Christian Haupt
University of Ulm
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Featured researches published by Christian Haupt.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Gernot Habicht; Christian Haupt; Ralf P. Friedrich; Peter Hortschansky; Carsten Sachse; Jessica Meinhardt; Karin Wieligmann; Gerald P. Gellermann; Michael Brodhun; Jürgen Götz; Karl-Jürgen Halbhuber; Christoph Röcken; Uwe Horn; Marcus Fändrich
The formation of amyloid fibrils is a common biochemical characteristic that occurs in Alzheimers disease and several other amyloidoses. The unifying structural feature of amyloid fibrils is their specific type of β-sheet conformation that differentiates these fibrils from the products of normal protein folding reactions. Here we describe the generation of an antibody domain, termed B10, that recognizes an amyloid-specific and conformationally defined epitope. This antibody domain was selected by phage-display from a recombinant library of camelid antibody domains. Surface plasmon resonance, immunoblots, and immunohistochemistry show that this antibody domain distinguishes Aβ amyloid fibrils from disaggregated Aβ peptide as well as from specific Aβ oligomers. The antibody domain possesses functional activity in preventing the formation of mature amyloid fibrils by stabilizing Aβ protofibrils. These data suggest possible applications of B10 in the detection of amyloid fibrils or in the modulation of their formation.
Angewandte Chemie | 2012
Christian Haupt; Jörg Leppert; Raik Rönicke; Jessica Meinhardt; Jay K. Yadav; Oliver Ohlenschläger; Klaus G. Reymann; Matthias Görlach; Marcus Fändrich
Aggregation of b-amyloid (Ab) peptide into oligomers and protofibrils is a hallmark of Alzheimer s disease (AD). Increasing evidence shows that the primary insult in AD is caused by oligomeric species that impair the ordered function of synaptic networks. Consistent with this view, oligomers were shown to affect synaptic plasticity, and they impair the long-term potentiation (LTP) in living brain tissues, a widely used model system of brain memory functions. Using solidstate NMR spectroscopy, we here determined the residuespecific molecular conformation of a highly synaptotoxic bamyloid oligomer structure. Our measurements reveal a stable N-terminal b strand that controls the partitioning between oligomer and protofibril formation, whereas targeting the peptide N-terminus ameliorates Ab-dependent neuronal dysfunctions. The presently investigated, chemically well-defined Ab oligomers faithfully reproduce the hallmark characteristics of AD-related oligomers. Living hippocampal brain slices were exposed to different Ab conformers (Figure 1A), and a series of tetanic electrical stimuli were applied to evoke a longlasting increase of the synaptic transmission, termed LTP. Oligomers, but not freshly dissolved, that is, primarily monomeric, Ab peptide or fibrils, reduce the LTP response and therefore disturb the brain memory functions within these tissue samples (Figure 1B). A similar oligomer-specificity is seen with cultured primary neurons, which present a significant oligomer-dependent decrease ( 40%) of their
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
Christian Haupt; Magdalena Bereza; Senthil T. Kumar; Barbara Kieninger; Isabel Morgado; Peter Hortschansky; Günter Fritz; Christoph Röcken; Uwe Horn; Marcus Fändrich
Amyloid immunotherapy has led to the rise of antibodies, which target amyloid fibrils or structural precursors of fibrils, based on their specific conformational properties. Recently, we reported the biotechnological generation of the B10 antibody fragment, which provides conformation-specific binding to amyloid fibrils. B10 strongly interacts with fibrils from Alzheimers β amyloid (Aβ) peptide, while disaggregated Aβ peptide or Aβ oligomers are not explicitly recognized. B10 also enables poly-amyloid-specific binding and recognizes amyloid fibrils derived from different types of amyloidosis or different polypeptide chains. Based on our current data, however, we find that B10 does not recognize all tested amyloid fibrils and amyloid tissue deposits. It also does not specifically interact with intrinsically unfolded polypeptide chains or globular proteins even if the latter encompass high β-sheet content or β-solenoid domains. By contrast, B10 binds amyloid fibrils from d-amino acid or l-amino acid peptides and non-proteinaceous biopolymers with highly regular and anionic surface properties, such as heparin and DNA. These data establish that B10 binding does not depend on an amyloid-specific or protein-specific backbone structure. Instead, it involves the recognition of a highly regular and anionic surface pattern. This specificity mechanism is conserved in nature and occurs also within a group of natural amyloid receptors from the innate immune system, the pattern recognition receptors. Our data illuminate the structural diversity of naturally occurring amyloid scaffolds and enable the discrimination of distinct fibril populations in vitro and within diseased tissues.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
Christian Haupt; Isabel Morgado; Senthil T. Kumar; Christoph Parthier; Magdalena Bereza; Peter Hortschansky; Milton T. Stubbs; Uwe Horn; Marcus Fändrich
