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Dive into the research topics where Falko Hochgräfe is active.

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Featured researches published by Falko Hochgräfe.


Cancer Research | 2010

Tyrosine phosphorylation profiling reveals the signaling network characteristics of basal breast cancer cells

Falko Hochgräfe; Luxi Zhang; Sandra A O'Toole; Brigid C. Browne; Mark Pinese; Ana Porta Cubas; Gillian M. Lehrbach; David R. Croucher; Danny Rickwood; Alice Boulghourjian; Robert F. Shearer; Radhika Nair; Alexander Swarbrick; Dana Faratian; Peter Mullen; David J. Harrison; Andrew V. Biankin; Robert L. Sutherland; Mark J. Raftery; Roger J. Daly

To identify therapeutic targets and prognostic markers for basal breast cancers, breast cancer cell lines were subjected to mass spectrometry-based profiling of protein tyrosine phosphorylation events. This revealed that luminal and basal breast cancer cells exhibit distinct tyrosine phosphorylation signatures that depend on pathway activation as well as protein expression. Basal breast cancer cells are characterized by elevated tyrosine phosphorylation of Met, Lyn, EphA2, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), and FAK, and Src family kinase (SFK) substrates such as p130Cas. SFKs exert a prominent role in these cells, phosphorylating key regulators of adhesion and migration and promoting tyrosine phosphorylation of the receptor tyrosine kinases EGFR and Met. Consistent with these observations, SFK inhibition attenuated cellular proliferation, survival, and motility. Basal breast cancer cell lines exhibited differential responsiveness to small molecule inhibitors of EGFR and Met that correlated with the degree of target phosphorylation, and reflecting kinase coactivation, inhibiting two types of activated network kinase (e.g., EGFR and SFKs) was more effective than single agent approaches. FAK signaling enhanced both proliferation and invasion, and Lyn was identified as a proinvasive component of the network that is associated with a basal phenotype and poor prognosis in patients with breast cancer. These studies highlight multiple kinases and substrates for further evaluation as therapeutic targets and biomarkers. However, they also indicate that patient stratification based on expression/activation of drug targets, coupled with use of multi-kinase inhibitors or combination therapies, may be required for effective treatment of this breast cancer subgroup.


Proteomics | 2008

Proteomic analysis of antioxidant strategies of Staphylococcus aureus: diverse responses to different oxidants.

Carmen Wolf; Falko Hochgräfe; Harald Kusch; Dirk Albrecht; Michael Hecker; Susanne Engelmann

The high resolution 2‐D protein gel electrophoresis technique combined with MALDI‐TOF MS and a recently developed fluorescence‐based thiol modification assay were used to investigate the cellular response of Staphylococcus aureus to oxidative stress. Addition of hydrogen peroxide, diamide, and the superoxide generating agent paraquat to exponentially growing cells revealed complex changes in the protein expression pattern. In particular, proteins involved in detoxification, repair systems, and intermediary metabolism were found to be up‐regulated. Interestingly, there is only a small overlap of proteins induced by all these stressors. Exposure to hydrogen peroxide mediated a significant increase of DNA repair enzymes, whereas treatment with diamide affected proteins involved in protein repair and degradation. The activity of proteins under oxidative stress conditions can be modulated by oxidation of thiol groups. In growing cells, protein thiols were found to be mainly present in the reduced state. Diamide mediated a strong increase of reversibly oxidized thiols in a variety of metabolic enzymes. By contrast, hydrogen peroxide resulted in the reversible oxidation especially of proteins with active site cysteines. Moreover, high levels of hydrogen peroxide influenced the pI of three proteins containing cysteines within their active sites (GapA1, AhpC, and HchA) indicating the generation of sulfinic or sulfonic acid by irreversible oxidation of thiols.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

S-Cysteinylation Is a General Mechanism for Thiol Protection of Bacillus subtilis Proteins after Oxidative Stress

Falko Hochgräfe; Jörg Mostertz; Dierk-Christoph Pöther; Dörte Becher; John D. Helmann; Michael Hecker

