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Dive into the research topics where Johan N. Jansonius is active.

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Featured researches published by Johan N. Jansonius.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 1998

Structure, evolution and action of vitamin B6-dependent enzymes

Johan N. Jansonius

The number of known three-dimensional structures of vitamin B6-dependent enzymes has doubled in the past two years. A fourth type of fold for B6-dependent enzymes, involving a TIM-barrel domain, has been discovered. Alanine racemase is the first known representative of this new fold. Significant progress has been made in understanding the allosteric effects in the tryptophan synthase reaction.


Structure | 1995

2.0 A structure of indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase from the hyperthermophile Sulfolobus solfataricus: possible determinants of protein stability.

Michael Hennig; Beatrice Darimont; Reinhard Sterner; Kasper Kirschner; Johan N. Jansonius

BACKGROUND Recent efforts to understand the basis of protein stability have focused attention on comparative studies of proteins from hyperthermophilic and mesophilic organisms. Most work to date has been on either oligomeric enzymes or monomers comprising more than one domain. Such studies are hampered by the need to distinguish between stabilizing interactions acting between subunits or domains from those acting within domains. In order to simplify the search for determinants of protein stability we have chosen to study the monomeric enzyme indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus (sIGPS), which grows optimally at 90 degrees C. RESULTS The 2.0 A crystal structure of sIGPS was determined and compared with the known 2.0 A structure of the IGPS domain of the bifunctional enzyme from the mesophilic bacterium Escherichia coli (eIGPS). sIGPS and eIGPS have only 30% sequence identity, but share high structural similarity. Both are single-domain (beta/alpha)8 barrel proteins, with one (eIGPS) or two (sIGPS) additional helices inserted before the first beta strand. The thermostable sIGPS has many more salt bridges than eIGPS. Several salt bridges crosslink adjacent alpha helices or participate in triple or quadruple salt-bridge clusters. The number of helix capping, dipole stabilizing and hydrophobic interactions is also increased in sIGPS. CONCLUSIONS The higher stability of sIGPS compared with eIGPS seems to be the result of several improved interactions. These include a larger number of salt bridges, stabilization of alpha helices and strengthening of both polypeptide chain termini and solvent-exposed loops.


Structure | 1995

The structure of OmpF porin in a tetragonal crystal form.

Sandra W. Cowan; Rm Garavito; Johan N. Jansonius; Ja Jenkins; R Karlsson; N König; Ef Pai; Richard A. Pauptit; Pierre J. Rizkallah; Jurg P. Rosenbusch; Gabriele Rummel; Tilman Schirmer

BACKGROUND OmpF porin is a trimeric integral membrane protein responsible for the passive transport of small hydrophilic molecules, such as nutrients and waste products, across the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. Very few membrane proteins have been crystallized in three dimensions, yet this stable protein can be obtained in several crystal forms. Comparison of the structures of the same membrane protein in two different packing environments is of major interest, because it allows us to explore the integrity of the structure outside the natural membrane environment. RESULTS The structure of OmpF porin in a tetragonal crystal form with two trimers per asymmetric unit has been determined at 3.2 A resolution and compared with that obtained previously in a trigonal crystal form. The lattice contacts involve only polar atoms, whereas extensive hydrophobic protein-protein interactions were found in the trigonal lattice. The trimer structure is virtually identical in both. CONCLUSIONS Our comparison reveals that the overall structure of OmpF is not influenced by crystal lattice constraints and, thus, presumably bears close resemblance to the in vivo structure. The tetragonal crystal structure has provided the starting model for the phasing of neutron diffraction data obtained from this crystal form, as described in an accompanying article.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2001

Structural insight into Parkinson's disease treatment from drug-inhibited DOPA decarboxylase.

Peter Burkhard; Paola Dominici; Carla Borri-Voltattorni; Johan N. Jansonius; Vladimir N. Malashkevich

DOPA decarboxylase (DDC) is responsible for the synthesis of the key neurotransmitters dopamine and serotonin via decarboxylation of l-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (l-DOPA) and l-5-hydroxytryptophan, respectively. DDC has been implicated in a number of clinic disorders, including Parkinsons disease and hypertension. Peripheral inhibitors of DDC are currently used to treat these diseases. We present the crystal structures of ligand-free DDC and its complex with the anti-Parkinson drug carbiDOPA. The inhibitor is bound to the enzyme by forming a hydrazone linkage with the cofactor, and its catechol ring is deeply buried in the active site cleft. The structures provide the molecular basis for the development of new inhibitors of DDC with better pharmacological characteristics.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1996

Structure of a novel extracellular Ca(2+)-binding module in BM-40.

Erhard Hohenester; Patrik Maurer; Christine Hohenadl; Rupert Timpl; Johan N. Jansonius; Jürgen Engel

The EF-hand is a highly conserved Ca2+-binding motif found in many cytosolic Ca2+-modulated proteins. Here we report the crystal structure at 2.0 Å resolution of the carboxy-terminal domain of human BM-40 (SPARC, osteonectin), an extracellular matrix protein containing an EF-hand pair. The two EF-hands interact canonically but their detailed structures are unusual. In the first EF-hand a one-residue insertion is accommodated by a cis-peptide bond and by substituting a carboxylate by a peptide carbonyl as a Ca2+ ligand. The second EF-hand is stabilized by a disulphide bond. The EF-hand pair interacts tightly with an amphiphilic amino-terminal helix, reminiscent of target peptide binding by calmodulin. The present structure defines a novel protein module occurring in several other extracellular proteins.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1983

X-ray diffraction analysis of matrix porin, an integral membrane protein from Escherichia coli outer membranes☆

R.M. Garavito; John A. Jenkins; Johan N. Jansonius; Rolf Karlsson; Jurg P. Rosenbusch

An integral membrane protein forming channels across Escherichia coli outer membranes, porin, has been crystallized using a polyethylene glycol or salt-generated two-phase system. Monodispersity and homogeneity of protein-detergent complexes were found to be prerequisites for reproducible formation of crystals amenable to X-ray structural analysis. By varying pH, detergent and buffer type, large crystals of three different habits can be obtained, two of which are discussed in this paper. The tetragonal form (space group P4(2); unit cell dimensions, a = b = 155 A, c = 172 A) is suitable for X-ray analysis. Low temperature induces a change of the space group to P4(2)22, with a single trimer in the asymmetric unit. This crystal form diffracts to a resolution beyond 2.9 A. The hexagonal crystal form (space group P6(3)22; unit cell dimensions, a = b = 93 A, c = 220 A) is limited in resolution to 4.5 A, but reveals a packing arrangement very similar to that in two-dimensional membrane-like crystalline arrays.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1981

Repeated seeding technique for growing large single crystals of proteins.

C. Thaller; L.H. Weaver; G. Eichele; E. Wilson; R. Karlsson; Johan N. Jansonius

Abstract A seeding method has been developed for growing large single crystals of globular proteins once small, preliminary specimens have been obtained. A small, carefully washed, crystal is used to seed a protein solution. After growth has stopped, the crystal is removed and inserted into a fresh protein solution, which allows it to grow further. This process can be repeated until the crystal has reached the desired dimensions. In several instances isomorphous heavy-atom derivatives could be obtained by including heavy-atom reagents in the seeded protein solution. This seeding technique is shown to work reproducibly with several proteins and under different conditions, suggesting that it might be generally applicable.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1988

Crystal structure of neutral protease from Bacillus cereus refined at 3.0A˚resolution and comparison with the homologous but more thermostable enzyme thermolysin

Richard A. Pauptit; Rolf Karlsson; Daniel Picot; John A. Jenkins; Ann-Sofie Niklaus-Reimer; Johan N. Jansonius

