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Dive into the research topics where Markos Pechlivanis is active.

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Featured researches published by Markos Pechlivanis.


Cell | 2010

The Palmitoylation Machinery Is a Spatially Organizing System for Peripheral Membrane Proteins

Oliver Rocks; Marc Gerauer; Nachiket Vartak; Sebastian Koch; Zhi-Ping Huang; Markos Pechlivanis; Jürgen Kuhlmann; Lucas Brunsveld; Anchal Chandra; Bernhard Ellinger; Herbert Waldmann; Philippe I. H. Bastiaens

Reversible S-palmitoylation of cysteine residues critically controls transient membrane tethering of peripheral membrane proteins. Little is known about how the palmitoylation machinery governs their defined localization and function. We monitored the spatially resolved reaction dynamics and substrate specificity of the core mammalian palmitoylation machinery using semisynthetic substrates. Palmitoylation is detectable only on the Golgi, whereas depalmitoylation occurs everywhere in the cell. The reactions are not stereoselective and lack any primary consensus sequence, demonstrating that substrate specificity is not essential for de-/repalmitoylation. Both palmitate attachment and removal require seconds to accomplish. This reaction topography and rapid kinetics allows the continuous redirection of mislocalized proteins via the post-Golgi sorting apparatus. Unidirectional secretion ensures the maintenance of a proper steady-state protein distribution between the Golgi and the plasma membrane, which are continuous with endosomes. This generic spatially organizing system differs from conventional receptor-mediated targeting mechanisms and efficiently counteracts entropy-driven redistribution of palmitoylated peripheral membrane proteins over all membranes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Identification of a Short Spir Interaction Sequence at the C-terminal End of Formin Subgroup Proteins

Markos Pechlivanis; Annette Samol; Eugen Kerkhoff

The actin nucleation factors Spire and Cappuccino interact with each other and regulate essential cellular events during Drosophila oogenesis in a cooperative fashion. The interaction blocks formin actin nucleation activity and enhances the Spire activity. Analogous to Spire and Cappuccino, the mammalian homologs Spir-1 and formin-2 show a regulatory interaction. To get an understanding of the nature of the Spir-formin cooperation, we have analyzed the interaction biochemically and biophysically. Our data shows that the association of Spir-1 and formin-2 is not significantly mediated by binding of the Spir-1-KIND domain to the formin FH2 core domain. Instead, a short sequence motif C-terminal adjacent to the formin-2-FH2 domain could be characterized that mediates the interaction and is conserved among the members of the Fmn subgroup of formins. In line with this, we found that both mammalian Spir proteins, Spir-1 and Spir-2, interact with mammalian Fmn subgroup proteins formin-1 and formin-2.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Farnesylation of Pex19p Is Required for Its Structural Integrity and Function in Peroxisome Biogenesis

Robert Rucktäschel; Sven Thoms; Vadim Sidorovitch; André Halbach; Markos Pechlivanis; Rudolf Volkmer; Kirill Alexandrov; Jürgen Kuhlmann; Hanspeter Rottensteiner; Ralf Erdmann

The conserved CaaX box peroxin Pex19p is known to be modified by farnesylation. The possible involvement of this lipid modification in peroxisome biogenesis, the degree to which Pex19p is farnesylated, and its molecular function are unknown or controversial. We resolve these issues by first showing that the complete pool of Pex19p is processed by farnesyltransferase in vivo and that this modification is independent of peroxisome induction or the Pex19p membrane anchor Pex3p. Furthermore, genomic mutations of PEX19 prove that farnesylation is essential for proper matrix protein import into peroxisomes, which is supposed to be caused indirectly by a defect in peroxisomal membrane protein (PMP) targeting or stability. This assumption is corroborated by the observation that mutants defective in Pex19p farnesylation are characterized by a significantly reduced steady-state concentration of prominent PMPs (Pex11p, Ant1p) but also of essential components of the peroxisomal import machinery, especially the RING peroxins, which were almost depleted from the importomer. In vivo and in vitro, PMP recognition is only efficient when Pex19p is farnesylated with affinities differing by a factor of 10 between the non-modified and wild-type forms of Pex19p. Farnesylation is likely to induce a conformational change in Pex19p. Thus, isoprenylation of Pex19p contributes to substrate membrane protein recognition for the topogenesis of PMPs, and our results highlight the importance of lipid modifications in protein-protein interactions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Molecular Basis of Actin Nucleation Factor Cooperativity CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF THE SPIR-1 KINASE NON-CATALYTIC C-LOBE DOMAIN (KIND)·FORMIN-2 FORMIN SPIR INTERACTION MOTIF (FSI) COMPLEX

