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Dive into the research topics where Ulrike Kapp is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulrike Kapp.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Helicobacter pylori Type IV Secretion Apparatus Exploits β1 Integrin in a Novel RGD-Independent Manner

Luisa F. Jiménez-Soto; Stefan Kutter; Xaver Sewald; Claudia Ertl; Evelyn Weiss; Ulrike Kapp; Manfred Rohde; Torsten Pirch; Kirsten Jung; S. Francesco Retta; Laurent Terradot; Wolfgang Fischer; Rainer Haas

Translocation of the Helicobacter pylori (Hp) cytotoxin-associated gene A (CagA) effector protein via the cag-Type IV Secretion System (T4SS) into host cells is a major risk factor for severe gastric diseases, including gastric cancer. However, the mechanism of translocation and the requirements from the host cell for that event are not well understood. The T4SS consists of inner- and outer membrane-spanning Cag protein complexes and a surface-located pilus. Previously an arginine-glycine-aspartate (RGD)-dependent typical integrin/ligand type interaction of CagL with α5β1 integrin was reported to be essential for CagA translocation. Here we report a specific binding of the T4SS-pilus-associated components CagY and the effector protein CagA to the host cell β1 Integrin receptor. Surface plasmon resonance measurements revealed that CagA binding to α5β1 integrin is rather strong (dissociation constant, KD of 0.15 nM), in comparison to the reported RGD-dependent integrin/fibronectin interaction (KD of 15 nM). For CagA translocation the extracellular part of the β1 integrin subunit is necessary, but not its cytoplasmic domain, nor downstream signalling via integrin-linked kinase. A set of β1 integrin-specific monoclonal antibodies directed against various defined β1 integrin epitopes, such as the PSI, the I-like, the EGF or the β-tail domain, were unable to interfere with CagA translocation. However, a specific antibody (9EG7), which stabilises the open active conformation of β1 integrin heterodimers, efficiently blocked CagA translocation. Our data support a novel model in which the cag-T4SS exploits the β1 integrin receptor by an RGD-independent interaction that involves a conformational switch from the open (extended) to the closed (bent) conformation, to initiate effector protein translocation.


Science | 2012

Structural Basis for Prereceptor Modulation of Plant Hormones by GH3 Proteins

Corey S. Westfall; Chloe Zubieta; Jonathan Herrmann; Ulrike Kapp; Max H. Nanao; Joseph M. Jez

Plant Hormone Modulators The activity and stability of several plant hormones is modulated by conjugation with various amino acids and their derivatives. Westfall et al. (p. 1708, published online 24 May) solved the crystal structures for two acyl acid amido synthetases from Arabidopsis. The findings suggest how the enzymes might discriminate between apolar and acidic amino acids and lend insight into the reaction chemistries that add functional diversity to hormone signaling pathways. Crystal structures of plant GH3 proteins reveal how these enzymes accommodate jasmonates, auxins, and benzoates. Acyl acid amido synthetases of the GH3 family act as critical prereceptor modulators of plant hormone action; however, the molecular basis for their hormone selectivity is unclear. Here, we report the crystal structures of benzoate-specific Arabidopsis thaliana AtGH3.12/PBS3 and jasmonic acid–specific AtGH3.11/JAR1. These structures, combined with biochemical analysis, define features for the conjugation of amino acids to diverse acyl acid substrates and highlight the importance of conformational changes in the carboxyl-terminal domain for catalysis. We also identify residues forming the acyl acid binding site across the GH3 family and residues critical for amino acid recognition. Our results demonstrate how a highly adaptable three-dimensional scaffold is used for the evolution of promiscuous activity across an enzyme family for modulation of plant signaling molecules.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2015

Raster-scanning serial protein crystallography using micro- and nano-focused synchrotron beams.

Nicolas Coquelle; Aaron S. Brewster; Ulrike Kapp; Anastasya Shilova; Britta Weinhausen; Manfred Burghammer; Jacques-Philippe Colletier

A raster scanning serial protein crystallography approach is presented, that consumes as low ∼200–700u2005nl of sedimented crystals. New serial data pre-analysis software, NanoPeakCell, is introduced.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Structural basis of 5-nitroimidazole antibiotic resistance: the crystal structure of NimA from Deinococcus radiodurans.

