Gabriele Rummel
University of Basel
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Featured researches published by Gabriele Rummel.
Structure | 1995
Sandra W. Cowan; Rm Garavito; Johan N. Jansonius; Ja Jenkins; R Karlsson; N König; Ef Pai; Richard A. Pauptit; Pierre J. Rizkallah; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Gabriele Rummel; Tilman Schirmer
BACKGROUND OmpF porin is a trimeric integral membrane protein responsible for the passive transport of small hydrophilic molecules, such as nutrients and waste products, across the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. Very few membrane proteins have been crystallized in three dimensions, yet this stable protein can be obtained in several crystal forms. Comparison of the structures of the same membrane protein in two different packing environments is of major interest, because it allows us to explore the integrity of the structure outside the natural membrane environment. RESULTS The structure of OmpF porin in a tetragonal crystal form with two trimers per asymmetric unit has been determined at 3.2 A resolution and compared with that obtained previously in a trigonal crystal form. The lattice contacts involve only polar atoms, whereas extensive hydrophobic protein-protein interactions were found in the trigonal lattice. The trimer structure is virtually identical in both. CONCLUSIONS Our comparison reveals that the overall structure of OmpF is not influenced by crystal lattice constraints and, thus, presumably bears close resemblance to the in vivo structure. The tetragonal crystal structure has provided the starting model for the phasing of neutron diffraction data obtained from this crystal form, as described in an accompanying article.
Structure | 1999
Raimund Dutzler; Gabriele Rummel; S Albertí; S Hernández-Allés; Prashant S. Phale; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Vj Benedí; Tilman Schirmer
BACKGROUND Porins are channel-forming membrane proteins that confer solute permeability to the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. In Escherichia coli, major nonspecific porins are matrix porin (OmpF) and osmoporin (OmpC), which show high sequence homology. In response to high osmolarity of the medium, OmpC is expressed at the expense of OmpF porin. Here, we study osmoporin of the pathogenic Klebsiella pneumoniae (OmpK36), which shares 87% sequence identity with E. coliOmpC in an attempt to establish why osmoporin is best suited to function at high osmotic pressure. RESULTS The crystal structure of OmpK36 has been determined to a resolution of 3.2 A by molecular replacement with the model of OmpF. The structure of OmpK36 closely resembles that of the search model. The homotrimeric structure is composed of three hollow 16-stranded antiparallel beta barrels, each delimiting a separate pore. Most insertions and deletions with respect to OmpF are found in the loops that protrude towards the cell exterior. A characteristic ten-residue insertion in loop 4 contributes to the subunit interface. At the pore constriction, the replacement of an alanine by a tyrosine residue does not alter the pore profile of OmpK36 in comparison with OmpF because of the different course of the mainchain. Functionally, as characterized in lipid bilayers and liposomes, OmpK36 resembles OmpC with decreased conductance and increased cation selectivity in comparison with OmpF. CONCLUSIONS The osmoporin structure suggests that not an altered pore size but an increase in charge density is the basis for the distinct physico-chemical properties of this porin that are relevant for its preferential expression at high osmotic strength.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Kuo-Long Lou; Nathalie Saint; Alexej Prilipov; Gabriele Rummel; Spencer Benson; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Tilman Schirmer
OmpF porin is a nonspecific pore protein from the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. Previously, a set of mutants was selected that allow the passage of long maltodextrins that do not translocate through the wild-type pore. Here, we describe the crystal structures of four point mutants and one deletion mutant from this set; their functional characterization is reported in the accompanying paper (Saint, N., Lou, K.-L., Widmer, C., Luckey, M., Schirmer, T., Rosenbusch, J. P. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 20676-20680). All mutations have a local effect on the structure of the pore constriction and result in a larger pore cross-section. Substitution of each of the three closely packed arginine residues at the pore constriction (Arg-42, Arg-82, and Arg-132) by shorter uncharged residues causes rearrangement of the adjacent basic residues. This demonstrates mutual stabilization of these residues in the wild-type porin. Deletion of six residues from the internal loop (Δ109-114) results in disorder of seven adjacent residues but does not alter the structure of the β-barrel framework. Thus, the large hollow β-barrel motif can be regarded as an autonomous structure.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1991
Richard A. Pauptit; Hong Zhang; Gabriele Rummel; Schirmer Tilman; Johan N. Jansonius; Jurg P. Rosenbusch
Trigonal crystals of the integral membrane protein porin from Escherichia coli have been grown and characterized. They belong to space group P321 with unit cell constants a = b = LL8.4, c = 52.7 A, alpha = beta = 90 degrees, gamma = 120 degrees. The crystals grow as well-defined hexagonal prisms to a size of 0.25 mm in all dimensions, and diffract to 2.7 A. The molecular symmetry coincides with 3-fold crystallographic symmetry, giving two trimers per unit cell (1 monomer/asymmetric unit). This corresponds to VM = 2.9 A3/Da. Native X-ray data to 3.0 A resolution have been collected on a FAST area detector and a search for heavy atom derivatives is underway.
Biochimie | 1998
Simon Penel; E. Pebay-Peyroula; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Gabriele Rummel; Tilman Schirmer; P.A. Timmins
The structure of the detergent, ocytyl hydroxyethylsufoxide (C8(HE)SO), bound to the OmpF porin from E coli (in the trigonal crystal form) has been determined by neutron crystallography. Due to a dynamic exchange of detergent molecules with their environment they are not ordered on an atomic scale. The structure reported here is therefore at a resolution of approximately 16 A. The X-ray crystallographically determined structure of the protein provides a starting point for the neutron analysis in which the detergent is visualized primarily thanks to its high contrast against D2O. The structure shows the detergent to be located mainly in two areas. It forms toroidal annuli around each OmpF trimer, these annuli fusing to form a detergent belt surrounding a solvent filled column traversing the crystal. Those areas of the protein to which the detergent binds are formed almost exclusively of hydrophobic residues and form a band about 30 A high around the trimer. Its upper and lower bounds are defined by two bands of aromatic residues, tyrosines pointing away from the detergent belt and interacting with the polar headgroups while phenylalanines point inwards. This strongly suggests that the same areas define, in vivo, the location at which protein interacts with lipid. The hydrophobic moiety of detergent is also found mediating the hydrophobic protein-protein interactions at the interface between two trimers on the crystallographic two-fold axis.
Nature | 1992
Sandra W. Cowan; Tilman Schirmer; Gabriele Rummel; M. Steiert; R. Ghosh; Richard A. Pauptit; Johan N. Jansonius; Jurg P. Rosenbusch
Science | 1997
Eva Pebay-Peyroula; Gabriele Rummel; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Ehud M. Landau
Journal of Structural Biology | 1998
Gabriele Rummel; Ariane Hardmeyer; Christine Widmer; Mark L. Chiu; Peter Nollert; Kaspar P. Locher; Ivo Pedruzzi; Ehud M. Landau; Jurg P. Rosenbusch
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006
Arnaud Baslé; Gabriele Rummel; Paola Storici; Juerg P. Rosenbusch; Tilman Schirmer
Infection and Immunity | 1995
S Albertí; F Rodríquez-Quiñones; Tilman Schirmer; Gabriele Rummel; J M Tomás; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Vj Benedí