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Dive into the research topics where Philipp Koldewey is active.

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Featured researches published by Philipp Koldewey.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Genetic selection designed to stabilize proteins uncovers a chaperone called Spy

Shu Quan; Philipp Koldewey; Tim Tapley; Nadine Kirsch; Karen M. Ruane; Jennifer Pfizenmaier; Rong Shi; Stephan Hofmann; Linda Foit; Guoping Ren; Ursula Jakob; Zhaohui Xu; Miroslaw Cygler; James C. A. Bardwell

To optimize the in vivo folding of proteins, we linked protein stability to antibiotic resistance, thereby forcing bacteria to effectively fold and stabilize proteins. When we challenged Escherichia coli to stabilize a very unstable periplasmic protein, it massively overproduced a periplasmic protein called Spy, which increases the steady-state levels of a set of unstable protein mutants up to 700-fold. In vitro studies demonstrate that the Spy protein is an effective ATP-independent chaperone that suppresses protein aggregation and aids protein refolding. Our strategy opens up new routes for chaperone discovery and the custom tailoring of the in vivo folding environment. Spy forms thin, apparently flexible cradle-shaped dimers. The structure of Spy is unlike that of any previously solved chaperone, making it the prototypical member of a new class of small chaperones that facilitate protein refolding in the absence of energy cofactors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Mitochondrial peroxiredoxin functions as crucial chaperone reservoir in Leishmania infantum

Filipa Teixeira; Helena Castro; Tânia Cruz; Eric Tse; Philipp Koldewey; Daniel R. Southworth; Ana M. Tomás; Ursula Jakob

Significance Peroxiredoxins (Prxs) are highly abundant proteins, which serve two seemingly mutually exclusive roles as peroxidases and molecular chaperones. Little is known about the precise mechanism of Prxs’ activation as chaperone and the physiological significance of this second function. Here we demonstrate that in Leishmania infantum, reduced Prx provides a crucial, stress-specific chaperone reservoir, which is activated rapidly upon exposure to unfolding stress conditions. Once activated, Prx protects a wide range of different clients against protein unfolding. Clients are bound in the center of the decameric ring, providing experimental evidence for previous claims that Prxs serve as likely ancestors of chaperonins. Interference with client binding impairs Leishmania infectivity, providing compelling evidence for the in vivo importance of Prx’s chaperone function. Cytosolic eukaryotic 2-Cys-peroxiredoxins have been widely reported to act as dual-function proteins, either detoxifying reactive oxygen species or acting as chaperones to prevent protein aggregation. Several stimuli, including peroxide-mediated sulfinic acid formation at the active site cysteine, have been proposed to trigger the chaperone activity. However, the mechanism underlying this activation and the extent to which the chaperone function is crucial under physiological conditions in vivo remained unknown. Here we demonstrate that in the vector-borne protozoan parasite Leishmania infantum, mitochondrial peroxiredoxin (Prx) exerts intrinsic ATP-independent chaperone activity, protecting a wide variety of different proteins against heat stress-mediated unfolding in vitro and in vivo. Activation of the chaperone function appears to be induced by temperature-mediated restructuring of the reduced decamers, promoting binding of unfolding client proteins in the center of Prx’s ringlike structure. Client proteins are maintained in a folding-competent conformation until restoration of nonstress conditions, upon which they are released and transferred to ATP-dependent chaperones for refolding. Interference with client binding impairs parasite infectivity, providing compelling evidence for the in vivo importance of Prx’s chaperone function. Our results suggest that reduced Prx provides a mitochondrial chaperone reservoir, which allows L. infantum to deal successfully with protein unfolding conditions during the transition from insect to the mammalian hosts and to generate viable parasites capable of perpetuating infection.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2016

Substrate protein folds while it is bound to the ATP-independent chaperone Spy

Frederick Stull; Philipp Koldewey; Julia R. Humes; Sheena E. Radford; James C. A. Bardwell

Chaperones assist in the folding of many proteins in the cell. Although the most well-studied chaperones use cycles of ATP binding and hydrolysis to assist in protein folding, a number of chaperones have been identified that promote folding in the absence of high-energy cofactors. Precisely how ATP-independent chaperones accomplish this feat is unclear. Here we characterized the kinetic mechanism of substrate folding by the small ATP-independent chaperone Spy from Escherichia coli. Spy rapidly associates with its substrate, immunity protein 7 (Im7), thereby eliminating Im7s potential for aggregation. Remarkably, Spy then allows Im7 to fully fold into its native state while it remains bound to the surface of the chaperone. These results establish a potentially widespread mechanism whereby ATP-independent chaperones assist in protein refolding. They also provide compelling evidence that substrate proteins can fold while being continuously bound to a chaperone.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

