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Featured researches published by Peter Loidl.


The Plant Cell | 1995

Inhibition of maize histone deacetylases by HC toxin, the host-selective toxin of Cochliobolus carbonum.

Gerald Brosch; Richard Ransom; Thomas Lechner; Jonathan D. Walton; Peter Loidl

HC toxin, the host-selective toxin of the maize pathogen Cochliobolus carbonum, inhibited maize histone deacetylase (HD) at 2 microM. Chlamydocin, a related cyclic tetrapeptide, also inhibited HD activity. The toxins did not affect histone acetyltransferases. After partial purification of histone deacetylases HD1-A, HD1-B, and HD2 from germinating maize embryos, we demonstrated that the different enzymes were similarly inhibited by the toxins. Inhibitory activities were reversibly eliminated by treating toxins with 2-mercaptoethanol, presumably by modifying the carbonyl group of the epoxide-containing amino acid Aeo (2-amino-9,10-epoxy-8-oxodecanoic acid). Kinetic studies revealed that inhibition of HD was of the uncompetitive type and reversible. HC toxin, in which the epoxide group had been hydrolyzed, completely lost its inhibitory activity; when the carbonyl group of Aeo had been reduced to the corresponding alcohol, the modified toxin was less active than native toxin. In vivo treatment of embryos with HC toxin caused the accumulation of highly acetylated histone H4 subspecies and elevated acetate incorporation into H4 in susceptible-genotype embryos but not in the resistant genotype. HDs from chicken and the myxomycete Physarum polycephalum were also inhibited, indicating that the host selectivity of HC toxin is not determined by its inhibitory effect on HD. Consistent with these results, we propose a model in which HC toxin promotes the establishment of pathogenic compatibility between C. carbonum and maize by interfering with reversible histone acetylation, which is implicated in the control of fundamental cellular processes, such as chromatin structure, cell cycle progression, and gene expression.


Chromosoma | 1994

Histone acetylation: facts and questions

Peter Loidl

The DNA of eukaryotic cells is organized in a complex with proteins, either as interphase chromatin or mitotic chromosomes. Nucleosomes, the structural subunits of chromatin, have long been considered as static structures, incompatible with processes occurring in chromatin. During the past few years it has become evident that the histone part of the nucleosome has important regulatory functions. Some of these functions are mediated by the N-terminal core histone domains which contain sites for posttranslational modifications, among them lysine residues for reversible acetylation. Recent results indicate that acetylation and deacetylation of N-terminal lysines of nucleosomal core histones represent a means of molecular communication between chromatin and the cellular signal transduction network, resulting in heritable epigenetic information. Data on enzymes involved in acetylation and the pattern of acetylated lysine sites on chromosomes, as well as genetic data on yeast transcriptional repression, suggest that acetylation may lead to structural transitions as well as specific signalling within distinct chromatin domains.


Trends in Plant Science | 2001

Histone acetylation: lessons from the plant kingdom

Alexandra Lusser; Doris Kölle; Peter Loidl

Post-translational acetylation of core histones is an enigmatic process. The identification of histone acetyltransferases and deacetylases as co-regulators of transcription in yeast and vertebrates has advanced our understanding of the biological role of histone acetylation and also improved our general insight into the molecular network of gene regulation. Basic features of histone acetylation in plants resemble those of other eukaryotes but there are differences, which are reflected in novel classes of histone deacetylase. Investigating histone acetylation in higher plants might reveal regulatory pathways distinct from animals, yet of essential importance for gene expression in plants.


Current Biology | 1997

Cell growth inhibition by the Mad/Max complex through recruitment of histone deacetylase activity

Anette Sommer; Stefanie Hilfenhaus; Annette R. Menkel; Elisabeth Kremmer; Christian Seiser; Peter Loidl; Bernhard Lüscher

BACKGROUND The organization of chromatin is crucial for the regulation of gene expression. In particular, both the positioning and properties of nucleosomes influence promoter-specific transcription. The acetylation of core histones has been suggested to alter the properties of nucleosomes and affect the access of DNA-binding transcriptional regulators to promoters. A recently identified mammalian histone deacetylase (HD1) shows homology to the yeast Rpd3 protein, which together with Sin3 affects the transcription of several genes. Mammalian Sin3 proteins interact with the Mad components of the Myc/Max/Mad network of cell growth regulators. Mad/Max complexes may recruit mammalian Rpd3-like enzymes, therefore, directing histone deacetylase activity to promoters and negatively regulating cell growth. RESULTS We report the identification of a tetrameric complex composed of Max, Mad1, Sin3B and HD1. This complex has histone deacetylase activity which can be blocked by the histone deacetylase inhibitors trichostatin A and sodium butyrate. The inhibition of cell growth by Mad1 is enhanced by Sin3B and HD1, as measured by colony formation assays. Furthermore, a Mad1-induced block of S-phase progression can be overcome by trichostatin A, as shown in microinjection experiments. CONCLUSIONS The recruitment of a histone deacetylase by sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins provides a mechanism by which the state of acetylation of histones in nucleosomes and hence the activity of specific promoters can be influenced. The finding that Mad/Max complexes interact with Sin3 and HD1 in vivo suggests a model for the role of Mad proteins in antagonizing the function of Myc proteins.


FEBS Letters | 1988

Towards an understanding of the biological function of histone acetylation

Peter Loidl

A model is presented which explains the biological function of posttranslational acetylation of core histones in chromatin. Along the lines of this model histone acetylation serves as a general mechanism to destabilize nucleosome core particles during various processes occurring in chromatin. Acetylation acts as a signal that modulates histone‐protein and histone‐DNA interactions and finally leads to the displacement of particular histones from nucleosome cores. The high specificity of the acetylation signal for different processes (DNA replication, transcription, differentiation‐specific histone replacement) is achieved by site specificity and asymmetry of acetylation in nucleosomes. The essential features of this model are in accord with the more recent results on histone acetylation.


Fems Microbiology Reviews | 2008

Histone modifications and chromatin dynamics: a focus on filamentous fungi.

Gerald Brosch; Peter Loidl; Stefan Graessle

The readout of the genetic information of eukaryotic organisms is significantly regulated by modifications of DNA and chromatin proteins. Chromatin alterations induce genome-wide and local changes in gene expression and affect a variety of processes in response to internal and external signals during growth, differentiation, development, in metabolic processes, diseases, and abiotic and biotic stresses. This review aims at summarizing the roles of histone H1 and the acetylation and methylation of histones in filamentous fungi and links this knowledge to the huge body of data from other systems. Filamentous fungi show a wide range of morphologies and have developed a complex network of genes that enables them to use a great variety of substrates. This fact, together with the possibility of simple and quick genetic manipulation, highlights these organisms as model systems for the investigation of gene regulation. However, little is still known about regulation at the chromatin level in filamentous fungi. Understanding the role of chromatin in transcriptional regulation would be of utmost importance with respect to the impact of filamentous fungi in human diseases and agriculture. The synthesis of compounds (antibiotics, immunosuppressants, toxins, and compounds with adverse effects) is also likely to be regulated at the chromatin level.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1997

Analogues of trichosтatin a and trapoxin B as histone deacetylase inhibitors

Manfred Jung; Katharina Hoffmann; Gerald Brosch; Peter Loidl

Abstract Inhibitors of histone deacetylase are potent inducers of differentiation and bear considerable potential as drugs for chemoprevention and treatment of cancer. So far only complex natural products and a few synthetic congeners have been identified as specific inhibitors. We have prepared a set of simple analogues in as little as four synthetic steps that have inhibitory potencies in the range of known cyclotetrapeptide inhibitors. These compounds are interesting leads for the design of potent inhibitors of histone deacetylase.


Planta | 2001

Comparative analysis of HD2 type histone deacetylases in higher plants

Markus Dangl; Gerald Brosch; Hubertus Haas; Peter Loidl; Alexandra Lusser

Abstract. Zea mays (L.) histone deacetylase HD2 was identified as a new type of histone deacetylase (HDAC) unrelated to the well-known Rpd3p and Hda1p families but with sequence homology to peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerases (PPIases). Here we show that HD2 is a multigene family with highly related members in various plant species. Gene analysis revealed a similar exon/intron structure in Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. and Z. mays, and most of the sequences analyzed were demonstrated to possess an intron of the very rare AT-AC type.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1996

A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF HISTONE DEACETYLASES OF PLANT, FUNGAL AND VERTEBRATE CELLS

Thomas Lechner; Alexandra Lusser; Gerald Brosch; Anton Eberharter; Maria Goralik-Schramel; Peter Loidl

The enzymatic equilibrium of reversible core histone acetylation is maintained by two enzyme activities, histone acetyltransferase and histone deacetylase (HD). These enzyme activities exist as multiple enzyme forms. The present report describes methods to extract different HD-forms from three organisms, germinating maize embryos, the myxomycete Physarum polycephalum, and chicken red blood cells; it provides data on the chromatographic separation and partial purification of HD-forms. In germinating maize embryos three HDs (HD1-A, HD1-B, HD2) can be discriminated; HD1-A, HD1-B, and HD2 were characterized in terms of their dependence on pH, temperature and various ions, as well as kinetic parameters (Km for core histones) and inhibition by various compounds. The same parameters were investigated for the corresponding enzymes of Physarum polycephalum, and mature and immature chicken erythrocytes. Based on these results, optimum assay conditions were established for the different enzyme forms. The kinetic data revealed that the maize histone deacetylase HD1-B peak after partial purification by Q-Sepharose chromatography was heterogeneous and consisted of two histone binding sites that differed significantly in their affinity for purified core histones. Optimized affinity chromatography on poly-Lysine Agarose indeed showed that the former defined deacetylase HD1-B can be separated clearly into two individual HD enzyme forms. The high multiplicity of histone deacetylases underlines the importance of these enzymes for the complex regulation of core histone acetylation.


FEBS Letters | 1993

Histone deacetylase: A key enzyme for the binding of regulatory proteins to chromatin

Gerardo López-Rodas; Gerald Brosch; Elena I. Georgieva; Ramon Sendra; Luis Franco; Peter Loidl

Core histones can be modified by reversible, posttranslational acetylation of specific lysine residues within the N‐terminal protein domains. The dynamic equilibrium of acetylation is maintained by two enzyme activities, histone acetyltransferase and histone deacetylase. Recent data on histone deacetylases and on anionic motifs in chromatin‐ or DNA‐binding regulatory proteins (e.g. transcription factors, nuclear proto‐oncogenes) are summarized and united into a hypothesis which attributes a key function to histone deacetylation for the binding of regulatory proteins to chromatin by a transient, specific local increase of the positive charge in the N‐terminal domains of nucleosomal core histones. According to our model, the rapid deacetylation of distinct lysines in especially H2A and H2B would facilitate the association of anionic protein domains of regulatory proteins to specific nucleosomes. Therefore histone deacetylation (histone deacetylases) may represent a unique regulatory mechanism in the early steps of gene activation, in contrast to the more structural role of histone acetylation (histone acetyltransferases) for nucleosomal transitions during the actual transcription process.

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Gerald Brosch

Innsbruck Medical University

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Adele Loidl

University of Innsbruck

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Alexandra Lusser

Innsbruck Medical University

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Antonello Mai

Sapienza University of Rome

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Georg Golderer

Innsbruck Medical University

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