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Dive into the research topics where Ulrich Meissner is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulrich Meissner.


Integrative and Comparative Biology | 2007

Minireview: Recent progress in hemocyanin research

Heinz Decker; Nadja Hellmann; Elmar Jaenicke; Bernhard Lieb; Ulrich Meissner; Jürgen Markl

This review summarizes recent highlights of our joint work on the structure, evolution, and function of a family of highly complex proteins, the hemocyanins. They are blue-pigmented oxygen carriers, occurring freely dissolved in the hemolymph of many arthropods and molluscs. They are copper type-3 proteins and bind one dioxygen molecule between two copper atoms in a side-on coordination. They possess between 6 and 160 oxygen-binding sites, and some of them display the highest molecular cooperativity observed in nature. The functional properties of hemocyanins can be convincingly described by either the Monod-Wyman-Changeux (MWC) model or its hierarchical extension, the Nested MWC model; the latter takes into account the structural hierarchies in the oligomeric architecture. Recently, we applied these models to interpret the influence of allosteric effectors in detailed terms. Effectors shift the allosteric equilibria but have no influence on the oxygen affinities characterizing the various conformational states. We have shown that hemocyanins from species living at different environmental temperatures have a cooperativity optimum at the typical temperature of their natural habitat. Besides being oxygen carriers, some hemocyanins function as a phenoloxidase (tyrosinase/catecholoxidase) which, however, requires activation. Chelicerates such as spiders and scorpions lack a specific phenoloxidase, and in these animals activated hemocyanin might catalyse melanin synthesis in vivo. We propose a similar activation mechanism for arthropod hemocyanins, molluscan hemocyanins and tyrosinases: amino acid(s) that sterically block the access of phenolic compounds to the active site have to be removed. The catalysis mechanism itself can now be explained on the basis of the recently published crystal structure of a tyrosinase. In a series of recent publications, we presented the complete gene and primary structure of various hemocyanins from different molluscan classes. From these data, we deduced that the molluscan hemocyanin molecule evolved ca. 740 million years ago, prior to the separation of the extant molluscan classes. Our recent advances in the 3D cryo-electron microscopy of hemocyanins also allow considerable insight into the oligomeric architecture of these proteins of high molecular mass. In the case of molluscan hemocyanin, the structure of the wall and collar of the basic decamers is now rapidly becoming known in greater detail. In the case of arthropod hemocyanin, a 10-Å structure and molecular model of the Limulus 8 × 6mer shows the amino acids at the various interfaces between the eight hexamers, and reveals histidine-rich residue clusters that might be involved in transferring the conformational signals establishing cooperative oxygen binding.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Comparison of the decameric structure of peroxiredoxin-II by transmission electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography.

J. Robin Harris; Ewald Schröder; Michail N. Isupov; Dirk Scheffler; Poul Kristensen; Jennifer A. Littlechild; Ulrich Meissner

The decameric human erythrocyte protein torin is identical to the thiol-specific antioxidant protein-II (TSA-II), also termed peroxiredoxin-II (Prx-II). Single particle analysis from electron micrographs of Prx-II molecules homogeneously orientated across holes in the presence of a thin film of ammonium molybdate and trehalose has facilitated the production of a >/=20 A 3-D reconstruction by angular reconstitution that emphasises the D5 symmetry of the ring-like decamer. The X-ray structure for Prx-II was fitted into the transmission electron microscopic reconstruction by molecular replacement. The surface-rendered transmission electron microscopy (TEM) reconstruction correlates well with the solvent-excluded surface of the X-ray structure of the Prx-II molecule. This provides confirmation that transmission electron microscopy of negatively stained specimens, despite limited resolution, has the potential to reveal a valid representation of surface features of protein molecules. 2-D crystallisation of the Prx-II protein on mica as part of a TEM study resulted in the formation of a p2 crystal form with parallel linear arrays of stacked rings. This latter 2-D form correlates well with that observed from the 2.7 A X-ray structure of Prx-II solved from a new orthorhombic 3-D crystal form.


Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology | 2001

Marine tumor vaccine carriers: structure of the molluscan hemocyanins KLH and htH.

