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Dive into the research topics where Sabine Hunke is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabine Hunke.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Purification, reconstitution, and characterization of the CpxRAP envelope stress system of Escherichia coli.

Rebecca Fleischer; Ralf Heermann; Kirsten Jung; Sabine Hunke

In Escherichia coli the Cpx sensor regulator system senses different kinds of envelope stress and responds by triggering the expression of periplasmic folding factors and proteases. It consists of the membrane-anchored sensor kinase CpxA, the response regulator CpxR, and the periplasmic protein CpxP. The Cpx pathway is induced in vivo by a variety of signals including pH variation, osmotic stress, and misfolded envelope proteins and is inhibited by overproduced CpxP. Because it is not clear how the Cpx pathway is able to recognize and correspond to so many different signals we overproduced, solubilized, purified, and incorporated the complete membrane-integral CpxA protein into proteoliposomes to analyze its biochemical properties in more detail. Autokinase and phosphotransfer activities of the reconstituted CpxA-His6 protein were stimulated by KCl. NaCl also stimulated the activities but to a lesser extent. Other osmotic active solutes as glycine betaine, sucrose, and proline had no effect. The system was further characterized by testing for susceptibility to sensor kinase inhibitors. Among these, Closantel inhibited the activities of solubilized but not of the reconstituted CpxA-His6 protein. We further analyzed the effect of CpxP on CpxA activities. Purified tagless CpxP protein reduced the phosphorylation status of CpxA to 50% but had no effect on CpxA phosphotransfer or phosphatase activities. As the in vitro system excludes the involvement of other factors our finding is the first biochemical evidence for direct protein-protein interaction between the sensor kinase CpxA and the periplasmic protein CpxP resulting in a down-regulation of the autokinase activity of CpxA.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Temperature effect on inclusion body formation and stress response in the periplasm of Escherichia coli

Sabine Hunke; Jean-Michel Betton

We previously characterized a defective‐folding mutant of maltose‐binding protein of Escherichia coli, MalE31, which formed periplasmic inclusion bodies. Here, we show that MalE31 aggregation does not affect bacterial growth at 30°C but is lethal at 37°C. Surprisingly, under mild heat shock conditions at 42°C, inclusion bodies are degraded and bacterial growth is restored. One physiological consequence for the cells overproducing MalE31 was to induce an extracytoplasmic stress response by increasing the expression of the heat shock protease DegP via the CpxA/CpxR two‐component signalling pathway. Furthermore, we show that the Cpx response is required to rescue the cells from the toxicity mediated by MalE31. Finally, expression of highly destabilized MalE variants that do not aggregate in the periplasm also induces the Cpx pathway, indicating that inclusion body formation is not necessary to activate this specific extracytoplasmic stress regulatory system.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2012

Signal integration by the Cpx-envelope stress system

Sabine Hunke; Rebecca Keller; Volker Müller

The Cpx-envelope stress system coordinates the expression and assembly of surface structures important for the virulence of Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria. It is comprised of the membrane-anchored sensor kinase CpxA, the cytosolic response regulator CpxR and the accessory protein CpxP. Characteristic of the group of two-component systems, the Cpx system responds to a broad range of stimuli including pH, salt, metals, lipids and misfolded proteins that cause perturbation in the envelope. Moreover, the Cpx system has been linked to inter-kingdom signalling and bacterial cell death. However, although signal specificity has been assumed, for most signals the mechanism of signal integration is not understood. Recent structural and functional studies provide the first insights into how CpxP inhibits CpxA and serves as sensor for misfolded pilus subunits, pH and salt. Here, we summarize and reflect on the current knowledge on signal integration by the Cpx-envelope stress system.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Structural Basis for Two-component System Inhibition and Pilus Sensing by the Auxiliary CpxP Protein.

