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Featured researches published by Torsten Giesemann.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

A Role for Polyproline Motifs in the Spinal Muscular Atrophy Protein SMN PROFILINS BIND TO AND COLOCALIZE WITH SMN IN NUCLEAR GEMS

Torsten Giesemann; Silvia Rathke-Hartlieb; Martin Rothkegel; Jörg W. Bartsch; Sabine Buchmeier; Brigitte M. Jockusch; Harald Jockusch

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by the loss of α-motoneurons in the spinal cord followed by atrophy of skeletal muscles. SMA-determining candidate genes, SMN1 and SMN2, have been identified on human chromosome 5q. The corresponding SMN protein is expressed ubiquitously. It is coded by seven exons and contains conspicuous proline-rich motifs in its COOH-terminal third (exons 4, 5, and 6). Such motifs are known to bind to profilins (PFNs), small proteins engaged in the control of actin dynamics. We tested whether profilins interact with SMN via its polyproline stretches. Using the yeast two-hybrid system we show that profilins bind to SMN and that this binding depends on its proline-rich motifs. These results were confirmed by coimmunoprecipitation and by in vitro binding studies. Two PFN isoforms, I and II, are known, of which II is characteristic for central nervous system tissue. We show by in situ hybridization that both PFNs are highly expressed in mouse spinal cord and that PFN II is expressed predominantly in neurons. In motoneurons, the primary target of neurodegeneration in SMA, profilins are highly concentrated and colocalize with SMN in the cytoplasm of the cell body and in nuclear gems. Likewise, SMN and PFN I colocalize in gems of HeLa cells. Although SMN interacts with both profilin isoforms, binding of PFN II was stronger than of PFN I in all assays employed. Because the SMN genes are expressed ubiquitously, our findings suggest that the interaction of PFN II with SMN may be involved in neuron-specific effects of SMN mutations.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Auto-catalytic cleavage of Clostridium difficile toxins A and B depends on cysteine protease activity.

Martina Egerer; Torsten Giesemann; Thomas Jank; Karla J. F. Satchell; Klaus Aktories

The action of Clostridium difficile toxins A and B depends on processing and translocation of the catalytic glucosyltransferase domain into the cytosol of target cells where Rho GTPases are modified. Here we studied the processing of the toxins. Dithiothreitol and β-mercaptoethanol induced auto-cleavage of purified native toxin A and toxin B into ∼250/210- and ∼63-kDa fragments. The 63-kDa fragment was identified by mass spectrometric analysis as the N-terminal glucosyltransferase domain. This cleavage was blocked by N-ethylmaleimide or iodoacetamide. Exchange of cysteine 698, histidine 653, or aspartate 587 of toxin B prevented cleavage of full-length recombinant toxin B and of an N-terminal fragment covering residues 1–955 and inhibited cytotoxicity of full-length toxin B. Dithiothreitol synergistically increased the effect of myo-inositol hexakisphosphate, which has been reported to facilitate auto-cleavage of toxin B (Reineke, J., Tenzer, S., Rupnik, M., Koschinski, A., Hasselmayer, O., Schrattenholz, A., Schild, H., and Von Eichel-Streiber, C. (2007) Nature 446, 415–419). N-Ethylmaleimide blocked auto-cleavage induced by the addition of myo-inositol hexakisphosphate, suggesting that cysteine residues are essential for the processing of clostridial glucosylating toxins. Our data indicate that clostridial glucosylating cytotoxins possess an inherent cysteine protease activity related to the cysteine protease of Vibrio cholerae RTX toxin, which is responsible for auto-cleavage of glucosylating toxins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Clostridium difficile Glucosyltransferase Toxin B-essential Amino Acids for Substrate Binding

Thomas Jank; Torsten Giesemann; Klaus Aktories

Recently the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of Clostridium difficile toxin B was solved ( Reinert, D. J., Jank, T., Aktories, K., and Schulz, G. E. (2005) J. Mol. Biol. 351, 973-981 ). On the basis of this structure, we studied the functional role of several amino acids located in the catalytic center of toxin B. Besides the 286DXD288 motif and Trp102, which were shown to be necessary for Mn2+ and UDP binding, respectively, we identified by alanine scanning Asp270, Arg273, Tyr284, Asn384, and Trp520 as being important for enzyme activity. The amino acids Arg455, Asp461, Lys463, and Glu472 and residues of helix α17 (e.g. Glu449) of toxin B are essential for enzyme-protein substrate recognition. Introduction of helix α17 of toxin B into Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin inhibited modification of Ras subfamily proteins but enabled glucosylation of RhoA, indicating that helix α17 is involved in RhoA recognition by toxin B. The data allow the design of a model of the interaction of the glucosyltransferase domain of toxin B with its protein substrate RhoA.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Cholesterol-dependent Pore Formation of Clostridium difficile Toxin A

