Tobias Weinert
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Tobias Weinert.
Nature | 2012
Seigo Shima; Martin Krueger; Tobias Weinert; Ulrike Demmer; Jörg Kahnt; Rudolf K. Thauer; Ulrich Ermler
The anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) with sulphate, an area currently generating great interest in microbiology, is accomplished by consortia of methanotrophic archaea (ANME) and sulphate-reducing bacteria. The enzyme activating methane in methanotrophic archaea has tentatively been identified as a homologue of methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) that catalyses the methane-forming step in methanogenic archaea. Here we report an X-ray structure of the 280 kDa heterohexameric ANME-1 MCR complex. It was crystallized uniquely from a protein ensemble purified from consortia of microorganisms collected with a submersible from a Black Sea mat catalysing AOM with sulphate. Crystals grown from the heterogeneous sample diffract to 2.1 Å resolution and consist of a single ANME-1 MCR population, demonstrating the strong selective power of crystallization. The structure revealed ANME-1 MCR in complex with coenzyme M and coenzyme B, indicating the same substrates for MCR from methanotrophic and methanogenic archaea. Differences between the highly similar structures of ANME-1 MCR and methanogenic MCR include a F430 modification, a cysteine-rich patch and an altered post-translational amino acid modification pattern, which may tune the enzymes for their functions in different biological contexts.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2015
Tobias Weinert; Simona G Huwiler; Johannes W. Kung; Sina Weidenweber; Petra Hellwig; Hans-Joachim Stärk; Till Biskup; Stefan Weber; Julien J. H. Cotelesage; Graham N. George; Ulrich Ermler; Matthias Boll
In chemical synthesis, the widely used Birch reduction of aromatic compounds to cyclic dienes requires alkali metals in ammonia as extremely low-potential electron donors. An analogous reaction is catalyzed by benzoyl-coenzyme A reductases (BCRs) that have a key role in the globally important bacterial degradation of aromatic compounds at anoxic sites. Because of the lack of structural information, the catalytic mechanism of enzymatic benzene ring reduction remained obscure. Here, we present the structural characterization of a dearomatizing BCR containing an unprecedented tungsten cofactor that transfers electrons to the benzene ring in an aprotic cavity. Substrate binding induces proton transfer from the bulk solvent to the active site by expelling a Zn(2+) that is crucial for active site encapsulation. Our results shed light on the structural basis of an electron transfer process at the negative redox potential limit in biology. They open the door for biological or biomimetic alternatives to a basic chemical synthetic tool.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Liv J. Rather; Tobias Weinert; Ulrike Demmer; Eckhard Bill; Wael Ismail; Georg Fuchs; Ulrich Ermler
The coenzyme A (CoA)-dependent aerobic benzoate metabolic pathway uses an unprecedented chemical strategy to overcome the high aromatic resonance energy by forming the non-aromatic 2,3-epoxybenzoyl-CoA. The crucial dearomatizing reaction is catalyzed by three enzymes, BoxABC, where BoxA is an NADPH-dependent reductase, BoxB is a benzoyl-CoA 2,3-epoxidase, and BoxC is an epoxide ring hydrolase. We characterized the key enzyme BoxB from Azoarcus evansii by structural and Mössbauer spectroscopic methods as a new member of class I diiron enzymes. Several family members were structurally studied with respect to the diiron center architecture, but no structure of an intact diiron enzyme with its natural substrate has been reported. X-ray structures between 1.9 and 2.5 Å resolution were determined for BoxB in the diferric state and with bound substrate benzoyl-CoA in the reduced state. The substrate-bound reduced state is distinguished from the diferric state by increased iron-ligand distances and the absence of directly bridging groups between them. The position of benzoyl-CoA inside a 20 Å long channel and the position of the phenyl ring relative to the diiron center are accurately defined. The C2 and C3 atoms of the phenyl ring are closer to one of the irons. Therefore, one oxygen of activated O2 must be ligated predominantly to this proximate iron to be in a geometrically suitable position to attack the phenyl ring. Consistent with the observed iron/phenyl geometry, BoxB stereoselectively should form the 2S,3R-epoxide. We postulate a reaction cycle that allows a charge delocalization because of the phenyl ring and the electron-withdrawing CoA thioester.
