7 results on '"Hecky, J"'
Search Results
2. TAT hitchhiker selection expanded to folding helpers, multimeric interactions and combinations with protein fragment complementation
- Author
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Speck, J., primary, Rauber, C., additional, Kukenshoner, T., additional, Niemoller, C., additional, Mueller, K. J., additional, Schleberger, P., additional, Dondapati, P., additional, Hecky, J., additional, Arndt, K. M., additional, and Muller, K. M., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. TAT hitchhiker selection expanded to folding helpers, multimeric interactions and combinations with protein fragment complementation.
- Author
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Speck J, Räuber C, Kükenshöner T, Niemöller C, Mueller KJ, Schleberger P, Dondapati P, Hecky J, Arndt KM, and Müller KM
- Subjects
- Arginine genetics, Arginine metabolism, Cloning, Molecular methods, Escherichia coli chemistry, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins chemistry, Escherichia coli Proteins genetics, Membrane Transport Proteins chemistry, Membrane Transport Proteins genetics, Models, Molecular, Protein Folding, Protein Multimerization, Protein Transport, Recombinant Fusion Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Fusion Proteins genetics, Recombinant Fusion Proteins metabolism, beta-Lactamases chemistry, beta-Lactamases genetics, Escherichia coli metabolism, Escherichia coli Proteins metabolism, Membrane Transport Proteins metabolism, Protein Engineering methods, Protein Interaction Mapping, beta-Lactamases metabolism
- Abstract
The twin-arginine translocation (TAT) pathway of the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane mediates translocation only of proteins that accomplished a native-like conformation. We deploy this feature in modular selection systems for directed evolution, in which folding helpers as well as dimeric or oligomeric protein-protein interactions enable TAT-dependent translocation of the resistance marker TEM β-lactamase (βL). Specifically, we demonstrate and analyze selection of (i) enhancers for folding by direct TAT translocation selection of a target protein interposed between the TorA signal sequence and βL, (ii) dimeric or oligomeric protein-protein interactions by hitchhiker translocation (HiT) selection of proteins fused to the TorA signal sequence and to the βL, respectively and (iii) heterotrimeric protein-protein interactions by combining HiT with protein fragment complementation selection of proteins fused to two split βL fragments and TorA, respectively. The lactamase fragments were additionally engineered for improved activity and stability. Applicability was benchmarked with interaction partners of known affinity and multimerization whereby cellular fitness correlated well with biophysical protein properties. Ultimately, the HiT selection was employed to identify peptides, which specifically bind to leukemia- and melanoma-relevant target proteins (MITF and ETO) by coiled-coil or tetra-helix-bundle formation with high affinity. The various versions of TAT selection led to inhibiting peptides (iPEPs) of disease-promoting interactions and enabled so far difficult to achieve selections.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Exploring the molecular linkage of protein stability traits for enzyme optimization by iterative truncation and evolution.
- Author
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Speck J, Hecky J, Tam HK, Arndt KM, Einsle O, and Müller KM
- Subjects
- Enzyme Stability, Gene Library, Guanidine pharmacology, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Protein Unfolding drug effects, Proteolysis, Temperature, Thermodynamics, beta-Lactamases metabolism, Directed Molecular Evolution methods, Sequence Deletion, beta-Lactamases chemistry, beta-Lactamases genetics
- Abstract
The stability of proteins is paramount for their therapeutic and industrial use and, thus, is a major task for protein engineering. Several types of chemical and physical stabilities are desired, and discussion revolves around whether each stability trait needs to be addressed separately and how specific and compatible stabilizing mutations act. We demonstrate a stepwise perturbation-compensation strategy, which identifies mutations rescuing the activity of a truncated TEM β-lactamase. Analyses relating structural stress with the external stresses of heat, denaturants, and proteases reveal our second-site suppressors as general stability centers that also improve the full-length enzyme. A library of lactamase variants truncated by 15 N-terminal and three C-terminal residues (Bla-NΔ15CΔ3) was subjected to activity selection and DNA shuffling. The resulting clone with the best in vivo performance harbored eight mutations, surpassed the full-length wild-type protein by 5.3 °C in T(m), displayed significantly higher catalytic activity at elevated temperatures, and showed delayed guanidine-induced denaturation. The crystal structure of this mutant was determined and provided insights into its stability determinants. Stepwise reconstitution of the N- and C-termini increased its thermal, denaturant, and proteolytic resistance successively, leading to a full-length enzyme with a T(m) increased by 15.3 °C and a half-denaturation concentration shifted from 0.53 to 1.75 M guanidinium relative to that of the wild type. These improvements demonstrate that iterative truncation-optimization cycles can exploit stability-trait linkages in proteins and are exceptionally suited for the creation of progressively stabilized variants and/or downsized proteins without the need for detailed structural or mechanistic information.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. In vitro cell quality of articular chondrocytes assigned for autologous implantation in dependence of specific patient characteristics.
