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Dive into the research topics where Hans-Gerhard Burgert is active.

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Featured researches published by Hans-Gerhard Burgert.


The EMBO Journal | 1999

A cytomegalovirus glycoprotein re‐routes MHC class I complexes to lysosomes for degradation

Uwe Reusch; Walter Muranyi; Pero Lučin; Hans-Gerhard Burgert; Hartmut Hengel; Ulrich H. Koszinowski

Mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV) early gene expression interferes with the major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC class I) pathway of antigen presentation. Here we identify a 48 kDa type I transmembrane glycoprotein encoded by the MCMV early gene m06, which tightly binds to properly folded β2‐microglobulin (β2m)‐associated MHC class I molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This association is mediated by the lumenal/transmembrane part of the protein. gp48–MHC class I complexes are transported out of the ER, pass the Golgi, but instead of being expressed on the cell surface, they are redirected to the endocytic route and rapidly degraded in a Lamp‐1+ compartment. As a result, m06‐expressing cells are impaired in presenting antigenic peptides to CD8+ T cells. The cytoplasmic tail of gp48 contains two di‐leucine motifs. Mutation of the membrane‐proximal di‐leucine motif of gp48 restored surface expression of MHC class I, while mutation of the distal one had no effect. The results establish a novel viral mechanism for downregulation of MHC class I molecules by directly binding surface‐destined MHC complexes and exploiting the cellular di‐leucine sorting machinery for lysosomal degradation.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2002

Subversion of host defense mechanisms by adenoviruses

Hans-Gerhard Burgert; Z. Ruzsics; S. Obermeier; A. Hilgendorf; Mark Windheim; A. Elsing

Adenoviruses (Ads) cause acute and persistent infections. Alike the much more complex herpesviruses, Ads encode numerous immunomodulatory functions. About a third of the viral genome is devoted to counteract both the innate and the adaptive antiviral immune response. Immediately upon infection, E1A blocks interferon-induced gene expression and the VA-RNA inhibits interferon-induced PKR activity. At the same time, E1A reprograms the cell for DNA synthesis and induces the intrinsic cellular apoptosis program that is interrupted by E1B/19K and E1B/55K proteins, the latter inhibits p53-mediated apoptosis. Most other viral stealth functions are encoded by a separate transcription units, E3. Several E3 products prevent death receptor-mediated apoptosis. E3/14.7K seems to interfere with the cytolytic and pro-inflammatory activities of TNF while E3/10.4K and 14.5K proteins remove Fas and TRAIL receptors from the cell surface by inducing their degradation in lysosomes. These and other functions that may afect granule-mediated cell death might drastically limit lysis by NK cells and cytotoxic T cells (CTL). Moreover, Ads interfere with recognition of infected cell by CTL. The paradigmatic E3/19K protein subverts antigen presentation by MHC class I molecules by inhibiting their transport to the cell surface. In concert, these viral countermeasures ensure prolonged survival in the infected host and, as a consequence, facilitate transmission. Elucidating the molecular mechanisms of Ad-mediated immune evasion has stimulated corresponding research on other viruses. This knowledge will also be instrumental for designing better vectors for gene therapy and vaccination, and may lead to a more rational treatment of life-threatening Ad infections, e.g. in transplantation patients.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Adenovirus E3/19K Promotes Evasion of NK Cell Recognition by Intracellular Sequestration of the NKG2D Ligands Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Chain-Related Proteins A and B

Brian P. McSharry; Hans-Gerhard Burgert; Douglas P. Owen; Richard James Stanton; Virginie Prod'homme; Martina Sester; Katja Koebernick; Veronika Groh; Thomas Spies; S.T. Cox; Ann-Margaret Little; Edward Chung Yern Wang; Peter Tomasec; Gavin William Grahame Wilkinson

ABSTRACT The adenovirus (Ad) early transcription unit 3 (E3) encodes multiple immunosubversive functions that are presumed to facilitate the establishment and persistence of infection. Indeed, the capacity of E3/19K to inhibit transport of HLA class I (HLA-I) to the cell surface, thereby preventing peptide presentation to CD8+ T cells, has long been recognized as a paradigm for viral immune evasion. However, HLA-I downregulation has the potential to render Ad-infected cells vulnerable to natural killer (NK) cell recognition. Furthermore, expression of the immediate-early Ad gene E1A is associated with efficient induction of ligands for the key NK cell-activating receptor NKG2D. Here we show that while infection with wild-type Ad enhances synthesis of the NKG2D ligands, major histocompatibility complex class I chain-related proteins A and B (MICA and MICB), their expression on the cell surface is actively suppressed. Both MICA and MICB are retained within the endoplasmic reticulum as immature endoglycosidase H-sensitive forms. By analyzing a range of cell lines and viruses carrying mutated versions of the E3 gene region, E3/19K was identified as the gene responsible for this activity. The structural requirements within E3/19K necessary to sequester MICA/B and HLA-I are similar. In functional assays, deletion of E3/19K rendered Ad-infected cells more sensitive to NK cell recognition. We report the first NK evasion function in the Adenoviridae and describe a novel function for E3/19K. Thus, E3/19K has a dual function: inhibition of T-cell recognition and NK cell activation.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2004

