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Dive into the research topics where Enrica Bordignon is active.

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Featured researches published by Enrica Bordignon.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Molecular Details of Bax Activation, Oligomerization, and Membrane Insertion

Stephanie Bleicken; Mirjam Classen; Pulagam V. L. Padmavathi; Takashi Ishikawa; Kornelius Zeth; Heinz-Juergen Steinhoff; Enrica Bordignon

Bax and Bid are pro-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 protein family. Upon cleavage by caspase-8, Bid activates Bax. Activated Bax inserts into the mitochondrial outer membrane forming oligomers which lead to membrane poration, release of cytochrome c, and apoptosis. The detailed mechanism of Bax activation and the topology and composition of the oligomers are still under debate. Here molecular details of Bax activation and oligomerization were obtained by application of several biophysical techniques, including atomic force microscopy, cryoelectron microscopy, and particularly electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy performed on spin-labeled Bax. Incubation with detergents, reconstitution, and Bid-triggered insertion into liposomes were found to be effective in inducing Bax oligomerization. Bid was shown to activate Bax independently of the stoichiometric ratio, suggesting that Bid has a catalytic function and that the interaction with Bax is transient. The formation of a stable dimerization interface involving two Bcl-2 homology 3 (BH3) domains was found to be the nucleation event for Bax homo-oligomerization. Based on intermolecular distance determined by EPR, a model of six adjacent Bax molecules in the oligomer is presented where the hydrophobic hairpins (helices α5 and α6) are equally spaced in the membrane and the two BH3 domains are in close vicinity in the dimer interface, separated by >5 nm from the next BH3 pairs.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

High sensitivity and versatility of the DEER experiment on nitroxide radical pairs at Q-band frequencies.

Yevhen Polyhach; Enrica Bordignon; Rene Tschaggelar; Sandhya Gandra; Adelheid Godt; Gunnar Jeschke

Measurement of distances with the Double Electron-Electron Resonance (DEER) experiment at X-band frequencies using a pair of nitroxides as spin labels is a popular biophysical tool for studying function-related conformational dynamics of proteins. The technique is intrinsically highly precise and can potentially access the range from 1.5 to 6-10 nm. However, DEER performance drops strongly when relaxation rates of the nitroxide spin labels are high and available material quantities are low, which is usually the case for membrane proteins reconstituted into liposomes. This leads to elevated noise levels, very long measurement times, reduced precision, and a decrease of the longest accessible distances. Here we quantify the performance improvement that can be achieved at Q-band frequencies (34.5 GHz) using a high-power spectrometer. More than an order of magnitude gain in sensitivity is obtained with a homebuilt setup equipped with a 150 W TWT amplifier by using oversized samples. The broadband excitation enabled by the high power ensures that orientation selection can be suppressed in most cases, which facilitates extraction of distance distributions. By varying pulse lengths, Q-band DEER can be switched between orientationally non-selective and selective regimes. Because of suppression of nuclear modulations from matrix protons and deuterons, analysis of the Q-band data is greatly simplified, particularly in cases of very small DEER modulation depth due to low binding affinity between proteins forming a complex or low labelling efficiency. Finally, we demonstrate that a commercial Q-band spectrometer can be readily adjusted to the high-power operation.


Molecular Cell | 2014

Structural Model of Active Bax at the Membrane

Stephanie Bleicken; Gunnar Jeschke; Carolin Stegmueller; Raquel Salvador-Gallego; Ana J. García-Sáez; Enrica Bordignon

Bax plays a central role in the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis. Upon activation, cytosolic Bax monomers oligomerize on the surface of mitochondria and change conformation concertedly to punch holes into the outer membrane. The subsequent release of cytochrome c initiates cell death. However, the structure of membrane-inserted Bax and its mechanism of action remain largely unknown. Here, we propose a 3D model of active Bax at the membrane based on double electron-electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy in liposomes and isolated mitochondria. We show that active Bax is organized at the membrane as assemblies of dimers. In addition to a stable dimerization domain, each monomer contains a more flexible piercing domain involved in interdimer interactions and pore formation. The most important structural change during Bax activation is the opening of the hairpin formed by helices 5 and 6, which adopts a clamp-like conformation central to the mechanism of mitochondrial permeabilization.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2013

Conformational heterogeneity of the aspartate transporter Glt Ph

Inga Hänelt; Dorith Wunnicke; Enrica Bordignon; Heinz-Juergen Steinhoff; Dirk Jan Slotboom

GltPh is a Pyrococcus horikoshii homotrimeric Na+-coupled aspartate transporter that belongs to the glutamate transporter family. Each protomer consists of a trimerization domain involved in subunit interaction and a transporting domain with the substrate-binding site. Here, we have studied the conformational changes underlying transport by GltPh using EPR spectroscopy. The trimerization domains form a rigid scaffold, whereas the transporting domains sample multiple conformations, consistent with large-scale movements during the transport cycle. Binding of substrates changed the occupancies of the different conformational states, but the domains remained heterogeneous. The membrane environment favored conformations different from those observed in detergent micelles, but the transporting domain remained structurally heterogeneous in both environments. We conclude that the transporting domains sample multiple conformational states with substantial occupancy regardless of the presence of substrate and coupling ions, consistent with equilibrium constants close to unity between the observed transporter conformations.


