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Browsing by Author "Linke, Dirk"

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Now showing 1 - 9 of 9
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    An evolutionarily conserved glycine-tyrosine motif forms a folding core in outer membrane proteins.
    (2017)
    Michalik, Marcin
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    Orwick-Rydmark, Marcella
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    Habeck, Michael  
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    Alva, Vikram
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    Arnold, Thomas
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    Linke, Dirk
    An intimate interaction between a pair of amino acids, a tyrosine and glycine on neighboring β-strands, has been previously reported to be important for the structural stability of autotransporters. Here, we show that the conservation of this interacting pair extends to nearly all major families of outer membrane β-barrel proteins, which are thought to have originated through duplication events involving an ancestral ββ hairpin. We analyzed the function of this motif using the prototypical outer membrane protein OmpX. Stopped-flow fluorescence shows that two folding processes occur in the millisecond time regime, the rates of which are reduced in the tyrosine mutant. Folding assays further demonstrate a reduction in the yield of folded protein for the mutant compared to the wild-type, as well as a reduction in thermal stability. Taken together, our data support the idea of an evolutionarily conserved 'folding core' that affects the folding, membrane insertion, and thermal stability of outer membrane protein β-barrels.
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    Expression, crystallization and preliminary X-ray crystallographic studies of the outer membrane protein OmpW from Escherichia coli
    (2006)
    Albrecht, Reinhard
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    Zeth, Kornelius
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    Söding, Johannes  
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    Lupas, Andrei
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    Linke, Dirk
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    Festkörper‐NMR‐Studien an der Membrananker‐Domäne von YadA in der bakteriellen Außenmembran
    (2015)
    Shahid, Shakeel A.
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    Nagaraj, Madhu
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    Chauhan, Nandini
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    Franks, Trent W.
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    Bardiaux, Benjamin
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    Habeck, Michael  
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    Orwick-Rydmark, Marcella
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    Linke, Dirk
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    van Rossum, Barth-J.
    MAS-NMR was used to study the structure and dynamics at ambient temperatures of the membrane-anchor domain of YadA (YadA-M) in a pellet of the outer membrane of E. coli in which it was expressed. YadA is an adhesin from the pathogen Yersinia enterocolitica that is involved in interactions with the host cell, and it is a model protein for studying the autotransport process. Existing assignments were sucessfully transferred to a large part of the YadA-M protein in the E. coli lipid environment by using C-13-C-13 DARR and PDSD spectra at different mixing times. The chemical shifts in most regions of YadA-M are unchanged relative to those in microcrystalline YadA-M preparations from which a structure has previously been solved, including the ASSA region that is proposed to be involved in transition-state hairpin formation for transport of the soluble domain. Comparisons of the dynamics between the microcrystalline and membrane-embedded samples indicate greater flexibility of the ASSA region in the outer-membrane preparation at physiological temperatures. This study will pave the way towards MAS-NMR structure determination of membrane proteins, and a better understanding of functionally important dynamic residues in native membrane environments.
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    HHomp—prediction and classification of outer membrane proteins
    (2009)
    Remmert, Michael
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    Linke, Dirk
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    Lupas, Andrei N.
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    Söding, Johannes  
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    Is the C-terminal insertional signal in Gram-negative bacterial outer membrane proteins species-specific or not?
    (2012)
    Paramasivam, Nagarajan
    ;
    Habeck, Michael  
    ;
    Linke, Dirk
    Abstract Background In Gram-negative bacteria, the outer membrane is composed of an asymmetric lipid bilayer of phopspholipids and lipopolysaccharides, and the transmembrane proteins that reside in this membrane are almost exclusively β-barrel proteins. These proteins are inserted into the membrane by a highly conserved and essential machinery, the BAM complex. It recognizes its substrates, unfolded outer membrane proteins (OMPs), through a C-terminal motif that has been speculated to be species-specific, based on theoretical and experimental results from only two species, Escherichia coli and Neisseria meningitidis , where it was shown on the basis of individual sequences and motifs that OMPs from the one cannot easily be over expressed in the other, unless the C-terminal motif was adapted. In order to determine whether this species specificity is a general phenomenon, we undertook a large-scale bioinformatics study on all predicted OMPs from 437 fully sequenced proteobacterial strains. Results We were able to verify the incompatibility reported between Escherichia coli and Neisseria meningitidis , using clustering techniques based on the pairwise Hellinger distance between sequence spaces for the C-terminal motifs of individual organisms. We noticed that the amino acid position reported to be responsible for this incompatibility between Escherichia coli and Neisseria meningitidis does not play a major role for determining species specificity of OMP recognition by the BAM complex. Instead, we found that the signal is more diffuse, and that for most organism pairs, the difference between the signals is hard to detect. Notable exceptions are the Neisseriales , and Helicobacter spp . For both of these organism groups, we describe the specific sequence requirements that are at the basis of the observed difference. Conclusions Based on the finding that the differences between the recognition motifs of almost all organisms are small, we assume that heterologous overexpression of almost all OMPs should be feasible in E. coli and other Gram-negative bacterial model organisms. This is relevant especially for biotechnology applications, where recombinant OMPs are used e.g. for the development of vaccines. For the species in which the motif is significantly different, we identify the residues mainly responsible for this difference that can now be changed in heterologous expression experiments to yield functional proteins.
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    Membrane-protein structure determination by solid-state NMR spectroscopy of microcrystals
    (2012)
    Shahid, Shakeel Ahmad
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    Bardiaux, Benjamin
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    Franks, W. Trent
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    Krabben, Ludwig
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    Habeck, Michael  
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    van Rossum, Barth-Jan
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    Linke, Dirk
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    ScbA from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) has homology to fatty acid synthases and is able to synthesize γ-butyrolactones
    (2007)
    Hsiao, Nai-Hua
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    Söding, Johannes  
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    Linke, Dirk
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    Lange, Corinna
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    Hertweck, Christian
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    Wohlleben, Wolfgang
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    Takano, Eriko
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    Solid-state NMR Study of the YadA Membrane-Anchor Domain in the Bacterial Outer Membrane
    (2015)
    Shahid, Shakeel A.
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    Nagaraj, Madhu
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    Chauhan, Nandini
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    Franks, Trent W.
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    Bardiaux, Benjamin
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    Habeck, Michael  
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    Orwick-Rydmark, Marcella
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    Linke, Dirk
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    van Rossum, Barth-J.
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    Structure-Activity Analysis of the Dermcidin-derived Peptide DCD-1L, an Anionic Antimicrobial Peptide Present in Human Sweat
    (2012)
    Paulmann, Maren
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    Arnold, Thomas
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    Linke, Dirk
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    Özdirekcan, Suat
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    Kopp, Annika
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    Gutsmann, Thomas
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    Kalbacher, Hubert
    ;
    Wanke, Ines
    ;
    Schuenemann, Verena J.
    ;
    Habeck, Michael  
    ;
    Schittek, Birgit

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