S-Thiolation is crucial for protection and regulation of thiol-containing proteins during oxidative stress and is frequently achieved by the formation of mixed disulfides with glutathione. However, many Gram-positive bacteria including Bacillus subtilis lack the low molecular weight (LMW) thiol glutathione. Here we provide evidence that S-thiolation by the LMW thiol cysteine represents a general mechanism in B. subtilis. In vivo labeling of proteins with [35S]cysteine and nonreducing two-dimensional PAGE analyses revealed that a large subset of proteins previously identified as having redox-sensitive thiols are modified by cysteine in response to treatment with the thiol-specific oxidant diamide. By means of multidimensional shotgun proteomics, the sites of S-cysteinylation for six proteins could be identified, three of which are known to be S-glutathionylated in other organisms.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

Nitric Oxide Stress Induces Different Responses but Mediates Comparable Protein Thiol Protection in Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus

Falko Hochgräfe; Carmen Wolf; Stephan Fuchs; Manuel Liebeke; Michael Lalk; Susanne Engelmann; Michael Hecker

The nonpathogenic Bacillus subtilis and the pathogen Staphylococcus aureus are gram-positive model organisms that have to cope with the radical nitric oxide (NO) generated by nitrite reductases of denitrifying bacteria and by the inducible NO synthases of immune cells of the host, respectively. The response of both microorganisms to NO was analyzed by using a two-dimensional gel approach. Metabolic labeling of the proteins revealed major changes in the synthesis pattern of cytosolic proteins after the addition of the NO donor MAHMA NONOate. Whereas B. subtilis induced several oxidative stress-responsive regulons controlled by Fur, PerR, OhrR, and Spx, as well as the general stress response controlled by the alternative sigma factor SigB, the more resistant S. aureus showed an increased synthesis rate of proteins involved in anaerobic metabolism. These data were confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance analyses indicating that NO causes a drastically higher increase in the formation of lactate and butanediol in S. aureus than in B. subtilis. Monitoring the intracellular protein thiol state, we observed no increase in reversible or irreversible protein thiol modifications after NO stress in either organism. Obviously, NO itself does not cause general protein thiol oxidations. In contrast, exposure of cells to NO prior to peroxide stress diminished the irreversible thiol oxidation caused by hydrogen peroxide.


Molecular Microbiology | 2005

Fluorescence thiol modification assay: oxidatively modified proteins in Bacillus subtilis

Falko Hochgräfe; Jörg Mostertz; Dirk Albrecht; Michael Hecker

Oxidatively modified thiol groups of cysteine residues are known to modulate the activity of a growing number of proteins. In this study, we developed a fluorescence‐based thiol modification assay and combined it with two‐dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry to monitor the in vivo thiol state of cytoplasmic proteins. For the Gram‐positive model organism Bacillus subtilis our results show that protein thiols of growing cells are mainly present in the reduced state. Only a few proteins were found to be thiol‐modified, e.g. enzymes that include oxidized thiols in their catalytic cycle. To detect proteins that are particularly sensitive to oxidative stress we exposed growing B. subtilis cells to diamide, hydrogen peroxide or to the superoxide generating agent paraquat. Diamide mediated a significant increase of oxidized thiols in a variety of metabolic enzymes, whereas treatment with paraquat affected only a few proteins. Exposure to hydrogen peroxide forced the oxidation especially of proteins with active site cysteines, e.g. of cysteine‐based peroxidases and glutamine amidotransferase‐like proteins. Moreover, high levels of hydrogen peroxide were observed to influence the isoelectric point of proteins of this group indicating the generation of irreversibly oxidated thiols. From the overlapping set of oxidatively modified proteins, also enzymes necessary for methionine biosynthesis were identified, e.g. cobalamin‐independent methionine synthase MetE. Growth experiments revealed a methionine limitation after diamide and hydrogen peroxide stress, which suggests a thiol‐oxidation‐dependent inactivation of MetE. Finally, evidence is presented that the antibiotic nitrofurantoin mediates the formation of oxidized thiols in B. subtilis.


