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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin L. Schulz is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin L. Schulz.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Definition of the bacterial N-glycosylation site consensus sequence

N. Martin Young; Shin Numao; Benjamin L. Schulz; Isabelle Hug; Nico Callewaert; Dominic C Mills; David C. Watson; Marcela Hernandez; John F. Kelly; Michael Wacker; Markus Aebi

The Campylobacter jejuni pgl locus encodes an N‐linked protein glycosylation machinery that can be functionally transferred into Escherichia coli. In this system, we analyzed the elements in the C. jejuni N‐glycoprotein AcrA required for accepting an N‐glycan. We found that the eukaryotic primary consensus sequence for N‐glycosylation is N terminally extended to D/E‐Y‐N‐X‐S/T (Y, X≠P) for recognition by the bacterial oligosaccharyltransferase (OST) PglB. However, not all consensus sequences were N‐glycosylated when they were either artificially introduced or when they were present in non‐C. jejuni proteins. We were able to produce recombinant glycoproteins with engineered N‐glycosylation sites and confirmed the requirement for a negatively charged side chain at position −2 in C. jejuni N‐glycoproteins. N‐glycosylation of AcrA by the eukaryotic OST in Saccharomyces cerevisiae occurred independent of the acidic residue at the −2 position. Thus, bacterial N‐glycosylation site selection is more specific than the eukaryotic equivalent with respect to the polypeptide acceptor sequence.


Science | 2006

N-linked glycosylation of folded proteins by the bacterial oligosaccharyltransferase.

Shin Numao; Mario F. Feldman; Benjamin L. Schulz; Nico Callewaert; Ina Catrein; Markus Aebi

N-linked protein glycosylation is found in all domains of life. In eukaryotes, it is the most abundant protein modification of secretory and membrane proteins, and the process is coupled to protein translocation and folding. We found that in bacteria, N-glycosylation can occur independently of the protein translocation machinery. In an in vitro assay, bacterial oligosaccharyltransferase glycosylated a folded endogenous substrate protein with high efficiency and folded bovine ribonuclease A with low efficiency. Unfolding the eukaryotic substrate greatly increased glycosylation. We propose that in the bacterial system, glycosylation sites are located in flexible parts of folded proteins, whereas the eukaryotic cotranslational glycosylation evolved to a mechanism presenting the substrate in a flexible form before folding.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2010

A combined method for producing homogeneous glycoproteins with eukaryotic N-glycosylation

Flavio Schwarz; Wei Huang; Cishan Li; Benjamin L. Schulz; Christian Lizak; Alessandro Palumbo; Shin Numao; Dario Neri; Markus Aebi; Lai-Xi Wang

We describe a novel method for producing homogeneous eukaryotic N-glycoproteins. The method involves the engineering and functional transfer of the C. jejuni glycosylation machinery in E. coli to express glycosylated proteins with the key GlcNAc-Asn linkage. The bacterial glycans were then trimmed and remodeled in vitro by enzymatic transglycosylation to fulfill a eukaryotic N-glycosylation. It provides a potentially general platform for producing eukaryotic N-glycoproteins.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Distinct donor and acceptor specificities of Trypanosoma brucei oligosaccharyltransferases

Luis Izquierdo; Benjamin L. Schulz; João A. Rodrigues; Maria Lucia S. Güther; James B. Procter; Geoffrey J. Barton; Markus Aebi; Michael A. J. Ferguson

Asparagine‐linked glycosylation is catalysed by oligosaccharyltransferase (OTase). In Trypanosoma brucei OTase activity is catalysed by single‐subunit enzymes encoded by three paralogous genes of which TbSTT3B and TbSTT3C can complement a yeast Δstt3 mutant. The two enzymes have overlapping but distinct peptide acceptor specificities, with TbSTT3C displaying an enhanced ability to glycosylate sites flanked by acidic residues. TbSTT3A and TbSTT3B, but not TbSTT3C, are transcribed in the bloodstream and procyclic life cycle stages of T. brucei. Selective knockdown and analysis of parasite protein N‐glycosylation showed that TbSTT3A selectively transfers biantennary Man5GlcNAc2 to specific glycosylation sites whereas TbSTT3B selectively transfers triantennary Man9GlcNAc2 to others. Analysis of T. brucei glycosylation site occupancy showed that TbSTT3A and TbSTT3B glycosylate sites in acidic to neutral and neutral to basic regions of polypeptide, respectively. This embodiment of distinct specificities in single‐subunit OTases may have implications for recombinant glycoprotein engineering. TbSTT3A and TbSTT3B could be knocked down individually, but not collectively, in tissue culture. However, both were independently essential for parasite growth in mice, suggesting that inhibiting protein N‐glycosylation could have therapeutic potential against trypanosomiasis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Oxidoreductase activity of oligosaccharyltransferase subunits Ost3p and Ost6p defines site-specific glycosylation efficiency

