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Dive into the research topics where Anton Steen is active.

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Featured researches published by Anton Steen.


Molecular Microbiology | 2008

LysM, a widely distributed protein motif for binding to (peptido)glycans

Girbe Buist; Anton Steen; Jan Kok; Oscar P. Kuipers

Bacteria retain certain proteins at their cell envelopes by attaching them in a non‐covalent manner to peptidoglycan, using specific protein domains, such as the prominent LysM (Lysin Motif) domain. More than 4000 (Pfam PF01476) proteins of both prokaryotes and eukaryotes have been found to contain one or more Lysin Motifs. Notably, this collection contains not only truly secreted proteins, but also (outer‐)membrane proteins, lipoproteins or proteins bound to the cell wall in a (non‐)covalent manner. The motif typically ranges in length from 44 to 65 amino acid residues and binds to various types of peptidoglycan and chitin, most likely recognizing the N‐acetylglucosamine moiety. Most bacterial LysM‐containing proteins are peptidoglycan hydrolases with various cleavage specificities. Binding of certain LysM proteins to cells of Gram‐positive bacteria has been shown to occur at specific sites, as binding elsewhere is hindered by the presence of other cell wall components such as lipoteichoic acids. Interestingly, LysM domains of certain plant kinases enable the plant to recognize its symbiotic bacteria or sense and induce resistance against fungi. This interaction is triggered by chitin‐like compounds that are secreted by the symbiotic bacteria or released from fungi, demonstrating an important sensing function of LysMs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Cell Wall Attachment of a Widely Distributed Peptidoglycan Binding Domain Is Hindered by Cell Wall Constituents

Anton Steen; Girbe Buist; Kees Leenhouts; Mohamed El Khattabi; Froukje Grijpstra; Aldert Zomer; Gerard Venema; Oscar P. Kuipers; Jan Kok

The C-terminal region (cA) of the major autolysin AcmA of Lactococcus lactis contains three highly similar repeated regions of 45 amino acid residues (LysM domains), which are separated by nonhomologous sequences. The cA domain could be deleted without destroying the cell wall-hydrolyzing activity of the enzyme in vitro. This AcmA derivative was capable neither of binding to lactococcal cells nor of lysing these cells while separation of the producer cells was incomplete. The cA domain and a chimeric protein consisting of cA fused to the C terminus of MSA2, a malaria parasite surface antigen, bound to lactococcal cells specifically via cA. The fusion protein also bound to many other Gram-positive bacteria. By chemical treatment of purified cell walls of L. lactis and Bacillus subtilis, peptidoglycan was identified as the cell wall component interacting with cA. Immunofluorescence studies showed that binding is on specific locations on the surface of L. lactis, Enterococcus faecalis, Streptococcus thermophilus, B. subtilis, Lactobacillus sake, and Lactobacillus casei cells. Based on these studies, we propose that LysM-type repeats bind to peptidoglycan and that binding is hindered by other cell wall constituents, resulting in localized binding of AcmA. Lipoteichoic acid is a candidate hindering component. For L. lactis SK110, it is shown that lipoteichoic acids are not uniformly distributed over the cell surface and are mainly present at sites where no MSA2cA binding is observed.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Novel Surface Display System for Proteins on Non-Genetically Modified Gram-Positive Bacteria

Tjibbe Bosma; Rolf Kanninga; Jolanda Neef; Sandrine Audouy; Maarten L. van Roosmalen; Anton Steen; Girbe Buist; Jan Kok; Oscar P. Kuipers; George T. Robillard; Kees Leenhouts

ABSTRACT A novel display system is described that allows highly efficient immobilization of heterologous proteins on bacterial surfaces in applications for which the use of genetically modified bacteria is less desirable. This system is based on nonliving and non-genetically modified gram-positive bacterial cells, designated gram-positive enhancer matrix (GEM) particles, which are used as substrates to bind externally added heterologous proteins by means of a high-affinity binding domain. This binding domain, the protein anchor (PA), was derived from the Lactococcus lactis peptidoglycan hydrolase AcmA. GEM particles were typically prepared from the innocuous bacterium L. lactis, and various parameters for the optimal preparation of GEM particles and binding of PA fusion proteins were determined. The versatility and flexibility of the display and delivery technology were demonstrated by investigating enzyme immobilization and nasal vaccine applications.


