Rudi Lurz
Max Planck Society
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Rudi Lurz.
Cell | 1997
Eberhard Scherzinger; Rudi Lurz; Mark Turmaine; Laura Mangiarini; Birgit Hollenbach; Renate Hasenbank; Gillian P. Bates; Stephen W. Davies; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker
The mechanism by which an elongated polyglutamine sequence causes neurodegeneration in Huntingtons disease (HD) is unknown. In this study, we show that the proteolytic cleavage of a GST-huntingtin fusion protein leads to the formation of insoluble high molecular weight protein aggregates only when the polyglutamine expansion is in the pathogenic range. Electron micrographs of these aggregates revealed a fibrillar or ribbon-like morphology, reminiscent of scrapie prions and beta-amyloid fibrils in Alzheimers disease. Subcellular fractionation and ultrastructural techniques showed the in vivo presence of these structures in the brains of mice transgenic for the HD mutation. Our in vitro model will aid in an eventual understanding of the molecular pathology of HD and the development of preventative strategies.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2008
Dagmar E. Ehrnhoefer; Jan Bieschke; Annett Boeddrich; Martin Herbst; Laura Masino; Rudi Lurz; Sabine Engemann; Annalisa Pastore; Erich E. Wanker
The accumulation of β-sheet–rich amyloid fibrils or aggregates is a complex, multistep process that is associated with cellular toxicity in a number of human protein misfolding disorders, including Parkinsons and Alzheimers diseases. It involves the formation of various transient and intransient, on- and off-pathway aggregate species, whose structure, size and cellular toxicity are largely unclear. Here we demonstrate redirection of amyloid fibril formation through the action of a small molecule, resulting in off-pathway, highly stable oligomers. The polyphenol (−)-epigallocatechin gallate efficiently inhibits the fibrillogenesis of both α-synuclein and amyloid-β by directly binding to the natively unfolded polypeptides and preventing their conversion into toxic, on-pathway aggregation intermediates. Instead of β-sheet–rich amyloid, the formation of unstructured, nontoxic α-synuclein and amyloid-β oligomers of a new type is promoted, suggesting a generic effect on aggregation pathways in neurodegenerative diseases.
Stem Cells | 2010
Alessandro Prigione; Beatrix Fauler; Rudi Lurz; Hans Lehrach; James Adjaye
The ability of stem cells to propagate indefinitely is believed to occur via the fine modulation of pathways commonly involved in cellular senescence, including the telomerase, the p53, and the mitochondrial/oxidative stress pathways. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a novel stem cell population obtained from somatic cells through forced expression of a set of genes normally expressed in embryonic stem cells (ESCs). These reprogrammed cells acquire self‐renewal properties and appear almost undistinguishable from ESCs in terms of morphology, gene expression, and differentiation potential. Accordingly, iPSCs exhibit alterations of the senescence‐related telomerase and p53 signaling pathways. However, although treatments with antioxidants have been recently shown to enhance cellular reprogramming, detailed information regarding the state of the mitochondrial/oxidative stress pathway in iPSCs is still lacking. Mitochondria undergo specific changes during organismal development and aging. Thus, addressing whether somatic mitochondria within iPSCs acquire ESC‐like features or retain the phenotype of the parental cell is an unanswered but relevant question. Herein, we demonstrate that somatic mitochondria within human iPSCs revert to an immature ESC‐like state with respect to organelle morphology and distribution, expression of nuclear factors involved in mitochondrial biogenesis, content of mitochondrial DNA, intracellular ATP level, oxidative damage, and lactate generation. Upon differentiation, mitochondria within iPSCs and ESCs exhibited analogous maturation and anaerobic‐to‐aerobic metabolic modifications. Overall, the data highlight that human iPSCs and ESCs, although not identical, share similar mitochondrial properties and suggest that cellular reprogramming can modulate the mitochondrial/oxidative stress pathway, thus inducing a rejuvenated state capable of escaping cellular senescence. STEM CELLS 2010;28:721–733
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Cecile Evrin; Pippa Clarke; Juergen Zech; Rudi Lurz; Jingchuan Sun; Stefan Uhle; Huilin Li; Bruce Stillman; Christian Speck
