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Dive into the research topics where Christian Riekel is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Riekel.


Nature | 2005

Structure of the cross-|[beta]| spine of amyloid-like fibrils

Rebecca Nelson; Michael R. Sawaya; Melinda Balbirnie; Anders Madsen; Christian Riekel; Robert Grothe; David Eisenberg

Numerous soluble proteins convert to insoluble amyloid-like fibrils that have common properties. Amyloid fibrils are associated with fatal diseases such as Alzheimers, and amyloid-like fibrils can be formed in vitro. For the yeast protein Sup35, conversion to amyloid-like fibrils is associated with a transmissible infection akin to that caused by mammalian prions. A seven-residue peptide segment from Sup35 forms amyloid-like fibrils and closely related microcrystals, from which we have determined the atomic structure of the cross-β spine. It is a double β-sheet, with each sheet formed from parallel segments stacked in register. Side chains protruding from the two sheets form a dry, tightly self-complementing steric zipper, bonding the sheets. Within each sheet, every segment is bound to its two neighbouring segments through stacks of both backbone and side-chain hydrogen bonds. The structure illuminates the stability of amyloid fibrils, their self-seeding characteristic and their tendency to form polymorphic structures.


Nature | 2007

Atomic structures of amyloid cross-β spines reveal varied steric zippers

Michael R. Sawaya; Shilpa Sambashivan; Rebecca Nelson; Magdalena I. Ivanova; Stuart A. Sievers; Marcin I. Apostol; Michael J. Thompson; Melinda Balbirnie; Jed J. W. Wiltzius; Heather T. McFarlane; Anders Ø. Madsen; Christian Riekel; David Eisenberg

Amyloid fibrils formed from different proteins, each associated with a particular disease, contain a common cross-β spine. The atomic architecture of a spine, from the fibril-forming segment GNNQQNY of the yeast prion protein Sup35, was recently revealed by X-ray microcrystallography. It is a pair of β-sheets, with the facing side chains of the two sheets interdigitated in a dry ‘steric zipper’. Here we report some 30 other segments from fibril-forming proteins that form amyloid-like fibrils, microcrystals, or usually both. These include segments from the Alzheimer’s amyloid-β and tau proteins, the PrP prion protein, insulin, islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP), lysozyme, myoglobin, α-synuclein and β2-microglobulin, suggesting that common structural features are shared by amyloid diseases at the molecular level. Structures of 13 of these microcrystals all reveal steric zippers, but with variations that expand the range of atomic architectures for amyloid-like fibrils and offer an atomic-level hypothesis for the basis of prion strains.


Applied Physics Letters | 2005

Hard x-ray nanoprobe based on refractive x-ray lenses

Cg Schroer; Olga Kurapova; Jens Patommel; P Boye; J Feldkamp; B. Lengeler; Manfred Burghammer; Christian Riekel; Laszlo Vincze; A. van der Hart; M. Küchler

Based on nanofocusing refractive x-ray lenses a hard x-ray scanning microscope is currently being developed and is being implemented at beamline ID13 of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (Grenoble, France). It can be operated in transmission, fluorescence, and diffraction mode. Tomographic scanning allows one to determine the inner structure of a specimen. In this device, a monochromatic (E=21keV) hard x-ray nanobeam with a lateral extension of 47×55nm2 was generated. Further reduction of the beam size to below 20 nm is targeted.


Protein Science | 2008

Atomic structure of the cross‐β spine of islet amyloid polypeptide (amylin)

Jed Wiltzius; Stuart A. Sievers; Michael R. Sawaya; Duilio Cascio; Dmitriy Popov; Christian Riekel; David Eisenberg

Human islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP or amylin) is a 37‐residue hormone found as fibrillar deposits in pancreatic extracts of nearly all type II diabetics. Although the cellular toxicity of IAPP has been established, the structure of the fibrillar form found in these deposits is unknown. Here we have crystallized two segments from IAPP, which themselves form amyloid‐like fibrils. The atomic structures of these two segments, NNFGAIL and SSTNVG, were determined, and form the basis of a model for the most commonly observed, full‐length IAPP polymorph.


Biophysical Journal | 2003

The Mechanical Properties of Hydrated Intermediate Filaments: Insights from Hagfish Slime Threads

Douglas S. Fudge; Kenn H. Gardner; V. Trevor Forsyth; Christian Riekel; John M. Gosline

Intermediate filaments (IFs) impart mechanical integrity to cells, yet IF mechanics are poorly understood. It is assumed that IFs in cells are as stiff as hard alpha-keratin, F-actin, and microtubules, but the high bending flexibility of IFs and the low stiffness of soft alpha-keratins suggest that hydrated IFs may be quite soft. To test this hypothesis, we measured the tensile mechanics of the keratin-like threads from hagfish slime, which are an ideal model for exploring the mechanics of IF bundles and IFs because they consist of tightly packed and aligned IFs. Tensile tests suggest that hydrated IF bundles possess low initial stiffness (E(i) = 6.4 MPa) and remarkable elasticity (up to strains of 0.34), which we attribute to soft elastomeric IF protein terminal domains in series with stiffer coiled coils. The high tensile strength (180 MPa) and toughness (130 MJ/m(3)) of IF bundles support the notion that IFs lend mechanical integrity to cells. Their long-range elasticity suggests that IFs may also allow cells to recover from large deformations. X-ray diffraction and congo-red staining indicate that post-yield deformation leads to an irreversible alpha-->beta conformational transition in IFs, which leads to plastic deformation, and may be used by cells as a mechanosensory cue.


Science | 2006

Elemental compositions of comet 81P/Wild 2 samples collected by Stardust

G. J. Flynn; Pierre Bleuet; Janet Borg; John P. Bradley; Frank E. Brenker; S. Brennan; John C. Bridges; D. E. Brownlee; Emma S. Bullock; Manfred Burghammer; Benton C. Clark; Zu Rong Dai; Charles P. Daghlian; Zahia Djouadi; Sirine C. Fakra; Tristan Ferroir; Christine Floss; Ian A. Franchi; Zack Gainsforth; J.-P. Gallien; Philippe Gillet; Patrick G. Grant; Giles A. Graham; Simon F. Green; Faustine Grossemy; Philipp R. Heck; Gregory F. Herzog; Peter Hoppe; Friedrich Hörz; Joachim Huth

We measured the elemental compositions of material from 23 particles in aerogel and from residue in seven craters in aluminum foil that was collected during passage of the Stardust spacecraft through the coma of comet 81P/Wild 2. These particles are chemically heterogeneous at the largest size scale analyzed (∼180 ng). The mean elemental composition of this Wild 2 material is consistent with the CI meteorite composition, which is thought to represent the bulk composition of the solar system, for the elements Mg, Si, Mn, Fe, and Ni to 35%, and for Ca and Ti to 60%. The elements Cu, Zn, and Ga appear enriched in this Wild 2 material, which suggests that the CI meteorites may not represent the solar system composition for these moderately volatile minor elements.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2000

New avenues in x-ray microbeam experiments

Christian Riekel

The high brilliance of third-generation synchrotron radiation sources allows new applications in x-ray microdiffraction and microsmall-angle scattering. Beam sizes down to about one µm are routinely used and sub-µm beam sizes are becoming available. Scanning diffractometry can be used to examine samples like single fibres without the necessity for sectioning, as is required for transmission electron scattering experiments. Examples are taken principally from weakly scattering polymers and biopolymers. In single-crystal diffraction, sub-µm3 crystal volumes have been reached for inorganic crystals. Protein crystallography has been demonstrated for a few tenths of µm linear crystal size, which reduces the crystallization time for many proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Natural tri- to hexapeptides self-assemble in water to amyloid β-type fiber aggregates by unexpected α-helical intermediate structures

