Mirko Himmel
University of Potsdam
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Mirko Himmel.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005
Matthias Vorgerd; Peter F.M. van der Ven; Vera Bruchertseifer; Thomas Löwe; Rudolf A. Kley; Rolf Schröder; Hanns Lochmüller; Mirko Himmel; Katrin Koehler; Dieter O. Fürst; Angela Huebner
Myofibrillar myopathy (MFM) is a human disease that is characterized by focal myofibrillar destruction and pathological cytoplasmic protein aggregations. In an extended German pedigree with a novel form of MFM characterized by clinical features of a limb-girdle myopathy and morphological features of MFM, we identified a co-segregating, heterozygous nonsense mutation (8130G-->A; W2710X) in the filamin c gene (FLNC) on chromosome 7q32.1. The mutation is the first found in FLNC and is localized in the dimerization domain of filamin c. Functional studies showed that, in the truncated mutant protein, this domain has a disturbed secondary structure that leads to the inability to dimerize properly. As a consequence of this malfunction, the muscle fibers of our patients display massive cytoplasmic aggregates containing filamin c and several Z-disk-associated and sarcolemmal proteins.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003
Thorsten Hornemann; Stefan Kempa; Mirko Himmel; Katrin Hayeß; Dieter O. Fürst; Theo Wallimann
Muscle-type creatine kinase (MM-CK) is a member of the CK isoenzyme family with key functions in cellular energetics. MM-CK interacts in an isoform-specific manner with the M-band of sarcomeric muscle, where it serves as an efficient intramyofibrillar ATP-regenerating system for the actin-activated myosin ATPase located nearby on both sides of the M-band. Four MM-CK-specific and highly conserved lysine residues are thought to be responsible for the interaction of MM-CK with the M-band. A yeast two-hybrid screen led to the identification of MM-CK as a binding partner of a central portion of myomesin (My7-8). An interaction was observed with domains six to eight of the closely related M-protein but not with several other Ig-like domains, including an M-band domain, of titin. The observed interactions were corroborated and characterised in detail by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy (BiaCore). In both cases, they were CK isoform-specific and the MM-CK-specific lysine residues (K8. K24, K104 and K115) are involved in this interaction. At pH 6.8, the dissociation constants for the myomesin/MM-CK and the M-protein/MM-CK binding were in the range of 50-100 nM and around 1 microM, respectively. The binding showed pronounced pH-dependence and indicates a dynamic association/dissociation behaviour, which most likely depends on the energy state of the muscle. Our data propose a simple model for the regulation of this dynamic interaction.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Alexandre R. Gingras; Wolfgang H. Ziegler; Andrey A. Bobkov; M. Gordon Joyce; Domenico Fasci; Mirko Himmel; Sven Rothemund; Anett Ritter; J. Günter Grossmann; Bipin Patel; Neil Bate; Benjamin T. Goult; Jonas Emsley; Igor L. Barsukov; Gordon C. K. Roberts; Robert C. Liddington; Mark H. Ginsberg; David R. Critchley
The adaptor protein talin serves both to activate the integrin family of cell adhesion molecules and to couple integrins to the actin cytoskeleton. Integrin activation has been shown to involve binding of the talin FERM domain to membrane proximal sequences in the cytoplasmic domain of the integrin β-subunit. However, a second integrin-binding site (IBS2) has been identified near the C-terminal end of the talin rod. Here we report the crystal structure of IBS2 (residues 1974-2293), which comprises two five-helix bundles, “IBS2-A” (1974-2139) and “IBS2-B” (2140-2293), connected by a continuous helix with a distinct kink at its center that is stabilized by side-chain H-bonding. Solution studies using small angle x-ray scattering and NMR point to a fairly flexible quaternary organization. Using pull-down and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, we demonstrate that integrin binding requires both IBS2 domains, as does binding to acidic phospholipids and robust targeting to focal adhesions. We have defined the membrane proximal region of the integrin cytoplasmic domain as the major binding region, although more membrane distal regions are also required for strong binding. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis points to an important electrostatic component to binding. Thermal unfolding experiments show that integrin binding induces conformational changes in the IBS2 module, which we speculate are linked to vinculin and membrane binding.
Biochemistry | 2003
Mirko Himmel; Peter F.M. van der Ven; Walter Stöcklein; Dieter O. Fürst
Filamins are a family of actin cross-linking proteins that are primarily localized in the cortical cytoplasm of all mammalian cells. Until now, three major isoforms (filamins a, b, and c) have been identified, that were shown to be differentially expressed and/or localized in different tissues. An amino-terminal double CH-domain actin binding domain, and a dimerization region in the carboxy-terminal portion of the protein are the molecular basis for its actin cross-linking activity. Chemical cross-linking of bacterially expressed recombinant proteins was used to demonstrate that in all three filamin isoforms the most carboxy-terminally situated immunoglobulinlike domain is required and sufficient for dimerization. The efficiency of the dimerization was increased upon inclusion of the preceding hinge 2 region, indicating a function for this region in the regulation of dimerization. By mixing recombinant proteins derived from different filamin isoforms, we found that heterodimer formation is possible between filamins b and c but not between filamin a and the other two filamins. This selectivity of dimerization might provide a further molecular explanation for the differential intracellular sorting of filamin isoforms and their distinct properties.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Mirko Himmel; Anett Ritter; Sven Rothemund; Björg V. Pauling; Klemens Rottner; Alexandre R. Gingras; Wolfgang H. Ziegler
In cell-extracellular matrix junctions (focal adhesions), the cytoskeletal protein talin is central to the connection of integrins to the actin cytoskeleton. Talin is thought to mediate this connection via its two integrin, (at least) three actin, and several vinculin binding sites. The binding sites are cryptic in the head-to-rod autoinhibited cytoplasmic form of the protein and require (stepwise) conformational activation. This activation process, however, remains poorly understood, and there are contradictory models with respect to the determinants of adhesion site localization. Here, we report turnover rates and protein-protein interactions in a range of talin rod domain constructs varying in helix bundle structure. We conclude that several bundles of the C terminus cooperate to regulate targeting and concomitantly tailor high affinity interactions of the talin rod in cell adhesions. Intrinsic control of ligand binding activities is essential for the coordination of adhesion site function of talin.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Susanna Marg; Ulrike Winkler; Marcello Sestu; Mirko Himmel; Madeleine Schönherr; Janina Bär; Amrit Mann; Markus Moser; Claudia T. Mierke; Klemens Rottner; Manfred Blessing; Johannes Hirrlinger; Wolfgang H. Ziegler
Background The cytoskeletal adaptor protein vinculin plays a fundamental role in cell contact regulation and affects central aspects of cell motility, which are essential to both embryonal development and tissue homeostasis. Functional regulation of this evolutionarily conserved and ubiquitously expressed protein is dominated by a high-affinity, autoinhibitory head-to-tail interaction that spatially restricts ligand interactions to cell adhesion sites and, furthermore, limits the residency time of vinculin at these sites. To date, no mutants of the vinculin protein have been characterized in animal models. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, we investigate vinculin-ΔEx20, a splice variant of the protein lacking the 68 amino acids encoded by exon 20 of the vinculin gene VCL. Vinculin-ΔEx20 was found to be expressed alongside with wild type protein in a knock-in mouse model with a deletion of introns 20 and 21 (VCL-ΔIn20/21 allele) and shows defective head-to-tail interaction. Homozygous VCL-ΔIn20/21 embryos die around embryonal day E12.5 showing cranial neural tube defects and exencephaly. In mouse embryonic fibroblasts and upon ectopic expression, vinculin-ΔEx20 reveals characteristics of constitutive head binding activity. Interestingly, the impact of vinculin-ΔEx20 on cell contact induction and stabilization, a hallmark of the vinculin head domain, is only moderate, thus allowing invasion and motility of cells in three-dimensional collagen matrices. Lacking both F-actin interaction sites of the tail, the vinculin-ΔEx20 variant unveils vinculins dynamic binding to cell adhesions independent of a cytoskeletal association, and thus differs from head-to-tail binding deficient mutants such as vinculin-T12, in which activated F-actin binding locks the protein variant to cell contact sites. Conclusions/Significance Vinculin-ΔEx20 is an active variant supporting adhesion site stabilization without an enhanced mechanical coupling. Its presence in a transgenic animal reveals the potential of splice variants in the vinculin gene to alter vinculin function in vivo. Correct control of vinculin is necessary for embryonic development.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2010
Johannes Bühligen; Mirko Himmel; Carl Gebhardt; Jan C. Simon; Wolfgang H. Ziegler; Marco Averbeck
Following antigen contact, maturation and migration of DCs into lymphatic tissues are crucial to the developing immune response or maintenance of tolerance. Lysophosphatidylcholine (LysoPC) is generated during apoptosis of cells and acts as a “find‐and‐eat‐me” signal thought to prevent autoimmunity. Moreover, LysoPC can activate PKCδ and initiates a signaling cascade that leads to phosphorylation and inactivation of syndecan‐4 (SDC4), a heparansulfate proteoglycan integrin co‐receptor. In human monocyte‐derived DCs, we recently demonstrated that SDC4 is upregulated during maturation thereby stimulating DC motility. Here, we investigate the effects of LysoPC on DC motility as well as on the involvement of PKCδ phosphorylation‐dependent regulation of DC motility by SDC4 and PKCα. Employing a static adhesion assay and videomicroscopy, we show that LysoPC inhibits adhesion of DCs to fibronectin and motility of DCs by decreasing podosome formation. Moreover, DC podosome formation and motility, which both are regulated by SDC4 and subject to control by PKCδ‐dependent phosphorylation of SDC4, were inhibited in LysoPC‐matured DCs. Thus, these DC are defective in adhesion and migration. Based on our results, we hypothesize that LysoPC released during apoptosis might delay DC migration to lymphoid organs and thus prevent autoimmunity. J. Cell. Physiol. 225: 905–914, 2010.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2000
Peter F.M. van der Ven; Sebastian Wiesner; Paula Salmikangas; Daniel Auerbach; Mirko Himmel; Stefan Kempa; Katrin Hayeß; Dirk Pacholsky; Anu Taivainen; Rolf Schröder; Olli Carpén; Dieter O. Fürst
Journal of Cell Science | 2004
Dirk Pacholsky; Padmanabhan Vakeel; Mirko Himmel; Thomas Löwe; Theresia E. B. Stradal; Klemens Rottner; Dieter O. Fürst; Peter F.M. van der Ven
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005
Stephan Lange; Mirko Himmel; Daniel Auerbach; Irina Agarkova; Katrin Hayess; Dieter O. Fürst; Jean-Claude Perriard; Elisabeth Ehler