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Featured researches published by Martin Renatus.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

Structural basis for the activation of flaviviral NS3 proteases from dengue and West Nile virus.

Paul Erbel; Nikolaus Schiering; Allan D'Arcy; Martin Renatus; Markus Kroemer; Siew Pheng Lim; Zheng Yin; Thomas H. Keller; Subhash G. Vasudevan; Ulrich Hommel

The replication of flaviviruses requires the correct processing of their polyprotein by the viral NS3 protease (NS3pro). Essential for the activation of NS3pro is a 47-residue region of NS2B. Here we report the crystal structures of a dengue NS2B–NS3pro complex and a West Nile virus NS2B–NS3pro complex with a substrate-based inhibitor. These structures identify key residues for NS3pro substrate recognition and clarify the mechanism of NS3pro activation.


Structure | 2006

Structural Basis of Ubiquitin Recognition by the Deubiquitinating Protease USP2.

Martin Renatus; Shirley Gil Parrado; Allan D'Arcy; Ulf Eidhoff; Bernd Gerhartz; Ulrich Hassiepen; Benoit Pierrat; Ralph Riedl; Daniela Vinzenz; Susanne Worpenberg; Markus Kroemer

Summary Deubiquitinating proteases reverse protein ubiquitination and rescue their target proteins from destruction by the proteasome. USP2, a cysteine protease and a member of the ubiquitin specific protease family, is overexpressed in prostate cancer and stabilizes fatty acid synthase, which has been associated with the malignancy of some aggressive prostate cancers. Here, we report the structure of the human USP2 catalytic domain in complex with ubiquitin. Ubiquitin uses two major sites for the interaction with the protease. Both sites are required simultaneously, as shown by USP2 inhibition assays with peptides and ubiquitin mutants. In addition, a layer of ordered water molecules mediates key interactions between ubiquitin and USP2. As several of those molecules are found at identical positions in the previously solved USP7/ubiquitin-aldehyde complex structure, we suggest a general mechanism of water-mediated ubiquitin recognition by USPs.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

Structural Determinants of MALT1 Protease Activity.

Christian Wiesmann; Lukas Leder; Jutta Blank; Anna Bernardi; Samu Melkko; Arnaud Decock; Allan D'Arcy; Frederic Villard; P. Erbel; Nicola Hughes; Felix Freuler; Rainer Nikolay; Juliano Alves; Frédéric Bornancin; Martin Renatus

The formation of the CBM (CARD11-BCL10-MALT1) complex is pivotal for antigen-receptor-mediated activation of the transcription factor NF-κB. Signaling is dependent on MALT1 (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma translocation protein 1), which not only acts as a scaffolding protein but also possesses proteolytic activity mediated by its caspase-like domain. It remained unclear how the CBM activates MALT1. Here, we provide biochemical and structural evidence that MALT1 activation is dependent on its dimerization and show that mutations at the dimer interface abrogate activity in cells. The unliganded protease presents itself in a dimeric yet inactive state and undergoes substantial conformational changes upon substrate binding. These structural changes also affect the conformation of the C-terminal Ig-like domain, a domain that is required for MALT1 activity. Binding to the active site is coupled to a relative movement of caspase and Ig-like domains. MALT1 binding partners thus may have the potential of tuning MALT1 protease activity without binding directly to the caspase domain.


Biochemical Journal | 2009

The Crystal Structure of Caspase-6, a Selective Effector of Axonal Degeneration.

Renato Baumgartner; Gabriele Meder; Christophe Briand; Arnaud Decock; Allan D'Arcy; Ulrich Hassiepen; Richard Morse; Martin Renatus

Neurodegenerative diseases pose one of the most pressing unmet medical needs today. It has long been recognized that caspase-6 may play a role in several neurodegenerative diseases for which there are currently no disease-modifying therapies. Thus it is a potential target for neurodegenerative drug development. In the present study we report on the biochemistry and structure of caspase-6. As an effector caspase, caspase-6 is a constitutive dimer independent of the maturation state of the enzyme. The ligand-free structure shows caspase-6 in a partially mature but latent conformation. The cleaved inter-domain linker remains partially inserted in the central groove of the dimer, as observed in other caspases. However, in contrast with the structures of other caspases, not only is the catalytic machinery misaligned, but several structural elements required for substrate recognition are missing. Most importantly, residues forming a short anti-parallel beta-sheet abutting the substrate in other caspase structures are part of an elongation of the central alpha-helix. Despite the dramatic structural changes that are required to adopt a canonical catalytically competent conformation, the pre-steady-state kinetics exhibit no lag phase in substrate turnover. This suggests that the observed conformation does not play a regulatory role in caspase-6 activity. However, targeting the latent conformation in search for specific and bio-available caspase-6 inhibitors might offer an alternative to active-site-directed approaches.


