Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Laxmikanth Kollipara is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Laxmikanth Kollipara.


Proteomics | 2014

The next level of complexity: Crosstalk of posttranslational modifications

A. Saskia Venne; Laxmikanth Kollipara; René P. Zahedi

Beside gene expression and translational control, which are relatively slow, PTM of proteins represents the major level of regulation, from very fast and reversible to slow or irreversible processes. PTMs affect protein structure and act as molecular switches, which regulate the interaction of proteins with DNA, cofactors, lipids, and other proteins. In the past few years, evidence for extensive crosstalk between PTMs has accumulated. The combination of different PTMs on protein surfaces can create a “PTM code,” which can be recognized by specific effectors to initiate/inhibit downstream events, only inducing/retaining a signal once the complementary incoming signals are present at the same time and place. Although MS‐based proteomics has substantially improved our knowledge about PTMs, currently sensitive and dedicated analytical strategies are available only for few different types of PTM. Several recent studies focused on the combinatorial analysis of PTMs, but preferentially utilized peptide‐centric bottom‐up strategies might be too restricted to decipher complex PTM codes. Here, we discuss the current state of PTM crosstalk research and how proteomics may contribute to understanding PTM codes, representing the next level of complexity and one of the biggest challenges for future proteomics research.


Proteomics | 2013

Protein carbamylation: In vivo modification or in vitro artefact?

Laxmikanth Kollipara; René P. Zahedi

Carbamylation (carbamoylation) of lysine residues and protein N‐termini is a nonenzymatic PTM that has been related to protein ageing. In contrast to other PTM, such as phosphorylation, carbamylation can be artificially introduced during sample preparation with urea, thus affecting studies directed toward in vivo carbamylation. In aqueous solution, urea—commonly used for denaturing proteins—is in equilibrium with ammonium and isocyanate. Under alkaline conditions, the latter can react with primary amines of free N‐termini and ε‐amine groups of lysines to form carbamyl derivatives. Despite being a relatively slow process, which is accelerated at elevated temperatures, prolonged incubation of protein/peptide samples in urea buffers can induce undesired carbamylation, hampering not only the proteolytic digestion with trypsin and peptide identification by MS, but also interfering with stable isotope‐labeling techniques such as iTRAQ, tandem mass tags, and isotope‐coded protein labeling. Here, we evaluated the extent of urea‐induced carbamylation under commonly used sample preparation conditions. From our results, we can deduce that carbamylation occurs in all cases involving urea, however with varying degree: e.g. carbamidomethylation in the presence of 8.0 M urea induced carbamylation of 17% of N‐termini and 4% of Lys residues. Additionally, researching a recently published large‐scale dataset revealed a high degree of urea‐induced carbamylation in current proteomic samples.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2014

Myopathy in Marinesco–Sjögren syndrome links endoplasmic reticulum chaperone dysfunction to nuclear envelope pathology

Andreas Roos; Stephan Buchkremer; Laxmikanth Kollipara; Thomas Labisch; Christian Gatz; Manuela Zitzelsberger; Eva Brauers; Kay Nolte; J. Michael Schröder; Janbernd Kirschner; Christopher Marvin Jesse; Hans H. Goebel; Anand Goswami; Richard Zimmermann; René P. Zahedi; Jan Senderek; Joachim Weis

Marinesco–Sjögren syndrome (MSS) features cerebellar ataxia, mental retardation, cataracts, and progressive vacuolar myopathy with peculiar myonuclear alterations. Most MSS patients carry homozygous or compound heterozygous SIL1 mutations. SIL1 is a nucleotide exchange factor for the endoplasmic reticulum resident chaperone BiP which controls a plethora of essential processes in the endoplasmic reticulum. In this study we made use of the spontaneous Sil1 mouse mutant woozy to explore pathomechanisms leading to Sil1 deficiency-related skeletal muscle pathology. We found severe, progressive myopathy characterized by alterations of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, accumulation of autophagic vacuoles, mitochondrial changes, and prominent myonuclear pathology including nuclear envelope and nuclear lamina alterations. These abnormalities were remarkably similar to the myopathy in human patients with MSS. In particular, the presence of perinuclear membranous structures which have been reported as an ultrastructural hallmark of MSS-related myopathy could be confirmed in woozy muscles. We found that these structures are derived from the nuclear envelope and nuclear lamina and associate with proliferations of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In line with impaired function of BiP secondary to loss of its nucleotide exchange factor Sil1, we observed activation of the unfolded protein response and the endoplasmic-reticulum-associated protein degradation-pathway. Despite initiation of the autophagy–lysosomal system, autophagic clearance was found ineffective which is in agreement with the formation of autophagic vacuoles. This report identifies woozy muscle as a faithful phenocopy of the MSS myopathy. Moreover, we provide a link between two well-established disease mechanisms in skeletal muscle, dysfunction of chaperones and nuclear envelope pathology.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Insight into the Inhibition of Drug-Resistant Mutants of the Receptor Tyrosine Kinase EGFR.

