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Dive into the research topics where Florian Richter is active.

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Featured researches published by Florian Richter.


Methods in Enzymology | 2011

Rosetta3: An Object-Oriented Software Suite for the Simulation and Design of Macromolecules

Andrew Leaver-Fay; Michael D. Tyka; Steven M. Lewis; Oliver F. Lange; James Thompson; Ron Jacak; Kristian W. Kaufman; P. Douglas Renfrew; Colin A. Smith; Will Sheffler; Ian W. Davis; Seth Cooper; Adrien Treuille; Daniel J. Mandell; Florian Richter; Yih-En Andrew Ban; Sarel J. Fleishman; Jacob E. Corn; David E. Kim; Sergey Lyskov; Monica Berrondo; Stuart Mentzer; Zoran Popović; James J. Havranek; John Karanicolas; Rhiju Das; Jens Meiler; Tanja Kortemme; Jeffrey J. Gray; Brian Kuhlman

We have recently completed a full re-architecturing of the ROSETTA molecular modeling program, generalizing and expanding its existing functionality. The new architecture enables the rapid prototyping of novel protocols by providing easy-to-use interfaces to powerful tools for molecular modeling. The source code of this rearchitecturing has been released as ROSETTA3 and is freely available for academic use. At the time of its release, it contained 470,000 lines of code. Counting currently unpublished protocols at the time of this writing, the source includes 1,285,000 lines. Its rapid growth is a testament to its ease of use. This chapter describes the requirements for our new architecture, justifies the design decisions, sketches out central classes, and highlights a few of the common tasks that the new software can perform.


Nature | 2010

Quantitative reactivity profiling predicts functional cysteines in proteomes

Eranthie Weerapana; Chu Wang; Gabriel M. Simon; Florian Richter; Sagar D. Khare; Myles B. D. Dillon; Daniel A. Bachovchin; Kerri A. Mowen; David Baker; Benjamin F. Cravatt

Cysteine is the most intrinsically nucleophilic amino acid in proteins, where its reactivity is tuned to perform diverse biochemical functions. The absence of a consensus sequence that defines functional cysteines in proteins has hindered their discovery and characterization. Here we describe a proteomics method to profile quantitatively the intrinsic reactivity of cysteine residues en masse directly in native biological systems. Hyper-reactivity was a rare feature among cysteines and it was found to specify a wide range of activities, including nucleophilic and reductive catalysis and sites of oxidative modification. Hyper-reactive cysteines were identified in several proteins of uncharacterized function, including a residue conserved across eukaryotic phylogeny that we show is required for yeast viability and is involved in iron-sulphur protein biogenesis. We also demonstrate that quantitative reactivity profiling can form the basis for screening and functional assignment of cysteines in computationally designed proteins, where it discriminated catalytically active from inactive cysteine hydrolase designs.


PLOS ONE | 2011

De Novo Enzyme Design Using Rosetta3

Florian Richter; Andrew Leaver-Fay; Sagar D. Khare; Sinisa Bjelic; David Baker

The Rosetta de novo enzyme design protocol has been used to design enzyme catalysts for a variety of chemical reactions, and in principle can be applied to any arbitrary chemical reaction of interest, The process has four stages: 1) choice of a catalytic mechanism and corresponding minimal model active site, 2) identification of sites in a set of scaffold proteins where this minimal active site can be realized, 3) optimization of the identities of the surrounding residues for stabilizing interactions with the transition state and primary catalytic residues, and 4) evaluation and ranking the resulting designed sequences. Stages two through four of this process can be carried out with the Rosetta package, while stage one needs to be done externally. Here, we demonstrate how to carry out the Rosetta enzyme design protocol from start to end in detail using for illustration the triosephosphate isomerase reaction.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Rosettascripts: A scripting language interface to the Rosetta Macromolecular modeling suite

Sarel J. Fleishman; Andrew Leaver-Fay; Jacob E. Corn; Eva Maria Strauch; Sagar D. Khare; Nobuyasu Koga; Justin Ashworth; Paul Murphy; Florian Richter; Gordon Lemmon; Jens Meiler; David Baker

Macromolecular modeling and design are increasingly useful in basic research, biotechnology, and teaching. However, the absence of a user-friendly modeling framework that provides access to a wide range of modeling capabilities is hampering the wider adoption of computational methods by non-experts. RosettaScripts is an XML-like language for specifying modeling tasks in the Rosetta framework. RosettaScripts provides access to protocol-level functionalities, such as rigid-body docking and sequence redesign, and allows fast testing and deployment of complex protocols without need for modifying or recompiling the underlying C++ code. We illustrate these capabilities with RosettaScripts protocols for the stabilization of proteins, the generation of computationally constrained libraries for experimental selection of higher-affinity binding proteins, loop remodeling, small-molecule ligand docking, design of ligand-binding proteins, and specificity redesign in DNA-binding proteins.


