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Dive into the research topics where Adrian Hugenmatter is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrian Hugenmatter.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

The Evolutionary Origins of Detoxifying Enzymes THE MAMMALIAN SERUM PARAOXONASES (PONs) RELATE TO BACTERIAL HOMOSERINE LACTONASES

Hagit Bar-Rogovsky; Adrian Hugenmatter; Dan S. Tawfik

Background: Serum paraoxonases (PONs) comprise a family of mammalian detoxifying lactonases with different substrate specificities. Results: A newly identified bacterial PON and the reconstructed ancestor of mammalian PONs are quorum-quenching lactonases. Conclusion: PONs originated from quorum-quenching lactonases that later acquired new detoxifying functions. Significance: The evolutionary history of detoxifying enzymes may explain their ambiguous and overlapping specificity profiles. Serum paraoxonases (PONs) are detoxifying lactonases that were first identified in mammals. Three mammalian families are known, PON1, 2, and 3 that reside primarily in the liver. They catalyze essentially the same reaction, lactone hydrolysis, but differ in their substrate specificity. Although some members are highly specific, others have a broad specificity profile. The evolutionary origins and substrate specificities of PONs therefore remain poorly understood. Here, we report a newly identified family of bacterial PONs, and the reconstruction of the ancestor of the three families of mammalian PONs. Both the mammalian ancestor and the characterized bacterial PONX_OCCAL were found to efficiently hydrolyze N-acyl homoserine lactones that mediate quorum sensing in many bacteria, including pathogenic ones. The mammalian PONs may therefore relate to a newly identified family of bacterial, PON-like “quorum-quenching” lactonases. The appearance of PONs in metazoa is likely to relate to innate immunity rather than detoxification. Unlike the bacterial PON, the mammalian ancestor also hydrolyzes, with low efficiency, lactones other than homoserine lactones, thus preceding the detoxifying functions that diverged later in two of the three mammalian families. The bifunctionality of the mammalian ancestor and the trade-off between the quorum-quenching and detoxifying lactonase activities explain the broad and overlapping specificities of some mammalian PONs versus the singular specificity of others.


Biochemistry | 2009

Directed Evolution of Serum Paraoxonase PON3 by Family Shuffling and Ancestor/Consensus Mutagenesis, and Its Biochemical Characterization

Olga Khersonsky; Mira Rosenblat; Lilly Toker; Shiri Yacobson; Adrian Hugenmatter; Israel Silman; Joel L. Sussman; Michael Aviram; Dan S. Tawfik

Serum paraoxonases (PONs) are calcium-dependent lactonases with anti-atherogenic and detoxification functions. Here we describe the directed evolution and characterization of recombinant variants of serum paraoxonase PON3 that express in an active and soluble manner in Escherichia coli. These variants were obtained by combining family shuffling and phylogeny-based mutagenesis: the limited diversity of accessible, cloned PON3 genes was complemented by spiking the shuffling reaction with ancestor/consensus mutations, mutations to residues that comprise the consensus or appear in the predicted ancestors of the PON family. We screened the resulting libraries for PON3s lactonase activity while ensuring that the selected variants retained the substrate specificity of wild-type mammalian PON3s. The availability of highly stable, recombinant PON3 that is free of all other serum components enabled us to explore unknown biochemical features of PON3, including its binding to HDL particles, the effect of HDL on PON3s stability and enzymatic activity, and ex vivo tests of its anti-atherogenic properties. Overall, it appears that PON3 possesses properties very similar to those of PON1: the enzymes lactonase activity is selectively stimulated by binding to apoAI-HDL, with a concomitant increase in its stability. PON3 also exhibits potentially anti-atherogenic functions, although at levels lower than those of PON1.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Human Blood-Brain Barrier Transcytosis Assay Reveals Antibody Transcytosis Influenced by pH-Dependent Receptor Binding

Hadassah Sade; Claudia Baumgartner; Adrian Hugenmatter; Ekkehard Moessner; Per-Ola Freskgård; Jens Niewoehner

We have adapted an in vitro model of the human blood-brain barrier, the immortalized human cerebral microvascular endothelial cells (hCMEC/D3), to quantitatively measure protein transcytosis. After validating the receptor-mediated transport using transferrin, the system was used to measure transcytosis rates of antibodies directed against potential brain shuttle receptors. While an antibody to the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R) was exclusively recycled to the apical compartment, the fate of antibodies to the transferrin receptor (TfR) was determined by their relative affinities at extracellular and endosomal pH. An antibody with reduced affinity at pH5.5 showed significant transcytosis, while pH-independent antibodies of comparable affinities at pH 7.4 remained associated with intracellular vesicular compartments and were finally targeted for degradation.


Archive | 2014

MONOVALENT BLOOD BRAIN BARRIER SHUTTLE MODULES

Petra Rueger; Georg Tiefenthaler; Ekkehard Moessner; Jens Niewoehner; Adrian Hugenmatter; Cuiying Shao; Francesca Ros; Gang Xu


Archive | 2012

Method and constructs for the ph dependent passage of the blood-brain-barrier

Bernd Bohrmann; Per-Ola Freskgård; Adrian Hugenmatter; Erhard Kopetzki; Ekkehard Moessner; Jens Niewoehner; Hadassah Sade; Pablo Umana


Archive | 2017

METHOD AND CONSTRUCTS FOR PH DEPENDENT PASSAGE OF BLOOD-BRAIN-BARRIER

Bernd Bohrmann; Per-Ola Freskgård; Adrian Hugenmatter; Kopetzky Erhard; Moessner Ekkehard; Jens Niewoehner; Hadassah Sade; Umana Pablo


Archive | 2016

MÓDULOS LANZADERA MONOVALENTES DE LA BARRERA HEMATOCEFÁLICA

Ekkehard Moessner; Petra Rueger; Cuiying Shao; Georg Tiefenthaler; Francesca Ros; Gang Xu; Jens Niewoehner; Adrian Hugenmatter


Archive | 2016

ANTICUERPOS ANTI-TAU(pS422) HUMANIZADOS Y MÉTODOS DE UTILIZACIÓN

Adrian Hugenmatter; Fiona Grueninger; Ulrich Goepfert; Guy Georges; Thomas Emrich; Stefan Dengl; Kevin Brady; Michael Molhoj; Tilman Schlothauer; Jens Niewoehner; Olaf Mundigl; Ekkehard Moessner; Joerg Moelleken; Hubert Kettenberger; Anton Jochner


Archive | 2015

Anticorps bispecifiques anti-cd3epsilon et bcma

Minh Diem Vu; Klaus Strein; Oliver Ast; Marina Bacac; Peter Bruenker; Tanja Fauti; Anne Freimoser-Grundschober; Ralf Hosse; Adrian Hugenmatter; Christiane Jaeger; Christian Klein; Ekkehard Moessner; Samuel Moser; Pablo Umana


Archive | 2014

Modules navettes de barrière hémato-encéphalique monovalents

Petra Rueger; Georg Tiefenthaler; Ekkehard Moessner; Jens Niewoehner; Adrian Hugenmatter; Cuiying Shao; Francesca Ros; Gang Xu

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