Xiaohui Zhou; Rebecca Keller; Rudolf Volkmer; Norbert Krauss; Patrick Scheerer; Sabine Hunke

Bacteria are equipped with two-component systems to cope with environmental changes, and auxiliary proteins provide response to additional stimuli. The Cpx two-component system is the global modulator of cell envelope stress in Gram-negative bacteria that integrates very different signals and consists of the kinase CpxA, the regulator CpxR, and the dual function auxiliary protein CpxP. CpxP both inhibits activation of CpxA and is indispensable for the quality control system of P pili that are crucial for uropathogenic Escherichia coli during kidney colonization. How these two essential biological functions of CpxP are linked is not known. Here, we report the crystal structure of CpxP at 1.45 Å resolution with two monomers being interdigitated like “left hands” forming a cap-shaped dimer. Our combined structural and functional studies suggest that CpxP inhibits the kinase CpxA through direct interaction between its concave polar surface and the negatively charged sensor domain on CpxA. Moreover, an extended hydrophobic cleft on the convex surface suggests a potent substrate recognition site for misfolded pilus subunits. Altogether, the structural details of CpxP provide a first insight how a periplasmic two-component system inhibitor blocks its cognate kinase and is released from it.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Large-scale purification, dissociation and functional reassembly of the maltose ATP-binding cassette transporter (MalFGK2) of Salmonella typhimurium

Heidi Landmesser; Anke Stein; Bettina Blüschke; Melanie Brinkmann; Sabine Hunke; Erwin Schneider

Abstract The maltose ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter of Salmonella typhimurium is composed of a membrane-associated complex (MalFGK 2 ) and a periplasmic substrate binding protein. To further elucidate protein–protein interactions between the subunits, we have studied the dissociation and reassembly of the MalFGK 2 complex at the level of purified components in proteoliposomes. First, we optimized the yield in purified complex protein by taking advantage of a newly constructed expression plasmid that carries the malK , malF and malG genes in tandem orientation. Incorporated in proteoliposomes, the complex exhibited maltose binding protein/maltose-dependent ATPase activity with a V max of 1.25 μmol P i /min/mg and a K m of 0.1 mM. ATPase activity was sensitive to vanadate and enzyme IIA Glc , a component of the enterobacterial glucose transport system. The proteoliposomes displayed maltose transport activity with an initial rate of 61 nmol/min/mg. Treatment of proteoliposomes with 6.6 M urea resulted in the release of medium-exposed MalK subunits concomitant with the complete loss of ATPase activity. By adding increasing amounts of purified MalK to urea-treated proteoliposomes, about 50% of vanadate-sensitive ATPase activity relative to the control could be recovered. Furthermore, the phenotype of MalKQ140K that exhibits ATPase activity in solution but not when associated with MalFG was confirmed by reassembly with MalK-depleted proteoliposomes.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Novel missense mutations that affect the transport function of Malk, the ATP-binding-cassette subunit of the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium maltose transport system.

Sabine Hunke; Heidi Landmesser; Erwin Schneider

We report on novel mutations in the malK gene of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, encoding the ATPase subunit of the maltose transporter (MalFGK(2)). Biochemical analysis suggests that (i) L86 might be involved in a signaling step during substrate translocation and (ii) E306 may be critical for the structural integrity of the protein.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Dynamic interaction between the CpxA sensor kinase and the periplasmic accessory protein CpxP mediates signal recognition in E. coli.

Karolin Tschauner; Patrick Hörnschemeyer; Volker Steffen Müller; Sabine Hunke

Two-component systems, consisting of an inner membrane sensor kinase and a cytosolic response regulator, allow bacteria to respond to changes in the environment. Some two-component systems are additionally orchestrated by an accessory protein that integrates additional signals. It is assumed that spatial and temporal interaction between an accessory protein and a sensor kinase modifies the activity of a two-component system. However, for most accessory proteins located in the bacterial envelope the mechanistic details remain unclear. Here, we analyzed the interaction between the periplasmic accessory protein CpxP and the sensor kinase CpxA in Escherichia coli in dependency of three specific stimuli. The Cpx two-component system responds to envelope stress and plays a pivotal role for the quality control of multisubunit envelope structures, including type three secretion systems and pili of different pathogens. In unstressed cells, CpxP shuts off the Cpx response by a yet unknown mechanism. We show for the first time the physical interaction between CpxP and CpxA in unstressed cells using bacterial two-hybrid system and membrane-Strep-tagged protein interaction experiments. In addition, we demonstrate that a high salt concentration and the misfolded pilus subunit PapE displace CpxP from the sensor kinase CpxA in vivo. Overall, this study provides clear evidence that CpxP modulates the activity of the Cpx system by dynamic interaction with CpxA in response to specific stresses.


Proteomics | 2011

Membrane-SPINE: An improved method to identify protein-protein interaction partners of membrane proteins in vivo

Volker Steffen Müller; Peter R. Jungblut; Thomas F. Meyer; Sabine Hunke

Membrane proteins are crucial for many essential cellular processes. As membrane proteins function in complexes, methods to detect and to characterize membrane protein–protein interactions are undoubtedly required. Therefore, we developed the “Membrane‐Strep‐tagged protein interaction experiment” (Membrane‐SPINE) that combines the specific purification of a Strep‐tagged membrane protein with the reversible fixation of protein complexes by formaldehyde cross‐linking. In combination with MS analysis, we suggest Membrane‐SPINE as a powerful tool to identify unknown interaction partners of membrane proteins in vivo.


FEBS Letters | 1999

A Cys-less variant of the bacterial ATP binding cassette protein MalK is functional in maltose transport and regulation

Sabine Hunke; Erwin Schneider

The cysteine residues of the ABC protein MalK from Salmonella typhimurium maltose transport system (C40, C350, C360) were consecutively replaced by serines. Cys‐less MalK was fully functional in maltose transport in vivo. Moreover, the activity of MalK as a repressor of other maltose‐regulated genes was also retained. The absence of cysteine residues in the purified protein was verified by its failure to react with fluorescein‐5‐maleimide. In contrast to purified wild‐type MalK, the ATPase activity of the C40S variant was insensitive to inhibition by N‐ethylmaleimide.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2014

The Sensor Kinase DctS Forms a Tripartite Sensor Unit with DctB and DctA for Sensing C4-Dicarboxylates in Bacillus subtilis

Sabrina Graf; Dominik Schmieden; Karolin Tschauner; Sabine Hunke; Gottfried Unden

The DctSR two-component system of Bacillus subtilis controls the expression of the aerobic C4-dicarboxylate transporter DctA. Deletion of DctA leads to an increased dctA expression. The inactivation of DctB, an extracellular binding protein, is known to inhibit the expression of dctA. Here, interaction between the sensor kinase DctS and the transporter DctA as well as the binding protein DctB was demonstrated in vivo using streptavidin (Strep) or His protein interaction experiments (mSPINE or mHPINE), and the data suggest that DctA and DctB act as cosensors for DctS. The interaction between DctS and DctB was also confirmed by the bacterial two-hybrid system (BACTH). In contrast, no indication was obtained for a direct interaction between the transporter DctA and the binding protein DctB. Activity levels of uptake of [(14)C]succinate by bacteria that expressed DctA from a plasmid were similar in the absence and the presence of DctB, demonstrating that the binding protein DctB is not required for transport. Thus, DctB is involved not in transport but in cosensing with DctS, highlighting DctB as the first example of a TRAP-type binding protein that acts as a cosensor. The simultaneous presence of DctS/DctB and DctS/DctA sensor pairs and the lack of direct interaction between the cosensors DctA and DctB indicate the formation of a tripartite complex via DctS. It is suggested that the DctS/DctA/DctB complex forms the functional unit for C4-dicarboxylate sensing in B. subtilis.

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Erwin Schneider

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Rebecca Keller

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Anke Stein

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Heidi Landmesser

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Rebecca Keller

Humboldt University of Berlin

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