Immune Evasion by Adenovirus E3 Proteins: Exploitation of Intracellular Trafficking Pathways

Mark Windheim; A. Hilgendorf; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

Adenoviruses (Ads) are nonenveloped viruses which replicate and assemble in the nucleus. Therefore, viral membrane proteins are not directly required for their multiplication. Yet, all human Ads encode integral membrane proteins in the early transcription unit 3 (E3). Previous studies on subgenus C Ads demonstrated that most E3 proteins exhibit immunomodulatory functions. In this review we focus on the E3 membrane proteins, which appear to be primarily devoted to remove critical recognition structures for the host immune system from the cell surface. The molecular mechanism for removal depends on the E3 protein involved: E3/19K prevents expression of newly synthesized MHC molecules by inhibition of ER export, whereas E3/10.4-14.5K down-regulate apoptosis receptors by rerouting them into lysosomes. The viral proteins mediating these processes contain typical transport motifs, such as KKXX, YXXphi, or LL. E3/49K, another recently discovered E3 protein, may require such motifs to reach a processing compartment essential for its presumed immunomodulatory activity. Thus, E3 membrane proteins exploit the intracellular trafficking machinery for immune evasion. Conspicuously, many E3 membrane proteins from Ads other than subgenus C also contain putative transport motifs. Close inspection of surrounding amino acids suggests that many of these are likely to be functional. Therefore, Ads might harbor more E3 proteins that exploit intracellular trafficking pathways as a means to manipulate immunologically important key molecules. Differential expression of such functions by Ads of different subgenera may contribute to their differential pathogenesis. Thus, an unexpected link emerges between viral manipulation of intracellular transport pathways and immune evasion.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Transposon-Assisted Cloning and Traceless Mutagenesis of Adenoviruses: Development of a Novel Vector Based on Species D

Zsolt Ruzsics; Markus Wagner; Andrea Osterlehner; Jonathan P. Cook; Ulrich H. Koszinowski; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

ABSTRACT Until recently, adenovirus (Ad)-mediated gene therapy was almost exclusively based on human Ad type 5 (Ad5). Preexisting immunity and the limited, coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor-dependent tropism of Ad5 stimulated attempts to exploit the natural diversity in tropism of the other 50 known human Ad serotypes. Aiming in particular at immunotherapy and vaccination, we have screened representative serotypes from different Ad species for their ability to infect dendritic cells. Ad19a, an Ad from species D, was selected for development as a new vector for vaccination and cancer gene therapy. To clone and manipulate its genome, we have developed a novel methodology, coined “exposon mutagenesis,” that allows the rapid and precise introduction of virtually any genetic alteration (deletions, point mutations, or insertions) into recombinant Ad bacterial artificial chromosomes. The versatility of the system was exemplified by deleting the E3 region of Ad19a, by specifically knocking out expression of a species-specific E3 gene, E3/49K, and by reinserting E3/49K into an E3 null Ad19a mutant. The technology requires only limited sequence information and is applicable to other Ad species. Therefore, it should be extremely valuable for the analysis of gene functions from any Ad species. In addition, a basic, replication-defective E1- and E3-deleted Ad19a vector expressing GFP (Ad19aGFP) was generated. This new vector based on species D Ads exhibits a very promising tropism for lymphoid and muscle cells and shows great potential as an alternative vector for transduction of cell types that are resistant to or only poorly transduced by conventional Ad5-based vectors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Two Distinct Transport Motifs in the Adenovirus E3/10.4-14.5 Proteins Act in Concert to Down-modulate Apoptosis Receptors and the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor

Annette Hilgendorf; Johan Lindberg; Zsolt Ruzsics; Stefan Höning; Andreas Elsing; Madelaine Löfqvist; Hartmut Engelmann; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

