Susanne Thon
University of Jena
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Featured researches published by Susanne Thon.
Neuron | 2010
Jana Kusch; Christoph Biskup; Susanne Thon; Eckhard Schulz; Vasilica Nache; Thomas Zimmer; Frank Schwede; Klaus Benndorf
HCN pacemaker channels are tetramers mediating rhythmicity in neuronal and cardiac cells. The activity of these channels is controlled by both membrane voltage and the ligand cAMP, binding to each of the four channel subunits. The molecular mechanism underlying channel activation and the relationship between the two activation stimuli are still unknown. Using patch-clamp fluorometry and a fluorescent cAMP analog, we show that full ligand-induced activation appears already with only two ligands bound to the tetrameric channel. Kinetic analysis of channel activation and ligand binding suggests direct interaction between the voltage sensor and the cyclic nucleotide-binding domain, bypassing the pore. By exploiting the duality of activation in HCN2 channels by voltage and ligand binding, we quantify the increase of the binding affinity and overall free energy for binding upon channel activation, proving thus the principle of reciprocity between ligand binding and conformational change in a receptor protein.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2012
Jana Kusch; Susanne Thon; Eckhard Schulz; Christoph Biskup; Vasilica Nache; Thomas Zimmer; Reinhard Seifert; Frank Schwede; Klaus Benndorf
Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-modulated (HCN) channels are tetrameric membrane proteins that generate electrical rhythmicity in specialized neurons and cardiomyocytes. The channels are primarily activated by voltage but are receptors as well, binding the intracellular ligand cyclic AMP. The molecular mechanism of channel activation is still unknown. Here we analyze the complex activation mechanism of homotetrameric HCN2 channels by confocal patch-clamp fluorometry and kinetically quantify all ligand binding steps and closed-open isomerizations of the intermediate states. For the binding affinity of the second, third and fourth ligand, our results suggest pronounced cooperativity in the sequence positive, negative and positive, respectively. This complex interaction of the subunits leads to a preferential stabilization of states with zero, two or four ligands and suggests a dimeric organization of the activation process: within the dimers the cooperativity is positive, whereas it is negative between the dimers.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2009
Beate Völksch; Susanne Thon; Ilse D. Jacobsen; Matthias Gube
Pantoea species are ubiquitous in nature and occasionally associated with infections caused by contaminated clinical material. Hence, Pantoea agglomerans is considered as an opportunistic pathogen of humans. Since species of the genus Pantoea and closely related species of other Enterobacteriaceae genera are phenotypically very similar, many clinical isolates are misassigned into P. agglomerans based on the use of quick commercial-offered biochemical tests. Our objective was to find markers enabling discrimination between clinical and plant isolates and to assess their virulence potential. We characterized 27 Pantoea strains, including 8 P. agglomerans isolates of clinical, and 11 of plant origin by biochemical tests and genotyping, including analysis of 16S rDNA and gapA gene sequences, and pattern polymorphisms of ITS- and ERIC/REP-DNA. All data showed that no discrete evolution occurred between plant-associated and clinical P. agglomerans isolates. Based on the typing results, five clinical- and five plant-associated P. agglomerans strains representing the majority of clades were tested on a model plant and in embryonated eggs. On soybean plants P. agglomerans strains independent of their origin could develop stable epiphytic populations. Surprisingly, in the embryonated egg model there was no difference of virulence between clinical and vegetable P. agglomerans isolates. However, these strains were significantly less virulent than a phytopathogenic P. ananatis isolate. We suggest that, independent of their origin, all P. agglomerans strains might possess indistinguishable virulence potential.
Biophysical Journal | 2013
Susanne Thon; Ralf Schmauder; Klaus Benndorf
Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic-nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels are tetramers that evoke rhythmic electrical activity in specialized neurons and cardiac cells. These channels are activated by hyperpolarizing voltage, and the second messenger cAMP can further enhance the activation. Despite the physiological importance of HCN channels, their elementary functional properties are still unclear. In this study, we expressed homotetrameric HCN2 channels in Xenopus oocytes and performed single-channel experiments in patches containing either one or multiple channels. We show that the single-channel conductance is as low as 1.67 pS and that channel activation is a one-step process. We also observed that the time between the hyperpolarizing stimulus and the first channel opening, the first latency, determines the activation process alone. Notably, at maximum hyperpolarization, saturating cAMP drives the channel to open for unusually long periods. In particular, at maximum activation by hyperpolarization and saturating cAMP, the open probability approaches unity. In contrast to other reports, no evidence of interchannel cooperativity was observed. In conclusion, single HCN2 channels operate only with an exceptionally low conductance, and both activating stimuli, voltage and cAMP, exclusively control the open probability.