Molecular Microbiology | 2008

Depletion of thiol‐containing proteins in response to quinones in Bacillus subtilis

Manuel Liebeke; Dierk-Christoph Pöther; Nguyen Van Duy; Dirk Albrecht; Dörte Becher; Falko Hochgräfe; Michael Lalk; Michael Hecker; Haike Antelmann

Quinones are highly toxic naturally occurring thiol‐reactive compounds. We have previously described novel pathways for quinone detoxification in the Gram‐positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis. In this study, we have investigated the extent of irreversible and reversible thiol modifications caused in vivo by electrophilic quinones. Exposure to toxic benzoquinone (BQ) concentrations leads to depletion of numerous Cys‐rich cytoplasmic proteins in the proteome of B. subtilis. Mass spectrometry and immunoblot analyses demonstrated that these BQ‐depleted proteins represent irreversibly damaged BQ aggregates that escape the two‐dimensional gel separation. This enabled us to quantify the depletion of thiol‐containing proteins which are the in vivo targets for thiol‐(S)‐alkylation by toxic quinone compounds. Metabolomic approaches confirmed that protein depletion is accompanied by depletion of the low‐molecular‐weight (LMW) thiol cysteine. Finally, no increased formation of disulphide bonds was detected in the thiol‐redox proteome in response to sublethal quinone concentrations. The glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate dehydrogenase (GapA) was identified as the only new target for reversible thiol modifications after exposure to toxic quinones. Together our data show that the thiol‐(S)‐alkylation reaction with protein and non‐protein thiols is the in vivo mechanism for thiol depletion and quinone toxicity in B. subtilis and most likely also in other bacteria.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

Diamide Triggers Mainly S Thiolations in the Cytoplasmic Proteomes of Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus

Dierk-Christoph Pöther; Manuel Liebeke; Falko Hochgräfe; Haike Antelmann; Dörte Becher; Michael Lalk; Ulrike Lindequist; Ilya Borovok; Gerald Cohen; Yair Aharonowitz; Michael Hecker

Glutathione constitutes a key player in the thiol redox buffer in many organisms. However, the gram-positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus lack this low-molecular-weight thiol. Recently, we identified S-cysteinylated proteins in B. subtilis after treatment of cells with the disulfide-generating electrophile diamide. S cysteinylation is thought to protect protein thiols against irreversible oxidation to sulfinic and sulfonic acids. Here we show that S thiolation occurs also in S. aureus proteins after exposure to diamide. We further analyzed the formation of inter- and intramolecular disulfide bonds in cytoplasmic proteins using diagonal nonreducing/reducing sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. However, only a few proteins were identified that form inter- or intramolecular disulfide bonds under control and diamide stress conditions in B. subtilis and S. aureus. Depletion of the cysteine pool was concomitantly measured in B. subtilis using a metabolomics approach. Thus, the majority of reversible thiol modifications that were previously detected by two-dimensional gel fluorescence-based thiol modification assay are most likely based on S thiolations. Finally, we found that a glutathione-producing B. subtilis strain which expresses the Listeria monocytogenes gshF gene did not show enhanced oxidative stress resistance compared to the wild type.


Cancer Research | 2013

Involvement of Lyn and the Atypical Kinase SgK269/PEAK1 in a Basal Breast Cancer Signaling Pathway

David R. Croucher; Falko Hochgräfe; Luxi Zhang; Ling Liu; Ruth J. Lyons; Danny Rickwood; Carole M Tactacan; Brigid C. Browne; Navied Ali; Howard Cheuk Ho Chan; Robert F. Shearer; David Gallego-Ortega; Darren N. Saunders; Alexander Swarbrick; Roger J. Daly

Basal breast cancer cells feature high expression of the Src family kinase Lyn that has been implicated in the pathogenicity of this disease. In this study, we identified novel Lyn kinase substrates, the most prominent of which was the atypical kinase SgK269 (PEAK1). In breast cancer cells, SgK269 expression associated with the basal phenotype. In primary breast tumors, SgK269 overexpression was detected in a subset of basal, HER2-positive, and luminal cancers. In immortalized MCF-10A mammary epithelial cells, SgK269 promoted transition to a mesenchymal phenotype and increased cell motility and invasion. Growth of MCF-10A acini in three-dimensional (3D) culture was enhanced upon SgK269 overexpression, which induced an abnormal, multilobular acinar morphology and promoted extracellular signal-regulated kinase (Erk) and Stat3 activation. SgK269 Y635F, mutated at a major Lyn phosphorylation site, did not enhance acinar size or cellular invasion. We show that Y635 represents a Grb2-binding site that promotes both Stat3 and Erk activation in 3D culture. RNA interference-mediated attenuation of SgK269 in basal breast cancer cells promoted acquisition of epithelial characteristics and decreased anchorage-independent growth. Together, our results define a novel signaling pathway in basal breast cancer involving Lyn and SgK269 that offers clinical opportunities for therapeutic intervention.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Characterization of the Novel Broad-Spectrum Kinase Inhibitor CTx-0294885 As an Affinity Reagent for Mass Spectrometry-Based Kinome Profiling

