Friedel Drepper
University of Freiburg
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Featured researches published by Friedel Drepper.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Sara Frigerio; Chiara Campoli; Simone Zorzan; Luca Isaia Fantoni; Cristina Crosatti; Friedel Drepper; Wolfgang Haehnel; Luigi Cattivelli; Tomas Morosinotto; Roberto Bassi
We analyze the effect of the plastoquinone redox state on the regulation of the light-harvesting antenna size at transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. This was approached by studying transcription and accumulation of light-harvesting complexes in wild type versus the barley mutant viridis zb63, which is depleted in photosystem I and where plastoquinone is constitutively reduced. We show that the mRNA level of genes encoding antenna proteins is almost unaffected in the mutant; this stability of messenger level is not a peculiarity of antenna-encoding genes, but it extends to all photosynthesis-related genes. In contrast, analysis of protein accumulation by two-dimensional PAGE shows that the mutant undergoes strong reduction of its antenna size, with individual gene products having different levels of accumulation. We conclude that the plastoquinone redox state plays an important role in the long term regulation of chloroplast protein expression. However, its modulation is active at the post-transcriptional rather than transcriptional level.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Ilie Sachelaru; Narcis Adrian Petriman; Renuka Kudva; Patrick Kuhn; Thomas Welte; Bettina Knapp; Friedel Drepper; Bettina Warscheid; Hans-Georg Koch
The immunoblot data in Fig. 4A was not obtained from a conditional secDF depletion strain Escherichia coli BL325 with a plasmid-borne copy of SecY(I91pBpa)EG as stated. The correct images representing SecD, SecF, SecY, and YidC levels in inner membrane vesicles of the conditional secDF depletion strain E. coli BL325 with a plasmid-borne copy of SecY(I91pBpa)EG are now shown. This correction does not affect the interpretation of the results or the conclusions of this work. THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY VOL. 290, NO. 23, p. 14492, June 5, 2015
Traffic | 2011
Patrick Kuhn; Benjamin Weiche; Lukas Sturm; Erik Sommer; Friedel Drepper; Bettina Warscheid; Victor Sourjik; Hans-Georg Koch
Signal recognition particle (SRP)‐dependent protein targeting is a universally conserved process that delivers proteins to the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane or to the endoplasmic reticulum membrane in eukaryotes. Crucial during targeting is the transfer of the ribosome‐nascent chain complex (RNC) from SRP to the Sec translocon. In eukaryotes, this step is co‐ordinated by the SRβ subunit of the SRP receptor (SR), which probably senses a vacant translocon by direct interaction with the translocon. Bacteria lack the SRβ subunit and how they co‐ordinate RNC transfer is unknown. By site‐directed cross‐linking and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) analyses, we show that FtsY, the bacterial SRα homologue, binds to the exposed C4/C5 loops of SecY, the central component of the bacterial Sec translocon. The same loops serve also as binding sites for SecA and the ribosome. The FtsY–SecY interaction involves at least the A domain of FtsY, which attributes an important function to this so far ill‐defined domain. Binding of FtsY to SecY residues, which are also used by SecA and the ribosome, probably allows FtsY to sense an available translocon and to align the incoming SRP–RNC with the protein conducting channel. Thus, the Escherichia coli FtsY encompasses the functions of both the eukaryotic SRα and SRβ subunits in one single protein.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012
Thomas Welte; Renuka Kudva; Patrick Kuhn; Lukas Sturm; David Braig; Matthias Müller; Bettina Warscheid; Friedel Drepper; Hans-Georg Koch
The YidC insertase also integrates multispanning membrane proteins that had been considered to be exclusively SecYEG dependent. Only membrane proteins that require SecA can be inserted only via SecYEG. Targeting to YidC is SRP dependent, and the C-terminus of YidC cross-links to SRP, FtsY, and ribosomal subunits.
Proteomics | 2009
Heinrich Heide; André Nordhues; Friedel Drepper; Sabine Nick; Miriam Schulz-Raffelt; Wolfgang Haehnel; Michael Schroda
Knowledge of the interaction partners of a protein of interest may provide important information on its function. Common to currently available tools for the identification of protein–protein interactions, however, is their high rates of false positives. Only recently an assay was reported that allowed for the unequivocal identification of protein–protein interactions in mammalian cells in a single experiment. This assay, termed quantitative immunoprecipitation combined with knockdown (QUICK), combines RNAi, stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture, immunoprecipitation, and quantitative MS. We are using the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to understand the roles of chaperones in chloroplast biogenesis. The goal of this work was to apply QUICK to Chlamydomonas for the identification of novel interaction partners of vesicle‐inducing protein in plastids 1 (VIPP1), a protein required for the biosynthesis/maintenance of thylakoid membranes and known substrate of chloroplast HSP70B. We report here a robust QUICK protocol for Chlamydomonas that has been improved (i) by introducing a cross‐linking step (‐X) to improve protein complex stability and (ii) by including a control for the correction of unequal immunoprecipitation and/or labeling efficiencies. Using QUICK and cross‐linking we could verify that HSP70B and CGE1 form a complex with VIPP1 and could also demonstrate that chloroplast HSP90C is part of this complex. Moreover, we could show that the chaperones interact with VIPP1 also in membrane fractions.
