Harm Otten
University of Copenhagen
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Harm Otten.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
R. Jason Quinlan; Matt D. Sweeney; Leila Lo Leggio; Harm Otten; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen; Katja Salomon Johansen; Kristian B. R. M. Krogh; Christian Isak Jørgensen; Morten Tovborg; Annika Anthonsen; Theodora Tryfona; Clive P. Walter; Paul Dupree; Feng Xu; Gideon J. Davies; Paul H. Walton
The enzymatic degradation of recalcitrant plant biomass is one of the key industrial challenges of the 21st century. Accordingly, there is a continuing drive to discover new routes to promote polysaccharide degradation. Perhaps the most promising approach involves the application of “cellulase-enhancing factors,” such as those from the glycoside hydrolase (CAZy) GH61 family. Here we show that GH61 enzymes are a unique family of copper-dependent oxidases. We demonstrate that copper is needed for GH61 maximal activity and that the formation of cellodextrin and oxidized cellodextrin products by GH61 is enhanced in the presence of small molecule redox-active cofactors such as ascorbate and gallate. By using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and single-crystal X-ray diffraction, the active site of GH61 is revealed to contain a type II copper and, uniquely, a methylated histidine in the coppers coordination sphere, thus providing an innovative paradigm in bioinorganic enzymatic catalysis.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Malene H. Jensen; Harm Otten; Ulla Christensen; Torben Vedel Borchert; Lars Lehmann Hylling Christensen; Sine Larsen; Leila Lo Leggio
We present here the first experimental evidence for bound substrate in the active site of a rhamnogalacturonan lyase belonging to family 4 of polysaccharide lyases, Aspergillus aculeatus rhamnogalacturonan lyase (RGL4). RGL4 is involved in the degradation of rhamnogalacturonan-I, an important pectic plant cell wall polysaccharide. Based on the previously determined wild-type structure, enzyme variants RGL4_H210A and RGL4_K150A have been produced and characterized both kinetically and structurally, showing that His210 and Lys150 are key active-site residues. Crystals of the RGL4_K150A variant soaked with a rhamnogalacturonan digest gave a clear picture of substrate bound in the -3/+3 subsites. The crystallographic and kinetic studies on RGL4, and structural and sequence comparison to other enzymes in the same and other PL families, enable us to propose a detailed reaction mechanism for the β-elimination on [-,2)-α-l-rhamno-(1,4)-α-d-galacturonic acid-(1,-]. The mechanism differs significantly from the one established for pectate lyases, in which most often calcium ions are engaged in catalysis.
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2013
Harm Otten; Malwina Michalak; Jørn Dalgaard Mikkelsen; Sine Larsen
A novel Emericella nidulans endo-β-1,4-galactanase (EnGAL) demonstrates a strong capacity to generate high levels of very potent prebiotic oligosaccharides from potato pulp, a by-product of the agricultural potato-starch industry. EnGAL belongs to glycoside hydrolase family 53 and shows high (72.5%) sequence identity to an endo-β-1,4-galactanase from Aspergillus aculeatus. Diffraction data extending to 2.0 Å resolution were collected from a crystal of EnGAL grown from conditions containing 0.2 M zinc acetate. The crystal structure showed a high similarity between EnGAL and other endo-β-1,4-galactanases belonging to GH53. It also revealed 15 zinc ions bound to the protein, one of which is located in the active site, where it is coordinated by residues Glu136 and Glu246 which comprise the catalytic machinery. The majority of the zinc ions are located on the surface of the enzyme, in some cases with side chains from two different molecules as ligands, thus explaining why the presence of zinc ions was essential for crystallization.
Metallomics | 2014
Eszter Tóth; Eszter Németh; Harm Otten; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen; Hans Erik Mølager Christensen; Lubomír Rulíšek; Kyosuke Nagata; Sine Larsen; Béla Gyurcsik
The nuclease domain of colicin E7 metallonuclease (NColE7) contains its active centre at the C-terminus. The mutant ΔN4-NColE7-C* - where the four N-terminal residues including the positively charged K446, R447 and K449 are replaced with eight residues from the GST tag - is catalytically inactive. The crystal structure of this mutant demonstrates that its overall fold is very similar to that of the native NColE7 structure. This implicates the stabilizing effect of the remaining N-terminal sequence on the structure of the C-terminal catalytic site and the essential role of the deleted residues in the mechanism of the catalyzed reaction. Complementary QM/MM calculations on the protein-DNA complexes support the less favourable cleavage by the mutant protein than by NColE7. Furthermore, a water molecule as a possible ligand for the Zn(2+)-ion is proposed to play a role in the catalytic process. These results suggest that the mechanism of the Zn(2+)-containing HNH nucleases needs to be further studied and discussed.
IUCrJ | 2018
Pavol Skubák; Demet Araç; Matthew W. Bowler; Ana R. Correia; André Hoelz; Sine Larsen; Gordon A. Leonard; Andrew A. McCarthy; Sean McSweeney; Christoph Mueller-Dieckmann; Harm Otten; Gabriel Salzman; Navraj S. Pannu
A new algorithm automatically determines the structures of large macromolecules of unknown fold from low-resolution single-wavelength anomalous X-ray data and a partial model that failed with other methods.
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2016
Folmer Fredslund; Harm Otten; Sabrina Gemperlein; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen; Yvonne Carius; Gert-Wieland Kohring; Leila Lo Leggio
Bradyrhizobium japonicum sorbitol dehydrogenase is NADH-dependent and is active at elevated temperatures. The best substrate is D-glucitol (a synonym for D-sorbitol), although L-glucitol is also accepted, giving it particular potential in industrial applications. Crystallization led to a hexagonal crystal form, with crystals diffracting to 2.9 Å resolution. In attempts to phase the data, a molecular-replacement solution based upon PDB entry 4nbu (33% identical in sequence to the target) was found. The solution contained one molecule in the asymmetric unit, but a tetramer similar to that found in other short-chain dehydrogenases, including the search model, could be reconstructed by applying crystallographic symmetry operations. The active site contains electron density consistent with D-glucitol and phosphate, but there was not clear evidence for the binding of NADH. In a search for the features that determine the thermostability of the enzyme, the Tm for the orthologue from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, for which the structure was already known, was also determined, and this enzyme proved to be considerably less thermostable. A continuous β-sheet is formed between two monomers in the tetramer of the B. japonicum enzyme, a feature not generally shared by short-chain dehydrogenases, and which may contribute to thermostability, as may an increased Pro/Gly ratio.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014
Ines Isabel Cardoso Rodrigues da Silva; Carsten Jers; Harm Otten; Christian Nyffenegger; Dorte Møller Larsen; Patrick Derkx; Anne S. Meyer; Jørn Dalgaard Mikkelsen; Sine Larsen
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014
Sabrina Gauer; Zhijie Wang; Harm Otten; Mathieu Etienne; Morten J. Bjerrum; Leila Lo Leggio; Alain Walcarius; Friedrich Giffhorn; Gert-Wieland Kohring
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2013
Eszter Tóth; Béla Gyurcsik; Harm Otten; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen; Leila Lo Leggio; Sine Larsen; Hans Erik Mølager Christensen; Kyosuke Nagata
Archive | 2013
Eszter N. Tóth; Béla Gyurcsik; Harm Otten; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen