiporter CaiT ist ein Mitglied der Betain/Carnitin/Cholin Transporter (BCCT) Familie. Sekundärtransporter der BCCT Familie transportieren Substrate, die eine positiv-geladene quartäre Ammoniumgruppe besitzen. CaiT besteht aus 504 Amiosäuren und besitzt ein moleculares Gewicht von etwa 56 kDa. In Enterobakterien wie Escherichia coli, Proteus mirabilis und Salmonella typhimurium wird die Expression des caiTABCDE Operons unter anaeroben Bedingungen induziert. Unter diesen Bedinungen ist CaiT der Haupttransporter des Betain-Derivates L-Carnitin. In Enterobakterien wird L-Carnitin unter anaeroben Bedingungen aufgenommen und dehydratisiert wobei Crotonobetain ensteht. Crotonobetain wird anschließend zum Endprodukt gamma-Butyrobetain reduziert. Gamma-Butyrobetain ist das Gegensubstrat, das aus der Zelle hinaustransportiert wird, wenn L-Carnitin in die Zelle aufgenommen wird. Der Austauschmechanismus von LCarnitin gegen gamma-Butyrobetain geschieht ohne das Vorhandensein eines elektrochemischen Gradients, d.h. CaiT ist sowohl H+- als auch Na+-unabhängig. Ein Ziel dieser Arbeit war es die drei-dimensionale (3D) Struktur von CaiT mittels Röntgenstrukturanalyse zu lösen. Weiterhin sollten mit Hilfe der 3D-Struktur und funktionellen Studien detailiertere Erkenntnisse über den kationenunabhängigen Antiportmechanismus von CaiT ermittelt werden. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die 3D-Röntgenkristallstrukturen von drei CaiT-Homologen der Enterobakterien P. mirabilis (PmCaiT), E. coli (EcCaiT) und S. typhimurium (StCaiT) mittels molekularem Ersatz (engl.: molecular replacement, MR) mit einem Alanin-Model des CaiT verwandten Na+/Glycinbetain Symporters BetP gelöst. PmCaiT konnte mit einer Auflösung von 2.3 Å gelöst werden. Das Protein kristallisierte in der Kristallraumgruppe H3, mit drei Molekülen in der asymmetrischen Einheit (engl.: asymmetric unit, AU). Die drei PmCaiT-Moleküle ordneten sich innerhalb der AU um eine kristallographische dreifach Symmetrieachse an. EcCaiT wurde mittels MR mit einem Alanin-Model von PmCaiT bei einer Auflösung von 3.5 Å gelöst. EcCaiT kristallisierte in der Kristallraumgruppe P32, ebenfalls mit drei Molekülen in der AU, jedoch ohne kristallographische Symmetry. Während der Verfeinerung des EcCaiT-Models wurde eine strenge dreifache nichtkristallographische Symmetry (engl.: non-crystallographic symmetry, NCS) angewandt. StCaiT, das ebenfalls mittels MR mit einem Alanin-Model von PmCaiT, aber bei einer Auflösung von 4.0 Å gelöst wurde, kristallisierte in der Kristallraumgruppe P65, ebenfalls mit drei StCaiT-Molekülen in der AU, ohne kristallographische Symmetry. Bei der Verfeinerung des StCaiT-Modells wurde wie bei EcCaiT eine strenge NCS angewandt. Da die Auflösung von 4.0 Å bei StCaiT zu niedrig ist um detailierte moleculare Erkenntnisse zu gewinnen, wurden Protein- sowie Substratinteraktionen nur an den Strukturen von PmCaiT und EcCaiT analysiert. Alle drei CaiT-Homologe weisen jedoch einen ähnlichen strukturellen Aufbau auf. In der Röntgenkristallstruktur bildet CaiT ein symmetrisches Trimer, das über ionische und polare Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Protomeren stabilisiert wird. Der trimere Oligomerisierungszustand von CaiT in Detergenzlösung sowie in zweidimensionalen Lipidmembrankristallen wurde bereits in früheren Arbeiten gezeigt. Jedes der drei CaiT-Protomere besteht aus zwölf Transmembranhelices (TMH), die N- und C-terminalen Domänen des Proteins befinden sich auf der cytoplasmatischen Seite. Zehn der TMH bilden zwei invertierte Wiederholungseinheiten aus jeweils fünf TMH. Die erste Einheit besteht aus den TMH 3 – 7, die invertierte zweite Einheit besteht aus den TMH 8 – 12. Beide Wiederholungseinheiten sind strukturell nahezu identisch und lassen sich fast vollständig übereinanderlegen, jedoch weisen die Aminosäuren der beiden Einheiten keine signifikante Sequenzidentität auf. Die ersten beiden Helices der Wiederholungseinheiten, die TMH 3 – 4 und die TMH 8 – 9, bilden ein antiparalleles vier-Helix-Bündel, in dem in CaiT zwei Substratbindestellen lokalisiert sind. Eine derartige Transporterarchitektur wurde erstmals in der Struktur des Na+/Alanin Symporters LeuTAa des thermophilen Bakteriums Aquifex aeolicus gezeigt. Bislang wurden, inklusive CaiT, sieben Sekundärtransporterstrukturen gelöst, die diese LeuT-Transporterarchitektur aufweisen. Ungewöhnlich dabei ist, dass diese sieben Sekundärtransporter fünf verschiedenen Transporterfamilien angehören und eine Verwandschaft auf Basis der Aminosäuren nicht zu finden ist. Da jedoch die tertiäre Struktur dieser Tansporter konserviert ist, kann davon ausgegangen werden, dass sie alle von einem Urprotein entstanden sind, welches zunächst aus fünf TMH bestanden haben muss. Im Laufe der Evolution hat sich das Urgen des Urproteins zunächst dupliziert und die weitere Evolution hat zwar die Aminosäuresequenz verändert und den Umweltbedingungen angepasst, jedoch ist die tertiäre Struktur erhalten geblieben. Da sich die tertiäre Struktur der sieben Sekundärtransporter so stark ähnelt, ist zu vermuten, dass auch der Transportmechanismus ähnlich, jedoch nicht identisch ist. Nach dem strukturellen Aufbau der Transporter, der Lage der Substratbindestellen in den jeweiligen Transportern und der Tatsache, dass es sich bei diesen Proteinen um Membranproteine handelt, wurde ein Transportmechanismus aufgestellt, in dem die Bindestelle des zu transportierende Substrats alternierend zu beiden Seiten der Membran zugänglich ist, ohne jedoch jemals den Substratweg innerhalb des Proteins vollständig zu öffnen. Dieser Mechanismus wurde als “alternating access mechanism” beschrieben. Anhand der unterschiedlichen Zustände, in denen einige der Transporter kristallisierten, kann abgeleitet werden, welche Konformationsänderungen erforderlich sind um das Substrat von einer Seiter der Membran auf die andere zu transportieren. Bisher kristallisierten einzelne der sechs Transporter in der nach außen gerichteten offenen Form, der nach außen gerichteten Form, in der die Substratbindestelle jedoch nicht mehr zugänglich ist, in einer Form, die keine Öffnungspräferenz der Substratbindestelle zu einer Seite der Membran hat und in der nach innen gerichteten Form, in der die Substratbindestelle jedoch nicht geöffnet ist. CaiT kristallisierte in der noch fehlenden Konformation, der nach innen gerichteten Form, in der die Substratbindestelle zugänglich ist. Mit dieser noch fehlenend Konformation kann der Transportzyklus des “alternating access mechanism” vollständig beschrieben werden. Alle drei CaiT-Homologe kristallisierten in der nach innen gerichteten, offenen Konformation. Im Gegensatz zur EcCaiT-Struktur kristallisierte PmCaiT in der substratungebundenen Form. In der StCaiT-Struktur konnte aufgrund der niedrigen Auflösung kein Substrat nachgewiesen werden. In der EcCaiT-Struktur sind zwei gamma-Butyrobetain-Moleküle gebunden. Das erste Molekül wurde in der zentralen Substratbindestelle, der sogenannten Tryptophan-Box bestehend aus vier Tryptophanen, im Zentrum des Protein lokalisiert. Das zweite gamma-Butyrobetain-Molekül wurde in einer Vertiefung an der extrazellulären Proteinoberfläche gefunden. Beide Substrate werden hauptsächlich über Kation-Pi-Interaktionen zwischen der positiv geladenen quatären Ammoniumgruppe des Substrats und des Pi-Elektronensystems der Tryptophane in den jeweiligen Bindestellen gebunden. Eine besondere Eigenschaft von CaiT ist der H+- bzw. Na+-unabhängige Substrattransport. Die CaiT-Struktur erklärt warum kein zusätzliches Kation benötigt wird um Substrat zu binden oder zu transportieren. In der EcCaiT-Struktur ist eine wichtige polare nicht-bindende Interaktion zwischen der Carboxylgruppe des gamma-Butyrobetains und dem Schwefelatom eines Methionins in der zentrale Bindestelle zu erkennen. Dieses Methionin ist konserviert in den prokaryotischen CaiTs und in den Na+-unabhängigen eukaryotischen L-Carnitin Transportern (OCTN), jedoch ist es nicht konserviert im Na+-abhängigen verwandten Glycinbetain Transporter BetP. In BetP ist diese Position des Methionins durch ein Valin ersetzt. Die Mutation des Methionins in CaiT zu Valin ermöglicht zwar immernoch die H+- bzw. Na+-unabhängige Bindung des Substrates durch die Tryptophan-Box, jedoch ist der Substrattransport nahezu vollständig zerstört. Eine derart wichtige Substratkoordinierende Funktion des Schwefelatoms eines Methionins wurde bisher nicht beschrieben. Eine weitere Stelle, die in H+- bzw. Na+-abhängigen Transporter mit H+ bzw. Na+ besetzt ist, ist in CaiT von einem positiv geladenen Arginin eingenommen. Eine positive Ladung an dieser Stelle stabilisiert den Bereich im Protein in der Nähe der zentralen Substratbindestelle. Die Mutation des Arginins zu Glutamat in CaiT erzielt eine vollständige Inaktivierung des Substrattansports. Durch Zugabe von Na+ im Transportansatz kann die Substrattransportaktivität der Glutamat-Mutante jedoch teilweise zurückerlangt werden. Diese eben beschriebenen Aminosäurereste in den beiden Stellen des Proteins erklären die Kationenunabhängigkeit von CaiT. Die Aktivierung des Antiportmechanismus in CaiT wurde mit Hilfe von Bindungsstudien an rekonstituiertem Protein ermittelt. Diese Messungen ergaben für das Wildtypprotein ein sigmoidales Substratbindungsverhalten, was auf ein positiv-kooperatives Bindungsverhalten hindeutet. Die beiden Substratbindestellen im Protein sowie die beiden unterschiedlichen Substrate, L-Carnitin und gamma-Butyrobetain, lassen auf einen heterotropen positiv-kooperativen Bindungs- und einen allosterisch regulierten Transportmechanismus schließen. Bei diesem Mechanismus erhöht die Bindung eines Substrats in der regulatorischen Bindestelle durch induzierte Konformationsänderungen die Affinität eines anderen Substrats in einer weiteren Substratbindestelle. Die regulatorische Bindestelle in CaiT befindet sich an der extrazellulären Proteinoberfläche. Eine Schwächung der Substrataffinität in dieser Bindestelle durch Einführung einer Mutation, verstärkt das sigmoidale Substratbindungsverhalten und hat einen negativen Einfluss auf den Substrattransport. Durch die in dieser Arbeit gelösten 3D-Röntgenkristallstrukturen der zwei CaiT-Homologen, PmCaiT und EcCaiT, sowie den durchgeführten funktionellen Studien sowohl an Wildtypprotein wie auch an Mutanten konnte ein L-Carnitin/gamma-Butyrobetain Antiport-Mechanismus für CaiT vorzuschlagen werden.