Nature Communications | 2016

Targeted inhibition of the COP9 signalosome for treatment of cancer

Anita Schlierf; Eva Altmann; Jean Quancard; Anne B. Jefferson; René Assenberg; Martin Renatus; Matthew Jones; Ulrich Hassiepen; Michael Schaefer; Michael Kiffe; Andreas Weiss; Christian Wiesmann; Richard Sedrani; Jörg Eder; Bruno Martoglio

The COP9 signalosome (CSN) is a central component of the activation and remodelling cycle of cullin-RING E3 ubiquitin ligases (CRLs), the largest enzyme family of the ubiquitin–proteasome system in humans. CRLs are implicated in the regulation of numerous cellular processes, including cell cycle progression and apoptosis, and aberrant CRL activity is frequently associated with cancer. Remodelling of CRLs is initiated by CSN-catalysed cleavage of the ubiquitin-like activator NEDD8 from CRLs. Here we describe CSN5i-3, a potent, selective and orally available inhibitor of CSN5, the proteolytic subunit of CSN. The compound traps CRLs in the neddylated state, which leads to inactivation of a subset of CRLs by inducing degradation of their substrate recognition module. CSN5i-3 differentially affects the viability of tumour cell lines and suppresses growth of a human xenograft in mice. Our results provide insights into how CSN regulates CRLs and suggest that CSN5 inhibition has potential for anti-tumour therapy.


Immunology and Cell Biology | 2018

The T-cell fingerprint of MALT1 paracaspase revealed by selective inhibition

Maureen Bardet; Adeline Unterreiner; Claire Malinverni; Frédérique Lafossas; Corinne Vedrine; Danielle Boesch; Yeter Kolb; Daniel Kaiser; Anton Glück; Martin A. Schneider; Andreas Katopodis; Martin Renatus; Oliver Simic; Achim Schlapbach; Jean Quancard; Catherine H. Regnier; Guido Bold; Carole Pissot-Soldermann; José M. Carballido; Jiri Kovarik; Thomas Calzascia; Frédéric Bornancin

Mucosa‐associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma translocation protein 1 (MALT1) is essential for immune responses triggered by antigen receptors but the contribution of its paracaspase activity is not fully understood. Here, we studied how MALT1 proteolytic function regulates T‐cell activation and fate after engagement of the T‐cell receptor pathway. We show that MLT‐827, a potent and selective MALT1 paracaspase inhibitor, does not prevent the initial phase of T‐cell activation, in contrast to the pan‐protein kinase C inhibitor AEB071. However, MLT‐827 strongly impacted cell expansion after activation. We demonstrate this is the consequence of profound inhibition of IL‐2 production as well as reduced expression of the IL‐2 receptor alpha subunit (CD25), resulting from defective canonical NF‐κB activation and accelerated mRNA turnover mechanisms. Accordingly, MLT‐827 revealed a unique transcriptional fingerprint of MALT1 protease activity, providing evidence for broad control of T‐cell signaling pathways. Altogether, this first report with a potent and selective inhibitor elucidates how MALT1 paracaspase activity integrates several T‐cell activation pathways and indirectly controls gamma‐chain receptor dependent survival, to impact on T‐cell expansion.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Two Antagonistic MALT1 Auto-Cleavage Mechanisms Reveal a Role for TRAF6 to Unleash MALT1 Activation

Stefanie Ginster; Maureen Bardet; Adeline Unterreiner; Claire Malinverni; Florian Renner; Stephen Lam; Felix Freuler; Bertran Gerrits; Johannes Voshol; Thomas Calzascia; Catherine H. Regnier; Martin Renatus; Rainer Nikolay; Laura Israël; Frédéric Bornancin

