Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mareike Kurz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mareike Kurz.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Properties of the Thioredoxin Fold Superfamily Are Modulated by a Single Amino Acid Residue

Guoping Ren; Daniel Stephan; Zhaohui Xu; Ying Zheng; Danming Tang; Rosemary S. Harrison; Mareike Kurz; Russell Jarrott; Stephen R. Shouldice; Annie Hiniker; Jennifer L. Martin; Begoña Heras; James C. A. Bardwell

The ubiquitous thioredoxin fold proteins catalyze oxidation, reduction, or disulfide exchange reactions depending on their redox properties. They also play vital roles in protein folding, redox control, and disease. Here, we have shown that a single residue strongly modifies both the redox properties of thioredoxin fold proteins and their ability to interact with substrates. This residue is adjacent in three-dimensional space to the characteristic CXXC active site motif of thioredoxin fold proteins but distant in sequence. This residue is just N-terminal to the conservative cis-proline. It is isoleucine 75 in the case of thioredoxin. Our findings support the conclusion that a very small percentage of the amino acid residues of thioredoxin-related proteins are capable of dictating the functions of these proteins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Staphylococcus aureus DsbA Does Not Have a Destabilizing Disulfide: A NEW PARADIGM FOR BACTERIAL OXIDATIVE FOLDING

Begoña Heras; Mareike Kurz; Russell Jarrott; Stephen R. Shouldice; Patrick Frei; Gautier Robin; Masa Cemazar; Linda Thöny-Meyer; Jennifer L. Martin

In Gram-negative bacteria, the introduction of disulfide bonds into folding proteins occurs in the periplasm and is catalyzed by donation of an energetically unstable disulfide from DsbA, which is subsequently re-oxidized through interaction with DsbB. Gram-positive bacteria lack a classic periplasm but nonetheless encode Dsb-like proteins. Staphylococcus aureus encodes just one Dsb protein, a DsbA, and no DsbB. Here we report the crystal structure of S. aureus DsbA (SaDsbA), which incorporates a thioredoxin fold with an inserted helical domain, like its Escherichia coli counterpart EcDsbA, but it lacks the characteristic hydrophobic patch and has a truncated binding groove near the active site. These findings suggest that SaDsbA has a different substrate specificity than EcDsbA. Thermodynamic studies indicate that the oxidized and reduced forms of SaDsbA are energetically equivalent, in contrast to the energetically unstable disulfide form of EcDsbA. Further, the partial complementation of EcDsbA by SaDsbA is independent of EcDsbB and biochemical assays show that SaDsbA does not interact with EcDsbB. The identical stabilities of oxidized and reduced SaDsbA may facilitate direct re-oxidation of the protein by extracellular oxidants, without the need for DsbB.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2008

Cloning, expression, purification and characterization of a DsbA-like protein from Wolbachia pipientis.

Mareike Kurz; Iñaki Iturbe-Ormaetxe; Russell Jarrott; Nathan P. Cowieson; Gautier Robin; Alun Jones; Gordon J. King; Patrick Frei; Scott L. O'Neill; Begoña Heras; Jennifer L. Martin

Wolbachia pipientis are obligate endosymbionts that infect a wide range of insect and other arthropod species. They act as reproductive parasites by manipulating the host reproduction machinery to enhance their own transmission. This unusual phenotype is thought to be a consequence of the actions of secreted Wolbachia proteins that are likely to contain disulfide bonds to stabilize the protein structure. In bacteria, the introduction or isomerization of disulfide bonds in proteins is catalyzed by Dsb proteins. The Wolbachia genome encodes two proteins, alpha-DsbA1 and alpha-DsbA2, that might catalyze these steps. In this work we focussed on the 234 residue protein alpha-DsbA1; the gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, the protein was purified and its identity confirmed by mass spectrometry. The sequence identity of alpha-DsbA1 for both dithiol oxidants (E. coli DsbA, 12%) and disulfide isomerases (E. coli DsbC, 14%) is similar. We therefore sought to establish whether alpha-DsbA1 is an oxidant or an isomerase based on functional activity. The purified alpha-DsbA1 was active in an oxidoreductase assay but had little isomerase activity, indicating that alpha-DsbA1 is DsbA-like rather than DsbC-like. This work represents the first successful example of the characterization of a recombinant Wolbachia protein. Purified alpha-DsbA1 will now be used in further functional studies to identify protein substrates that could help explain the molecular basis for the unusual Wolbachia phenotypes, and in structural studies to explore its relationship to other disulfide oxidoreductase proteins.


