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Dive into the research topics where Maia De Kerpel is active.

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Featured researches published by Maia De Kerpel.


Molecular Microbiology | 2012

Structural Insight in Histo-Blood Group Binding by the F18 Fimbrial Adhesin Fedf.

Kristof Moonens; Julie Bouckaert; Annelies Coddens; Thao Tran; Santosh Panjikar; Maia De Kerpel; Eric Cox; Han Remaut; Henri De Greve

F18‐positive enterotoxigenic and Shiga toxin‐producing Escherichia coli are responsible for post‐weaning diarrhoea and oedema disease in pigs and lead to severe production losses in the farming industry. F18 fimbriae attach to the small intestine of young piglets by latching onto glycosphingolipids with A/H blood group determinants on type 1 core. We demonstrate the N‐terminal domain of the F18 fimbrial subunit FedF to be responsible for ABH‐mediated attachment and present its X‐ray structure in ligand‐free form and bound to A and B type 1 hexaoses. The FedF lectin domain comprises a 10‐stranded immunoglobulin‐like β‐sandwich. Three linear motives, Q47‐N50, H88‐S90 and R117‐T119, form a shallow glycan binding pocket near the tip of the domain that is selective for type 1 core glycans in extended conformation. In addition to the glycan binding pocket, a polybasic loop on the membrane proximal surface of FedF lectin domain is shown to be required for binding to piglet enterocytes. Although dispensable for ABH glycan recognition, the polybasic surface adds binding affinity in the context of the host cell membrane, a mechanism that is proposed to direct ABH–glycan binding to cell‐bound glycosphingolipids and could allow bacteria to avoid clearance by secreted glycoproteins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Structural and Functional Insight into the Carbohydrate Receptor Binding of F4 Fimbriae-producing Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli

Kristof Moonens; Imke Van den Broeck; Maia De Kerpel; Francine Deboeck; Hanne Raymaekers; Han Remaut; Henri De Greve

Background: F4 fimbriae produced by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli mediate attachment to eukaryotic host receptors. Results: The structure of lactose bound to the F4 fimbrial adhesin FaeGad was elucidated. Conclusion: Lactose interacts at a subdomain grafted on the FaeGad core domain. Significance: The co-complex structure explains the finely tuned receptor specificity of F4ad fimbriae; additionally, the carbohydrate binding site differs among FaeG variants. Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) strains are important causes of intestinal disease in humans and lead to severe production losses in animal farming. A range of fimbrial adhesins in ETEC strains determines host and tissue tropism. ETEC strains expressing F4 fimbriae are associated with neonatal and post-weaning diarrhea in piglets. Three naturally occurring variants of F4 fimbriae (F4ab, F4ac, and F4ad) exist that differ in the primary sequence of their major adhesive subunit FaeG, and each features a related yet distinct receptor binding profile. Here the x-ray structure of FaeGad bound to lactose provides the first structural insight into the receptor specificity and mode of binding by the poly-adhesive F4 fimbriae. A small D′-D″-α1-α2 subdomain grafted on the immunoglobulin-like core of FaeG hosts the carbohydrate binding site. Two short amino acid stretches Phe150–Glu152 and Val166–Glu170 of FaeGad bind the terminal galactose in the lactosyl unit and provide affinity and specificity to the interaction. A hemagglutination-based assay with E. coli expressing mutant F4ad fimbriae confirmed the elucidated co-complex structure. Interestingly, the crucial D′-α1 loop that borders the FaeGad binding site adopts a different conformation in the two other FaeG variants and hints at a heterogeneous binding pocket among the FaeG serotypes.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Structural and Thermodynamic Characterization of Pre- and Postpolymerization States in the F4 Fimbrial Subunit FaeG

Inge Van Molle; Kristof Moonens; Abel Garcia-Pino; Lieven Buts; Maia De Kerpel; Lode Wyns; Julie Bouckaert; Henri De Greve

Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli expressing F4 fimbriae are the major cause of porcine colibacillosis and are responsible for significant death and morbidity in neonatal and postweaned piglets. Via the chaperone-usher pathway, F4 fimbriae are assembled into thin, flexible polymers mainly composed of the single-domain adhesin FaeG. The F4 fimbrial system has been labeled eccentric because the F4 pilins show some features distinct from the features of pilins of other chaperone-usher-assembled structures. In particular, FaeG is much larger than other pilins (27 versus approximately 17 kDa), grafting an additional carbohydrate binding domain on the common immunoglobulin-like core. Structural data of FaeG during different stages of the F4 fimbrial biogenesis process, combined with differential scanning calorimetry measurements, confirm the general principles of the donor strand complementation/exchange mechanisms taking place during pilus biogenesis via the chaperone-usher pathway.


Molecular Microbiology | 2014

Secretion and functional display of fusion proteins through the curli biogenesis pathway

Nani Van Gerven; Parveen Goyal; Guy Vandenbussche; Maia De Kerpel; Wim Jonckheere; Henri De Greve; Han Remaut

Curli are functional amyloids expressed as fibres on the surface of Enterobacteriaceae. Contrary to the protein misfolding events associated with pathogenic amyloidosis, curli are the result of a dedicated biosynthetic pathway. A specialized transporter in the outer membrane, CsgG, operates in conjunction with the two accessory proteins CsgE and CsgF to secrete curlin subunits to the extracellular surface, where they nucleate into cross‐beta strand fibres. Here we investigate the substrate tolerance of the CsgG transporter and the capability of heterologous sequences to be built into curli fibres. Non‐native polypeptides ranging up to at least 260 residues were exported when fused to the curli subunit CsgA. Secretion efficiency depended on the folding properties of the passenger sequences, with substrates exceeding an approximately 2 nm transverse diameter blocking passage through the transport channel. Secretion of smaller passengers was compatible with prior DsbA‐mediated disulphide bridge formation in the fusion partner, indicating that CsgG is capable of translocating non‐linear polypeptide stretches. Using fusions we further demonstrate the exported or secreted heterologous passenger proteins can attain their native, active fold, establishing curli biogenesis pathway as a platform for the secretion and surface display of small heterologous proteins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

The Molecular Mechanism of Shiga Toxin Stx2e Neutralization by a Single-domain Antibody Targeting the Cell Receptor-binding Domain.

Alvin W. Lo; Kristof Moonens; Maia De Kerpel; Lea Brys; Els Pardon; Han Remaut; Henri De Greve

Background: Swine edema disease is caused by Shiga toxin Stx2e-producing Escherichia coli. Results: A potent Stx2e-neutralizing nanobody, NbStx2e1, was discovered; the crystal structure of the NbStx2e1-Stx2e complex uncovers the molecular basis of the Stx2e inhibition. Conclusion: NbStx2e1 directly prevents the binding of Stx2e to host cell receptor. Significance: NbStx2e1 can be employed to prevent Stx2e-mediated disease. Shiga toxin Stx2e is the major known agent that causes edema disease in newly weaned pigs. This severe disease is characterized by neurological disorders, hemorrhagic lesions, and frequent fatal outcomes. Stx2e consists of an enzymatically active A subunit and five B subunits that bind to a specific glycolipid receptor on host cells. It is evident that antibodies binding to the A subunit or the B subunits of Shiga toxin variants may have the capability to inhibit their cytotoxicity. Here, we report the discovery and characterization of a VHH single domain antibody (nanobody) isolated from a llama phage display library that confers potent neutralizing capacity against Stx2e toxin. We further present the crystal structure of the complex formed between the nanobody (NbStx2e1) and the Stx2e toxoid, determined at 2.8 Å resolution. Structural analysis revealed that for each B subunit of Stx2e, one NbStx2e1 is interacting in a head-to-head orientation and directly competing with the glycolipid receptor binding site on the surface of the B subunit. The neutralizing NbStx2e1 can in the future be used to prevent or treat edema disease.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2006

