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Dive into the research topics where Iker Valle Aramburu is active.

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Featured researches published by Iker Valle Aramburu.


Cell | 2015

Plasticity of an Ultrafast Interaction between Nucleoporins and Nuclear Transport Receptors

Sigrid Milles; Davide Mercadante; Iker Valle Aramburu; Malene Ringkjøbing Jensen; Niccolò Banterle; Christine Koehler; Swati Tyagi; Jane Clarke; Sarah L. Shammas; Martin Blackledge; Frauke Gräter; Edward A. Lemke

Summary The mechanisms by which intrinsically disordered proteins engage in rapid and highly selective binding is a subject of considerable interest and represents a central paradigm to nuclear pore complex (NPC) function, where nuclear transport receptors (NTRs) move through the NPC by binding disordered phenylalanine-glycine-rich nucleoporins (FG-Nups). Combining single-molecule fluorescence, molecular simulations, and nuclear magnetic resonance, we show that a rapidly fluctuating FG-Nup populates an ensemble of conformations that are prone to bind NTRs with near diffusion-limited on rates, as shown by stopped-flow kinetic measurements. This is achieved using multiple, minimalistic, low-affinity binding motifs that are in rapid exchange when engaging with the NTR, allowing the FG-Nup to maintain an unexpectedly high plasticity in its bound state. We propose that these exceptional physical characteristics enable a rapid and specific transport mechanism in the physiological context, a notion supported by single molecule in-cell assays on intact NPCs.


Nature Protocols | 2015

Labeling proteins on live mammalian cells using click chemistry

Ivana Nikić; Jun Hee Kang; Gemma Estrada Girona; Iker Valle Aramburu; Edward A. Lemke

We describe a protocol for the rapid labeling of cell-surface proteins in living mammalian cells using click chemistry. The labeling method is based on strain-promoted alkyne-azide cycloaddition (SPAAC) and strain-promoted inverse-electron–demand Diels–Alder cycloaddition (SPIEDAC) reactions, in which noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) bearing ring-strained alkynes or alkenes react, respectively, with dyes containing azide or tetrazine groups. To introduce ncAAs site specifically into a protein of interest (POI), we use genetic code expansion technology. The protocol can be described as comprising two steps. In the first step, an Amber stop codon is introduced—by site-directed mutagenesis—at the desired site on the gene encoding the POI. This plasmid is then transfected into mammalian cells, along with another plasmid that encodes an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase/tRNA (RS/tRNA) pair that is orthogonal to the hosts translational machinery. In the presence of the ncAA, the orthogonal RS/tRNA pair specifically suppresses the Amber codon by incorporating the ncAA into the polypeptide chain of the POI. In the second step, the expressed POI is labeled with a suitably reactive dye derivative that is directly supplied to the growth medium. We provide a detailed protocol for using commercially available ncAAs and dyes for labeling the insulin receptor, and we discuss the optimal surface-labeling conditions and the limitations of labeling living mammalian cells. The protocol involves an initial cloning step that can take 4–7 d, followed by the described transfections and labeling reaction steps, which can take 3–4 d.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Highly Stable trans‐Cyclooctene Amino Acids for Live‐Cell Labeling

Jan Hoffmann; Tilman Plass; Ivana Nikić; Iker Valle Aramburu; Christine Koehler; Hartmut Gillandt; Edward A. Lemke; Carsten Schultz

trans-Cyclooctene groups incorporated into proteins via non-canonical amino acids (ncAAs) are emerging as specific handles for bioorthogonal chemistry. Here, we present a highly improved synthetic access to the axially and the equatorially linked trans-cyclooct-2-ene isomers (1 a,b). We further show that the axially connected isomer has a half-life about 10 times higher than the equatorial isomer and reacts with tetrazines much faster, as determined by stopped-flow experiments. The improved properties resulted in different labeling performance of the insulin receptor on the surface of intact cells.


ChemBioChem | 2016

Hydrophilic trans-Cyclooctenylated Noncanonical Amino Acids for Fast Intracellular Protein Labeling.

Eszter Kozma; Ivana Nikić; Balázs Varga; Iker Valle Aramburu; Jun Hee Kang; Oliver T. Fackler; Edward A. Lemke; Péter Kele

Introduction of bioorthogonal functionalities (e.g., trans‐cyclooctene‐TCO) into a protein of interest by site‐specific genetic encoding of non‐canonical amino acids (ncAAs) creates uniquely targetable platforms for fluorescent labeling schemes in combination with tetrazine‐functionalized dyes. However, fluorescent labeling of an intracellular protein is usually compromised by high background, arising from the hydrophobicity of ncAAs; this is typically compensated for by hours‐long washout to remove excess ncAAs from the cellular interior. To overcome these problems, we designed, synthesized, and tested new, hydrophilic TCO‐ncAAs. One derivative, DOTCO‐lysine was genetically incorporated into proteins with good yield. The increased hydrophilicity shortened the excess ncAA washout time from hours to minutes, thus permitting rapid labeling and subsequent fluorescence microscopy.


Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2017

Floppy but not sloppy: Interaction mechanism of FG-nucleoporins and nuclear transport receptors

Iker Valle Aramburu; Edward A. Lemke

The nuclear pore complex (NPC) forms a permeability barrier between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Molecules that are able to cross this permeability barrier encounter different disordered phenylalanine glycine rich nucleoporins (FG-Nups) that act as a molecular filter and regulate the selective NPC crossing of biomolecules. In this review, we provide a current overview regarding the interaction mechanism between FG-Nups and the carrier molecules that recognize and enable the transport of cargoes through the NPC aiming to understand the general molecular mechanisms that facilitate the nucleocytoplasmic transport.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2017

Sampling Long- versus Short-Range Interactions Defines the Ability of Force Fields To Reproduce the Dynamics of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins

Davide Mercadante; Johannes A. Wagner; Iker Valle Aramburu; Edward A. Lemke; Frauke Gräter

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have valuably complemented experiments describing the dynamics of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), particularly since the proposal of models to solve the artificial collapse of IDPs in silico. Such models suggest redefining nonbonded interactions, by either increasing water dispersion forces or adopting the Kirkwood-Buff force field. These approaches yield extended conformers that better comply with experiments, but it is unclear if they all sample the same intrachain dynamics of IDPs. We have tested this by employing MD simulations and single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer spectroscopy to sample the dimensions of systems with different sequence compositions, namely strong and weak polyelectrolytes. For strong polyelectrolytes in which charge effects dominate, all the proposed solutions equally reproduce the expected ensembles dimensions. For weak polyelectrolytes, at lower cutoffs, force fields abnormally alter intrachain dynamics, overestimating excluded volume over chain flexibility or reporting no difference between the dynamics of different chains. The TIP4PD water model alone can reproduce experimentally observed changes in extensions (dimensions), but not quantitatively and with only weak statistical significance. Force field limitations are reversed with increased interaction cutoffs, showing that chain dynamics are critically defined by the presence of long-range interactions. Force field analysis aside, our study provides the first insights into how long-range interactions critically define IDP dimensions and raises the question of which length range is crucial to correctly sample the overall dimensions and internal dynamics of the large group of weakly charged yet highly polar IDPs.


Cell Reports | 2018

Two Differential Binding Mechanisms of FG-Nucleoporins and Nuclear Transport Receptors

Piau Siong Tan; Iker Valle Aramburu; Davide Mercadante; Swati Tyagi; Aritra Chowdhury; Daniel Spitz; Sarah L. Shammas; Frauke Gräter; Edward A. Lemke

Summary Phenylalanine-glycine-rich nucleoporins (FG-Nups) are intrinsically disordered proteins, constituting the selective barrier of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Previous studies showed that nuclear transport receptors (NTRs) were found to interact with FG-Nups by forming an “archetypal-fuzzy” complex through the rapid formation and breakage of interactions with many individual FG motifs. Here, we use single-molecule studies combined with atomistic simulations to show that, in sharp contrast, FG-Nup214 undergoes a coupled reconfiguration-binding mechanism when interacting with the export receptor CRM1. Association and dissociation rate constants are more than an order of magnitude lower than in the archetypal-fuzzy complex between FG-Nup153 and NTRs. Unexpectedly, this behavior appears not to be encoded selectively into CRM1 but rather into the FG-Nup214 sequence. The same distinct binding mechanisms are unperturbed in O-linked β-N-acetylglucosamine-modified FG-Nups. Our results have implications for differential roles of distinctly spatially distributed FG-Nup⋅NTR interactions in the cell.


Biophysical Journal | 2017

Dissecting Conformational Features and Binding Mechanisms of Phenylalanine-Glycine Rich Nucleoporins

Piau Siong Tan; Iker Valle Aramburu; Swati Tyagi; Aritra Chowdhury; Edward A. Lemke


Biophysical Journal | 2017

Surface Solvation Tunes Molecular-Recognition Plasticity in IDPs

Aritra Chowdhury; Iker Valle Aramburu; Piau Siong Tan; Edward A. Lemke


Archive | 2016

Platform: Intrinsically Disordered Proteins (IDP) and Aggregates II

Jannik Larsen; Kadla Røskva Rosholm; Søren L. Pedersenb; Henrik K. Munch; Vadym Tkach; John J. Sakon; Thomas Bjørnholm; Keith Weninger; Poul M. Bendix; Knud J. Jensen; Mark J. Uline; Nikos S. Hatzakis; Dimitrios Stamou; Iker Valle Aramburu; Davide Mercadante; Sigrid Milles; Malene Ringkjøbing; Christine Koehler; Swati Tyagi; Jane Clarke; Sarah L. Shammas; Martin Blackledge; Edward A. Lemke

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Edward A. Lemke

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Christine Koehler

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Ivana Nikić

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Swati Tyagi

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Davide Mercadante

Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies

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Aritra Chowdhury

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Jane Clarke

University of Cambridge

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Jun Hee Kang

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Piau Siong Tan

European Bioinformatics Institute

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