Journal of Structural and Functional Genomics | 2005

Pilot studies on the parallel production of soluble mouse proteins in a bacterial expression system

Nathan P. Cowieson; Pawel Listwan; Mareike Kurz; Anna Aagaard; Timothy Ravasi; Christine A. Wells; Thomas Huber; David A. Hume; Bostjan Kobe; Jennifer L. Martin

We investigated the parallel production in medium throughput of mouse proteins, using protocols that involved recombinatorial cloning, protein expression screening and batch purification. The methods were scaled up to allow the simultaneous processing of tens or hundreds of protein samples. Scale-up was achieved in two stages. In an initial study, 30 targets were processed manually but with common protocols for all targets. In the second study, these protocols were applied to 96 target proteins that were processed in an automated manner. The success rates at each stage of the study were similar for both the manual and automated approaches. Overall, 15 of the selected 126 target mouse genes (12%) yielded soluble protein products in a bacterial expression system. This success rate compares favourably with other protein screening projects, particularly for eukaryotic proteins, and could be further improved by modifications at the cloning step.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2007

Expression and crystallization of DsbA from Staphylococcus aureus

Begoña Heras; Mareike Kurz; Russell Jarrott; Karl A. Byriel; Alun Jones; Linda Thöny-Meyer; Jennifer L. Martin

Bacterial Dsb proteins catalyse the in vivo formation of disulfide bonds, a critical step in the stability and activity of many proteins. Most studies on Dsb proteins have focused on Gram-negative bacteria and thus the process of oxidative folding in Gram-positive bacteria is poorly understood. To help elucidate this process in Gram-positive bacteria, DsbA from Staphylococcus aureus (SaDsbA) has been focused on. Here, the expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary diffraction analysis of SaDsbA are reported. SaDsbA crystals diffract to a resolution limit of 2.1 A and belong to the hexagonal space group P6(5) or P6(1), with unit-cell parameters a = b = 72.1, c = 92.1 A and one molecule in the asymmetric unit (64% solvent content).


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2008

Crystallization and preliminary diffraction analysis of a DsbA homologue from Wolbachia pipientis

Mareike Kurz; Iñaki Iturbe-Ormaetxe; Russell Jarrott; Scott L. O'Neill; Karl A. Byriel; Jennifer L. Martin; Begoña Heras

alpha-DsbA1 is one of two DsbA homologues encoded by the Gram-negative alpha-proteobacterium Wolbachia pipientis, an endosymbiont that can behave as a reproductive parasite in insects and as a mutualist in medically important filarial nematodes. The alpha-DsbA1 protein is thought to be important for the folding and secretion of Wolbachia proteins involved in the induction of reproductive distortions. Crystals of native and SeMet alpha-DsbA1 were grown by vapour diffusion and belong to the monoclinic space group C2, with unit-cell parameters a = 71.4, b = 49.5, c = 69.3 A, beta = 107.0 degrees and one molecule in the asymmetric unit (44% solvent content). X-ray data were recorded from native crystals to a resolution of 2.01 A using a copper anode and data from SeMet alpha-DsbA1 crystals were recorded to 2.45 A resolution using a chromium anode.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2007

The name's bond……disulfide bond

Begoña Heras; Mareike Kurz; Stephen R. Shouldice; Jennifer L. Martin


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2009

Structural and functional characterization of the oxidoreductase α-DsbA1 from Wolbachia pipientis

Mareike Kurz; Iñaki Iturbe-Ormaetxe; Russell Jarrott; Stephen R. Shouldice; Merridee A. Wouters; Patrick Frei; Scott L. O'Neill; Begoña Heras; Jennifer L. Martin


Protein Expression and Purification | 2006

Incorporating a TEV cleavage site reduces the solubility of nine recombinant mouse proteins

Mareike Kurz; Nathan P. Cowieson; Gautier Robin; David A. Hume; Jennifer L. Martin; Bostjan Kobe; Pawel Listwan


Analytical Biochemistry | 2005

Modification of recombinatorial cloning for small affinity tag fusion protein construct generation

Pawel Listwan; Nathan P. Cowieson; Mareike Kurz; David A. Hume; Jennifer L. Martin; Bostjan Kobe

Collaboration


Dive into the Mareike Kurz'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

Bostjan Kobe

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gautier Robin

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pawel Listwan

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge