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Dive into the research topics where Hermann Schägger is active.

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Featured researches published by Hermann Schägger.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1991

Blue native electrophoresis for isolation of membrane protein complexes in enzymatically active form

Hermann Schägger; Gebhard von Jagow

A discontinuous electrophoretic system for the isolation of membrane proteins from acrylamide gels has been developed using equipment for sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Coomassie dyes were introduced to induce a charge shift on the proteins and aminocaproic acid served to improve solubilization of membrane proteins. Solubilized mitochondria or extracts of heart muscle tissue, lymphoblasts, yeast, and bacteria were applied to the gels. From cells containing mitochondria, all the multiprotein complexes of the oxidative phosphorylation system were separated within one gel. The complexes were resolved into the individual polypeptides by second-dimension Tricine-SDS-PAGE or extracted without SDS for functional studies. The recovery of all respiratory chain complexes was almost quantitative. The percentage recovery of functional activity depended on the respective protein complex studied and was zero for some complexes, but almost quantitative for others. The system is especially useful for small scale purposes, e.g., separation of radioactively labeled membrane proteins, N-terminal protein sequencing, preparation of proteins for immunization, and diagnostic studies of inborn neuromuscular diseases.


Nature Protocols | 2006

Tricine-SDS-PAGE.

Hermann Schägger

Tricine–SDS-PAGE is commonly used to separate proteins in the mass range 1–100 kDa. It is the preferred electrophoretic system for the resolution of proteins smaller than 30 kDa. The concentrations of acrylamide used in the gels are lower than in other electrophoretic systems. These lower concentrations facilitate electroblotting, which is particularly crucial for hydrophobic proteins. Tricine–SDS-PAGE is also used preferentially for doubled SDS-PAGE (dSDS-PAGE), a proteomic tool used to isolate extremely hydrophobic proteins for mass spectrometric identification, and it offers advantages for resolution of the second dimension after blue-native PAGE (BN-PAGE) and clear-native PAGE (CN-PAGE). Here I describe a protocol for Tricine–SDS-PAGE, which includes efficient methods for Coomassie blue or silver staining and electroblotting, thereby increasing the versatility of the approach. This protocol can be completed in 1–2 d.*Note: In the version of the article initially published online, the words “Gel buffer (3x)” were missing in the table on page 18. The error has been corrected in all versions of the article.


Nature Protocols | 2006

Blue native PAGE

Ilka Wittig; Hans-Peter Braun; Hermann Schägger

Blue native PAGE (BN-PAGE) can be used for one-step isolation of protein complexes from biological membranes and total cell and tissue homogenates. It can also be used to determine native protein masses and oligomeric states and to identify physiological protein–protein interactions. Native complexes are recovered from gels by electroelution or diffusion and are used for 2D crystallization and electron microscopy or analyzed by in-gel activity assays or by native electroblotting and immunodetection. In this protocol, we describe methodology to perform BN-PAGE followed by (i) native extraction or native electroblotting of separated proteins, or (ii) a second dimension of tricine-SDS-PAGE or modified BN-PAGE, or (iii) a second dimension of isoelectric focusing (IEF) followed by a third dimension of tricine-SDS-PAGE for the separation of subunits of complexes. These protocols for 2D and 3D PAGE can be completed in 2 and 3 days.


The EMBO Journal | 2000

Supercomplexes in the respiratory chains of yeast and mammalian mitochondria

Hermann Schägger; Kathy Pfeiffer

Around 30–40 years after the first isolation of the five complexes of oxidative phosphorylation from mammalian mitochondria, we present data that fundamentally change the paradigm of how the yeast and mammalian system of oxidative phosphorylation is organized. The complexes are not randomly distributed within the inner mitochondrial membrane, but assemble into supramolecular structures. We show that all cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is bound to cytochrome c reductase (complex III), which exists in three forms: the free dimer, and two supercomplexes comprising an additional one or two complex IV monomers. The distribution between these forms varies with growth conditions. In mammalian mitochondria, almost all complex I is assembled into supercomplexes comprising complexes I and III and up to four copies of complex IV, which guided us to present a model for a network of respiratory chain complexes: a ‘respirasome’. A fraction of total bovine ATP synthase (complex V) was isolated in dimeric form, suggesting that a dimeric state is not limited to S.cerevisiae, but also exists in mammalian mitochondria.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Cardiolipin Stabilizes Respiratory Chain Supercomplexes

