Christine B. Breitenlechner
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Christine B. Breitenlechner.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003
Michael Gassel; Christine B. Breitenlechner; Petra Rüger; Ute Jucknischke; Thorsten Schneider; Robert Huber; Dirk Bossemeyer; Richard A. Engh
The mutation of well behaved enzymes in order to simulate less manageable cognates is the obvious approach to study specific features of the recalcitrant target. Accordingly, the prototypical protein kinase PKA serves as a model for many kinases, including the closely related PKB, an AGC family protein kinase now implicated as oncogenic in several cancers. Two residues that differ between the alpha isoforms of PKA and PKB at the adenine-binding site generate differing shapes of the binding surface and are likely to play a role in ligand selectivity. As the corresponding mutations in PKA, V123A would enlarge the adenine pocket, while L173M would alter both the shape and its electronic character of the adenine-binding surface. We have determined the structures of the corresponding double mutant (PKAB2: PKAalpha V123A, L173M) in apo and MgATP-bound states, and observed structural alterations of a residue not previously involved in ATP-binding interactions: the side-chain of Q181, which in native PKA points away from the ATP-binding site, adopts in apo double mutant protein a new rotamer conformation, which places the polar groups at the hinge region in the ATP pocket. MgATP binding forces Q181 back to the position seen in native PKA. The crystal structure shows that ATP binding geometry is identical with that in native PKA but in this case was determined under conditions with only a single Mg ion ligand. Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy studies show that significant energy is required for this ligand-induced transition. An additional PKA/PKB mutation, Q181K, corrects the defect, as shown both by the crystal structure of triple mutant PKAB3 (PKAalpha V123A, L173M, Q181K) and by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy binding studies with ATP and three isoquinoline inhibitors. Thus, the triple mutant serves well as an easily crystallizable model for PKB inhibitor interactions. Further, the phenomenon of Q181 shows how crystallographic analysis should accompany mutant studies to monitor possible spurious structural effects.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Stefan Bonn; Saturnino Herrero; Christine B. Breitenlechner; Andrea Erlbruch; Wolf D. Lehmann; Richard A. Engh; Michael Gassel; Dirk Bossemeyer
Controlling aberrant kinase-mediated cellular signaling is a major strategy in cancer therapy; successful protein kinase inhibitors such as Tarceva and Gleevec verify this approach. Specificity of inhibitors for the targeted kinase(s), however, is a crucial factor for therapeutic success. Based on homology modeling, we previously identified four amino acids in the active site of Rho-kinase that likely determine inhibitor specificities observed for Rho-kinase relative to protein kinase A (PKA) (in PKA numbering: T183A, L49I, V123M, and E127D), and a fifth (Q181K) that played a surprising role in PKA-PKB hybrid proteins. We have systematically mutated these residues in PKA to their counterparts in Rho-kinase, individually and in combination. Using four Rho-kinase-specific, one PKA-specific, and one pan-kinase-specific inhibitor, we measured the inhibitor-binding properties of the mutated proteins and identify the roles of individual residues as specificity determinants. Two combined mutant proteins, containing the combination of mutations T183A and L49I, closely mimic Rho-kinase. Kinetic results corroborate the hypothesis that side-chain identities form the major determinants of selectivity. An unexpected result of the analysis is the consistent contribution of the individual mutations by simple factors. Crystal structures of the surrogate kinase inhibitor complexes provide a detailed basis for an understanding of these selectivity determinant residues. The ability to obtain kinetic and structural data from these PKA mutants, combined with their Rho-kinase-like selectivity profiles, make them valuable for use as surrogate kinases for structure-based inhibitor design.
Structure | 2003
Christine B. Breitenlechner; Michael Gaßel; Hiroyoshi Hidaka; Volker Kinzel; Robert Huber; Richard A. Engh; Dirk Bossemeyer
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004
Christine B. Breitenlechner; Thomas Wegge; Laurent Berillon; Klaus Graul; Klaus Marzenell; Walter-Gunar Friebe; Ulrike Thomas; Ralf Schumacher; Robert Huber; Richard A. Engh; Birgit Masjost
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005
Christine B. Breitenlechner; Norman Kairies; Konrad Honold; Stefan Scheiblich; Hans Koll; Eva Greiter; Stefan Koch; Wolfgang Schäfer; Robert Huber; Richard A. Engh
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2005
Christine B. Breitenlechner; Walter-Gunar Friebe; Emmanuel Brunet; Guido Werner; Klaus Graul; Ulrike Thomas; Klaus-Peter Künkele; Wolfgang Schäfer; Michael Gassel; Dirk Bossemeyer; Robert Huber; Richard A. Engh; Birgit Masjost
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004
Michael Gassel; Christine B. Breitenlechner; Norbert König; Robert Huber; Richard A. Engh; Dirk Bossemeyer
Biochemistry | 2004
Christine B. Breitenlechner; Richard A. Engh; Robert Huber; Volker Kinzel; Dirk Bossemeyer; Michael Gassel
Biochemistry | 2002
Markus H. J. Seifert; Christine B. Breitenlechner; Dirk Bossemeyer; Robert Huber; Tad A. Holak; Richard A. Engh
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2005
Christine B. Breitenlechner; Dirk Bossemeyer; Richard A. Engh