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Dive into the research topics where Erich Michel is active.

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Featured researches published by Erich Michel.


Nature | 2014

Structural basis of the non-coding RNA RsmZ acting as a protein sponge

Olivier Duss; Erich Michel; Maxim Yulikov; Mario Schubert; Gunnar Jeschke; Frédéric H.-T. Allain

MicroRNA and protein sequestration by non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) has recently generated much interest. In the bacterial Csr/Rsm system, which is considered to be the most general global post-transcriptional regulatory system responsible for bacterial virulence, ncRNAs such as CsrB or RsmZ activate translation initiation by sequestering homodimeric CsrA-type proteins from the ribosome-binding site of a subset of messenger RNAs. However, the mechanism of ncRNA-mediated protein sequestration is not understood at the molecular level. Here we show for Pseudomonas fluorescens that RsmE protein dimers assemble sequentially, specifically and cooperatively onto the ncRNA RsmZ within a narrow affinity range. This assembly yields two different native ribonucleoprotein structures. Using a powerful combination of nuclear magnetic resonance and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy we elucidate these 70-kilodalton solution structures, thereby revealing the molecular mechanism of the sequestration process and how RsmE binding protects the ncRNA from RNase E degradation. Overall, our findings suggest that RsmZ is well-tuned to sequester, store and release RsmE and therefore can be viewed as an ideal protein ‘sponge’.


PLOS ONE | 2011

IL-22 Is Produced by Innate Lymphoid Cells and Limits Inflammation in Allergic Airway Disease

Christian Taube; Christine Tertilt; Gabor Gyülvészi; Nina Dehzad; Katharina Kreymborg; Kristin Schneeweiss; Erich Michel; Sebastian Reuter; Jean-Christophe Renauld; Danielle Arnold-Schild; Hansjörg Schild; Roland Buhl; Burkhard Becher

Interleukin (IL)-22 is an effector cytokine, which acts primarily on epithelial cells in the skin, gut, liver and lung. Both pro- and anti-inflammatory properties have been reported for IL-22 depending on the tissue and disease model. In a murine model of allergic airway inflammation, we found that IL-22 is predominantly produced by innate lymphoid cells in the inflamed lungs, rather than TH cells. To determine the impact of IL-22 on airway inflammation, we used allergen-sensitized IL-22-deficient mice and found that they suffer from significantly higher airway hyperreactivity upon airway challenge. IL-22-deficiency led to increased eosinophil infiltration lymphocyte invasion and production of CCL17 (TARC), IL-5 and IL-13 in the lung. Mice treated with IL-22 before antigen challenge displayed reduced expression of CCL17 and IL-13 and significant amelioration of airway constriction and inflammation. We conclude that innate IL-22 limits airway inflammation, tissue damage and clinical decline in allergic lung disease.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Molecular basis for the wide range of affinity found in Csr/Rsm protein–RNA recognition

Olivier Duss; Erich Michel; Nana Diarra dit Konté; Mario Schubert; Frédéric H.-T. Allain

The carbon storage regulator/regulator of secondary metabolism (Csr/Rsm) type of small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs) is widespread throughout bacteria and acts by sequestering the global translation repressor protein CsrA/RsmE from the ribosome binding site of a subset of mRNAs. Although we have previously described the molecular basis of a high affinity RNA target bound to RsmE, it remains unknown how other lower affinity targets are recognized by the same protein. Here, we have determined the nuclear magnetic resonance solution structures of five separate GGA binding motifs of the sRNA RsmZ of Pseudomonas fluorescens in complex with RsmE. The structures explain how the variation of sequence and structural context of the GGA binding motifs modulate the binding affinity for RsmE by five orders of magnitude (∼10 nM to ∼3 mM, Kd). Furthermore, we see that conformational adaptation of protein side-chains and RNA enable recognition of different RNA sequences by the same protein contributing to binding affinity without conferring specificity. Overall, our findings illustrate how the variability in the Csr/Rsm protein–RNA recognition allows a fine-tuning of the competition between mRNAs and sRNAs for the CsrA/RsmE protein.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Pheromone discrimination by a pH-tuned polymorphism of the Bombyx mori pheromone-binding protein