The increasing resistance of almost all pathogenic bacteria to antibiotics (multidrug resistance) causes a severe threat to public health. The mechanisms underlying multidrug resistance include the induced over expression of multidrug transporters which extrude a variety of lipophilic and toxic substrates in an energy dependent fashion through the membrane out of the cell. These proteins are found in all transporter families. The work described in this thesis is dedicated to drug-proton antiporters from the small multidrug resistance (SMR) family. These efflux pumps with just four transmembrane helices per monomer are so far the smallest transporters discovered. Their oligomeric state, topology, three dimensional structure, catalytic cycle and transport mechanism are still rather controversial. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to directly address these questions for the small multidrug resistance proteins Halobacterium salinarium Hsmr and Escherichia coli (E. coli) EmrE using a number of biophysical methods such as NMR, transport assays, mass spectrometry and analytical ultracentrifugation. Especially the work on Hsmr has been challenging due to the halophilic nature of this protein. In Chapter 1, key questions and the most important biophysical techniques are introduced followed by Material and Methods in Chapter 2. Depending on experimental requirements, cell free or ‘classical’ in vivo expression has been used for this thesis. Cell free expression as an option for the production of small multidrug transporters has been explored in Chapter 3. It has been possible to produce the SMR family members Hsmr, EmrE, TBsmr and YdgF in vitro. The expression of Hsmr was investigated in more detail under different experimental conditions. Hsmr was either refolded from precipitate or maintained in a soluble form during expression in the presence of detergents and liposomes. Furthermore, amino acids for which no auxotrophic strains were available could be labelled successfully. This expression system has been also used for preparing labelled samples of EmrE as described in Chapter 9. In vivo in E. coli expression of Hsmr, as described in Chapter 4, provided large amounts of proteins if fermenter production was used. Uniform labelling and selective unlabelling with stable isotopes (13C, 15N) for NMR spectroscopy was achieved in vivo in a more efficient and cost effective manner than using the cell free approach for this protein. Hsmr could be purified successfully from both in vitro and in vivo expression media. Hsmr is expressed in vivo and in vitro with N-terminal formylation. The Nterminal formylation is unstable and Hsmr in the presence of low salt concentrations was amenable to N-terminal degradation. It was found that Hsmr shows longest stability in Fos-ß-choline® 12 and sodium dodecyl sulphate, but best reconstitution conditions were found, when dodecyl maltoside is used and exchanged with Escherichia coli lipids. A molar protein lipid ratio of 1 to 100, amenable to solid state nuclear magnetic resonance, has been achieved. Sample homogeneity was shown by freeze fracture electron microscopy. The oligomeric state of Hsmr in detergent has been assessed by SDS PAGE, blue native PAGE, size exclusion chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation and laser induced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry (LILBID) as described in Chapter 5. A concentration and detergent dependent monomer-oligomer equilibrium has been found by all methods. The activity of Hsmr under the sample preparation conditions used here was shown using radioactive and fluorescence binding as well as fluorescence and electrochemical transport assays (Chapter 6). For transport studies, a stable pH gradient was generated by co-reconstitution of Hsmr with bacteriorhodopsin and subsequent sample illumination. Based on the observed long term stability of Hsmr in Fos-ß-choline® 12 and sodium dodecyl sulphate, liquid state NMR experiments were attempted in order to assess the correct folding of Hsmr in detergent micelles (Chapter 7). 1D proton and 2D HSQC spectra of U-15N Hsmr revealed a poor spectral dispersion, low resolution and only a small number of peaks. These are at least partly due to long rotational correlation times of the large protein detergent complex. This problem has been overcome by applying solid-state NMR to Hsmr reconstituted into E. coli lipids (Chapter 8). Uniform 13C labelled samples were prepared and two dimensional proton-driven spin diffusion and double quantum-single quantum correlation spectra were acquired successfully. Unfortunately, the spectral resolution was not yet sufficient for further structural studies. Reasons for the observed linebroadening could be structural heterogeneity or molecular motions which interfere with the NMR timescale. Therefore, the protein mobility has been probed using static 2H solid state NMR on Ala-d3-Hsmr. It could be shown, that parts of Hsmr are remarkably mobile in the membrane and that this mobility can be limited by the addition of the substrate ethidium bromide. Ethidium bromide as well as tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) is typical multidrug transporter substrates. The membrane interaction of TPP+ in DMPC membranes has been resolved by 1H MAS NMR. It was found that it penetrates into the interface region of the lipid bilayers and therefore behaves like many other transporter substrates adding to the hypothesis that the membrane could act as a pre-sorting filter. Finally, Chapter 9 is dedicated to the characterisation of the essential and highly conserved residue Glu-14 in EmrE by solid-state NMR. In order to avoid spectral overlap, the single Glu EmrE E25A mutant was chosen instead of the wildtype. The protein has been produced in vitro to take advantage of reduced isotope scrambling in the cell free expression system as verified by analytical NMR spectroscopy. Correct labelling of EmrE was tested by MALDI-TOF and solid-state NMR. The dimeric state of DDM solubilised EmrE has been probed by LILBID. The labelled protein was reconstituted into E. coli lipids to ensure a native membrane environment. Activity was determined by measuring ethidium bromide transport. Freeze fracture EM revealed very homogeneous protein incorporation even after many days of MAS NMR experiments. 2D 13C double quantum filtered experiments were used to obtain chemical shift and lineshape information of Glu-14 in EmrE. Two distinct populations were found with backbone chemical shift differences of 4 - 6 ppm which change upon substrate binding. These findings indicate a structural asymmetry at the assumed dimerisation interface and are discussed in the context of a model for shared substrate/proton binding. These studies represent the first successful use of cell free expression to prepare labelled membrane proteins for solid-state NMR and allow for the first time an NMR insight into the binding pocket of a multidrug efflux pump.
In this thesis, the structure of the C-terminal domain of presenilin-1, the catalytic component of the y-secretase complex, is investigated by NMR spectroscopy. The ysecretase complex has a definitive role in the pathogenic development of Alzheimer's disease, in that it mediates the cleavage of aprecursor to create the amyloid ß peptide. Aggregates of amyloid ß which form amyloid plaques are the most overt clinieal feature observed in the post-mortem brains of Alzheimer's patient. In addition, many of the mutations found in the aggressive early onset familial Alzheimer's disease have been linked to presenilin-1, highlighting its importance in disease progression and deeming it an important target for investigation. One of the greatest challenges for the structural investigation of the y-secretase components is their low expression yields in cell-based systems. We therefore applied continuous-exchange cell-free expression to obtain sufficient amounts of protein for our structural studies. An added benefit of the cell-free expression system is the freedom to incorporate any desired combination of stable-isotope labels directly into sampies. We were therefore able to develop a labeling scheme which targets the amino acid composition of transmembrane a-helices, allowing us to simplify an assignment procedure whieh tends to be cumbersome and diffieult for most a-helical transmembrane proteins. The y-secretase complex is a member of the intramembrane cleaving proteases which, as their name implies, cleave their transmembrane substrates within the bilayer. Single particle analysis of the y-secretase (1) as weil as crystal structures of rhomboid (2) and S2P (3) have revealed the presence of hydrophilie po res within the membrane where catalysis occurs. In light of evidence that certain elements of CTF reside in close proximity or even contribute to the formation of the hydrophilic pore, we chose to study the structure of CTF in mieelles, whieh may be better suited to accommodate CTF in isolation as compared with solid membranes in the absence of the other y-secretase components. The structure of CTF was solved to 1.7 A (backbone r.m.s.d) and revealed the presence of unusual features, including a partially membrane-spanning helix which situates the catalytic asparte at its N-terminus in what would be the center of the membrane where catalysis is proposed to occur, as weil as a severely kinked helix which is partially embedded beneath the surface of the membrane (P6). Interestingly, similar features have been observed in the crystal structure of the GlpG rhomboid. In addition, a soluble helix was found in the long N-terminal loop of CTF which until now has been described as unstructured. The first part of the thesis is designed to provide an introduction to Alzheimer's disease, the role of y-secretase and its presenilin-l catalytic component in disease progression, as weil as cell-free expression and liquid-state NMR techniques involved in the structural investigation of membrane proteins. In chapter 2, the reader is familiarized with the history, the clinical manifestation, and biochemical features of Alzheimer's disease. The chapter goes further to describe the role of the y-secretase complex and its individual components in disease progression and substrate processing. Chapter 3 focuses more specifically on presenilin-l in the context of the newly emerging class of intramembrane proteases. In chapter 4, attention is shifted to the cell-free expression system with special focus on the expression of membrane proteins, and chapter 5 explores the various liquid-state NMR techniques that were required for the characterization of CTF. The second part of the thesis is cumulative and contains original research, method, and review articles that were produced during the course of study. Chapter 6 explores the various techniques and innovations used to study membrane proteins using continuous exchange cell-free expression coupled with NMR spectroscopy. In chapter 7, a new technique, transmembrane segment targeted labeling, is described as a tool that facilitates the backbone assignment of transmembrane proteins which display severe overlap in NMR spectra. Chapter 8 presents the novel NMR structure of the C-terminal fragment of presenilin-l solved in SOS micelles.
