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Dive into the research topics where Peter Friedhoff is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Friedhoff.


FEBS Letters | 1996

RNA stimulates aggregation of microtubule‐associated protein tau into Alzheimer‐like paired helical filaments

T. Kampers; Peter Friedhoff; Jacek Biernat; Eva Maria Mandelkow; Eva-Maria Mandelkow

The microtubule‐associated protein tau is the main component of the paired helical filaments (PHFs) of Alzheimers disease, the most common senile dementia. To understand the origin of taus abnormal assembly we have studied the influence of other cytosolic components. Here we report that PHF assembly is strongly enhanced by RNA. The RNA‐induced assembly of PHFs is dependent on the formation of intermolecular disulfide bridges involving Cys322 in the third repeat of tau, and it includes the dimerization of tau as an early intermediate. Three‐repeat constructs polymerize most efficiently, two repeat constructs are the minimum number required for assembly, and even all six full‐length isoforms of tau can be induced to form PHFs by RNA.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Structure of tau protein and assembly into paired helical filaments

Peter Friedhoff; Martin von Bergen; Eva-Maria Mandelkow; Eckhard Mandelkow

Over the past few years the systematic investigation of paired helical filament assembly from tau protein in vitro has become feasible. We review our current understanding of the structure and conformations of tau protein and how this affects taus assembly into the pathological paired helical filaments in Alzheimers disease.


Molecular Cell | 2010

Structure of the endonuclease domain of MutL: unlicensed to cut

Monica C. Pillon; Jessica J. Lorenowicz; Michael Uckelmann; Andrew D. Klocko; Ryan R. Mitchell; Yu Seon Chung; Paul Modrich; Graham C. Walker; Lyle A. Simmons; Peter Friedhoff; Alba Guarné

DNA mismatch repair corrects errors that have escaped polymerase proofreading, increasing replication fidelity 100- to 1000-fold in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans. The MutL protein plays a central role in mismatch repair by coordinating multiple protein-protein interactions that signal strand removal upon mismatch recognition by MutS. Here we report the crystal structure of the endonuclease domain of Bacillus subtilis MutL. The structure is organized in dimerization and regulatory subdomains connected by a helical lever spanning the conserved endonuclease motif. Additional conserved motifs cluster around the lever and define a Zn(2+)-binding site that is critical for MutL function in vivo. The structure unveils a powerful inhibitory mechanism to prevent undesired nicking of newly replicated DNA and allows us to propose a model describing how the interaction with MutS and the processivity clamp could license the endonuclease activity of MutL. The structure also provides a molecular framework to propose and test additional roles of MutL in mismatch repair.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Mutations in the MutSα interaction interface of MLH1 can abolish DNA mismatch repair

Guido Plotz; Christoph Welsch; Luis Giron-Monzon; Peter Friedhoff; Mario Albrecht; Albrecht Piiper; Ricardo M. Biondi; Thomas Lengauer; Stefan Zeuzem; Jochen Raedle

MutLα, a heterodimer of MLH1 and PMS2, plays a central role in human DNA mismatch repair. It interacts ATP-dependently with the mismatch detector MutSα and assembles and controls further repair enzymes. We tested if the interaction of MutLα with DNA-bound MutSα is impaired by cancer-associated mutations in MLH1, and identified one mutation (Ala128Pro) which abolished interaction as well as mismatch repair activity. Further examinations revealed three more residues whose mutation interfered with interaction. Homology modelling of MLH1 showed that all residues clustered in a small accessible surface patch, suggesting that the major interaction interface of MutLα for MutSα is located on the edge of an extensive β-sheet that backs the MLH1 ATP binding pocket. Bioinformatic analysis confirmed that this patch corresponds to a conserved potential protein–protein interaction interface which is present in both human MLH1 and its E.coli homologue MutL. MutL could be site-specifically crosslinked to MutS from this patch, confirming that the bacterial MutL–MutS complex is established by the corresponding interface in MutL. This is the first study that identifies the conserved major MutLα–MutSα interaction interface in MLH1 and demonstrates that mutations in this interface can affect interaction and mismatch repair, and thereby can also contribute to cancer development.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Sau3AI, a Monomeric Type II Restriction Endonuclease That Dimerizes on the DNA and Thereby Induces DNA Loops