During pre-replication complex (pre-RC) formation, origin recognition complex (ORC), Cdc6, and Cdt1 cooperatively load the 6-subunit mini chromosome maintenance (MCM2-7) complex onto DNA. Loading of MCM2-7 is a prerequisite for DNA licensing that restricts DNA replication to once per cell cycle. During S phase MCM2-7 functions as part of the replicative helicase but within the pre-RC MCM2-7 is inactive. The organization of replicative DNA helicases before and after loading onto DNA has been studied in bacteria and viruses but not eukaryotes and is of major importance for understanding the MCM2-7 loading mechanism and replisome assembly. Lack of an efficient reconstituted pre-RC system has hindered the detailed mechanistic and structural analysis of MCM2-7 loading for a long time. We have reconstituted Saccharomyces cerevisiae pre-RC formation with purified proteins and showed efficient loading of MCM2-7 onto origin DNA in vitro. MCM2-7 loading was found to be dependent on the presence of all pre-RC proteins, origin DNA, and ATP hydrolysis. The quaternary structure of MCM2-7 changes during pre-RC formation: MCM2-7 before loading is a single hexamer in solution but is transformed into a double-hexamer during pre-RC formation. Using electron microscopy (EM), we observed that loaded MCM2-7 encircles DNA. The loaded MCM2-7 complex can slide on DNA, and sliding is not directional. Our results provide key insights into mechanisms of pre-RC formation and have important implications for understanding the role of the MCM2-7 in establishment of bidirectional replication forks.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2012
Jan Bieschke; Martin Herbst; Thomas Wiglenda; Ralf P. Friedrich; Annett Boeddrich; Franziska Schiele; Daniela Kleckers; Juan Miguel Lopez del Amo; Björn Grüning; Qinwen Wang; Michael Schmidt; Rudi Lurz; Roger Anwyl; Sigrid Schnoegl; Marcus Fändrich; Ronald Frank; Bernd Reif; Stefan Günther; Dominic M. Walsh; Erich E. Wanker
Several lines of evidence indicate that prefibrillar assemblies of amyloid-β (Aβ) polypeptides, such as soluble oligomers or protofibrils, rather than mature, end-stage amyloid fibrils cause neuronal dysfunction and memory impairment in Alzheimers disease. These findings suggest that reducing the prevalence of transient intermediates by small molecule-mediated stimulation of amyloid polymerization might decrease toxicity. Here we demonstrate the acceleration of Aβ fibrillogenesis through the action of the orcein-related small molecule O4, which directly binds to hydrophobic amino acid residues in Aβ peptides and stabilizes the self-assembly of seeding-competent, β-sheet-rich protofibrils and fibrils. Notably, the O4-mediated acceleration of amyloid fibril formation efficiently decreases the concentration of small, toxic Aβ oligomers in complex, heterogeneous aggregation reactions. In addition, O4 treatment suppresses inhibition of long-term potentiation by Aβ oligomers in hippocampal brain slices. These results support the hypothesis that small, diffusible prefibrillar amyloid species rather than mature fibrillar aggregates are toxic for mammalian cells.
The EMBO Journal | 1993
Prakash Dube; Paulo Tavares; Rudi Lurz; M van Heel
Electron microscopy in combination with image processing is a powerful method for obtaining structural information on non‐crystallized biological macromolecules at the 10–50 A resolution level. The processing of noisy microscopical images requires advanced data processing methodologies in which one must carefully avoid the introduction of any form of bias into the data set. Using a novel multivariate statistical approach to the analysis of symmetry, we studied the structure of the bacteriophage SPP1 portal protein oligomer. This portal structure, ubiquitous in icosahedral bacteriophages which package dsDNA, is located at the site of symmetry mismatch between a 5‐fold vertex of the icosahedral shell and the 6‐fold symmetric (helical) tail. From previous studies such ‘head‐to‐tail connector’ structures were generally accepted to be homododecamers assembled in a 12‐fold symmetric ring around a central channel. Using a new analysis methodology we have found that the phage SPP1 portal structure exhibits 13‐fold cyclical symmetry: a new point group organization for oligomeric proteins. A model for the DNA packaging mechanism by 13‐fold symmetric portal protein assemblies is presented which attributes a coherent functional meaning to their unusual symmetry.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Volker Heiser; Sabine Engemann; Wolfgang Bröcker; Ilona Dunkel; Annett Boeddrich; Stephanie Waelter; Eddi Nordhoff; Rudi Lurz; Nancy Schugardt; Susanne Rautenberg; Christian Herhaus; Gerhard Barnickel; Henning Böttcher; Hans Lehrach; Erich Wanker
Preventing the formation of insoluble polyglutamine containing protein aggregates in neurons may represent an attractive therapeutic strategy to ameliorate Huntingtons disease (HD). Therefore, the ability to screen for small molecules that suppress the self-assembly of huntingtin would have potential clinical and significant research applications. We have developed an automated filter retardation assay for the rapid identification of chemical compounds that prevent HD exon 1 protein aggregation in vitro. Using this method, a total of 25 benzothiazole derivatives that inhibit huntingtin fibrillogenesis in a dose-dependent manner were discovered from a library of ≈184,000 small molecules. The results obtained by the filter assay were confirmed by immunoblotting, electron microscopy, and mass spectrometry. Furthermore, cell culture studies revealed that 2-amino-4,7-dimethyl-benzothiazol-6-ol, a chemical compound similar to riluzole, significantly inhibits HD exon 1 aggregation in vivo. These findings may provide the basis for a new therapeutic approach to prevent the accumulation of insoluble protein aggregates in Huntingtons disease and related glutamine repeat disorders.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