- Author
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Pestka JM, Schmal H, Salzmann G, Hecky J, Südkamp NP, and Niemeyer P
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aggrecans analysis, Biomarkers analysis, Biopsy, Cartilage, Articular pathology, Cell Count, Cell Differentiation, Cell Survival, Collagen Type II analysis, Female, Humans, Hyaluronan Receptors analysis, In Vitro Techniques, Knee Joint surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Transplantation, Autologous, Young Adult, Chondrocytes cytology, Chondrocytes transplantation
- Abstract
Objective: Autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) is a well-established therapeutic option for the treatment of cartilage defects of the knee joint. Since information concerning the cellular aspects of ACI is still limited, the aim of the present study was to investigate relevant differences between chondrocyte quality after in vitro cultivation and possible correlations with patient-specific factors., Design: Cell quality of 252 consecutive ACI patients was assessed after chondrocyte in vitro expansion by determination of the expression of cartilage relevant surface marker CD44 and cartilage-specific differentiation markers (aggrecan and collagen type II). All cell quality parameters were correlated with patient-specific parameters, such as age, size and defect location, number of defects and grade of joint degeneration according to the Kellgren-Lawrence classification., Results: Neither the expression of CD44, aggrecan or collagen type II nor cell density or viability after proliferation seemed to correlate with the grade of joint degeneration, defect aetiology or patient gender. However, chondrocytes harvested from the knee joints of patients at less than 20 years of age showed significantly higher expression rates of cartilage-specific markers when compared to older patients' chondrocytes., Conclusions: The present study identifies relevant differences concerning chondrocyte quality after in vitro expansion in a highly preselected study population of 252 patients that from a surgical point of view were eligible for ACI. With the exception of patients aged 20 years or younger, no patient-specific parameters could be identified which might allow anticipation of cell quality in individual patients.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A general method of terminal truncation, evolution, and re-elongation to generate enzymes of enhanced stability.
- Author
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Hecky J, Mason JM, Arndt KM, and Müller KM
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Enzyme Stability, Kinetics, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Conformation, Protein Denaturation, Temperature, Thermodynamics, Urea metabolism, beta-Lactamases genetics, Directed Molecular Evolution, Protein Engineering methods, beta-Lactamases chemistry
- Abstract
Improving enzyme stability is a highly desirable design step in generating enzymes able to function under extreme conditions, such as elevated temperatures, while having the additional benefit of being less susceptible to cleavage by proteases. For these reasons, many different approaches and techniques have been devised in constructing such proteins, but the results to date have been of mixed success. Here, we present a robust method involving the terminal truncation, random mutagenesis and fragmentation, recombination, elongation, and finally, selection at physiological temperatures, to generate an enzyme with improved stability. Three cycles of directed evolution comprising of random mutagenesis, DNA shuffling, and selection at 37 degrees C were used, using the bacterial enzyme TEM-1 beta-lactamase as a model protein to yield deletion mutants with in vivo ampicillin resistance levels comparable to wild-type (wt) enzyme. Kinetic studies demonstrate the selected mutant to have a significantly improved thermostability relative to its wt counterpart. Elongation of this mutant to the full-length gene resulted in a beta-lactamase variant with dramatically increased thermostability. This technique was so fruitful that the evolved enzyme retained its maximum catalytic activity even 20 degrees C above its wt parent protein optimum. Thus, structural perturbation by terminal truncation and subsequent compensation by directed evolution at physiological temperatures is a fast, efficient, and highly effective way to improve the thermostability of proteins without the need for selecting at elevated temperatures.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Structural perturbation and compensation by directed evolution at physiological temperature leads to thermostabilization of beta-lactamase.
- Author
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Hecky J and Müller KM
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Catalysis, Directed Molecular Evolution, Enzyme Stability, Kinetics, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Denaturation, Sequence Deletion, beta-Lactamases genetics, beta-Lactamases metabolism, Temperature, beta-Lactamases chemistry
- Abstract
The choice of protein for use in technical and medical applications is limited by stability issues, making understanding and engineering of stability key. Here, enzyme destabilization by truncation was combined with directed evolution to create stable variants of TEM-1 beta-lactamase. This enzyme was chosen because of its implication in prodrug activation therapy, pathogen resistance to lactam antibiotics, and reporter enzyme bioassays. Removal of five N-terminal residues generated a mutant which did not confer antibiotic resistance at 37 degrees C. Accordingly, the half-life time in vitro was only 7 s at 40 degrees C. However, three cycles comprising random mutagenesis, DNA shuffling, and metabolic selection at 37 degrees C yielded mutants providing resistance levels significantly higher than that of the wild type. These mutants demonstrated increased thermoactivity and thermostability in time-resolved kinetics at various temperatures. Chemical denaturation revealed improved thermodynamic stabilities of a three-state unfolding pathway exceeding wild-type construct stability. Elongation of one optimized deletion mutant to full length increased its stability even further. Compared to that of the wild type, the temperature optimum was shifted from 35 to 50 degrees C, and the beginning of heat inactivation increased by 20 degrees C while full activity at low temperatures was maintained. We attribute these effects mainly to two independently acting boundary interface residue exchanges (M182T and A224V). Structural perturbation by terminal truncation, evolutionary compensation at physiological temperatures, and elongation is an efficient way to analyze and improve thermostability without the need for high-temperature selection, structural information, or homologous proteins.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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