Peter Friedhoff; Rudi Lurz; Gerhild Lüder; Alfred Pingoud

Here, we report that Sau3AI, an unusually large type II restriction enzyme with sequence homology to the mismatch repair protein MutH, is a monomeric enzyme as shown by gel filtration and ultracentrifugation. Structural similarities in the N- and C-terminal halves of the protein suggest that Sau3AI is a pseudo-dimer, i.e. a polypeptide with two similar domains. Since Sau3AI displays a nonlinear dependence of cleavage activity on enzyme concentration and a strong preference for substrates with two recognition sites over those with only one, it is likely that the functionally active form of Sau3AI is a dimer of a pseudo-dimer. Indeed, electron microscopy studies demonstrate that two distant recognition sites are brought together through DNA looping induced by the simultaneous binding of twoSau3AI molecules to the DNA. We suggest that the dimeric form of Sau3AI supplies two DNA-binding sites, one that is associated with the catalytic center and one that serves as an effector site.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

On the Divalent Metal Ion Dependence of DNA Cleavage by Restriction Endonucleases of the EcoRI Family

Vera Pingoud; Wolfgang Wende; Peter Friedhoff; Monika Reuter; Jürgen Alves; Albert Jeltsch; Letif Mones; Monika Fuxreiter; Alfred Pingoud

Restriction endonucleases of the PD...D/EXK family need Mg(2+) for DNA cleavage. Whereas Mg(2+) (or Mn(2+)) promotes catalysis, Ca(2+) (without Mg(2+)) only supports DNA binding. The role of Mg(2+) in DNA cleavage by restriction endonucleases has elicited many hypotheses, differing mainly in the number of Mg(2+) involved in catalysis. To address this problem, we measured the Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) concentration dependence of DNA cleavage by BamHI, BglII, Cfr10I, EcoRI, EcoRII (catalytic domain), MboI, NgoMIV, PspGI, and SsoII, which were reported in co-crystal structure analyses to bind one (BglII and EcoRI) or two (BamHI and NgoMIV) Me(2+) per active site. DNA cleavage experiments were carried out at various Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) concentrations at constant ionic strength. All enzymes show a qualitatively similar Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) concentration dependence. In general, the Mg(2+) concentration optimum (between approximately 1 and 10 mM) is higher than the Mn(2+) concentration optimum (between approximately 0.1 and 1 mM). At still higher Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) concentrations, the activities of all enzymes tested are reduced but can be reactivated by Ca(2+). Based on these results, we propose that one Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) is critical for restriction enzyme activation, and binding of a second Me(2+) plays a role in modulating the activity. Steady-state kinetics carried out with EcoRI and BamHI suggest that binding of a second Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) mainly leads to an increase in K(m), such that the inhibitory effect of excess Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) can be overcome by increasing the substrate concentration. Our conclusions are supported by molecular dynamics simulations and are consistent with the structural observations of both one and two Me(2+) binding to these enzymes.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

The PMS2 Subunit of Human MutLα Contains a Metal Ion Binding Domain of the Iron-Dependent Repressor Protein Family

Jan Kosinski; Guido Plotz; Alba Guarné; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Peter Friedhoff

DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is responsible for correcting replication errors. MutLalpha, one of the main players in MMR, has been recently shown to harbor an endonuclease/metal-binding activity, which is important for its function in vivo. This endonuclease activity has been confined to the C-terminal domain of the hPMS2 subunit of the MutLalpha heterodimer. In this work, we identify a striking sequence-structure similarity of hPMS2 to the metal-binding/dimerization domain of the iron-dependent repressor protein family and present a structural model of the metal-binding domain of MutLalpha. According to our model, this domain of MutLalpha comprises at least three highly conserved sequence motifs, which are also present in most MutL homologs from bacteria that do not rely on the endonuclease activity of MutH for strand discrimination. Furthermore, based on our structural model, we predict that MutLalpha is a zinc ion binding protein and confirm this prediction by way of biochemical analysis of zinc ion binding using the full-length and C-terminal domain of MutLalpha. Finally, we demonstrate that the conserved residues of the metal ion binding domain are crucial for MMR activity of MutLalpha in vitro.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Identifying an interaction site between MutH and the C-terminal domain of MutL by crosslinking, affinity purification, chemical coding and mass spectrometry