N-terminal truncation enables crystallization of the receptor-binding domain of the FedF bacterial adhesin

Maia De Kerpel; Inge Van Molle; Lea Brys; Lode Wyns; Henri De Greve; Julie Bouckaert

FedF is the two-domain tip adhesin of F18 fimbriae from enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli. Bacterial adherence, mediated by the N-terminal receptor-binding domain of FedF to carbohydrate receptors on intestinal microvilli, causes diarrhoea and oedema disease in newly weaned piglets and induces the secretion of Shiga toxins. A truncate containing only the receptor-binding domain of FedF was found to be further cleaved at its N-terminus. Reconstruction of this N-terminal truncate rendered FedF amenable to crystallization, resulting in crystals with space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) and unit-cell parameters a = 36.20, b = 74.64, c = 99.03 A that diffracted to beyond 2 A resolution. The binding specificity of FedF was screened for on a glycan array, exposing 264 glycoconjugates, to identify specific receptors for cocrystallization with FedF.


Veterinary Research | 2015

Structural insight in the inhibition of adherence of F4 fimbriae producing enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli by llama single domain antibodies

Kristof Moonens; Imke Van den Broeck; Emmanuel Okello; Els Pardon; Maia De Kerpel; Han Remaut; Henri De Greve

Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli that cause neonatal and post-weaning diarrhea in piglets express F4 fimbriae to mediate attachment towards host receptors. Recently we described how llama single domain antibodies (VHHs) fused to IgA, produced in Arabidopsis thaliana seeds and fed to piglets resulted in a progressive decline in shedding of F4 positive ETEC bacteria. Here we present the structures of these inhibiting VHHs in complex with the major adhesive subunit FaeG. A conserved surface, distant from the lactose binding pocket, is targeted by these VHHs, highlighting the possibility of targeting epitopes on single-domain adhesins that are non-involved in receptor binding.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Nanobody Mediated Inhibition of Attachment of F18 Fimbriae Expressing Escherichia coli

Kristof Moonens; Maia De Kerpel; Annelies Coddens; Eric Cox; Els Pardon; Han Remaut; Henri De Greve

Post-weaning diarrhea and edema disease caused by F18 fimbriated E. coli are important diseases in newly weaned piglets and lead to severe production losses in farming industry. Protective treatments against these infections have thus far limited efficacy. In this study we generated nanobodies directed against the lectin domain of the F18 fimbrial adhesin FedF and showed in an in vitro adherence assay that four unique nanobodies inhibit the attachment of F18 fimbriated E. coli bacteria to piglet enterocytes. Crystallization of the FedF lectin domain with the most potent inhibitory nanobodies revealed their mechanism of action. These either competed with the binding of the blood group antigen receptor on the FedF surface or induced a conformational change in which the CDR3 region of the nanobody displaces the D″-E loop adjacent to the binding site. This D″-E loop was previously shown to be required for the interaction between F18 fimbriated bacteria and blood group antigen receptors in a membrane context. This work demonstrates the feasibility of inhibiting the attachment of fimbriated pathogens by employing nanobodies directed against the adhesin domain.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2016

A unique hetero-hexadecameric architecture displayed by the Escherichia coli O157 PaaA2-ParE2 antitoxin-toxin complex.

Yann G. J. Sterckx; Thomas Jové; Alexander V. Shkumatov; Abel Garcia-Pino; Lieselotte Geerts; Maia De Kerpel; Jurij Lah; Henri De Greve; Laurence Van Melderen; Remy Loris


Archive | 2015

Structural and Functional Insight into the Carbohydrate Receptor Binding of F4 Fimbriae-producing Enterotoxigenic

Kristof Moonens; Imke Van den Broeck; Maia De Kerpel; Francine Deboeck; Hanne Raymaekers; Han Remaut; Henri De Greve

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Henri De Greve

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Han Remaut

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Kristof Moonens

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Els Pardon

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Julie Bouckaert

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Abel Garcia-Pino

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Francine Deboeck

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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