Hanna-Kirsti S. Leiros; Sigrid Kozielski-Stuhrmann; Ulrike Kapp; Laurent Terradot; Gordon A. Leonard; Sean McSweeney

5-Nitroimidazole-based antibiotics are compounds extensively used for treating infections in humans and animals caused by several important pathogens. They are administered as prodrugs, and their activation depends upon an anaerobic 1-electron reduction of the nitro group by a reduction pathway in the cells. Bacterial resistance toward these drugs is thought to be caused by decreased drug uptake and/or an altered reduction efficiency. One class of resistant strains, identified in Bacteroides, has been shown to carry Nim genes (NimA, -B, -C, -D, and -E), which encode for reductases that convert the nitro group on the antibiotic into a non-bactericidal amine. In this paper, we have described the crystal structure of NimA from Deinococcus radiodurans (drNimA) at 1.6 Å resolution. We have shown that drNimA is a homodimer in which each monomer adopts a β-barrel fold. We have identified the catalytically important His-71 along with the cofactor pyruvate and antibiotic binding sites, all of which are found at the monomer-monomer interface. We have reported three additional crystal structures of drNimA, one in which the antibiotic metronidazole is bound to the protein, one with pyruvate covalently bound to His-71, and one with lactate covalently bound to His-71. Based on these structures, a reaction mechanism has been proposed in which the 2-electron reduction of the antibiotic prevents accumulation of the toxic nitro radical. This mechanism suggests that Nim proteins form a new class of reductases, conferring resistance against 5-nitroimidazole-based antibiotics.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

The structure of a DnaA/HobA complex from Helicobacter pylori provides insight into regulation of DNA replication in bacteria

Ganesh Natrajan; Marie Francoise Noirot-Gros; Anna Zawilak-Pawlik; Ulrike Kapp; Laurent Terradot

Bacterial DNA replication requires DnaA, an AAA+ ATPase that initiates replication at a specific chromosome region, oriC, and is regulated by species-specific regulators that directly bind DnaA. HobA is a DnaA binding protein, recently identified as an essential regulator of DNA replication in Helicobacter pylori. We report the crystal structure of HobA in complex with domains I and II of DnaA (DnaAI–II) from H. pylori, the first structure of DnaA bound to one of its regulators. Biochemical characterization of the complex formed shows that a tetramer of HobA binds four DnaAI–II molecules, and that DnaAI–II is unable to oligomerize by itself. Mutagenesis and protein–protein interaction studies demonstrate that some of the residues located at the HobA-DnaAI–II interface in the structure are necessary for complex formation. Introduction of selected mutations into H. pylori shows that the disruption of the interaction between HobA and DnaA is lethal for the bacteria. Remarkably, the DnaA binding site of HobA is conserved in DiaA from Escherichia coli, suggesting that the structure of the HobA/DnaA complex represents a model for DnaA regulation in other Gram-negative bacteria. Our data, together with those from other studies, indicate that HobA could play a crucial scaffolding role during the initiation of replication in H. pylori by organizing the first step of DnaA oligomerization and attachment to oriC.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2013

Determination of the GH3.12 protein conformation through HPLC-integrated SAXS measurements combined with X-ray crystallography.

Adam Round; Elizabeth Brown; Romain Marcellin; Ulrike Kapp; Corey S. Westfall; Joseph M. Jez; Chloe Zubieta

The combination of protein crystallography and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) provides a powerful method to investigate changes in protein conformation. These complementary structural techniques were used to probe the solution structure of the apo and the ligand-bound forms of the Arabidopsis thaliana acyl acid-amido synthetase GH3.12. This enzyme is part of the extensive GH3 family and plays a critical role in the regulation of plant hormones through the formation of amino-acid-conjugated hormone products via an ATP-dependent reaction mechanism. The enzyme adopts two distinct C-terminal domain orientations with `open and `closed active sites. Previous studies suggested that ATP only binds in the open orientation. Here, the X-ray crystal structure of GH3.12 is presented in the closed conformation in complex with the nonhydrolysable ATP analogue AMPCPP and the substrate salicylate. Using on-line HPLC purification combined with SAXS measurements, the most likely apo and ATP-bound protein conformations in solution were determined. These studies demonstrate that the C-terminal domain is flexible in the apo form and favours the closed conformation upon ATP binding. In addition, these data illustrate the efficacy of on-line HPLC purification integrated into the SAXS sample-handling environment to reliably monitor small changes in protein conformation through the collection of aggregate-free and highly redundant data.


