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Dive into the research topics where Erich Wanker is active.

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Featured researches published by Erich Wanker.


Cell | 1997

Formation of Neuronal Intranuclear Inclusions Underlies the Neurological Dysfunction in Mice Transgenic for the HD Mutation

Stephen W. Davies; Mark Turmaine; Barbara Cozens; Marian DiFiglia; Alan H. Sharp; Christopher A. Ross; Eberhard Scherzinger; Erich Wanker; Laura Mangiarini; Gillian P. Bates

Huntingtons disease (HD) is one of an increasing number of human neurodegenerative disorders caused by a CAG/polyglutamine-repeat expansion. The mutation occurs in a gene of unknown function that is expressed in a wide range of tissues. The molecular mechanism responsible for the delayed onset, selective pattern of neuropathology, and cell death observed in HD has not been described. We have observed that mice transgenic for exon 1 of the human HD gene carrying (CAG)115 to (CAG)156 repeat expansions develop pronounced neuronal intranuclear inclusions, containing the proteins huntingtin and ubiquitin, prior to developing a neurological phenotype. The appearance in transgenic mice of these inclusions, followed by characteristic morphological change within neuronal nuclei, is strikingly similar to nuclear abnormalities observed in biopsy material from HD patients.


Cell | 2005

A human protein-protein interaction network : A resource for annotating the proteome

Ulrich Stelzl; Uwe Worm; Maciej Lalowski; Felix H. Brembeck; Heike Goehler; Martin Stroedicke; Martina Zenkner; Anke Schoenherr; Susanne Koeppen; Jan Timm; Sascha Mintzlaff; Claudia Abraham; Nicole Bock; Silvia Kietzmann; Astrid Goedde; Engin Toksöz; Anja Droege; Sylvia Krobitsch; Bernhard Korn; Walter Birchmeier; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker

Protein-protein interaction maps provide a valuable framework for a better understanding of the functional organization of the proteome. To detect interacting pairs of human proteins systematically, a protein matrix of 4456 baits and 5632 preys was screened by automated yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) interaction mating. We identified 3186 mostly novel interactions among 1705 proteins, resulting in a large, highly connected network. Independent pull-down and co-immunoprecipitation assays validated the overall quality of the Y2H interactions. Using topological and GO criteria, a scoring system was developed to define 911 high-confidence interactions among 401 proteins. Furthermore, the network was searched for interactions linking uncharacterized gene products and human disease proteins to regulatory cellular pathways. Two novel Axin-1 interactions were validated experimentally, characterizing ANP32A and CRMP1 as modulators of Wnt signaling. Systematic human protein interaction screens can lead to a more comprehensive understanding of protein function and cellular processes.


Cell | 1997

Huntingtin-encoded polyglutamine expansions form amyloid-like protein aggregates in vitro and in vivo.

Eberhard Scherzinger; Rudi Lurz; Mark Turmaine; Laura Mangiarini; Birgit Hollenbach; Renate Hasenbank; Gillian P. Bates; Stephen W. Davies; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker

The mechanism by which an elongated polyglutamine sequence causes neurodegeneration in Huntingtons disease (HD) is unknown. In this study, we show that the proteolytic cleavage of a GST-huntingtin fusion protein leads to the formation of insoluble high molecular weight protein aggregates only when the polyglutamine expansion is in the pathogenic range. Electron micrographs of these aggregates revealed a fibrillar or ribbon-like morphology, reminiscent of scrapie prions and beta-amyloid fibrils in Alzheimers disease. Subcellular fractionation and ultrastructural techniques showed the in vivo presence of these structures in the brains of mice transgenic for the HD mutation. Our in vitro model will aid in an eventual understanding of the molecular pathology of HD and the development of preventative strategies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Identification of benzothiazoles as potential polyglutamine aggregation inhibitors of Huntington's disease by using an automated filter retardation assay

Volker Heiser; Sabine Engemann; Wolfgang Bröcker; Ilona Dunkel; Annett Boeddrich; Stephanie Waelter; Eddi Nordhoff; Rudi Lurz; Nancy Schugardt; Susanne Rautenberg; Christian Herhaus; Gerhard Barnickel; Henning Böttcher; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker

