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Dive into the research topics where Dirk Flemming is active.

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Featured researches published by Dirk Flemming.


Cell | 2011

Insight into Structure and Assembly of the Nuclear Pore Complex by Utilizing the Genome of a Eukaryotic Thermophile

Stefan Amlacher; Phillip Sarges; Dirk Flemming; Vera van Noort; Ruth Kunze; Damien P. Devos; Manimozhiyan Arumugam; Peer Bork; Ed Hurt

Despite decades of research, the structure and assembly of the nuclear pore complex (NPC), which is composed of ∼30 nucleoporins (Nups), remain elusive. Here, we report the genome of the thermophilic fungus Chaetomium thermophilum (ct) and identify the complete repertoire of Nups therein. The thermophilic proteins show improved properties for structural and biochemical studies compared to their mesophilic counterparts, and purified ctNups enabled the reconstitution of the inner pore ring module that spans the width of the NPC from the anchoring membrane to the central transport channel. This module is composed of two large Nups, Nup192 and Nup170, which are flexibly bridged by short linear motifs made up of linker Nups, Nic96 and Nup53. This assembly illustrates how Nup interactions can generate structural plasticity within the NPC scaffold. Our findings therefore demonstrate the utility of the genome of a thermophilic eukaryote for studying complex molecular machines.


Molecular Cell | 2008

Structural Basis of the Nic96 Subcomplex Organization in the Nuclear Pore Channel

Nils Schrader; Philipp Stelter; Dirk Flemming; Ruth Kunze; Ed Hurt; Ingrid R. Vetter

Nic96 is a conserved nucleoporin that recruits the Nsp1-Nup49-Nup57 complex, a module with Phe-Gly (FG) repeats, to the central transport channel of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Nic96 binds the Nsp1 complex via its N domain and assembles into the NPC framework via its central and C domain. Here, we report the crystal structure of a large structural nucleoporin, Nic96 without its N domain (Nic96DeltaN). Nic96DeltaN is composed of three domains and is a straight molecule that--although almost entirely helical--exhibits strong deviations from the predicted alpha-solenoid fold. The missing N domain projects midway from the Nic96 molecule, indicating how the Nsp1 complex might be located with respect to the rod-like Nic96. Notably, Nic96DeltaN binds in vitro to FG repeats of the Nsp1 complex. These data suggest a model of how Nic96 could organize a transport module with coiled-coil domains and FG repeats in the central pore channel.


Structure | 2013

Protein Interfaces of the Conserved Nup84 Complex from Chaetomium thermophilum Shown by Crosslinking Mass Spectrometry and Electron Microscopy

Karsten Thierbach; Alexander von Appen; Matthias Thoms; Martin Beck; Dirk Flemming; Ed Hurt

A key building block of the nuclear pore complex (NPC) is the Nup84 subcomplex that has been structurally analyzed predominantly in the yeast system. To expand this analysis and gain insight into the evolutionary conservation of its structure, we reconstituted an octameric Nup84 complex using the subunits from a thermophile, Chaetomium thermophilum (ct). This assembly carries Nup37 and Elys, which are characteristic subunits of the orthologous human Nup107-Nup160 complex but absent from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We found that Elys binds cooperatively to the complex requiring both Nup37 and Nup120. Unexpectedly, the reconstituted ctNup84 complex formed a striking dimer structure with an unpredicted side-to-side arrangement of two molecules. Finally, crosslinking mass spectrometry allowed the mapping of key protein interfaces within the Y-shaped complex. Thus, the thermophilic Nup84 complex can serve as a structural model for higher eukaryotic Nup107-Nup160 assemblies to gain insight into its possible configuration within the NPC scaffold.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Precise mapping of subunits in multiprotein complexes by a versatile electron microscopy label

Dirk Flemming; Karsten Thierbach; Philipp Stelter; Bettina Böttcher; Ed Hurt

Positional knowledge of subunits within multiprotein assemblies is crucial for understanding their function. The topological analysis of protein complexes by electron microscopy has undergone impressive development, but analysis of the exact positioning of single subunits has lagged behind. Here we have developed a clonable ∼80-residue tag that, upon attachment to a target protein, can recruit a structurally prominent electron microscopy label in vitro. This tag is readily visible on single particles and becomes exceptionally distinct after image processing and classification. Thus, our method is applicable for the exact topological mapping of subunits in macromolecular complexes.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Two structurally distinct domains of the nucleoporin Nup170 cooperate to tether a subset of nucleoporins to nuclear pores

Dirk Flemming; Phillip Sarges; Philipp Stelter; Andrea Hellwig; Bettina Böttcher; Ed Hurt

How individual nucleoporins (Nups) perform their role in nuclear pore structure and function is largely unknown. In this study, we examined the structure of purified Nup170 to obtain clues about its function. We show that Nup170 adopts a crescent moon shape with two structurally distinct and separable domains, a β-propeller N terminus and an α-solenoid C terminus. To address the individual roles of each domain, we expressed these domains separately in yeast. Notably, overexpression of the Nup170 C domain was toxic in nup170Δ cells and caused accumulation of several Nups in cytoplasmic foci. Further experiments indicated that the C-terminal domain anchors Nup170 to nuclear pores, whereas the N-terminal domain functions to recruit or retain a subset of Nups, including Nup159, Nup188, and Pom34, at nuclear pores. We conclude that Nup170 performs its role as a structural adapter between cytoplasmically oriented Nups and the nuclear pore membrane.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

Structural basis for assembly and function of the Nup82 complex in the nuclear pore scaffold.