FEBS Journal | 2005

AcmA of Lactococcus lactis is an N‐acetylglucosaminidase with an optimal number of LysM domains for proper functioning

Anton Steen; Girbe Buist; Gavin J. Horsburgh; Gerard Venema; Oscar P. Kuipers; Simon J. Foster; Jan Kok

AcmA, the major autolysin of Lactococcus lactis MG1363 is a modular protein consisting of an N‐terminal active site domain and a C‐terminal peptidoglycan‐binding domain. The active site domain is homologous to that of muramidase‐2 of Enterococcus hirae, however, RP‐HPLC analysis of muropeptides released from Bacillus subtilis peptidoglycan, after digestion with AcmA, shows that AcmA is an N‐acetylglucosaminidase. In the C‐terminus of AcmA three highly similar repeated regions of 45 amino acid residues are present, which are separated by short nonhomologous sequences. The repeats of AcmA, which belong to the lysine motif (LysM) domain family, were consecutively deleted, removed, or, alternatively, one additional repeat was added, without destroying the cell wall‐hydrolyzing activity of the enzyme in vitro, although AcmA activity was reduced in all cases. In vivo, proteins containing no or only one repeat did not give rise to autolysis of lactococcal cells, whereas separation of the producer cells from the chains was incomplete. Exogenously added AcmA deletion derivatives carrying two repeats or four repeats bound to lactococcal cells, whereas the derivative with no or one repeat did not. In conclusion, these results show that AcmA needs three LysM domains for optimal peptidoglycan binding and biological functioning.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

Autolysis of Lactococcus lactis Is Increased upon d-Alanine Depletion of Peptidoglycan and Lipoteichoic Acids

Anton Steen; Emmanuelle Palumbo; Marie Deghorain; Pier Sandro Cocconcelli; Jean Delcour; Oscar P. Kuipers; Jan Kok; Girbe Buist; Pascal Hols

Mutations in the genes encoding enzymes responsible for the incorporation of D-Ala into the cell wall of Lactococcus lactis affect autolysis. An L. lactis alanine racemase (alr) mutant is strictly dependent on an external supply of D-Ala to be able to synthesize peptidoglycan and to incorporate D-Ala in the lipoteichoic acids (LTA). The mutant lyses rapidly when D-Ala is removed at mid-exponential growth. AcmA, the major lactococcal autolysin, is partially involved in the increased lysis since an alr acmA double mutant still lyses, albeit to a lesser extent. To investigate the role of D-Ala on LTA in the increased cell lysis, a dltD mutant of L. lactis was investigated, since this mutant is only affected in the D-alanylation of LTA and not the synthesis of peptidoglycan. Mutation of dltD results in increased lysis, showing that D-alanylation of LTA also influences autolysis. Since a dltD acmA double mutant does not lyse, the lysis of the dltD mutant is totally AcmA dependent. Zymographic analysis shows that no degradation of AcmA takes place in the dltD mutant, whereas AcmA is degraded by the extracellular protease HtrA in the wild-type strain. In L. lactis, LTA has been shown to be involved in controlled (directed) binding of AcmA. LTA lacking D-Ala has been reported in other bacterial species to have an improved capacity for autolysin binding. Mutation of dltD in L. lactis, however, does not affect peptidoglycan binding of AcmA; neither the amount of AcmA binding to the cells nor the binding to specific loci is altered. In conclusion, D-Ala depletion of the cell wall causes lysis by two distinct mechanisms. First, it results in an altered peptidoglycan that is more susceptible to lysis by AcmA and also by other factors, e.g., one or more of the other (putative) cell wall hydrolases expressed by L. lactis. Second, reduced amounts of D-Ala on LTA result in decreased degradation of AcmA by HtrA, which results in increased lytic activity.


PLOS ONE | 2013

AcmD, a Homolog of the Major Autolysin AcmA of Lactococcus lactis, Binds to the Cell Wall and Contributes to Cell Separation and Autolysis

Ganesh Ram R. Visweswaran; Anton Steen; Kees Leenhouts; Monika Szeliga; Beata Ruban; Anne Hesseling-Meinders; Bauke W. Dijkstra; Oscar P. Kuipers; Jan Kok; Girbe Buist

Lactococcus lactis expresses the homologous glucosaminidases AcmB, AcmC, AcmA and AcmD. The latter two have three C-terminal LysM repeats for peptidoglycan binding. AcmD has much shorter intervening sequences separating the LysM repeats and a lower iso-electric point (4.3) than AcmA (10.3). Under standard laboratory conditions AcmD was mainly secreted into the culture supernatant. An L. lactis acmAacmD double mutant formed longer chains than the acmA single mutant, indicating that AcmD contributes to cell separation. This phenotype could be complemented by plasmid-encoded expression of AcmD in the double mutant. No clear difference in cellular lysis and protein secretion was observed between both mutants. Nevertheless, overexpression of AcmD resulted in increased autolysis when AcmA was present (as in the wild type strain) or when AcmA was added to the culture medium of an AcmA-minus strain. Possibly, AcmD is mainly active within the cell wall, at places where proper conditions are present for its binding and catalytic activity. Various fusion proteins carrying either the three LysM repeats of AcmA or AcmD were used to study and compare their cell wall binding characteristics. Whereas binding of the LysM domain of AcmA took place at pHs ranging from 4 to 8, LysM domain of AcmD seems to bind strongest at pH 4.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2014