Kornelius Zeth; Markos Pechlivanis; Annette Samol; Sandra Pleiser; Clemens Vonrhein; Eugen Kerkhoff

The distinct actin nucleation factors of the Spir and formin subgroup families cooperate in actin nucleation. The Spir/formin cooperativity has been identified to direct two essential steps in mammalian oocyte maturation, the asymmetric spindle positioning and polar body extrusion during meiosis. Understanding the nature and regulation of the Spir/Fmn cooperation is an important requirement to comprehend mammalian reproduction. Recently we dissected the structural elements of the Spir and Fmn family proteins, which physically link the two actin nucleation factors. The trans-regulatory interaction is mediated by the Spir kinase non-catalytic C-lobe domain (KIND) and the C-terminal formin Spir interaction motif (FSI). The interaction inhibits formin nucleation activity and enhances the Spir activity. To get insights into the molecular mechanism of the Spir/Fmn interaction, we determined the crystal structure of the KIND domain alone and in complex with the C-terminal Fmn-2 FSI peptide. Together they confirm the proposed structural homology of the KIND domain to the protein kinase fold and reveal the basis of the Spir/formin interaction. The complex structure showed a large interface with conserved and positively charged residues of the Fmn FSI peptide mediating major contacts to an acidic groove on the surface of KIND. Protein interaction studies verified the electrostatic nature of the interaction. The data presented here provide the molecular basis of the Spir/formin interaction and give a first structural view into the mechanisms of actin nucleation factor cooperativity.


ChemBioChem | 2009

Mapping the isoprenoid binding pocket of PDEδ by a semisynthetic, photoactivatable N-ras lipoprotein

Michael Alexander; Marc Gerauer; Markos Pechlivanis; Boriana Popkirova; Radovan Dvorsky; Luc Brunsveld; Herbert Waldmann; Jürgen Kuhlmann

Biologically functional Ras isoforms undergo post‐translational modifications starting with farnesylation of the most C‐terminal cysteine. Combined with further processing steps, this isoprenylation allows for the anchoring of these proteins in endomembranes, where signal transduction events take place. The specific localization is subject to dynamic regulation and assumed to modulate the activity of Ras proteins by governing their spatiotemporal distribution. The δ subunit of phosphodiesterase (PDEδ) has attracted attention as a solubilization factor of isoprenylated Ras. In this study, we demonstrate that critical residues in the putative isoprenoid pocket of PDEδ can be mapped by coupling with a semisynthetic N‐Ras lipoprotein in which the native farnesyl group of the processed protein was replaced by a photoactivatable geranyl benzophenone moiety. The crosslinked product included parts of β‐sheet 9 of PDEδ, which contains the highly conserved amino acids V145 and L147. Modeling of the PDEδ–geranyl benzophenone (GerBP) complex supports the conclusion that the photolabeled sequence is embedded in the putative isoprenoid pocket of PDEδ.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006

Hydrophobic modifications of Ras proteins by isoprenoid groups and fatty acids- : More than just membrane anchoring

Markos Pechlivanis; Juergen Kuhlmann


Biochemistry | 2007

Prenylation of Ras Facilitates hSOS1-Promoted Nucleotide Exchange,upon Ras Binding to the Regulatory Site

Markos Pechlivanis; Rieke Ringel; Boriana Popkirova; Juergen Kuhlmann


Archive | 2007

Dissecting the prenylsensitivity of the N-Ras:hSOS1:N-Ras-interaction

Markos Pechlivanis; Jürgen Kuhlmann


GBM Annual Spring meeting Mosbach 2007 | 2007

Farnesylation of Pex19p is essential for peroxisomal membrane protein recognition

Robert Rucktäschel; Sven Thoms; Kirill Alexandrov; André Halbach; Markos Pechlivanis; Jürgen Kuhlmann; Rudolph Volkmer-Engert; Hanspeter Rottensteiner; Ralf Erdmann


GBM Annual Fall meeting Berlin/Potsdam 2005 | 2005

The Rasfar:SOS:Rasfar-interaction

Markos Pechlivanis; Boriana Popkirova; Jürgen Kuhlmann

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