Fred F. Damberger; Erich Michel; Yuko Ishida; Walter S. Leal; Kurt Wüthrich

Significance Pheromone recognition by insect olfactory organs is critical for the ability of insects to locate mates. The silkworm moth Bombyx mori has long served as a model organism for studies of this process. Key components in the sensory organs have been identified, including the pheromone bombykol, pheromone-binding protein (BmorPBP), ligand-degrading enzymes, and the pheromone receptor, but many details of the mechanism allowing highly sensitive and selective pheromone detection are still elusive. Here, it is shown that a pH-dependent conformational polymorphism of BmorPBP affords highly selective transport of the pheromone, demonstrating an active role for BmorPBP in ligand discrimination. The Bombyx mori pheromone-binding protein (BmorPBP) is known to adopt two different conformations. These are BmorPBPA, where a regular helix formed by the C-terminal dodecapeptide segment, α7, occupies the ligand-binding cavity, and BmorPBPB, where the binding site is free to accept ligands. NMR spectra of delipidated BmorPBP solutions at the physiological pH of the bulk sensillum lymph near pH 6.5 show only BmorPBPA, and in mixtures, the two species are in slow exchange on the chemical shift frequency scale. This equilibrium has been monitored at variable pH and ligand concentrations, demonstrating that it is an intrinsic property of BmorPBP that is strongly affected by pH variation and ligand binding. This polymorphism tunes BmorPBP for optimal selective pheromone transport: Competition between α7 and lipophilic ligands for its binding cavity enables selective uptake of bombykol at the pore endings in the sensillum wall, whereas compounds with lower binding affinity can only be bound in the bulk sensillum lymph. After transport across the bulk sensillum lymph into the lower pH area near the dendritic membrane surface, bombykol is ejected near the receptor, whereas compounds with lower binding affinity are ejected before reaching the olfactory receptor, rendering them susceptible to degradation by enzymes present in the sensillum lymph.


ChemBioChem | 2013

Amino acid-selective segmental isotope labeling of multidomain proteins for structural biology.

Erich Michel; Lenka Skrisovska; Kurt Wüthrich; Frédéric H.-T. Allain

Current solution NMR techniques enable structural investigations of proteins in molecular particles with sizes up to several hundred kDa. However, the large molecular weight of proteins in such systems results in increased numbers of NMR signals, and the resulting spectral overlap typically imposes limitations. For multidomain proteins, segmental isotope labeling of individual domains facilitates the spectral interpretation by reducing the number of signals, but for large domains with small signal dispersion, signal overlap can persist. To overcome limitations arising from spectral overlap, we present a strategy that combines cell‐free expression and ligation of the expressed proteins to produce multidomain proteins with selective amino acid‐type labeling in individual domains. The bottleneck of intrinsically low cell‐free expression yields of precursor molecules was overcome by introducing new fusion constructs that allowed milligram production of ligation‐competent domains labeled in one or multiple amino acid types. Ligation‐competent unlabeled partner domains were produced in vivo, and subsequent domain ligation was achieved by using an on‐column strategy. This approach is illustrated with two multidomain RNA‐binding proteins, that is, the two C‐terminal RNA‐recognition motifs of the human polypyrimidine tract‐binding protein, and two highly homologous helix–turn–helix domains of the human glutamyl‐prolyl‐tRNA synthetase.


FEBS Journal | 2012

Cell-free expression of disulfide-containing eukaryotic proteins for structural biology

Erich Michel; Kurt Wüthrich

We describe Escherichia coli based cell‐free production of milligram quantities of eukaryotic proteins containing native disulfide bonds. Using a previously described expression system, we systematically investigated the influence of redox potential variation in the reaction mixture and the impact of adding disulfide bond catalysts on soluble protein production. It is then shown that the optimized reaction conditions for native disulfide bond formation can be combined with the use of N‐terminal fusion constructs with the GB1 domain for increased expression yields. The resulting cell‐free system is suitable for stable‐isotope labeling and does not require chemical pretreatment of the cell extract to stabilize the redox potential. For the human doppel protein, the mouse doppel protein and mouse interleukin‐22 we obtained 0.3–0.7 mg of purified native protein per milliliter of reaction mixture. Formation of disulfide bonds was validated using the Ellman assay, and native folding of the three proteins was monitored by NMR and CD spectroscopy.