HdeB Functions as an Acid-protective Chaperone in Bacteria

Jan Ulrik Dahl; Philipp Koldewey; Loïc Salmon; Scott Horowitz; James C. A. Bardwell; Ursula Jakob

Background: Periplasmic chaperones HdeA and HdeB are involved in the acid stress response in Escherichia coli. Results: HdeB requires its folded and dimeric state to protect E. coli from protein aggregation at pH 4. Conclusion: HdeA and HdeB use different mechanisms to prevent periplasmic protein aggregation, allowing them to function over a broad pH range. Significance: This study furthers the understanding of how enteric bacteria counteract acid stress. Enteric bacteria such as Escherichia coli utilize various acid response systems to counteract the acidic environment of the mammalian stomach. To protect their periplasmic proteome against rapid acid-mediated damage, bacteria contain the acid-activated periplasmic chaperones HdeA and HdeB. Activation of HdeA at pH 2 was shown to correlate with its acid-induced dissociation into partially unfolded monomers. In contrast, HdeB, which has high structural similarities to HdeA, shows negligible chaperone activity at pH 2 and only modest chaperone activity at pH 3. These results raised intriguing questions concerning the physiological role of HdeB in bacteria, its activation mechanism, and the structural requirements for its function as a molecular chaperone. In this study, we conducted structural and biochemical studies that revealed that HdeB indeed works as an effective molecular chaperone. However, in contrast to HdeA, whose chaperone function is optimal at pH 2, the chaperone function of HdeB is optimal at pH 4, at which HdeB is still fully dimeric and largely folded. NMR, analytical ultracentrifugation, and fluorescence studies suggest that the highly dynamic nature of HdeB at pH 4 alleviates the need for monomerization and partial unfolding. Once activated, HdeB binds various unfolding client proteins, prevents their aggregation, and supports their refolding upon subsequent neutralization. Overexpression of HdeA promotes bacterial survival at pH 2 and 3, whereas overexpression of HdeB positively affects bacterial growth at pH 4. These studies demonstrate how two structurally homologous proteins with seemingly identical in vivo functions have evolved to provide bacteria with the means for surviving a range of acidic protein-unfolding conditions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Flexible, symmetry-directed approach to assembling protein cages

Aaron Sciore; Min Su; Philipp Koldewey; Joseph D. Eschweiler; Kelsey A. Diffley; Brian M. Linhares; Brandon T. Ruotolo; James C. A. Bardwell; Georgios Skiniotis; E. Neil G. Marsh

Significance The ability to organize biological molecules into new hierarchical forms represents an important goal in synthetic biology. However, designing new quaternary interactions between protein subunits has proved technically challenging and has generally required extensive redesign of protein−protein interfaces. Here, we demonstrate a conceptually simple way to assemble a protein into a well-defined geometric structure that uses coiled-coil sequences as “off-the-shelf” components. This approach is inherently modular and adaptable to a wide range of proteins and symmetries, opening up avenues for the construction of biological structures with diverse geometries and wide-ranging functionalities. The assembly of individual protein subunits into large-scale symmetrical structures is widespread in nature and confers new biological properties. Engineered protein assemblies have potential applications in nanotechnology and medicine; however, a major challenge in engineering assemblies de novo has been to design interactions between the protein subunits so that they specifically assemble into the desired structure. Here we demonstrate a simple, generalizable approach to assemble proteins into cage-like structures that uses short de novo designed coiled-coil domains to mediate assembly. We assembled eight copies of a C3-symmetric trimeric esterase into a well-defined octahedral protein cage by appending a C4-symmetric coiled-coil domain to the protein through a short, flexible linker sequence, with the approximate length of the linker sequence determined by computational modeling. The structure of the cage was verified using a combination of analytical ultracentrifugation, native electrospray mass spectrometry, and negative stain and cryoelectron microscopy. For the protein cage to assemble correctly, it was necessary to optimize the length of the linker sequence. This observation suggests that flexibility between the two protein domains is important to allow the protein subunits sufficient freedom to assemble into the geometry specified by the combination of C4 and C3 symmetry elements. Because this approach is inherently modular and places minimal requirements on the structural features of the protein building blocks, it could be extended to assemble a wide variety of proteins into structures with different symmetries.