Julian Engel; Christian Becker; Jonas Lategahn; Marina Keul; Julia Ketzer; Thomas Mühlenberg; Laxmikanth Kollipara; Carsten Schultz-Fademrecht; René P. Zahedi; Sebastian Bauer; Daniel Rauh

Targeting acquired drug resistance represents the major challenge in the treatment of EGFR-driven non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Herein, we describe the structure-based design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of a novel class of covalent EGFR inhibitors that exhibit excellent inhibition of EGFR-mutant drug-resistant cells. Protein X-ray crystallography combined with detailed kinetic studies led to a deeper understanding of the mode of inhibition of EGFR-T790M and provided insight into the key principles for effective inhibition of the recently discovered tertiary mutation at EGFR-C797S.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

The FERM protein EPB41L5 regulates actomyosin contractility and focal adhesion formation to maintain the kidney filtration barrier

Christoph Schell; Manuel Rogg; Martina Suhm; Martin Helmstädter; Dominik Sellung; Mako Yasuda-Yamahara; Oliver Kretz; Victoria Küttner; Hani Suleiman; Laxmikanth Kollipara; René P. Zahedi; Albert Sickmann; Stefan Eimer; Andrey S. Shaw; Albrecht Kramer-Zucker; Mariko Hirano-Kobayashi; Takaya Abe; Shinichi Aizawa; Florian Grahammer; Björn Hartleben; Jörn Dengjel; Tobias B. Huber

Significance Loss of podocyte adhesion is a hallmark of glomerular disease progression. Here we unravel the in vivo composition of the podocyte adhesion machinery by the use of quantitative proteomics and identify the FERM domain protein EPB41L5 as a selectively enriched novel podocyte focal adhesion protein. EPB41L5 is essential to maintaining podocyte adhesion in vivo by recruiting the Rho GEF ARHGEF18, initiating a signaling cascade and ultimately resulting in increased actomyosin activity and focal adhesion stabilization. As EPB41L5 is down-regulated in various glomerular pathologies, these findings offer a perspective for interventions aiming to prevent loss of podocytes in glomerular disease. Podocytes form the outer part of the glomerular filter, where they have to withstand enormous transcapillary filtration forces driving glomerular filtration. Detachment of podocytes from the glomerular basement membrane precedes most glomerular diseases. However, little is known about the regulation of podocyte adhesion in vivo. Thus, we systematically screened for podocyte-specific focal adhesome (FA) components, using genetic reporter models in combination with iTRAQ-based mass spectrometry. This approach led to the identification of FERM domain protein EPB41L5 as a highly enriched podocyte-specific FA component in vivo. Genetic deletion of Epb41l5 resulted in severe proteinuria, detachment of podocytes, and development of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Remarkably, by binding and recruiting the RhoGEF ARGHEF18 to the leading edge, EPB41L5 directly controls actomyosin contractility and subsequent maturation of focal adhesions, cell spreading, and migration. Furthermore, EPB41L5 controls matrix-dependent outside-in signaling by regulating the focal adhesome composition. Thus, by linking extracellular matrix sensing and signaling, focal adhesion maturation, and actomyosin activation EPB41L5 ensures the mechanical stability required for podocytes at the kidney filtration barrier. Finally, a diminution of EPB41L5-dependent signaling programs appears to be a common theme of podocyte disease, and therefore offers unexpected interventional therapeutic strategies to prevent podocyte loss and kidney disease progression.