PLOS ONE | 2011

RosettaRemodel: A Generalized Framework for Flexible Backbone Protein Design

Po-Ssu Huang; Yih-En Andrew Ban; Florian Richter; Ingemar André; Robert B. Vernon; William R. Schief; David Baker

We describe RosettaRemodel, a generalized framework for flexible protein design that provides a versatile and convenient interface to the Rosetta modeling suite. RosettaRemodel employs a unified interface, called a blueprint, which allows detailed control over many aspects of flexible backbone protein design calculations. RosettaRemodel allows the construction and elaboration of customized protocols for a wide range of design problems ranging from loop insertion and deletion, disulfide engineering, domain assembly, loop remodeling, motif grafting, symmetrical units, to de novo structure modeling.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Computational Design of Catalytic Dyads and Oxyanion Holes for Ester Hydrolysis

Florian Richter; Rebecca Blomberg; Sagar D. Khare; Gert Kiss; Alexandre P. Kuzin; Adam J. T. Smith; Jasmine L. Gallaher; Zbigniew Pianowski; Roger C. Helgeson; Alexej Grjasnow; Rong Xiao; Jayaraman Seetharaman; Min Su; Sergey M. Vorobiev; Scott Lew; Farhad Forouhar; Gregory J. Kornhaber; John F. Hunt; Gaetano T. Montelione; Liang Tong; K. N. Houk; Donald Hilvert; David Baker

Nucleophilic catalysis is a general strategy for accelerating ester and amide hydrolysis. In natural active sites, nucleophilic elements such as catalytic dyads and triads are usually paired with oxyanion holes for substrate activation, but it is difficult to parse out the independent contributions of these elements or to understand how they emerged in the course of evolution. Here we explore the minimal requirements for esterase activity by computationally designing artificial catalysts using catalytic dyads and oxyanion holes. We found much higher success rates using designed oxyanion holes formed by backbone NH groups rather than by side chains or bridging water molecules and obtained four active designs in different scaffolds by combining this motif with a Cys-His dyad. Following active site optimization, the most active of the variants exhibited a catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(M)) of 400 M(-1) s(-1) for the cleavage of a p-nitrophenyl ester. Kinetic experiments indicate that the active site cysteines are rapidly acylated as programmed by design, but the subsequent slow hydrolysis of the acyl-enzyme intermediate limits overall catalytic efficiency. Moreover, the Cys-His dyads are not properly formed in crystal structures of the designed enzymes. These results highlight the challenges that computational design must overcome to achieve high levels of activity.


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

Computational design of a red fluorophore ligase for site-specific protein labeling in living cells.

Daniel S. Liu; Lucas G. Nivón; Florian Richter; Peter Goldman; Thomas J. Deerinck; Jennifer Z. Yao; Douglas S. Richardson; William S. Phipps; Anne Z. Ye; Mark H. Ellisman; Catherine L. Drennan; David Baker; Alice Y. Ting

Significance This work establishes a fluorescence labeling method that can be used in living cells to derivatize specific proteins of interest with a small red fluorophore, resorufin. The method has extremely high sequence specificity and is based on a computationally designed fluorophore ligase, derived from Escherichia coli lipoic acid ligase. These results demonstrate the power of computational design to majorly reengineer enzyme specificity. Extensive screening of rationally designed enzyme mutants failed to achieve the same result. Chemical fluorophores offer tremendous size and photophysical advantages over fluorescent proteins but are much more challenging to target to specific cellular proteins. Here, we used Rosetta-based computation to design a fluorophore ligase that accepts the red dye resorufin, starting from Escherichia coli lipoic acid ligase. X-ray crystallography showed that the design closely matched the experimental structure. Resorufin ligase catalyzed the site-specific and covalent attachment of resorufin to various cellular proteins genetically fused to a 13-aa recognition peptide in multiple mammalian cell lines and in primary cultured neurons. We used resorufin ligase to perform superresolution imaging of the intermediate filament protein vimentin by stimulated emission depletion and electron microscopies. This work illustrates the power of Rosetta for major redesign of enzyme specificity and introduces a tool for minimally invasive, highly specific imaging of cellular proteins by both conventional and superresolution microscopies.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

Design of activated serine–containing catalytic triads with atomic-level accuracy

Sridharan Rajagopalan; Chu Wang; Kai Yu; Alexandre P. Kuzin; Florian Richter; Scott Lew; Aleksandr E Miklos; Megan L. Matthews; Jayaraman Seetharaman; Min Su; John F. Hunt; Benjamin F. Cravatt; David Baker

A challenge in the computational design of enzymes is that multiple properties must be simultaneously optimized -- substrate-binding, transition state stabilization, and product release -- and this has limited the absolute activity of successful designs. Here, we focus on a single critical property of many enzymes: the nucleophilicity of an active site residue that initiates catalysis. We design proteins with idealized serine-containing catalytic triads, and assess their nucleophilicity directly in native biological systems using activity-based organophosphate probes. Crystal structures of the most successful designs show unprecedented agreement with computational models, including extensive hydrogen bonding networks between the catalytic triad (or quartet) residues, and mutagenesis experiments demonstrate that these networks are critical for serine activation and organophosphate-reactivity. Following optimization by yeast-display, the designs react with organophosphate probes at rates comparable to natural serine hydrolases. Co-crystal structures with diisopropyl fluorophosphate bound to the serine nucleophile suggest the designs could provide the basis for a new class of organophosphate captures agents.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Engineering of temperature- and light-switchable Cas9 variants

Florian Richter; Ines Fonfara; Boris Bouazza; Charlotte Helene Schumacher; Majda Bratovič; Emmanuelle Charpentier; Andreas Möglich

Sensory photoreceptors have enabled non-invasive and spatiotemporal control of numerous biological processes. Photoreceptor engineering has expanded the repertoire beyond natural receptors, but to date no generally applicable strategy exists towards constructing light-regulated protein actuators of arbitrary function. We hence explored whether the homodimeric Rhodobacter sphaeroides light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) domain (RsLOV) that dissociates upon blue-light exposure can confer light sensitivity onto effector proteins, via a mechanism of light-induced functional site release. We chose the RNA-guided programmable DNA endonuclease Cas9 as proof-of-principle effector, and constructed a comprehensive library of RsLOV inserted throughout the Cas9 protein. Screening with a high-throughput assay based on transcriptional repression in Escherichia coli yielded paRC9, a moderately light-activatable variant. As domain insertion can lead to protein destabilization, we also screened the library for temperature-sensitive variants and isolated tsRC9, a variant with robust activity at 29°C but negligible activity at 37°C. Biochemical assays confirmed temperature-dependent DNA cleavage and binding for tsRC9, but indicated that the light sensitivity of paRC9 is specific to the cellular setting. Using tsRC9, the first temperature-sensitive Cas9 variant, we demonstrate temperature-dependent transcriptional control over ectopic and endogenous genetic loci. Taken together, RsLOV can confer light sensitivity onto an unrelated effector; unexpectedly, the same LOV domain can also impart strong temperature sensitivity.


ChemBioChem | 2017

Photoactivatable mussel-based underwater adhesive proteins by an expanded genetic code

Matthias Hauf; Florian Richter; Tobias Schneider; Thomas Faidt; Berta M. Martins; Tobias Baumann; Patrick Durkin; Holger Dobbek; Karin Jacobs; Andreas Möglich; Nediljko Budisa

Marine mussels exhibit potent underwater adhesion abilities under hostile conditions by employing 3,4‐dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA)‐rich mussel adhesive proteins (MAPs). However, their recombinant production is a major biotechnological challenge. Herein, a novel strategy based on genetic code expansion has been developed by engineering efficient aminoacyl‐transfer RNA synthetases (aaRSs) for the photocaged noncanonical amino acid ortho‐nitrobenzyl DOPA (ONB‐DOPA). The engineered ONB‐DOPARS enables in vivo production of MAP type 5 site‐specifically equipped with multiple instances of ONB‐DOPA to yield photocaged, spatiotemporally controlled underwater adhesives. Upon exposure to UV light, these proteins feature elevated wet adhesion properties. This concept offers new perspectives for the production of recombinant bioadhesives.

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David Baker

University of Washington

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Andrew Leaver-Fay

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Alice Y. Ting

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Chu Wang

Scripps Research Institute

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Jacob E. Corn

University of California

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