Cell Reports | 2017
Marcel Morgenstern; Sebastian B. Stiller; Philipp Lübbert; Christian D. Peikert; Stefan Dannenmaier; Friedel Drepper; Uri Weill; Philipp Höß; Reinhild Feuerstein; Michael Gebert; Maria Bohnert; Martin van der Laan; Maya Schuldiner; Conny Schütze; Silke Oeljeklaus; Nikolaus Pfanner; Nils Wiedemann; Bettina Warscheid
Summary Mitochondria perform central functions in cellular bioenergetics, metabolism, and signaling, and their dysfunction has been linked to numerous diseases. The available studies cover only part of the mitochondrial proteome, and a separation of core mitochondrial proteins from associated fractions has not been achieved. We developed an integrative experimental approach to define the proteome of east mitochondria. We classified > 3,300 proteins of mitochondria and mitochondria-associated fractions and defined 901 high-confidence mitochondrial proteins, expanding the set of mitochondrial proteins by 82. Our analysis includes protein abundance under fermentable and nonfermentable growth, submitochondrial localization, single-protein experiments, and subcellular classification of mitochondria-associated fractions. We identified mitochondrial interactors of respiratory chain supercomplexes, ATP synthase, AAA proteases, the mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system (MICOS), and the coenzyme Q biosynthesis cluster, as well as mitochondrial proteins with dual cellular localization. The integrative proteome provides a high-confidence source for the characterization of physiological and pathophysiological functions of mitochondria and their integration into the cellular environment.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2015
Sabine Hünten; Markus Kaller; Friedel Drepper; Silke Oeljeklaus; Thomas Bonfert; Florian Erhard; Anne Dueck; Norbert Eichner; Caroline C. Friedel; Gunter Meister; Ralf Zimmer; Bettina Warscheid; Heiko Hermeking
We determined the effect of p53 activation on de novo protein synthesis using quantitative proteomics (pulsed stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture/pSILAC) in the colorectal cancer cell line SW480. This was combined with mRNA and noncoding RNA expression analyses by next generation sequencing (RNA-, miR-Seq). Furthermore, genome-wide DNA binding of p53 was analyzed by chromatin-immunoprecipitation (ChIP-Seq). Thereby, we identified differentially regulated proteins (542 up, 569 down), mRNAs (1258 up, 415 down), miRNAs (111 up, 95 down) and lncRNAs (270 up, 123 down). Changes in protein and mRNA expression levels showed a positive correlation (r = 0.50, p < 0.0001). In total, we detected 133 direct p53 target genes that were differentially expressed and displayed p53 occupancy in the vicinity of their promoter. More transcriptionally induced genes displayed occupied p53 binding sites (4.3% mRNAs, 7.2% miRNAs, 6.3% lncRNAs, 5.9% proteins) than repressed genes (2.4% mRNAs, 3.2% miRNAs, 0.8% lncRNAs, 1.9% proteins), suggesting indirect mechanisms of repression. Around 50% of the down-regulated proteins displayed seed-matching sequences of p53-induced miRNAs in the corresponding 3′-UTRs. Moreover, proteins repressed by p53 significantly overlapped with those previously shown to be repressed by miR-34a. We confirmed up-regulation of the novel direct p53 target genes LINC01021, MDFI, ST14 and miR-486 and showed that ectopic LINC01021 expression inhibits proliferation in SW480 cells. Furthermore, KLF12, HMGB1 and CIT mRNAs were confirmed as direct targets of the p53-induced miR-34a, miR-205 and miR-486–5p, respectively. In line with the loss of p53 function during tumor progression, elevated expression of KLF12, HMGB1 and CIT was detected in advanced stages of cancer. In conclusion, the integration of multiple omics methods allowed the comprehensive identification of direct and indirect effectors of p53 that provide new insights and leads into the mechanisms of p53-mediated tumor suppression.
