7 results on '"Mateusz Jaskolowski"'
Search Results
2. Molecular basis of the TRAP complex function in ER protein biogenesis
- Author
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Mateusz Jaskolowski, Ahmad Jomaa, Martin Gamerdinger, Sandeep Shrestha, Marc Leibundgut, Elke Deuerling, and Nenad Ban
- Subjects
Structural Biology ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
The translocon-associated protein (TRAP) complex resides in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane and interacts with the Sec translocon and the ribosome to facilitate biogenesis of secretory and membrane proteins. TRAP plays a key role in the secretion of many hormones, including insulin. Here we reveal the molecular architecture of the mammalian TRAP complex and how it engages the translating ribosome associated with Sec61 translocon on the ER membrane. The TRAP complex is anchored to the ribosome via a long tether and its position is further stabilized by a finger-like loop. This positions a cradle-like lumenal domain of TRAP below the translocon for interactions with translocated nascent chains. Our structure-guided TRAP mutations in Caenorhabditis elegans lead to growth deficits associated with increased ER stress and defects in protein hormone secretion. These findings elucidate the molecular basis of the TRAP complex in the biogenesis and translocation of proteins at the ER., Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 30 (6), ISSN:1545-9993, ISSN:1545-9985
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Stepwise maturation of the peptidyl transferase region of human mitoribosomes
- Author
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Alain Scaiola, Tanja Schönhut, Oliver Rackham, Mateusz Jaskolowski, Martin Saurer, Aleksandra Filipovska, Tea Lenarčič, Richard G. Lee, Nenad Ban, and Marc Leibundgut
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Models, Molecular ,Peptidyl transferase ,Protein subunit ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,GTPase ,Ribosome ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Mitochondrial Ribosomes ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Catalytic Domain ,Mitochondrial ribosome ,Humans ,Monomeric GTP-Binding Proteins ,Mitochondrial ribosome assembly ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,General Chemistry ,Methyltransferases ,Ribosomal RNA ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Membrane protein ,RNA, Ribosomal ,Peptidyl Transferases ,biology.protein ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Protein Multimerization ,Ribosome Subunits, Large ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Mitochondrial ribosomes are specialized for the synthesis of membrane proteins responsible for oxidative phosphorylation. Mammalian mitoribosomes have diverged considerably from the ancestral bacterial ribosomes and feature dramatically reduced ribosomal RNAs. The structural basis of the mammalian mitochondrial ribosome assembly is currently not well understood. Here we present eight distinct assembly intermediates of the human large mitoribosomal subunit involving seven assembly factors. We discover that the NSUN4-MTERF4 dimer plays a critical role in the process by stabilizing the 16S rRNA in a conformation that exposes the functionally important regions of rRNA for modification by the MRM2 methyltransferase and quality control interactions with the conserved mitochondrial GTPase MTG2 that contacts the sarcin-ricin loop and the immature active site. The successive action of these factors leads to the formation of the peptidyl transferase active site of the mitoribosome and the folding of the surrounding rRNA regions responsible for interactions with tRNAs and the small ribosomal subunit., Nature Communications, 12 (1), ISSN:2041-1723
- Published
- 2021
4. Structural Insights into the Mechanism of Mitoribosomal Large Subunit Biogenesis
- Author
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Nenad Ban, Elke K. Horn, André Schneider, David J. F. Ramrath, Simone Mattei, Marc Leibundgut, Moritz Niemann, Salvatore Calderaro, Philipp Bieri, Mateusz Jaskolowski, and Daniel Boehringer
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Ribosomal Proteins ,Mitochondrial translation ,Trypanosoma brucei brucei ,Ribosome biogenesis ,Computational biology ,Biology ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Ribosome assembly ,DEAD-box RNA Helicases ,Mitochondrial Ribosomes ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,540 Chemistry ,Prokaryotic translation ,Mitochondrial ribosome ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,Helicase ,Cell Biology ,RNA, Ribosomal ,biology.protein ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Mitoribosome ,Ribosomal maturation ,Assembly factors ,Trypanosoma brucei ,Cryo-EM structure ,Peptidyltransferase center ,Ribosomal GTPases ,Ribosome Subunits, Large ,Eukaryotic Ribosome ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biogenesis - Abstract
In contrast to the bacterial translation machinery, mitoribosomes and mitochondrial translation factors are highly divergent in terms of composition and architecture. There is increasing evidence that the biogenesis of mitoribosomes is an intricate pathway, involving many assembly factors. To better understand this process, we investigated native assembly intermediates of the mitoribosomal large subunit from the human parasite Trypanosoma brucei using cryo-electron microscopy. We identify 28 assembly factors, 6 of which are homologous to bacterial and eukaryotic ribosome assembly factors. They interact with the partially folded rRNA by specifically recognizing functionally important regions such as the peptidyltransferase center. The architectural and compositional comparison of the assembly intermediates indicates a stepwise modular assembly process, during which the rRNA folds toward its mature state. During the process, several conserved GTPases and a helicase form highly intertwined interaction networks that stabilize distinct assembly intermediates. The presented structures provide general insights into mitoribosomal maturation. © 2020 Elsevier Inc. The structures of two assembly intermediates of the Trypanosoma brucei mitoribosomal large subunit in combination with biochemical analysis provide insights into the stepwise mitoribosomal biogenesis process that involves numerous assembly factors functioning as enzymes or scaffold components. © 2020 Elsevier Inc. ISSN:1097-2765 ISSN:1097-4164
- Published
- 2020
5. The structure of the C-terminal domain of the nucleoprotein from the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus in complex with a pan-specific synthetic Fab
