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Dive into the research topics where Dirk Windisch is active.

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Featured researches published by Dirk Windisch.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Hydrophobic Matching Controls the Tilt and Stability of the Dimeric Platelet-derived Growth Factor Receptor (PDGFR) β Transmembrane Segment

Claudia Muhle-Goll; Silke Hoffmann; Sergii Afonin; Stephan L. Grage; Anton A. Polyansky; Dirk Windisch; Marcel Zeitler; Jochen Bürck; Anne S. Ulrich

Background: Dimerization regulates activation of PDGF receptor in signal transduction. Results: The transmembrane segment of PDGFR forms a left-handed helical dimer, which becomes more tilted and less stable in model membranes with decreasing lipid acyl chain lengths. Conclusion: The membrane thickness controls the ability of the transmembrane segments to dimerize. Significance: Receptor dimerization and activation in vivo may require relocation to thick lipid rafts. The platelet-derived growth factor receptor β is a member of the cell surface receptor tyrosine kinase family and dimerizes upon activation. We determined the structure of the transmembrane segment in dodecylphosphocholine micelles by liquid-state NMR and found that it forms a stable left-handed helical dimer. Solid-state NMR and oriented circular dichroism were used to measure the tilt angle of the helical segments in macroscopically aligned model membranes with different acyl chain lengths. Both methods showed that decreasing bilayer thickness (DEPC-POPC-DMPC) led to an increase in the helix tilt angle from 10° to 30° with respect to the bilayer normal. At the same time, reconstitution of the comparatively long hydrophobic segment became less effective, eventually resulting in complete protein aggregation in the short-chain lipid DLPC. Unrestrained molecular dynamics simulations of the dimer were carried out in explicit lipid bilayers (DEPC, POPC, DMPC, sphingomyelin), confirming the observed dependence of the helix tilt angle on bilayer thickness. Notably, molecular dynamics revealed that the left-handed dimer gets tilted en bloc, whereas conformational transitions to alternative (e.g. right-handed dimeric) states were not supported. The experimental data along with the simulation results demonstrate a pronounced interplay between the platelet-directed growth factor receptor β transmembrane segment and the bilayer thickness. The effect of hydrophobic mismatch might play a key role in the redistribution and activation of the receptor within different lipid microdomains of the plasma membrane in vivo.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Structural Role of the Conserved Cysteines in the Dimerization of the Viral Transmembrane Oncoprotein E5

Dirk Windisch; Silke Hoffmann; Sergii Afonin; Stefanie Vollmer; Soraya Benamira; Birgid Langer; Jochen Bürck; Claudia Muhle-Goll; Anne S. Ulrich

The E5 oncoprotein is the major transforming protein of bovine papillomavirus type 1. This 44-residue transmembrane protein can interact with the platelet-derived growth factor receptor β, leading to ligand-independent activation and cell transformation. For productive interaction, E5 needs to dimerize via a C-terminal pair of cysteines, though a recent study suggested that its truncated transmembrane segment can dimerize on its own. To analyze the structure of the full protein in a membrane environment and elucidate the role of the Cys-Ser-Cys motif, we produced recombinantly the wild-type protein and four cysteine mutants. Comparison by circular dichroism in detergent micelles and lipid vesicular dispersion and by NMR in trifluoroethanol demonstrates that the absence of one or both cysteines does not influence the highly α-helical secondary structure, nor does it impair the ability of E5 to dimerize, observations that are further supported by sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We also observed assemblies of higher order. Oriented circular dichroism in lipid bilayers shows that E5 is aligned as a transmembrane helix with a slight tilt angle, and that this membrane alignment is also independent of any cysteines. We conclude that the Cys-containing motif represents a disordered region of the protein that serves as an extra covalent connection for stabilization.


Biochemistry | 2014

Structure-Based Engineering of a Minimal Porin Reveals Loop-Independent Channel Closure

Wolfgang Grosse; Georgios Psakis; Barbara Mertins; Philipp Reiss; Dirk Windisch; Felix Brademann; Jochen Bürck; Anne S. Ulrich; Ulrich Koert; Lars-Oliver Essen

Porins, like outer membrane protein G (OmpG) of Escherichia coli, are ideal templates among ion channels for protein and chemical engineering because of their robustness and simple architecture. OmpG shows fast transitions between open and closed states, which were attributed to loop 6 (L6). As flickering limits single-channel-based applications, we pruned L6 by either 8 or 12 amino acids. While the open probabilities of both L6 variants resemble that of native OmpG, their gating frequencies were reduced by 63 and 81%, respectively. Using the 3.2 Å structure of the shorter L6 variant in the open state, we engineered a minimal porin (220 amino acids), where all remaining extramembranous loops were truncated. Unexpectedly, this minimized porin still exhibited gating, but it was 5-fold less frequent than in OmpG. The residual gating of the minimal pore is hence independent of L6 rearrangements and involves narrowing of the ion conductance pathway most probably driven by global stretching-flexing deformations of the membrane-embedded β-barrel.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

UV-CD12: Synchrotron radiation circular dichroism beamline at ANKA

Jochen Bürck; Siegmar Roth; Dirk Windisch; Parvesh Wadhwani; David Moss; Anne S. Ulrich

UV-CD12 at ANKA and its current end-station are described, with a standard module for vacuum-UV synchrotron radiation circular dichroism of bio-macromolecules in the liquid state, and a unique module for macroscopically oriented lipid membranes (oriented circular dichroism).