Savvas N. Savvides; Hye-Jeong Yeo; Moriah R. Beck; Franca Blaesing; Rudi Lurz; Erich Lanka; Renate Buhrdorf; Wolfgang Fischer; Rainer Haas; Gabriel Waksman
The coupling of ATP binding/hydrolysis to macromolecular secretion systems is crucial to the pathogenicity of Gram‐negative bacteria. We reported previously the structure of the ADP‐bound form of the hexameric traffic VirB11 ATPase of the Helicobacter pylori type IV secretion system (named HP0525), and proposed that it functions as a gating molecule at the inner membrane, cycling through closed and open forms regulated by ATP binding/hydrolysis. Here, we combine crystal structures with analytical ultracentrifugation experiments to show that VirB11 ATPases indeed function as dynamic hexameric assemblies. In the absence of nucleotide, the N‐terminal domains exhibit a collection of rigid‐body conformations. Nucleotide binding ‘locks’ the hexamer into a symmetric and compact structure. We propose that VirB11s use the mechanical leverage generated by such nucleotide‐dependent conformational changes to facilitate the export of substrates or the assembly of the type IV secretion apparatus. Bio chemical characterization of mutant forms of HP0525 coupled with electron microscopy and in vivo assays support such hypothesis, and establish the relevance of VirB11s ATPases as drug targets against pathogenic bacteria.
Genes & Development | 2008
Martin Lange; Bogac Kaynak; Ulrike B. Forster; Martje Tönjes; Jenny J. Fischer; Christina Grimm; Jenny Schlesinger; Steffen Just; Ilona Dunkel; Tammo Krueger; Siegrun Mebus; Hans Lehrach; Rudi Lurz; Johan Gobom; Wolfgang Rottbauer; Salim Abdelilah-Seyfried; Silke Sperling
Chromatin remodeling and histone modifications facilitate access of transcription factors to DNA by promoting the unwinding and destabilization of histone-DNA interactions. We present DPF3, a new epigenetic key factor for heart and muscle development characterized by a double PHD finger. DPF3 is associated with the BAF chromatin remodeling complex and binds methylated and acetylated lysine residues of histone 3 and 4. Thus, DPF3 may represent the first plant homeodomains that bind acetylated lysines, a feature previously only shown for the bromodomain. During development Dpf3 is expressed in the heart and somites of mouse, chicken, and zebrafish. Morpholino knockdown of dpf3 in zebrafish leads to incomplete cardiac looping and severely reduced ventricular contractility, with disassembled muscular fibers caused by transcriptional deregulation of structural and regulatory proteins. Promoter analysis identified Dpf3 as a novel downstream target of Mef2a. Taken together, DPF3 adds a further layer of complexity to the BAF complex by representing a tissue-specific anchor between histone acetylations as well as methylations and chromatin remodeling. Furthermore, this shows that plant homeodomain proteins play a yet unexplored role in recruiting chromatin remodeling complexes to acetylated histones.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2002
Gunnar F. Schröder; Sabine Krause; Ellen L. Zechner; Beth Traxler; Hye-Jeong Yeo; Rudi Lurz; Gabriel Waksman; Erich Lanka
TraG-like proteins are potential NTP hydrolases (NTPases) that are essential for DNA transfer in bacterial conjugation. They are thought to mediate interactions between the DNA-processing (Dtr) and the mating pair formation (Mpf) systems. TraG-like proteins also function as essential components of type IV secretion systems of several bacterial pathogens such as Helicobacter pylori. Here we present the biochemical characterization of three members of the family of TraG-like proteins, TraG (RP4), TraD (F), and HP0524 (H. pylori). These proteins were found to have a pronounced tendency to form oligomers and were shown to bind DNA without sequence specificity. Standard NTPase assays indicated that these TraG-like proteins do not possess postulated NTP-hydrolyzing activity. Surface plasmon resonance was used to demonstrate an interaction between TraG and relaxase TraI of RP4. Topology analysis of TraG revealed that TraG is a transmembrane protein with cytosolic N and C termini and a short periplasmic domain close to the N terminus. We predict that multimeric inner membrane protein TraG forms a pore. A model suggesting that the relaxosome binds to the TraG pore via TraG-DNA and TraG-TraI interactions is presented.