Photosynthesis Research | 2000
Nir Keren; Itzhak Ohad; A. W. Rutherford; Friedel Drepper; Anja Krieger-Liszkay
Inhibition of Photosystem II (PS II) activity induced by continuous light or by saturating single turnover flashes was investigated in Ca2+-depleted, Mn-depleted and active PS II enriched membrane fragments. While Ca2+- and Mn-depleted PS II were more damaged under continuous illumination, active PS II was more susceptible to flash-induced photoinhibition. The extent of photoinactivation as a function of the duration of the dark interval between the saturating single turnover flashes was investigated. The active centres showed the most photodamage when the time interval between the flashes was long enough (32 s) to allow for charge recombination between the S2 or S3 and QB− to occur. Illumination with groups of consecutive flashes (spacing between the flashes 0.1 s followed by 32 s dark interval) resulted in a binary oscillation of the loss of PS II-activity in active samples as has been shown previously (Keren N, Gong H, Ohad I (1995), J Biol Chem 270: 806–814). Ca2+- and Mn-depleted PS II did not show this effect. The data are explained by assuming that charge recombination in active PS II results in a back reaction that generates P680 triplet and thence singlet oxygen, while in Ca2+- and Mn-depleted PS II charge recombination occurs through a different pathway, that does not involve triplet generation. This correlates with an up-shift of the midpoint potential of QA in samples lacking Ca2+ or Mn that, in term, is predicted to result in the triplet generating pathway becoming thermodynamically less favourable (G.N. Johnson, A.W. Rutherford, A. Krieger, 1995, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1229, 201–207). The diminished susceptibility to flash-induced photoinhibition in Ca2+- and Mn-depleted PS II is attributed at least in part to this mechanism.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2014
Heike Wiese; Katja Kuhlmann; Sebastian Wiese; Nadine Stoepel; Magdalena Pawlas; Helmut E. Meyer; Christian Stephan; Martin Eisenacher; Friedel Drepper; Bettina Warscheid
Over the past years, phosphoproteomics has advanced to a prime tool in signaling research. Since then, an enormous amount of information about in vivo protein phosphorylation events has been collected providing a treasure trove for gaining a better understanding of the molecular processes involved in cell signaling. Yet, we still face the problem of how to achieve correct modification site localization. Here we use alternative fragmentation and different bioinformatics approaches for the identification and confident localization of phosphorylation sites. Phosphopeptide-enriched fractions were analyzed by multistage activation, collision-induced dissociation and electron transfer dissociation (ETD), yielding complementary phosphopeptide identifications. We further found that MASCOT, OMSSA and Andromeda each identified a distinct set of phosphopeptides allowing the number of site assignments to be increased. The postsearch engine SLoMo provided confident phosphorylation site localization, whereas different versions of PTM-Score integrated in MaxQuant differed in performance. Based on high-resolution ETD and higher collisional dissociation (HCD) data sets from a large synthetic peptide and phosphopeptide reference library reported by Marx et al. [Nat. Biotechnol. 2013, 31 (6), 557-564], we show that an Andromeda/PTM-Score probability of 1 is required to provide an false localization rate (FLR) of 1% for HCD data, while 0.55 is sufficient for high-resolution ETD spectra. Additional analyses of HCD data demonstrated that for phosphotyrosine peptides and phosphopeptides containing two potential phosphorylation sites, PTM-Score probability cutoff values of <1 can be applied to ensure an FLR of 1%. Proper adjustment of localization probability cutoffs allowed us to significantly increase the number of confident sites with an FLR of <1%.Our findings underscore the need for the systematic assessment of FLRs for different score values to report confident modification site localization.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Kathrin Förster; Paola Turina; Friedel Drepper; Wolfgang Haehnel; Susanne Fischer; Peter Gräber; Jan Petersen
The H(+)/ATP synthase from yeast mitochondria, MF₀F₁, was purified and reconstituted into liposomes prepared from phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidic acid. Analysis by mass spectrometry revealed the presence of all subunits of the yeast enzyme with the exception of the K-subunit. The MF₀F₁ liposomes were energized by acid-base transitions (DeltapH) and a K(+)/valinomycin diffusion potential (Deltaphi). ATP synthesis was completely abolished by the addition of uncouplers as well as by the inhibitor oligomycin. The rate of ATP synthesis was optimized as a function of various parameters and reached a maximum value (turnover number) of 120s⁻¹ at a transmembrane pH difference of 3.2 units (at pH(in)=4.8 and pH(out)=8.0) and a Deltaphi of 133mV (Nernst potential). Functional studies showed that the monomeric MF₀F₁, was fully active in ATP synthesis. The turnover increased in a sigmoidal way with increasing internal and decreasing external proton concentration. The dependence of the turnover on the phosphate concentration and the dependence of K(M) on pH(out) indicated that the substrate for ATP synthesis is the monoanionic phosphate species H₂PO⁻₄.