The adenovirus (Ad) early transcription unit E3 encodes immunosubversive functions. The E3 transmembrane proteins 10.4 and 14.5 form a complex that down-regulates the epidermal growth factor receptor and apoptosis receptors from the cell surface by diverting them to endosomes/lysosomes for degradation. The latter process protects infected cells from ligand-induced apoptosis. The mechanism by which 10.4-14.5 mediate re-routing remains elusive. We examined the role of putative YXXΦ and dileucine (LL) transport motifs within Ad2 10.4-14.5 for target protein modulation. By generating stable E3 transfectants expressing 10.4-14.5 proteins with alanine substitutions in these motifs, we show that 3 of the 5 motifs are essential for functional activity. Whereas tyrosine 74 in 14.5 appears to be important for efficient 10.4-14.5 interaction, the 122YXXΦ motif in 14.5 and the dileucine motif Leu 87-Leu88 in 10.4 constitute genuine transport motifs: disruption of either motif abolished binding to the cellular adaptor proteins AP-1 and AP-2, as shown by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, and caused missorting, dramatically altering cell surface appearance and the intracellular location of viral proteins. Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis and immunofluorescence data provide evidence that Tyr122 in 14.5 is essential for rapid endocytosis of the 10.4-14.5 complex, whereas the 10.4LL motif acts down-stream and protects 10.4-14.5 from extensive degradation by rerouting it into a recycling pathway. Infection of primary cells with adenoviruses carrying the relevant point mutations confirmed the crucial role of these transport motifs for down-regulation of Fas, TRAIL-R1, TRAIL-R2, and epidermal growth factor receptor. Thus, two distinct transport motifs present in two proteins synergize for efficient target removal and immune evasion.


Journal of Virology | 2002

Characterization of E3/49K, a Novel, Highly Glycosylated E3 Protein of the Epidemic Keratoconjunctivitis-Causing Adenovirus Type 19a

Mark Windheim; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

ABSTRACT The early transcription unit 3 (E3) of human adenoviruses (Ads) encodes proteins with various immunomodulatory functions. Ads from different subgenera differ considerably in their E3 coding capacity, suggesting that distinct sets of immunomodulatory E3 proteins may influence the disease pattern associated with different Ad subgenera. Interestingly, the E3 region of Ads classified in subgenus D, which are often isolated from AIDS patients and have the propensity to cause eye infections, contains a unique gene, named E3/49K, that may encode a protein with a calculated molecular weight of 48,984 that might be implicated in diseases caused by this subgenus. The 49K sequence predicts a highly glycosylated type I transmembrane protein with a short cytoplasmic tail containing two motifs, YXXΦ and LL, potentially involved in targeting the protein to endosomal or lysosomal compartments. Remarkably, the 49K protein is predicted to contain an unusual immunoglobulin-like fold. Here we have characterized the E3/49K protein of Ad type 19a, an Ad of subgenus D which causes epidemic keratoconjunctivitis. E3/49K was synthesized as an 80- to 100-kDa protein, which is unusually large for an E3 protein. In contrast to another early protein, E3/19K, the expression of E3/49K started early but continued throughout the infection cycle. Analysis of the 49K glycosylation revealed that the majority of 49K molecules contained only 12 of the predicted 14 N-glycans. Furthermore, we provide evidence that 49K is O-glycosylated. At steady state, E3/49K was localized in the Golgi-trans-Golgi network and in early endosomes. Interestingly, the 49K protein has a rather short half-life and seems to be proteolytically cleaved. A processing pattern similar to that in the early stages of infection is seen in transfected cells, constitutively expressing 49K in the absence of other Ad proteins. Together, our data provide the first biochemical and cell biological characterization of an unique E3 protein of subgenus D Ads.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

A unique secreted adenovirus E3 protein binds to the leukocyte common antigen CD45 and modulates leukocyte functions

Mark Windheim; Jennifer H. Southcombe; Elisabeth Kremmer; Lucy Chaplin; Doris Urlaub; Christine S. Falk; Maren Claus; Janine Mihm; Myles Braithwaite; Kevin M. Dennehy; Harald Renz; Martina Sester; Carsten Watzl; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

Significance Human adenoviruses encode Early region 3 (E3) proteins that manipulate the host immune response to establish an infection or to persist longer. To date, only a few E3 functions from a single adenovirus species (C) have been characterized, all of which act directly on infected cells. Here we describe a secreted E3 protein that is uniquely expressed by species D adenoviruses. This protein targets noninfected leukocytes using a cell surface phosphatase as a receptor. We provide evidence that this interaction suppresses leukocyte activation and effector functions, implying that species D adenoviruses can affect the host distant from the site of infection. The E3 transcription unit of human adenoviruses (Ads) encodes immunomodulatory proteins. Interestingly, the size and composition of the E3 region differs considerably among Ad species, suggesting that distinct sets of immunomodulatory E3 proteins may influence their interaction with the human host and the disease pattern. However, to date, only common immune evasion functions of species C E3 proteins have been described. Here we report on the immunomodulatory activity of a species D-specific E3 protein, E3/49K. Unlike all other E3 proteins that act on infected cells, E3/49K seems to target uninfected cells. Initially synthesized as an 80- to 100-kDa type I transmembrane protein, E3/49K is subsequently cleaved, with the large ectodomain (sec49K) secreted. We found that purified sec49K exhibits specific binding to lymphoid cell lines and all primary leukocytes, but not to fibroblasts or epithelial cells. Consistent with this binding profile and the molecular mass, the sec49K receptor was identified as the cell surface protein tyrosine phosphatase CD45. Antibody-blocking studies suggested that sec49K binds to the membrane proximal domains present in all CD45 isoforms. Functional studies showed that sec49K can suppress the activation and cytotoxicity of natural killer cells as well as the activation, signaling, and cytokine production of T cells. Thus, we have discovered an adenovirus protein that is actively secreted and describe immunomodulatory activities of an E3 protein uniquely expressed by a single Ad species.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Conserved Amino Acids within the Adenovirus 2 E3/19K Protein Differentially Affect Downregulation of MHC Class I and MICA/B Proteins