Structure | 2012

Architecture of a Dodecameric Bacterial Replicative Helicase

Meike Stelter; Irina Gutsche; Ulrike Kapp; Alexandre Bazin; Goran Bajic; Gaël Goret; Marc Jamin; Joanna Timmins; Laurent Terradot

Hexameric DnaB helicases are often loaded at DNA replication forks by interacting with the initiator protein DnaA and/or a helicase loader (DnaC in Escherichia coli). These loaders are not universally required, and DnaB from Helicobacter pylori was found to bypass DnaC when expressed in E.xa0coli cells. The crystal structure of Helicobacter pylori DnaB C-terminal domain (HpDnaB-CTD) reveals a large two-helix insertion (named HPI) in the ATPase domain that protrudes away from the RecA fold. Biophysical characterization and electron microscopy (EM) analysis of the full-length protein show that HpDnaB forms head-to-head double hexamers remarkably similar to helicases found in some eukaryotes, archaea, and viruses. The docking of the HpDnaB-CTD structure into EM reconstruction of HpDnaB provides a model that shows how hexamerization of the CTD is facilitated by HPI-HPI interactions. The HpDnaB double-hexamer architecture supports an alternative strategy to load bacterial helicases onto forks in the absence of helicase loaders.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2008

Structure of Deinococcus Radiodurans Tunicamycin-Resistance Protein (Tmrd), a Phosphotransferase.

Ulrike Kapp; Sofia Macedo; David R. Hall; Ingar Leiros; Sean McSweeney; Edward P. Mitchell

The open-reading frame (ORF) DR_1419 in the Deinococcus radiodurans genome is annotated as a representative of the wide family of tunicamycin-resistance proteins as identified in a range of bacterial genomes. The D. radiodurans ORF DR_1419 was cloned and expressed; the protein TmrD was crystallized and its X-ray crystal structure was determined to 1.95 A resolution. The structure was determined using single-wavelength anomalous diffraction with selenomethionine-derivatized protein. The refined structure is the first to be reported for a member of the tunicamycin-resistance family. It reveals strong structural similarity to the family of nucleoside monophosphate kinases and to the chloramphenicol phosphotransferase of Streptomyces venezuelae, suggesting that the mode of action is possibly by phosphorylation of tunicamycin.


Structure | 2017

Structural Basis for the Subversion of MAP Kinase Signaling by an Intrinsically Disordered Parasite Secreted Agonist.

Erika Pellegrini; Andrés Palencia; Laurence Braun; Ulrike Kapp; Alexandre Bougdour; Hassan Belrhali; Matthew W. Bowler; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Summary The causative agent of toxoplasmosis, the intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii, delivers a protein, GRA24, into the cells it infects that interacts with the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase p38α (MAPK14), leading to activation and nuclear translocation of the host kinase and a subsequent inflammatory response that controls the progress of the parasite. The purification of a recombinant complex of GRA24 and human p38α has allowed the molecular basis of this activation to be determined. GRA24 is shown to be intrinsically disordered, binding two kinases that act independently, and is the only factor required to bypass the canonical mitogen-activated protein kinase activation pathway. An adapted kinase interaction motif (KIM) forms a highly stable complex that competes with cytoplasmic regulatory partners. In addition, the recombinant complex forms a powerful in vitro tool to evaluate the specificity and effectiveness of p38α inhibitors that have advanced to clinical trials, as it provides a hitherto unavailable stable and highly active form of p38α.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

Expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary crystal structure analysis of the Deinococcus radiodurans organic hydroperoxide-resistance protein

Cécile Meunier-Jamin; Ulrike Kapp; Gordon A. Leonard; Sean McSweeney

The organic hydroperoxide-resistance protein (DR1857) from Deinococcus radiodurans has been expressed, purified and crystallized. The crystals are suitable for X-ray analysis, diffract to at least 2.3 A resolution, have unit-cell parameters a = 45.7, b = 59.6, c = 49.7 A, beta = 90.43 degrees and belong to space group P2(1). The calculated Matthews coefficient of 2.1 A(3) Da(-1) coupled with a calculated solvent content of approximately 42% is consistent with the presence of a homodimer in the asymmetric unit. Here, the methods used in the overexpression and purification of the protein are described and details of crystallization conditions and preliminary X-ray diffraction are provided.

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Sean McSweeney

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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Gordon A. Leonard

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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Cyril Dian

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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Chloe Zubieta

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Corey S. Westfall

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joseph M. Jez

Washington University in St. Louis

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