NK cells are part of the innate immune system, and are important players in the body’s first defence line against virus-infected and malignantly transformed cells. While T cells recognize neoplastic cells in an MHC-restricted fashion, NK cells do not require prior sensitization and education about the target. In leukemia and lymphoma patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation not only T cells but also NK cells have been found to mediate potent graft-versus-tumor effects. Hence, autologous or donor-derived NK cells hold great promise for cancer immunotherapy. Since the generation of highly purified NK cell products for clinical applications is labor-intensive and time consuming, established human NK cell lines such as NK-92 are also being considered for clinical protocols. NK-92 cells display phenotypic and functional characteristics similar to activated primary NK cells. While NK-92 cells are highly cytotoxic towards malignant cells of hematologic origin, they do not affect healthy human tissues. NK-92 cells can be expanded under GMP-compliant conditions, and can therefore be provided in sufficient numbers with defined phenotypic characteristics for clinical applications. Safety of NK-92 cells for adoptive immunotherapy was already shown in two phase I/II clinical trials...
ABCB9 is a peptide transporter belonging to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter subfamily B. Due to its high sequence identity to the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) the protein was named TAP-like (TAPL). The primary aim of this PhD thesis was the functional characterization of the TAPL transport complex. Despite the lack of TAPL function in the classical MHC class I pathway an involvement of TAPL in antigen presentation was still suggested. Apart from the crucial role of TAP for peptide delivery into the ER, TAP-independent translocation pathways in professional antigen presenting cells (pAPC) have been proposed, but not identified so far. Remarkably, TAPL mRNA and protein expression is strongly induced during differentiation of monocytes to immature and mature dendritic cells. This result was confirmed in the promonocytic cell line THP-1, which was used as a model system for monocyte to macrophage differentiation. By using quantitative immunofluorescence microscopy and subcellular fractionation, TAPL was detected in the lysosomal compartment co-localizing with the lysosome associated membrane protein 2 (LAMP-2) thus excluding the ER-localization formerly reported. Furthermore, by in vitro assays, a TAPL-specific and ATPdependent translocation of peptides into isolated lysosomes was demonstrated. Hence, TAPL is a candidate mediating peptide transport in alternative antigen presentation pathways in pAPCs. The presence of an extra N-terminal transmembrane domain (TMD0) lacking sequence homology to any known protein distinguishes TAPL from most other ABC transporters of its subfamily. By dissecting the TAPL translocation complex into its four putative transmembrane helices containing TMD0 and the core complex, distinct functions to the core complex and TMD0 were assigned. The core-TAPL complex composed of six predicted transmembrane helices and the nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) was expressed transiently in HeLa or stably in Raji cells. Crude membranes containing core-TAPL showed the same peptide transport activity as wt-TAPL demonstrating that the six core helices and the NBD are sufficient for peptide transport. This result also shows that the core transport complex is correctly targeted to and assembled in the membrane. Strikingly, in contrast to the wt transporter, the core complex localizes only partially to lysosomes and is mistargeted to the plasma membrane as observed by immunofluorescence microscopy and confirmed biochemically by cell surface biotinylation. Thus, a crucial role for TMD0 in proper subcellular targeting can be postulated. The vast majority of biological processes are mediated by protein complexes, hence characterization of such protein-protein-interactions is essential for understanding protein function on the cellular level. To identify interaction partners of TAPL, the transporter was isolated by tandem affinity purification. By tandem mass spectrometry the membrane proteins LAMP-1 and LAMP-2 were deciphered as specific proteins interacting with wt-TAPL. Notably, core-TAPL lacks these interactions indicating a role for TMD0 in recruiting other proteins. These results were verified for endogenous TAPL by co-immunoprecipitation. Using cells deficient in LAMP-1 and/or in LAMP-2 an escort function for the LAMP proteins was excluded. Very importantly, the physiological function of the LAMP-1and LAMP-2 interaction with TAPL is an increase in stability, since in their absence half-life of TAPL is drastically reduced.
In Philadelphia Chromosome (Ph) positive ALL and CML the fusion between BCR and ABL leads to the BCR/ABL fusion proteins, which induces the leukemic phenotype because of the constitutive activation of multiple signaling pathways down-stream to the aberrant BCR/ABL fusion tyrosine kinase. Targeted inhibition of BCR/ABL by ABL-kinase inhibitors induces apoptosis in BCR/ABL transformed cells and leads to complete remission in Ph positive leukemia patients. However, a large portion of patients with advanced Ph+ leukemia relapse and acquire resistance. Kinase domain (KD) mutations interfering with inhibitor binding represent the major mechanism of acquired resistance in patients with Ph+ leukemia. Tetramerization of BCR/ABL through the N-terminal coiled-coil region (CC) of BCR is essential for the ABL-kinase activation. Targeting the CC-domain forces BCR/ABL into a monomeric conformation, reduces its kinase activity and increases the sensitivity for Imatinib. Here we show that i.) targeting the tetramerization by a peptide representing the Helix-2 of the CC efficiently reduced the autophosphorylation of both WT BCR/ABL and its mutants; ii.) Helix-2 inhibited the transformation potential of BCR/ABL independently of the presence of mutations; iii.) Helix-2 efficiently cooperated with Imatinib as revealed by their effects on the transformation potential and the factor-independence related to BCR/ABL with the exception of mutant T315I. These findings suggest that BCR/ABL harboring the T315I mutation have a transformation potential which is at least partially independent from its kinase activity. Targeted inhibition of BCR/ABL by small molecule inhibitors reverses the transformation potential of BCR/ABL. We definitively proved that targeting the tetramerization of BCR/ABL mediated by the N-terminal coiled-coil domain (CC) using competitive peptides, representing the Helix-2 of the CC, represents a valid therapeutic approach for treating Ph+ leukemia. To further develop competitive peptides for targeting BCR/ABL, we created a membrane permeable Helix-2 peptide (MPH-2) by fusing the Helix-2 peptide with a peptide transduction tag. In this study, we report that the MPH-2: (i) interacted with BCR/ABL in vivo; (ii) efficiently inhibited the autophosphorylation of BCR/ABL; (iii) suppressed the growth and viability of Ph+ leukemic cells; and (iv) was efficiently transduced into mononuclear cells (MNC) in an in vivo mouse model. The T315I mutation confers resistance against all actually approved ABL-kinase inhibitors and competitive peptides. It seems not only to decrease affinity for kinase inhibitors but to confer additional features to the leukemogenic potential of BCR/ABL. To determine the role of T315I in resistance to the inhibition of oligomerization and in the leukemogenic potential of BCR/ABL, we investigated its influence on loss-of-function mutants with regard to the capacity to mediate factor-independence. Thus we studied the effects of T315I on BCR/ABL mutants lacking functional domains in the BCR portion indispensable for the oncogenic activity of BCR/ABL such as the N-terminal coiled coil (CC), the tyrosine phosphorylation site Y177 and the serine/threonine kinase domain (ST), as well as on the ABL portion of BCR/ABL (#ABL-T315I) with or without the inhibitory SH3 (delta SH3-ABL) domain. Here we report that i.) T315I restored the capacity to mediate factor independence of oligomerization_deficient p185BCR/ABL; ii.) resistance of p185-T315I against inhibition of the oligomerization depends on the phosphorylation at Y177; iii.) autophosphorylation at Y177 is not affected by the oligomerization inhibition, but phosphorylation at Y177 of endogenous BCR parallels the effects of T315I; iv.) the effects of T315I are associated with an intact ABL_kinase activity; v.) the presence of T315I is associated with an increased ABL_kinase activity also in mutants unable to induce Y177 phosphorylation of endogenous BCR; vi.) there is no direct relationship between the ABL-kinase activity and the capacity to mediate factor_independence induced by T315I as revealed by the #ABL-T315I mutant, which was unable to induce Y177 phosphorylation of BCR only in the presence of the SH3 domain. In contrast to its physiological counterpart c-ABL, the BCR/ABL kinase is constitutively activated, inducing the leukemic phenotype. The N-terminus of c-ABL (Cap region) contributes to the regulation of its kinase function. It is myristoylated, and the myristate residue binds to a hydrophobic pocket in the kinase domain known as the myristoyl binding pocket in a process called “capping”, which results in an auto-inhibited conformation. Because the cap region is replaced by the N-terminus of BCR, BCR/ABL “escapes” this auto-inhibition. Allosteric inhibition by myristate “mimics”, such as GNF-2, is able to inhibit unmutated BCR/ABL, but not the BCR/ABL that harbors the “gatekeeper” mutation T315I. Here we investigated the possibility of increasing the efficacy of allosteric inhibition by blocking BCR/ABL oligomerization. We demonstrate that inhibition of oligomerization was able not only to increase the efficacy of GNF-2 on unmutated BCR/ABL, but also to overcome the resistance of BCR/ABL-T315I to allosteric inhibition. These results strongly suggest that the response to allosteric inhibition by GNF-2 is inversely related to the degree of oligomerization of BCR/ABL. Taken together these data suggest that the inhibition of tetramerization inhibits BCR/ABL-mediated transformation and can contribute to overcome Imatinib-resistance. The study provides the first evidence that an efficient peptide transduction system facilitates the employ-ment of competitive peptides to target the oligomerization interface of BCR/ABL in vivo. Further the data show that T315I confers additional leukemogenic activity to BCR/ABL, which might explain the clinical behavior of patients with BCR/ABL -T315I-positive blasts. In summary, our observations establish a new approach for the molecular targeting of BCR/ABL and its resistant mutants represented by the combination of oligomerization and allosteric inhibitors.