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Dive into the research topics where Christian Hammann is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Hammann.


ChemBioChem | 2002

Folding and activity of the hammerhead ribozyme

Christian Hammann; David M. J. Lilley

The hammerhead is the smallest of the nucleolytic ribozymes, that undergo backbone cleavage by a transesterification reaction in the presence of magnesium ions. The RNA is induced to fold into its active conformation by the binding of metal ions in two stages. These generate domain 2, the scaffold on which the ribozyme is built, and domain 1, the active centre of the ribozyme. Further local structural rearrangement during the activation of the ribozyme is suggested by a number of crystal structures. The 105‐fold rate enhancement is probably brought about by a combination of metal‐ion participation and stereochemical factors in the environment of the folded RNA structure.


RNA | 2012

The ubiquitous hammerhead ribozyme

Christian Hammann; Andrej Luptak; Jonathan Perreault; Marcos de la Peña

The hammerhead ribozyme is a small catalytic RNA motif capable of endonucleolytic (self-) cleavage. It is composed of a catalytic core of conserved nucleotides flanked by three helices, two of which form essential tertiary interactions for fast self-scission under physiological conditions. Originally discovered in subviral plant pathogens, its presence in several eukaryotic genomes has been reported since. More recently, this catalytic RNA motif has been shown to reside in a large number of genomes. We review the different approaches in discovering these new hammerhead ribozyme sequences and discuss possible biological functions of the genomic motifs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Dissection of the ion-induced folding of the hammerhead ribozyme using 19F NMR.

Christian Hammann; David G. Norman; David M. J. Lilley

We have used 19F NMR to analyze the metal ion-induced folding of the hammerhead ribozyme by selective incorporation of 5fluorouridine. We have studied the chemical shift and linewidths of 19F resonances of 5-fluorouridine at the 4 and 7 positions in the ribozyme core as a function of added Mg2+. The data fit well to a simple two-state model whereby the formation of domain 1 is induced by the noncooperative binding of Mg2+ with an association constant in the range of 100 to 500 M−1, depending on the concentration of monovalent ions present. The results are in excellent agreement with data reporting on changes in the global shape of the ribozyme. However, the NMR experiments exploit reporters located in the center of the RNA sections undergoing the folding transitions, thereby allowing the assignment of specific nucleotides to the separate stages. The results define the folding pathway at high resolution and provide a time scale for the first transition in the millisecond range.


RNA | 2011

From alpaca to zebrafish: Hammerhead ribozymes wherever you look

Carsten Seehafer; Anne Kalweit; Gerhard Steger; Stefan Gräf; Christian Hammann

The hammerhead ribozyme was originally discovered in subviral plant pathogens and was subsequently also found in a few other genomic locations. Using a secondary structure-based descriptor, we have searched publicly accessible sequence databases for new examples of type III hammerhead ribozymes. The more than 60,000 entries fulfilling the descriptor were filtered with respect to folding and stability parameters that were experimentally validated. This resulted in a set of 284 unique motifs, of which 124 represent database entries of known hammerhead ribozymes from subviral plant pathogens and A. thaliana. The remainder are 160 novel ribozyme candidates in 50 different eukaryotic genomes. With a few exceptions, the ribozymes were found either in repetitive DNA sequences or in introns of protein coding genes. Our data, which is complementary to a study by De la Peña and García-Robles in 2010, indicate that the hammerhead is the most abundant small endonucleolytic ribozyme, which, in view of no sequence conservation beyond the essential nucleotides, likely has evolved independently in different organisms.


RNA Biology | 2012

Viroid-specific small RNA in plant disease

Christian Hammann; Gerhard Steger

Viroids are the smallest autonomous infectious nucleic acids known today. They are non-coding, unencapsidated, circular RNAs with sizes ranging from 250 to 400 nucleotides and infect certain plants. These RNAs are transcribed by rolling-circle mechanisms in the plant host’s nuclei (Pospiviroidae) or chloroplasts (Avsunviroidae). Since viroids lack any open reading frame, their pathogenicity has for a long time been a conundrum. Recent findings, however, show that viroid infection is associated with the appearance of viroid-specific small RNA (vsRNA). These have sizes similar to endogenous small interfering RNA and microRNA and thus might alter the normal gene expression in the host plant. In this review we will summarize the current knowledge on vsRNA and discuss the current hypotheses how they connect to the induced symptoms, which vary dramatically, depending on both the plant cultivar and the viroid strain.


Genome Biology | 2007

Searching genomes for ribozymes and riboswitches

Christian Hammann; Eric Westhof

New regulatory RNAs with complex structures have recently been discovered, among them the first catalytic riboswitch, a gene-regulatory RNA sequence with catalytic activity. Here we discuss some of the experimental approaches and theoretical difficulties attached to the identification of new ribozymes in genomes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Structural basis for the mutual antagonism of cAMP and TRIP8b in regulating HCN channel function.

