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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Eichinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Eichinger.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Structural insight into the dual ligand specificity and mode of high density lipoprotein association of apolipoprotein d.

Andreas Eichinger; Amber Nasreen; Hyun Jin Kim; Arne Skerra

Human apolipoprotein D (ApoD) occurs in plasma associated with high density lipoprotein. Apart from the involvement in lipid metabolism, its binding activity for progesterone and arachidonic acid plays a role in cancer development and neurological diseases. The crystal structures of free ApoD and its complex with progesterone were determined at 1.8Å resolution and reveal a lipocalin fold. The narrow, mainly uncharged pocket within the typical β-barrel accommodates progesterone with its acetyl side chain oriented toward the bottom. The cavity adopts essentially the same shape in the absence of progesterone and allows complexation of arachidonic acid as another cognate ligand. Three of the four extended loops at the open end of the β-barrel expose hydrophobic side chains, which is an unusual feature for lipocalins and probably effects association with the high density lipoprotein particle by mediating insertion into the lipid phase. This mechanism is in line with an unpaired Cys residue in the same surface region that can form a disulfide cross-link with apolipoprotein A-II.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE SIGNALING MECHANISM OF THE PH-RESPONSIVE, MEMBRANE-INTEGRATED TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATOR CADC OF ESCHERICHIA COLI

Ina Haneburger; Andreas Eichinger; Arne Skerra; Kirsten Jung

The membrane-integrated transcriptional regulator CadC of Escherichia coli activates expression of the cadBA operon at low external pH with concomitantly available lysine, providing adaptation to mild acidic stress. CadC is a representative of the ToxR-like proteins that combine sensory, signal transduction, and DNA-binding activities within a single polypeptide. Although several ToxR-like regulators such as CadC, as well as the main regulator of Vibrio cholerae virulence, ToxR itself, which activate gene expression at acidic pH, have been intensively investigated, their molecular activation mechanism is still unclear. In this study, a structure-guided mutational analysis was performed to elucidate the mechanism by which CadC detects acidification of the external milieu. Thus, a cluster of negatively charged amino acids (Asp-198, Asp-200, Glu-461, Glu-468, and Asp-471) was found to be crucial for pH detection. These amino acids form a negatively charged patch on the surface of the periplasmic domain of CadC that stretches across its two subdomains. The results of different combinations of amino acid replacements within this patch indicated that the N-terminal subdomain integrates and transduces the signals coming from both subdomains to the transmembrane domain. Alterations in the phospholipid composition did not influence pH-dependent cadBA expression, and therefore, interplay of the acidic surface patch with the negatively charged headgroups is unlikely. Models are discussed according to which protonation of these acidic amino acid side chains reduces repulsive forces between the two subdomains and/or between two monomers within a CadC dimer and thereby enables receptor activation upon lowering of the environmental pH.


Protein Science | 2006

Solubility engineering and crystallization of human apolipoprotein D

Amber Nasreen; Martin Vogt; Hyun Jin Kim; Andreas Eichinger; Arne Skerra

Human apolipoprotein D (ApoD) is a physiologically important member of the lipocalin protein family that was discovered as a peripheral subunit of the high‐density lipoprotein (HDL) but is also abundant in other body fluids and organs, including neuronal tissue. Although it has been possible to produce functional ApoD in the periplasm of Escherichia coli and to demonstrate its ligand‐binding activity for progesterone and arachidonic acid, the recombinant protein suffers from a pronounced tendency to aggregate and to adsorb to vessel surfaces as well as chromatography matrices, thus hampering further structural investigation. Here, we describe a systematic mutagenesis study directed at presumably exposed hydrophobic side chains of the unglycosylated recombinant protein. As a result, one ApoD mutant with just three new amino acid substitutions—W99H, I118S, and L120S—was identified, which exhibits the following features: (1) improved yield upon periplasmic biosynthesis in E. coli, (2) elution as a monomeric protein from a gel permeation chromatography column, and (3) unchanged binding activity for its physiological ligands. In addition, the engineered ApoD was successfully crystallized (space group I4 with unit cell parameters a = 75.1 Å, b = 75.1 Å, c = 166.0 Å, α = β = γ = 90°), thus demonstrating its conformationally homogeneous behavior and providing a basis for the future X‐ray structural analysis of this functionally still puzzling protein.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

Deactivation of the E. coli pH stress sensor CadC by cadaverine.