Charlotte A. E. Hauser; Rensheng Deng; Archana Mishra; Yihua Loo; Ulung Gondo Kusumo Khoe; Furen Zhuang; Daniel W. Cheong; Angelo Accardo; Michael Sullivan; Christian Riekel; Jackie Y. Ying; Ulrich A. Hauser

Many fatal neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson, the prion-related diseases, and non-neurodegenerative disorders such as type II diabetes are characterized by abnormal amyloid fiber aggregates, suggesting a common mechanism of pathogenesis. We have discovered that a class of systematically designed natural tri- to hexapeptides with a characteristic sequential motif can simulate the process of fiber assembly and further condensation to amyloid fibrils, probably via unexpected dimeric α-helical intermediate structures. The characteristic sequence motif of the novel peptide class consists of an aliphatic amino acid tail of decreasing hydrophobicity capped by a polar head. To our knowledge, the investigated aliphatic tripeptides are the shortest ever reported naturally occurring amino acid sequence that can adopt α-helical structure and promote amyloid formation. We propose the stepwise assembly process to be associated with characteristic conformational changes from random coil to α-helical intermediates terminating in cross-β peptide structures. Circular dichroism and X-ray fiber diffraction analyses confirmed the concentration-dependent conformational changes of the peptides in water. Molecular dynamics simulating peptide behavior in water revealed monomer antiparallel pairing to dimer structures by complementary structural alignment that further aggregated and stably condensed into coiled fibers. The ultrasmall size and the dynamic facile assembly process make this novel peptide class an excellent model system for studying the mechanism of amyloidogenesis, its evolution and pathogenicity. The ability to modify the properties of the assembled structures under defined conditions will shed light on strategies to manipulate the pathogenic amyloid aggregates in order to prevent or control aggregate formation.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2001

Spider silk fibre extrusion: combined wide- and small-angle X-ray microdiffraction experiments.

Christian Riekel; Fritz Vollrath

The major and minor ampullate silks from live Nephila senegalensis (Tetragnathidae) and the major ampullate silk from Euprostenops spp. (Pisauridae) spiders were investigated in situ by X-ray diffraction during forced silking. Wide- (WAXS) and small-angle (SAXS) scattering patterns were obtained at the same time. WAXS data show that the thread at the exit of the spigots already contains beta-sheet poly(alanine) crystallites. SAXS data suggest the presence of microfibrils with an axial repeating period of approximately 8 nm for both Nephila and Euprostenops. Minor ampullate (MI) Nephila silk, however, does not show this axial repeat which is probably due to a higher amount of crystal forming poly(alanine). A microfibrillar morphology, connected by a network of random polymer chains, can explain the presence of highly oriented crystallites, an oriented halo and a diffuse background in the WAXS patterns. At high reeling speeds, bound water is co-extruded with the fibre. It can be squeezed out of the fibre by friction at a needle. Under natural conditions it is the spiders tarsal claws which might serve to squeeze out the water to improve the mechanical properties of the thread during dragline production.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 1999

Aspects of X-ray diffraction on single spider fibers

Christian Riekel; C. Bränden; Catherine L. Craig; C. Ferrero; F. Heidelbach; Martin Müller

Diffraction patterns of silk from several spider species have been obtained by synchrotron radiation using a beam size > or = 10 microm. Single fiber diffraction patterns were obtained for fiber diameters down to a few microns. Diffraction patterns recorded with a 10 microm wide X-ray beam displayed fiber texture. The presence of two fractions of different crystallinity was confirmed for a single Nephila clavipes fiber. The orientation distribution of the polymer chains of the crystalline fraction along the fiber axis was found to be about 23 degrees full-width at half maximum (fwhm). The azimuthal spread of the short-range order fraction was about 86 degrees fwhm.

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Manfred Burghammer

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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Richard J. Davies

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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Stephan V. Roth

Royal Institute of Technology

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Angelo Accardo

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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R. Young

University of Manchester

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Enzo Di Fabrizio

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Werner Jark

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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