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Featured researches published by Martin A. Schärer.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2012

Protein interface classification by evolutionary analysis

Jose M. Duarte; Adam Srebniak; Martin A. Schärer; Guido Capitani

BackgroundDistinguishing biologically relevant interfaces from lattice contacts in protein crystals is a fundamental problem in structural biology. Despite efforts towards the computational prediction of interface character, many issues are still unresolved.ResultsWe present here a protein-protein interface classifier that relies on evolutionary data to detect the biological character of interfaces. The classifier uses a simple geometric measure, number of core residues, and two evolutionary indicators based on the sequence entropy of homolog sequences. Both aim at detecting differential selection pressure between interface core and rim or rest of surface. The core residues, defined as fully buried residues (>95% burial), appear to be fundamental determinants of biological interfaces: their number is in itself a powerful discriminator of interface character and together with the evolutionary measures it is able to clearly distinguish evolved biological contacts from crystal ones. We demonstrate that this definition of core residues leads to distinctively better results than earlier definitions from the literature. The stringent selection and quality filtering of structural and sequence data was key to the success of the method. Most importantly we demonstrate that a more conservative selection of homolog sequences - with relatively high sequence identities to the query - is able to produce a clearer signal than previous attempts.ConclusionsAn evolutionary approach like the one presented here is key to the advancement of the field, which so far was missing an effective method exploiting the evolutionary character of protein interfaces. Its coverage and performance will only improve over time thanks to the incessant growth of sequence databases. Currently our method reaches an accuracy of 89% in classifying interfaces of the Ponstingl 2003 datasets and it lends itself to a variety of useful applications in structural biology and bioinformatics. We made the corresponding software implementation available to the community as an easy-to-use graphical web interface at http://www.eppic-web.org.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Molecular Insights into Mammalian End-binding Protein Heterodimerization

Christian O. De Groot; Ilian Jelesarov; Fred F. Damberger; Saša Bjelić; Martin A. Schärer; Neel Sarovar Bhavesh; Ilia Grigoriev; Rubén M. Buey; Kurt Wüthrich; Guido Capitani; Anna Akhmanova; Michel O. Steinmetz

Microtubule plus-end tracking proteins (+TIPs) are involved in many microtubule-based processes. End binding (EB) proteins constitute a highly conserved family of +TIPs. They play a pivotal role in regulating microtubule dynamics and in the recruitment of diverse +TIPs to growing microtubule plus ends. Here we used a combination of methods to investigate the dimerization properties of the three human EB proteins EB1, EB2, and EB3. Based on Förster resonance energy transfer, we demonstrate that the C-terminal dimerization domains of EBs (EBc) can readily exchange their chains in solution. We further document that EB1c and EB3c preferentially form heterodimers, whereas EB2c does not participate significantly in the formation of heterotypic complexes. Measurements of the reaction thermodynamics and kinetics, homology modeling, and mutagenesis provide details of the molecular determinants of homo- versus heterodimer formation of EBc domains. Fluorescence spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance studies in the presence of the cytoskeleton-associated protein-glycine-rich domains of either CLIP-170 or p150glued or of a fragment derived from the adenomatous polyposis coli tumor suppressor protein show that chain exchange of EBc domains can be controlled by binding partners. Extension of these studies of the EBc domains to full-length EBs demonstrate that heterodimer formation between EB1 and EB3, but not between EB2 and the other two EBs, occurs both in vitro and in cells as revealed by live cell imaging. Together, our data provide molecular insights for rationalizing the dominant negative control by C-terminal EB domains and form a basis for understanding the functional role of heterotypic chain exchange by EBs in cells.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2012

Quality control of disulfide bond formation in pilus subunits by the chaperone FimC

Maria D Crespo; Chasper Puorger; Martin A. Schärer; Oliv Eidam; Markus G. Grütter; Guido Capitani

Type 1 pili from uropathogenic Escherichia coli are filamentous, noncovalent protein complexes mediating bacterial adhesion to the host tissue. All structural pilus subunits are homologous proteins sharing an invariant disulfide bridge. Here we show that disulfide bond formation in the unfolded subunits, catalyzed by the periplasmic oxidoreductase DsbA, is required for subunit recognition by the assembly chaperone FimC and for FimC-catalyzed subunit folding. FimC thus guarantees quantitative disulfide bond formation in each of the up to 3,000 subunits of the pilus. The X-ray structure of the complex between FimC and the main pilus subunit FimA and the kinetics of FimC-catalyzed FimA folding indicate that FimC accelerates folding of pilus subunits by lowering their topological complexity. The kinetic data, together with the measured in vivo concentrations of DsbA and FimC, predict an in vivo half-life of 2 s for oxidative folding of FimA in the periplasm.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Interaction of mammalian end binding proteins with CAP-Gly domains of CLIP-170 and p150 glued

