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Dive into the research topics where Horst Vogel is active.

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Featured researches published by Horst Vogel.


Nature Biotechnology | 2003

A general method for the covalent labeling of fusion proteins with small molecules in vivo

Antje Keppler; Susanne Gendreizig; Thomas Gronemeyer; Horst Pick; Horst Vogel; Kai Johnsson

Characterizing the movement, interactions, and chemical microenvironment of a protein inside the living cell is crucial to a detailed understanding of its function. Most strategies aimed at realizing this objective are based on genetically fusing the protein of interest to a reporter protein that monitors changes in the environment of the coupled protein. Examples include fusions with fluorescent proteins, the yeast two-hybrid system, and split ubiquitin. However, these techniques have various limitations, and considerable effort is being devoted to specific labeling of proteins in vivo with small synthetic molecules capable of probing and modulating their function. These approaches are currently based on the noncovalent binding of a small molecule to a protein, the formation of stable complexes between biarsenical compounds and peptides containing cysteines, or the use of biotin acceptor domains. Here we describe a general method for the covalent labeling of fusion proteins in vivo that complements existing methods for noncovalent labeling of proteins and that may open up new ways of studying proteins in living cells.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1986

Models for the structure of outer-membrane proteins of Escherichia coli derived from Raman spectroscopy and prediction methods

Horst Vogel; Fritz Jähnig

The secondary structure of porin, maltoporin and OmpA protein reconstituted in lipid membranes is determined by Raman spectroscopy. The three proteins have similar structures consisting of 50 to 60% beta-strand, about 20% beta-turn, and less than 15% alpha-helix. Employing a method for structural prediction that accounts for amphipathic beta-strands, folding models are developed for porin and for the segment of OmpA protein incorporated into the membrane. In the model, the OmpA fragment consists of eight amphipathic membrane-spanning beta-strands that form a beta-barrel. Similarly, porin is folded into ten amphipathic membrane-spanning beta-strands that are located at the surface of the trimer towards the lipids and eight predominantly hydrophilic strands in the interior.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Resolution of Fluorescence Correlation Measurements

Ulrich Meseth; Thorsten Wohland; Rudolf Rigler; Horst Vogel

The resolution limit of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy for two-component solutions is investigated theoretically and experimentally. The autocorrelation function for two different particles in solution were computed, statistical noise was added, and the resulting curve was fitted with a least squares fit. These simulations show that the ability to distinguish between two different molecular species in solution depends strongly on the number of photons detected from each particle, their difference in size, and the concentration of each component in solution. To distinguish two components, their diffusion times must differ by at least a factor of 1.6 for comparable quantum yields and a high fluorescence signal. Experiments were conducted with Rhodamine 6G and Rhodamine-labeled bovine serum albumin. The experimental results support the simulations. In addition, they show that even with a high fluorescence signal but significantly different quantum yields, the diffusion times must differ by a factor much bigger than 1.6 to distinguish the two components. Depending on the quantum yields and the difference in size, there exists a concentration threshold for the less abundant component below which it is not possible to determine with statistical means alone that two particles are in solution.


Nature Biotechnology | 2011

Overcoming barriers to membrane protein structure determination.

Roslyn M. Bill; Peter J. F. Henderson; So Iwata; Edmund R. S. Kunji; Hartmut Michel; Richard Neutze; Simon Newstead; Berend Poolman; Christopher G. Tate; Horst Vogel

After decades of slow progress, the pace of research on membrane protein structures is beginning to quicken thanks to various improvements in technology, including protein engineering and microfocus X-ray diffraction. Here we review these developments and, where possible, highlight generic new approaches to solving membrane protein structures based on recent technological advances. Rational approaches to overcoming the bottlenecks in the field are urgently required as membrane proteins, which typically comprise ∼30% of the proteomes of organisms, are dramatically under-represented in the structural database of the Protein Data Bank.


Biophysical Journal | 1986

The structure of melittin in membranes.

Horst Vogel; Fritz Jähnig

The conformation of the polypeptide melittin in lipid membranes as determined by Raman spectroscopy is a bent alpha-helix formed by the mainly hydrophobic residues 1-21, and a nonhelical COOH-terminal segment of the hydrophilic residues 22-26. Fluorescence quenching experiments on residue Trp19 reveal that all COOH-termini are located on that side of a vesicular membrane to which melittin was added. By means of fluorescence energy transfer between unmodified and modified Trp19 residues, melittin is shown to aggregate in membranes predominantly in the form of tetramers. These and previous results on the location and orientation of melittin permit the development of a model for the structure of melittin tetramers in membranes. The hydrophilic sides of four bilayer-spanning helices face each other to form a hydrophilic pore through the membrane.


Nature Biotechnology | 2004

Reversible site-selective labeling of membrane proteins in live cells

Emmanuel G Guignet; Ruud Hovius; Horst Vogel

Chemical and biological labeling is fundamental for the elucidation of the function of proteins within biochemical cellular networks. In particular, fluorescent probes allow detection of molecular interactions, mobility and conformational changes of proteins in live cells with high temporal and spatial resolution. We present a generic method to label proteins in vivo selectively, rapidly (seconds) and reversibly, with small molecular probes that can have a wide variety of properties. These probes comprise a chromophore and a metal-ion-chelating nitrilotriacetate (NTA) moiety, which binds reversibly and specifically to engineered oligohistidine sequences in proteins of interest. We demonstrate the feasibility of the approach by binding NTA-chromophore conjugates to a representative ligand-gated ion channel and G protein–coupled receptor, each containing a polyhistidine sequence. We investigated the ionotropic 5HT3 serotonin receptor by fluorescence measurements to characterize in vivo the probe-receptor interactions, yielding information on structure and plasma membrane distribution of the receptor.


