Georg Mlynek
Max F. Perutz Laboratories
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Publication
Featured researches published by Georg Mlynek.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2011
Georg Mlynek; Björn Sjöblom; Julius Kostan; Stephanie Füreder; Frank Maixner; Kira Gysel; Paul G. Furtmüller; Christian Obinger; Michael Wagner; Holger Daims; Kristina Djinović-Carugo
Chlorite dismutase (Cld) is a unique heme enzyme catalyzing the conversion of ClO(2)(-) to Cl(-) and O(2). Cld is usually found in perchlorate- or chlorate-reducing bacteria but was also recently identified in a nitrite-oxidizing bacterium of the genus Nitrospira. Here we characterized a novel Cld-like protein from the chemolithoautotrophic nitrite oxidizer Nitrobacter winogradskyi which is significantly smaller than all previously known chlorite dismutases. Its three-dimensional (3D) crystal structure revealed a dimer of two identical subunits, which sharply contrasts with the penta- or hexameric structures of other chlorite dismutases. Despite a truncated N-terminal domain in each subunit, this novel enzyme turned out to be a highly efficient chlorite dismutase (K(m) = 90 μM; k(cat) = 190 s(-1); k(cat)/K(m) = 2.1 × 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)), demonstrating a greater structural and phylogenetic diversity of these enzymes than was previously known. Based on comparative analyses of Cld sequences and 3D structures, signature amino acid residues that can be employed to assess whether uncharacterized Cld-like proteins may have a high chlorite-dismutating activity were identified. Interestingly, proteins that contain all these signatures and are phylogenetically closely related to the novel-type Cld of N. winogradskyi exist in a large number of other microbes, including other nitrite oxidizers.
Journal of Structural Biology | 2010
Julius Kostan; Björn Sjöblom; Frank Maixner; Georg Mlynek; Paul G. Furtmüller; Christian Obinger; Michael Wagner; Holger Daims; Kristina Djinović-Carugo
Chlorite dismutase (Cld) is a unique heme enzyme which transforms chlorite to chloride and molecular oxygen (reaction: ClO(2)(-)→Cl(-)+O(2)). Since bacteria with Cld play significant roles in the bioremediation of industrially contaminated sites and also in wastewater treatment, it is of high interest to understand the molecular mechanism of chlorite detoxification. Here we investigate a highly active Cld from Candidatus Nitrospira defluvii (NdCld), a key nitrifier in biological wastewater treatment, using a comprehensive structural, biochemical and bioinformatics approach. We determined the crystal structure of Cld from Candidatus Nitrospira defluvii and showed that functional NdCld is a homopentamer possessing a fold found in other Clds and Cld-like enzymes. To investigate the Cld function in more detail, site-directed mutagenesis of a catalytically important residue (Arg173) was performed and two enzyme mutants were structurally and biochemically characterized. Arginine 173 is demonstrated to play a key role in (i) controlling of ligand and substrate access and binding and (ii) in chlorite dismutation reaction. The flexible residue modulates the electrostatic potential and size of the active site entrance and might be involved in keeping transiently formed hypochlorite in place for final molecular oxygen and chloride formation. Furthermore, using a structure-based sequence alignment, we show that the residue corresponding to Arg173 is conserved in all known active forms of Cld and propose it as a marker for Cld activity in yet uncharacterized Cld-like proteins. Finally, our analysis indicates that all Clds and Cld-like enzymes employ a non-covalently bound heme as a cofactor.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2012
Tien-Thanh Nguyen; Hoang Anh Nguyen; Sheryl Lozel Arreola; Georg Mlynek; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Geir Mathiesen; Thu-Ha Nguyen; Dietmar Haltrich
The lacZ gene from Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus DSM 20081, encoding a β-galactosidase of the glycoside hydrolase family GH2, was cloned into different inducible lactobacillal expression vectors for overexpression in the host strain Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1. High expression levels were obtained in laboratory cultivations with yields of approximately 53000 U of β-galactosidase activity per liter of medium, which corresponds to ∼170 mg of recombinant protein per liter and β-galactosidase levels amounting to 63% of the total intracellular protein of the host organism. The wild-type (nontagged) and histidine-tagged recombinant enzymes were purified to electrophoretic homogeneity and further characterized. β-Galactosidase from L. bulgaricus was used for lactose conversion and showed very high transgalactosylation activity. The maximum yield of galacto-oligosaccharides (GalOS) was approximately 50% when using an initial concentration of 600 mM lactose, indicating that the enzyme can be of interest for the production of GalOS.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
Stefan Hofbauer; Kira Gysel; Georg Mlynek; Julius Kostan; Andreas Hagmüller; Holger Daims; Paul G. Furtmüller; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Christian Obinger
Chlorite dismutases (Cld) are unique heme b containing oxidoreductases that convert chlorite to chloride and dioxygen. Recent phylogenetic and structural analyses demonstrated that these metalloproteins significantly differ in oligomeric and subunit structure. Here we have analyzed two representatives of two phylogenetically separated lineages, namely pentameric Cld from Candidatus “Nitrospira defluvii” and dimeric Cld from Nitrobacter winogradskyi having a similar enzymatic activity at room temperature. By application of a broad set of techniques including differential scanning calorimetry, electronic circular dichroism, UV–vis and fluorescence spectroscopy the temperature-mediated and chemical unfolding of both recombinant proteins were analyzed. Significant differences in thermal and conformational stability are reported. The pentameric enzyme is very stable between pH 3 and 10 (Tm = 92 °C at pH 7.0) and active at high temperatures thus being an interesting candidate for bioremediation of chlorite. By contrast the dimeric protein starts to unfold already at 53 °C. The observed unfolding pathways are discussed with respect to the known subunit structure and subunit interaction.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2015
Stefan Hofbauer; Andreas Hagmüller; Irene Schaffner; Georg Mlynek; Michael Krutzler; Gerhard Stadlmayr; Katharina F. Pirker; Christian Obinger; Holger Daims; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Paul G. Furtmüller
Graphical abstract
Biochemistry | 2014
Stefan Hofbauer; Kira Gysel; Marzia Bellei; Andreas Hagmüller; Irene Schaffner; Georg Mlynek; Julius Kostan; Katharina F. Pirker; Holger Daims; Paul G. Furtmüller; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Christian Obinger
Chlorite dismutases (Clds) are heme b containing oxidoreductases that convert chlorite to chloride and molecular oxygen. In order to elucidate the role of conserved heme cavity residues in the catalysis of this reaction comprehensive mutational and biochemical analyses of Cld from “Candidatus Nitrospira defluvii” (NdCld) were performed. Particularly, point mutations of the cavity-forming residues R173, K141, W145, W146, and E210 were performed. The effect of manipulation in 12 single and double mutants was probed by UV–vis spectroscopy, spectroelectrochemistry, pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetics, and X-ray crystallography. Resulting biochemical data are discussed with respect to the known crystal structure of wild-type NdCld and the variants R173A and R173K as well as the structures of R173E, W145V, W145F, and the R173Q/W146Y solved in this work. The findings allow a critical analysis of the role of these heme cavity residues in the reaction mechanism of chlorite degradation that is proposed to involve hypohalous acid as transient intermediate and formation of an O=O bond. The distal R173 is shown to be important (but not fully essential) for the reaction with chlorite, and, upon addition of cyanide, it acts as a proton acceptor in the formation of the resulting low-spin complex. The proximal H-bonding network including K141-E210-H160 keeps the enzyme in its ferric (E°′ = −113 mV) and mainly five-coordinated high-spin state and is very susceptible to perturbation.
Biochemistry | 2012
Stefan Hofbauer; Marzia Bellei; Axel Sündermann; Katharina F. Pirker; Andreas Hagmüller; Georg Mlynek; Julius Kostan; Holger Daims; Paul G. Furtmüller; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Chris Oostenbrink; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Christian Obinger
Chlorite dismutases (Clds) are heme b-containing oxidoreductases that convert chlorite to chloride and dioxygen. In this work, the thermodynamics of the one-electron reduction of the ferric high-spin forms and of the six-coordinate low-spin cyanide adducts of the enzymes from Nitrobacter winogradskyi (NwCld) and Candidatus “Nitrospira defluvii” (NdCld) were determined through spectroelectrochemical experiments. These proteins belong to two phylogenetically separated lineages that differ in subunit (21.5 and 26 kDa, respectively) and oligomeric (dimeric and pentameric, respectively) structure but exhibit similar chlorite degradation activity. The E°′ values for free and cyanide-bound proteins were determined to be −119 and −397 mV for NwCld and −113 and −404 mV for NdCld, respectively (pH 7.0, 25 °C). Variable-temperature spectroelectrochemical experiments revealed that the oxidized state of both proteins is enthalpically stabilized. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest that changes in the protein structure are negligible, whereas solvent reorganization is mainly responsible for the increase in entropy during the redox reaction. Obtained data are discussed with respect to the known structures of the two Clds and the proposed reaction mechanism.
