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Dive into the research topics where Helge C. Dorfmueller is active.

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Featured researches published by Helge C. Dorfmueller.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Structural insights into the mechanism and inhibition of eukaryotic O-GlcNAc hydrolysis

Francesco V. Rao; Helge C. Dorfmueller; Fabrizio Villa; Matthew Allwood; Ian M. Eggleston; Daan M. F. van Aalten

O‐linked N‐acetylglucosamine (O‐GlcNAc) modification of specific serines/threonines on intracellular proteins in higher eukaryotes has been shown to directly regulate important processes such as the cell cycle, insulin sensitivity and transcription. The structure, molecular mechanisms of catalysis, protein substrate recognition/specificity of the eukaryotic O‐GlcNAc transferase and hydrolase are largely unknown. Here we describe the crystal structure, enzymology and in vitro activity on human substrates of Clostridium perfringens NagJ, a close homologue of human O‐GlcNAcase (OGA), representing the first family 84 glycoside hydrolase structure. The structure reveals a deep active site pocket highly conserved with the human enzyme, compatible with binding of O‐GlcNAcylated peptides. Together with mutagenesis data, the structure supports a variant of the substrate‐assisted catalytic mechanism, involving two aspartic acids and an unusually positioned tyrosine. Insights into recognition of substrate come from a complex with the transition state mimic O‐(2‐acetamido‐2‐deoxy‐D‐glucopyranosylidene)amino‐N‐phenylcarbamate (Ki=5.4 nM). Strikingly, the enzyme is inhibited by the pseudosubstrate peptide Ala‐Cys(‐S‐GlcNAc)‐Ala, and has OGA activity against O‐GlcNAcylated human proteins, suggesting that the enzyme is a suitable model for further studies into the function of human OGA.


Biochemical Journal | 2009

Glcnacstatins are Nanomolar Inhibitors of Human O-Glcnacase Inducing Cellular Hyper-O-Glcnacylation

Helge C. Dorfmueller; Vladimir S. Borodkin; Marianne Schimpl; Daan M. F. van Aalten

O-GlcNAcylation is an essential, dynamic and inducible post-translational glycosylation of cytosolic proteins in metazoa and can show interplay with protein phosphorylation. Inhibition of OGA (O-GlcNAcase), the enzyme that removes O-GlcNAc from O-GlcNAcylated proteins, is a useful strategy to probe the role of this modification in a range of cellular processes. In the present study, we report the rational design and evaluation of GlcNAcstatins, a family of potent, competitive and selective inhibitors of human OGA. Kinetic experiments with recombinant human OGA reveal that the GlcNAcstatins are the most potent human OGA inhibitors reported to date, inhibiting the enzyme in the sub-nanomolar to nanomolar range. Modification of the GlcNAcstatin N-acetyl group leads to up to 160-fold selectivity against the human lysosomal hexosaminidases which employ a similar substrate-assisted catalytic mechanism. Mutagenesis studies in a bacterial OGA, guided by the structure of a GlcNAcstatin complex, provides insight into the role of conserved residues in the human OGA active site. GlcNAcstatins are cell-permeant and, at low nanomolar concentrations, effectively modulate intracellular O-GlcNAc levels through inhibition of OGA, in a range of human cell lines. Thus these compounds are potent selective tools to study the cell biology of O-GlcNAc.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2008

Molecular mechanisms of O-GlcNAcylation

Ramon Hurtado-Guerrero; Helge C. Dorfmueller; Daan M. F. van Aalten

Protein glycosylation with O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) is a reversible post-translational modification of serines/threonines on metazoan proteins and occurring with similar time scales, dynamics and stoichiometry as protein phosphorylation. Levels of this modification are regulated by two enzymes-O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) and O-GlcNAc hydrolase (OGA). Although the biochemistry of these enzymes and functional implications of O-GlcNAc have been studied extensively, until recently the structures and molecular mechanisms of OGT/OGA were not understood. This review covers a body of recent work that has led to an understanding of the structure of OGA, its catalytic mechanism and the development of a plethora of different inhibitors that are finding their use in cell biological studies towards the functional implications of O-GlcNAc. Furthermore, the very recent structure determination of a bacterial OGT orthologue has given the first insights into the contribution of the tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs) to the active site and the role of some residues in catalysis and substrate binding.


