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Featured researches published by Anneloes Blok.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013

The Structure of the Cytochrome P450cam-Putidaredoxin Complex Determined by Paramagnetic NMR Spectroscopy and Crystallography.

Yoshitaka Hiruma; Mathias A. S. Hass; Yuki Kikui; Wei-Min Liu; Betül Ölmez; Simon P. Skinner; Anneloes Blok; Alexander Kloosterman; Hiroyasu Koteishi; Frank Löhr; Harald Schwalbe; Masaki Nojiri; Marcellus Ubbink

Cytochrome P450cam catalyzes the hydroxylation of camphor in a complex process involving two electron transfers (ETs) from the iron-sulfur protein putidaredoxin. The enzymatic control of the successive steps of catalysis is critical for a highly efficient reaction. The injection of the successive electrons is part of the control system. To understand the molecular interactions between putidaredoxin and cytochrome P450cam, we determined the structure of the complex both in solution and in the crystal state. Paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy using lanthanide tags yielded 446 structural restraints that were used to determine the solution structure. An ensemble of 10 structures with an RMSD of 1.3Å was obtained. The crystal structure of the complex was solved, showing a position of putidaredoxin that is identical with the one in the solution structure. The NMR data further demonstrate the presence of a minor state or set of states of the complex in solution, which is attributed to the presence of an encounter complex. The structure of the major state shows a small binding interface and a metal-to-metal distance of 16Å, with two pathways that provide strong electronic coupling of the redox centers. The interpretation of these results is discussed in the context of ET. The structure indicates that the ET rate can be much faster than the reported value, suggesting that the process may be gated.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

A pH-Sensitive, Colorful, Lanthanide-Chelating Paramagnetic NMR Probe

Wei-Min Liu; Peter H. J. Keizers; Mathias A. S. Hass; Anneloes Blok; Monika Timmer; Alexi J. C. Sarris; Mark Overhand; Marcellus Ubbink

Paramagnetic lanthanides ions are broadly used in NMR spectroscopy. The effects of unpaired electrons on NMR spectral parameters provide a powerful tool for the characterization of macromolecular structures and dynamics. Here, a new lanthanide-chelating NMR probe, Caged Lanthanide NMR Probe-7 (CLaNP-7), is presented. It can be attached to protein surfaces via two disulfide bridges, yielding a probe that is rigid relative to the protein backbone. CLaNP-7 extends the application range of available probes. It has a yellow color, which is helpful for sample preparation. Its effects are comparable to those of CLaNP-5, but its charge is two units lower (+1) than that of CLaNP-5 (+3), reducing the change in surface potential after probe attachment. It also has a different magnetic susceptibility tensor, so by using both tags, two sets of structural restraints can be obtained per engineered cysteine pair. Moreover, it was found that the orientation of the magnetic susceptibility tensor is pH dependent (pK(a) ≈ 7) when a histidine residue is located in the neighborhood of the probe attachment site. The results show that the His imidazole group interacts with the CLaNP-7 tag. It is proposed that the histidine residue forms a hydrogen bond to a water/hydroxyl molecule that occupies the ninth coordination position on the lanthanide, thus breaking the two-fold symmetry of the CLaNP tag in a pH-dependent way.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Validation of a lanthanide tag for the analysis of protein dynamics by paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy.

Mathias A. S. Hass; Peter H. J. Keizers; Anneloes Blok; Yoshitaka Hiruma; Marcellus Ubbink

Paramagnetic lanthanide tags potentially can enhance the effects of microsecond to millisecond dynamics in proteins on NMR signals and provide structural information on lowly populated states encoded in the pseudocontact shifts. We have investigated the microsecond to millisecond mobility of a two-point attached lanthanide tag, CLaNP-5, using paramagnetic (1)H CPMG relaxation dispersion methods. CLaNP-5 loaded with Lu(3+), Yb(3+), or Tm(3+) was attached to three sites on the surface of two proteins, pseudoazurin and cytochrome c. The paramagnetic center causes large relaxation dispersion effects for two attachment sites, suggesting that local dynamics of the protein at the attachment site causes mobility of the paramagnetic center. At one site the relaxation dispersions are small and limited to the immediate environment of the tag. It is concluded that paramagnetic relaxation dispersion could represent a sensitive method to probe protein dynamics. However, the selection of a rigid attachment site is of critical importance.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Delicate conformational balance of the redox enzyme cytochrome P450cam

Simon P. Skinner; Wei-Min Liu; Yoshitaka Hiruma; Monika Timmer; Anneloes Blok; Mathias A. S. Hass; Marcellus Ubbink

Significance The ubiquitous enzymes called cytochromes P450 catalyze a broad range of chemical reactions using molecular oxygen. For example, in humans, these enzymes are involved in breakdown of foreign compounds, including drugs. The bacterial cytochrome P450cam is thought to open up to allow substrate to enter the active site, and then to close during catalysis to keep reactive intermediates inside. Surprisingly, recent crystal structures suggested that the enzyme is open during the reaction. We have studied the enzyme in solution using paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy, demonstrating that, in fact, the enzyme is closed. This finding indicates that the subtle balance between open and closed is affected by crystallization, which can lead to the wrong conclusions about the protein dynamics. The energy landscapes of proteins are highly complex and can be influenced by changes in physical and chemical conditions under which the protein is studied. The redox enzyme cytochrome P450cam undergoes a multistep catalytic cycle wherein two electrons are transferred to the heme group and the enzyme visits several conformational states. Using paramagnetic NMR spectroscopy with a lanthanoid tag, we show that the enzyme bound to its redox partner, putidaredoxin, is in a closed state at ambient temperature in solution. This result contrasts with recent crystal structures of the complex, which suggest that the enzyme opens up when bound to its partner. The closed state supports a model of catalysis in which the substrate is locked in the active site pocket and the enzyme acts as an insulator for the reactive intermediates of the reaction.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

A Two‐Armed Lanthanoid‐Chelating Paramagnetic NMR Probe Linked to Proteins via Thioether Linkages

Wei-Min Liu; Simon P. Skinner; Monika Timmer; Anneloes Blok; Mathias A. S. Hass; Dmitri V. Filippov; Mark Overhand; Marcellus Ubbink

Paramagnetic NMR probes provide valuable long-range structural information on proteins and protein complexes. A new, stable, two-armed lanthanoid probe is reported that can be attached to a protein site-specifically via chemically inert thioether linkages.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Efficient electron transfer in a protein network lacking specific interactions.

Francesca Meschi; Frank G. M. Wiertz; Linda Klauss; Anneloes Blok; Bernd Ludwig; Angelo Merli; Hendrik A. Heering; Gian Luigi Rossi; Marcellus Ubbink

In many biochemical processes, proteins need to bind partners amidst a sea of other molecules. Generally, partner selection is achieved by formation of a single-orientation complex with well-defined, short-range interactions. We describe a protein network that functions effectively in a metabolic electron transfer process but lacks such specific interactions. The soil bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans oxidizes a variety of compounds by channeling electrons into the main respiratory pathway. Upon conversion of methylamine by methylamine dehydrogenase, electrons are transported to the terminal oxidase to reduce molecular oxygen. Steady-state kinetic measurements and NMR experiments demonstrate a remarkable number of possibilities for the electron transfer, involving the cupredoxin amicyanin as well as four c-type cytochromes. The observed interactions appear to be governed exclusively by the electrostatic nature of each of the proteins. It is concluded that Paracoccus provides a pool of cytochromes for efficient electron transfer via weak, ill-defined interactions, in contrast with the view that functional biochemical interactions require well-defined molecular interactions. It is proposed that the lack of requirement for specificity in these interactions might facilitate the integration of new metabolic pathways.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Amicyanin transfers electrons from methylamine dehydrogenase to cytochrome c-551i via a ping-pong mechanism, not a ternary complex.