Angewandte Chemie | 2000

A Chip‐Based Biosensor for the Functional Analysis of Single Ion Channels

Christian Schmidt; Michael Mayer; Horst Vogel

The functional anal. of single ion channel proteins presents a serious bottleneck in the process of finding new pharmacol. active compds. Currently available single channel recording methods are not suited for automation and miniaturization. However, new techniques such as combinatorial chem. and combinatorial genetics, which produce large amts. of potential drugs and mutant proteins, demand efficient and reliable screening as well as low sample consumption. Here we present a novel, silicon chip-based assay to probe the function of channel proteins. Membrane vesicles were electrophoretically positioned and fused across micrometer sized holes in the chip surface. Seal resistances up to 1000 GW obtained after a few seconds positioning time, allowed the detailed anal. of single ion channel currents. Std. sample vols. in the microliter range strongly reduce sample consumption, making the application of this technique in parallelized, highly sensitive biosensing devices for large-scale functional screening feasible. [on SciFinder (R)]


Nature Biotechnology | 1999

Micropatterned immobilization of a G protein-coupled receptor and direct detection of G protein activation.

Christoph Bieri; Oliver P. Ernst; Stephan Heyse; Klaus Peter Hofmann; Horst Vogel

G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) constitute an abundant family of membrane receptors of high pharmacological interest. Cell-based assays are the predominant means of assessing GPCR activation, but are limited by their inherent complexity. Functional molecular assays that directly and specifically report G protein activation by receptors could offer substantial advantages. We present an approach to immobilize receptors stably and with defined orientation to substrates. By surface plasmon resonance (SPR), we were able to follow ligand binding, G protein activation, and receptor deactivation of a representative GPCR, bovine rhodopsin. Microcontact printing was used to produce micrometer-sized patterns with high contrast in receptor activity. These patterns can be used for local referencing to enhance the sensitivity of chip-based assays. The immobilized receptor was stable both for hours and during several activation cycles. A ligand dose–response curve with the photoactivatable agonist 11-cis-retinal showed a half-maximal signal at 120 nM. Our findings may be useful to develop novel assay formats for GPCRs based on receptor immobilization to solid supports, particularly to sensor surfaces.


Chemistry & Biology | 2003

Directed evolution of O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase for efficient labeling of fusion proteins with small molecules in vivo

Alexandre Juillerat; Thomas Gronemeyer; Antje Keppler; Susanne Gendreizig; Horst Pick; Horst Vogel; Kai Johnsson

We report here the generation of mutants of the human O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (hAGT) for the efficient in vivo labeling of fusion proteins with synthetic reporter molecules. Libraries of hAGT were displayed on phage, and mutants capable of efficiently reacting with the inhibitor O(6)-benzylguanine were selected based on their ability to irreversibly transfer the benzyl group to a reactive cysteine residue. Using synthetic O(6)-benzylguanine derivatives, the selected mutant proteins allow for a highly efficient covalent labeling of hAGT fusion proteins in vivo and in vitro with small molecules and therefore should become important tools for studying protein function in living cells. In addition to various applications in proteomics, the selected mutants also yield insight into the interaction of the DNA repair protein hAGT with its inhibitor O(6)-benzylguanine.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Probing the Structure and Function of the Tachykinin Neurokinin-2 Receptor through Biosynthetic Incorporation of Fluorescent Amino Acids at Specific Sites

Gerardo Turcatti; Karin Nemeth; Michael D. Edgerton; Ulrich Meseth; François Talabot; Manuel C. Peitsch; Jonathan Knowles; Horst Vogel; André Chollet

A general method for understanding the mechanisms of ligand recognition and activation of G protein-coupled receptors has been developed. A study of ligand-receptor interactions in the prototypic seven-transmembrane neurokinin-2 receptor (NK2) using this fluorescence-based approach is presented. A fluorescent unnatural amino acid was introduced at known sites into NK2 by suppression of UAG nonsense codons with the aid of a chemically misacylated synthetic tRNA specifically designed for the incorporation of unnatural amino acids during heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Fluorescence-labeled NK2 mutants containing an unique 3-N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)-2,3-diaminopropionic acid (NBD-Dap) residue at either site 103, in the first extracellular loop, or 248, in the third cytoplasmic loop, were functionally active. The fluorescent NK2 mutants were investigated by microspectrofluorimetry in a native membrane environment. Intermolecular distances were determined by measuring the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between the fluorescent unnatural amino acid and a fluorescently labeled NK2 heptapeptide antagonist. These distances, calculated by the theory of Förster, permit to fix the ligand in space and define the structure of the receptor in a molecular model for NK2 ligand-receptor interactions. Our data are the first report of the incorporation of a fluorescent unnatural amino acid into a membrane protein in intact cells by the method of nonsense codon suppression, as well as the first measurement of experimental distances between a G protein-coupled receptor and its ligand by FRET. The method presented here can be generally applied to the analysis of spatial relationships in integral membrane proteins such as receptors or channels.

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Ruud Hovius

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Horst Pick

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Martha Liley

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Jean-Manuel Segura

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Ghérici Hassaïne

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Ana-Paula Tairi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Joachim Piguet

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Luigino Grasso

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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