Chemistry & Biology | 2010

Cell-Penetrant, Nanomolar O-GlcNAcase Inhibitors Selective against Lysosomal Hexosaminidases

Helge C. Dorfmueller; Vladimir S. Borodkin; Marianne Schimpl; Xiaowei Zheng; Robert Kime; Kevin D. Read; Daan M. F. van Aalten

Summary Posttranslational modification of metazoan nucleocytoplasmic proteins with N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) is essential, dynamic, and inducible and can compete with protein phosphorylation in signal transduction. Inhibitors of O-GlcNAcase, the enzyme removing O-GlcNAc, are useful tools for studying the role of O-GlcNAc in a range of cellular processes. We report the discovery of nanomolar OGA inhibitors that are up to 900,000-fold selective over the related lysosomal hexosaminidases. When applied at nanomolar concentrations on live cells, these cell-penetrant molecules shift the O-GlcNAc equilibrium toward hyper-O-GlcNAcylation with EC50 values down to 3 nM and are thus invaluable tools for the study of O-GlcNAc cell biology.


Amino Acids | 2011

Substrate and Product Analogues as Human O-Glcnac Transferase Inhibitors.

Helge C. Dorfmueller; Vladimir S. Borodkin; David E. Blair; Shalini Pathak; Iva Navratilova; Daan M. F. van Aalten

Protein glycosylation on serine/threonine residues with N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) is a dynamic, inducible and abundant post-translational modification. It is thought to regulate many cellular processes and there are examples of interplay between O-GlcNAc and protein phosphorylation. In metazoa, a single, highly conserved and essential gene encodes the O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) that transfers GlcNAc onto substrate proteins using UDP–GlcNAc as the sugar donor. Specific inhibitors of human OGT would be useful tools to probe the role of this post-translational modification in regulating processes in the living cell. Here, we describe the synthesis of novel UDP–GlcNAc/UDP analogues and evaluate their inhibitory properties and structural binding modes in vitro alongside alloxan, a previously reported weak OGT inhibitor. While the novel analogues are not active on living cells, they inhibit the enzyme in the micromolar range and together with the structural data provide useful templates for further optimisation.


Open Biology | 2013

Structure of a bacterial putative acetyltransferase defines the fold of the human O-GlcNAcase C-terminal domain

Francesco V. Rao; Alexander W. Schüttelkopf; Helge C. Dorfmueller; Andrew T. Ferenbach; Iva Navratilova; Daan M. F. van Aalten

The dynamic modification of proteins by O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) is an essential posttranslational modification present in higher eukaryotes. Removal of O-GlcNAc is catalysed by O-GlcNAcase, a multi-domain enzyme that has been reported to be bifunctional, possessing both glycoside hydrolase and histone acetyltransferase (AT) activity. Insights into the mechanism, protein substrate recognition and inhibition of the hydrolase domain of human OGA (hOGA) have been obtained via the use of the structures of bacterial homologues. However, the molecular basis of AT activity of OGA, which has only been reported in vitro, is not presently understood. Here, we describe the crystal structure of a putative acetyltransferase (OgpAT) that we identified in the genome of the marine bacterium Oceanicola granulosus, showing homology to the hOGA C-terminal AT domain (hOGA-AT). The structure of OgpAT in complex with acetyl coenzyme A (AcCoA) reveals that, by homology modelling, hOGA-AT adopts a variant AT fold with a unique loop creating a deep tunnel. The structures, together with mutagenesis and surface plasmon resonance data, reveal that while the bacterial OgpAT binds AcCoA, the hOGA-AT does not, as explained by the lack of key residues normally required to bind AcCoA. Thus, the C-terminal domain of hOGA is a catalytically incompetent ‘pseudo’-AT.