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), also called Complex IV of the aerobic respiratory chain, is located in the plasma membrane of prokaryotes and in the inner mitochondrial membrane of eukaryotes. The redox energy of dioxygen reduction is used to translocate protons across the membrane resulting in an electrochemical proton gradient. The generated proton gradient is exploited by the adenosine-5’-triphosphate synthase. In this work, bacterial four-subunit aa3-Type CcO from Paracoccus denitrificans (ATCC 13543, 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO) was used for analyses. 1) The recombinant homologously produced 4 SU-wt CcO (4 SU-wt rec CcO) was functionally compared with the native 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO. The 4 SU-wt rec CcO showed functional deficiencies as determined by UV-vis spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies. Total X-ray Reflection Fluorescence measurements show in both wild type CcOs the same ratio of the redoxactive Fe and Cu (2 Fe : 3 Cu) indicating full complement of the functional metals. If CcO contains only subunit I and II, it loses its functional integrity during continuous turnover activity. The importance of subunit III for integrity of CcO was demonstrated using 2 SU-wt rec CcO. Crystallisation trials of suicide inactivated 2 SU-wt rec CcOs have been ineffective using standard crystallisation conditions. Crystals of active 2 SU-wt rec CcO (positive control) have been obtained under these conditions and this result indicates possible structural changes in suicide inactivated 2 SU-wt rec CcO. The structure of active 2 SU-wt rec CcO was determined to 2.25 Å resolution. 2) Terminal oxidases require four electrons for the cleavage of the dioxygen bond (O=O). In general, the catalytic cycle of CcO is described by the electron input and thus by the different redox states of the metal centres: the O, E, R, P and F state. The two-electron reduced R intermediate is able to donate four electrons for dioxygen reduction forming the P state. The P intermediate is an oxoferryl state implying the lack of an electron for the R -> P transition, because the metal centres can only provide three electrons (Fe+II forms Fe+IV and Cu+II forms Cu+I). The P state, where the dioxygen bond is already broken, shows an oxoferryl state (FeIV=O2-) and a nearby tyrosine is proposed to form a tyrosyl radical representing the donor of the missing electron. H2O2-induced artificial intermediates provide the opportunity to investigated different catalytic intermediates in detail. Mixing equimolar amounts of H2O2 to CcO in the O state induces the "two-electron" reduced PH state at high pH and the electronically equal "two-electron" reduced F• H state at low pH. The addition of an excess amount of H2O2 leads to the three-electron reduced FH state. Functional studies using the 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO have demonstrated a bound peroxide (O- - O-) intermediate during the catalytic cycle. Using EPR it was previously shown that Y167 hosts a radical species in PH/F• H state which suggests that Y167 could provide this "missing electron". While X-ray structural models of CcO and Fourier-transformed infrared (FTIR) measurements of oxygenated ("pulsed") 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO suggest a bound peroxide in the O state, UV-vis and EPR spectroscopic studies indicate that other intermediates may also contain such peroxide species. Equimolar and excess amounts of H2O2 induce the PH/F• H and FH states, respectively and catalase treatment of the FH state leads, contrary to the natural direction of the catalytic cycle, to the apparent transition of the FH -> PH/F• H states, which is accompanied by reappearance of an EPR signal from the Y167• radical. The novel PFH/F• FH states are presented here and we postulate that the FH state hosts a superoxide (or peroxide) adduct at CuB in the binuclear site. In addition, the novel P10 state is also introduced having a maximum at lambda = 612 nm in the difference absorption spectrum (minus the O state). The P10 state is induced by mixing CcO in the O state with a pH 10 buffer. This pH 10 induced state resembles standard P states such as PCO, PH and PR. However, the P10 state evolves out of the O state without addition of reduction equivalents. Using EPR spectroscopy it was shown that Y167 hosts a radical species in the P10 state such as in the PH state. In summary, all functional data presented here provide evidence for a peroxide bound during the O state. Finally, a new model for the natural catalytic cycle is proposed. If the O state contains a peroxide, it is also likely that the E and R state contain this species. Even the oxoferryl intermediates P and F states may complex a peroxide at CuB in the binuclear site. 3) The amino acid residue Y167, which hosts the radical in the PH/F•H states, is not directly part of the binuclear site of CcO. For identification of the primary electron donor, two tryptophan variants of CcO, W272F and W164F, which are located nearby the binuclear site, were produced. Evidence is provided that W272 is a kinetically fast electron donor for the O2 molecule. The electron is replenished by Y167, or probably by Y280 in the natural cycle. The Y167 radical is detectable by EPR spectroscopy after treatment with equimolar amounts of H2O2 in the active variant W164F, but is absent in the inactive variant W272F. 4) CcO contains two proton conducting pathways, the D- and the K-pathway. Proteoliposomes of the variants H28A and D30N, mutations located at the entrance of the D-pathway, both show the identical proton pumping activity as the 4 SU-wt rec CcO (pumped H+/e- = 1). The variant N113D shows abolished proton pumping (pumped H+/e- = 0), but a relative high cytochrome c oxidation activity (63 %). G196D displays no cytochrome c oxidation and proton pumping activity. Overall, the addition or removal of a negative charge within the D-pathway such as in D124N, N131D, N113D and G196D leads to a decoupled phenotype indicating the high degree of electrostatic coupling in CcO.
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the key players in signal perception and transduction and one of the currently most important class of drug targets. An example of high pharmacological relevance is the human endothelin (ET) system comprising two rhodopsin-like GPCRs, the endothelin A (ETA) and the endothelin B (ETB) receptor. Both receptors are major modulators in cardiovascular regulation and show striking diversities in biological responses affecting vasoconstriction and blood pressure regulation as well as many other physiological processes. Numerous disorders are associated with ET dysfunction and ET antagonism is considered an efficient treatment of diseases like heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, artherosclerosis and even cancer. This study exemplifies strategies and approaches for the preparative scale synthesis of GPCRs in individual cell-free (CF) systems based on E. coli, a newly emerging and promising technique for the production of even very difficult membrane proteins. The preparation of high quality samples in sufficient amounts is still a major bottleneck for the structural determination of the ET receptors. Heterologous overexpression has been a challenge now for decades but extensive studies with conventional cell-based systems had only limited success. A central milestone of this study was the development of efficient preparative scale expression protocols of the ETA receptor in qualities sufficient for structural analysis by using individual CF systems. Newly designed optimization strategies, the implementation of a variety of CF expression modes and the development of specific quality control assays finally resulted in the production of several milligrams of ETA receptor per one millilitre of reaction mixture. The versatility of CF expression was extensively used to modulate GPCR sample quality by modification of the solubilization environment with detergents and lipids in a variety of combinations at different stages of the production process. Downstream processing procedures of CF synthesized GPCRs were systematically optimized and sample properties were analysed with respect to homogeneity, protein stability and receptor ligand binding competence. Evaluation was accomplished by an array of complementary and specifically modified techniques. Depending on its hydrophobic environment, CF production of the ETA receptor resulted in non-aggregated, monodisperse forms with sufficient long-term stability and high degrees of secondary structure thermostability. The obtained results document the CF production of the ETA receptor in two different modes as an example of a class A GPCR in ligand-binding competent and non-aggregated form in quantities sufficient for structural approaches. The presented strategy could serve as basic guideline for the production of related receptors in similar systems.
Succinate:quinone oxidoreductases (SQORs) are integral membrane protein complexes, which couple the two-electron oxidation of succinate to fumarate (succinate → fumarate + 2H+ + 2e-) to the two-electron reduction of quinone to quinol (quinone + 2H+ + 2e- → quinol) as well as catalyzing the opposite reaction, the reduction of fumarate by quinol. In mitochondria and some aerobic bacteria, succinate:ubiquinone reductase, also known as complex II of the aerobic respiratory chain or as succinate dehydrogenase from the tricarboxylic acid (TCA or Krebs) cycle, catalyzes the oxidation of succinate by ubiquinone, which is mildly exergonic under standart conditions and not directly associated with energy storage in the form of a transmembrane electrochemical proton potential (Δp). Gram-positive bacteria do not contain ubiquinone but rather menaquinone, a quinone with significantly lower oxidation-reduction (“redox”) midpoint potential. In these cases, the catalyzed oxidation of succinate by quinone is endergonic under standard conditions. Consequently, these bacteria face a thermodynamic problem in supporting the catalysis of this reaction in vivo. Based on experimental evidence obtained on whole cells and purified membranes, it had previously been proposed that the SQR from Gram-positive bacteria supports this reaction at the expense of the protonmotive force, Δp. Nonetheless, it has been argued that the observed Δp dependence is not associated specifically with the activity of SQR because the occurrence of artifacts in experiments with bacterial membranes and whole cells can not be fully excluded. Clearly, definitive insight into the mechanism of catalysis of this intriguing reaction required a corresponding functional characterization of an isolated, membranebound SQR from a Gram-positive bacterium. The first aim of the present work addresses the question if the general feasibility of the energetically uphill electron transfer from succinate to menaquinone is associated specifically to a single enzyme complex, the SQR. The prerequisite to achieve this goal was stable preparation of this enzyme.
The glycine receptor (GlyR) is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter receptor in spinal cord and brainstem. Heteropentameric GlyRs are clustered and anchored at inhibitory postsynaptic sites by the binding of the large intracellular loop between transmembrane domains 3 and 4 of the GlyRbeta subunit (GlyRbeta-loop) to the cytoplasmic scaffolding protein gephyrin. GlyRs are also cotransported with gephyrin along microtubules in the anterograde and retrograde direction due to the binding of gephyrin to microtubule-associated motor proteins. Additionally, GlyRs undergo lateral diffusion in the plasma membrane from extrasynaptic to synaptic sites and vice versa. Since its discovery, gephyrin has remained for many years the only binding partner interacting directly with the GlyRbeta subunit. In an attempt to elucidate further mechanisms involved in GlyR function and regulation at inhibitory postsynaptic sites, a proteomic screen for putative binding partners to the GlyRbeta loop was performed. Three proteins were identified as putative interactors. In this thesis, the interaction between these putative binding proteins and the GlyRbeta subunit was analyzed and characterized. Binding studies with glutathione-S-transferase fusion proteins revealed that all putative binding proteins, Syndapin (Sdp), Vacuolar Protein Sorting 35 (Vps35) and Neurobeachin (Nbea), interact specifically with the GlyRbeta loop. The Sdp family of proteins are F-BAR and SH3 domain containing proteins. Inmmunocytochemical experiments showed that SdpI as well as the isoforms SdpII-S and SdpIIL colocalize with the full-length GlyRbeta subunit in a mammalian cell expression system. In cultured spinal cord neurons, a partial colocalization of endogenous SdpI with several excitatory and inhibitory synaptic markers was demonstrated. Mapping experiments using deletion mutants narrowed the SdpI binding site down to 22 amino acids. Peptide competition experiments confirmed the specificity of the interaction between SdpI and this sequence of the GlyRbeta subunit. Point mutation analysis revealed a SH3-proline rich domain dependent interaction between SdpI and the GlyRbeta subunit, respectively. In addition, binding studies in mammalian cells showed that both splice variants of SdpII as well as SdpI interact with the GlyR scaffolding protein gephyrin. Although the SdpI and gephyrin binding sites do not overlap, protein competition studies revealed that interaction of the E-domain of gephyrin with the GlyRbeta loop interferes with SdpI binding. Since SdpI is a dynamin binding protein involved in vesicle endocytosis and recycling pathways, a possible function of SdpI in the regulation of GlyR synaptic distribution was investigated. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments confirmed a SdpI-GlyR association in the vesicle-enriched fraction of rat spinal cord tissue. Immunocytochemical studies of SdpI knock out mice showed that the clustering and distribution of GlyRs in the brain stem is unchanged. However, acute down-regulation of SdpI in rat spinal cord neurons by viral shRNA expression led to a reduction in the number and size of GlyR clusters, an effect that could be rescued upon shRNA-resistant SdpI overexpression. Further immunocytochemical analysis of the localization of gephyrin, the gamma2 subunit of the type A gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor (GABAARgamma2 subunit) and the vesicular inhibitory amino acid transporter (VIAAT) under SdpI knock-down conditions showed that both the number and average size of the gamma2-subunit containing GABAA receptor clusters were significantly reduced in spinal cord neurons. In contrast to GlyR and GABAARgamma2 immunoreactivity, the number and average size of gephyrin and VIAAT clusters were barely reduced upon SdpI downregulation. These results suggest that SdpI has a role in GlyR trafficking that can be compensated by other syndapin isoforms or other trafficking pathways. Furthermore, SdpI might be required for the clusters of GlyRs and gamma2-subunit containing GABAARs in spinal cord and brainstem. Vps35 is the core protein of the retromer complex, which mediates the endosome to Golgi apparatus retrieval of different types of receptors in mammals and yeast. Here, protein-protein interaction assays revealed for the first time that Vps35 interacts directly with the GlyRbeta loop as well as with gephyrin. The generation of specific Vps35 antibodies allowed to determine the distribution of this protein in the central nervous system. Immunocytochemical analyses revealed the presence of Vps35 in the somata and neurites of spinal cord neurons, suggesting a possible interaction of Vps35 with the GlyR under physiological conditions. Nbea is a BEACH domain containing, neuron-specific protein. Binding studies revealed a direct interaction between two regions of Nbea and the GlyRbeta loop. Immunocytochemical experiments confirmed a somatic and synaptic distribution of Nbea in primary cultures. In spinal cord neurons, a partial colocalization of Nbea with excitatory and inhibitory synaptic markers suggests a possible interaction of Nbea with the GlyR at inhibitory synaptic sites.
The various OPE mixtures were also tested on sSOI material which consists of a thin strained silicon layer on top of an insulator like silicon dioxide. The OPE A, B and F are able to reveal threading dislocations (TD) in the strained silicon film (chapter 5.11). The TD densities determined for the OPE A correspond very well with those obtained with the Secco diluted reference. The tested OPE mixtures are not able to delineate other crystal defects like stacking faults, pile ups or twins, which also appear in the strained silicon. Some Organic Peracid Etches were also tested on wafers with an epitaxial silicon layer and on silicon substrates. Epitaxially produced silicon layers are nearly defect-free. Etching times were chosen such that only a part of the epitaxial layer was removed. Nevertheless, after very long etching times (> 16 h) isolated pits were found, with defect densities ranging from 104/cm3 to 106/cm3 depending on the etching solution used. No etch pits were found in the remaining epitaxial layer when OPE F was used. Longer etching times appear to favour the formation of artefects. These artefacts could be caused by the formation of gas bubbles, particles or micro scratches at the crystal surface. The OPE C and D are able to reveal vacancy agglomerates (D-defects) in silicon substrates (see under 5.5, 5.6 and 5.11in chapter 5). Due to their low removal rates and the long etching times which favour the formation of artifacts, these solutions are less suited to the delineation of defects in silicon substrates. In the second part of this study the different etch formulations have been compared with each other in respect of their physical properties like removal rates, activation energies, standard potentials and selectivities (chapter 6). The selectivity was determined at etch pits caused by dislocations. The depth of the etch pits, determined by atomic force microscopy (AFM), should be dependent on the selectivity of the corresponding etching solution used. The higher the selectivity of the solution the deeper the etch pit should be. It was assumed that a low removal rate and a high activation energy for the etching process should correspond to a high selectivity. However, the experimental results have shown that it is not possible to predict the selectivity of an etching solution from experimental parameters like removal rate or activation energy. One must bear in mind that selectivity was only determined on one particular type of crystal defect, namely on dislocations. Values for selectivity in the etching solutions can differ for other defect types. Besides the etching solutions used in this study differ considerably from each other in respect of their chemical and physical roperties. They can be divided into three completely different etching systems. The original Secco solution and the diluted variations thereof are hydrofluoric acid-dichromate mixtures with the Cr6+ species as the oxidizing agent. The Jeita and MEMC solutions contain nitric acid, hydrofluoric acid and, as diluents, acetic acid and water. Here the oxidizing agents are various N(III) species which are formed autocatalytically during the etching process. The concentration of acetic acid also plays an important role as it lowers the degree of dissociation of HF and of HNO3. This has an influence on the pH and the standard potential of the etching solution. The Organic Peracid Etches are mixtures of hydrogen peroxide and a short-chain alkanoic acid like acetic acid. Such systems are strictly speaking not aqueous solutions, the reactive species is the peracid formed.Within each system, however, a certain relationship is perceived between the selectivity of the etching solution on the one hand, and the and the activation energy or the removal rate on the other. The decreased activation energy for the etching process of silicon at a dislocation can be calculated from experimental data by using the Arrhenius equation (chapter 6.3). It was found that the strain inside the crystal lattice caused by a dislocation loop leads to an increase of the potential energy of ~ 5 % and, hence, a decrease of the activation energy of ~ 5 % and an increase in the removal rate of ~ 100 %.
Orthopoxviruses are large DNA viruses that replicate within the cytoplasm of infected cells encoding over a hundred different proteins. The orthopoxviral 68k ankyrin‐like protein (68k‐ank) is highly conserved among orthopoxviruses, and this study aimed at elucidating the function of 68k‐ank. The 68k‐ank protein is composed of four ankyrin repeats (ANK) and an F‐box‐like domain; both motifs are known proteinprotein interaction domains. The F‐box is found in cellular F‐box proteins (FBP), crucial components of cellular E3 ubiquitin (Ub) ligases. With yeast‐two‐hybrid screens and subsequent co‐immunoprecipitation analyses, it was possible to identify S‐phase kinase‐associated protein 1a (Skp1a) as a cellular counterpart of 68k‐ank via binding to the F‐box‐like domain. Additionally, Cullin‐1 was co‐precipitated, suggesting the formation of a viral‐cellular SCF E3 Ub ligase complex. Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) ‐ being attenuated and unable to replicate in most mammalian cell lines due to a block in morphogenesis – nevertheless, expresses its complete genetic information attributing to its properties as promising vector vaccine. Conservation of 68k‐ank as the only ANK protein encoded by MVA implied a substantial role of this viral factor. Hence, its function in the viral life cycle was assessed by studying a 68k‐ank knock‐out MVA. A mutant phenotype manifested in nonpermissive mammalian cells characterized by a block succeeding viral early gene expression and by a reduced ability of the virus to shutoff host protein synthesis. Studies with MVA encoding a 68k‐ank F‐box‐like domain truncated protein revealed that viral‐cellular SCF complex formation and maintenance of viral gene expression are two distinct, unrelated functions fulfilled by 68k‐ank. Moreover, K1, a well‐described VACV host range factor of the ANK protein family, is able to complement 68k‐ank function. This suggests that gene expression of MVA putatively depends on the ANKs encoded in 68k‐ank. In addition to the important findings in vitro, first virulence studies with the mouse pox agent, ectromelia virus (ECTV) deleted of the 68k‐ank ortholog (C11) suggested that this factor contributes to ECTV virulence in vivo.