Benjamin L. Schulz; Christian U. Stirnimann; John P. A. Grimshaw; Maurice S. Brozzo; Fabienne Fritsch; Elisabeth Mohorko; Guido Capitani; Markus G. Grütter; Markus Aebi

Asparagine-linked glycosylation is a common posttranslational modification of diverse secretory and membrane proteins in eukaryotes, where it is catalyzed by the multiprotein complex oligosaccharyltransferase. The functions of the protein subunits of oligoasccharyltransferase, apart from the catalytic Stt3p, are ill defined. Here we describe functional and structural investigations of the Ost3/6p components of the yeast enzyme. Genetic, biochemical and structural analyses of the lumenal domain of Ost6p revealed oxidoreductase activity mediated by a thioredoxin-like fold with a distinctive active-site loop that changed conformation with redox state. We found that mutation of the active-site cysteine residues of Ost6p and its paralogue Ost3p affected the glycosylation efficiency of a subset of glycosylation sites. Our results show that eukaryotic oligosaccharyltransferase is a multifunctional enzyme that acts at the crossroads of protein modification and protein folding.


Biochemical Journal | 2002

Identification of two highly sialylated human tear-fluid DMBT1 isoforms: The major high-molecular-mass glycoproteins in human tears

Benjamin L. Schulz; David Oxley; Nicolle H. Packer; Niclas G. Karlsson

Human open eye tear fluid was separated by low-percentage SDS/PAGE to detect high-molecular-mass protein components. Two bands were found with apparent molecular masses of 330 and 270 kDa respectively. By peptide-mass fingerprinting after tryptic digestion, the proteins were found to be isoforms of the DMBT1 gene product, with over 30% of the predicted protein covered by the tryptic peptides. By using gradient SDS/agarose/polyacrylamide composite gel electrophoresis and staining for glycosylation, it was shown that the two isoforms were the major high-molecular-mass glycoproteins of >200 kDa in human tear fluid. Western blotting showed that the proteins expressed sialyl-Le(a). After the release of oligosaccharides by reductive beta-elimination from protein blotted on to PVDF membrane, it was revealed by liquid chromatography-MS that the O-linked oligosaccharides were comprised mainly of highly sialylated oligosaccharides with up to 16 monosaccharide units. A majority of the oligosaccharides could be described by the formula dHex(0-->2)NeuAc(1-->)(x)Hex(x)HexNAc(x)(-ol), x=1-6, where Hex stands for hexose, dHex for deoxyhexose, HexNAc for N-acetylhexosamine and NeuAc for N-acetylneuraminate. The number of sialic acids in the formula is less than 5. Interpretation of collision-induced fragmentation tandem MS confirmed the presence of sialic acid and suggested the presence of previously undescribed structures carrying the sialyl-Le(a) epitopes. Small amounts of neutral and sulphated species were also present. This is the first time that O-linked oligosaccharides have been detected and described from protein variant of the DMBT1 gene.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2008

All in One: Leishmania major STT3 Proteins Substitute for the Whole Oligosaccharyltransferase Complex in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Farnoush Parsaie Nasab; Benjamin L. Schulz; Francisco Gamarro; Armando J. Parodi; Markus Aebi

The transfer of lipid-linked oligosaccharide to asparagine residues of polypeptide chains is catalyzed by oligosaccharyltransferase (OTase). In most eukaryotes, OTase is a hetero-oligomeric complex composed of eight different proteins, in which the STT3 component is believed to be the catalytic subunit. In the parasitic protozoa Leishmania major, four STT3 paralogues, but no homologues to the other OTase components seem to be encoded in the genome. We expressed each of the four L. major STT3 proteins individually in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and found that three of them, LmSTT3A, LmSTT3B, and LmSTT3D, were able to complement a deletion of the yeast STT3 locus. Furthermore, LmSTT3D expression suppressed the lethal phenotype of single and double deletions in genes encoding other essential OTase subunits. LmSTT3 proteins did not incorporate into the yeast OTase complex but formed a homodimeric enzyme, capable of replacing the endogenous, multimeric enzyme of the yeast cell. Therefore, these protozoan OTases resemble the prokaryotic enzymes with respect to their architecture, but they used substrates typical for eukaryotic cells: N-X-S/T sequons in proteins and dolicholpyrophosphate-linked high mannose oligosaccharides.