Robert Ahrends; Jan Kosinski; Dieter Kirsch; Laura Manelyte; Luis Giron-Monzon; Lars Hummerich; Oliver Schulz; Bernhard Spengler; Peter Friedhoff

To investigate protein–protein interaction sites in the DNA mismatch repair system we developed a crosslinking/mass spectrometry technique employing a commercially available trifunctional crosslinker with a thiol-specific methanethiosulfonate group, a photoactivatable benzophenone moiety and a biotin affinity tag. The XACM approach combines photocrosslinking (X), in-solution digestion of the crosslinked mixtures, affinity purification via the biotin handle (A), chemical coding of the crosslinked products (C) followed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (M). We illustrate the feasibility of the method using a single-cysteine variant of the homodimeric DNA mismatch repair protein MutL. Moreover, we successfully applied this method to identify the photocrosslink formed between the single-cysteine MutH variant A223C, labeled with the trifunctional crosslinker in the C-terminal helix and its activator protein MutL. The identified crosslinked MutL-peptide maps to a conserved surface patch of the MutL C-terminal dimerization domain. These observations are substantiated by additional mutational and chemical crosslinking studies. Our results shed light on the potential structures of the MutL holoenzyme and the MutH–MutL–DNA complex.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Chemical Trapping of the Dynamic MutS-MutL Complex Formed in DNA Mismatch Repair in Escherichia coli

Ines Winkler; Andreas D. Marx; Damien Lariviere; Roger J. Heinze; Michele Cristovao; Annet Reumer; Ute Curth; Titia K. Sixma; Peter Friedhoff

The ternary complex comprising MutS, MutL, and DNA is a key intermediate in DNA mismatch repair. We used chemical cross-linking and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to study the interaction between MutS and MutL and to shed light onto the structure of this complex. Via chemical cross-linking, we could stabilize this dynamic complex and identify the structural features of key events in DNA mismatch repair. We could show that in the complex between MutS and MutL the mismatch-binding and connector domains of MutS are in proximity to the N-terminal ATPase domain of MutL. The DNA- and nucleotide-dependent complex formation could be monitored by FRET using single cysteine variants labeled in the connector domain of MutS and the transducer domain of MutL, respectively. In addition, we could trap MutS after an ATP-induced conformational change by an intramolecular cross-link between Cys-93 of the mismatch-binding domain and Cys-239 of the connector domain.


Human Mutation | 2010

Identification of Lynch syndrome mutations in the MLH1–PMS2 interface that disturb dimerization and mismatch repair†

Jan Kosinski; Inga Hinrichsen; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Peter Friedhoff; Guido Plotz

Missense alterations of the mismatch repair gene MLH1 have been identified in a significant proportion of individuals suspected of having Lynch syndrome, a hereditary syndrome that predisposes for cancer of colon and endometrium. The pathogenicity of many of these alterations, however, is unclear. A number of MLH1 alterations are located in the C‐terminal domain (CTD) of MLH1, which is responsible for constitutive dimerization with PMS2. We analyzed which alterations may result in pathogenic effects due to interference with dimerization. We used a structural model of CTD of MLH1–PMS2 heterodimer to select 19 MLH1 alterations located inside and outside two candidate dimerization interfaces in the MLH1–CTD. Three alterations (p.Gln542Leu, p.Leu749Pro, p.Tyr750X) caused decreased coexpression of PMS2, which is unstable in the absence of interaction with MLH1, suggesting that these alterations interfere with dimerization. All three alterations are located within the dimerization interface suggested by our model. They also compromised mismatch repair, suggesting that defects in dimerization abrogate repair and confirming that all three alterations are pathogenic. Additionally, we provided biochemical evidence that four alterations with uncertain pathogenicity (p.Ala586Pro, p.Leu636Pro, p.Thr662Pro, and p.Arg755Trp) are deleterious because of poor expression or poor repair efficiency, and confirm the deleterious effect of eight further alterations. Hum Mutat 31:975–982, 2010.

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Eva-Maria Mandelkow

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Wolfgang Wende

Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University

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