Stefan D. Knight
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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Featured researches published by Stefan D. Knight.
Molecular Microbiology | 2004
Julie Bouckaert; Jenny Berglund; Mark A. Schembri; Erwin De Genst; Lieve Cools; Manfred Wuhrer; Chia-Suei Hung; Jerome S. Pinkner; Rikard Slättegård; Anton V. Zavialov; Devapriya Choudhury; Solomon Langermann; Scott J. Hultgren; Lode Wyns; Per Klemm; Stefan Oscarson; Stefan D. Knight; Henri De Greve
Mannose‐binding type 1 pili are important virulence factors for the establishment of Escherichia coli urinary tract infections (UTIs). These infections are initiated by adhesion of uropathogenic E. coli to uroplakin receptors in the uroepithelium via the FimH adhesin located at the tips of type 1 pili. Blocking of bacterial adhesion is able to prevent infection. Here, we provide for the first time binding data of the molecular events underlying type 1 fimbrial adherence, by crystallographic analyses of the FimH receptor binding domains from a uropathogenic and a K‐12 strain, and affinity measurements with mannose, common mono‐ and disaccharides, and a series of alkyl and aryl mannosides. Our results illustrate that the lectin domain of the FimH adhesin is a stable and functional entity and that an exogenous butyl α‐ d‐mannoside, bound in the crystal structures, exhibits a significantly better affinity for FimH (Kd = 0.15 µM) than mannose (Kd = 2.3 µM). Exploration of the binding affinities of α‐ d‐mannosides with longer alkyl tails revealed affinities up to 5 nM. Aryl mannosides and fructose can also bind with high affinities to the FimH lectin domain, with a 100‐fold improvement and 15‐fold reduction in affinity, respectively, compared with mannose. Taken together, these relative FimH affinities correlate exceptionally well with the relative concentrations of the same glycans needed for the inhibition of adherence of type 1 piliated E. coli. We foresee that our findings will spark new ideas and initiatives for the development of UTI vaccines and anti‐adhesive drugs to prevent anticipated and recurrent UTIs.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1990
Stefan D. Knight; Inger Andersson; Carl-Ivar Brändén
The X-ray structure of the quaternary complex of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from spinach with CO2, Mg2+ and a reaction-intermediate analogue (CABP) has been determined and refined at 2.4 A resolution. Cyclic non-crystallographic symmetry averaging around the molecular 4-fold axis and phase combination were used to improve the initial multiple isomorphous replacement phases. A model composed of one large subunit and one small subunit was built in the resulting electron density map, which was of excellent quality. Application of the local symmetry gave an initial model of the L8S8 molecule with a crystallographic R-value of 0.43. Refinement of this initial model was performed by a combination of conventional least-squares energy refinement and molecular dynamics simulation using the XPLOR program. Three rounds of refinement, interspersed with manual rebuilding at the graphics display, resulted in a model containing all of the 123 amino acid residues in the small subunit, and 467 of the 475 residues in the large subunit. The R-value for this model is 0.24, with relatively small deviations from ideal stereochemistry. Subunit interactions in the L8S8 molecule have been analysed and are described. The interface areas between the subunits are extensive, and bury almost half of the accessible surface areas of both the large and the small subunit. A number of conserved interaction areas that may be of functional significance have been identified and are described, and biochemical and mutagenesis data are discussed in the structural framework of the model.
Nature | 2010
Glareh Askarieh; My Hedhammar; Kerstin Nordling; Alejandra Sáenz; Cristina Casals; Anna Rising; Jan Johansson; Stefan D. Knight
Nature’s high-performance polymer, spider silk, consists of specific proteins, spidroins, with repetitive segments flanked by conserved non-repetitive domains. Spidroins are stored as a highly concentrated fluid dope. On silk formation, intermolecular interactions between repeat regions are established that provide strength and elasticity. How spiders manage to avoid premature spidroin aggregation before self-assembly is not yet established. A pH drop to 6.3 along the spider’s spinning apparatus, altered salt composition and shear forces are believed to trigger the conversion to solid silk, but no molecular details are known. Miniature spidroins consisting of a few repetitive spidroin segments capped by the carboxy-terminal domain form metre-long silk-like fibres irrespective of pH. We discovered that incorporation of the amino-terminal domain of major ampullate spidroin 1 from the dragline of the nursery web spider Euprosthenops australis (NT) into mini-spidroins enables immediate, charge-dependent self-assembly at pH values around 6.3, but delays aggregation above pH 7. The X-ray structure of NT, determined to 1.7 Å resolution, shows a homodimer of dipolar, antiparallel five-helix bundle subunits that lack homologues. The overall dimeric structure and observed charge distribution of NT is expected to be conserved through spider evolution and in all types of spidroins. Our results indicate a relay-like mechanism through which the N-terminal domain regulates spidroin assembly by inhibiting precocious aggregation during storage, and accelerating and directing self-assembly as the pH is lowered along the spider’s silk extrusion duct.