Molecular Neurobiology | 2016

Cellular Signature of SIL1 Depletion: Disease Pathogenesis due to Alterations in Protein Composition Beyond the ER Machinery.

Andreas Roos; Laxmikanth Kollipara; Stephan Buchkremer; Thomas Labisch; Eva Brauers; Christian Gatz; Chris Lentz; Jose Gerardo-Nava; Joachim Weis; René P. Zahedi

SIL1 acts as nucleotide exchange factor for the endoplasmic reticulum chaperone BiP. Mutations of SIL1 cause Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome (MSS), a neurodegenerative disorder. Moreover, a particular function of SIL1 for etiopathology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) was highlighted, thus declaring the functional SIL1-BiP complex as a modifier for neurodegenerative disorders. Thereby, depletion of SIL1 was associated with an earlier manifestation and in strengthened disease progression in ALS. Owing to the absence of appropriate in vitro models, the precise cellular pathophysiological mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration in MSS and triggering the same in further disorders like ALS are still elusive. We found that SIL1 depletion in human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells led to structural changes of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) including the nuclear envelope and mitochondrial degeneration that closely mimic pathological alterations in MSS and ALS. Functional studies revealed disturbed protein transport, cytotoxicity with reduced proliferation and viability, accompanied by activation of cellular defense mechanisms including the unfolded protein response, ER-associated degradation pathway, proteolysis, and expression of apoptotic and survival factors. Our data moreover indicated that proteins involved in cytoskeletal organization, vesicular transport, mitochondrial function, and neurological processes contribute to SIL1 pathophysiology. Altered protein expression upon SIL1 depletion in vitro could be confirmed in Sil1-deficient motoneurones for paradigmatic proteins belonging to different functional classes. Our results demonstrate that SIL1-depleted HEK293 cells are an appropriate model to identify proteins modulated by SIL1 expression level and contributing to neurodegeneration in MSS and further disorders like ALS. Thereby, our combined results point out that proteins beyond such involved ER-related protein processing are affected by SIL1 depletion.


Translational Psychiatry | 2016

Bottom-up proteomics suggests an association between differential expression of mitochondrial proteins and chronic fatigue syndrome

Federica Ciregia; Laxmikanth Kollipara; Laura Giusti; René P. Zahedi; Chiara Giacomelli; Maria Rosa Mazzoni; Gino Giannaccini; Pietro Scarpellini; Andrea Urbani; Albert Sickmann; Antonio Lucacchini; Laura Bazzichi

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a debilitating and complex disorder characterized by unexplained fatigue not improved by rest. An area of investigation is the likely connection of CFS with defective mitochondrial function. In a previous work, we investigated the proteomic salivary profile in a couple of monozygotic twins discordant for CFS. Following this work, we analyzed mitochondrial proteins in the same couple of twins. Nano-liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (nano-LC-MS) was used to study the mitochondria extracted from platelets of the twins. Subsequently, we selected three proteins that were validated using western blot analysis in a big cohort of subjects (n=45 CFS; n=45 healthy), using whole saliva (WS). The selected proteins were as follows: aconitate hydratase (ACON), ATP synthase subunit beta (ATPB) and malate dehydrogenase (MDHM). Results for ATPB and ACON confirmed their upregulation in CFS. However, the MDHM alteration was not confirmed. Thereafter, seeing the great variability of clinical features of CFS patients, we decided to analyze the expression of our proteins after splitting patients according to clinical parameters. For each marker, the values were actually higher in the group of patients who had clinical features similar to the ill twin. In conclusion, these results suggest that our potential markers could be one of the criteria to be taken into account for helping in diagnosis. Furthermore, the identification of biomarkers present in particular subgroups of CFS patients may help in shedding light upon the complex entity of CFS. Moreover, it could help in developing tailored treatments.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2016

Proteome Profiling and Ultrastructural Characterization of the Human RCMH Cell Line: Myoblastic Properties and Suitability for Myopathological Studies

Laxmikanth Kollipara; Stephan Buchkremer; Joachim Weis; Eva Brauers; Mareike Hoss; Stephan Rütten; Pablo Caviedes; René P. Zahedi; Andreas Roos