Jürgen Markl; Bernhard Lieb; Wolfgang Gebauer; Benjamin Altenhein; Ulrich Meissner; J. Robin Harris

Keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) is a well-established immune stimulant and hapten carrier, andHaliotis tuberculata hemocyanin (HtH) is a related product. Biologically, KLH and HtH are blue copper proteins which serve as oxygen carriers in the blood of the keyhole limpetMegathura crenulata and the abaloneH. tuberculata, respectively, two marine gastropods. Both hemocyanins occur as two distinct isoforms, termed KLH1, KLH2, HIM, and HtH2. Each of these molecules is based on a very large polypeptide chain, the subunit (molecular mass ca 400 kDa), which is folded into a series of eight globular functional units (molecular mass ca 50 kDa each). Twenty copies of this subunit form a cylindrical quaternary structure (molecular mass ca 8 MDa). This article reviews the recent data on the biosynthesis, quaternary structure, subunit architecture, amino acid sequence, gene structure, and recombinant production of KLH and HtH.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2002

Interaction of the Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) with cholesterol, some cholesterol esters, and cholesterol derivatives: a TEM study

J. Robin Harris; Sucharit Bhakdi; Ulrich Meissner; Dirk Scheffler; Robert Bittman; Guoqing Li; Alexander Zitzer; Michael Palmer

The Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) 63-kDa monomer has been shown to interact in aqueous suspension with cholesterol microcystals to produce a ring/pore-like heptameric oligomer approximately 8 nm in outer diameter. Transmission electron microscopy data were produced from cholesterol samples adsorbed to carbon support films, spread across the holes of holey carbon films, and negatively stained with ammonium molybdate. The VCC oligomers initially attach to the edge of the stacked cholesterol bilayers and with increasing time cover the two planar surfaces. VCC oligomers are also released into solution, with some tendency to cluster, possibly via the hydrophobic membrane-spanning domain. At the air/water interface, the VCC oligomers are likely to be selectively oriented with the hydrophobic domain facing the air. Despite some molecular disorder/plasticity within the oligomers, multivariate statistical analysis and rotational self-correlation using IMAGIC-5 strongly suggest the presence of sevenfold rotational symmetry. To correlate the electron microscopy data with on-going biochemical and permeability studies using liposomes of varying lipid composition, the direct interaction of VCC with several cholesterol derivatives and other steroids has been examined. 19-Hydroxycholesterol and 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol both induce VCC oligomerization. beta-Estradiol, which does not possess an aliphatic side chain, also efficiently induces VCC oligomer formation, as does cholesteryl acetate. Cholesteryl stearate and oleate and the C22 (2-trifluoroacetyl)naphthyloxy analogue of cholesterol fail to induce VCC oligomerization, but binding of the monomer to the surface of these steroids does occur. Stigmasterol has little tendency to induce oligomer formation, and oligomers are largely confined to the edge of the bilayers; ergosterol has even less oligomerization ability. Attempts to solubilize and stabilize the VCC oligomers from cholesterol suspensions have been pursued using the neutral surfactant octylglucoside. Although individual solubilized oligomers have been defined which exhibit a characteristic cytolysin channel conformation in the side-on orientation, a tendency remains for the oligomers to cluster via their hydrophobic domains.


Cancer Research | 2011

Highly Specific Auto-Antibodies against Claudin-18 Isoform 2 Induced by a Chimeric HBcAg Virus-Like Particle Vaccine Kill Tumor Cells and Inhibit the Growth of Lung Metastases

Thorsten Klamp; Jens Schumacher; Georg Huber; Christoph Kühne; Ulrich Meissner; Abderraouf Selmi; Thomas Hiller; Sebastian Kreiter; Jürgen Markl; Özlem Türeci; Ugur Sahin

Strategies for antibody-mediated cancer immunotherapy, such as active immunization with virus-like particle (VLP)-based vaccines, are gaining increasing attention. We developed chimeric hepatitis B virus core antigen (HBcAg)-VLPs that display a surface epitope of the highly selective tumor-associated cell lineage marker claudin-18 isoform 2 (CLDN18.2) flanked by a mobility-increasing linker. Auto-antibodies elicited by immunization with these chimeric HBcAg-VLPs in 2 relevant species (mouse and rabbit) bind with high precision to native CLDN18.2 at physiologic densities on the surface of living cells but not to the corresponding epitope of the CLDN18.1 splice variant that differs by merely one amino acid. The induced auto-antibodies are capable of efficiently killing CLDN18.2 expressing cells in vitro by complement-dependent and antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Moreover, they provide partial protective immunity against the challenge of mice with syngeneic tumor cells stably expressing CLDN18.2. Our study provides a first proof-of-concept that immunization combining VLPs as antigen carriers with specific conformational epitopes of a highly selective differentiation antigen may elicit auto-antibodies with high cytocidal and tumoricidal potential.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Quaternary structure of the European spiny lobster (Palinurus elephas) 1 x 6-mer hemocyanin from cryoEM and amino acid sequence data

Ulrich Meissner; Michael Stohr; Kristina Kusche; Thorsten Burmester; Holger Stark; J. Robin Harris; Elena V. Orlova; Jürgen Markl

Arthropod hemocyanins are large respiratory proteins that are composed of up to 48 subunits (8 x 6-mer) in the 75kDa range. A 3D reconstruction of the 1 x 6-mer hemocyanin from the European spiny lobster Palinurus elephas has been performed from 9970 single particles using cryoelectron microscopy. An 8A resolution of the hemocyanin 3D reconstruction has been obtained from about 600 final class averages. Visualisation of structural elements such as alpha-helices has been achieved. An amino acid sequence alignment shows the high sequence identity (>80%) of the hemocyanin subunits from the European spiny lobster P.elephas and the American spiny lobster Panulirus interruptus. Comparison of the P.elephas hemocyanin electron microscopy (EM) density map with the known P.interruptus X-ray structure shows a close structural correlation, demonstrating the reliability of both methods for reconstructing proteins. By molecular modelling, we have found the putative locations for the amino acid sequence (597-605) and the C-terminal end (654-657), which are absent in the available P.interruptus X-ray data.


FEBS Journal | 2006

Molecular mass of macromolecules and subunits and the quaternary structure of hemoglobin from the microcrustacean Daphnia magna

Tobias Lamkemeyer; Bettina Zeis; Heinz Decker; Elmar Jaenicke; Dieter Waschbüsch; Wolfgang Gebauer; Jürgen Markl; Ulrich Meissner; Morgane Rousselot; Franck Zal; Graeme Nicholson; Rüdiger J. Paul

The molecular masses of macromolecules and subunits of the extracellular hemoglobin from the fresh‐water crustacean Daphnia magna were determined by analytical ultracentrifugation, multiangle laser light scattering and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. The hemoglobins from hypoxia‐incubated, hemoglobin‐rich and normoxia‐incubated, hemoglobin‐poor Daphnia magna were analyzed separately. The sedimentation coefficient of the macromolecule was 17.4 ± 0.1 S, and its molecular mass was 583 kDa (hemoglobin‐rich animals) determined by AUC and 590.4 ± 11.1 kDa (hemoglobin‐rich animals) and 597.5 ± 49 kDa (hemoglobin‐poor animals), respectively, determined by multiangle laser light scattering. Measurements of the hemoglobin subunit mass of hemoglobin‐rich animals by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry revealed a significant peak at 36.482 ± 0.0015 kDa, i.e. 37.715 kDa including two heme groups. The hemoglobin subunits are modified by O‐linked glycosylation in the pre‐A segments of domains 1. No evidence for phosphorylation of hemoglobin subunits was found. The subunit migration behavior during SDS/PAGE was shown to be influenced by the buffer system used (Tris versus phosphate). The subunit mass heterogeneity found using Tris buffering can be explained by glycosylation of hemoglobin subunits. Based on molecular mass information, Daphnia magna hemoglobin is demonstrated to consist of 16 subunits. The quaternary structure of the Daphnia magna hemoglobin macromolecule was assessed by three‐dimensional reconstructions via single‐particle analysis based on negatively stained electron microscopic specimens. It turned out to be much more complex than hitherto proposed: it displays D4 symmetry with a diameter of approximately 12 nm and a height of about 8 nm.


Archive | 2008

A new automated plunger for cryopreparation of proteins in defined - even oxygen free - atmospheres

Frank Depoix; Ulrich Meissner; Jürgen Markl

We study the structure and function of hemocyanins. They are giant extracellular oxygen carriers in the hemolymph of many molluscs and arthropods. Since some of these blue, copper-containing proteins show the highest cooperativity in nature (h = 10), one of our goals is to understand the chemomechanical interaction between the different substructures during allosteric oxygen binding.


Archive | 2008

Quaternary structure of recombinant human meprin β, a zinc peptidase of the astacin family

Ulrich Meissner; Philipp Arnold; Arne Moeller; Frank Depoix; Christoph Becker-Pauly; Walter Stöcker

Meprins are astacin-type zinc peptidases distantly related to matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) [1]. They are expressed in various epithelia, intestinal leukocytes and cancer cells. They cleave basement membrane proteins, cytokines and adhesion molecules, suggesting a role in epithelial differentiation, cell migration and immune reactions [2–4]. There is evidence for detachment of cells from the basal membrane caused by meprin alpha, while meprin beta probably plays a role in terminal differentiation and cell migration [5, 6].


Archive | 2008

Cryo TEM-based 3D reconstruction of the recombinant expressed human zinc peptidase Meprin β

Philipp Arnold; Arne Moeller; Frank Depoix; Christoph Becker-Pauly; Walter Stöcker; Ulrich Meissner

Meprins are astacin-type zinc endopeptidases, which have been observed so far exclusively in vertebrates. Based on the structure of their catalytic domains these enzymes are distantly related to matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) [1]. Typically, meprins are expressed in brush border membranes of intestine and kidney tubules, intestinal leukocytes, and certain cancer cells. This suggests a role in epithelial differentiation and cell migration [2]. For human meprin two subforms are described: Meprin α and meprin β [3].

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Arne Moeller

Scripps Research Institute

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