Ina Haneburger; Georg Fritz; Nicole Jurkschat; Larissa Tetsch; Andreas Eichinger; Arne Skerra; Ulrich Gerland; Kirsten Jung

At acidic pH and in the presence of lysine, the pH sensor CadC activates transcription of the cadBA operon encoding the lysine/cadaverine antiporter CadB and the lysine decarboxylase CadA. In effect, these proteins contribute to acid stress adaptation in Escherichia coli. cadBA expression is feedback inhibited by cadaverine, and a cadaverine binding site is predicted within the central cavity of the periplasmic domain of CadC on the basis of its crystallographic analysis. Our present study demonstrates that this site only partially accounts for the cadaverine response in vivo. Instead, evidence for a second, pivotal binding site was collected, which overlaps with the pH-responsive patch of amino acids located at the dimer interface of the periplasmic domain. The temporal response of the E. coli Cad module upon acid shock was measured and modeled for two CadC variants with mutated cadaverine binding sites. These studies supported a cascade-like binding and deactivation model for the CadC dimer: binding of cadaverine within the pair of central cavities triggers a conformational transition that exposes two further binding sites at the dimer interface, and the occupation of those stabilizes the inactive conformation. Altogether, these data represent a striking example for the deactivation of a pH sensor.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2014

Structure-guided engineering of Anticalins with improved binding behavior and biochemical characteristics for application in radio-immuno imaging and/or therapy

E. Eggenstein; Andreas Eichinger; Hyun Jin Kim; Arne Skerra

Modern strategies in radio-immuno therapy and in vivo imaging require robust, small, and specific ligand-binding proteins. In this context we have previously developed artificial lipocalins, so-called Anticalins, with high binding activity toward rare-earth metal-chelate complexes using combinatorial protein design. Here we describe further improvement of the Anticalin C26 via in vitro affinity maturation to yield CL31, which has a fourfold slower dissociation half-life above 2h. Also, we present the crystallographic analyses of both the initial and the improved Anticalin, providing insight into the molecular mechanism of chelated metal binding and the role of amino acid substitutions during the step-wise affinity maturation. Notably, one of the four structurally variable loops that form the ligand pocket in the lipocalin scaffold undergoes a significant conformational change from C26 to CL31, acting as a lid that closes over the accommodated metal-chelate ligand. A systematic mutational study indicated that further improvement of ligand affinity is difficult to achieve while providing clues on the contribution of relevant side chains in the engineered binding pocket. Unexpectedly, some of the amino acid replacements led to strong increases - more then 10-fold - in the yield of soluble protein from periplasmic secretion in Escherichia coli.


Protein Science | 2011

Crystal structure of the sensory domain of Escherichia coli CadC, a member of the ToxR-like protein family

Andreas Eichinger; Ina Haneburger; Christiane Koller; Kirsten Jung; Arne Skerra

The membrane‐integral transcriptional activator CadC comprises sensory and transcriptional regulatory functions within one polypeptide chain. Its C‐terminal periplasmic domain, CadCpd, is responsible for sensing of environmental pH as well as for binding of the feedback inhibitor cadaverine. Here we describe the crystal structure of CadCpd (residues 188–512) solved at a resolution of 1.8 Å via multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) using a ReCl62− derivative. CadCpd reveals a novel fold comprising two subdomains: an N‐terminal subdomain dominated by a β‐sheet in contact with three α‐helices and a C‐terminal subdomain formed by an eleven‐membered α‐helical bundle, which is oriented almost perpendicular to the helices in the first subdomain. Further to the native protein, crystal structures were also solved for its variants D471N and D471E, which show functionally different behavior in pH sensing. Interestingly, in the heavy metal derivative of CadCpd used for MAD phasing a ReCl62− ion was found in a cavity located between the two subdomains. Amino acid side chains that coordinate this complex ion are conserved in CadC homologues from various bacterial species, suggesting a function of the cavity in the binding of cadaverine, which was supported by docking studies. Notably, CadCpd forms a homo‐dimer in solution, which can be explained by an extended, albeit rather polar interface between two symmetry‐related monomers in the crystal structure. The occurrence of several acidic residues in this region suggests protonation‐dependent changes in the mode of dimerization, which could eventually trigger transcriptional activation by CadC in the bacterial cytoplasm.


