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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas D. Werbeck is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas D. Werbeck.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Coupling and dynamics of subunits in the hexameric AAA+ chaperone ClpB

Nicolas D. Werbeck; Sandra Schlee; Jochen Reinstein

The bacterial AAA+ protein ClpB and its eukaryotic homologue Hsp104 ensure thermotolerance of their respective organisms by reactivating aggregated proteins in cooperation with the Hsp70/Hsp40 chaperone system. Like many members of the AAA+ superfamily, the ClpB protomers form ringlike homohexameric complexes. The mechanical energy necessary to disentangle protein aggregates is provided by ATP hydrolysis at the two nucleotide-binding domains of each monomer. Previous studies on ClpB and Hsp104 show a complex interplay of domains and subunits resulting in homotypic and heterotypic cooperativity. Using mutations in the Walker A and Walker B nucleotide-binding motifs in combination with mixing experiments we investigated the degree of inter-subunit coupling with respect to different aspects of the ClpB working cycle. We find that subunits are tightly coupled with regard to ATPase and chaperone activity, but no coupling can be observed for ADP binding. Comparison of the data with statistical calculations suggests that for double Walker mutants, approximately two in six subunits are sufficient to abolish chaperone and ATPase activity completely. In further experiments, we determined the dynamics of subunit reshuffling. Our results show that ClpB forms a very dynamic complex, reshuffling subunits on a timescale comparable to steady-state ATP hydrolysis. We propose that this could be a protection mechanism to prevent very stable aggregates from becoming suicide inhibitors for ClpB.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

The ATPase cycle of the mitochondrial Hsp90 analog Trap1.

Adriane Leskovar; Harald Wegele; Nicolas D. Werbeck; Johannes Buchner; Jochen Reinstein

Hsp90 is an ATP-dependent molecular chaperone whose mechanism is not yet understood in detail. Here, we present the first ATPase cycle for the mitochondrial member of the Hsp90 family called Trap1 (tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated protein 1). Using biochemical, thermodynamic, and rapid kinetic methods we dissected the kinetics of the nucleotide-regulated rearrangements between the open and the closed conformations. Surprisingly, upon ATP binding, Trap1 shifts predominantly to the closed conformation (70%), but, unlike cytosolic Hsp90 from yeast, this process is rather slow at 0.076 s-1. Because reopening (0.034 s-1) is about ten times faster than hydrolysis (khyd = 0.0039 s-1), which is the rate-limiting step, Trap1 is not able to commit ATP to hydrolysis. The proposed ATPase cycle was further scrutinized by a global fitting procedure that utilizes all relevant experimental data simultaneously. This analysis corroborates our model of a two-step binding mechanism of ATP followed by irreversible ATP hydrolysis and a one-step product (ADP) release.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Probing a moving target with a plastic unfolding intermediate of an ankyrin-repeat protein

Nicolas D. Werbeck; Laura S. Itzhaki

Repeat proteins are composed of tandem arrays of 30- to 40-residue structural motifs and are characterized by short-range interactions between residues close in sequence. Here we have investigated the equilibrium unfolding of D34, a 426-residue fragment of ankyrinR that comprises 12 ankyrin repeats. We show that D34 unfolds via an intermediate in which the C-terminal half of the protein is structured and the N-terminal half is unstructured. Surprisingly, however, we find that we change the unfolding process when we attempt to probe it. Single-site, moderately destabilizing mutations at the C terminus result in different intermediates dominating. The closer to the C terminus the mutation, the fewer repeats are structured in the intermediate; thus, structure in the intermediate frays from the site of the mutation. This behavior contrasts with the robust unfolding of globular proteins in which mutations can destabilize an intermediate but do not cause a different intermediate to be populated. We suggest that, for large repeat arrays, the energy landscape is very rough, with many different low-energy species containing varying numbers of folded modules so the species that dominates can be altered easily by single, conservative mutations. The multiplicity of partly folded states populated in the equilibrium unfolding of D34 is also mirrored by the kinetic folding mechanism of ankyrin-repeat proteins in which we have observed that parallel pathways are accessible from different initiation sites in the structure.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Shifting transition states in the unfolding of a large ankyrin repeat protein