Monika Gaik; Dirk Flemming; Alexander von Appen; Panagiotis L. Kastritis; Norbert Mücke; Jessica Fischer; Philipp Stelter; Alessandro Ori; Khanh Huy Bui; Jochen Baßler; Elisar Barbar; Martin Beck; Ed Hurt

The yeast Nup82 complex forms an unusual asymmetric structure with a dimeric array of subunits that mediate its anchorage to the NPC scaffold and its concomitant interaction with the soluble nucleocytoplasmic transport machinery.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Analysis of the yeast nucleoporin Nup188 reveals a conserved S-like structure with similarity to karyopherins.

Dirk Flemming; Damien P. Devos; Johannes Schwarz; Stefan Amlacher; Malik Lutzmann; Ed Hurt

Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) embedded in the double nuclear membrane mediate the entire nucleocytoplasmic transport between the nucleus and cytoplasm. Each NPC is composed of about 30 different proteins (nucleoporins or Nups), which exist in multiple (8, 16 or 32) copies within the NPC scaffold. Recently, we have identified and characterized the large structural Nups, Nup188 and Nup192, from the thermophilic eukaryote Chaetomium thermophilum, which exhibited superior properties for biochemical and structural studies, when compared to their mesophilic orthologs. Here, we study the large structural Nups from the model organism yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our data show that yeast Nup188 like its thermophilic orthologue ctNup188 exhibits a twisted S-like structure, which flexibly binds the linker nucleoporin Nic96 via a short conserved α-helix motif. Using bioinformatic methods, we have generated a pseudo-atomic structural model of Nup188 and its related Nup192, which further strengthens the view that the large α-solenoid structural Nups are related to karyopherins.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2016

MOZART1 and γ-tubulin complex receptors are both required to turn γ-TuSC into an active microtubule nucleation template

Tien-chen Lin; Annett Neuner; Dirk Flemming; Peng Liu; Takumi Chinen; Ursula Jäkle; Robert A. Arkowitz; Elmar Schiebel

Cells use γ-tubulin complex to nucleate microtubules. The assembly of active microtubule nucleator is spatially and temporally regulated through the cell cycle. Lin et al. show that the protein Mzt1/MOZART1 and γ-tubulin complex receptors directly interact and act together to assemble the γ-tubulin small complex into an active microtubule nucleation template and that such interaction is conserved between Candida albicans and human cells.


Structure | 2015

Structural Characterization of the Chaetomium thermophilum TREX-2 Complex and its Interaction with the mRNA Nuclear Export Factor Mex67:Mtr2

Lyudmila Dimitrova; Eugene Valkov; Shintaro Aibara; Dirk Flemming; Stephen H. McLaughlin; Ed Hurt; Murray Stewart

Summary The TREX-2 complex integrates mRNA nuclear export into the gene expression pathway and is based on a Sac3 scaffold to which Thp1, Sem1, Sus1, and Cdc31 bind. TREX-2 also binds the mRNA nuclear export factor, Mex67:Mtr2, through the Sac3 N-terminal region (Sac3N). Here, we characterize Chaetomium thermophilum TREX-2, show that the in vitro reconstituted complex has an annular structure, and define the structural basis for interactions between Sac3, Sus1, Cdc31, and Mex67:Mtr2. Crystal structures show that the binding of C. thermophilum Sac3N to the Mex67 NTF2-like domain (Mex67NTF2L) is mediated primarily through phenylalanine residues present in a series of repeating sequence motifs that resemble those seen in many nucleoporins, and Mlp1 also binds Mex67:Mtr2 using a similar motif. Deletion of Sac3N generated growth and mRNA export defects in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and we propose TREX-2 and Mlp1 function to facilitate export by concentrating mature messenger ribonucleoparticles at the nuclear pore entrance.


Protein Science | 2017

Interaction network of the ribosome assembly machinery from a eukaryotic thermophile.

Jochen Baßler; Yasar Luqman Ahmed; Martina Kallas; Markus Kornprobst; Fabiola R. Calviño; Marén Gnädig; Matthias Thoms; Gunter Stier; Sherif Ismail; Satyavati Kharde; Nestor Castillo; Sabine Griesel; Sonja Bastuck; Bettina Bradatsch; Emma Thomson; Dirk Flemming; Irmgard Sinning; Ed Hurt

Ribosome biogenesis in eukaryotic cells is a highly dynamic and complex process innately linked to cell proliferation. The assembly of ribosomes is driven by a myriad of biogenesis factors that shape pre‐ribosomal particles by processing and folding the ribosomal RNA and incorporating ribosomal proteins. Biochemical approaches allowed the isolation and characterization of pre‐ribosomal particles from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which lead to a spatiotemporal map of biogenesis intermediates along the path from the nucleolus to the cytoplasm. Here, we cloned almost the entire set (∼180) of ribosome biogenesis factors from the thermophilic fungus Chaetomium thermophilum in order to perform an in‐depth analysis of their protein–protein interaction network as well as exploring the suitability of these thermostable proteins for structural studies. First, we performed a systematic screen, testing about 80 factors for crystallization and structure determination. Next, we performed a yeast 2‐hybrid analysis and tested about 32,000 binary combinations, which identified more than 1000 protein–protein contacts between the thermophilic ribosome assembly factors. To exemplary verify several of these interactions, we performed biochemical reconstitution with the focus on the interaction network between 90S pre‐ribosome factors forming the ctUTP‐A and ctUTP‐B modules, and the Brix‐domain containing assembly factors of the pre‐60S subunit. Our work provides a rich resource for biochemical reconstitution and structural analyses of the conserved ribosome assembly machinery from a eukaryotic thermophile.

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Ed Hurt

Heidelberg University

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Roland Beckmann

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich

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