Torsten Giesemann; Thomas Jank; Ralf Gerhard; Elke Maier; Ingo Just; Roland Benz; Klaus Aktories

The large clostridial cytotoxins toxin A and toxin B from Clostridium difficile are major virulence factors known to cause antibiotic-associated diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis. Both toxins mono-glucosylate and thereby inactivate small GTPases of the Rho family. Recently, it was reported that toxin B, but not toxin A, induces pore formation in membranes of target cells under acidic conditions. Here, we reassessed data on pore formation of toxin A in cells derived from human colon carcinoma. Treatment of 86Rb+-loaded cells with native or recombinant toxin A resulted in an increased efflux of radioactive cations induced by an acidic pulse. The efficacy of pore formation was dependent on membrane cholesterol, since cholesterol depletion of membranes with methyl-β-cyclodextrin inhibited 86Rb+ efflux, and cholesterol repletion reconstituted pore-forming activity of toxin A. Similar results were obtained with toxin B. Consistently, methyl-β-cyclodextrin treatment delayed intoxication of cells in a concentration-dependent manner. In black lipid membranes, toxin A induced ion-permeable pores only in cholesterol containing bilayers and at low pH. In contrast, release of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored structures by phosphatidylinositol specific phospholipase C treatment did not reduce cell sensitivity toward toxins A and B. These data indicate that in colonic cells toxin A induces pore formation in an acidic environment (e.g. endosomes) similar to that reported for toxin B and suggest that pore formation by clostridial glucosylating toxins depends on the presence of cholesterol.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Autocatalytic Processing of Clostridium difficile Toxin B BINDING OF INOSITOL HEXAKISPHOSPHATE

Martina Egerer; Torsten Giesemann; Christian Herrmann; Klaus Aktories

Clostridium difficile toxins A and B are major virulence factors responsible for induction of pseudomembranous colitis and antibiotic-associated diarrhea in men. The toxins possess a multidomain structure and only the N-terminal glucosyltransferase domain, which inactivates Rho GTPases by glucosylation, is translocated into the cytosol of target cells. Processing of the toxin occurs by autocatalytic cleavage and is activated by inositol hexakisphosphate (InsP6). Here we studied the inherent protease activity in fragments of toxin B and determined the site of toxin B that interacts with InsP6. We report that a fragment of toxin B, comprised of residues 1–955, is cleaved in the presence of InsP6. In contrast, mutants of the catalytic triad of the putative cysteine protease domain did not cleave this fragment. [3H]InsP6 bound to holotoxin B and to the fragment 1–955, but not to a fragment comprising residues 900–2366 or the glucosyltransferase domain (residues 1–544). Binding to the putative cysteine protease domain (residues 544–955) was also observed. InsP6-binding was specific and saturable. Isothermal titration calorimetry revealed a Kd value of 2.4 μm for binding of InsP6 to toxin fragment 544–955 with a stoichiometry factor of 0.86. Lysine 600 of toxin B was identified as essential amino acid for InsP6 binding and for InsP6-dependent activation of the protease activity.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2008

Processing of Clostridium difficile toxins

Torsten Giesemann; Martina Egerer; Thomas Jank; Klaus Aktories

The pathogenicity of Clostridium difficile depends on the large clostridial glucosylating toxins A and B (TcdA and TcdB). The proteins accomplish their own uptake by a modular structure comprising a catalytic and a binding/translocation domain. Based on a proteolytic processing step solely the catalytic domain reaches the cytosol. Within the cells, the glucosyltransferases inactivate small GTPases by mono-O-glucosylation. Here, a short overview is given regarding latest insights into the intramolecular processing, which is mediated by an intrinsic protease activity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Change of the Donor Substrate Specificity of Clostridium difficile Toxin B by Site-directed Mutagenesis