Nicolas D. Werbeck; Pamela J. E. Rowling; Vasuki R. Chellamuthu; Laura S. Itzhaki

The 33-amino-acid ankyrin motif comprises a β-turn followed by two anti-parallel α-helices and a loop and tandem arrays of the motif pack in a linear fashion to produce elongated structures characterized by short-range interactions. In this article we use site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the kinetic unfolding mechanism of D34, a 426-residue, 12-ankyrin repeat fragment of the protein ankyrinR. The data are consistent with a model in which the N-terminal half of the protein unfolds first by unraveling progressively from the start of the polypeptide chain to form an intermediate; in the next step, the C-terminal half of the protein unfolds via two pathways whose transition states have either the early or the late C-terminal ankyrin repeats folded. We conclude that the two halves of the protein unfold by different mechanisms because the N-terminal moiety folds and unfolds in the context of a folded C-terminal moiety, which therefore acts as a “seed” and confers a unique directionality on the process, whereas the C-terminal moiety folds and unfolds in the context of an unfolded N-terminal moiety and therefore behaves like a single-domain ankyrin repeat protein, having a high degree of symmetry and consequently more than one unfolding pathway accessible to it.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2010

Disaggregases in 4 dimensions

Thomas R. M. Barends; Nicolas D. Werbeck; Jochen Reinstein

Non-destructive dissagregation of protein aggregates is a formidable task mediated by the specialized AAA+ chaperone Hsp104/ClpB in combination with the Hsp70/DnaK chaperone system. The exact mechanism of how the hexameric Hsp104/ClpB proteins perform the task of protein disaggregation or remodeling is largely unknown. The process is ATP-dependent and tight coupling between the ATPase domains within the hexameric ring-complex could be observed. While substrate translocation through the central pore of the ring-shaped hexamer appears to be a central mechanism shared with other AAA+ proteins, a middle domain unique to Hsp104/ClpB could be involved in specific features of the Hsp/ClpB mechanism and its regulation. Recent findings underline the dynamic properties of the molecular complex and might provide a basis to understand substrate interaction, regulation of disaggregation activity, and interactions with co-chaperones.


Biochemistry | 2009

Nucleotide Binding and Allosteric Modulation of the Second AAA+ Domain of ClpB Probed by Transient Kinetic Studies

Nicolas D. Werbeck; Julian N. Kellner; Thomas R. M. Barends; Jochen Reinstein

The bacterial AAA+ chaperone ClpB provides thermotolerance by disaggregating aggregated proteins in collaboration with the DnaK chaperone system. Like many other AAA+ proteins, ClpB is believed to act as a biological motor converting the chemical energy of ATP into molecular motion. ClpB has two ATPase domains, NBD1 and NBD2, on one polypeptide chain. The functional unit of ClpB is a homohexameric ring, with a total of 12 potential nucleotide binding sites. Previously, two separate constructs, one each containing NBD1 or NBD2, have been shown to form a functional complex with chaperone activity when mixed. Here we aimed to elucidate the nucleotide binding properties of the ClpB complex using pre-steady state kinetics and fluorescent nucleotides. For this purpose, we first disassembled the complex and characterized in detail the binding kinetics of a construct comprising NBD2 and the C-terminal domain of ClpB. The monomeric construct bound nucleotides very tightly. ADP bound 2 orders of magnitude more tightly than ATP; this difference in binding affinity resulted almost exclusively from different dissociation rate constants. The nucleotide binding properties of NBD2 changed when this construct was complemented with a construct comprising NBD1 and the middle domain. Our approach shows how complex formation can influence the binding properties of the individual domains and allows us to assign nucleotide binding features of this highly complex, multimeric enzyme to specific domains.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Loop interactions and dynamics tune the enzymatic activity of the human histone deacetylase 8.