Biophysical Journal | 2012
Klaus Benndorf; Susanne Thon; Eckhard Schulz
In a multimeric receptor protein, the binding of a ligand can modulate the binding of a succeeding ligand. This phenomenon, called cooperativity, is caused by the interaction of the receptor subunits. By using a complex Markovian model and a set of parameters determined previously, we analyzed how the successive binding of four ligands leads to a complex cooperative interaction of the subunits in homotetrameric HCN2 pacemaker channels. The individual steps in the model were characterized by Gibbs free energies for the equilibria and activation energies, specifying the affinity of the binding sites and the transition rates, respectively. Moreover, cooperative free energies were calculated for each binding step in both the closed and the open channel. We show that the cooperativity sequence positive-negative-positive determined for the binding affinity is generated by the combined effect of very different cooperativity sequences determined for the binding and unbinding rates, which are negative-negative-positive and no-negative-no, respectively. It is concluded that in the ligand-induced activation of HCN2 channels, the sequence of cooperativity based on the binding affinity is caused by two even qualitatively different sequences of cooperativity that are based on the rates of ligand binding and unbinding.
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Susanne Thon; Eckhard Schulz; Jana Kusch; Klaus Benndorf
Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-modulated (HCN) channels are tetrameric proteins that evoke electrical rhythmicity in specialized neurons and cardiomyocytes. The channels are activated by hyperpolarizing voltage but are also receptors for the intracellular ligand adenosine-3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) that enhances activation but is unable to activate the channels alone. Using fcAMP, a fluorescent derivative of cAMP, we analyzed the effect of ligand binding on HCN2 channels not preactivated by voltage. We identified a conformational flip of the channel as an intermediate state following the ligand binding and quantified it kinetically. Globally fitting the time courses of ligand binding and unbinding revealed modest cooperativity among the subunits in the conformational flip. The intensity of this cooperativity, however, was only moderate compared to channels preactivated by hyperpolarizing voltage. These data provide kinetic information about conformational changes proceeding in nonactivated HCN2 channels when cAMP binds. Moreover, our approach bears potential for analyzing the function of any other membrane receptor if a potent fluorescent ligand is available.
PLOS Computational Biology | 2018
Sabine Hummert; Susanne Thon; Thomas Eick; Ralf Schmauder; Eckhard Schulz; Klaus Benndorf
Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-modulated (HCN) channels control electrical rhythmicity in specialized brain and heart cells. We quantitatively analysed voltage-dependent activation of homotetrameric HCN2 channels and its modulation by the second messenger cAMP using global fits of hidden Markovian models to complex experimental data. We show that voltage-dependent activation is essentially governed by two separable voltage-dependent steps followed by voltage-independent opening of the pore. According to this model analysis, the binding of cAMP to the channels exerts multiple effects on the voltage-dependent gating: It stabilizes the open pore, reduces the total gating charge from ~8 to ~5, makes an additional closed state outside the activation pathway accessible and strongly accelerates the ON-gating but not the OFF-gating. Furthermore, the open channel has a much slower computed OFF-gating current than the closed channel, in both the absence and presence of cAMP. Together, these results provide detailed new insight into the voltage- and cAMP-induced activation gating of HCN channels.
Biophysical Journal | 2009
Jana Kusch; Christoph Biskup; Susanne Thon; Eckhard Schulz; Klaus Benndorf
HCN channels are nonselective tetrameric cation channels that are activated by hyperpolarizing voltages and modulated by the ligand cAMP. They generate spontaneous rhythmic activity in heart and brain. Ligand binding to the intracellular cyclic nucleotide-binding site accelerates activation kinetics, shifts the steady-state activation to more positive voltages and increases the open probability. Though it is relatively simple to determine an apparent affinity for the ligand action, it is not so simple to determine the true ligand affinity during channel activation because, according to the principle of reciprocity, ligand binding and efficacy depend on each other, i.e. the affinity of the binding sites must increase when the channel opens. It is therefore important to determine the binding of the ligands to the channels and channel activation simultaneously.Activation of homotetrameric HCN2 channels was studied in inside-out macropatches simultaneously with ligand binding by means of patch-clamp fluorometry, using a fluorescent cAMP (fcAMP) that activates the channels in a similar manner as cAMP. With 1 μM fcAMP the binding of the ligand to the open channels exceeded that to closed channels. The slowness of the activation time course of HCN2 channels allowed us to monitor the ligand binding during the activation process. As predicted, the slow activation time course was accompanied by an increase of ligand binding. Moreover, the increase of binding was exponential whereas activation obeyed the typical sigmoidal time course. Hence, in the superimposed normalized time courses, the initial binding preceded activation whereas at later times activation preceeded binding. These results show that activation gating indeed increases the binding affinity for the ligands, quite as predicted by the principle of reciprocity, and that the gating of the first of the four subunits, which does not lead to channel opening, is associated with ligand binding.
Biophysical Journal | 2013
Jana Kusch; Jana Rose; Tobias Fischer; Susanne Thon; Klaus Benndorf
Biophysical Journal | 2013
Susanne Thon; Klaus Benndorf