Thomas Jank; Dirk J. Reinert; Torsten Giesemann; Georg E. Schulz; Klaus Aktories

The large cytotoxins of Clostridia species glycosylate and thereby inactivate small GTPases of the Rho family. Clostridium difficile toxins A and B and Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin use UDP-glucose as the donor for glucosylation of Rho/Ras GTPases. In contrast, α-toxin from Clostridium novyi N-acetylglucosaminylates Rho GTPases by using UDP-N-acetylglucosamine as a donor substrate. Based on the crystal structure of C. difficile toxin B, we studied the sugar donor specificity of the toxins by site-directed mutagenesis. The changing of Ile-383 and Gln-385 in toxin B to serine and alanine, respectively, largely increased the acceptance of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine as a sugar donor for modification of RhoA. The Km value was reduced from 960 to 26 μm for the double mutant. Accordingly, the potential of the double mutant of toxin B to hydrolyze UDP-N-acetylglucosamine was higher than that for UDP-glucose. The changing of Ile-383 and Gln-385 in the lethal toxin of C. sordellii allowed modification of Ras in the presence of UDP-N-acetyl-glucosamine and reduced the acceptance of UDP-glucose as a donor for glycosylation. Vice versa, the changing of the equivalent residues in C. novyi α-toxin from Ser-385 and Ala-387 to isoleucine and glutamine, respectively, reversed the donor specificity of the toxin from UDP-N-acetylglucosamine to UDP-glucose. These data demonstrate that two amino acid residues are crucial for the co-substrate specificity of clostridial glycosylating toxins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Exchange of a Single Amino Acid Switches the Substrate Properties of RhoA and RhoD toward Glucosylating and Transglutaminating Toxins

Thomas Jank; Ulrike Pack; Torsten Giesemann; Gudula Schmidt; Klaus Aktories

Rho GTPases are the preferred targets of various bacterial cytotoxins, including Clostridium difficile toxins A and B, Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin, the cytotoxic necrotizing factors (CNF1) from Escherichia coli, and the dermonecrotizing toxin (DNT) from Bordetella species. The toxins inactivate or activate specific sets of Rho GTPases by mono-O-glucosylation and deamidation/transglutamination, respectively. Here we studied the structural basis of the recognition of RhoA, which is modified by toxin B, CNF1, and DNT, in comparison with RhoD, which is solely a substrate for lethal toxin. We found that a single amino acid residue in RhoA and RhoD defines the substrate specificity for toxin B and lethal toxin. Change of serine 73 to phenylalanine in RhoA turned RhoA into a substrate for lethal toxin. Accordingly, change of the equivalently positioned phenylalanine 85 in RhoD with serine allowed glucosylation by toxin B. Comparable results were achieved with the Rho-activating and transglutaminating enzymes CNF1 and DNT. Here, amino acid glutamate 64 of RhoA and the equivalent aspartate 76 of RhoD define substrate specificity for CNF1 and DNT, respectively. These data indicate that single amino acid residues located in the switch II region of Rho proteins determine enzyme specificity for diverse bacterial toxins.


Plant Journal | 2013

Modification of plant Rac/Rop GTPase signalling using bacterial toxin transgenes

Manoj K. Singh; Fugang Ren; Torsten Giesemann; Cristina Dal Bosco; Taras Pasternak; Thomas Blein; Benedetto Ruperti; Gudula Schmidt; Klaus Aktories; Arthur J. Molendijk; Klaus Palme

Bacterial protein toxins which modify Rho GTPase are useful for the analysis of Rho signalling in animal cells, but these toxins cannot be taken up by plant cells. We demonstrate in vitro deamidation of Arabidopsis Rop4 by Escherichia coli Cytotoxic Necrotizing Factor 1 (CNF1) and glucosylation by Clostridium difficile toxin B. Expression of the catalytic domain of CNF1 caused modification and activation of co-expressed Arabidopsis Rop4 GTPase in tobacco leaves, resulting in hypersensitive-like cell death. By contrast, the catalytic domain of toxin B modified and inactivated co-expressed constitutively active Rop4, blocking the hypersensitive response caused by over-expression of active Rops. In transgenic Arabidopsis, both CNF1 and toxin B inhibited Rop-dependent polar morphogenesis of leaf epidermal cells. Toxin B expression also inhibited Rop-dependent morphogenesis of root hairs and trichome branching, and resulted in root meristem enlargement and dwarf growth. Our results show that CNF1 and toxin B transgenes are effective tools in Rop GTPase signalling studies.


Glycobiology | 2007

Rho-glucosylating Clostridium difficile toxins A and B: new insights into structure and function

Thomas Jank; Torsten Giesemann; Klaus Aktories

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Thomas Jank

University of Freiburg

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Brigitte M. Jockusch

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Elke Maier

University of Würzburg

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