Bioscience Reports | 2016
Stefan Hofbauer; Barry D. Howes; Nicola Flego; Katharina F. Pirker; Irene Schaffner; Georg Mlynek; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Paul G. Furtmüller; Giulietta Smulevich; Christian Obinger
Structurally and phylogenetically closely related chlorite dismutase (Cld) and HemQ differ fundamentally in their enzymatic properties. Reconstruction of the proximal H-bonding network renders Cld HemQ-like, the latter being proposed to bind coprohaeme and release protohaeme.
Biochemistry | 2016
Stefan Hofbauer; Marco Dalla Sega; Stefan Scheiblbrandner; Zuzana Jandova; Irene Schaffner; Georg Mlynek; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Paul G. Furtmüller; Chris Oostenbrink; Christian Obinger
Recently, a novel pathway for heme b biosynthesis in Gram-positive bacteria has been proposed. The final poorly understood step is catalyzed by an enzyme called HemQ and includes two decarboxylation reactions leading from coproheme to heme b. Coproheme has been suggested to act as both substrate and redox active cofactor in this reaction. In the study presented here, we focus on HemQs from Listeria monocytogenes (LmHemQ) and Staphylococcus aureus (SaHemQ) recombinantly produced as apoproteins in Escherichia coli. We demonstrate the rapid and two-phase uptake of coproheme by both apo forms and the significant differences in thermal stability of the apo forms, coproheme-HemQ and heme b-HemQ. Reduction of ferric high-spin coproheme-HemQ to the ferrous form is shown to be enthalpically favored but entropically disfavored with standard reduction potentials of −205 ± 3 mV for LmHemQ and −207 ± 3 mV for SaHemQ versus the standard hydrogen electrode at pH 7.0. Redox thermodynamics suggests the presence of a pronounced H-bonding network and restricted solvent mobility in the heme cavity. Binding of cyanide to the sixth coproheme position is monophasic but relatively slow (∼1 × 104 M–1 s–1). On the basis of the available structures of apo-HemQ and modeling of both loaded forms, molecular dynamics simulation allowed analysis of the interaction of coproheme and heme b with the protein as well as the role of the flexibility at the proximal heme cavity and the substrate access channel for coproheme binding and heme b release. Obtained data are discussed with respect to the proposed function of HemQ in monoderm bacteria.
Molecular Microbiology | 2015
Irene Schaffner; Stefan Hofbauer; Michael Krutzler; Katharina F. Pirker; Marzia Bellei; Gerhard Stadlmayr; Georg Mlynek; Kristina Djinović-Carugo; Gianantonio Battistuzzi; Paul G. Furtmüller; Holger Daims; Christian Obinger
It is demonstrated that cyanobacteria (both azotrophic and non‐azotrophic) contain heme b oxidoreductases that can convert chlorite to chloride and molecular oxygen (incorrectly denominated chlorite ‘dismutase’, Cld). Beside the water‐splitting manganese complex of photosystem II, this metalloenzyme is the second known enzyme that catalyses the formation of a covalent oxygen–oxygen bond. All cyanobacterial Clds have a truncated N‐terminus and are dimeric (i.e. clade 2) proteins. As model protein, Cld from Cyanothece sp. PCC7425 (CCld) was recombinantly produced in Escherichia coli and shown to efficiently degrade chlorite with an activity optimum at pH 5.0 [kcat 1144 ± 23.8 s−1, KM 162 ± 10.0 μM, catalytic efficiency (7.1 ± 0.6) × 106 M−1 s−1]. The resting ferric high‐spin axially symmetric heme enzyme has a standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of −126 ± 1.9 mV at pH 7.0. Cyanide mediates the formation of a low‐spin complex with kon = (1.6 ± 0.1) × 105 M−1 s−1 and koff = 1.4 ± 2.9 s−1 (KD ∼ 8.6 μM). Both, thermal and chemical unfolding follows a non‐two‐state unfolding pathway with the first transition being related to the release of the prosthetic group. The obtained data are discussed with respect to known structure–function relationships of Clds. We ask for the physiological substrate and putative function of these O2‐producing proteins in (nitrogen‐fixing) cyanobacteria.