Cell | 2003
Anton V. Zavialov; Jenny Berglund; Alexander F Pudney; Laura J. Fooks; Tara M Ibrahim; Sheila MacIntyre; Stefan D. Knight
Most gram-negative pathogens express fibrous adhesive virulence organelles that mediate targeting to the sites of infection. The F1 capsular antigen from the plague pathogen Yersinia pestis consists of linear fibers of a single subunit (Caf1) and serves as a prototype for nonpilus organelles assembled via the chaperone/usher pathway. Genetic data together with high-resolution X-ray structures corresponding to snapshots of the assembly process reveal the structural basis of fiber formation. Comparison of chaperone bound Caf1 subunit with the subunit in the fiber reveals a novel type of conformational change involving the entire hydrophobic core of the protein. The observed conformational change suggests that the chaperone traps a high-energy folding intermediate of Caf1. A model is proposed in which release of the subunit allows folding to be completed, driving fiber formation.
The EMBO Journal | 1996
Danielle L. Hung; Stefan D. Knight; R M Woods; Jerry Pinkner; Scott J. Hultgren
The initial encounter of a microbial pathogen with the host often involves the recognition of host receptors by different kinds of bacterial adhesive organelles called pili, fimbriae, fibrillae or afimbrial adhesins. The development of over 26 of these architecturally diverse adhesive organelles in various Gram‐negative pathogens depends on periplasmic chaperones that are comprised of two immunoglobulin‐like domains. All of the chaperones possess a highly conserved sheet in domain 1 and a conserved interdomain hydrogen‐bonding network. Chaperone‐subunit complex formation depends on the anchoring of the carboxylate group of the subunit into the conserved crevice of the chaperone cleft and the subsequent positioning of the COOH terminus of subunits along the exposed edge of the conserved sheet of the chaperone. We discovered that the chaperones can be divided into two distinct subfamilies based upon conserved structural differences that occur in the conserved sheet. Interestingly, a subdivision of the chaperones based upon whether they assemble rod‐like pili or non‐pilus organelles that have an atypical morphology defines the same two subgroups. The molecular dissection of the two chaperone subfamilies and the adhesive fibers that they assemble has advanced our understanding of the development of virulence‐associated organelles in pathogenic bacteria.
Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2000
Frederic G. Sauer; Michelle M. Barnhart; Devapriya Choudhury; Stefan D. Knight; Gabriel Waksman; Scott J. Hultgren
Bacterial pili assembled by the chaperone-usher pathway can mediate microbial attachment, an early step in the establishment of an infection, by binding specifically to sugars present in host tissues. Recent work has begun to reveal the structural basis both of chaperone function in the biogenesis of these pili and of bacterial attachment.
The EMBO Journal | 1998
Gabriel E. Soto; Karen W. Dodson; Derek Ogg; Christopher Liu; John E. Heuser; Stefan D. Knight; Jan Kihlberg; C. Hal Jones; Scott J. Hultgren
The class of proteins collectively known as periplasmic immunoglobulin‐like chaperones play an essential role in the assembly of a diverse set of adhesive organelles used by pathogenic strains of Gram‐negative bacteria. Herein, we present a combination of genetic and structural data that sheds new light on chaperone–subunit and subunit–subunit interactions in the prototypical P pilus system, and provides new insights into how PapD controls pilus biogenesis. New crystallographic data of PapD with the C‐terminal fragment of a subunit suggest a mechanism for how periplasmic chaperones mediate the extraction of pilus subunits from the inner membrane, a prerequisite step for subunit folding. In addition, the conserved N‐ and C‐terminal regions of pilus subunits are shown to participate in the quaternary interactions of the mature pilus following their uncapping by the chaperone. By coupling the folding of subunit proteins to the capping of their nascent assembly surfaces, periplasmic chaperones are thereby able to protect pilus subunits from premature oligomerization until their delivery to the outer membrane assembly site.
Molecular Microbiology | 2006
Julie Bouckaert; Jenny Mackenzie; Jose L. de Paz; Beatrice Chipwaza; Devapriya Choudhury; Anton V. Zavialov; Karin Mannerstedt; Jennifer Anderson; Denis Piérard; Lode Wyns; Peter H. Seeberger; Stefan Oscarson; Henri De Greve; Stefan D. Knight
Type‐1 fimbriae are important virulence factors for the establishment of Escherichia coli urinary tract infections. Bacterial adhesion to the high‐mannosylated uroplakin Ia glycoprotein receptors of bladder epithelium is mediated by the FimH adhesin. Previous studies have attributed differences in mannose‐sensitive adhesion phenotypes between faecal and uropathogenic E. coli to sequence variation in the FimH receptor‐binding domain. We find that FimH variants from uropathogenic, faecal and enterohaemorrhagic isolates express the same specificities and affinities for high‐mannose structures. The only exceptions are FimHs from O157 strains that carry a mutation (Asn135Lys) in the mannose‐binding pocket that abolishes all binding. A high‐mannose microarray shows that all substructures are bound by FimH and that the largest oligomannose is not necessarily the best binder. Affinity measurements demonstrate a strong preference towards oligomannosides exposing Manα1‐3Man at their non‐reducing end. Binding is further enhanced by the β1‐4‐linkage to GlcNAc, where binding is 100‐fold better than that of α‐d‐mannose. Manα1‐3Manβ1‐4GlcNAc, a major oligosaccharide present in the urine of α‐mannosidosis patients, thus constitutes a well‐defined FimH epitope. Differences in affinities for high‐mannose structures are at least 10‐fold larger than differences in numbers of adherent bacteria between faecal and uropathogenic strains. Our results imply that the carbohydrate expression profile of targeted host tissues and of natural inhibitors in urine, such as Tamm‐Horsfall protein, are stronger determinants of adhesion than FimH variation.
Biochemical Journal | 2005
Anton V. Zavialov; Vladimir M. Tischenko; Laura J. Fooks; Bjørn Olav Brandsdal; Johan Åqvist; Vladimir P. Zav'yalov; Sheila MacIntyre; Stefan D. Knight
Periplasmic chaperone/usher machineries are used for assembly of filamentous adhesion organelles of Gram-negative pathogens in a process that has been suggested to be driven by folding energy. Structures of mutant chaperone-subunit complexes revealed a final folding transition (condensation of the subunit hydrophobic core) on the release of organelle subunit from the chaperone-subunit pre-assembly complex and incorporation into the final fibre structure. However, in view of the large interface between chaperone and subunit in the pre-assembly complex and the reported stability of this complex, it is difficult to understand how final folding could release sufficient energy to drive assembly. In the present paper, we show the X-ray structure for a native chaperone-fibre complex that, together with thermodynamic data, shows that the final folding step is indeed an essential component of the assembly process. We show that completion of the hydrophobic core and incorporation into the fibre results in an exceptionally stable module, whereas the chaperone-subunit pre-assembly complex is greatly destabilized by the high-energy conformation of the bound subunit. This difference in stabilities creates a free energy potential that drives fibre formation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Hanna Willander; Jenny Presto; Glareh Askarieh; Henrik Biverstål; Birgitta Frohm; Stefan D. Knight; Jan Johansson; Sara Linse
Background: Alzheimer disease (AD) is associated with Aβ protein misfolding and aggregation into fibrils rich in β-sheet structure. Results: BRICHOS domains prevent fibril formation of Aβ far below the stoichiometric ratio. Conclusion: Aβ is maintained as an unstructured monomer in the presence of BRICHOS. Significance: BRICHOS domain can have a natural protective role against Aβ aggregation, which may open new routes toward AD therapy. Amyloid diseases such as Alzheimer, Parkinson, and prion diseases are associated with a specific form of protein misfolding and aggregation into oligomers and fibrils rich in β-sheet structure. The BRICHOS domain consisting of ∼100 residues is found in membrane proteins associated with degenerative and proliferative disease, including lung fibrosis (surfactant protein C precursor; pro-SP-C) and familial dementia (Bri2). We find that recombinant BRICHOS domains from Bri2 and pro-SP-C prevent fibril formation of amyloid β-peptides (Aβ40 and Aβ42) far below the stoichiometric ratio. Kinetic experiments show that a main effect of BRICHOS is to prolong the lag time in a concentration-dependent, quantitative, and reproducible manner. An ongoing aggregation process is retarded if BRICHOS is added at any time during the lag phase, but it is too late to interfere at the end of the process. Results from circular dichroism and NMR spectroscopy, as well as analytical size exclusion chromatography, imply that Aβ is maintained as an unstructured monomer during the extended lag phase in the presence of BRICHOS. Electron microscopy shows that although the process is delayed, typical amyloid fibrils are eventually formed also when BRICHOS is present. Structural BRICHOS models display a conserved array of tyrosine rings on a five-stranded β-sheet, with inter-hydroxyl distances suited for hydrogen-bonding peptides in an extended β-conformation. Our data imply that the inhibitory mechanism is reliant on BRICHOS interfering with molecular events during the lag phase.