Molecular Microbiology | 2010

The maltose ATP‐binding cassette transporter in the 21st century – towards a structural dynamic perspective on its mode of action

Enrica Bordignon; Mathias Grote; Erwin Schneider

The maltose/maltodextrin transport system of Escherichia coli/Salmonella, composed of periplasmic maltose‐binding protein, MalE, the pore‐forming subunits MalF and MalG, and a homodimer of the nucleotide‐binding subunit, MalK, serves as a model for canonical ATP‐binding cassette importers in general. The wealth of knowledge accumulated on the maltose transporter in more than three decades by genetic, molecular genetic and biochemical means was complemented more recently by crystal structures of the isolated MalK dimer and of two conformational states of the full transporter. Here, we summarize insights into the transport mechanism provided by these structures and draw the readers attention to experimental tools by which the dynamics of the transporter can be studied during substrate translocation. A transport model is presented that integrates currently available biochemical, biophysical and structural data. We also present the state of knowledge on regulatory functions of the maltose transporter associated with the C‐terminal domain of MalK. Finally, we will address the application of coarse‐grained modelling to visualize the progression of the conformational changes of an ABC transporter with special emphasis on the maltose system, which can provide a model platform for testing and validating the bioinformatic tools.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Structural Analysis of a HAMP Domain THE LINKER REGION OF THE PHOTOTRANSDUCER IN COMPLEX WITH SENSORY RHODOPSIN II

Enrica Bordignon; Johann P. Klare; Meike Doebber; Ansgar A. Wegener; Swetlana Martell; Martin Engelhard; Heinz-Jürgen Steinhoff

Sensory rhodopsin II, the photophobic receptor from Natronomonas pharaonis (NpSRII)5, forms a 2:2 complex with its cognate transducer (N. pharaonis halobacterial transducer of rhodopsins II (NpHtrII)) in lipid membranes. Light activation of NpSRII leads to a displacement of helix F, which in turn triggers a rotation/screw-like motion of TM2 in NpHtrII. This conformational change is thought to be transmitted through the membrane adjacent conserved signal transduction domain in histidine kinases, adenylyl cyclases, methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins, and phosphatases (HAMP domain) to the cytoplasmic signaling domain of the transducer. The architecture and function of the HAMP domain are still unknown. In order to obtain information on the structure and dynamics of this region, EPR experiments on a truncated transducer (NpHtrII157) and NpSRII, site-directed spin-labeled and reconstituted into purple membrane lipids, have been carried out. A nitroxide scanning involving residues in the transducer helix TM2, in the predicted AS-1 region, and at selected positions in the following connector and AS-2 regions of the HAMP domain has been performed. Accessibility and dynamics data allowed us to identify a helical region up to residue Ala94 in the AS-1 amphipathic sequence, followed by a highly dynamic domain protruding into the water phase. Additionally, transducer-transducer and transducer-receptor proximity relations revealed the overall architecture of the AS-1 sequences in the 2:2 complex, which are suggested to form a molten globular type of a coiled-coil bundle.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Structural basis for allosteric cross-talk between the asymmetric nucleotide binding sites of a heterodimeric ABC exporter

Michael Hohl; Lea M. Hürlimann; Simon Böhm; Jendrik Schöppe; Markus G. Grütter; Enrica Bordignon; Markus A. Seeger