Preventing the formation of insoluble polyglutamine containing protein aggregates in neurons may represent an attractive therapeutic strategy to ameliorate Huntingtons disease (HD). Therefore, the ability to screen for small molecules that suppress the self-assembly of huntingtin would have potential clinical and significant research applications. We have developed an automated filter retardation assay for the rapid identification of chemical compounds that prevent HD exon 1 protein aggregation in vitro. Using this method, a total of 25 benzothiazole derivatives that inhibit huntingtin fibrillogenesis in a dose-dependent manner were discovered from a library of ≈184,000 small molecules. The results obtained by the filter assay were confirmed by immunoblotting, electron microscopy, and mass spectrometry. Furthermore, cell culture studies revealed that 2-amino-4,7-dimethyl-benzothiazol-6-ol, a chemical compound similar to riluzole, significantly inhibits HD exon 1 aggregation in vivo. These findings may provide the basis for a new therapeutic approach to prevent the accumulation of insoluble protein aggregates in Huntingtons disease and related glutamine repeat disorders.


Molecular Cell | 1998

SH3GL3 Associates with the Huntingtin Exon 1 Protein and Promotes the Formation of Polygln-Containing Protein Aggregates

Annie Sittler; Stephanie Wälter; Niels Wedemeyer; Renate Hasenbank; Eberhard Scherzinger; Holger Eickhoff; Gillian P. Bates; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker

The mechanism by which aggregated polygins cause the selective neurodegeneration in Huntingtons disease (HD) is unknown. Here, we show that the SH3GL3 protein, which is preferentially expressed in brain and testis, selectively interacts with the HD exon 1 protein (HDex1p) containing a glutamine repeat in the pathological range and promotes the formation of insoluble polyglutamine-containing aggregates in vivo. The C-terminal SH3 domain in SH3GL3 and the proline-rich region in HDex1p are essential for the interaction. Coimmunoprecipitations and immunofluorescence studies revealed that SH3GL3 and HDex1p colocalize in transfected COS cells. Additionally, an anti-SH3GL3 antibody was also able to coimmunoprecipitate the full-length huntingtin from an HD human brain extract. The characteristics of the interaction between SH3GL3 and huntingtin and the colocalization of the two proteins suggest that SH3GL3 could be involved in the selective neuronal cell death in HD.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Aggregation of proteins with expanded glutamine and alanine repeats of the glutamine-rich and asparagine-rich domains of Sup35 and of the amyloid β-peptide of amyloid plaques

M. F. Perutz; B. J. Pope; D. Owen; Erich Wanker; Eberhard Scherzinger

The exon-1 peptide of huntingtin has 51 Gln repeats and produces the symptoms of Huntingtons disease in transgenic mice. Aggregation of the yeast Sup35 protein into prions has been attributed to its glutamine-rich and asparagine-rich domain. Here, we show that poly-l-asparagine forms polar zippers similar to those of poly-l-glutamine. In solution at acid pH, the glutamine-rich and asparagine-rich 18-residue Sup35 peptide, rendered soluble by the addition of two aspartates at the amino end and two lysines at the carboxyl end, gives a β-sheet CD spectrum; it aggregates at neutral pH. A poly-alanine peptide D2A10K2 gives an α-helical CD spectrum at all pHs and does not aggregate; a peptide with the sequence of the C-terminal helix of the α-chain of human hemoglobin, preceded by two aspartates and followed by two lysines, exhibits a random coil spectrum and does not aggregate either. Alignment of several β-strands with the sequence of the 42-residue Alzheimers amyloid β-peptide shows that they can be linked together by a network of salt bridges. We also asked why single amino acid replacements can so destabilize the native structures of proteins that they unfold and form amyloids. The difference in free energy of a protein molecule between its native, fully ordered structure and an amorphous mixture of randomly coiled chains is only of the order of 10 kcal/mol. Theory shows that destabilization of the native structure by no more than 2 kcal/mol can increase the probability of nucleation of disordered aggregates from which amyloids could grow 130,000-fold.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Huntingtin Bodies Sequester Vesicle-Associated Proteins by a Polyproline-Dependent Interaction

Zheng-Hong Qin; Yumei Wang; Ellen Sapp; Benjamin G. Cuiffo; Erich Wanker; Michael R. Hayden; Kimberly B. Kegel; Neil Aronin; Marian DiFiglia