Andrea Saponaro; Sofia R. Pauleta; Francesca Cantini; Manolis Matzapetakis; Christian Hammann; Chiara Donadoni; Lei Hu; Gerhard Thiel; Lucia Banci; Bina Santoro; Anna Moroni

Significance cAMP regulation of ion channels controls higher brain functions, such as sleep, memory, and cognition. Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels are activated by the direct binding of cAMP to their cytoplasmic tail and inhibited by the neuronal β-subunit tetratricopeptide repeat-containing Rab8b interacting protein (TRIP8b), which prevents cAMP binding. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of regulation of this family of ion channels is critical because it pertains to the physiological processes and diseases associated with dysfunctions in the HCN current. Here, we explain the dual regulatory system of HCN2 channels in atomic detail. cAMP and TRIP8b do not compete for the same binding site on the HCN2 cytoplasmic tail; rather, they exert their mutual competition by promoting and stabilizing two different conformational states of the protein. cAMP signaling in the brain mediates several higher order neural processes. Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels directly bind cAMP through their cytoplasmic cyclic nucleotide binding domain (CNBD), thus playing a unique role in brain function. Neuronal HCN channels are also regulated by tetratricopeptide repeat-containing Rab8b interacting protein (TRIP8b), an auxiliary subunit that antagonizes the effects of cAMP by interacting with the channel CNBD. To unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the dual regulation of HCN channel activity by cAMP/TRIP8b, we determined the NMR solution structure of the HCN2 channel CNBD in the cAMP-free form and mapped on it the TRIP8b interaction site. We reconstruct here the full conformational changes induced by cAMP binding to the HCN channel CNBD. Our results show that TRIP8b does not compete with cAMP for the same binding region; rather, it exerts its inhibitory action through an allosteric mechanism, preventing the cAMP-induced conformational changes in the HCN channel CNBD.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Mechanistic insights into an engineered riboswitch: a switching element which confers riboswitch activity

Julia E. Weigand; Sina R. Schmidtke; Tristan Will; Elke Duchardt-Ferner; Christian Hammann; Jens Wöhnert; Beatrix Suess

While many different RNA aptamers have been identified that bind to a plethora of small molecules only very few are capable of acting as engineered riboswitches. Even for aptamers binding the same ligand large differences in their regulatory potential were observed. We address here the molecular basis for these differences by using a set of unrelated neomycin-binding aptamers. UV melting analyses showed that regulating aptamers are thermally stabilized to a significantly higher degree upon ligand binding than inactive ones. Regulating aptamers show high ligand-binding affinity in the low nanomolar range which is necessary but not sufficient for regulation. NMR data showed that a destabilized, open ground state accompanied by extensive structural changes upon ligand binding is important for regulation. In contrast, inactive aptamers are already pre-formed in the absence of the ligand. By a combination of genetic, biochemical and structural analyses, we identified a switching element responsible for destabilizing the ligand free state without compromising the bound form. Our results explain for the first time the molecular mechanism of an engineered riboswitch.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Secondary structure is required for 3′ splice site recognition in yeast

Ondřej Gahura; Christian Hammann; Anna Valentová; František Půta; Petr Folk

Higher order RNA structures can mask splicing signals, loop out exons, or constitute riboswitches all of which contributes to the complexity of splicing regulation. We identified a G to A substitution between branch point (BP) and 3′ splice site (3′ss) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae COF1 intron, which dramatically impaired its splicing. RNA structure prediction and in-line probing showed that this mutation disrupted a stem in the BP-3′ss region. Analyses of various COF1 intron modifications revealed that the secondary structure brought about the reduction of BP to 3′ss distance and masked potential 3′ss. We demonstrated the same structural requisite for the splicing of UBC13 intron. Moreover, RNAfold predicted stable structures for almost all distant BP introns in S. cerevisiae and for selected examples in several other Saccharomycotina species. The employment of intramolecular structure to localize 3′ss for the second splicing step suggests the existence of pre-mRNA structure-based mechanism of 3′ss recognition.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1995

An ENDOR and ESEEM study of the blue copper protein azurin

J. W. A. Coremans; M. van Gastel; O. G. Poluektov; Edgar J. J. Groenen; T. den Blaauwen; G. van Pouderoyen; Gerard W. Canters; Herbert Nar; Christian Hammann; Albrecht Messerschmidt

Abstract We report electron-nuclear double-resonance experiments on a single crystal of azurin at 95 GHz and electron-spin-echo envelope-modulation experiments on frozen solutions of azurin and of the H117G mutant at 9 GHz. The hyperfine and quadrupole tensors of the two remote nitrogens of the histidine ligands of copper are assigned and discussed. A third nucleus is found to contribute to the echo-modulation spectrum and this probably concerns an amide nitrogen of the peptide backbone.

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Gerhard Steger

University of Düsseldorf

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Janis Kruse

Jacobs University Bremen

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Beatrix Suess

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Eric Westhof

University of Strasbourg

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Anne Kalweit

Jacobs University Bremen

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Carsten Seehafer

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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