Martina Sester; Katja Koebernick; Douglas P. Owen; Minghui Ao; Yana Bromberg; Ed May; Emily Stock; Lawrence Andrews; Veronika Groh; Thomas Spies; Alexander Steinle; Beatrice Menz; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

Successful establishment and persistence of adenovirus (Ad) infections are facilitated by immunosubversive functions encoded in the early transcription unit 3 (E3). The E3/19K protein has a dual role, preventing cell surface transport of MHC class I/HLA class I (MHC-I/HLA-I) Ags and the MHC-I–like molecules (MHC-I chain-related chain A and B [MICA/B]), thereby inhibiting both recognition by CD8 T cells and NK cells. Although some crucial functional elements in E3/19K have been identified, a systematic analysis of the functional importance of individual amino acids is missing. We now have substituted alanine for each of 21 aas in the luminal domain of Ad2 E3/19K conserved among Ads and investigated the effects on HLA-I downregulation by coimmunoprecipitation, pulse-chase analysis, and/or flow cytometry. Potential structural alterations were monitored using conformation-dependent E3/19K-specific mAbs. The results revealed that only a small number of mutations abrogated HLA-I complex formation (e.g., substitutions W52, M87, and W96). Mutants M87 and W96 were particularly interesting as they exhibited only minimal structural changes suggesting that these amino acids make direct contacts with HLA-I. The considerable number of substitutions with little functional defects implied that E3/19K may have additional cellular target molecules. Indeed, when assessing MICA/B cell-surface expression we found that mutation of T14 and M82 selectively compromised MICA/B downregulation with essentially no effect on HLA-I modulation. In general, downregulation of HLA-I was more severely affected than that of MICA/B; for example, substitutions W52, M87, and W96 essentially abrogated HLA-I modulation while largely retaining the ability to sequester MICA/B. Thus, distinct conserved amino acids seem preferentially important for a particular functional activity of E3/19K.


Journal of Virology | 2013

The Transmembrane Domain of the Adenovirus E3/19K Protein Acts as an Endoplasmic Reticulum Retention Signal and Contributes to Intracellular Sequestration of Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Molecules

Martina Sester; Zsolt Ruszics; Emma Mackley; Hans-Gerhard Burgert

ABSTRACT The human adenovirus E3/19K protein is a type I transmembrane glycoprotein of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) that abrogates cell surface transport of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) and MHC-I-related chain A and B (MICA/B) molecules. Previous data suggested that E3/19K comprises two functional modules: a luminal domain for interaction with MHC-I and MICA/B molecules and a dilysine motif in the cytoplasmic tail that confers retrieval from the Golgi apparatus back to the ER. This study was prompted by the unexpected phenotype of an E3/19K molecule that was largely retained intracellularly despite having a mutated ER retrieval motif. To identify additional structural determinants responsible for ER localization, chimeric molecules were generated containing the luminal E3/19K domain and the cytoplasmic and/or transmembrane domain (TMD) of the cell surface protein MHC-I Kd. These chimeras were analyzed for transport, cell surface expression, and impact on MHC-I and MICA/B downregulation. As with the retrieval mutant, replacement of the cytoplasmic tail of E3/19K allowed only limited transport of the chimera to the cell surface. Efficient cell surface expression was achieved only by additionally replacing the TMD of E3/19K with that of MHC-I, suggesting that the E3/19K TMD may confer static ER retention. This was verified by ER retention of an MHC-I Kd molecule with the TMD replaced by that of E3/19K. Thus, we have identified the E3/19K TMD as a novel functional element that mediates static ER retention, thereby increasing the concentration of E3/19K in the ER. Remarkably, the ER retrieval signal alone, without the E3/19K TMD, did not mediate efficient HLA downregulation, even in the context of infection. This suggests that the TMD is required together with the ER retrieval function to ensure efficient ER localization and transport inhibition of MHC-I and MICA/B molecules.

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Thomas Spies

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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