Saša Bjelić; Christian O. De Groot; Martin A. Schärer; Rolf Jaussi; Katja Bargsten; Mara Salzmann; Daniel Frey; Guido Capitani; Richard A. Kammerer; Michel O. Steinmetz

End binding proteins (EBs) track growing microtubule ends and play a master role in organizing dynamic protein networks. Mammalian cells express up to three different EBs (EB1, EB2, and EB3). Besides forming homodimers, EB1 and EB3 also assemble into heterodimers. One group of EB-binding partners encompasses proteins that harbor CAP-Gly domains. The binding properties of the different EBs towards CAP-Gly proteins have not been systematically investigated. This information is, however, important to compare and contrast functional differences. Here we analyzed the interactions between CLIP-170 and p150(glued) CAP-Gly domains with the three EB homodimers and the EB1-EB3 heterodimer. Using isothermal titration calorimetry we observed that some EBs bind to the individual CAP-Gly domains with similar affinities while others interact with their targets with pronounced differences. We further found that the two types of CAP-Gly domains use alternative mechanisms to target the C-terminal domains of EBs. We succeeded to solve the crystal structure of a complex composed of a heterodimer of EB1 and EB3 C-termini together with the CAP-Gly domain of p150(glued). Together, our results provide mechanistic insights into the interaction properties of EBs and offer a molecular framework for the systematic investigation of their functional differences in cells.


Proteins | 2010

CRK: An evolutionary approach for distinguishing biologically relevant interfaces from crystal contacts

Martin A. Schärer; Markus G. Grütter; Guido Capitani

Protein crystals contain two different types of interfaces: biologically relevant ones, observed in protein–protein complexes and oligomeric proteins, and nonspecific ones, corresponding to crystal lattice contacts. Because of the increasing complexity of the objects being tackled in structural biology, distinguishing biological contacts from crystal contacts is not always a trivial task and can lead to wrong interpretation of macromolecular structures. We devised an approach (CRK, core‐rim Ka/Ks ratio) for distinguishing biologically relevant interfaces from nonspecific ones. Given a protein–protein interface, CRK finds a set of homologs to the sequences of the proteins involved in the interface, retrieves and aligns the corresponding coding sequences, on which it carries out a residue‐by‐residue Ka/Ks ratio (ω) calculation. It divides interface residues into a “rim” and a “core” set and analyzes the selection pressure on the residues belonging to the two sets. We developed and tested CRK on different datasets and test cases, consisting of biologically relevant contacts, nonspecific ones or of both types. The method proves very effective in distinguishing the two categories of interfaces, with an overall accuracy rate of 84%. As it relies on different principles when compared with existing tools, CRK is optimally suited to be used in combination with them. In addition, CRK has potential applications in the validation of structures of oligomeric proteins and protein complexes. Proteins 2010.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

How Periplasmic Thioredoxin TlpA Reduces Bacterial Copper Chaperone ScoI and Cytochrome Oxidase Subunit II (CoxB) Prior to Metallation

Helge K. Abicht; Martin A. Schärer; Nick Quade; Raphael Ledermann; Elisabeth Mohorko; Guido Capitani; Hauke Hennecke

Background: α-Proteobacteria, extant relatives of mitochondria, are model organisms for studying assembly of bacterial and mitochondrial metalloenzymes. Results: Periplasmic thioredoxin TlpA is a specific reductant for copper chaperone ScoI and cytochrome oxidase subunit II (CoxB). Conclusion: Cysteines in the copper-binding sites of ScoI and CoxB must be reduced prior to metallation. Significance: Structures of TlpA-ScoI and TlpA-CoxB intermediates reveal mechanistic details of the reduction process. Two critical cysteine residues in the copper-A site (CuA) on subunit II (CoxB) of bacterial cytochrome c oxidase lie on the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane. As the periplasm is an oxidizing environment as compared with the reducing cytoplasm, the prediction was that a disulfide bond formed between these cysteines must be eliminated by reduction prior to copper insertion. We show here that a periplasmic thioredoxin (TlpA) acts as a specific reductant not only for the Cu2+ transfer chaperone ScoI but also for CoxB. The dual role of TlpA was documented best with high-resolution crystal structures of the kinetically trapped TlpA-ScoI and TlpA-CoxB mixed disulfide intermediates. They uncovered surprisingly disparate contact sites on TlpA for each of the two protein substrates. The equilibrium of CoxB reduction by TlpA revealed a thermodynamically favorable reaction, with a less negative redox potential of CoxB (E′0 = −231 mV) as compared with that of TlpA (E′0 = −256 mV). The reduction of CoxB by TlpA via disulfide exchange proved to be very fast, with a rate constant of 8.4 × 104 m−1 s−1 that is similar to that found previously for ScoI reduction. Hence, TlpA is a physiologically relevant reductase for both ScoI and CoxB. Although the requirement of ScoI for assembly of the CuA-CoxB complex may be bypassed in vivo by high environmental Cu2+ concentrations, TlpA is essential in this process because only reduced CoxB can bind copper ions.


ChemBioChem | 2013

(4R)- and (4S)-Fluoroproline in the Conserved cis-Prolyl Peptide Bond of the Thioredoxin Fold: Tertiary Structure Context Dictates Ring Puckering

Marina Rubini; Martin A. Schärer; Guido Capitani

Fine-tuning protein stability: The non-natural amino acids (2S,4R)- and (2S,4S)-fluoroproline modulate protein stability by biasing the proline ring pucker and the cis/trans equilibrium of prolyl peptide bonds. We incorporated both fluoroproline stereoisomers at the invariant cis-proline residue of the thioredoxin fold. The results show that tertiary structure context overrules the conformational preferences of fluoroprolines.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Crystal structure of the BoNT/A2 receptor-binding domain in complex with the luminal domain of its neuronal receptor SV2C

Roger Benoit; Martin A. Schärer; Mara Wieser; Xiaodan Li; Daniel M. Frey; Richard A. Kammerer

A detailed molecular understanding of botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT)/host-cell-receptor interactions is fundamental both for developing strategies against botulism and for generating improved BoNT variants for medical applications. The X-ray crystal structure of the receptor-binding domain (HC) of BoNT/A1 in complex with the luminal domain (LD) of its neuronal receptor SV2C revealed only few specific side-chain – side-chain interactions that are important for binding. Notably, two BoNT/A1 residues, Arg 1156 and Arg 1294, that are crucial for the interaction with SV2, are not conserved among subtypes. Because it has been suggested that differential receptor binding of subtypes might explain their differences in biological activity, we determined the crystal structure of BoNT/A2-HC in complex with SV2C-LD. Although only few side-chain interactions are conserved between the two BoNT/A subtypes, the overall binding mode of subtypes A1 and A2 is virtually identical. In the BoNT/A2-HC – SV2C complex structure, a missing cation-π stacking is compensated for by an additional salt bridge and an anion-π stacking interaction, which explains why the binding of BoNT/A subtypes to SV2C tolerates variable side chains. These findings suggest that motif extensions and a shallow binding cleft in BoNT/A-HC contribute to binding specificity.


FEBS Letters | 2011

Structural basis for reduced activity of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate synthase affected by a mutation linked to andromonoecy.

Martin A. Schärer; Andrew C. Eliot; Markus G. Grütter; Guido Capitani

1‐aminocyclopropane‐1‐carboxylate synthase (ACS) is a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of the plant hormone ethylene. Recently, a new biological role for ACS has been found in Cucumis melo where a single point mutation (A57V) of one isoform of the enzyme, causing reduced activity, results in andromonoecious plants. We present here a straightforward structural basis for the reduced activity of the A57V mutant, based on our work on Malus domestica ACS, including a new structure of the unliganded apple enzyme at 1.35 Å resolution.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Accelerating the Association of the Most Stable Protein–Ligand Complex by more than Two Orders of Magnitude

Christoph Giese; Jonathan Eras; Anne Kern; Martin A. Schärer; Guido Capitani

The complex between the bacterial type 1 pilus subunit FimG and the peptide corresponding to the N-terminal extension (termed donor strand, Ds) of the partner subunit FimF (DsF) shows the strongest reported noncovalent molecular interaction, with a dissociation constant (KD ) of 1.5×10(-20)  m. However, the complex only exhibits a slow association rate of 330 m(-1)  s(-1) that limits technical applications, such as its use in affinity purification. Herein, a structure-based approach was used to design pairs of FimGt (a FimG variant lacking its own N-terminal extension) and DsF variants with enhanced electrostatic surface complementarity. Association of the best mutant FimGt/DsF pairs was accelerated by more than two orders of magnitude, while the dissociation rates and 3D structures of the improved complexes remained essentially unperturbed. A KD  value of 8.8×10(-22)  m was obtained for the best mutant complex, which is the lowest value reported to date for a protein/ligand complex.

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Christian O. De Groot

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Richard A. Kammerer

Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell-Matrix Research

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