1. Fab co-complexes of proton pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) Fab fragments suitable for co-crystallization with complex I were generated using an immobilized papainbased protocol. The binding of the antibody fragments to complex I was verified using Surface Plasmon Resonance and size exclusion chromatography. The binding constants of the antibodies and their respective Fab fragments were found to be in the nanomolar range. This work presents the first report on successful crystallization of complex I (proton pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) from Yarrowia lipolytica with proteolytic Fab fragments. The quality of the crystals was significantly improved when compared to the initial experiments and the best crystals diffracted X-rays to a resolution of ~7 Å. The activity of complex I remained uninfluenced by antibody fragment binding. The initial diffraction data suggest that the complex I/Fab co-complex crystals represent a space group different to the one observed for the native protein. Ongoing experiments are aimed at further enhancements of the diffraction quality of the crystals. Providing a different space group the CI/Fab co-complexes may become a very useful approach for structure determination of the enzyme. Moreover, the bound Fab offers an additional possibility to generate phase information. The antibody-mediated crystallization represents a valuable tool in structural characterization of the NADH:oxidoreductase subcomplexes or even single subunits. 2. UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase from Yarrowia lipolytica displays affinity towards Ni2+ NTA and was first detected in a contaminated sample of complex I. Following, separation from complex I, Ugp1p was purified using anion exchange chromatography. Sequence similarity studies revealed high identity to other known pyrophosphorylases. As indicated by laser-based mass spectrometry method (LILBID) Ugp1p from Y. lipolytica builds octamers similarly to the enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The initial crystals grew as thin needles favorably in sitting drop setups. The size of the crystals was increased by employment of a micro batch technique. The improved crystals diffracted X-rays to a resolution of 3.2 Å at the synchrotron beamline. Structural characterization is under way using a molecular replacement approach based on the published structure of baker’s yeast UGPase.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic T cell-mediated autoimmune disorder that results in the destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic ß cells leading to life-long dependence on exogenous insulin. Attraction, activation and transmigration of inflammatory cells to the site of ß-cell injury depend on two major molecular interactions. First, interactions between chemokines and their receptors expressed on leukocytes result in the recruitment of circulating inflammatory cells to the site of injury. In this context, it has been demonstrated in various studies that the interaction of the chemokine CXCL10 with its receptor CXCR3 expressed on circulating cells plays a key role in the development of T1D. Second, once arrived at the site of inflammation adhesion molecules promote the extravasation of arrested cells through the endothelial cell layer to penetrate the site of injury. Here, the junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) JAM-C expressed on endothelial cells is involved in the process of leukocyte diabedesis. It was recently demonstrated that blocking of JAM-C efficiently attenuated cerulein-induced pancreatitis in mice. In my thesis I studied the influence of the CXCL10/CXCR3 interaction on the one hand, and of the adhesion molecule JAM-C on the other hand, on trafficking and transmigration of antigen-specific, autoaggressive T cells in the RIP-LCMV mouse model. RIP-LCMV mice express the glycoprotein (GP) or the nucleoprotein (NP) of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) as a target autoantigen specifically in the ß cells of the islets of Langerhans and turn diabetic after LCMV-infection. In my first project I found that pharmacologic blockade of CXCR3 during development of virus-induced T1D results in a significant delay but not in an abrogation of overt disease. However, neither the frequency nor the migratory properties of islet-specific T cells was significantly changed during CXCR3 blockade. In the second project I was able to demonstrate that JAM-C was upregulated around the islets in RIP-LCMV mice after LCMV infection and its expression correlated with islet infiltration and functional ß-cell impairment. Blockade with a neutralizing anti-JAM-C antibody slightly reduced T1D incidence, whereas overexpression of JAM-C on endothelial cells did not accelerate virus-induced diabetes. In summary, our data suggest that both CXCR3 as well as JAM-C are involved in trafficking and transmigration of antigen-specific autoaggressive T cells to the islets of Langerhans. However, the detection of only a moderate influence on the onset of clinical disease during CXCR3 or JAM-C blockade reflects the complex pathogenesis of T1D and indicates that several different inflammatory factors need to be neutralized in order to achieve a stable and persistent protection from disease.
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are rare but fatal neurodegenerative diseases affecting human and animals. The prion protein which is the causative agent, according to “protein-only” hypothesis misfold in to rogue amyloid conformer. Despite several years of studies, the atomic structural details of the rogue conformers have not been clearly understood. This study focused on developing an in-vitro conversion method, which allows us to monitor the transition from unfolded state of prion protein to fibril state. In order to reach maximal unfolded state, we have used 8 M urea as chemical denaturant, pH 2 and prion fragment 90-230 as the model. It has been demonstrated earlier that acidic pH and mild denaturant induce the fibril formation. The mechanism underlying the structural transition from monomeric state to polymeric form is largely unknown. We have confirmed by EM and AFM that fibrils are formed in our conditions, which resemble to naturally occurring fibrils in morphologies observed. The agitation accelerates the rate of fibril formation and, which allow us to do time-resolved NMR on these preparations. The conformational flexibility is inherent to amyloid fibrils and has been observed in our preparations. We aimed to map the important segment of prion protein, which forms the rigid core in its fibrillar structured form. Our time-resolved NMR studies allowed us to monitor the changes happening from unfolded state to fibrillar state. Analysis of data identified the segment between residues 145 to 223 forming the rigid core in these fibrils, which correspond to β strand 2, helix 2 and major part of helix 3 of native prion monomeric structure. Most of the point mutations which are associated with hereditary prion disease are part of rigid core, which undergo a refolding on fibril formation. The C-terminal residues from 224 to 230 displayed peak shifting and therefore, indicate the adaptation to a fibril specific conformation. The major part of N-terminal 90-144 segment, remains dynamic, which can be understood by their accessibility to amyloid specific antibodies. This provides novel structural insight to the amyloid formation from unfolded state of prion protein fragment 90-230, which represents the proteinase-K resistant part naturally occurring prions. Earlier studies have established the core to 160-220 where hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry or site-directed spin labeling EPR spectroscopy was used for analysis. Those studies have been initiated from either native-like or partially unfolded state of recombinant prion protein, and therefore, it is quite striking to find out that fibrils initiated from unfolded monomeric state share the same “amyloid core”. This structural insight has important implications for understanding the molecular basis of prion propagation.
Acute myeloid/lymphoid leukemia is a fatal hematological malignancy characterized by accumulation of nonfunctional, immature blasts, which interferes with the production of normal blood cells. Activating mutations of receptor tyrosine kinases are common genetic lesions in leukemia. FLT3-ITD is a frequent activating mutation found in AML patients, leading to uncontrolled proliferation of leukemic blasts. FLT3-ITD directly activates STAT5, leading to the induction of STAT5 target gene expression like PIM kinases and SOCS genes. STAT5 and PIM kinases have been shown to play a crucial role in the FLT3-ITD mediated transformation. On the other hand, the role of SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation has not been studied to date. SOCS proteins are part of a negative feedback mechanism that controls Jak kinases downstream of cytokine receptors. One of the SOCS family members, SOCS1 has been reported to suppress oncogenecity of several activating kinases implicated in hematologic malignancies. In this thesis the role of these SOCS proteins in FLT3-ITD mediated transformation (in vitro) and leukemogenesis (in vivo) is systematically explored. Expression of FLT3-ITD in cell lines of myeloid (32D) and lymphoid (Ba/F3) origin, led to CIS, SOCS1 and SOCS2 expression. FLT3-ITD expression in primary murine bone marrow stem/progenitor cells led to a 59 fold induction of SOCS1 expression. Furthermore, FLT3-ITD positive AML cell lines (MV4-11, MOLM-13) show kinase dependent CIS, SOCS1, and SOCS3 expression. Importantly SOCS1 is highly expressed in AML patients with FLT3-ITD compared to healthy individuals. SOCS1 protein was expressed in FLT3-ITD transduced murine bone marrow stem cells and SOCS1 expression was abolished with kinase inhibition in MOLM-13 cell line. In conclusion, SOCS1 was highly regulated by FLT3-ITD in myeloid, lymphoid cell lines, in bone marrow stem/progenitors and in AML patient samples. SOCS1 co-expression did not affect FLT3-ITD mediated signaling and proliferation, but abolished IL-3 mediated proliferation and protected 32D cells from interferon-α and interferon-γ mediated growth inhibition. FLT3-ITD expressing 32D cells showed diminished STAT1 activation in response to interferons (α and γ). Alone, SOCS1 strongly inhibited cytokine induced colony formation of bone marrow stem and progenitors, but not FLT3-ITD induced colony formation. Most importantly, in the presence of growth inhibitory interferon-γ, SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to increased colony formation compared to FLT3-ITD alone. Taken together, FLT3-ITD induced and exogenously expressed SOCS1, shielded cells from external cytokines, signals, while not affecting FLT3-ITD induced proliferation/signaling. In further experiments the in vivo effects of SOCS1 were studied in a bone marrow transplantation model. SOCS1 bone marrow transplants were unable to engraft/proliferate in mice. FLT3-ITD was shown to induce a myeloproliferative disease. Both control (empty vector), SOCS1 transplanted mice were normal and did not show any disease phenotype. FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD developed either myeloproliferative disease or acute lymphoblastic leukemia with equal distribution. SOCS1 co-expression with FLT3-ITD led to a decreased latency. Mice transplanted with FLT3-ITD alone and SOCS1 co-expressing FLT3-ITD displayed enlarged spleens, liver and hypercellular bone marrow indicating infiltration of leukemic cells. Mice were also anemic and showed decreased platelet counts. Importantly SOCS1 co-expression particularly shortened the latency of myeloproliferative disease but not of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In summary, in the context of FLT3-ITD, SOCS1 acts as a ‘conditional oncogene’ and cooperates with FLT3-ITD in the development of myeloproliferative disease. With these data we propose the following model: FLT3-ITD induces SOCS gene expression, which shields cells against proliferation and differentiation signals from cytokines, while not affecting FLT3-ITD mediated proliferative signals. This leaves cells under the dictate of FLT3-ITD thereby contributing to leukemogenesis. Similar to FLT3-ITD, BCR/ABL (P190) (an oncogenic fusion kinase often found in acute lymphoblastic leukemia) induces SOCS gene expression in K562 and long-term cultured cells from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. SOCS1 co-expression does not affect BCR/ABL mediated proliferation while abrogating IL-3 mediated proliferation. These findings suggest that SOCS proteins may play a general co-operative role in the context of oncogenes which aberrantly activate STAT3/5 independently of JAK kinases. This study reveals a novel molecular mechanism of FLT3-ITD mediated leukemogenesis and suggests SOCS genes as potential therapeutic targets.
By adopting a variety of shapes, proteins can perform a wide number of functions in the cell, from being structural elements or enabling communication with the environment to performing complex enzymatic reactions needed to sustain metabolism. The number of proteins in the cell is limited by the number of genes encoding them. However, several mechanisms exist to increase the overall number of protein functions. One of them are post-translational modifications, i.e. covalent attachment of various molecules onto proteins. Ubiquitin was the first protein to be found to modify other proteins, and, faithful to its evocative name, it is involved in nearly all the activities of a cell. Ubiquitylation of proteins was believed for a long time only to be responsible for proteasomal degradation of modified proteins. However, with the discovery of various types of ubiquitylation, such as mono-, multiple- or poly-ubiquitylation, new functions of this post-translational modification emerged. Mono-ubiquitylation has been implicated in endocytosis, chromatin remodelling and DNA repair, while poly-ubiquitylation influences the half-life of proteins or modulates signal transduction pathways. DNA damage repair and tolerance are example of pathways extensively regulated by ubiquitylation. PCNA, a protein involved in nearly all types of DNA transaction, can undergo both mono- and poly-ubiquitylation. These modifications are believed to change the spectrum of proteins that interact with PCNA. Monoubiquitylation of PCNA is induced by stalling of replication forks when replicative polymerases (pols) encounter an obstacle, such as DNA damage or tight DNA-protein complexes. It is believed that monoubiquitylation of PCNA stimulates the exchange between replicative pols to one of polymerases that can synthesize DNA across various lesions, a mechanism of damage tolerance known as translesion synthesis (TLS). Our work has helped to understand why monoubiqutylation of PCNA favours this polymerase switch. We have identified two novel domains with the ability to bind Ub non-covalently. These domains are present in all the members of Y polymerases performing TLS, and were named Ub-binding zinc finger (UBZ) (in polη and polκ) and Ub-binding motif (UBM) (in polι and Rev1). We have shown that these domains enable Y polymerases to preferentially gain access to PCNA upon stalling of replication, when the action of translesion polymerases is required. While the region of direct interaction between Y pols and PCNA had been known (BRCT domain in Rev1 and PIP box motif (PIP) in three others members), we propose that Ub-binding domains (UBDs) in translesion Y pols enhance the PIP- or BRCT-domain-mediated interaction between these polymerases and PCNA by binding to the Ub moiety attached onto PCNA. Following these initial studies, we have also discovered that Y polymerases themselves undergo monoubiquitylation and that their UBDs mediate this modification. This auto-ubiquitylation is believed to lead to an intramolecular interaction between UBD and Ub attached in cis onto the UBD-containing protein. We have mapped monoubiquitylation sites in polη in the C-terminal portion of the protein containing the nuclear localization signal (NLS) and the PIP box. Beside PIP, the NLS motif is also involved in direct interaction of polη with PCNA. Based on these findings, we propose that monoubiquitylation of either NLS or PIP masks them from potential interaction with PCNA. Lastly, using several functional assays, we have demonstrated the importance of all these three motifs in the C-terminus of polη (UBZ, NLS and PIP) for efficient TLS. We have also constructed a mimic of monoubiquitylated polη by genetically fusing polη with Ub. Interestingly, this chimera is deficient in TLS as compared to the wild-type protein. Altogether, these studies demonstrate that the C-terminus of polη constitutes a regulatory module involved in multiple-site interaction with monoubiquitylated PCNA, and that monoubiquitylation of this region inhibits the interaction between polη and PCNA. Our work has also revealed that the UBDs of Y pols as well as of other proteins implicated in DNA damage repair and tolerance, such as the Werner helicase-interacting protein 1 (Wrnip1), are required for their proper sub-nuclear localization. All these proteins localize to discrete focal structures inside the nucleus and mutation of their UBDs results in inability to accumulate in these foci. Interestingly, by exchanging UBDs between different proteins we have learned that each UBD seems to have a distinct functional role, surprisingly not limited to Ubbinding ability. In fact, swapping the UBZ of Wrnip1 with the UBM of polι abolished the localization of Wrnip1 to foci despite preserving the Ub-binding ability of the chimeric protein. In summary, this work provides an overview of how post-translation modification of proteins by Ub can regulate several DNA transactions. Firstly, key regulators (e.g. PCNA) can be differentially modified by Ub. Secondly, specialized UBDs (e.g. UBM, UBZ) embedded only in a subset of proteins act as modules able to recognize these modifications. Thirdly, by means of mediating auto-ubiquitylation, UBDs can modulate the behaviour of host proteins by allowing for either in cis or in trans Ub-UBD interactions.
Enantioselective carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions, particularly, using organocatalysts represent one of the most important areas in modern synthetic chemistry. New concepts and methods in organocatalysis are emerging continuously, allowing more selective, economically more appealing and environmentally friendlier transformations. Chiral Brønsted-acid catalysts have recently emerged as a new class of organocatalysts for a number of enantioselective carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions. The first part of this thesis focused on the new development of new Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclizations. The Nazarov reaction belongs to the group of electrocyclic reactions and is one of the most versatile methods for the synthesis of five-membered rings, which are the key structural elements of numerous natural products. In general, the Nazarov cyclization can be catalyzed by Brønsted or Lewis acids. However, only a few asymmetric variations have been described, of which most require the use of large amounts of chiral metal complexes. The reactivities of Nazarov cyclizations are also depending on the substituents of the divinyl ketone substrates as described in the first chapter. The substrates to study Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclization were prepared following the known procedures. The dihydropyran was treated with tBuLi in THF at –78 oC and then the α,β-unsaturated aldehydes 1 were added to the reaction mixture to afford the corresponding alcohols 2 in moderate to good yields. The alcohols 2 were oxidized to divinyl ketones 3 employing Dess-Martin periodinane/pyridine (DMP/py) in CH2Cl2 at room temperature to obtain the divinyl ketones 3 in moderate to good yields (Scheme 1). Scheme 1. Preparation of substrates in order to study Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclization and subsequent transformations. At the starting point, an evaluation of suitable Brønsted acid catalysts for the enantioselective Nazarov cyclization of divinyl ketone 3a was performed. The initial reactions conducted with various BINOL-phosphoric acids 4a-4e in toluene at 60 oC provided the mixture of cis and trans cyclopentenones 5a with enantioselectivities of up to 82% ee (Table 1, entries 1-5). Eventually, improved reactivity could be achieved by using the corresponding N-triflylphosphoramides 4f and 4g, which even at 0 oC gave complete conversion after ten minutes. Additionally, it was shown that the use of these catalysts significantly enhanced both the diastereoselectivity (cis/trans ratio up to 7:1) and the enantioselectivity (up to 96% ee; Table 1, entries 6 and 7). Table 1. Evaluation of Brønsted acids 4a-4g in the enantioselective Nazarov cyclization. The scope of the Brønsted acid-catalyzed enantioselective Nazarov cyclization of various divinyl ketones 3 was explored under an optimized reaction condition (Scheme 2). Treatment of divinyl ketones 3 in CHCl3 in the presence of 2 mol% chiral BINOL-Ntriflylphosphoramide 4g at 0 oC for 1-6 h provided the corresponding cyclopentenone 5 in good yields (45-92%) with excellent enantioselectivities (up to 93% ee) (Scheme 2). Furthermore, the isomerization of cis-cyclopentenone under basic condition led to the corresponding trans-cyclopentenone without loss of enantiomeric purity. This efficient method introduced here was not only the first example of an organocatalytic electrocyclic reaction but also represented the first enantioselective activation of a carbonyl group catalyzed by a chiral BINOL phosphoric acid. Compared to the metal-catalyzed reaction, special features of this new Brønsted acid-catalyzed electrocyclization are the lower catalyst loadings (2 mol%), higher enantioselectivities, accessibility to all possible stereoisomers, as well as the mild conditions. ....
Genes coding for membrane proteins make up 25%-30% of the genome in most organisms. Membrane proteins play an important role in cell functioning and their importance is enhanced by the fact that a large number of drugs are targeted at membrane proteins. Paradoxically, experimentally determined structures of membrane protein correspond to only about 1.7% of protein structures deposited in the protein data bank (PDB). This is largely due to the fact that membrane proteins are difficult to deal with owing to their amphipathic nature. The low abundance of membrane proteins in native tissue makes heterologous overexpression of these genes a necessity. This thesis work aimed at heterologous production of several secondary active transporter proteins for structural and functional characterizations and establishing alternative strategies to overcome the obstacles associated with heterologous overproduction. Four members of the heavy metal transporting cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) family from S. typhimurium and A. aeolicus were heterologously overproduced in E. coli and functionally characterized by an in vivo complementation assay using the zinc transport deficient E. coli GG48 strain. Out of these four, Aq_2073 from A. aeolicus was produced in large scale with substantial yield and purity sufficient to carry out structural studies. After extensive stability studies with different detergents, pHs and temperatures, the protein was subjected to 3D and 2D crystallization trials. Several C- terminal truncated constructs were made and the simultaneous crystallization screenings were carried out. These resulted in initial needle like crystals in 3D crystallization trials or optimum sized vesicles with crystalline patches in 2D crystallization trials but no obvious crystal. The protein showed significant increase in melting temperature in the presence of cadmium, when tested by differential scanning calorimetry. Another transporter, STM3880 of the potassium uptake permease (KUP) family from S. typhimurium, was heterologously overproduced in E. coli, purified by affinity chromatography, reconstituted into artificial liposome and functionally characterized by solid supported membrane based electrophysiology. In order to establish alternative expression strategies, continuous exchange cell free expression (CECF) of proteins from four different families was carried out. This method found to be aptly complementing the cell-based production approach. Targets from resistance to homoserine/threonine (RhtB) family not expressing in vivo could be expressed and purified using CECF. STM1781 of the sulfate permease (SulP) family was expressed, purified and characterized for stability while the cell-based production resulted in extensive degradation. PF0780 of multidrug/oligosaccharidyllipid/polysaccharide flippase (MOP) family was also purified to homogeneity and the stability was comparable to in vivo produced protein. Moreover, the effect of maltose binding protein (MBP) fusion at N-terminus on production and membrane integration was tested with three selected targets. The analysis revealed decreased yields in the presence of MBP if the protein had both termini in the cytoplasm. This work succeed in heterologously overproducing and establishing purification protocols for several secondary active transporters aiming at structural and functional characterization in a structural genomics framework. It also showed that integration of alternative strategies, like employing both cell-based and cell-free heterologous expression systems, expands the overall expression space coverage and in turn increases the chance of success of a structural genomics styled project.
