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Dive into the research topics where Kristine Steen Jensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristine Steen Jensen.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Protein Dielectric Constants Determined from NMR Chemical Shift Perturbations

Predrag Kukic; Damien Farrell; Lawrence P. McIntosh; E Bertrand García-Moreno; Kristine Steen Jensen; Zigmantas Toleikis; Kaare Teilum; Jens Erik Nielsen

Understanding the connection between protein structure and function requires a quantitative understanding of electrostatic effects. Structure-based electrostatic calculations are essential for this purpose, but their use has been limited by a long-standing discussion on which value to use for the dielectric constants (ε(eff) and ε(p)) required in Coulombic and Poisson-Boltzmann models. The currently used values for ε(eff) and ε(p) are essentially empirical parameters calibrated against thermodynamic properties that are indirect measurements of protein electric fields. We determine optimal values for ε(eff) and ε(p) by measuring protein electric fields in solution using direct detection of NMR chemical shift perturbations (CSPs). We measured CSPs in 14 proteins to get a broad and general characterization of electric fields. Coulombs law reproduces the measured CSPs optimally with a protein dielectric constant (ε(eff)) from 3 to 13, with an optimal value across all proteins of 6.5. However, when the water-protein interface is treated with finite difference Poisson-Boltzmann calculations, the optimal protein dielectric constant (ε(p)) ranged from 2 to 5 with an optimum of 3. It is striking how similar this value is to the dielectric constant of 2-4 measured for protein powders and how different it is from the ε(p) of 6-20 used in models based on the Poisson-Boltzmann equation when calculating thermodynamic parameters. Because the value of ε(p) = 3 is obtained by analysis of NMR chemical shift perturbations instead of thermodynamic parameters such as pK(a) values, it is likely to describe only the electric field and thus represent a more general, intrinsic, and transferable ε(p) common to most folded proteins.


Biochemistry | 2010

Thiol-Disulfide Exchange between Glutaredoxin and Glutathione

Rasmus Iversen; Peter Anders Andersen; Kristine Steen Jensen; Jakob R. Winther; Bent W. Sigurskjold

Glutaredoxins are ubiquitous thiol-disulfide oxidoreductases which catalyze the reduction of glutathione-protein mixed disulfides. Belonging to the thioredoxin family, they contain a conserved active site CXXC motif. The N-proximal active site cysteine can form a mixed disulfide with glutathione or an intramolecular disulfide with the C-proximal cysteine. The C-proximal cysteine is not known to be involved in the catalytic mechanism. The stability of the mixed disulfide with glutathione has been investigated in detail using a mutant variant of yeast glutaredoxin 1, in which the C-proximal active site cysteine has been replaced with serine. The exchange reaction between the reduced protein and oxidized glutathione leading to formation of the mixed disulfide could readily be monitored by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) due to the enthalpic contributions from the noncovalent interactions and the protonation of glutathione thiolate. An algorithm for the analysis of this type of reaction by ITC was developed and showed that the interaction is enthalpy driven with a large entropy penalty. The applicability of the method was verified by a mass spectrometry-based approach, which gave a standard reduction potential of -295 mV for the mixed disulfide. In another set of experiments, the pK(a) value of the active site cysteine was determined. In line with what has been observed for other glutaredoxins, this cysteine was found to have a very low pK(a) value. The glutathionylation of glutaredoxin was shown to have a substantial effect on the thermal stability of the protein as revealed by differential scanning calorimetry.


Biochemistry | 2014

The pKa Value and Accessibility of Cysteine Residues Are Key Determinants for Protein Substrate Discrimination by Glutaredoxin

Kristine Steen Jensen; Jeppe T. Pedersen; Jakob R. Winther; Kaare Teilum

The enzyme glutaredoxin catalyzes glutathione exchange, but little is known about its interaction with protein substrates. Very different proteins are substrates in vitro, and the enzyme seems to have low requirements for specific protein interactions. Here we present a systematic investigation of the interaction between human glutaredoxin 1 and glutathionylated variants of a single model protein. Thus, single cysteine variants of acyl-coenzyme A binding protein were produced creating a set of substrates in the same protein background. The rate constants for deglutathionylation differ by more than 2 orders of magnitude between the best (k1 = 1.75 × 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) and the worst substrate (k1 = 4 × 10(2) M(-1) s(-1)). The pKa values of the substrate cysteine residues were determined by NMR spectroscopy and found to vary from 8.2 to 9.9. Rates of glutaredoxin 1-catalyzed deglutathionylation were assessed with respect to substrate cysteine pKa values, cysteine residue accessibility, local stability, and backbone dynamics. Good substrates are characterized by a combination of high accessibility of the glutathionylated site and low pKa of the cysteine residue.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Millisecond Dynamics in Glutaredoxin during Catalytic Turnover Is Dependent on Substrate Binding and Absent in the Resting States

Kristine Steen Jensen; Jakob R. Winther; Kaare Teilum

Conformational dynamics is important for enzyme function. Which motions of enzymes determine catalytic efficiency and whether the same motions are important for all enzymes, however, are not well understood. Here we address conformational dynamics in glutaredoxin during catalytic turnover with a combination of NMR magnetization transfer, R(2) relaxation dispersion, and ligand titration experiments. Glutaredoxins catalyze a glutathione exchange reaction, forming a stable glutathinoylated enzyme intermediate. The equilibrium between the reduced state and the glutathionylated state was biochemically tuned to exchange on the millisecond time scale. The conformational changes of the protein backbone during catalysis were followed by (15)N nuclear spin relaxation dispersion experiments. A conformational transition that is well described by a two-state process with an exchange rate corresponding to the glutathione exchange rate was observed for 23 residues. Binding of reduced glutathione resulted in competitive inhibition of the reduced enzyme having kinetics similar to that of the reaction. This observation couples the motions observed during catalysis directly to substrate binding. Backbone motions on the time scale of catalytic turnover were not observed for the enzyme in the resting states, implying that alternative conformers do not accumulate to significant concentrations. These results infer that the turnover rate in glutaredoxin is governed by formation of a productive enzyme-substrate encounter complex, and that catalysis proceeds by an induced fit mechanism rather than by conformer selection driven by intrinsic conformational dynamics.