Micha B. A. Kunze; David W. Wright; Nicolas D. Werbeck; John Kirkpatrick; Peter V. Coveney; D. Flemming Hansen

The human histone deacetylase 8 (HDAC8) is a key hydrolase in gene regulation and has been identified as a drug target for the treatment of several cancers. Previously the HDAC8 enzyme has been extensively studied using biochemical techniques, X-ray crystallography, and computational methods. Those investigations have yielded detailed information about the active site and have demonstrated that the substrate entrance surface is highly dynamic. Yet it has remained unclear how the dynamics of the entrance surface tune and influence the catalytic activity of HDAC8. Using long time scale all atom molecular dynamics simulations we have found a mechanism whereby the interactions and dynamics of two loops tune the configuration of functionally important residues of HDAC8 and could therefore influence the activity of the enzyme. We subsequently investigated this hypothesis using a well-established fluorescence activity assay and a noninvasive real-time progression assay, where deacetylation of a p53 based peptide was observed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Our work delivers detailed insight into the dynamic loop network of HDAC8 and provides an explanation for a number of experimental observations.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Probing Arginine Side‐Chains and Their Dynamics with Carbon‐Detected NMR Spectroscopy: Application to the 42 kDa Human Histone Deacetylase 8 at High pH

Nicolas D. Werbeck; John Kirkpatrick; D. Flemming Hansen

Arginine side-chains play a distinct role because of their high pKa and perpetual positive charge. An NMR method is presented, based on carbon-detected 13Cζ–15Ne correlation spectra, which allows probing the arginine side-chains and their dynamics at neutral-to-high pH. The methodology is demonstrated on human histone deacetylase 8.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014

Elements in nucleotide sensing and hydrolysis of the AAA+ disaggregation machine ClpB: a structure-based mechanistic dissection of a molecular motor

Cathleen Zeymer; Thomas R. M. Barends; Nicolas D. Werbeck; Ilme Schlichting; Jochen Reinstein

High-resolution crystal structures together with mutational analysis and transient kinetics experiments were utilized to understand nucleotide sensing and the regulation of the ATPase cycle in an AAA+ molecular motor.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

The molecular mechanism of Hsp100 chaperone inhibition by the prion curing agent guanidinium chloride.

Cathleen Zeymer; Nicolas D. Werbeck; Ilme Schlichting; Jochen Reinstein

Background: Guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) inhibits Hsp100 chaperones and leads to prion curing in yeast. Results: The Gdm+ ion binds specifically to the N-terminal nucleotide binding domain, interacting primarily with a conserved glutamate and the bound nucleotide. Conclusion: GdmCl affects the catalytic cycle by both interfering with the essential glutamate and modulating nucleotide binding affinities. Significance: The study elucidates the mechanistic role of GdmCl in Hsp100 chaperone inhibition. The Hsp100 chaperones ClpB and Hsp104 utilize the energy from ATP hydrolysis to reactivate aggregated proteins in concert with the DnaK/Hsp70 chaperone system, thereby playing an important role in protein quality control. They belong to the family of AAA+ proteins (ATPases associated with various cellular activities), possess two nucleotide binding domains per monomer (NBD1 and NBD2), and oligomerize into hexameric ring complexes. Furthermore, Hsp104 is involved in yeast prion propagation and inheritance. It is well established that low concentrations of guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) inhibit the ATPase activity of Hsp104, leading to so called “prion curing,” the loss of prion-related phenotypes. Here, we present mechanistic details about the Hsp100 chaperone inhibition by GdmCl using the Hsp104 homolog ClpB from Thermus thermophilus. Initially, we demonstrate that NBD1 of ClpB, which was previously considered inactive as a separately expressed construct, is a fully active ATPase on its own. Next, we show that only NBD1, but not NBD2, is affected by GdmCl. We present a crystal structure of ClpB NBD1 in complex with GdmCl and ADP, showing that the Gdm+ ion binds specifically to the active site of NBD1. A conserved essential glutamate residue is involved in this interaction. Additionally, Gdm+ interacts directly with the nucleotide, thereby increasing the nucleotide binding affinity of NBD1. We propose that both the interference with the essential glutamate and the modulation of nucleotide binding properties in NBD1 is responsible for the GdmCl-specific inhibition of Hsp100 chaperones.

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