Proteins | 2015

Crystal structure of the human odorant binding protein, OBPIIa

André Schiefner; Regina Freier; Andreas Eichinger; Arne Skerra

Human odorant‐binding protein, OBPIIa, is expressed by nasal epithelia to facilitate transport of hydrophobic odorant molecules across the aqueous mucus. Here, we report its crystallographic analysis at 2.6 Å resolution. OBPIIa is a monomeric protein that exhibits the classical lipocalin fold with a conserved eight‐stranded β‐barrel harboring a remarkably large hydrophobic pocket. Basic residues within the four loops that shape the entrance to this ligand‐binding site evoke a positive electrostatic potential. Human OBPIIa shows distinct features compared with other mammalian OBPs, including a potentially reactive Cys side chain within its pocket similar to human tear lipocalin. Proteins 2015; 83:1180–1184.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Tight Molecular Recognition of Benzo[a]pyrene by a High-Affinity Antibody.

Andreas Eichinger; Irmgard Neumaier; Michael Pschenitza; Reinhard Niessner; Dietmar Knopp; Arne Skerra

Benzo[a]pyrene, which is produced during the incomplete combustion of organic material, is an abundant noxious pollutant because of its carcinogenic metabolic degradation products. The high-affinity (KD ≈3 nm) monoclonal antibody 22F12 allows facile bioanalytical quantification of benzo[a]pyrene even in complex matrices. We report the functional and X-ray crystallographic analysis of 22F12 in complex with 3-hydroxybenzo[a]pyrene after cloning of the V-genes and production as a recombinant Fab fragment. The polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon is bound in a deep pocket between the light and heavy chains, surrounded mainly by aromatic and aliphatic amino acid side chains. Interestingly, the hapten-antibody interface is less densely packed than expected and reveals polar, H-bond-like interactions with the polycyclic aromatic π-electron system, which may allow the antibody to maintain a large, predominantly hydrophobic binding site in an aqueous environment while providing sufficient complementarity to its ligand.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2017

Rational Design of an Anticalin-Type Sugar-Binding Protein Using a Genetically Encoded Boronate Side Chain.

Selvakumar Edwardraja; Andreas Eichinger; Ina Theobald; Carina Andrea Sommer; Andreas J. Reichert; Arne Skerra

The molecular recognition of carbohydrates plays a fundamental role in many biological processes. However, the development of carbohydrate-binding reagents for biomedical research and use poses a challenge due to the generally poor affinity of proteins toward sugars in aqueous solution. Here, we describe the effective molecular recognition of pyranose monosaccharides (in particular, galactose and mannose) by a rationally designed protein receptor based on the human lipocalin scaffold (Anticalin). Complexation relies on reversible covalent cis-diol boronate diester formation with a genetically encoded l-boronophenylalanine (Bpa) residue which was incorporated as a non-natural amino acid at a sterically permissive position in the ligand pocket of the Anticalin, as confirmed by X-ray crystallography. Compared with the metal-ion and/or avidity-dependent oligovalent lectins that prevail in nature, our approach offers a novel and promising route to generate tight sugar-binding reagents both as research reagents and for biomedical applications.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

High-affinity recognition of lanthanide(III) chelate complexes by a reprogrammed human lipocalin 2.

Hyun Jin Kim; Andreas Eichinger; Arne Skerra

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Arne Skerra

Technische Universität München

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Nicole Jurkschat

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich

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Tatiana I. Postnova

State University of New York System

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Hyun Jin Kim

Seoul National University

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