Significance ATP binding cassette (ABC) exporters contain a pair of nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs), which bind and hydrolyze ATP to pump substrates across the membrane. Functional studies suggest that the two ATP binding sites are conformationally coupled. In contrast to other ABC exporters, we show that the asymmetric NBDs of the heterodimeric ABC exporter TM287/288 remain in contact, even in the absence of nucleotides. By comparing the apo state with the adenosine 5′-(β,γ-imido)triphosphate–bound structure of TM287/288, we unravel the structural basis for allosteric coupling between the ATP binding sites. NBD-NBD contacts in the inward-facing transporter warrant cross-communication between the ATP binding sites throughout the transport cycle and are in agreement with functional models of clinically important heterodimeric ABC exporters including CFTR, SUR1, and TAP1/2. ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters mediate vital transport processes in every living cell. ATP hydrolysis, which fuels transport, displays positive cooperativity in numerous ABC transporters. In particular, heterodimeric ABC exporters exhibit pronounced allosteric coupling between a catalytically impaired degenerate site, where nucleotides bind tightly, and a consensus site, at which ATP is hydrolyzed in every transport cycle. Whereas the functional phenomenon of cooperativity is well described, its structural basis remains poorly understood. Here, we present the apo structure of the heterodimeric ABC exporter TM287/288 and compare it to the previously solved structure with adenosine 5′-(β,γ-imido)triphosphate (AMP-PNP) bound at the degenerate site. In contrast to other ABC exporter structures, the nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) of TM287/288 remain in molecular contact even in the absence of nucleotides, and the arrangement of the transmembrane domains (TMDs) is not influenced by AMP-PNP binding, a notion confirmed by double electron-electron resonance (DEER) measurements. Nucleotide binding at the degenerate site results in structural rearrangements, which are transmitted to the consensus site via two D-loops located at the NBD interface. These loops owe their name from a highly conserved aspartate and are directly connected to the catalytically important Walker B motif. The D-loop at the degenerate site ties the NBDs together even in the absence of nucleotides and substitution of its aspartate by alanine is well-tolerated. By contrast, the D-loop of the consensus site is flexible and the aspartate to alanine mutation and conformational restriction by cross-linking strongly reduces ATP hydrolysis and substrate transport.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Transmembrane Signaling in the Maltose ABC Transporter MalFGK2-E PERIPLASMIC MalF-P2 LOOP COMMUNICATES SUBSTRATE AVAILABILITY TO THE ATP-BOUND MalK DIMER

Mathias Grote; Yevhen Polyhach; Gunnar Jeschke; Heinz-Jürgen Steinhoff; Erwin Schneider; Enrica Bordignon

ABC transporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins that translocate solutes across biological membranes at the expense of ATP. In prokaryotic ABC importers, the extracytoplasmic anchoring of the substrate-binding protein (receptor) is emerging as a key determinant for the structural rearrangements in the cytoplasmically exposed ATP-binding cassette domains and in the transmembrane gates during the nucleotide cycle. Here the molecular mechanism of such signaling events was addressed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of spin-labeled ATP-binding cassette maltose transporter variants (MalFGK2-E). A series of doubly spin-labeled mutants in the MalF-P2 domain involving positions 92, 205, 239, 252, and 273 and one triple mutant labeled at positions 205/252 in P2 and 83 in the Q-loop of MalK were assayed. The EPR data revealed that the substrate-binding protein MalE is bound to the transporter throughout the transport cycle. Concomitantly with the three conformations of the ATP-binding cassette MalK2, three functionally relevant conformations are found also in the periplasmic MalF-P2 loop, strictly dependent on cytoplasmic nucleotide binding and periplasmic docking of liganded MalE to MalFG. The reciprocal communication across the membrane unveiled here gives first insights into the stimulatory effect of MalE on the ATPase activity, and it is suggested to be an important mechanistic feature of receptor-coupled ABC transporters.


Archive | 2010

The maltose ABC transporter in the 21st century ? towards a structural-dynamic perspective on its mode of action

Erwin Schneider; Enrica Bordignon; Mathias Grote

The maltose/maltodextrin transport system of Escherichia coli/Salmonella, composed of periplasmic maltose‐binding protein, MalE, the pore‐forming subunits MalF and MalG, and a homodimer of the nucleotide‐binding subunit, MalK, serves as a model for canonical ATP‐binding cassette importers in general. The wealth of knowledge accumulated on the maltose transporter in more than three decades by genetic, molecular genetic and biochemical means was complemented more recently by crystal structures of the isolated MalK dimer and of two conformational states of the full transporter. Here, we summarize insights into the transport mechanism provided by these structures and draw the readers attention to experimental tools by which the dynamics of the transporter can be studied during substrate translocation. A transport model is presented that integrates currently available biochemical, biophysical and structural data. We also present the state of knowledge on regulatory functions of the maltose transporter associated with the C‐terminal domain of MalK. Finally, we will address the application of coarse‐grained modelling to visualize the progression of the conformational changes of an ABC transporter with special emphasis on the maltose system, which can provide a model platform for testing and validating the bioinformatic tools.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Orthogonal spin labeling and Gd(III)-nitroxide distance measurements on bacteriophage T4-lysozyme.

Luca Garbuio; Enrica Bordignon; Evan K. Brooks; Wayne L. Hubbell; Gunnar Jeschke; Maxim Yulikov

We present the first example of chemoselective site-specific spin labeling of a monomeric protein with two spectroscopically orthogonal spin labels: a gadolinium(III) chelate complex and a nitroxide radical. A detailed analysis of the performance of two commercially available Gd(III) ligands in the Gd(III)-nitroxide pulse double electron-electron resonance (DEER or PELDOR) experiment is reported. A modification of the flip angle of the pump pulse in the Gd(III)-nitroxide DEER experiment is proposed to optimize sensitivity.

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Erwin Schneider

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Benesh Joseph

Goethe University Frankfurt

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