Mart van de Kamp
Leiden University
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Featured researches published by Mart van de Kamp.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1991
Herbert Nar; Albrecht Messerschmidt; Robert Huber; Mart van de Kamp; Gerard W. Canters
The three-dimensional structures of two site-specific mutants of the blue copper protein azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa have been solved by a combination of isomorphous replacement and Patterson search techniques, and refined by energy-restrained least-squares methods. The mutations introduced by recombinant DNA techniques involve residue His35, which was exchanged for glutamine and leucine, to probe for its suggested role in electron transfer. The two mutants, His35Gln (H35Q) and His35Leu (H35L), crystallize non-isomorphously in the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with unit cell dimensions of a = 109.74 A, b = 99.15 A, c = 47.82 A for H35Q, a = 57.82 A, b = 81.06 A, c = 110.03 A for H35L. In each crystal form, there are four molecules in the asymmetric unit. They are arranged as a dimer of dimers in the H35Q case and are distorted from ideal C2 symmetry in H35L. The final crystallographic R-value is 16.3% for 20.747 reflections to a resolution of 2.1 A for H35Q and 17.0% for 32,548 reflections to 1.9 A for H35L. The crystal structures reported here represent the first crystallographically refined structures for azurin from P. aeruginosa. The structure is very similar to that of azurin from Alcaligenes denitrificans. The copper atom is located about 7 A below a hydrophobic surface region and is ligated by five donor groups in a distorted trigonal bipyramidal fashion. The implications for electron transfer properties of the protein are discussed in terms of the mutation site and the packing of the molecules within the tetramer.
FEBS Letters | 1992
Herbert Nar; Albrecht Messerschmidt; Robert Huber; Mart van de Kamp; Gerard W. Canters
The 3D structure of apo‐azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been determined at 1.85 Å resolution. The crystal structure is composed of two different molecular forms of apo‐azurin arranged as hetero‐dimers in the tetramer of the asymmetric unit. Form 1 closely resembles the holo‐protein lacking copper. Form 2 shows differences in the metal binding site region induced by the incorporation of a solvent molecule into this site. The positions of the copper ligands His46 and His117 are shifted by 0.6 Å and 1.6 Å. The His117 side chain adopts a position at the surface of the protein, thereby facilitating access to the copper site. The presence of two different molecular forms of apo‐azurin in the crystal lattice may reflect an equilibrium between the two forms in solution. 1H‐NMR spectra or apo‐azurin recorded as a function or pH show that at high pH the line broadening of His35, His46 and His117 resonances is consistent with an interconversion between forms 1 and 2. At low pH, no broadening is observed. This may indicate that here the interconversion is fast on the NMR timescale.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Mart van de Kamp; Frits C. Hali; Nicola Rosato; Alessandro Finazzi Agrò; Gerard W. Canters
The azurin-encoding azu gene from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. A purification procedure was developed to isolate the azurin obtained from the E. coli cells. No differences were observed between azurins isolated from P. aeruginosa and E. coli. A non-reconstitutable azurin-like protein, azurin*, with a spectral ratio (A625/A280) less than 0.01 could be separated from holo-azurin with a spectral ratio of 0.58 (+/- 0.01). The properties of azurin* were examined by electrophoretic (SDS-PAGE and IEF) and spectroscopic (UV/vis, 1H-NMR, static and dynamic fluorescence) techniques, and compared to the properties of holo-azurin and apo-azurin. Azurin* resembles apo-azurin (same pKa* values of His-35 and His-117, same fluorescence characteristics). However, it has lost the ability to bind Cu-ions. It is tentatively concluded that azurin* is a chemically modified form of azurin, the modification possibly being due to oxidation of the ligand residue Cys-112 or the formation of a chemical bond between the ligand residues Cys-112 and His-117. In agreement with previous results from Hutnik and Szabo (Biochemistry (1989) 28, 3923-3934), fluorescence experiments show that the heterogeneous fluorescence decay observed for holo-azurin is not due to the presence of azurin*, but most likely originates from conformational heterogeneity of the holo-azurin.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 1996
Gabriele Bierbaum; Friedrich Götz; Andreas Peschel; Thomas Kupke; Mart van de Kamp; Hans-Georg Sahl
Lantibiotics are antibiotic peptides that contain the rare thioether amino acids lanthionine and/or methyllanthionine. Epidermin, Pep5 and epilancin K7 are produced by Staphylococcus epidermidis whereas gallidermin (6L-epidermin) was isolated from the closely related species Staphylococcus gallinarum. The biosynthesis of all four lantibiotics proceeds from structural genes which code for prepeptides that are enzymatically modified to give the mature peptides. The genes involved in biosynthesis, processing, export etc. are found in gene clusters adjacent to the structural genes and code for transporters, immunity functions, regulatory proteins and the modification enzymes LanB, LanC and LanD, which catalyze the biosynthesis of the rare amino acids. LanB and LanC are responsible for the dehydration of the serine and threonine residues to give dehydroalanine and dehydrobutyrine and subsequent addition of cysteine SH-groups to the dehydro amino acids which results in the thioether rings. EpiD, the only LanD enzyme known so far, catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of the C-terminal cysteine of epidermin which gives the C-terminal S-aminovinylcysteine after addition of a dehydroalanine residue.
Gene | 1990
Carla W. G. Hoitink; Lambertus P. Woudt; Jack C.M. Turenhout; Mart van de Kamp; Gerard W. Canters
The gene (azu) encoding azurin from Alcaligenes denitrificans has been cloned and sequenced. The gene codes for a pre-protein with a 19-aa signal peptide. Comparison with the sequences coding for the blue copper proteins from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Alcaligenes faecalis reveals the presence of ntrA and fnr boxes in front of all three genes, instead of a regular [-10, -35]-promoter. In P. aeruginosa, the azu gene is terminated by a bidirectional terminator and flanked by open reading frames on the opposite strand.
FEBS Journal | 1990
Mart van de Kamp; Maria Chiara Silvestrini; Maurizio Brunori; Jozef Van Beeumen; Frits C. Hali; Gerard W. Canters
FEBS Journal | 1992
Herbert Nar; Robert Huber; Albrecht Messerschmidt; Alexander Constantin Filippou; Manfred Barth; Michel Jaquinod; Mart van de Kamp; Gerard W. Canters
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1990
Mart van de Kamp; Rene Floris; Frits C. Hali; Gerard W. Canters
FEBS Journal | 1995
Mart van de Kamp; Henno W. van den Hooven; Ruud N.H. Konings; Gabriele Bierbaum; Hans-Georg Sahl; Oscar P. Kuipers; Roland J. Siezen; Willem M. de Vos; Cornelis W. Hilbers; Frank J. M. Van De Ven
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1991
Tanneke den Blaauwen; Mart van de Kamp; Gerard W. Canters