Extremophiles | 2014

Specificities and pH profiles of adenine and hypoxanthine–guanine–xanthine phosphoribosyltransferases (nucleotide synthases) of the thermoacidophile archaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus

Michael Riis Hansen; Kristine Steen Jensen; Mads Skytte Rasmussen; Stig Christoffersen; Anders Kadziola; Kaj Frank Jensen

Two open reading frames in the genome of Sulfolobus solfataricus (SSO2341 and SSO2424) were cloned and expressed in E. coli. The protein products were purified and their enzymatic activity characterized. Although SSO2341 was annotated as a gene (gpT-1) encoding a 6-oxopurine phosphoribosyltransferase (PRTase), the protein product turned out to be a PRTase highly specific for adenine and we suggest that the reading frame should be renamed apT. The other reading frame SSO2424 (gpT-2) proved to be a true 6-oxopurine PRTase active with hypoxanthine, xanthine and guanine as substrates, and we suggest that the gene should be renamed gpT. Both enzymes exhibited unusual profiles of activity versus pH. The adenine PRTase showed the highest activity at pH 7.5–8.5, but had a distinct peak of activity also at pH 4.5. The 6-oxo PRTase showed maximal activity with hypoxanthine and guanine around pH 4.5, while maximal activity with xanthine was observed at pH 7.5. We discuss likely reasons why SSO2341 in S. solfataricus and similar open reading frames in other Crenarchaeota could not be identified as genes encoding APRTase.Abstract Two open reading frames in the genome of Sulfolobus solfataricus (SSO2341 and SSO2424) were cloned and expressed in E. coli. The protein products were purified and their enzymatic activity characterized. Although SSO2341 was annotated as a gene (gpT-1) encoding a 6-oxopurine phosphoribosyltransferase (PRTase), the protein product turned out to be a PRTase highly specific for adenine and we suggest that the reading frame should be renamed apT. The other reading frame SSO2424 (gpT-2) proved to be a true 6-oxopurine PRTase active with hypoxanthine, xanthine and guanine as substrates, and we suggest that the gene should be renamed gpT. Both enzymes exhibited unusual profiles of activity versus pH. The adenine PRTase showed the highest activity at pH 7.5–8.5, but had a distinct peak of activity also at pH 4.5. The 6-oxo PRTase showed maximal activity with hypoxanthine and guanine around pH 4.5, while maximal activity with xanthine was observed at pH 7.5. We discuss likely reasons why SSO2341 in S. solfataricus and similar open reading frames in other Crenarchaeota could not be identified as genes encoding APRTase.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

A fluorescent probe which allows highly specific thiol labeling at low pH

Jonas Willum Nielsen; Kristine Steen Jensen; Rosa E. Hansen; Charlotte Held Gotfredsen; Jakob R. Winther

Determination of the thiol-disulfide status in biological systems is challenging as redox pools are easily perturbed during sample preparation. This is particularly pertinent under neutral to mildly alkaline conditions typically required for alkylation of thiols. Here we describe the synthesis and properties of a thiol-specific reagent, fluorescent cyclic activated disulfide (FCAD), which includes the fluorescein moiety as fluorophore and utilizes a variation of thiol-disulfide exchange chemistry. The leaving-group character of FCAD makes it reactive at pH 3, allowing modification at low pH, limiting thiol-disulfide exchange. Different applications are demonstrated including picomolar thiol detection, determination of redox potentials, and in-gel detection of labeled proteins.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2009

Kinetic and Thermodynamic Aspects of Cellular Thiol–Disulfide Redox Regulation

Kristine Steen Jensen; Rosa E. Hansen; Jakob R. Winther


Biochemistry | 2007

Structural and Enzymatic Investigation of the Sulfolobus Solfataricus Uridylate Kinase Shows Competitive Utp Inhibition and the Lack of GTP Stimulation

Kristine Steen Jensen; Eva Johansson; Kaj Frank Jensen


Biochemistry | 2015

Adenine Phosphoribosyltransferase from Sulfolobus solfataricus Is an Enzyme with Unusual Kinetic Properties and a Crystal Structure that Suggests It Evolved from a 6-Oxopurine Phosphoribosyltransferase

Kaj Frank Jensen; Michael Riis Hansen; Kristine Steen Jensen; Stig Christoffersen; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen; Anne Mølgaard; Anders Kadziola


Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2011

Sulfolobus solfataricusadenine phosphoribosyltransferase

Anders Kadziola; Kristine Steen Jensen; Anne Mølgaard; Jens-Christian Navarro Poulsen; Kaj Frank Jensen

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Anne Mølgaard

University of Copenhagen

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Kaare Teilum

University of Copenhagen

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Rosa E. Hansen

University of Copenhagen

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