Polyglutamine expansion in the N terminus of huntingtin (htt) causes selective neuronal dysfunction and cell death by unknown mechanisms. Truncated htt expressed in vitro produced htt immunoreactive cytoplasmic bodies (htt bodies). The fibrillar core of the mutant htt body resisted protease treatment and contained cathepsin D, ubiquitin, and heat shock protein (HSP) 40. The shell of the htt body was composed of globules 14-34 nm in diameter and was protease sensitive. HSP70, proteasome, dynamin, and the htt binding partners htt interacting protein 1 (HIP1), SH3-containing Grb2-like protein (SH3GL3), and 14.7K-interacting protein were reduced in their normal location and redistributed to the shell. Removal of a series of prolines adjacent to the polyglutamine region in htt blocked formation of the shell of the htt body and redistribution of dynamin, HIP1, SH3GL3, and proteasome to it. Internalization of transferrin was impaired in cells that formed htt bodies. In cortical neurons of Huntingtons disease patients with early stage pathology, dynamin immunoreactivity accumulated in cytoplasmic bodies. Results suggest that accumulation of a nonfibrillar form of mutant htt in the cytoplasm contributes to neuronal dysfunction by sequestering proteins involved in vesicle trafficking.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Mutant Huntingtin Promotes the Fibrillogenesis of Wild-type Huntingtin A POTENTIAL MECHANISM FOR LOSS OF HUNTINGTIN FUNCTION IN HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE

Anne Busch; Sabine Engemann; Rudi Lurz; Hitoshi Okazawa; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker

Aggregation of huntingtin (htt) in neuronal inclusions is associated with the development of Huntingtons disease (HD). Previously, we have shown that mutant htt fragments with polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts in the pathological range (>37 glutamines) form SDS-resistant aggregates with a fibrillar morphology, whereas wild-type htt fragments with normal polyQ domains do not aggregate. In this study we have investigated the co-aggregation of mutant and wild-type htt fragments. We found that mutant htt promotes the aggregation of wild-type htt, causing the formation of SDS-resistant co-aggregates with a fibrillar morphology. Conversely, mutant htt does not promote the fibrillogenesis of the polyQ-containing protein NOCT3 or the polyQ-binding protein PQBP1, although these proteins are recruited into inclusions containing mutant htt aggregates in mammalian cells. The formation of mixed htt fibrils is a highly selective process that not only depends on polyQ tract length but also on the surrounding amino acid sequence. Our data suggest that mutant and wild-type htt fragments may also co-aggregate in neurons of HD patients and that a loss of wild-type htt function may contribute to HD pathogenesis.


Molecular Medicine Today | 2000

Protein aggregation in Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease: implications for therapy

Erich Wanker

The accumulation of highly insoluble intracellular protein aggregates in neuronal inclusions is a hallmark of Huntingtons disease (HD) and Parkinsons disease (PD) as well as several other late-onset neurodegenerative disorders. The aggregates formed in vitro and in vivo generally have a fibrillar morphology, consist of individual beta-strands and are resistant to proteolytic degradation. Although the causal relationship between aggregate formation and disease remains to be proven, the gradual deposition of mutant protein in neurons is consistent with the late-onset and progressive nature of symptoms. Recently, circumstantial evidence from mouse and Drosophila model systems suggests that abnormal protein folding and aggregation play a key role in the pathogenesis of both HD and PD. Therefore, a detailed understanding of the molecular mechanisms of protein aggregation and its effects on neuronal cell death could open new opportunities for therapy.


Mechanisms of Development | 2002

The synpolydactyly homolog (spdh) mutation in the mouse – a defect in patterning and growth of limb cartilage elements

Andrea N. Albrecht; Georg C. Schwabe; Sigmar Stricker; Annett Böddrich; Erich Wanker; Stefan Mundlos

We have investigated the recessive mouse mutant synpolydactyly homolog (spdh) as a model for human synpolydactyly (SPD). As in human SPD, the spdh phenotype consists of central polydactyly, syndactyly and brachydactyly and is caused by the expansion of a polyalanine encoding repeat in the 5 region of the Hoxd13 gene. We performed a detailed phenotypic and functional analysis of spdh/spdh embryos using skeletal preparations, histology, in situ hybridization, BrdU labeling of proliferating cells, and in vitro expression studies. The absence of normal phalangeal joints and the misexpression of genes involved in joint formation demonstrate a role for Hox-genes in joint patterning. The spdh mutation results in abnormal limb pattering, defective chondrocyte differentiation, and in a drastic reduction in proliferation. Abnormal chondrocyte differentiation and proliferation persisted after birth and correlated with the expression of the mutant Hoxd13 and other Hox-genes during late-embryonic and postnatal growth.

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Gillian P. Bates

UCL Institute of Neurology

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