Amyloid fibrils are naturally occurring polypeptide scaffolds with considerable importance for human health and disease. These supermolecular assemblies are β-sheet rich and characterized by a high structural order. Clinical diagnosis and emerging therapeutic strategies of amyloid-dependent diseases, such as Alzheimers, rely on the specific recognition of amyloid structures by other molecules. Recently, we generated the B10 antibody fragment, which selectively binds to Alzheimers Aβ(1-40) amyloid fibrils but does not explicitly recognize other protein conformers, such as oligomers and disaggregated Aβ peptide. B10 presents poly-amyloid specific binding and interacts with fibrillar structures consisting of different polypeptide chains. To determine the molecular basis behind its specificity, we have analyzed the molecular properties of B10 with a battery of biochemical and biophysical techniques, ranging from X-ray crystallography to chemical modification studies. We find that fibril recognition depends on positively charged residues within the B10 antigen binding site. Mutation of these basic residues into alanine potently impairs fibril binding, and reduced B10-fibril interactions are also observed when the fibril carboxyl groups are covalently masked by a chemical modification approach. These data imply that the B10 conformational specificity for amyloid fibrils depends upon specific electrostatic interactions with an acidic moiety, which is common to different amyloid fibrils.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Marius Kollmer; Katrin Meinhardt; Christian Haupt; Falk Liberta; Melanie Wulff; Julia Linder; Lisa Handl; Liesa Heinrich; Cornelia Loos; Matthias Schmidt; Tatiana Syrovets; Thomas Simmet; Per Westermark; Gunilla T. Westermark; Uwe Horn; Volker Schmidt; Paul Walther; Marcus Fändrich
Significance Although considerable previous efforts have been dedicated to studying the molecular assembly of individual amyloid fibrils, much less is known about their 3D arrangement within a pathological deposit. In this study, we use electron tomography, an extremely powerful method for studying the detailed structure of cellular assemblies or macromolecular complexes, to unravel the superstructure of fibril networks. The structural views provided by our analysis enable a better understanding of the properties and pathogenic features of amyloid fibrils. The fibril network structure is also a crucial determinant of possible applications of such fibrils in the field of biotechnology or material sciences. Electron tomography is an increasingly powerful method to study the detailed architecture of macromolecular complexes or cellular structures. Applied to amyloid deposits formed in a cell culture model of systemic amyloid A amyloidosis, we could determine the structural morphology of the fibrils directly in the deposit. The deposited fibrils are arranged in different networks, and depending on the relative fibril orientation, we can distinguish between fibril meshworks, fibril bundles, and amyloid stars. These networks are frequently infiltrated by vesicular lipid inclusions that may originate from the death of the amyloid-forming cells. Our data support the role of nonfibril components for constructing fibril deposits and provide structural views of different types of lipid–fibril interactions.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2015
Shobini Jayaraman; Christian Haupt; Olga Gursky
Serum amyloid A (SAA) is an acute-phase protein that circulates mainly on plasma HDL. SAA interactions with its functional ligands and its pathogenic deposition in reactive amyloidosis depend, in part, on the structural disorder of this protein and its propensity to oligomerize. In vivo, SAA can displace a substantial fraction of the major HDL protein, apoA-I, and thereby influence the structural remodeling and functions of acute-phase HDL in ways that are incompletely understood. We use murine SAA1.1 to report the first structural stability study of human plasma HDL that has been enriched with SAA. Calorimetric and spectroscopic analyses of these and other SAA-lipid systems reveal two surprising findings. First, progressive displacement of the exchangeable fraction of apoA-I by SAA has little effect on the structural stability of HDL and its fusion and release of core lipids. Consequently, the major determinant for HDL stability is the nonexchangeable apoA-I. A structural model explaining this observation is proposed, which is consistent with functional studies in acute-phase HDL. Second, we report an α-helix folding/unfolding transition in SAA in the presence of lipid at near-physiological temperatures. This new transition may have potentially important implications for normal functions of SAA and its pathogenic misfolding.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Karthikeyan Annamalai; Falk Liberta; Marie-Theres Vielberg; William Close; Hauke Lilie; Karl-Heinz Gührs; Angelika Schierhorn; Rolf Koehler; Andreas Schmidt; Christian Haupt; Ute Hegenbart; Stefan Schönland; Matthias Schmidt; Michael Groll; Marcus Fändrich
Systemic amyloidosis is caused by the misfolding of a circulating amyloid precursor protein and the deposition of amyloid fibrils in multiple organs. Chemical and biophysical analysis of amyloid fibrils from human AL and murine AA amyloidosis reveal the same fibril morphologies in different tissues or organs of one patient or diseased animal. The observed structural similarities concerned the fibril morphology, the fibril protein primary and secondary structures, the presence of post-translational modifications and, in case of the AL fibrils, the partially folded characteristics of the polypeptide chain within the fibril. Our data imply for both analyzed forms of amyloidosis that the pathways of protein misfolding are systemically conserved; that is, they follow the same rules irrespective of where inside one body fibrils are formed or accumulated.