Francesca Meschi; Frank G. M. Wiertz; Linda Klauss; Chiara Cavalieri; Anneloes Blok; Bernd Ludwig; Hendrik A. Heering; Angelo Merli; Gian Luigi Rossi; Marcellus Ubbink

The first crystal structure of a ternary redox protein complex was comprised of the enzyme methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) and two electron transfer proteins, amicyanin and cytochrome c-551i from Paracoccus denitrificans [Chen et al. Science 1994, 264, 86-90]. The arrangement of the proteins suggested possible electron transfer from the active site of MADH via the amicyanin copper ion to the cytochrome heme iron, although the distance between the metals is large. We studied the interactions between these proteins in solution. A titration followed by NMR spectroscopy shows that amicyanin binds cytochrome c-551i. The interface comprises the hydrophobic and positive patches of amicyanin, not the binding site observed in the ternary complex. NMR experiments further show that amicyanin binds tightly to MADH with an interface that matches the one observed in the crystal structure and that mostly overlaps with the binding site for cytochrome c-551i. Upon addition of cytochrome c-551i, no changes in the NMR spectrum of MADH-bound amicyanin are observed, suggesting that a possible interaction of the cytochrome with the binary complex must be very weak, with a dissociation constant higher than 2 mM. Reconstitution of the entire redox chain in vitro demonstrates that amicyanin can react rapidly with cytochrome c-551i, but that association of amicyanin with MADH inhibits this reaction. It is concluded that electron transfer from MADH to cytochrome c-551i does not involve a ternary complex but occurs via a ping-pong mechanism in which amicyanin uses the same interface for the reactions with MADH and cytochrome c-551i.


ChemBioChem | 2014

An Ensemble of Rapidly Interconverting Orientations in Electrostatic Protein–Peptide Complexes Characterized by NMR Spectroscopy

Jia‐Ying Guan; Johannes M. Foerster; Jan W. Drijfhout; Monika Timmer; Anneloes Blok; G. Matthias Ullmann; Marcellus Ubbink

Protein complex formation involves an encounter state in which the proteins are associated in a nonspecific manner and often stabilized by interactions between charged surface patches. Such patches are thought to bind in many different orientations with similar affinity. To obtain experimental evidence for the dynamics in encounter complexes, a model was created using the electron transfer protein plastocyanin and short charged peptides. Three plastocyanins with distinct surface charge distributions were studied. The experimental results from chemical shift perturbations, paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) NMR, and theoretical results from Monte Carlo simulations indicate the presence of multiple binding orientations that interconvert quickly and are dominated by long‐range charge interactions. The PRE data also suggest the presence of highly transient orientations stabilized by short‐range interactions.


Biochemistry | 2017

Phosphate Promotes the Recovery of Mycobacterium tuberculosis β-Lactamase from Clavulanic Acid Inhibition

Wouter Elings; Raffaella Tassoni; Steven A. van der Schoot; Wendy Luu; Josef P. Kynast; Lin Dai; Anneloes Blok; Monika Timmer; Bogdan I. Florea; Navraj S. Pannu; Marcellus Ubbink

The rise of multi- and even totally antibiotic resistant forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis underlines the need for new antibiotics. The pathogen is resistant to β-lactam compounds due to its native serine β-lactamase, BlaC. This resistance can be circumvented by administration of a β-lactamase inhibitor. We studied the interaction between BlaC and the inhibitor clavulanic acid. Our data show hydrolysis of clavulanic acid and recovery of BlaC activity upon prolonged incubation. The rate of clavulanic acid hydrolysis is much higher in the presence of phosphate ions. A specific binding site for phosphate is identified in the active site pocket, both in the crystalline state and in solution. NMR spectroscopy experiments show that phosphate binds to this site with a dissociation constant of 30 mM in the free enzyme. We conclude that inhibition of BlaC by clavulanic acid is reversible and that phosphate ions can promote the hydrolysis of the inhibitor.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007

Redox-state-dependent complex formation between pseudoazurin and nitrite reductase.

Antonietta Impagliazzo; Anneloes Blok; Matthew J. Cliff; John E. Ladbury; Marcellus Ubbink

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Frank G. M. Wiertz

Delft University of Technology

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