Neutral protease from Bacillus cereus exhibits a 73% amino acid sequence homology to thermolysin, for which an accurate crystal structure exists. The B. cereus enzyme is, however, markedly less thermostable. The neutral protease was crystallized and diffraction data to 3.0 A resolution were recorded by oscillation photography. The crystal structure was solved by molecular replacement methods using thermolysin as a trial molecule. The solution was improved by rigid-body refinement and model rebuilding into electron density omit-maps. The atomic co-ordinates were refined to R = 21.7% at 3.0 A resolution. Comparison of the resultant model with the thermolysin structure shows that the two enzymes are very similar with a root-mean-square deviation between equivalent C alpha-atoms of 0.88 A. The gamma-turn found in thermolysin is transformed into a beta-turn in the neutral protease by the insertion of a glycine residue. There appear to be no contributions to the enhanced thermostability of thermolysin from additional salt bridges, whereas contributions in the form of extra hydrogen bonding interactions could be important. Other factors that may affect thermostability include the two glycine to alanine exchanges and perturbations in the environment of the double calcium site.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1977

Isolation, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic data of aspartate aminotransferase from chicken heart mitochondria☆

Heinz Gehring; Philipp Christen; Gregor Eichele; M. Glor; Johan N. Jansonius; A.-S. Reimer; J.D.G. Smit; Christina Thaller

Abstract The mitochondrial isoenzyme of aspartate aminotransferase (E.C. 2.6.1.1) has been isolated from chicken heart in an electrophoretically and immunologically homogeneous form. Large, well-diffracting single crystals of this enzyme, a dimeric molecule with a molecular weight of 90,000, have been grown by vapour phase diffusion against polyethylene glycol solutions. The crystals belong to space group P1. The unit cell, with the dimensions a = 55.6 A , 6 = 58.7 A , c = 76.0 A , α = 85.3 °, β = 109.2 °, γ = 115.6 °, contains a single dimer. The diffraction pattern extends to at least 2.1 A resolution.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

The catalytic mechanism of indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase: crystal structures of complexes of the enzyme from Sulfolobus solfataricus with substrate analogue, substrate, and product.

Michael Hennig; Beatrice Darimont; Johan N. Jansonius; Kasper Kirschner

Indoleglycerol phosphate synthase catalyzes the ring closure of an N-alkylated anthranilate to a 3-alkyl indole derivative, a reaction requiring Lewis acid catalysis in vitro. Here, we investigated the enzymatic reaction mechanism through X-ray crystallography of complexes of the hyperthermostable enzyme from Sulfolobus solfataricus with the substrate 1-(o-carboxyphenylamino) 1-deoxyribulose 5-phosphate, a substrate analogue and the product indole-3-glycerol phosphate. The substrate and the substrate analogue are bound to the active site in a similar, extended conformation between the previously identified phosphate binding site and a hydrophobic pocket for the anthranilate moiety. This binding mode is unproductive, because the carbon atoms that are to be joined are too far apart. The indole ring of the bound product resides in a second hydrophobic pocket adjacent to that of the anthranilate moiety of the substrate. Although the hydrophobic moiety of the substrate moves during catalysis from one hydrophobic pocket to the other, the triosephosphate moiety remains rigidly bound to the same set of hydrogen-bonding residues. Simultaneously, the catalytically important residues Lys53, Lys110 and Glu159 maintain favourable distances to the atoms of the ligand undergoing covalent changes. On the basis of these data, the structures of two putative catalytic intermediates were modelled into the active site. This new structural information and the modelling studies provide further insight into the mechanism of enzyme-catalyzed indole synthesis. The charged epsilon-amino group of Lys110 is the general acid, and the carboxylate group of Glu159 is the general base. Lys53 guides the substrate undergoing conformational transitions during catalysis, by forming a salt-bridge to the carboxylate group of its anthranilate moiety.

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Vladimir N. Malashkevich

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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