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Featured researches published by Uwe Tessmer.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Biochemical and Structural Analysis of Isolated Mature Cores of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1

Reinhold Welker; Heinrich Hohenberg; Uwe Tessmer; Carola Huckhagel; Hans-Georg Kräusslich

ABSTRACT Mature human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) particles contain a cone-shaped core structure consisting of the internal ribonucleoprotein complex encased in a proteinaceous shell derived from the viral capsid protein. Because of their very low stability after membrane removal, HIV-1 cores have not been purified in quantities sufficient for structural and biochemical analysis. Based on our in vitro assembly experiments, we have developed a novel method for isolation of intact mature HIV-1 cores. Concentrated virus suspensions were briefly treated with nonionic detergent and immediately centrifuged in a microcentrifuge for short periods of time. The resuspended pellet was subsequently analyzed by negative-stain and thin-section electron microscopy and by immunoelectron microscopy. Abundant cone-shaped cores as well as tubular and aberrant structures were observed. Stereo images showed that core structures preserved their three-dimensional architecture and exhibited a regular substructure. Detailed analysis of 155 cores revealed an average length of ca. 103 nm, an average diameter at the base of ca. 52 nm, and an average angle of 21.3°. There was significant variability in all parameters, indicating that HIV cores are not homogeneous. Immunoblot analysis of core preparations allowed semiquantitative estimation of the relative amounts of viral and cellular proteins inside the HIV-1 core, yielding a model for the topology of various proteins inside the virion.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Functional and Structural Characterization of Synthetic HIV-1 Vpr That Transduces Cells, Localizes to the Nucleus, and Induces G2 Cell Cycle Arrest

Peter Henklein; Karsten Bruns; Michael P. Sherman; Uwe Tessmer; Kai Licha; Jeffrey B. Kopp; Carlos M. C. de Noronha; Warner C. Greene; Victor Wray; Ulrich S. Schubert

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Vpr contributes to nuclear import of the viral pre-integration complex and induces G2 cell cycle arrest. We describe the production of synthetic Vpr that permitted the first studies on the structure and folding of the full-length protein. Vpr is unstructured at neutral pH, whereas under acidic conditions or upon addition of trifluorethanol it adopts α-helical structures. Vpr forms dimers in aqueous trifluorethanol, whereas oligomers exist in pure water.1H NMR spectroscopy allows the signal assignment of N- and C-terminal amino acid residues; however, the central section of the molecule is obscured by self-association. These findings suggest that the in vivo folding of Vpr may require structure-stabilizing interacting factors such as previously described interacting cellular and viral proteins or nucleic acids. In biological studies we found that Vpr is efficiently taken up from the extracellular medium by cells in a process that occurs independent of other HIV-1 proteins and appears to be independent of cellular receptors. Following cellular uptake, Vpr is efficiently imported into the nucleus of transduced cells. Extracellular addition of Vpr induces G2 cell cycle arrest in dividing cells. Together, these findings raise the possibility that circulating forms of Vpr observed in HIV-infected patients may exert biological effects on a broad range of host target cells.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Vpr Protein Is Incorporated into the Virion in Significantly Smaller Amounts than Gag and Is Phosphorylated in Infected Cells

Barbara Müller; Uwe Tessmer; Ulrich S. Schubert; Hans-Georg Kräusslich

ABSTRACT Viral protein R (Vpr) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is a small accessory protein involved in the nuclear import of viral DNA and the growth arrest of host cells. Several studies have demonstrated that a significant amount of Vpr is incorporated into the virus particle via interaction with the p6 domain of Gag, and it is generally assumed that Vpr is packaged in equimolar ratio to Gag. We have quantitated the relative amount of Vpr in purified virions following [35S]cysteine labeling of infected MT-4 cells, as well as by quantitative immunoblotting and found that Vpr is present in a molar ratio of approximately 1:7 compared to capsid. Analysis of isolated core particles showed that Vpr is associated with the mature viral core, despite quantitative loss of p6 from core preparations. Metabolic labeling of infected cells with ortho[32P]phosphate revealed that a small fraction of Vpr is phosphorylated in virions and infected cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Cyclophilin A interacts with HIV-1 Vpr and is required for its functional expression