- Author
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Malwina Radwanska, Zygmunt S. Derewenda, Daniel A. Engel, Urszula Derewenda, Tsuyoshi Miyake, Mateusz Jaskolowski, Elena K. Davydova, and Anthony A. Kossiakoff
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Phage display ,medicine.drug_class ,viruses ,Antigen-Antibody Complex ,Computational biology ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,medicine.disease_cause ,Monoclonal antibody ,Epitope ,Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments ,03 medical and health sciences ,Protein Domains ,Peptide Library ,Structural Biology ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunoglobulin Fragments ,Ebola virus ,Chemistry ,Ebolavirus ,Research Papers ,Nucleoprotein ,Synthetic antibody ,Nucleoproteins ,030104 developmental biology ,Hybridoma technology ,Bacterial antigen ,Cell Surface Display Techniques ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The vast majority of platforms for the detection of viral or bacterial antigens rely on immunoassays, typically ELISA or sandwich ELISA, that are contingent on the availability of suitable monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). This is a major bottleneck, since the generation and production of mAbs is time-consuming and expensive. Synthetic antibody fragments (sFabs) generated by phage-display selection offer an alternative with many advantages over Fabs obtained from natural antibodies using hybridoma technology. Unlike mAbs, sFabs are generated using phage display, allowing selection for binding to specific strains or for pan-specificity, for identification of structural epitopes or unique protein conformations and even for complexes. Further, they can easily be produced in Escherichia coli in large quantities and engineered for purposes of detection technologies and other applications. Here, the use of phage-display selection to generate a pan-specific Fab (MJ20), based on a Herceptin Fab scaffold, with the ability to bind selectively and with high affinity to the C-terminal domains of the nucleoproteins (NPs) from all five known strains of the Ebola virus is reported. The high-resolution crystal structure of the complex of MJ20 with the antigen from the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus reveals the basis for pan-specificity and illustrates how the phage-display technology can be used to manufacture suitable Fabs for use in diagnostic or therapeutic applications.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The molecular mechanism of cotranslational membrane protein recognition and targeting by SecA
- Author
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Ahmad Jomaa, Shuai Wang, Chien-I Yang, Mateusz Jaskolowski, Nenad Ban, and Shu-ou Shan
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Ribosomal Proteins ,medicine.disease_cause ,environment and public health ,Ribosome ,Article ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Protein Domains ,Structural Biology ,Ribosomal protein ,Protein targeting ,medicine ,Translocase ,Binding site ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Binding Sites ,SecA Proteins ,Escherichia coli K12 ,biology ,Chemistry ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,Translocon ,Cell biology ,Transmembrane domain ,Membrane protein ,Protein Biosynthesis ,biology.protein ,bacteria ,SEC Translocation Channels ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cotranslational protein targeting is a conserved process for membrane protein biogenesis. In Escherichia coli, the essential ATPase SecA was found to cotranslationally target a subset of nascent membrane proteins to the SecYEG translocase at the plasma membrane. The molecular mechanism of this pathway remains unclear. Here we use biochemical and cryoelectron microscopy analyses to show that the amino-terminal amphipathic helix of SecA and the ribosomal protein uL23 form a composite binding site for the transmembrane domain (TMD) on the nascent protein. This binding mode further enables recognition of charged residues flanking the nascent TMD and thus explains the specificity of SecA recognition. Finally, we show that membrane-embedded SecYEG promotes handover of the translating ribosome from SecA to the translocase via a concerted mechanism. Our work provides a molecular description of the SecA-mediated cotranslational targeting pathway and demonstrates an unprecedented role of the ribosome in shielding nascent TMDs.
- Published
- 2019
7. Locking the Elbow: Improved Antibody Fab Fragments as Chaperones for Structure Determination
- Author
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Pawel K. Dominik, Michael David Clark, Kimberly M. Sheehy, Huan Rui, Anthony A. Kossiakoff, Wenguang G. Liang, Mateusz Jaskolowski, Dawid Deneka, Yejoon Kim, Wei-Jen Tang, and Lucas J. Bailey
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Models, Molecular ,Phage display ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Fab-protein complex ,Protein Conformation ,Elbow ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Protein Engineering ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments ,Structural Biology ,Peptide Library ,Fab Fragments ,medicine ,Fab elbow angle ,Humans ,cryo-EM fiducial mark ,Antigens ,Molecular Biology ,Flexibility (engineering) ,biology ,antibody engineering ,Chemistry ,crystallization chaperone ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Antibody ,Crystallization ,Molecular Chaperones - Abstract
Antibody Fab fragments have been exploited with significant success to facilitate the structure determination of challenging macromolecules as crystallization chaperones and as molecular fiducial marks for single particle cryo-electron microscopy approaches. However, the inherent flexibility of the "elbow" regions, which link the constant and variable domains of the Fab, can introduce disorder and thus diminish their effectiveness. We have developed a phage display engineering strategy to generate synthetic Fab variants that significantly reduces elbow flexibility, while maintaining their high affinity and stability. This strategy was validated using previously recalcitrant Fab-antigen complexes where introduction of an engineered elbow region enhanced crystallization and diffraction resolution. Furthermore, incorporation of the mutations appears to be generally portable to other synthetic antibodies and may serve as a universal strategy to enhance the success rates of Fabs as structure determination chaperones.
- Published
- 2017
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