Roland Freudl
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Roland Freudl.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1986
Roland Freudl; Sheila MacIntyre; Maria Degen; Ulf Henning
The 325-residue OmpA protein is one of the major outer membrane proteins of Escherichia coli K-12. A model, in which this protein crosses the membrane eight times in an antiparallel beta-sheet conformation and in which regions around amino acids 25, 70, 110 and 154 are exposed at the cell surface, had been proposed. Linkers were inserted into the ompA gene with the result that OmpA proteins, carrying non-OmpA sequences between residues 153 and 154 or 160 and 162, were synthesized. Intact cells possessing these proteins were treated with proteases. Insertion of 15 residues between residues 153 and 154 made the protein sensitive to proteinase K and the sizes of the two cleavage products were those expected following proteolysis at the area of the insertion. Addition of at least 17 residues between residues 160 and 162 left the protein completely refractory to protease action. Thus, the former area is cell surface exposed while the latter area appears not to be. The insertions did not cause a decrease in the concentration of the hybrid proteins as compared to that of the OmpA protein, and in neither case was synthesis of the protein deleterious to cell growth. It is suggested that this method may serve to carry peptides of practical interest to the cell surface and that it can be used to probe surface-located regions of other membrane proteins.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2001
Natascha Blaudeck; Georg A. Sprenger; Roland Freudl; Thomas Wiegert
The bacterial twin arginine translocation (Tat) pathway translocates across the cytoplasmic membrane folded proteins which, in most cases, contain a tightly bound cofactor. Specific amino-terminal signal peptides that exhibit a conserved amino acid consensus motif, S/T-R-R-X-F-L-K, direct these proteins to the Tat translocon. The glucose-fructose oxidoreductase (GFOR) of Zymomonas mobilis is a periplasmic enzyme with tightly bound NADP as a cofactor. It is synthesized as a cytoplasmic precursor with an amino-terminal signal peptide that shows all of the characteristics of a typical twin arginine signal peptide. However, GFOR is not exported to the periplasm when expressed in the heterologous host Escherichia coli, and enzymatically active pre-GFOR is found in the cytoplasm. A precise replacement of the pre-GFOR signal peptide by an authentic E. coli Tat signal peptide, which is derived from pre-trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) reductase (TorA), allowed export of GFOR, together with its bound cofactor, to the E. coli periplasm. This export was inhibited by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, but not by sodium azide, and was blocked in E. coli tatC and tatAE mutant strains, showing that membrane translocation of the TorA-GFOR fusion protein occurred via the Tat pathway and not via the Sec pathway. Furthermore, tight cofactor binding (and therefore correct folding) was found to be a prerequisite for proper translocation of the fusion protein. These results strongly suggest that Tat signal peptides are not universally recognized by different Tat translocases, implying that the signal peptides of Tat-dependent precursor proteins are optimally adapted only to their cognate export apparatus. Such a situation is in marked contrast to the situation that is known to exist for Sec-dependent protein translocation.
Gene | 1989
Roland Freudl
Peptides, 21 amino acids (aa) in length, were inserted into cell-surface-exposed areas of the Escherichia coli outer membrane protein, OmpA, corresponding to aa positions 70 or 154 or at both sites simultaneously. The corresponding hybrid proteins were exported and normally assembled in the outer membrane. The results of protease-accessibility experiments are compatible with the presence of the peptides at the cell surface.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1985
Roland Freudl; Gabi Braun; Ingrid Hindennach; Ulf Henning
SummaryThe gene ompA encodes a major outer membrane protein of Escherichia coli. Localized mutagenesis of the part of the gene corresponding to the 21-residue signal sequence and the first 45 residues of the protein resulted in alterations which caused cell lysis when expressed. DNA sequence analyses revealed that in one mutant type the last CO2H-terminal residue of the signal sequence, alanine, was replaced by valine. The proteolytic removal of the signal peptide was much delayed and most of the unprocessed precursor protein was fractioned with the outer membrane. However, this precursor was completely soluble in sodium lauryl sarcosinate which does not solubilize the OmpA protein or fragments thereof present in the outer membrane. Synthesis of the mutant protein did not inhibit processing of the OmpA or OmpF proteins. In the other mutant type, multiple mutational alterations had occurred leading to four amino acid substitutions in the signal sequence and two affecting the first two residues of the mature protein. A reduced rate of processing could not be clearly demonstrated. Membrane fractionation suggested that small amounts of this precursor were associated with the plasma membrane but synthesis of this mutant protein also did not inhibit processing of the wild-type OmpA or OmpF proteins. Several lines of evidence left no doubt that the mature, mutant protein is stably incorporated into the outer membrane. It is suggested that the presence, in the outer membrane, of the mutant precursor protein in the former case, or of the mutant protein in the latter case perturbs the membrane architecture enough to cause cell death.