EMBO Reports | 2017
Stephanie Claus; Katrin Meinhardt; Tobias Aumüller; Ioana Puscalau‐Girtu; Julia Linder; Christian Haupt; Paul Walther; Tatiana Syrovets; Thomas Simmet; Marcus Fändrich
Serum amyloid A1 (SAA1) is an apolipoprotein that binds to the high‐density lipoprotein (HDL) fraction of the serum and constitutes the fibril precursor protein in systemic AA amyloidosis. We here show that HDL binding blocks fibril formation from soluble SAA1 protein, whereas internalization into mononuclear phagocytes leads to the formation of amyloid. SAA1 aggregation in the cell model disturbs the integrity of vesicular membranes and leads to lysosomal leakage and apoptotic death. The formed amyloid becomes deposited outside the cell where it can seed the fibrillation of extracellular SAA1. Our data imply that cells are transiently required in the amyloidogenic cascade and promote the initial nucleation of the deposits. This mechanism reconciles previous evidence for the extracellular location of deposits and amyloid precursor protein with observations the cells are crucial for the formation of amyloid.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2016
Shobini Jayaraman; Christian Haupt; Olga Gursky
Oxidative stress and inflammation, which involve a dramatic increase in serum amyloid A (SAA) levels, are critical in the development of atherosclerosis. Most SAA circulates on plasma HDL particles, altering their cardioprotective properties. SAA-enriched HDL has diminished anti-oxidant effects on LDL, which may contribute to atherogenesis. We determined combined effects of SAA enrichment and oxidation on biochemical changes in HDL. Normal human HDLs were incubated with SAA, oxidized by various factors (Cu2+, myeloperoxidase, H2O2, OCl−), and analyzed for lipid and protein modifications and biophysical remodeling. Three novel findings are reported: addition of SAA reduces oxidation of HDL and LDL lipids; oxidation of SAA-containing HDL in the presence of OCl− generates a covalent heterodimer of SAA and apoA-I that resists the release from HDL; and mild oxidation promotes spontaneous release of proteins (SAA and apoA-I) from SAA-enriched HDL. We show that the anti-oxidant effects of SAA extend to various oxidants and are mediated mainly by the unbound protein. We propose that free SAA sequesters lipid hydroperoxides and delays lipoprotein oxidation, though much less efficiently than other anti-oxidant proteins, such as apoA-I, that SAA displaces from HDL. These findings prompt us to reconsider the role of SAA in lipid oxidation in vivo.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Stephanie Claus; Ioana Puscalau‐Girtu; Paul Walther; Tatiana Syrovets; Thomas Simmet; Christian Haupt; Marcus Fändrich
Systemic AA amyloidosis arises from the misfolding of serum amyloid A1 (SAA1) protein and the deposition of AA amyloid fibrils at multiple sites within the body. Previous research already established that mononuclear phagocytes are crucial for the formation of the deposits in vivo and exposure of cultures of such cells to SAA1 protein induces the formation of amyloid deposits within the culture dish. In this study we show that both non-fibrillar and fibrillar SAA1 protein can be readily transferred between cultured J774A.1 cells, a widely used model of mononuclear phagocytes. We find that the exchange is generally faster with non-fibrillar SAA1 protein than with fibrils. Exchange is blocked if cells are separated by a membrane, while increasing the volume of cell culture medium had only small effects on the observed exchange efficiency. Taken together with scanning electron microscopy showing the presence of the respective types of physical interactions between the cultured cells, we conclude that the transfer of SAA1 protein depends on direct cell-to-cell contacts or tunneling nanotubes.