Traffic to the inner membrane of the nuclear envelope

Justyna K. Laba; Anton Steen; Liesbeth M. Veenhoff

Past research has yielded valuable insight into the mechanisms that regulate the nuclear transport of soluble molecules like transcription factors and mRNA. Much less is known about the mechanisms responsible for the transportation of membrane proteins to the inner membrane of the nuclear envelope. The key question is: does the facilitated transport of integral inner membrane proteins exist in the same way as it does for soluble proteins and, if so, what is it used for? Herein, we provide an overview of the current knowledge on traffic to the inner nuclear membrane, and make a case that: (a) known sorting signals and molecular mechanisms in membrane protein biogenesis, membrane protein traffic and nuclear transport are also relevant with respect to INM traffic; and (b) the interplay of the effects of these signals and molecular mechanisms is what determines the rates of traffic to the INM.


Traffic | 2015

Intrinsically disordered linker and plasma membrane-binding motif sort Ist2 and Ssy1 to junctions.

Annemarie Kralt; Marco Carretta; Muriel Mari; Fulvio Reggiori; Anton Steen; Bert Poolman; Liesbeth M. Veenhoff

Membrane junctions or contact sites are close associations of lipid bilayers of heterologous organelles. Ist2 is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐resident transmembrane protein that mediates associations between the plasma membrane (PM) and the cortical ER (cER) in bakers yeast. We asked the question what structure in Ist2 bridges the up to 30 nm distance between the PM and the cER and we noted that the region spacing the transmembrane domain from the cortical sorting signal interacting with the PM is predicted to be intrinsically disordered (ID). In Ssy1, a protein that was not previously described to reside at membrane junctions, we recognized a domain organization similar to that in Ist2. We found that the localization of both Ist2 and Ssy1 at the cell periphery depends on the presence of a PM‐binding domain, an ID linker region of sufficient length and a transmembrane domain that most probably resides in the ER. We show for the first time that an ID amino acid domain bridges adjacent heterologous membranes. The length and flexibility of ID domains make them uniquely eligible for spanning large distances, and we suggest that this domain structure occurs more frequently in proteins that mediate the formation of membrane contact sites.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Reduced lysis upon growth of Lactococcus lactis on galactose is a consequence of decreased binding of the autolysin AcmA

Anton Steen; Girbe Buist; Naomi E. Kramer; Ruud Jalving; Germaine F. J. D. Benus; Gerard Venema; Oscar P. Kuipers; Jan Kok

ABSTRACT When Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis IL1403 or L. lactis subsp. cremoris MG1363 is grown in a medium with galactose as the carbon source, the culture lyses to a lesser extent in stationary phase than when the bacteria are grown in a medium containing glucose. Expression of AcmA, the major autolysin of L. lactis, is not influenced by the carbon source. Binding studies with a fusion protein consisting of the MSA2 protein of Plasmodium falciparum and the C-terminal peptidoglycan-binding domain of AcmA revealed that cell walls of cells from both subspecies grown on galactose bind less AcmA than cell walls of cells grown on glucose. Cells grown on glucose or galactose and treated with trichloroacetic acid prior to AcmA binding bind similar amounts of AcmA. Analysis of the composition of the lipoteichoic acids (LTAs) of L. lactis IL1403 cells grown on glucose or galactose showed that the LTA composition is influenced by the carbon source: cells grown on galactose contain LTA with less galactose than cells grown on glucose. In conclusion, growth of L. lactis on galactose changes the LTA composition in the cell wall in such a way that less AcmA is able to bind to the peptidoglycan, resulting in a decrease in autolysis.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

Conservation of inner nuclear membrane targeting sequences in mammalian Pom121 and yeast Heh2 membrane proteins.

Annemarie Kralt; Noorjahan B. Jagalur; Vincent van den Boom; Ravi K. Lokareddy; Anton Steen; Gino Cingolani; Maarten Fornerod; Liesbeth M. Veenhoff

This study examines whether active transport to the inner nuclear membrane, as shown for yeast membrane proteins Heh1 and Heh2, is conserved in metazoans. In support of this, the nuclear localization signal of metazoan Pom121 shares biochemical, structural, and functional properties with those of Heh1 and Heh2, and a Heh2-derived reporter protein targets to the inner membrane in Hek293T cells.

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Girbe Buist

University Medical Center Groningen

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Jan Kok

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Jan Kok

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Annemarie Kralt

University Medical Center Groningen

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Bert Poolman

University of Groningen

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