Critical Reviews in Biotechnology | 2013

Saliva proteome research: current status and future outlook.

Benjamin L. Schulz; Justin J. Cooper-White; Chamindie Punyadeera

Human saliva harbours proteins of clinical relevance and about 30% of blood proteins are also present in saliva. This highlights that saliva can be used for clinical applications just as urine or blood. However, the translation of salivary biomarker discoveries into clinical settings is hampered by the dynamics and complexity of the salivary proteome. This review focuses on the current status of technological developments and achievements relating to approaches for unravelling the human salivary proteome. We discuss the dynamics of the salivary proteome, as well as the importance of sample preparation and processing techniques and their influence on downstream protein applications; post-translational modifications of salivary proteome and protein: protein interactions. In addition, we describe possible enrichment strategies for discerning post-translational modifications of salivary proteins, the potential utility of selected-reaction-monitoring techniques for biomarker discovery and validation, limitations to proteomics and the biomarker challenge and future perspectives. In summary, we provide recommendations for practical saliva sampling, processing and storage conditions to increase the quality of future studies in an emerging field of saliva clinical proteomics. We propose that the advent of technologies allowing sensitive and high throughput proteome-wide analyses, coupled to well-controlled study design, will allow saliva to enter clinical practice as an alternative to blood-based methods due to its simplistic nature of sampling, non-invasiveness, easy of collection and multiple collections by untrained professionals and cost-effective advantages.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

Analysis of Glycosylation Site Occupancy Reveals a Role for Ost3p and Ost6p in Site-specific N-Glycosylation Efficiency

Benjamin L. Schulz; Markus Aebi

Asparagine-linked glycosylation is the most common post-translational modification of proteins catalyzed in eukaryotes by the multiprotein complex oligosaccharyltransferase. Apart from the catalytic Stt3p, the roles of the subunits are ill defined. Here we describe functional investigations of the Ost3/6p components of the yeast enzyme. We developed novel analytical tools to quantify glycosylation site occupancy by enriching glycoproteins bound to the yeast polysaccharide cell wall, tagging glycosylated asparagines using endoglycosidase H glycan release, and detecting peptides and glycopeptides with LC-ESI-MS/MS. We found that the paralogues Ost3p and Ost6p were required for efficient glycosylation of distinct defined glycosylation sites. Our results describe a novel method for relative quantification of glycosylation occupancy in the genetically tractable yeast system and show that eukaryotic oligosaccharyltransferase isoforms have different activities toward protein substrates at the level of individual glycosylation sites.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2013

The globally disseminated M1T1 clone of group A Streptococcus evades autophagy for intracellular replication.

Timothy C. Barnett; David Liebl; Lisa M. Seymour; Christine M. Gillen; Jin Yan Lim; Christopher N. LaRock; Mark R. Davies; Benjamin L. Schulz; Victor Nizet; Rohan D. Teasdale; Mark J. Walker

Autophagy is reported to be an important innate immune defense against the intracellular bacterial pathogen Group A Streptococcus (GAS). However, the GAS strains examined to date belong to serotypes infrequently associated with human disease. We find that the globally disseminated serotype M1T1 clone of GAS can evade autophagy and replicate efficiently in the cytosol of infected cells. Cytosolic M1T1 GAS (strain 5448), but not M6 GAS (strain JRS4), avoids ubiquitylation and recognition by the host autophagy marker LC3 and ubiquitin-LC3 adaptor proteins NDP52, p62, and NBR1. Expression of SpeB, a streptococcal cysteine protease, is critical for this process, as an isogenic M1T1 ΔspeB mutant is targeted to autophagy and attenuated for intracellular replication. SpeB degrades p62, NDP52, and NBR1 in vitro and within the host cell cytosol. These results uncover a proteolytic mechanism utilized by GAS to escape the host autophagy pathway that may underpin the success of the M1T1 clone.

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Chamindie Punyadeera

Queensland University of Technology

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Karam Kostner

University of Queensland

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