Functional and structural characterization of Aquifex aeolicus sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase
(2010)
This work presents the first complete structure of the membrane protein sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase (SQR), obtained by X-ray crystallography. Its description is complemented by the results of biochemical and functional experiments. SQRs are ubiquitous flavoprotein disulfide reductases (FDRs), present in all domains of life, including in humans. Their physiological role extends from sulfide detoxification to sulfide-dependent respiration and photosynthesis (in archaea and bacteria), to heavy metal tolerance (in yeast) and possibly to sulfide signalling (in higher eukaryotes). Until now understanding the function of SQRs was difficult because of the poor level of sequence conservation in this enzyme family, the limited functional characterization available and the absence of any structural data. SQR was identified in the native membranes of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus by peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) and by a spectrophotometric activity assay. The protein was solubilized in the detergent dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside (DDM) and purified to homogeneity in a functionally active state. It binds one FAD molecule per protein monomer and FAD is its only cofactor. Its structure was determined in the “as-purified”, substrate-bound and inhibitor-bound forms at resolutions of 2.3, 2.0 and 2.9 Å, respectively. It is composed of two Rossmann-fold domains and of one membrane-attachment region. Despite the overall monomeric architecture being similar to that of FDRs, the structure reveals properties that had not been observed in FDRs until now and that have strong implications for the SQR catalytic mechanism. Surprisingly, A. aeolicus SQR is trimeric in the crystal structure and in solution, as determined by density-matched analytical ultracentrifugation, cross-linking and single particle electron microscopy. The trimer creates an appropriate surface for binding lipids and thus ensures that SQR exclusively reduces hydrophobic quinones. SQR inserts to a depth of about 12 Å into the membrane as an integral monotopic membrane protein. The interaction is mediated by an amphipathic helix-turn-helix tripodal motif and two lipid clamps. A channel in the membrane-binding domain extends towards the si-side of FAD and represents the quinone-binding site. The quinone ring is sandwiched between the conserved amino acids Phe 385 and Ile 346 and is possibly protonated upon reduction via Glu 318, Lys 382 and/or neighboring solvent molecules. Sulfide polymerization occurs on the re-side of FAD, where the highly conserved Cys 156 and Cys 347 appear to be covalently bound to the putative product of the reaction, a polysulfur chain which takes the form of an S8 ring in some monomers. Finally, the structure shows that FAD is covalently connected to the protein in an unprecedented way, via a putative disulfide bridge between the 8-methyl group of the isoalloxazine moiety and Cys 124. The high resolution insight into the protein and all unexpected structural observations presented in this work suggest that the catalytic mechanism of SQRs is significantly different from that of FDRs. In agreement with the structural and functional data, two reaction schemes are proposed for A. aeolicus SQR. They both provide a detailed description of how sulfide and quinones reach and bind the active site, how electrons are transferred from sulfide to quinone via FAD and how the elongating polysulfur product is attached to the polypeptide and is finally released. The two hypotheses differ in defining the structure of the covalent protein-FAD intermediate that forms during the reaction cycle and whose identity still remains experimentally undetermined. Remarkably, the structure of the active site and the FAD-binding mode of A. aeolicus SQR are not conserved in another SQR structure which also became available recently, that of the archaeon Acidianus ambivalens. The variability in SQRs suggests that not all of these enzymes follow the same catalytic mechanism, despite having been considered homologous. Consequently, the currently available but contradictory sequence-based classifications of the SQR family were revised. A structure-based alignment calculated on the increasing number of available sequences allowed to define new SQR groups and their characteristic sequence fingerprints in agreement with the reported structural and functional data. In conclusion, the results obtained in this work offer for the first time a detailed look into the intriguing but complicated reactions catalysed by SQRs and provide a stimulus for further genetic, biochemical and structural investigation.
Large amplitude intramolecular motions in non-rigid molecules are a fundamental issue in chemistry and biology. The conventional approaches for study these motions by far-infrared and microwave spectroscopy are not applicable when the molecule is non-polar. Therefore, in the current thesis an alternative approach for the investigation of large amplitude intramolecular motions was developed and tested. This new method is based on femtosecond rotational degenerate four-wave mixing spectroscopy (fs DFWM), which is a particular implementation of rotational coherence spectroscopy. The method was successfully applied for the investigation of pseudorotation in pyrrolidine and the ring-puckering vibration in cyclopentene. Another important subject is the photophysics of molecules and molecular clusters which have an ultrashort lifetime of their electronically excited state (photoreactivity). These ultrashort lifetimes often represent a protective mechanism causing photostability. The photoreactivity is usually the manifestation either of an “elementary” reaction, such as proton or electron transfer, which occurs in the excited state or of a fast non-radiative deactivation processes, such as internal conversion via conical intersection of the electronically excited and ground state. Due to a short-lived excited state, the conventional vibrational spectroscopic methods, such as IR depletion detected by resonance two-photon ionization spectroscopy (IR/R2PI), are not applicable for the structural investigation of these systems. Therefore, new approach, termed IR depletion detected by multiphoton ionization with femtosecond laser pulses (IR/fsMPI), was developed for studying the structure of photoreactive microsolvated molecules. The IR/fsMPI technique was applied for investigating the clusters of 1H-pyrrolo[3,2-h]quinoline with water/methanol as well as adenine- and 9-methyl-adenine-hydrates. In addition, the excited state dynamics of bifunctional azaaromatic molecule 7-(2'-pyridyl)indole (7PyIn) was studied by femtosecond pump-probe resonance excitation multiphoton ionization technique (fs REMPI). Under electronic excitation of this molecule a fast proton transfer (phototautomerization) takes place, which is followed by radiationless excited state deactivation process. The fs REMPI spectra lead to the conclusion that the phototautomerization in 7PyIn is coupled with a twisting of the molecule, and that the twisting provides an efficient channel for ultrafast radiationless excited state deactivation. This pattern of excited-state tautomerization/deactivation might be quite general.
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor belongs to the broad family of enzymatic receptors called receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs). Generally, the binding of a ligand to these receptors leads to activation of their intracellular kinase activity that sets in motion a cascade of signaling events. In order to ensure appropriate responses to physiological stimuli, the cell is endowed with the ability to regulate signal transduction via numerous mechanisms such as dephosphorylation of the RTK and its substrates as well as downregulation of the RTK. Activation of EGFR is a potent mitogenic (proliferative) and motogenic (cell motility) signal that plays crucial roles during embryonic development and maintenance of adult tissue. EGFR signaling is primarily regulated by ligand-induced receptor internalization with subsequent degradation in lysosomes. While the complex of proteins that are recruited to EGFR after its activation is well understood, proteins that interact with the receptor in the absence of ligand binding are still not systematically studied. With the goal of identifying novel binding partners of non-activated EGFR, a membrane based yeast-two hybrid screen (MYTH) was conducted. MYTH is based on the principle of in vivo reconstitution of the N-terminus (Nub) and C-terminus (Cub) halves of ubiquitin once brought into close proximity. A chimeric protein consisting of EGFR fused to Cub and a transcription factor was used as a bait to screen Nub-tagged cDNA library. Analysis of resultant yeast transformants revealed a total of 87 proteins to interact with EGFR. Of these only 11 were previously shown to bind to EGFR. A majority of the other proteins were shown to interact with the receptor by yeast retransformation. Fifteen were confirmed to bind to EGFR by coimmunoprecipitation assays in mammalian cells. One of the novel EGFR interactors identified in the screen was histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6). This deacetylase is localized in the cytoplasm and known to deacetylate alpha-tubulin, HSP90 and cortactin. The juxtamembrane region of EGFR binds to the Cterminus of HDAC6. Functionally, overexpression of wild type HDAC6 stabilized ligand-induced degradation of the receptor. On the other hand, deacetylase deficient or EGFR binding compromised mutants of HDAC6 were able to stabilize EGFR only partially. Downmodulation of HDAC6 expression by RNAi markedly accelerated degradation of the receptor. Taken together, HDAC6 is a negative regulator of EGFR downregulation that is dependent on its deacetylase activity and ability to bind to the receptor. Imaging studies revealed that HDAC6 does not affect internalization of EGFR from the plasma membrane but rather influences the post-endocytic trafficking of the receptor-ligand complex to lysosomes. Pulse-chase experiments using fluorophoretagged EGF showed that EGFR is transported faster towards the peri-nuclear region and delivered to late endosomes rapidly in HDAC6 depleted cells. HDAC6 is demonstrated to act, at least partly, by regulating the acetylation of alpha-tubulin. Upon EGFR activation, acetylation of alpha-tubulin on lysine 40 is progressively increased as shown by mass spectrometry and immunoblotting. Forced expression of a dominant negative mutant of alpha-tubulin, but not wild type alpha-tubulin, led to reduced speed and processive movement of early endosomes in GFP-Rab5 expressing cells. In a surprising twist, EGFR is able to phosphorylate HDAC6 on Tyr570. Phosphorylation of Tyr570 and Ser568 leads to inactivation of the deacetylase function of HDAC6 as shown by in vivo and in vitro assays. In summary, HDAC6 diminishes EGFR downregulation by slowing the transport of intracellular vesicles. The inhibitory effect is removed once HDAC6 is phosphorylated on key residues. In line with these findings, two recent reports have shown that hyper-acetylation of alpha-tubulin induced by inhibition of HDAC6 increases the transport of brain derived neurotrophic factor and JNK interacting protein-1 in different cell systems. Acetylated microtubules are more efficient in recruiting motor proteins like kinesin-1 and dynein. These findings indicate that HDAC6 plays an important regulatory role in intracellular trafficking pathways. However, several outstanding issues still remain unresolved. How does acetylation of microtubules influence vesicular trafficking? In this regard, the temporal and spatial dynamics of alpha-tubulin acetylation following EGFR activation should be studied. Furthermore, whether HDAC6 affects the trafficking of other endocytic cargos and additional organelles is an interesting question to address.