Kerstin Zander; Michael P. Sherman; Uwe Tessmer; Karsten Bruns; Victor Wray; Alexander T. Prechtel; Evelyn Schubert; Peter Henklein; Jeremy Luban; Jason Neidleman; Warner C. Greene; Ulrich S. Schubert

Viral protein R (Vpr) of human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1) is the major virion-associated accessory protein that affects a number of biological functions in the retroviral life cycle, including promotion of the transport of the preintegration complex into the nucleus and the induction of G2 host cell cycle arrest. Our recent investigation of the conformational heterogeneity of the proline residues in the N terminus of Vpr suggested a functional interaction between Vpr and a host peptidylprolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) that might regulate the cis/trans interconversion of the imidic bond within the conserved proline residues of Vpr in vivo. Using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, Far Western blot, and pulldown experiments a physical interaction of Vpr with the major host PPIase cyclophilin A (CypA) is now demonstrated. The interaction domain involves the N-terminal region of Vpr including an essential role for proline in position 35. The CypA inhibitor cyclosporin A and non-immunosuppressive PPIase inhibitors such as NIM811 and sanglifehrin A block expression of Vpr without affecting pre- or post-translational events such as transcription, intracellular transport, or virus incorporation of Vpr. Similarly to CypA inhibition, Vpr expression is also reduced in HIV-1 infected CypA–/– knock-out T cells. This study thus shows that in addition to the interaction between CypA and HIV-1 capsid occurring during early steps in virus replication, CypA is also important for the de novo synthesis of Vpr and that in the absence of CypA activity, the Vpr-mediated cell cycle arrest is completely lost in HIV-1-infected T cells.


Journal of Virology | 2010

A Global Analysis of Evolutionary Conservation among Known and Predicted Gammaherpesvirus MicroRNAs

Nicole Walz; Thomas Christalla; Uwe Tessmer; Adam Grundhoff

ABSTRACT MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, noncoding RNAs which posttranscriptionally regulate gene expression. The current release of the miRNA registry lists 16 viruses which encode a total of 146 miRNA hairpins. Strikingly, 139 of these are encoded by members of the herpesvirus family, suggesting an important role for miRNAs in the herpesvirus life cycle. However, with the exception of 7 miRNA hairpins known to be shared by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and the closely related rhesus lymphocryptovirus (rLCV), the known herpesvirus miRNAs show little evidence of evolutionary conservation. We have performed a global analysis of miRNA conservation among gammaherpesviruses which is not limited to family members known to encode miRNAs but includes also those which have not been previously analyzed. For this purpose, we have performed a computational prediction of miRNA candidates of all fully sequenced gammaherpesvirus genomes, followed by sequence/structure alignments. Our results indicate that gammaherpesvirus miRNA conservation is limited to two pairs of viral genomes. One is the already-known case of EBV and rLCV. These viruses, however, share significantly more miRNAs than previously thought, as we identified and experimentally verified 10 novel conserved as well as 7 novel nonconserved rLCV pre-miRNA hairpins. The second case consists of rhesus rhadinovirus (RRV), which is predicted to share at least 9 pre-miRNAs with the closely related Japanese macaque herpesvirus (JMHV). Although several other gammaherpesviruses are predicted to encode large numbers of clustered miRNAs at conserved genomic loci, no further examples of evolutionarily conserved miRNA sequences were found.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Solution Structure of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 p6 Protein

Torgils Fossen; Victor Wray; Karsten Bruns; Judhi Rachmat; Peter Henklein; Uwe Tessmer; Annette Maczurek; Patricia Klinger; Ulrich S. Schubert

