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Dive into the research topics where Shobhna Kapoor is active.

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Featured researches published by Shobhna Kapoor.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Membrane-Mediated Induction and Sorting of K-Ras Microdomain Signaling Platforms

Katrin Weise; Shobhna Kapoor; Christian Denter; Jörg Nikolaus; Norbert Opitz; Sebastian Koch; Gemma Triola; Andreas Herrmann; Herbert Waldmann; Roland Winter

The K-Ras4B GTPase is a major oncoprotein whose signaling activity depends on its correct localization to negatively charged subcellular membranes and nanoclustering in membrane microdomains. Selective localization and clustering are mediated by the polybasic farnesylated C-terminus of K-Ras4B, but the mechanisms and molecular determinants involved are largely unknown. In a combined chemical biological and biophysical approach we investigated the partitioning of semisynthetic fully functional lipidated K-Ras4B proteins into heterogeneous anionic model membranes and membranes composed of viral lipid extracts. Independent of GDP/GTP-loading, K-Ras4B is preferentially localized in liquid-disordered (l(d)) lipid domains and forms new protein-containing fluid domains that are recruiting multivalent acidic lipids by an effective, electrostatic lipid sorting mechanism. In addition, GDP-GTP exchange and, thereby, Ras activation results in a higher concentration of activated K-Ras4B in the nanoscale signaling platforms. Conversely, palmitoylated and farnesylated N-Ras proteins partition into the l(d) phase and concentrate at the l(d)/l(o) phase boundary of heterogeneous membranes. Next to the lipid anchor system, the results reveal an involvement of the G-domain in the membrane interaction process by determining minor but yet significant structural reorientations of the GDP/GTP-K-Ras4B proteins at lipid interfaces. A molecular mechanism for isoform-specific Ras signaling from separate membrane microdomains is postulated from the results of this study.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Revealing conformational substates of lipidated N-Ras protein by pressure modulation

Shobhna Kapoor; Gemma Triola; Ingrid R. Vetter; Mirko Erlkamp; Herbert Waldmann; Roland Winter

Regulation of protein function is often linked to a conformational switch triggered by chemical or physical signals. To evaluate such conformational changes and to elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms of subsequent protein function, experimental identification of conformational substates and characterization of conformational equilibria are mandatory. We apply pressure modulation in combination with FTIR spectroscopy to reveal equilibria between spectroscopically resolved substates of the lipidated signaling protein N-Ras. Pressure has the advantage that its thermodynamic conjugate is volume, a parameter that is directly related to structure. The conformational dynamics of N-Ras in its different nucleotide binding states in the absence and presence of a model biomembrane was probed by pressure perturbation. We show that not only nucleotide binding but also the presence of the membrane has a drastic effect on the conformational dynamics and selection of conformational substates of the protein, and a new substate appearing upon membrane binding could be uncovered. Population of this new substate is accompanied by structural reorientations of the G domain, as also indicated by complementary ATR-FTIR and IRRAS measurements. These findings thus illustrate that the membrane controls signaling conformations by acting as an effective interaction partner, which has consequences for the G-domain orientation of membrane-associated N-Ras, which in turn is known to be critical for its effector and modulator interactions. Finally, these results provide insights into the influence of pressure on Ras-controlled signaling events in organisms living under extreme environmental conditions as they are encountered in the deep sea where pressures reach the kbar range.


ChemPhysChem | 2015

Pressure-A Gateway to Fundamental Insights into Protein Solvation, Dynamics, and Function.

Trung Quan Luong; Shobhna Kapoor; Roland Winter

Now that the centennial anniversary of the first report on pressure denaturation of proteins by Nobel Laureate P. W. Bridgman can be celebrated, this Review on the application of high pressure as a key variable for studying the energetics and interactions of proteins appears. We demonstrate that combined temperature-pressure-dependent studies help delineate the free-energy landscape of proteins and elucidate which features are essential in determining their stability. Pressure perturbation also serves as an important tool to explore fluctuations in proteins and reveal their conformational substates. From shaping the free-energy landscape of proteins themselves to that of their interactions, conformational fluctuations not only dictate a plethora of biological processes, but are also implicated in a number of debilitating diseases. Finally, the advantages of using pressure to explore biomolecular assemblies and modulate enzymatic reactions are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Misplaced helix slows down ultrafast pressure-jump protein folding

Maxim B. Prigozhin; Yanxin Liu; Anna Jean Wirth; Shobhna Kapoor; Roland Winter; Klaus Schulten; Martin Gruebele