Gene | 1987
Roland Freudl; Gabi Braun; Nadine Honoré; Stewart T. Cole
The LexA-regulated sulA (sfiA) gene of Escherichia coli encodes an unstable protein which inhibits cell division. By determining the nucleotide sequences of the corresponding genes from the related bacteria Salmonella typhimurium, Enterobacter aerogenes and Serratia marcescens it was found that the regulatory region and the LexA binding site (SOS box) have been better conserved during evolution than the coding sequence. The N terminus of the SulA protein [amino acid (aa) residues 1-30] has diverged extensively during the evolution of Enterobacteriaceae, whereas the central region (aa residues 31-149) has been well conserved. At the C terminus a sequence showing some homology to the N protein of phage lambda was detected that may represent a recognition site for the Lon protease, which is known to degrade both polypeptides. When expressed in E. coli, the foreign sulA genes did not block cell division suggesting that their products are inactive. This may indicate that the N terminus of the SulA protein is involved in recognizing the cell division apparatus.
Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1990
Roland Freudl; Michael Klose; Ulf Henning
Results of studies, mostly using the outer membrane, 325 residue protein OmpA, are reviewed which concern its translocation across the plasma membrane and incorporation into the outer membrane ofEscherichia coli. For translocation, neither a unique export signal, acting in a positive fashion within the mature part of the precursor, nor a unique conformation of the precursor is required. Rather, the mature part of a secretory protein has to be export-compatible. Export-incompatibility can be caused by a stretch of 16 (but not 8 or 12) hydrophobic residues, too low a size of the polypeptide (smaller than 75 residue precursors), net positive charge at the N-terminus, or lack of a turn potential at the same site. It is not yet clear whether binding sites for chaperonins (SecB, trigger factor, GroEL) within OmpA are importantin vivo. The mechanism of sorting of outer membrane proteins is not yet understood. The membrane part of OmpA, encompassing residues 1 to about 170, it thought to traverse the membrane eight times in antiparallel β-sheet conformation. At least the structure of the last β-strand (residues 160–170) is of crucial importance for membrane assembly. It must be amphiphilic or hydrophobic, these properties must extend over at least nine residues, and it must not contain a proline residue at or near its center. Membrane incorporation of OmpA involves a conformational change of the protein and it could be that the last β-strand initiates folding and assembly in the outer membrane.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Claire M. L. Barrett; Roland Freudl; Colin Robinson
The twin arginine translocation pathway exports folded proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane of many bacteria. In Escherichia coli and other Gram-negative bacteria, TatA, TatB, and TatC are all essential for efficient translocation, and current models suggest that separate TatABC and TatA complexes coalesce at the point of translocation. However, other microbes appear only to possess tatA and tatC genes. In Escherichia coli, virtually no translocation is observed when only TatA and TatC are present, but several mutations at the extreme N terminus of TatA were shown to support translocation. Here we show that these apparently bifunctional mutant TatA variants can function as typical TatA components because translocation is observed when they are co-expressed with TatBC, and they assemble into large, heterogeneous complexes that resemble wild type TatA complexes. However, cells expressing TatC plus the mutant TatA variants do not contain complexes that resemble the expected 370-kDa TatABC complex, clearly indicating that the mutant TatA forms cannot assemble efficiently, or stably, into this complex. The simultaneous expression of wild type TatA furthermore blocks translocation activity, suggesting that the mutant TatA forms preferentially bind to other TatA molecules rather than TatC. Surprisingly, we observe translocation in the absence of detectable free TatA, when translational fusions of the mutant TatAs with TatC are expressed. Transport can thus proceed in the simultaneous absence of TatABC and TatA complexes at detectable levels, and we conclude that the active translocon may be formed from dynamic twin arginine translocation complexes, one or more of which may await characterization.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1988
Roland Freudl; Ulf Henning
The 325-residue OmpA protein, which is synthesized as a precursor with a 21-residue signal sequence, is a polypeptide of the outer membrane of Escherichia coli K-12. The signal peptide is able to direct translocation across the plasma membrane of virtually any fragment of this protein. It had, therefore, been concluded that information required for this translocation does not exist within the mature part of the protein. This view has been criticized and it was suggested that our data showed that both the signal sequence and residues within the first 44 amino acid residues of the mature protein contributed to an optimal translocation mechanism. It is shown that, at least as far as is detectable, this is not so. The apparent rates of processing of various pro-OmpA constructs were measured. It was found that these rates did not depend on the presence of amino acid residues 4 through 45 but on the size of the polypeptides; the processing rate decreased with decreasing size. A possible explanation for this phenomenon is offered. While the results do not exclude the possibility that a defined area of the mature protein is involved in optimizing translocation, there is so far no evidence for it.
FEBS Journal | 1999
Dirk Halbig; Thomas Wiegert; Natascha Blaudeck; Roland Freudl; Georg A. Sprenger
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1986
Roland Freudl; Heinz Schwarz; Y D Stierhof; K Gamon; I Hindennach; U Henning