Nature Communications | 2017
Tobias Weinert; Natacha Olieric; Robert K. Y. Cheng; Steffen Brünle; Daniel James; Dmitry Ozerov; Dardan Gashi; Laura Vera; May Marsh; Kathrin Jaeger; Florian S. N. Dworkowski; Ezequiel Panepucci; Shibom Basu; Petr Skopintsev; Andrew S. Doré; Tian Geng; Robert M. Cooke; Mengning Liang; Andrea E. Prota; Valérie Panneels; Przemyslaw Nogly; Ulrich Ermler; Gebhard F. X. Schertler; Michael Hennig; Michel O. Steinmetz; Meitian Wang; Jörg Standfuss
Historically, room-temperature structure determination was succeeded by cryo-crystallography to mitigate radiation damage. Here, we demonstrate that serial millisecond crystallography at a synchrotron beamline equipped with high-viscosity injector and high frame-rate detector allows typical crystallographic experiments to be performed at room-temperature. Using a crystal scanning approach, we determine the high-resolution structure of the radiation sensitive molybdenum storage protein, demonstrate soaking of the drug colchicine into tubulin and native sulfur phasing of the human G protein-coupled adenosine receptor. Serial crystallographic data for molecular replacement already converges in 1,000–10,000 diffraction patterns, which we collected in 3 to maximally 82 minutes. Compared with serial data we collected at a free-electron laser, the synchrotron data are of slightly lower resolution, however fewer diffraction patterns are needed for de novo phasing. Overall, the data we collected by room-temperature serial crystallography are of comparable quality to cryo-crystallographic data and can be routinely collected at synchrotrons.Serial crystallography was developed for protein crystal data collection with X-ray free-electron lasers. Here the authors present several examples which show that serial crystallography using high-viscosity injectors can also be routinely employed for room-temperature data collection at synchrotrons.
Science | 2018
Przemyslaw Nogly; Tobias Weinert; Daniel James; Sergio Carbajo; Dmitry Ozerov; Antonia Furrer; Dardan Gashi; Veniamin Borin; Petr Skopintsev; Kathrin Jaeger; Karol Nass; Petra Båth; Robert Bosman; Jason E. Koglin; Matthew Seaberg; Thomas J. Lane; Demet Kekilli; Steffen Brünle; Tomoyuki Tanaka; Wenting Wu; Christopher J. Milne; T. G. White; Anton Barty; Uwe Weierstall; Valérie Panneels; Eriko Nango; So Iwata; Mark S. Hunter; Igor Schapiro; Gebhard F. X. Schertler
Look fast Organisms from bacteria to humans sense and react to light. Proteins that contain the light-sensitive molecule retinal couple absorption of light to conformational changes that produce a signal or move ions across a membrane. Nogly et al. used an x-ray laser to probe the earliest structural changes to the retinal chromophore within microcrystals of the ion pump bacteriorhodopsin (see the Perspective by Moffat). The excited-state retinal wiggles but is held in place so that only one double bond of retinal is capable of isomerizing. A water molecule adjacent to the proton-pumping Schiff base responds to changes in charge distribution in the chromophore even before the movement of atoms begins. Science, this issue p. eaat0094; see also p. 127 Ultrafast crystallography captures the response of the pigment of bacteriorhodopsin to absorption of light. INTRODUCTION Retinal is a light-sensitive protein ligand that is used by all domains of life to process the information and energy content of light. Retinal-binding proteins are integral membrane proteins that drive vital biological processes, including light sensing for spatial orientation and circadian clock adjustment, as well as maintaining electrochemical gradients through ion transport. They also form the basis for optogenetic manipulation of neural cells. How the protein environment guides retinal isomerization on a subpicosecond time scale toward a single high-yield product is a fundamental outstanding question in photobiology. RATIONALE Light-induced isomerization of retinal is among the fastest reactions known in biology. It has been widely studied by spectroscopic techniques to probe the evolution of spectral intermediates over time. Using x-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs), it is now possible to observe ultrafast photochemical reactions and their induced molecular motions within proteins on scales of femtoseconds to milliseconds with near-atomic structural resolution. In this work, we used XFEL radiation to study the structural dynamics of retinal isomerization in the light-driven proton-pump bacteriorhodopsin (bR). The principal mechanism of isomerization in this prototypical retinal-binding protein has direct relevance for all other members of this important family of membrane proteins, and it provides insight into how protein environments catalyze photochemical reactions in general. RESULTS We collected high-resolution x-ray diffraction data from bR microcrystals injected across the femtosecond x-ray pulses of the Linac Coherent Light Source after excitation of the retinal chromophore by an optical laser pulse. X-ray diffraction images were sorted into temporal subgroups with a precision of about 200 fs. A series of 18 overlapping difference Fourier electron density maps reveal structural changes over the first picosecond of retinal photoexcitation. Complementary data for time delays of 10 ps and 8.33 ms allow us to resolve the later stages of the reaction. In combination with refined crystallographic structures at pump-probe delays corresponding to where the spectroscopically characterized I, J, K, and M intermediates form in solution, our time-resolved structural data reveal the trajectory of retinal isomerization and provide atomic details at key points along the reaction. The aspartic acid residues of the retinal counterion and functional water molecules in close proximity to the retinal Schiff base respond collectively to the formation and decay of the excited state. This collective motion sets the stage for retinal isomerization, which proceeds via a twisted retinal configuration. Quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations provide theoretical support for this structural evolution. CONCLUSION Our observations reveal how, concomitant with the formation of the earliest excited state, the retinal-binding pocket opens up in close proximity to the isomerizing bond. We propose that ultrafast charge transfer along retinal is a driving force for collective motions that contribute to the stereoselectivity and efficiency of retinal isomerization within a protein scaffold. Vibrational quake-like motions extending from retinal to the protein may also be a mechanism through which excess energy is released in a nonradiative fashion. Time-resolved serial crystallography resolves ultrafast atomic motions of retinal and the surrounding protein following photoexcitation. Retinal evolves from an all-trans conformation in the ground state toward a twisted 13-cis retinal over the course of a few hundred femtoseconds. The complex counterion, formed by two aspartic acid residues (Asp) and a water molecule (Wat), responds to changes in the electronic structure of the chromophore on the same time scale as the formation of the excited state. Ultrafast isomerization of retinal is the primary step in photoresponsive biological functions including vision in humans and ion transport across bacterial membranes. We used an x-ray laser to study the subpicosecond structural dynamics of retinal isomerization in the light-driven proton pump bacteriorhodopsin. A series of structural snapshots with near-atomic spatial resolution and temporal resolution in the femtosecond regime show how the excited all-trans retinal samples conformational states within the protein binding pocket before passing through a twisted geometry and emerging in the 13-cis conformation. Our findings suggest ultrafast collective motions of aspartic acid residues and functional water molecules in the proximity of the retinal Schiff base as a key facet of this stereoselective and efficient photochemical reaction.
Developmental Cell | 2018
Amol Aher; Maurits Kok; Ashwani Sharma; Ankit Rai; Natacha Olieric; Ruddi Rodriguez-Garcia; Eugene A. Katrukha; Tobias Weinert; Vincent Olieric; Lukas C. Kapitein; Michel O. Steinmetz; Marileen Dogterom; Anna Akhmanova
Summary The dynamic instability of microtubules plays a key role in controlling their organization and function, but the cellular mechanisms regulating this process are poorly understood. Here, we show that cytoplasmic linker-associated proteins (CLASPs) suppress transitions from microtubule growth to shortening, termed catastrophes, including those induced by microtubule-destabilizing agents and physical barriers. Mammalian CLASPs encompass three TOG-like domains, TOG1, TOG2, and TOG3, none of which bind to free tubulin. TOG2 is essential for catastrophe suppression, whereas TOG3 mildly enhances rescues but cannot suppress catastrophes. These functions are inhibited by the C-terminal domain of CLASP2, while the TOG1 domain can release this auto-inhibition. TOG2 fused to a positively charged microtubule-binding peptide autonomously accumulates at growing but not shrinking ends, suppresses catastrophes, and stimulates rescues. CLASPs suppress catastrophes by stabilizing growing microtubule ends, including incomplete ones, preventing their depolymerization and promoting their recovery into complete tubes. TOG2 domain is the key determinant of these activities.
Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2017
Vincent Olieric; Shibom Basu; Tobias Weinert; Meitian Wang
Experimental phasing by SAD (single-wavelength anomalous diffraction) is nowadays the dominant method for de novo structure determination owing to its experimental and operational simplicity. Most experiments still use selenomethionyl substitution or heavy-atom derivatization but native SAD, which exploits the weak anomalous scattering of light elements naturally present in the macromolecules (P, S, Cl, K and Ca), has made great progress in recent years and is gaining popularity [1]. With advances in both instrumentation and data collection strategies, as well as software, it is now possible to measure weak anomalous signals with very high accuracy. A data collection strategy [2], which yields high quality anomalous data from a single crystal entity, was developed at beamline X06DA-PXIII at the Swiss Light Source (SLS). It benefits from very stable X-ray source and optics, a high-precision multi-axis PRIGo goniometer [3] and a readout noise-free PILATUS detector (Dectris, Ltd.) calibrated for low energies. I will present those instrumentation developments and data collection strategies, as well as ongoing work towards a very fast and fully automated native SAD data collection protocol using SmarGon (SmarAct GmbH), the commercial multi-axis goniometer based on PRIGo, in combination with a hybrid photon counting detector EIGER (Dectris, Ltd.). I will show how native SAD is routinely performed at X06DA-PXIII for de novo structure determination of a wide range of targets solved in the past 3 years.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2015
Tobias Weinert; Simona G Huwiler; Johannes W. Kung; Sina Weidenweber; Petra Hellwig; Hans-Joachim Stärk; Till Biskup; Stefan Weber; Julien J. H. Cotelesage; Graham N. George; Ulrich Ermler; Matthias Boll
Nature Chemical Biology; doi:10.1038/nchembio.1849; corrected online 7 July 2015 and 21 July 2015 In the version of this article initially published, the PDB code for the structure of BamBC as isolated was listed as 4Z4O, which was incorrect. The correct code is 4Z40. The error has been corrected for the PDF and HTML versions of this article.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2015
Tobias Weinert; Simona G Huwiler; Johannes W. Kung; Sina Weidenweber; Petra Hellwig; Hans-Joachim Stärk; Till Biskup; Stefan Weber; Julien J. H. Cotelesage; Graham N. George; Ulrich Ermler; Matthias Boll
Nat. Chem. Biol. doi:10.1038/nchembio.1849; corrected online 7 July 2015 In the version of this article initially published online, the final intermediate in Figure 1a was originally depicted as a fully delocalized radical anion, which was incorrect. The error has been corrected for the print, PDF and HTML versions of this article.
Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2014
Tobias Weinert; Sandro Waltersperger; Vincent Olieric; Federica Basilico; Valentina Cecatiello; Meitian Wang
Up until now, comparatively few structures were solved by native SAD. Recent advances in multi crystal averaging [1] have shown that native SAD can be applied to an increasing number of cases. Though theoretically possible [2], successful structure solutions from twinned data have not been reported yet. Here, we report the structure solution of the human Centromere protein M from a merohedrally twinned crystal with a twinning fraction of 0.45 in the space group P3. The data were collected at the bending magnet beamline X06DA at the Swiss Light Source, which is equipped with the in-house developed multi-axis goniometer PRIGo and the PILATUS 2M detector. A highly redundant 2.2 Å dataset was collected in a number of different crystal orientations. A substructure solution could only be obtained after 50000 SHELXD [3] tries. Automatic model building after phasing and density modification resulted in a model with the majority of residues built correctly. We will present this particularly difficult case together with other more routine cases, all solved with the same experimental setup and at the beamline X06DA.