Studying (neuro)muscular disorders is a major topic in biomedicine with a demand for suitable model systems. Continuous cell culture (in vitro) systems have several technical advantages over in vivo systems and became widely used tools for discovering physiological/pathophysiological mechanisms in muscle. In particular, myoblast cell lines are suitable model systems to study complex biochemical adaptations occurring in skeletal muscle and cellular responses to altered genetic/environmental conditions. Whereas most in vitro studies use extensively characterized murine C2C12 cells, a comprehensive description of an equivalent human cell line, not genetically manipulated for immortalization, is lacking. Therefore, we characterized human immortal myoblastic RCMH cells using scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and proteomics. Among more than 6200 identified proteins we confirm the known expression of proteins important for muscle function. Comparing the RCMH proteome with two well-defined nonskeletal muscle cells lines (HeLa, U2OS) revealed a considerable enrichment of proteins important for muscle function. SEM/TEM confirmed the presence of agglomerates of cytoskeletal components/intermediate filaments and a prominent rough ER. In conclusion, our results indicate RMCH as a suitable in vitro model for investigating muscle function-related processes such as mechanical stress burden and mechanotransduction, EC coupling, cytoskeleton, muscle cell metabolism and development, and (ER-associated) myopathic disorders.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

An ribonucleoprotein supercomplex involved in trans-splicing of organelle group II introns.

Olga Reifschneider; Christina Marx; Jessica Jacobs; Laxmikanth Kollipara; Albert Sickmann; Dirk Wolters; Ulrich Kück

In the chloroplast of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, two discontinuous group II introns, psaA-i1 and psaA-i2, splice in trans, and thus their excision process resembles the nuclear spliceosomal splicing pathway. Here, we address the question whether fragmentation of trans-acting RNAs is accompanied by the formation of a chloroplast spliceosome-like machinery. Using a combination of liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), size exclusion chromatography, and quantitative RT-PCR, we provide the first characterization of a high molecular weight ribonucleoprotein apparatus participating in psaA mRNA splicing. This supercomplex contains two subcomplexes (I and II) that are responsible for trans-splicing of either psaA-i1 or psaA-i2. We further demonstrate that both subcomplexes are associated with intron RNA, which is a prerequisite for the correct assembly of subcomplex I. This study contributes further to our view of how the eukaryotic nuclear spliceosome evolved after bacterial endosymbiosis through fragmentation of self-splicing group II introns into a dynamic, protein-rich RNP machinery.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Disentangling thermal stress responses in a reef-calcifier and its photosymbionts by shotgun proteomics

Marleen Stuhr; Bernhard Blank-Landeshammer; Claire E. Reymond; Laxmikanth Kollipara; Albert Sickmann; Michal Kucera; Hildegard Westphal

The proliferation of key marine ecological engineers and carbonate producers often relies on their association with photosymbiotic algae. Evaluating stress responses of these organisms is important to predict their fate under future climate projections. Physiological approaches are limited in their ability to resolve the involved molecular mechanisms and attribute stress effects to the host or symbiont, while probing and partitioning of proteins cannot be applied in organisms where the host and symbiont are small and cannot be physically separated. Here we apply a label-free quantitative proteomics approach to detect changes of proteome composition in the diatom-bearing benthic foraminifera Amphistegina gibbosa experimentally exposed to three thermal-stress scenarios. We developed a workflow for protein extraction from less than ten specimens and simultaneously analysed host and symbiont proteomes. Despite little genomic data for the host, 1,618 proteins could be partially assembled and assigned. The proteomes revealed identical pattern of stress response among stress scenarios as that indicated by physiological measurements, but allowed identification of compartment-specific stress reactions. In the symbiont, stress-response and proteolysis-related proteins were up regulated while photosynthesis-related proteins declined. In contrast, host homeostasis was maintained through chaperone up-regulation associated with elevated proteosynthesis and proteolysis, and the host metabolism shifted to heterotrophy.

Collaboration


Dive into the Laxmikanth Kollipara's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eva Brauers

RWTH Aachen University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mathieu Vinken

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vera Rogiers

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge