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Dive into the research topics where Brian S. Vad is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian S. Vad.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

How Epigallocatechin Gallate Can Inhibit α-Synuclein Oligomer Toxicity in Vitro

Nikolai Lorenzen; Søren B. Nielsen; Yuichi Yoshimura; Brian S. Vad; Camilla Bertel Andersen; Cristine Betzer; Jørn Døvling Kaspersen; Gunna Christiansen; Jan Skov Pedersen; Poul Henning Jensen; Frans A. A. Mulder; Daniel E. Otzen

Background: Protein oligomers are implicated as cytotoxic membrane-disrupting agents in neurodegenerative diseases. Results: The small molecule EGCG, which inhibits α-synuclein oligomer toxicity, moderately reduces membrane binding and immobilizing the oligomer C-terminal tail. Conclusion: The α-synuclein oligomer may disrupt membranes by vesicle destabilization rather than pore formation. Significance: Limited reduction of oligomer membrane affinity may be sufficient to prevent cytotoxicity. Oligomeric species of various proteins are linked to the pathogenesis of different neurodegenerative disorders. Consequently, there is intense focus on the discovery of novel inhibitors, e.g. small molecules and antibodies, to inhibit the formation and block the toxicity of oligomers. In Parkinson disease, the protein α-synuclein (αSN) forms cytotoxic oligomers. The flavonoid epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) has previously been shown to redirect the aggregation of αSN monomers and remodel αSN amyloid fibrils into disordered oligomers. Here, we dissect EGCGs mechanism of action. EGCG inhibits the ability of preformed oligomers to permeabilize vesicles and induce cytotoxicity in a rat brain cell line. However, EGCG does not affect oligomer size distribution or secondary structure. Rather, EGCG immobilizes the C-terminal region and moderately reduces the degree of binding of oligomers to membranes. We interpret our data to mean that the oligomer acts by destabilizing the membrane rather than by direct pore formation. This suggests that reduction (but not complete abolition) of the membrane affinity of the oligomer is sufficient to prevent cytotoxicity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Eurocin, a New Fungal Defensin: STRUCTURE, LIPID BINDING, AND ITS MODE OF ACTION*

Jesper S. Oeemig; Carina Lynggaard; Daniel H. Knudsen; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Kent D. Nørgaard; Tanja Schneider; Brian S. Vad; Dorthe Sandvang; Line A. Nielsen; Søren Neve; Hans-Henrik Kristensen; Hans-Georg Sahl; Daniel E. Otzen; Reinhard Wimmer

Background: Antimicrobial peptides are new antibiotics avoiding resistance problems. Results: Eurocin is a new antimicrobial peptide featuring a cysteine-stabilized αβ-fold. Eurocin binds the cell wall precursor lipid II but does not disrupt cell membranes. Conclusion: Eurocin acts by inhibiting cell wall synthesis. Its structure is typical for invertebrate defensins. Significance: Knowing the mode of action and structure is a prerequisite for pharmaceutical application of an antibiotic. Antimicrobial peptides are a new class of antibiotics that are promising for pharmaceutical applications because they have retained efficacy throughout evolution. One class of antimicrobial peptides are the defensins, which have been found in different species. Here we describe a new fungal defensin, eurocin. Eurocin acts against a range of Gram-positive human pathogens but not against Gram-negative bacteria. Eurocin consists of 42 amino acids, forming a cysteine-stabilized α/β-fold. The thermal denaturation data point shows the disulfide bridges being responsible for the stability of the fold. Eurocin does not form pores in cell membranes at physiologically relevant concentrations; it does, however, lead to limited leakage of a fluorophore from small unilamellar vesicles. Eurocin interacts with detergent micelles, and it inhibits the synthesis of cell walls by binding equimolarly to the cell wall precursor lipid II.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

The Antimicrobial Mechanism of Action of Epsilon-Poly-l-Lysine

Morten Hyldgaard; Tina Mygind; Brian S. Vad; Marcel Stenvang; Daniel E. Otzen; Rikke Louise Meyer

ABSTRACT Epsilon-poly-l-lysine (ε-PL) is a natural antimicrobial cationic peptide which is generally regarded as safe (GRAS) as a food preservative. Although its antimicrobial activity is well documented, its mechanism of action is only vaguely described. The aim of this study was to clarify ε-PLs mechanism of action using Escherichia coli and Listeria innocua as model organisms. We examined ε-PLs effect on cell morphology and membrane integrity and used an array of E. coli deletion mutants to study how specific outer membrane components affected the action of ε-PL. We furthermore studied its interaction with lipid bilayers using membrane models. In vitro cell studies indicated that divalent cations and the heptose I and II phosphate groups in the lipopolysaccharide layer of E. coli are critical for ε-PLs binding efficiency. ε-PL removed the lipopolysaccharide layer and affected cell morphology of E. coli, while L. innocua underwent minor morphological changes. Propidium iodide staining showed that ε-PL permeabilized the cytoplasmic membrane in both species, indicating the membrane as the site of attack. We compared the interaction with neutral or negatively charged membrane systems and showed that the interaction with ε-PL relied on negative charges on the membrane. Suspended membrane vesicles were disrupted by ε-PL, and a detergent-like disruption of E. coli membrane was confirmed by atomic force microscopy imaging of supported lipid bilayers. We hypothesize that ε-PL destabilizes membranes in a carpet-like mechanism by interacting with negatively charged phospholipid head groups, which displace divalent cations and enforce a negative curvature folding on membranes that leads to formation of vesicles/micelles.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Pardaxin Permeabilizes Vesicles More Efficiently by Pore Formation than by Disruption

Brian S. Vad; Kresten Bertelsen; Charlotte Hau Johansen; Jan M. Pedersen; Troels Skrydstrup; Niels Chr. Nielsen; Daniel E. Otzen

Pardaxin is a 33-amino-acid neurotoxin from the Red Sea Moses sole Pardachirus marmoratus, whose mode of action shows remarkable sensitivity to lipid chain length and charge, although the effect of pH is unclear. Here we combine optical spectroscopy and dye release experiments with laser scanning confocal microscopy and natural abundance (13)C solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance to provide a more complete picture of how pardaxin interacts with lipids. The kinetics and efficiency of release of entrapped calcein is highly sensitive to pH. In vesicles containing zwitterionic lipids (PC), release occurs most rapidly at low pH, whereas in vesicles containing 20% anionic lipid (PG), release occurs most rapidly at high pH. Pardaxin forms stable or transient pores in PC vesicles that allow release of contents without loss of vesicle integrity, whereas the inclusion of PG promotes total vesicle collapse. In agreement with this, solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance reveals that pardaxin takes up a trans-membrane orientation in 14-O-PC/6-O-PC bicelles, whereas the inclusion of 14-0-PG restricts it to contacts with lipid headgroups, promoting membrane lysis. Pore formation in zwitterionic vesicles is more efficient than lysis of anionic vesicles, suggesting that electrostatic interactions may trap pardaxin in several suboptimal interconverting conformations on the membrane surface.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015

Functional bacterial amyloid increases Pseudomonas biofilm hydrophobicity and stiffness

Guanghong Zeng; Brian S. Vad; Morten Simonsen Dueholm; Gunna Christiansen; Martin Nilsson; Tim Tolker-Nielsen; Per Halkjær Nielsen; Rikke Louise Meyer; Daniel E. Otzen

The success of Pseudomonas species as opportunistic pathogens derives in great part from their ability to form stable biofilms that offer protection against chemical and mechanical attack. The extracellular matrix of biofilms contains numerous biomolecules, and it has recently been discovered that in Pseudomonas one of the components includes β-sheet rich amyloid fibrils (functional amyloid) produced by the fap operon. However, the role of the functional amyloid within the biofilm has not yet been investigated in detail. Here we investigate how the fap-based amyloid produced by Pseudomonas affects biofilm hydrophobicity and mechanical properties. Using atomic force microscopy imaging and force spectroscopy, we show that the amyloid renders individual cells more resistant to drying and alters their interactions with hydrophobic probes. Importantly, amyloid makes Pseudomonas more hydrophobic and increases biofilm stiffness 20-fold. Deletion of any one of the individual members of in the fap operon (except the putative chaperone FapA) abolishes this ability to increase biofilm stiffness and correlates with the loss of amyloid. We conclude that amyloid makes major contributions to biofilm mechanical robustness.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Bacterial RTX toxins allow acute ATP release from human erythrocytes directly through the toxin pore

Marianne Skals; Randi G. Bjaelde; Jesper Reinholdt; Knud Poulsen; Brian S. Vad; Daniel E. Otzen; Jens Leipziger; Helle A. Praetorius

Background: Hemolysis induced by the two RTX toxins HlyA and LtxA depends on ATP receptor activation. Results: HlyA and LtxA result in ATP release from human erythrocytes, which was unrelated to the main suggested ATP release pathway pannexin 1. Conclusion: ATP is released through a toxin pore. Significance: Adds new insights to the mechanism of these toxins. ATP is as an extracellular signaling molecule able to amplify the cell lysis inflicted by certain bacterial toxins including the two RTX toxins α-hemolysin (HlyA) from Escherichia coli and leukotoxin A (LtxA) from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans. Inhibition of P2X receptors completely blocks the RTX toxin-induced hemolysis over a larger concentration range. It is, however, at present not known how the ATP that provides the amplification is released from the attacked cells. Here we show that both HlyA and LtxA trigger acute release of ATP from human erythrocytes that preceded and were not caused by cell lysis. This early ATP release did not occur via previously described ATP-release pathways in the erythrocyte. Both HlyA and LtxA were capable of triggering ATP release in the presence of the pannexin 1 blockers carbenoxolone and probenecid, and the HlyA-induced ATP release was found to be similar in erythrocytes from pannexin 1 wild type and knock-out mice. Moreover, the voltage-dependent anion channel antagonist TRO19622 had no effect on ATP release by either of the toxins. Finally, we showed that both HlyA and LtxA were able to release ATP from ATP-loaded lipid (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine) vesicles devoid of any erythrocyte channels or transporters. Again we were able to show that this happened in a non-lytic fashion, using calcein-containing vesicles as controls. These data show that both toxins incorporate into lipid vesicles and allow ATP to be released. We suggest that both toxins cause acute ATP release by letting ATP pass the toxin pores in both human erythrocytes and artificial membranes.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Long-Term-Stable Ether−Lipid vs Conventional Ester−Lipid Bicelles in Oriented Solid-State NMR: Altered Structural Information in Studies of Antimicrobial Peptides

Kresten Bertelsen; Brian S. Vad; Erik H. Nielsen; Sara K. Hansen; Troels Skrydstrup; Daniel E. Otzen; Thomas Vosegaard; Niels Chr. Nielsen

Recently, ether lipids have been introduced as long-term stable alternatives to the more natural, albeit easier degradable, ester lipids in the preparation of oriented lipid bilayers and bicelles for oriented-sample solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Here we report that ether lipids such as the frequently used 14-O-PC (1,2-di-O-tetradecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) may induce significant changes in the structure and dynamics, including altered interaction between peptides and lipids relative to what is observed with the more conventionally used DMPC (1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) bilayers. Such effects are demonstrated for the antimicrobial peptide novicidin, for which 2D separate-local-field NMR and circular dichroism experiments reveal significant structural/conformational differences for the peptide in the two different lipid systems. Likewise, we observe altered secondary structure and different temperature-dependent membrane anchoring for the antimicrobial peptide alamethicin depending on whether the peptide is reconstituted into ester or ether lipids. Such observations are not particularly surprising considering the significant difference of the lipids in the phosphorus headgroup and they may provide important new insight into the delicate peptide-membrane interactions in the systems studied. In contrast, these observations reinforce the need to carefully consider potential structural changes in addition to long-term stability prior to the selection of membrane environment of membrane proteins in the analysis of their structure and dynamics. In more general terms, the results underscore the necessity in structural biology to address both the protein and its environments in studies relating structure to function.


Langmuir | 2011

Mechanical stress affects glucagon fibrillation kinetics and fibril structure.

Francesca Macchi; Søren V. Hoffmann; Martin Carlsen; Brian S. Vad; Alberto Imparato; Christian Rischel; Daniel E. Otzen

Mechanical stress can strongly influence the capability of a protein to aggregate and the kinetics of aggregation, but there is little insight into the underlying mechanism. Here we study the effect of different mechanical stress conditions on the fibrillation of the peptide hormone glucagon, which forms different fibrils depending on temperature, pH, ionic strength, and concentration. A combination of spectroscopic and microscopic data shows that fibrillar polymorphism can also be induced by mechanical stress. We observed two classes of fibrils: a low-stress and a high-stress class, which differ in their kinetic profiles, secondary structure as well as morphology and that are able to self-propagate in a template-dependent fashion. The bending rigidity of the low-stress fibrils is sensitive to the degree of mechanical perturbation. We propose a fibrillation model, where interfaces play a fundamental role in the switch between the two fibrillar classes. Our work also raises the cautionary note that mechanical perturbation is a potential source of variability in the study of fibrillation mechanisms and fibril structures.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Cyclodextrin-scaffolded alamethicin with remarkably efficient membrane permeabilizing properties and membrane current conductance.

Claudia U. Hjørringgaard; Brian S. Vad; Vladimir V. Matchkov; Søren B. Nielsen; Thomas Vosegaard; Niels Chr. Nielsen; Daniel E. Otzen; Troels Skrydstrup

Bacterial resistance to classical antibiotics is a serious medical problem, which continues to grow. Small antimicrobial peptides represent a potential solution and are increasingly being developed as novel therapeutic agents. Many of these peptides owe their antibacterial activity to the formation of trans-membrane ion-channels resulting in cell lysis. However, to further develop the field of peptide antibiotics, a thorough understanding of their mechanism of action is needed. Alamethicin belongs to a class of peptides called peptaibols and represents one of these antimicrobial peptides. To examine the dynamics of assembly and to facilitate a thorough structural evaluation of the alamethicin ion-channels, we have applied click chemistry for the synthesis of templated alamethicin multimers covalently attached to cyclodextrin-scaffolds. Using oriented circular dichroism, calcein release assays, and single-channel current measurements, the α-helices of the templated multimers were demonstrated to insert into lipid bilayers forming highly efficient and remarkably stable ion-channels.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

OmpA can form folded and unfolded oligomers.

Huabing Wang; Kell K. Andersen; Brian S. Vad; Daniel E. Otzen

The monomeric outer membrane protein OmpA from Escherichia coli has long served as a model protein for studying the folding and membrane insertion of β-barrel membrane proteins. Here we report that when OmpA is refolded in limiting amounts of surfactant (close to the cmc), it has a high propensity to form folded and unfolded oligomers. The oligomers exist both in a folded and (partially) unfolded form which both dissociate under denaturing conditions. Oligomerization does not require the involvement of the periplasmic domain and is not strongly affected by ionic strength. The folded dimers can be isolated and show native-like secondary structure; they are resistant to proteolytic attack and do not dissociate in high surfactant concentrations, indicating high kinetic stability once formed. Remarkably, OmpA also forms significant amounts of higher order structures when refolding in the presence of lipid vesicles. We suggest that oligomerization occurs by domain swapping favored by the high local concentration of OmpA molecules congregating on the same micelle or vesicle. In this model, the unfolded oligomer is stabilized by a small number of intermolecular β-strand contacts and subsequently folds to a more stable state where these intermolecular contacts are consolidated in a native-like fashion by contacts between complementary β-strands from different molecules. Our model is supported by the ability of complementary fragments to associate with each other in vitro. Oligomerization is probably avoided in the cell by the presence of cellular chaperones which maintain the protein in a monomeric state.

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