Suresh Kumar Vasa
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Suresh Kumar Vasa.
Nature Communications | 2014
Jean Philippe Demers; Birgit Habenstein; Antoine Loquet; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Karin Giller; Stefan Becker; David Baker; Adam Lange; Nikolaos G. Sgourakis
We introduce a general hybrid approach for determining the structures of supramolecular assemblies. Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) data define the overall envelope of the assembly and rigid-body orientation of the subunits while solid-state NMR (ssNMR) chemical shifts and distance constraints define the local secondary structure, protein fold and inter-subunit interactions. Finally, Rosetta structure calculations provide a general framework to integrate the different sources of structural information. Combining a 7.7-Å cryo-EM density map and 996 ssNMR distance constraints, the structure of the Type-III Secretion System (T3SS) needle of Shigella flexneri is determined to a precision of 0.4 Å. The calculated structures are cross-validated using an independent dataset of 691 ssNMR constraints and STEM measurements. The hybrid model resolves the conformation of the non-conserved N-terminus, that occupies a protrusion in the cryo-EM density, and reveals conserved pore residues forming a continuous pattern of electrostatic interactions, thereby suggesting a mechanism for effector protein translocation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Suresh Kumar Vasa; Lin Lin; Chaowei Shi; Birgit Habenstein; Dietmar Riedel; Juliane Kühn; Martin Thanbichler; Adam Lange
Significance Bactofilins are a new class of cytoskeletal proteins that are involved in key cellular processes. For instance, in the human pathogen Helicobacter pylori, they are responsible for maintaining its characteristic helical cell shape, a feature required for cells to efficiently colonize the gastric mucus. So far the atomic structure of bactofilin filaments has remained elusive, as the large bactofilin assemblies are not amenable to standard methods for 3D structure determination. Here, we have applied a combination of solid-state NMR and electron microscopy and discovered that bactofilins adopt a β-helical architecture, which has not been observed before for other cytoskeletal filaments. Interestingly, however, the structure bears similarities to that of the fungal prion protein HET-s. Bactofilins are a widespread class of bacterial filament-forming proteins, which serve as cytoskeletal scaffolds in various cellular pathways. They are characterized by a conserved architecture, featuring a central conserved domain (DUF583) that is flanked by variable terminal regions. Here, we present a detailed investigation of bactofilin filaments from Caulobacter crescentus by high-resolution solid-state NMR spectroscopy. De novo sequential resonance assignments were obtained for residues Ala39 to Phe137, spanning the conserved DUF583 domain. Analysis of the secondary chemical shifts shows that this core region adopts predominantly β-sheet secondary structure. Mutational studies of conserved hydrophobic residues located in the identified β-strand segments suggest that bactofilin folding and polymerization is mediated by an extensive and redundant network of hydrophobic interactions, consistent with the high intrinsic stability of bactofilin polymers. Transmission electron microscopy revealed a propensity of bactofilin to form filament bundles as well as sheet-like, 2D crystalline assemblies, which may represent the supramolecular arrangement of bactofilin in the native context. Based on the diffraction pattern of these 2D crystalline assemblies, scanning transmission electron microscopy measurements of the mass per length of BacA filaments, and the distribution of β-strand segments identified by solid-state NMR, we propose that the DUF583 domain adopts a β-helical architecture, in which 18 β-strand segments are arranged in six consecutive windings of a β-helix.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Antoine Loquet; Birgit Habenstein; Veniamin Chevelkov; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Karin Giller; Stefan Becker; Adam Lange
Noncovalent supramolecular assemblies possess in general several unique subunit-subunit interfaces.The basic building block of such an assembly consists of several subunits and contains all unique interfaces. Atomic-resolution structures of monomeric subunits are typically accessed by crystallography or solution NMR and fitted into electron microscopy density maps. However, the structure of the intact building block in the assembled state remains unknown with this hybrid approach. Here, we present the solid-state NMR atomic structure of the building block of the type III secretion system needle. The building block structure consists of a homotetrameric subunit complex with three unique supramolecular interfaces. Side-chain positions at the interfaces were solved at atomic detail. The high-resolution structure reveals unambiguously the helical handedness of the assembly, determined to be right-handed for the type III secretion system needle.Additionally, the axial rise per subunit could be extracted from the tetramer structure and independently validated by mass-per-length measurements.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Sudipta Roy; Birger Dittrich; Totan Mondal; Debasis Koley; A. C. Stückl; Brigitte Schwederski; Wolfgang Kaim; Michael John; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Rasmus Linser; Herbert W. Roesky
A cyclic alkyl(amino) carbene (cAAC) stabilized dimer [(cAAC)Si(P-Tip)]2 (2) (Tip = 2,4,6-triisopropylphenyl) is reported. 2 can be considered as a dimer of the heavier ketenimine (R2C═C═N-R) analogue. The dark-red rod-shaped crystals of 2 were synthesized by reduction of the precursor, cAAC-dichlorosilylene-stabilized phosphinidene (cAAC)SiCl2→P-Tip with sodium napthalenide. The crystals of 2 are storable at room temperature for several months and stable up to 215 °C under an inert atmosphere. X-ray single-crystal diffraction revealed that 2 contains a cyclic nonplanar four-membered SiPSiP ring. Magnetic susceptibility measurements confirmed the singlet spin ground state of 2. Cyclic voltammetry of 2 showed a quasi-reversible one-electron reduction indicating the formation of the corresponding radical anion 2(•-), which was further characterized by EPR measurements in solution. The electronic structure and bonding of 2 and 2(•-) were studied by theoretical calculations. The experimentally obtained data are in good agreement with the calculated values.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2015
ShengQi Xiang; Kristof Grohe; Petra Rovó; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Karin Giller; Stefan Becker; Rasmus Linser