Methods in Enzymology | 2015

Selective Amino Acid Segmental Labeling of Multi-Domain Proteins

Erich Michel; Frédéric H.-T. Allain

The steady technical advances of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) over the past decades enabled a significant increase in the molecular size of protein particles that can be subjected to a structural and functional characterization in solution. The larger molecular weight of such proteins is accompanied with an increase in NMR signals that complicate spectral interpretation due to signal overlap. The application of segmental isotope labeling to selected domains in multi-domain proteins can significantly facilitate spectral interpretation by reducing the number of observable signals. However, severe signal overlap may persist within individual domains that show low signal dispersion. To further reduce the number of signals and spectral complexity in such systems, we developed a procedure for selective amino acid-type labeling in individual domains of multi-domain proteins. This strategy combines efficient amino acid-type labeling amenable by cell-free protein expression with near-seamless domain ligation achievable by expressed protein ligation. By application of simple dual labeling schemes, this approach further allows residue-specific isotope labeling to position NMR-observable probes at desired sites within segments of multi-domain proteins. This chapter describes a detailed protocol for selective amino acid-type segmental labeling of multi-domain proteins and illustrates its application to a multi-domain RNA-binding protein. The applied ligation approach is further suitable for efficient ligation of unlabeled and/or uniformly labeled domains produced solely by recombinant in vivo expression.


Archive | 2018

An Integrated Cell-Free Assay to Study Translation Regulation by Small Bacterial Noncoding RNAs

Erich Michel; Olivier Duss; Frédéric H.-T. Allain

Posttranscriptional regulation of gene expression by small noncoding RNAs (sRNAs) is an important control mechanism that modulates bacterial metabolism, motility, and pathogenesis. Using the bacterial carbon storage regulator/regulator of secondary metabolism (Csr/Rsm) system, we here describe an E. coli-based cell-free translation assay that allows a quantitative analysis of translation regulation by ncRNAs and their corresponding translation repressor proteins. The assay quantifies the translation of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase in cell-free expression reactions that contain defined amounts of ncRNA and repressor protein. We demonstrate our protocol with a comparative translation activation analysis of the RsmX, RsmY, and RsmZ sRNAs from Pseudomonas protegens, which reveals a superior efficacy of RsmZ over RsmX and RsmY.


Nature Communications | 2018

Molecular basis for disassembly of an importin:ribosomal protein complex by the escortin Tsr2.

Sabina Schütz; Erich Michel; Fred F. Damberger; Michaela Oplová; Cohue Peña; Alexander Leitner; Ruedi Aebersold; Frédéric H.-T. Allain; Vikram Govind Panse

Disordered extensions at the termini and short internal insertions distinguish eukaryotic ribosomal proteins (r-proteins) from their anucleated archaeal counterparts. Here, we report an NMR structure of such a eukaryotic-specific segment (ESS) in the r-protein eS26 in complex with the escortin Tsr2. The structure reveals how ESS attracts Tsr2 specifically to importin:eS26 complexes entering the nucleus in order to trigger non-canonical RanGTP-independent disassembly. Tsr2 then sequesters the released eS26 and prevents rebinding to the importin, providing an alternative allosteric mechanism to terminate the process of nuclear import. Notably, a Diamond–Blackfan anemia-associated Tsr2 mutant protein is impaired in binding to ESS, unveiling a critical role for this interaction in human hematopoiesis. We propose that eS26-ESS and Tsr2 are components of a nuclear sorting system that co-evolved with the emergence of the nucleocytoplasmic barrier and transport carriers.Ribosomal proteins are transported to the nucleus with the help of importins, from which they are released prior to incorporation into the nascent ribosome. Here the authors report the NMR structure of the ribosomal protein eS26 in complex with the escortin Tsr2 and shed light on the mechanism of eS26 release from importin.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Peptide-guided assembly of repeat protein fragments

Erich Michel; Andreas Plückthun; Oliver Zerbe

Herein, we present the peptide-guided assembly of complementary fragments of designed armadillo repeat proteins (dArmRPs) to create proteins that bind peptides not only with high affinity but also with good selectivity. We recently demonstrated that complementary N- and C-terminal fragments of dArmRPs form high-affinity complexes that resemble the structure of the full-length protein, and that these complexes bind their target peptides. We now demonstrate that dArmRPs can be split such that the fragments assemble only in the presence of a templating peptide, and that fragment mixtures enrich the combination with the highest affinity for this peptide. The enriched fragment combination discriminates single amino acid variations in the target peptide with high specificity. Our results suggest novel opportunities for the generation of new peptide binders by selection from dArmRP fragment mixtures.

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Kurt Wüthrich

Scripps Research Institute

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Walter S. Leal

University of California

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Yuko Ishida

University of California

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