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Dive into the research topics where Anders Pedersen is active.

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Featured researches published by Anders Pedersen.


PLOS Biology | 2010

Proteorhodopsin Phototrophy Promotes Survival of Marine Bacteria during Starvation

Laura Gómez-Consarnau; Neelam Akram; Kristoffer Lindell; Anders Pedersen; Richard Neutze; Debra L. Milton; José M. González; Jarone Pinhassi

Mutational analysis provides direct evidence for the link between proteorhodopsin light-harvesting and enhanced survival of marine bacteria.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2008

Optimized in vitro and in vivo expression of proteorhodopsin: A seven-transmembrane proton pump

Pontus Gourdon; Anna Alfredsson; Anders Pedersen; Erik Malmerberg; Maria Nyblom; Mikael Widell; Ronnie Berntsson; Jarone Pinhassi; Marc Braiman; Örjan Hansson; Nicklas Bonander; Göran Karlsson; Richard Neutze

Proteorhodopsin is an integral membrane light-harvesting proton pump that is found in bacteria distributed throughout global surface waters. Here, we present a protocol for functional in vitro production of pR using a commercial cell-free synthesis system yielding 1.0mg purified protein per milliliter of cell lysate. We also present an optimized protocol for in vivo over-expression of pR in Escherichia coli, and a two-step purification yielding 5mg of essentially pure functional protein per liter of culture. Both approaches are straightforward, rapid, and easily scalable. Thus either may facilitate the exploitation of pR for commercial biotechnological applications. Finally, the implications of some observations of the in vitro synthesis behavior, as well as preliminary results towards a structural determination of pR are discussed.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2008

Proton-translocating transhydrogenase: an update of unsolved and controversial issues

Anders Pedersen; Göran Karlsson; Jan Rydström

Proton-translocating transhydrogenases, reducing NADP+ by NADH through hydride transfer, are membrane proteins utilizing the electrochemical proton gradient for NADPH generation. The enzymes have important physiological roles in the maintenance of e.g. reduced glutathione, relevant for essentially all cell types. Following X-ray crystallography and structural resolution of the soluble substrate-binding domains, mechanistic aspects of the hydride transfer are beginning to be resolved. However, the structure of the intact enzyme is unknown. Key questions regarding the coupling mechanism, i.e., the mechanism of proton translocation, are addressed using the separately expressed substrate-binding domains. Important aspects are therefore which functions and properties of mainly the soluble NADP(H)-binding domain, but also the NAD(H)-binding domain, are relevant for proton translocation, how the soluble domains communicate with the membrane domain, and the mechanism of proton translocation through the membrane domain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Glycosylation Increases the Thermostability of Human Aquaporin 10 Protein

Fredrik Öberg; Jennie Sjöhamn; Gerhard Fischer; Andreas Moberg; Anders Pedersen; Richard Neutze; Kristina Hedfalk

Human aquaporin10 (hAQP10) is a transmembrane facilitator of both water and glycerol transport in the small intestine. This aquaglyceroporin is located in the apical membrane of enterocytes and is believed to contribute to the passage of water and glycerol through these intestinal absorptive cells. Here we overproduced hAQP10 in the yeast Pichia pastoris and observed that the protein is glycosylated at Asn-133 in the extracellular loop C. This finding confirms one of three predicted glycosylation sites for hAQP10, and its glycosylation is unique for the human aquaporins overproduced in this host. Nonglycosylated protein was isolated using both glycan affinity chromatography and through mutating asparagine 133 to a glutamine. All three forms of hAQP10 where found to facilitate the transport of water, glycerol, erythritol, and xylitol, and glycosylation had little effect on functionality. In contrast, glycosylated hAQP10 showed increased thermostability of 3–6 °C compared with the nonglycosylated protein, suggesting a stabilizing effect of the N-linked glycan. Because only one third of hAQP10 was glycosylated yet the thermostability titration was mono-modal, we suggest that the presence of at least one glycosylated protein within each tetramer is sufficient to convey an enhanced structural stability to the remaining hAQP10 protomers of the tetramer.


New Biotechnology | 2011

Rational improvement of cell-free protein synthesis.

Anders Pedersen; Kristofer Hellberg; Johan Enberg; B. Göran Karlsson

Experimental design principles were applied on cell-free protein synthesis to optimize performance with regard to the expression yield and the incorporation efficiency of amino acid precursors. A versatile screening platform based on batch-mode cell-free expression and central composite design was used. The performance of different extracts (S12 and S30), the concentration dependence of key components and the effect of different additives were investigated. We find that the initial expression yield can be enhanced twofold to threefold in this manner. The improved conditions comprise a modified S12 extract, optimized concentrations of creatine phosphate and key amino acids, as well as introduction of ketoacid additives. Our results show that current cell-free expression technology is far from optimal and that higher yields and increased utilization of the provided precursors are attainable with further optimization.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Highly Efficient NMR Assignment of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins: Application to B- and T Cell Receptor Domains

Linnéa Isaksson; Maxim Mayzel; Maria Saline; Anders Pedersen; Joakim Rosenlöw; Bernhard Brutscher; B. Göran Karlsson; Vladislav Yu. Orekhov

We present an integrated approach for efficient characterization of intrinsically disordered proteins. Batch cell-free expression, fast data acquisition, automated analysis, and statistical validation with data resampling have been combined for achieving cost-effective protein expression, and rapid automated backbone assignment. The new methodology is applied for characterization of five cytosolic domains from T- and B-cell receptors in solution.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2012

Expression screening of membrane proteins with cell-free protein synthesis

Linnéa Isaksson; Johan Enberg; Richard Neutze; B. Göran Karlsson; Anders Pedersen

Detailed biophysical studies of integral membrane proteins are often hampered by sample preparation difficulties. Membrane proteins are typically difficult to express in sufficient amounts to enable the use of demanding techniques such as nuclear magnetic resonance and X-ray crystallography for structural biology. Here, we show that an inexpensive batch-based cell-free expression system can be a viable alternative for production of a wide range of different membrane proteins, both of prokaryotic and eukaryotic origin. Out of 38 tested protein constructs, 37 express at levels suitable for structural biology, i.e. enough to produce several milligrams of protein routinely and without excessive costs. This success rate was not anticipated and is even more impressive considering that more than half of the expressed proteins where of mammalian origin. A detergent screen identified Brij-58 as the, in general, most successful choice for co-translational solubilization of the expressed proteins.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

The organization of the membrane domain and its interaction with the NADP(H)-binding site in proton-translocating transhydrogenase from E. coli.

Tania Bizouarn; Magnus Althage; Anders Pedersen; Anna Katarina Tigerström; Jenny Karlsson; Carina B. Johansson; Jan Rydström

Proton-translocating nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase is a conformationally driven pump which catalyzes the reversibel reduction of NADP(+) by NADH. Transhydrogenases contain three domains, i.e., the hydrophilic NAD(H)-binding domain I and the NADP(H)-binding domain III, and the hydrophobic domain II containing the proton channel. Domains I and III have been separately expressed and characterized structurally by, e.g. X-ray crystallography and NMR. These domains catalyze transhydrogenation in the absence of domain II. However, due to the absence of the latter domain, the reactions catalyzed by domains I and III differ significantly from those catalyzed by the intact enzyme. Mutagenesis of residues in domain II markedly affects the activity of the intact enzyme. In order to resolve the structure-function relationships of the intact enzyme, and the molecular mechanism of proton translocation, it is therefore essential to establish the structure and function of domain II and its interactions with domains I and III. This review describes some relevant recent results in this field of research.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Molecular pathogenesis of a new glycogenosis caused by a glycogenin-1 mutation

Johanna Nilsson; Adnan Halim; Ali-Reza Moslemi; Anders Pedersen; Jonas Nilsson; Göran Larson; Anders Oldfors

Glycogenin-1 initiates the glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscle by the autocatalytic formation of a short oligosaccharide at tyrosine 195. Glycogenin-1 catalyzes both the glucose-O-tyrosine linkage and the α1,4 glucosidic bonds linking the glucose molecules in the oligosaccharide. We recently described a patient with glycogen depletion in skeletal muscle as a result of a non-functional glycogenin-1. The patient carried a Thr83Met substitution in glycogenin-1. In this study we have investigated the importance of threonine 83 for the catalytic activity of glycogenin-1. Non-glucosylated glycogenin-1 constructs, with various amino acid substitutions in position 83 and 195, were expressed in a cell-free expression system and autoglucosylated in vitro. The autoglucosylation was analyzed by gel-shift on western blot, incorporation of radiolabeled UDP-(14)C-glucose and nano-liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). We demonstrate that glycogenin-1 with the Thr83Met substitution is unable to form the glucose-O-tyrosine linkage at tyrosine 195 unless co-expressed with the catalytically active Tyr195Phe glycogenin-1. Our results explain the glycogen depletion in the patient expressing only Thr83Met glycogenin-1 and why heterozygous carriers without clinical symptoms show a small proportion of unglucosylated glycogenin-1.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2017

Metabolic and functional characterization of effects of developmental temperature in Drosophila melanogaster.

Mads Fristrup Schou; Torsten Nygaard Kristensen; Anders Pedersen; B. Göran Karlsson; Volker Loeschcke; Anders Malmendal

The ability of ectotherms to respond to changes in their thermal environment through plastic mechanisms is central to their adaptive capability. However, we still lack knowledge on the physiological and functional responses by which ectotherms acclimate to temperatures during development, and in particular, how physiological stress at extreme temperatures may counteract beneficial acclimation responses at benign temperatures. We exposed Drosophila melanogaster to 10 developmental temperatures covering their entire permissible temperature range. We obtained metabolic profiles and reaction norms for several functional traits: egg-to-adult viability, developmental time, and heat and cold tolerance. Females were more heat tolerant than males, whereas no sexual dimorphism was found in cold tolerance. A group of metabolites, mainly free amino acids, had linear reaction norms. Several energy-carrying molecules, as well as some sugars, showed distinct inverted U-shaped norms of reaction across the thermal range, resulting in a positive correlation between metabolite intensities and egg-to-adult viability. At extreme temperatures, low levels of these metabolites were interpreted as a response characteristic of costs of homeostatic perturbations. Our results provide novel insights into a range of metabolites reported to be central for the acclimation response and suggest several new candidate metabolites. Low and high temperatures result in different adaptive physiological responses, but they also have commonalities likely to be a result of the failure to compensate for the physiological stress. We suggest that the regulation of metabolites that are tightly connected to the performance curve is important for the ability of ectotherms to cope with variation in temperature.

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Jan Rydström

University of Gothenburg

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Richard Neutze

University of Gothenburg

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Adnan Halim

University of Copenhagen

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Klavs Madsen

University of Southern Denmark

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