Cell | 2016

Forces Driving Chaperone Action

Philipp Koldewey; Frederick Stull; Scott Horowitz; Raoul Martin; James C. A. Bardwell

It is still unclear what molecular forces drive chaperone-mediated protein folding. Here, we obtain a detailed mechanistic understanding of the forces that dictate the four key steps of chaperone-client interaction: initial binding, complex stabilization, folding, and release. Contrary to the common belief that chaperones recognize unfolding intermediates by their hydrophobic nature, we discover that the model chaperone Spy uses long-range electrostatic interactions to rapidly bind to its unfolded client protein Im7. Short-range hydrophobic interactions follow, which serve to stabilize the complex. Hydrophobic collapse of the client protein then drives its folding. By burying hydrophobic residues in its core, the clients affinity to Spy decreases, which causes client release. By allowing the client to fold itself, Spy circumvents the need for client-specific folding instructions. This mechanism might help explain how chaperones can facilitate the folding of various unrelated proteins.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2016

Visualizing chaperone-assisted protein folding

Scott Horowitz; Loïc Salmon; Philipp Koldewey; Logan S. Ahlstrom; Raoul Martin; Shu Quan; Pavel V. Afonine; Henry van den Bedem; Lili Wang; Qingping Xu; Raymond C. Trievel; Charles L. Brooks; James C. A. Bardwell

Challenges in determining the structures of heterogeneous and dynamic protein complexes have greatly hampered past efforts to obtain a mechanistic understanding of many important biological processes. One such process is chaperone-assisted protein folding. Obtaining structural ensembles of chaperone–substrate complexes would ultimately reveal how chaperones help proteins fold into their native state. To address this problem, we devised a new structural biology approach based on X-ray crystallography, termed residual electron and anomalous density (READ). READ enabled us to visualize even sparsely populated conformations of the substrate protein immunity protein 7 (Im7) in complex with the Escherichia coli chaperone Spy, and to capture a series of snapshots depicting the various folding states of Im7 bound to Spy. The ensemble shows that Spy-associated Im7 samples conformations ranging from unfolded to partially folded to native-like states and reveals how a substrate can explore its folding landscape while being bound to a chaperone.


Nature Communications | 2016

Determining crystal structures through crowdsourcing and coursework

Scott Horowitz; Brian Koepnick; Raoul Martin; Agnes Tymieniecki; Amanda A. Winburn; Seth Cooper; Jeff Flatten; David S. Rogawski; Nicole M. Koropatkin; Tsinatkeab T. Hailu; Neha Jain; Philipp Koldewey; Logan S. Ahlstrom; Matthew R. Chapman; Andrew P. Sikkema; Meredith A. Skiba; Finn P. Maloney; Felix R. M. Beinlich; Foldit Players; Zoran Popović; David Baker; Firas Khatib; James C. A. Bardwell

We show here that computer game players can build high-quality crystal structures. Introduction of a new feature into the computer game Foldit allows players to build and real-space refine structures into electron density maps. To assess the usefulness of this feature, we held a crystallographic model-building competition between trained crystallographers, undergraduate students, Foldit players and automatic model-building algorithms. After removal of disordered residues, a team of Foldit players achieved the most accurate structure. Analysing the target protein of the competition, YPL067C, uncovered a new family of histidine triad proteins apparently involved in the prevention of amyloid toxicity. From this study, we conclude that crystallographers can utilize crowdsourcing to interpret electron density information and to produce structure solutions of the highest quality.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Chaperone-client interactions: Non-specificity engenders multifunctionality

Philipp Koldewey; Scott Horowitz; James C. A. Bardwell

Here, we provide an overview of the different mechanisms whereby three different chaperones, Spy, Hsp70, and Hsp60, interact with folding proteins, and we discuss how these chaperones may guide the folding process. Available evidence suggests that even a single chaperone can use many mechanisms to aid in protein folding, most likely due to the need for most chaperones to bind clients promiscuously. Chaperone mechanism may be better understood by always considering it in the context of the clients folding pathway and biological function.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2018

Folding while bound to chaperones

Scott Horowitz; Philipp Koldewey; Frederick Stull; James C. A. Bardwell

Chaperones are important in preventing protein aggregation and aiding protein folding. How chaperones aid protein folding remains a key question in understanding their mechanism. The possibility of proteins folding while bound to chaperones was reintroduced recently with the chaperone Spy, many years after the phenomenon was first reported with the chaperones GroEL and SecB. In this review, we discuss the salient features of folding while bound in the cases for which it has been observed and speculate about its biological importance and possible occurrence in other chaperones.

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Loïc Salmon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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