Luxi Zhang; Ian Peter Holmes; Falko Hochgräfe; Scott Raymond Walker; Naveid Ali; Emily S. Humphrey; Jianmin Wu; Melanie de Silva; Wilhelmus J A Kersten; Theresa Connor; Hendrik Falk; Lynda Allan; Ian P. Street; John D. Bentley; Patricia A. Pilling; Brendon J. Monahan; Thomas S. Peat; Roger J. Daly

Kinase enrichment utilizing broad-spectrum kinase inhibitors enables the identification of large proportions of the expressed kinome by mass spectrometry. However, the existing inhibitors are still inadequate in covering the entire kinome. Here, we identified a novel bisanilino pyrimidine, CTx-0294885, exhibiting inhibitory activity against a broad range of kinases in vitro, and further developed it into a Sepharose-supported kinase capture reagent. Use of a quantitative proteomics approach confirmed the selectivity of CTx-0294885-bound beads for kinase enrichment. Large-scale CTx-0294885-based affinity purification followed by LC-MS/MS led to the identification of 235 protein kinases from MDA-MB-231 cells, including all members of the AKT family that had not been previously detected by other broad-spectrum kinase inhibitors. Addition of CTx-0294885 to a mixture of three kinase inhibitors commonly used for kinase-enrichment increased the number of kinase identifications to 261, representing the largest kinome coverage from a single cell line reported to date. Coupling phosphopeptide enrichment with affinity purification using the four inhibitors enabled the identification of 799 high-confidence phosphosites on 183 kinases, ∼10% of which were localized to the activation loop, and included previously unreported phosphosites on BMP2K, MELK, HIPK2, and PRKDC. Therefore, CTx-0294885 represents a powerful new reagent for analysis of kinome signaling networks that may facilitate development of targeted therapeutic strategies. Proteomics data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium ( http://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org ) via the PRIDE partner repository with the data set identifier PXD000239.


Proteomics | 2008

A proteome map of murine heart and skeletal muscle.

Katy Raddatz; Dirk Albrecht; Falko Hochgräfe; Michael Hecker; Michael Gotthardt

The balance of hypertrophy and atrophy is critical for the adaptation of cardiac and skeletal muscle mass to the demands of the environment and when deregulated can cause disease. Here we have used a proteomics approach to generate protein reference maps for the mouse heart and skeletal muscle, which provide a molecular basis for future functional and pathophysiological studies. The reference map provides information on molecular mass, pI, and literature data on function and localization, to facilitate the identification of proteins based on their migration in 2‐D gels. In total, we have identified 351 cardiac and 284 skeletal muscle protein spots, representing 249 and 214 different proteins, respectively. In addition, we have visualized the protein pattern of mouse heart and skeletal muscle at defined conditions comparing knockout (KO) animals deficient in the sarcomeric protein titin (a genetic atrophy model) and control littermates. We found 20 proteins that were differently expressed linking titins kinase region to the heat‐shock‐ and proteasomal stress response. Taken together, the established reference maps should provide a suitable tool to relate protein expression and PTM to cardiovascular and skeletal muscle disease using the mouse as an animal model.

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Jörg Mostertz

University of Greifswald

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Michael Hecker

University of Greifswald

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Manuela Harms

University of Greifswald

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Michael Lalk

University of Greifswald

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Jianmin Wu

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Erik Richter

University of Greifswald

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Luxi Zhang

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Mark J. Raftery

University of New South Wales

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