Kathy Pfeiffer; Vishal M. Gohil; Rosemary A. Stuart; Carola Hunte; Ulrich Brandt; Miriam L. Greenberg; Hermann Schägger

Cardiolipin stabilized supercomplexes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae respiratory chain complexes III and IV (ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and cytochrome c oxidase, respectively), but was not essential for their formation in the inner mitochondrial membrane because they were found also in a cardiolipin-deficient strain. Reconstitution with cardiolipin largely restored wild-type stability. The putative interface of complexes III and IV comprises transmembrane helices of cytochromes b and c1 and tightly bound cardiolipin. Subunits Rip1p, Qcr6p, Qcr9p, Qcr10p, Cox8p, Cox12p, and Cox13p and cytochrome c were not essential for the assembly of supercomplexes; and in the absence of Qcr6p, the formation of supercomplexes was even promoted. An additional marked effect of cardiolipin concerns cytochrome c oxidase. We show that a cardiolipin-deficient strain harbored almost inactive resting cytochrome c oxidase in the membrane. Transition to the fully active pulsed state occurred on a minute time scale.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

AIF deficiency compromises oxidative phosphorylation

Nicola Vahsen; Céline Candé; Jean Jacques Brière; Paule Bénit; Nicholas Joza; Nathanael Larochette; Pier G. Mastroberardino; Marie O. Pequignot; Noelia Casares; Vladimir Lazar; Olivier Feraud; Najet Debili; Silke Wissing; Silvia Engelhardt; Frank Madeo; Mauro Piacentini; Josef M. Penninger; Hermann Schägger; Pierre Rustin; Guido Kroemer

Apoptosis‐inducing factor (AIF) is a mitochondrial flavoprotein that, after apoptosis induction, translocates to the nucleus where it participates in apoptotic chromatinolysis. Here, we show that human or mouse cells lacking AIF as a result of homologous recombination or small interfering RNA exhibit high lactate production and enhanced dependency on glycolytic ATP generation, due to severe reduction of respiratory chain complex I activity. Although AIF itself is not a part of complex I, AIF‐deficient cells exhibit a reduced content of complex I and of its components, pointing to a role of AIF in the biogenesis and/or maintenance of this polyprotein complex. Harlequin mice with reduced AIF expression due to a retroviral insertion into the AIF gene also manifest a reduced oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) in the retina and in the brain, correlating with reduced expression of complex I subunits, retinal degeneration, and neuronal defects. Altogether, these data point to a role of AIF in OXPHOS and emphasize the dual role of AIF in life and death.


The EMBO Journal | 1998

Yeast mitochondrial F1F0‐ATP synthase exists as a dimer: identification of three dimer‐specific subunits

Isabel Arnold; Kathy Pfeiffer; Walter Neupert; Rosemary A. Stuart; Hermann Schägger

Using the technique of blue native gel electrophoresis, the oligomeric state of the yeast mitochondrial F1F0‐ATP synthase was analysed. Solubilization of mitochondrial membranes with low detergent to protein ratios led to the identification of the dimeric state of the ATP synthase. Analysis of the subunit composition of the dimer, in comparison with the monomer, revealed the presence of three additional small proteins. These dimer‐specific subunits of the ATP synthase were identified as the recently described subunit e/Tim11 (Su e/Tim11), the putative subunit g homolog (Su g) and a new component termed subunit k (Su k). Although, as shown here, these three proteins are not required for the formation of enzymatically active ATP synthase, Su e/Tim11 and Su g are essential for the formation of the dimeric state. Su e/Tim11 appears to play a central role in this dimerization process. The dimer‐specific subunits are associated with the membrane bound F0‐sector. The F0‐sector may thereby be involved in the dimerization of two monomeric F1F0‐ATP synthase complexes. We speculate that the F1F0‐ATP synthase of yeast, like the other complexes of oxidative phosphorylation, form supracomplexes to optimize transduction of energy and to enhance the stability of the complex in the membrane.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2007

High Resolution Clear Native Electrophoresis for In-gel Functional Assays and Fluorescence Studies of Membrane Protein Complexes

Ilka Wittig; Michael Karas; Hermann Schägger

Clear native electrophoresis and blue native electrophoresis are microscale techniques for the isolation of membrane protein complexes. The Coomassie Blue G-250 dye, used in blue native electrophoresis, interferes with in-gel fluorescence detection and in-gel catalytic activity assays. This problem can be overcome by omitting the dye in clear native electrophoresis. However, clear native electrophoresis suffers from enhanced protein aggregation and broadening of protein bands during electrophoresis and therefore has been used rarely. To preserve the advantages of both electrophoresis techniques we substituted Coomassie dye in the cathode buffer of blue native electrophoresis by non-colored mixtures of anionic and neutral detergents. Like Coomassie dye, these mixed micelles imposed a charge shift on the membrane proteins to enhance their anodic migration and improved membrane protein solubility during electrophoresis. This improved clear native electrophoresis offers a high resolution of membrane protein complexes comparable to that of blue native electrophoresis. We demonstrate the superiority of high resolution clear native electrophoresis for in-gel catalytic activity assays of mitochondrial complexes I–V. We present the first in-gel histochemical staining protocol for respiratory complex III. Moreover we demonstrate the special advantages of high resolution clear native electrophoresis for in-gel detection of fluorescent labeled proteins labeled by reactive fluorescent dyes and tagged by fluorescent proteins. The advantages of high resolution clear native electrophoresis make this technique superior for functional proteomics analyses.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2001

Blue-native gels to isolate protein complexes from mitochondria.

Hermann Schägger

Publisher Summary This chapter presents a new buffer system for blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN–PAGE) that is employed for the isolation of protein complexes from mitochondria. Several suggestions for choice of specific detergent and of the appropriate detergent or protein ratio for preservation of native protein–protein interactions are discussed. The application range of BN–PAGE gradually expanded from the analysis of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system (OXPHOS) complexes from bovine and human tissue (mitochondrial encephaolomyopathies) to the analysis of OXPHOS systems from plant mitochondria, yeast OXPHOS mutants, and chloroplasts. BN–PAGE has been applied with great success to the analysis of mitochondrial protein import complexes and of receptors in signal transduction. BN–PAGE is also a valuable technique for the identification of physiological protein–protein interactions: preprotein translocase complexes linked together by their substrates, the preproteins, yeast ATP synthase existing in a dimeric state, and respiratory chain complexes from yeast and mammalian mitochondria organized to form a network of supercomplexes. Moreover, the application of BN–PAGE will expand to the analysis of further receptors in the plasma membrane and in the membranes of cellular organelles, to the analysis of protein–chaperone interactions, and to the detection and analysis of antigen–antibody interactions. Protein–antibody interactions are stable under the conditions of BN–PAGE, as deduced from a shift of the apparent molecular mass of the protein antigen, and detection of immunoglobulin G (IgG) heavy and light chains in 2D sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)–PAGE at the position of the protein antigen.


Iubmb Life | 2001

Respiratory Chain Supercomplexes

Hermann Schägger

Respiratory chain supercomplexes have been isolated from mammalian and yeast mitochondria, and bacterial membranes. Functional roles of respiratory chain supercomplexes are catalytic enhancement, substrate channelling, and stabilization of complex I by complex III in mammalian cells. Bacterial supercomplexes are characterized by their relatively high detergent‐stability compared to yeast or mammalian supercomplexes that are stable to sonication. The mobility of substrate cytochrome c increases in the order bacterial, yeast, and mammalian respiratory chain. In bacterial supercomplexes, the electron transfer between complexes III and IV involves movement of the mobile head of a tightly bound cytochrome c, whereas the yeast S. cerevisiae seems to use substrate channelling of a mobile cytochrome c, and mammalian respiratory chains have been described to use a cytochrome c pool. Dimeric ATP synthase seems to be specific for mitochondrial OXPHOS systems. Monomeric complex V was found in Acetobacterium woodii and Paracoccus denitrificans .

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Ilka Wittig

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Ulrich Brandt

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Gebhard von Jagow

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Michael Karas

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Georg Fuchs

University of Freiburg

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Volker Zickermann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Rosalba Carrozzo

Boston Children's Hospital

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