Abstract Proton detection in solid-state NMR has seen a tremendous increase in popularity in the last years. New experimental techniques allow to exploit protons as an additional source of information on structure, dynamics, and protein interactions with their surroundings. In addition, sensitivity is mostly improved and ambiguity in assignment experiments reduced. We show here that, in the solid state, sequential amide-to-amide correlations turn out to be an excellent, complementary way to exploit amide shifts for unambiguous backbone assignment. For a general assessment, we compare amide-to-amide experiments with the more common 13C-shift-based methods. Exploiting efficient CP magnetization transfers rather than less efficient INEPT periods, our results suggest that the approach is very feasible for solid-state NMR.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Sudipta Roy; Kartik Chandra Mondal; Lennard Krause; Peter Stollberg; Regine Herbst-Irmer; Dietmar Stalke; Jann Meyer; A. C. Stückl; Bholanath Maity; Debasis Koley; Suresh Kumar Vasa; ShengQi Xiang; Rasmus Linser; Herbert W. Roesky
A silicon atom in the zero oxidation state stabilized by two carbene ligands is known as siladicarbene (silylone). There are two pairs of electrons on the silicon atom in silylone. This was recently confirmed by both experimental and theoretical charge density investigations. The silylone is stable up to 195 °C in an inert atmosphere. However, a substoichiometric amount (33 mol%) of potassium metal triggers the activation of the unsaturated C:Si:C backbone, leading to a selective reaction with a tertiary C-H bond in an atom-economical approach to form a six-membered cyclic silylene with three-coordinate silicon atom. Cyclic voltammetry shows that this reaction proceeds via the formation of a silylone radical anion intermediate, which is further confirmed by EPR spectroscopy.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Birgit Habenstein; Antoine Loquet; Songhwan Hwang; Karin Giller; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Stefan Becker; Michael Habeck; Adam Lange
Type 1 pili are filamentous protein assemblies on the surface of Gram-negative bacteria that mediate adhesion to host cells during the infection process. The molecular structure of type 1 pili remains elusive on the atomic scale owing to their insolubility and noncrystallinity. Herein we describe an approach for hybrid-structure determination that is based on data from solution-state NMR spectroscopy on the soluble subunit and solid-state NMR spectroscopy and STEM data on the assembled pilus. Our approach is based on iterative modeling driven by structural information extracted from different sources and provides a general tool to access pseudo atomic structures of protein assemblies with complex subunit folds. By using this methodology, we determined the local conformation of the FimA pilus subunit in the context of the assembled type 1 pilus, determined the exact helical pilus architecture, and elucidated the intermolecular interfaces contributing to pilus assembly and stability with atomic detail.
Nature Communications | 2017
Garima Jaipuria; Andrei Leonov; Karin Giller; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Łukasz Jaremko; Mariusz Jaremko; Rasmus Linser; Stefan Becker; Markus Zweckstetter
Cholesterol is an important regulator of membrane protein function. However, the exact mechanisms involved in this process are still not fully understood. Here we study how the tertiary and quaternary structure of the mitochondrial translocator protein TSPO, which binds cholesterol with nanomolar affinity, is affected by this sterol. Residue-specific analysis of TSPO by solid-state NMR spectroscopy reveals a dynamic monomer–dimer equilibrium of TSPO in the membrane. Binding of cholesterol to TSPOs cholesterol-recognition motif leads to structural changes across the protein that shifts the dynamic equilibrium towards the translocator monomer. Consistent with an allosteric mechanism, a mutation within the oligomerization interface perturbs transmembrane regions located up to 35 Å away from the interface, reaching TSPOs cholesterol-binding motif. The lower structural stability of the intervening transmembrane regions provides a mechanistic basis for signal transmission. Our study thus reveals an allosteric signal pathway that connects membrane protein tertiary and quaternary structure with cholesterol binding.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Suresh Kumar Vasa; Petra Rovó; Karin Giller; Stefan Becker; Rasmus Linser
Interactions within proteins, with their surrounding, and with other molecules are mediated mostly by hydrogen atoms. In fully protonated, inhomogeneous, or larger proteins, however, aliphatic proton shifts tend to show little dispersion despite fast Magic-Angle Spinning. 3D correlations dispersing aliphatic proton shifts by their better resolved amide N/H shifts can alleviate this problem. Using inverse second-order cross-polarization (iSOCP), we here introduce dedicated and improved means to sensitively link site-specific chemical shift information from aliphatic protons with a backbone amide resolution. Thus, even in cases where protein deuteration is impossible, this approach may enable access to various aspects of protein functions that are reported on by protons.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2015
Natalia Kulminskaya; Suresh Kumar Vasa; Karin Giller; Stefan Becker; Rasmus Linser
Multiple-bond carbon–carbon homonuclear mixing is a hurdle in extensively deuterated proteins and under fast MAS due to the absence of an effective proton dipolar-coupling network. Such conditions are now commonly employed in solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Here, we introduce an isotropic homonuclear 13C–13C through-bond mixing sequence, MOCCA, for the solid state. Even though applied under MAS, this scheme performs without rotor synchronization and thus does not pose the usual hurdles in terms of power dissipation for fast spinning. We compare its performance with existing homonuclear 13C–13C mixing schemes using a perdeuterated and partially proton-backexchanged protein. Based on the analysis of side chain carbon–carbon correlations, we show that particularly MOCCA with standard 180-degree pulses and delays leading to non-rotor-synchronized spacing performs exceptionally well. This method provides high magnetization transfer efficiency for multiple-bond transfer in the aliphatic region compared with other tested mixing sequences. In addition, we show that this sequence can also be tailor-made for recoupling within a selected spectral region using band-selective pulses.