Biochemical Journal | 2014

Bisubstrate Udp-Peptide Conjugates as Human O-Glcnac Transferase Inhibitors.

Vladimir S. Borodkin; Marianne Schimpl; Mehmet Gundogdu; Karim Rafie; Helge C. Dorfmueller; David Robinson; Daan M. F. van Aalten

Inhibitors of OGT (O-GlcNAc transferase) are valuable tools to study the cell biology of protein O-GlcNAcylation. We report OGT bisubstrate-linked inhibitors (goblins) in which the acceptor serine in the peptide VTPVSTA is covalently linked to UDP, eliminating the GlcNAc pyranoside ring. Goblin1 co-crystallizes with OGT, revealing an ordered C3 linker and retained substrate-binding modes, and binds the enzyme with micromolar affinity, inhibiting glycosyltransfer on to protein and peptide substrates.


FEBS Letters | 2010

Screening-Based Discovery of Drug-Like O-Glcnacase Inhibitor Scaffolds

Helge C. Dorfmueller; Daan M. F. van Aalten

O‐GlcNAcylation is an essential posttranslational modification in metazoa. Modulation of O‐GlcNAc levels with small molecule inhibitors of O‐GlcNAc hydrolase (OGA) is a useful strategy to probe the role of this modification in a range of cellular processes. Here we report the discovery of novel, low molecular weight and drug‐like O‐GlcNAcase inhibitor scaffolds by high‐throughput screening. Kinetic and X‐ray crystallographic analyses of the binding modes with human/bacterial O‐GlcNAcases identify some of these as competitive inhibitors. Comparative kinetic experiments with the mechanistically related human lysosomal hexosaminidases reveal that three of the inhibitor scaffolds show selectivity towards human OGA. These scaffolds provide attractive starting points for the development of non‐carbohydrate, drug‐like OGA inhibitors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

A Structural and Biochemical Model of Processive Chitin Synthesis

Helge C. Dorfmueller; Andrew T. Ferenbach; Vladimir S. Borodkin; Daan M. F. van Aalten

Background: Chitin synthesis is an attractive drug target in a range of organisms but is not understood at the molecular level. Results: The chitooligosaccharide synthase NodC can be assayed with a novel HTS assay, and the mechanism/fold can be probed by site-directed mutagenesis and topology mapping. Conclusion: NodC is a model system to probe chitin synthesis. Significance: This work enables the exploitation of chitin synthesis as a drug target. Chitin synthases (CHS) produce chitin, an essential component of the fungal cell wall. The molecular mechanism of processive chitin synthesis is not understood, limiting the discovery of new inhibitors of this enzyme class. We identified the bacterial glycosyltransferase NodC as an appropriate model system to study the general structure and reaction mechanism of CHS. A high throughput screening-compatible novel assay demonstrates that a known inhibitor of fungal CHS also inhibit NodC. A structural model of NodC, on the basis of the recently published BcsA cellulose synthase structure, enabled probing of the catalytic mechanism by mutagenesis, demonstrating the essential roles of the DD and QXXRW catalytic motifs. The NodC membrane topology was mapped, validating the structural model. Together, these approaches give insight into the CHS structure and mechanism and provide a platform for the discovery of inhibitors for this antifungal target.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012

Structural and biochemical characterization of a trapped coenzyme A adduct of Caenorhabditis elegans glucosamine-6-phosphate N-acetyltransferase 1

Helge C. Dorfmueller; Wenxia Fang; Francesco V. Rao; David E. Blair; Helen Attrill; D.M.F. van Aalten

Glucosamine-6-phosphate N-acetyltransferase is an essential enzyme of the eukaryotic UDP-GlcNAc biosynthetic pathway. A crystal structure at 1.55 Å resolution revealed a highly unusual covalent product complex and biochemical studies investigated the function of a fully conserved active-site cysteine.

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