The paracaspase MALT1 has arginine-directed proteolytic activity triggered by engagement of immune receptors. Recruitment of MALT1 into activation complexes is required for MALT1 proteolytic function. Here, co-expression of MALT1 in HEK293 cells, either with activated CARD11 and BCL10 or with TRAF6, was used to explore the mechanism of MALT1 activation at the molecular level. This work identified a prominent self-cleavage site of MALT1 isoform A (MALT1A) at R781 (R770 in MALT1B) and revealed that TRAF6 can activate MALT1 independently of the CBM. Intramolecular cleavage at R781/R770 removes a C-terminal TRAF6-binding site in both MALT1 isoforms, leaving MALT1B devoid of the two key interaction sites with TRAF6. A previously identified auto-proteolysis site of MALT1 at R149 leads to deletion of the death-domain, thereby abolishing interaction with BCL10. By using MALT1 isoforms and cleaved fragments thereof, as well as TRAF6 WT and mutant forms, this work shows that TRAF6 induces N-terminal auto-proteolytic cleavage of MALT1 at R149 and accelerates MALT1 protein turnover. The MALT1 fragment generated by N-terminal self-cleavage at R149 was labile and displayed enhanced signaling properties that required an intact K644 residue, previously shown to be a site for mono-ubiquitination of MALT1. Conversely, C-terminal self-cleavage at R781/R770 hampered the ability for self-cleavage at R149 and stabilized MALT1 by hindering interaction with TRAF6. C-terminal self-cleavage had limited impact on MALT1A but severely reduced MALT1B proteolytic and signaling functions. It also abrogated NF-κB activation by N-terminally cleaved MALT1A. Altogether, this study provides further insights into mechanisms that regulate the scaffolding and activation cycle of MALT1. It also emphasizes the reduced functional capacity of MALT1B as compared to MALT1A.


Protein Science | 2010

A lead discovery strategy driven by a comprehensive analysis of proteases in the peptide substrate space

Sai Chetan K. Sukuru; Florian Nigsch; Jean Quancard; Martin Renatus; Rajiv Chopra; Natasja Brooijmans; Dmitri Mikhailov; Zhan Deng; Allen Cornett; Jeremy L. Jenkins; Ulrich Hommel; John W. Davies; Meir Glick

We present here a comprehensive analysis of proteases in the peptide substrate space and demonstrate its applicability for lead discovery. Aligned octapeptide substrates of 498 proteases taken from the MEROPS peptidase database were used for the in silico analysis. A multiple‐category naïve Bayes model, trained on the two‐dimensional chemical features of the substrates, was able to classify the substrates of 365 (73%) proteases and elucidate statistically significant chemical features for each of their specific substrate positions. The positional awareness of the method allows us to identify the most similar substrate positions between proteases. Our analysis reveals that proteases from different families, based on the traditional classification (aspartic, cysteine, serine, and metallo), could have substrates that differ at the cleavage site (P1–P1′) but are similar away from it. Caspase‐3 (cysteine protease) and granzyme B (serine protease) are previously known examples of cross‐family neighbors identified by this method. To assess whether peptide substrate similarity between unrelated proteases could reliably translate into the discovery of low molecular weight synthetic inhibitors, a lead discovery strategy was tested on two other cross‐family neighbors—namely cathepsin L2 and matrix metallo proteinase 9, and calpain 1 and pepsin A. For both these pairs, a naïve Bayes classifier model trained on inhibitors of one protease could successfully enrich those of its neighbor from a different family and vice versa, indicating that this approach could be prospectively applied to lead discovery for a novel protease target with no known synthetic inhibitors.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Azaindoles as Zinc-Binding Small-Molecule Inhibitors of the JAMM Protease CSN5.

Eva Altmann; Paul Erbel; Martin Renatus; Michael Schaefer; Anita Schlierf; Adelaide Druet; Laurence Kieffer; Mickael Sorge; Keith B. Pfister; Ulrich Hassiepen; Matthew Jones; Simon Ruedisser; Daniela Ostermeier; Bruno Martoglio; Anne B. Jefferson; Jean Quancard

CSN5 is the zinc metalloprotease subunit of the COP9 signalosome (CSN), which is an important regulator of cullin-RING E3 ubiquitin ligases (CRLs). CSN5 is responsible for the cleavage of NEDD8 from CRLs, and blocking deconjugation of NEDD8 traps the CRLs in a hyperactive state, thereby leading to auto-ubiquitination and ultimately degradation of the substrate recognition subunits. Herein, we describe the discovery of azaindoles as a new class of CSN5 inhibitors, which interact with the active-site zinc ion of CSN5 through an unprecedented binding mode. The best compounds inhibited CSN5 with nanomolar potency, led to degradation of the substrate recognition subunit Skp2 in cells, and reduced the viability of HCT116 cells.


Structure | 2012

Phosphorylation Meets Proteolysis

Martin Renatus; Christopher J. Farady

Phosphorylation is a reversible post-translational modification that regulates many proteins and enzymes, including proteases, as shown by two recent publications. Huang and colleagues and Velázquez-Delgado and Hardy (this issue of Structure) describe how phosphorylation activates the protease activity of the deubiquitinating enzyme DUBA and how it inhibits caspase-6, respectively.

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