Kerstin Baier
Humboldt University of Berlin
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Featured researches published by Kerstin Baier.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Anne Karradt; Johanna Sobanski; Jens Mattow; Wolfgang Lockau; Kerstin Baier
When cyanobacteria are starved for nitrogen, expression of the NblA protein increases and thereby induces proteolytic degradation of phycobilisomes, light-harvesting complexes of pigmented proteins. Phycobilisome degradation leads to a color change of the cells from blue-green to yellow-green, referred to as bleaching or chlorosis. As reported previously, NblA binds via a conserved region at its C terminus to the α-subunits of phycobiliproteins, the main components of phycobilisomes. We demonstrate here that a highly conserved stretch of amino acids in the N-terminal helix of NblA is essential for protein function in vivo. Affinity purification of glutathione S-transferase-tagged NblA, expressed in a Nostoc sp. PCC7120 mutant lacking wild-type NblA, resulted in co-precipitation of ClpC, encoded by open reading frame alr2999 of the Nostoc chromosome. ClpC is a HSP100 chaperone partner of the Clp protease. ATP-dependent binding of NblA to ClpC was corroborated by in vitro pull-down assays. Introducing amino acid exchanges, we verified that the conserved N-terminal motif of NblA mediates the interaction with ClpC. Further results indicate that NblA binds phycobiliprotein subunits and ClpC simultaneously, thus bringing the proteins into close proximity. Altogether these results suggest that NblA may act as an adaptor protein that guides a ClpC·ClpP complex to the phycobiliprotein disks in the rods of phycobilisomes, thereby initiating the degradation process.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Ralf Bienert; Kerstin Baier; Rudolf Volkmer; Wolfgang Lockau; Udo Heinemann
Cyanobacterial light-harvesting complexes, the phycobilisomes, are proteolytically degraded when the organisms are starved for combined nitrogen, a process referred to as chlorosis or bleaching. Gene nblA, present in all phycobilisome-containing organisms, encodes a protein of about 7 kDa that plays a key role in phycobilisome degradation. The mode of action of NblA in this degradation process is poorly understood. Here we presented the 1.8-Å crystal structure of NblA from Anabaena sp. PCC 7120. In the crystal, NblA is present as a four-helix bundle formed by dimers, the basic structural units. By using pull-down assays with immobilized NblA and peptide scanning, we showed that NblA specifically binds to the α-subunits of phycocyanin and phycoerythrocyanin, the main building blocks of the phycobilisome rod structure. By site-directed mutagenesis, we identified amino acid residues in NblA that are involved in phycobilisome binding. The results provided evidence that NblA is directly involved in phycobilisome degradation, and the results allowed us to present a model that gives insight into the interaction of this small protein with the phycobilisomes.
Microbiology | 2009
Miriam Drath; Kerstin Baier; Karl Forchhammer
Methionine aminopeptidases (MetAPs or MAPs, encoded by map genes) are ubiquitous and pivotal enzymes for protein maturation in all living organisms. Whereas most bacteria harbour only one map gene, many cyanobacterial genomes contain two map paralogues, the genome of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 even three. The physiological function of multiple map paralogues remains elusive so far. This communication reports for the first time differential MetAP function in a cyanobacterium. In Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, the universally conserved mapC gene (sll0555) is predominantly expressed in exponentially growing cells and appears to be a housekeeping gene. By contrast, expression of mapA (slr0918) and mapB (slr0786) genes increases during stress conditions. The mapB paralogue is only transiently expressed, whereas the widely distributed mapA gene appears to be the major MetAP during stress conditions. A mapA-deficient Synechocystis mutant shows a subtle impairment of photosystem II properties even under non-stressed conditions. In particular, the binding site for the quinone Q(B) is affected, indicating specific N-terminal methionine processing requirements of photosystem II components. MAP-A-specific processing becomes essential under certain stress conditions, since the mapA-deficient mutant is severely impaired in surviving conditions of prolonged nitrogen starvation and high light exposure.
Plant Journal | 1999
Elisabeth Truernit; Ruth Stadler; Kerstin Baier; Norbert Sauer
FEBS Journal | 2000
Holger Berg; Karl Ziegler; Kirill Piotukh; Kerstin Baier; Wolfgang Lockau; Rudolf Volkmer-Engert
Microbiology | 2004
Kerstin Baier; Heike Lehmann; Dirk Paul Stephan; Wolfgang Lockau
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2001
Kerstin Baier; Sabine Nicklisch; Christoph Grundner; Jenny Reinecke; Wolfgang Lockau
Plant Cell and Environment | 2000
M. Büttner; Elisabeth Truernit; Kerstin Baier; J. Scholz‐Starke; M. Sontheim; C. Lauterbach; V. A. R. Huss; Norbert Sauer
Plant Molecular Biology | 1994
Norbert Sauer; Kerstin Baier; Manfred Gahrtz; Ruth Stadler; Jürgen Stolz; Elisabeth Truernit
Archive | 1998
R. Paul Woods; Craig R. Smith; Dan Kramer; Heike Enke; Kerstin Baier; Ulf Dühring; Karl Ziegler; Wolfgang Lockau; Marianne Gründel; John Robert Coleman; Christine Oesterhelt