Using a newly developed microsecond pressure-jump apparatus, we monitor the refolding kinetics of the helix-stabilized five-helix bundle protein λ*YA, the Y22W/Q33Y/G46,48A mutant of λ-repressor fragment 6–85, from 3 μs to 5 ms after a 1,200-bar P-drop. In addition to a microsecond phase, we observe a slower 1.4-ms phase during refolding to the native state. Unlike temperature denaturation, pressure denaturation produces a highly reversible helix-coil-rich state. This difference highlights the importance of the denatured initial condition in folding experiments and leads us to assign a compact nonnative helical trap as the reason for slower P-jump–induced refolding. To complement the experiments, we performed over 50 μs of all-atom molecular dynamics P-drop refolding simulations with four different force fields. Two of the force fields yield compact nonnative states with misplaced α-helix content within a few microseconds of the P-drop. Our overall conclusion from experiment and simulation is that the pressure-denatured state of λ*YA contains mainly residual helix and little β-sheet; following a fast P-drop, at least some λ*YA forms misplaced helical structure within microseconds. We hypothesize that nonnative helix at helix-turn interfaces traps the protein in compact nonnative conformations. These traps delay the folding of at least some of the population for 1.4 ms en route to the native state. Based on molecular dynamics, we predict specific mutations at the helix-turn interfaces that should speed up refolding from the pressure-denatured state, if this hypothesis is correct.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

Zinc-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate-bipyridine frameworks – linker functionalization impacts network topology during solvothermal synthesis

Sebastian Henke; Andreas Schneemann; Shobhna Kapoor; Roland Winter; Roland A. Fischer

Substitution of 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate (bdc) with additional alkoxy chains is the key to construct a family of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) of the type [Zn2(fu-bdc)2(bipy)]n (fu-bdc = functionalized bdc; bipy = 4,4′-bipyridine) exhibiting a honeycomb-like topology instead of the default pillared square-grid topology. Both the substitution pattern of the phenyl ring of the fu-bdc linker and the chain length of the alkoxy substituents have a major impact on the structure of the derived frameworks. Substitution at positions 2 and 3 leads to the trivial pillared square-grid framework, and substitution at positions 2 and 5 or 2 and 6 yields MOFs with the honeycomb-like topology. Also, simple methoxy substituents lead to the construction of a pillared square-grid topology, whereas longer substituents like ethoxy, n-propoxy, and n-butoxy generate honeycomb-like framework structures. These honeycomb MOFs feature one-dimensional channels, which are tuneable in diameter and functionality by the choice of substituent attached to the bdc-type linker. Pure component sorption isotherms indicate that the honeycomb-like frameworks selectively adsorb CO2 over N2 and CH4.


European Biophysics Journal | 2012

The role of G-domain orientation and nucleotide state on the Ras isoform-specific membrane interaction

Shobhna Kapoor; Katrin Weise; Mirko Erlkamp; Gemma Triola; Herbert Waldmann; Roland Winter

Ras proteins are proto-oncogenes that function as molecular switches linking extracellular stimuli with an overlapping but distinctive range of biological outcomes. Although modulatable interactions between the membrane and the Ras C-terminal hypervariable region (HVR) harbouring the membrane anchor motifs enable signalling specificity to be determined by their location, it is becoming clear that the spatial orientation of different Ras proteins is also crucial for their functions. To reveal the orientation of the G-domain at membranes, we conducted an extensive study on different Ras isoforms anchored to model raft membranes. The results show that the G-domain mediates the Ras–membrane interaction by inducing different sets of preferred orientations in the active and inactive states with largely parallel orientation relative to the membrane of most of the helices. The distinct locations of the different isoforms, exposing them to different effectors and regulators, coupled with different G-domain-membrane orientation, suggests synergy between this type of recognition motif and the specificity conferred by the HVR, thereby validating the concept of isoform specificity in Ras.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Temperature-pressure phase diagram of a heterogeneous anionic model biomembrane system: Results from a combined calorimetry, spectroscopy and microscopy study

Shobhna Kapoor; Alexander Werkmüller; Christian Denter; Yong Zhai; Jonas Markgraf; Katrin Weise; Norbert Opitz; Roland Winter

By using Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy in combination with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) coupled with pressure perturbation calorimetry (PPC), ultrasound velocimetry, Laurdan fluorescence spectroscopy, fluorescence microscopy and atomic force microscopy (AFM), the temperature and pressure dependent phase behavior of the five-component anionic model raft lipid mixture DOPC/DOPG/DPPC/DPPG/cholesterol (20:5:45:5:25 mol%) was investigated. A temperature range from 5 to 65 °C and a pressure range up to 16 kbar were covered to establish the temperature-pressure phase diagram of this heterogeneous model biomembrane system. Incorporation of 10-20 mol% PG still leads to liquid-ordered (l(o))-liquid-disordered (l(d)) phase coexistence regions over a wide range of temperatures and pressures. Compared to the corresponding neutral model raft mixture (DOPC/DPPC/Chol 25:50:25 mol%), the p,T-phase diagram is - as expected and in accordance with the Gibbs phase rule - more complex, the phase sequence as a function of temperature and pressure is largely similar, however. This anionic heterogeneous model membrane system will serve as a more realistic model biomembrane system to study protein interactions with anionic lipid bilayers displaying liquid-disordered/liquid-ordered domain coexistence over a wide range of the temperature-pressure plane, thus allowing also studies of biologically relevant systems encountered under extreme environmental conditions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Dissociation of the K-Ras4B/PDEδ Complex upon Contact with Lipid Membranes: Membrane Delivery Instead of Extraction