Biological Chemistry | 2014

Structural characterization of a C-terminally truncated E5 oncoprotein from papillomavirus in lipid bilayers.

Dirk Windisch; Colin Ziegler; Jochen Bürck; Anne S. Ulrich

Abstract E5 is the major transforming oncoprotein of bovine papillomavirus, which activates the platelet-derived growth factor receptor β in a highly specific manner. The short transmembrane protein E5 with only 44 residues interacts directly with the transmembrane segments of the receptor, but structural details are not available. Biophysical investigations are challenging, because the hydrophobic E5 protein tends to aggregate and get cross-linked non-specifically via two Cys residues near its C-terminus. Here, we demonstrate that a truncation by 10 amino acids creates a more manageable protein that can be conveniently used for structure analysis. Synchrotron radiation circular dichroism and solid-state 15N- and 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy show that this E5 variant serves as a representative model for the wild-type protein. The helical conformation of the transmembrane segment, its orientation in the lipid bilayer, and the ability to form homodimers in the membrane are not affected by the C-terminal truncation.


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Hydrophobic Mismatch Drives the Interaction of E5 with the Transmembrane Segment of PDGF Receptor

Dirk Windisch; Colin Ziegler; Stephan L. Grage; Jochen Bürck; Marcel Zeitler; Peter L. Gor’kov; Anne S. Ulrich

The oncogenic E5 protein from bovine papillomavirus is a short (44 amino acids long) integral membrane protein that forms homodimers. It activates platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) β in a ligand-independent manner by transmembrane helix-helix interactions. The nature of this recognition event remains elusive, as numerous mutations are tolerated in the E5 transmembrane segment, with the exception of one hydrogen-bonding residue. Here, we examined the conformation, stability, and alignment of the E5 protein in fluid lipid membranes of substantially varying bilayer thickness, in both the absence and presence of the PDGFR transmembrane segment. Quantitative synchrotron radiation circular dichroism analysis revealed a very long transmembrane helix for E5 of ∼26 amino acids. Oriented circular dichroism and solid-state 15N-NMR showed that the alignment and stability of this unusually long segment depend critically on the membrane thickness. When reconstituted alone in exceptionally thick DNPC lipid bilayers, the E5 helix was found to be inserted almost upright. In moderately thick bilayers (DErPC and DEiPC), it started to tilt and became slightly deformed, and finally it became aggregated in conventional DOPC, POPC, and DMPC membranes due to hydrophobic mismatch. On the other hand, when E5 was co-reconstituted with the transmembrane segment of PDGFR, it was able to tolerate even the most pronounced mismatch and was stabilized by binding to the receptor, which has the same hydrophobic length. As E5 is known to activate PDGFR within the thin membranes of the Golgi compartment, we suggest that the intrinsic hydrophobic mismatch of these two interaction partners drives them together. They seem to recognize each other by forming a closely packed bundle of mutually aligned transmembrane helices, which is further stabilized by a specific pair of hydrogen-bonding residues.


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Flipping Helices: Membrane Insertion of Amphiphilic Helices and Extrusion of Transmembrane Segments

Torsten H. Walther; Lena Steger; Erik Strandberg; Ariadna Grau Campistany; Parvesh Wadhwani; Benjamin Zimpfer; Jochen Bürck; Dirk Windisch; Katharina Becker; Stephan L. Grage; Johannes Reichert; Sergiy Afonin; Anne S. Ulrich


Gordon Research Conference on Membrane Protein Folding, Easton, MA, June 4-9, 2017 | 2017

Solid-state NMR analysis of the membrane alignment of the PDGF-receptor β and the E5 oncoprotein

Dirk Windisch; Colin Ziegler; Stephan L. Grage; Parvesh Wadhwani; Anne S. Ulrich


Annual EU/UK CD User Group Meeting, University of Warwick, GB, July 12, 2017 | 2017

Oriented SRCD - data collection and analysis

Jochen Bürck; Siegmar Roth; Dirk Windisch; Parvesh Wadhwani; Anne S. Ulrich


27th International Conference on Magnetic Resonance in Biological Systems, 21-26.08.2016, Kyoto | 2016

Solid-state 15N- and 19F-NMR analysis of the interaction of the viral E5 oncoprotein with the PDGF receptor in membranes

Stephan L. Grage; Dirk Windisch; Xiaojun Xu; Colin Ziegler; Parvesh Wadhwani; Anne S. Ulrich

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Anne S. Ulrich

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Jochen Bürck

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Parvesh Wadhwani

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Stephan L. Grage

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Colin Ziegler

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Claudia Muhle-Goll

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Silke Hoffmann

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Marcel Zeitler

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Sergii Afonin

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Sergiy Afonin

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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