Katrin Weise; Shobhna Kapoor; Alexander Werkmüller; Simone Möbitz; Gunther Zimmermann; Gemma Triola; Herbert Waldmann; Roland Winter

K-Ras4B is a small GTPase whose selective membrane localization and clustering into microdomains are mediated by its polybasic farnesylated C-terminus. The importance of the subcellular distribution for the signaling activity of K-Ras4B became apparent from recent in vivo studies, showing that the delta subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDEδ), which possesses a hydrophobic prenyl-binding pocket, is able to function as a potential binding partner for farnesylated proteins, thereby leading to a modulation of the spatiotemporal organization of K-Ras. Even though PDEδ has been suggested to serve as a cytosolic carrier for Ras, the functional transport mechanism still remains largely elusive. In this study, the effect of PDEδ on the interaction of GDP- and GTP-loaded K-Ras4B with neutral and anionic model biomembranes has been investigated by a combination of different spectroscopic and imaging techniques. The results show that PDEδ is not able to extract K-Ras4B from membranes. Rather, the K-Ras4B/PDEδ complex formed in bulk solution turned out to be unstable in the presence of heterogeneous membranes, resulting in a release of farnesylated K-Ras4B upon membrane contact. With the additional observation of enhanced membrane affinity for the K-Ras4B/PDEδ complex, a molecular mechanism for the PDEδ-K-Ras4B-membrane interaction could be proposed. This includes an effective delivery of PDEδ-solubilized K-Ras4B to the plasma membrane, probably through cytoplasmic diffusion, the dissociation of the K-Ras4B/PDEδ complex upon plasma membrane contact, and finally the membrane binding of released farnesylated K-Ras4B that leads to K-Ras4B-enriched microdomain formation.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2012

Investigation of structural changes of β-casein and lysozyme at the gas–liquid interface during foam fractionation

Ivana Barackov; Anika Mause; Shobhna Kapoor; Roland Winter; Gerhard Schembecker; B Bernhard Burghoff

Purification and separation of proteins play a major role in biotechnology. Nowadays, alternatives to multistep operations suffering from low product yields and high costs are investigated closely amidst which one of the promising options is foam fractionation. The molecular behavior at the gas-liquid interface plays an important role in the formation and stabilization of enriched foam. This study for the first time correlates the physico-chemical parameters to the molecular structure in view of protein enrichment during foam fractionation of the two relatively different proteins lysozyme and β-casein employing biophysical techniques such as circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy and infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS). In case of lysozyme, high enrichment was achieved at pH<pI in contrast to current opinion. This is due to partial unfolding and aggregation of the lysozyme molecules under favorable foaming conditions that resulted with high enrichment of foamed protein. Under these favorable conditions, CD spectra and IRRA spectra show that the unfolding of lysozyme is partially irreversible. However, the unfavorable foaming conditions, giving low enrichment, promote only minor structural changes and these changes are fully reversible. In case of β-casein, no pronounced unfolding can be observed using CD spectroscopy and IRRAS. The β-casein molecules adsorb and purely reorient at the gas-liquid interface, depending on favorable or unfavorable conditions.


Biophysical Journal | 2016

Regulation of K-Ras4B Membrane Binding by Calmodulin

Benjamin Sperlich; Shobhna Kapoor; Herbert Waldmann; Roland Winter; Katrin Weise

K-Ras4B is a membrane-bound small GTPase with a prominent role in cancer development. It contains a polybasic farnesylated C-terminus that is required for the correct localization and clustering of K-Ras4B in distinct membrane domains. PDEδ and the Ca(2+)-binding protein calmodulin (CaM) are known to function as potential binding partners for farnesylated Ras proteins. However, they differ in the number of interaction sites with K-Ras4B, leading to different modes of interaction, and thus affect the subcellular distribution of K-Ras4B in different ways. Although it is clear that Ca(2+)-bound CaM can play a role in the dynamic spatial cycle of K-Ras4B in the cell, the exact molecular mechanism is only partially understood. In this biophysical study, we investigated the effect of Ca(2+)/CaM on the interaction of GDP- and GTP-loaded K-Ras4B with heterogeneous model biomembranes by using a combination of different spectroscopic and imaging techniques. The results show that Ca(2+)/CaM is able to extract K-Ras4B from negatively charged membranes in a nucleotide-independent manner. Moreover, the data demonstrate that the complex of Ca(2+)/CaM and K-Ras4B is stable in the presence of anionic membranes and shows no membrane binding. Finally, the influence of Ca(2+)/CaM on the interaction of K-Ras4B with membranes is compared with that of PDEδ, which was investigated in a previous study. Although both CaM and PDEδ exhibit a hydrophobic binding pocket for farnesyl, they have different effects on membrane binding of K-Ras4B and hence should be capable of regulating K-Ras4B plasma membrane localization in the cell.

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Roland Winter

Technical University of Dortmund

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Katrin Weise

Technical University of Dortmund

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Alexander Werkmüller

Technical University of Dortmund

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Simone Möbitz

Technical University of Dortmund

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Benjamin Sperlich

Technical University of Dortmund

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