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6 protein represents a docking site for several cellular and viral binding factors and fulfills major roles in the formation of infectious viruses. To date, however, the structure of this 52-amino acid protein, by far the smallest lentiviral protein known, either in its mature form as free p6 or as the C-terminal part of the Pr55 Gag polyprotein has not been unraveled. We have explored the high resolution structure and folding of p6 by CD and NMR spectroscopy. Under membranous solution conditions, p6 can adopt a helix-flexible helix structure; a short helix-1 (amino acids 14–18) is connected to a pronounced helix-2 (amino acids 33–44) by a flexible hinge region. Thus, p6 can be subdivided into two distinct structural and functional domains; helix-2 perfectly defines the region that binds to the virus budding factor AIP-1/ALIX, indicating that this structure is required for interaction with the endosomal sorting complex required for transport. The PTAP motif at the N terminus, comprising the primary late assembly domain, which is crucial for interaction with another cellular budding factor, Tsg101, does not exhibit secondary structure. However, the adjacent helix-1 may play an indirect role in the specific complex formation between p6 and the binding groove in Tsg101. Moreover, binding studies by NMR demonstrate that helix-2, which also comprises the LXXLF motif required for incorporation of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 accessory protein Vpr into budding virions, specifically interacts with the Vpr binding region, indicating that under the specific solution conditions used for structure analysis, p6 adopted a functional conformation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Structural characterization of the HIV-1 Vpr N terminus: evidence of cis/trans-proline isomerism.

Karsten Bruns; Torgils Fossen; Victor Wray; Peter Henklein; Uwe Tessmer; Ulrich S. Schubert

The 96-residue human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) accessory protein Vpr serves manifold functions in the retroviral life cycle including augmentation of viral replication in non-dividing host cells, induction of G2 cell cycle arrest, and modulation of HIV-induced apoptosis. Using a combination of dynamic light scattering, circular dichroism, and NMR spectroscopy the N terminus of Vpr is shown to be a unique domain of the molecule that behaves differently from the C-terminal domain in terms of self-association and secondary structure folding. Interestingly, the four highly conserved proline residues in the N terminus are predicted to have a high propensity for cis/trans isomerism. Thus the high resolution structure and folding of a synthetic N-terminal peptide (Vpr1–40) and smaller fragments thereof have been investigated. 1H NMR data indicate Vpr1–40 possesses helical structure between residues 17–32, and for the first time, this helix, which is bound by proline residues, was observed even in aqueous solution devoid of any detergent supplements. In addition, NMR data revealed that all of the proline residues undergo a cis/ trans isomerism to such an extent that ∼40% of all Vpr molecules possess at least one proline in a cis conformation. This phenomenon of cis/trans isomerism, which is unprecedented for HIV-1 Vpr, not only provides an explanation for the molecular heterogeneity observed in the full-length molecule but also indicates that in vivo the folding and function of Vpr should depend on a cis/trans-proline isomerase activity, particularly as two of the proline residues in positions 14 and 35 show considerable amounts of cis isomers. This prediction correlates well with our recent observation (Zander, K., Sherman, M. P., Tessmer, U., Bruns, K., Wray, V., Prechtel, A. T., Schubert, E., Henklein, P., Luban, J., Neidleman, J., Greene, W. C., and Schubert, U. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 43170–43181) of a functional interaction between the major cellular isomerase cyclophilin A and Vpr, both of which are incorporated into HIV-1 virions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Structural characterization and oligomerization of PB1-F2, a proapoptotic influenza A virus protein.

Karsten Bruns; Nicole Studtrucker; Alok Sharma; Torgils Fossen; David Mitzner; André Eissmann; Uwe Tessmer; René Röder; Peter Henklein; Victor Wray; Ulrich S. Schubert

Recently, a novel 87-amino acid influenza A virus protein with proapoptotic properties, PB1-F2, has been reported that originates from an alternative reading frame in the PB1 polymerase gene and is encoded in most known human influenza A virus isolates. Here we characterize the molecular structure of a biologically active synthetic version of the protein (sPB1-F2). Western blot analysis, chemical cross-linking, and NMR spectroscopy afforded direct evidence of the inherent tendency of sPB1-F2 to undergo oligomerization mediated by two distinct domains located in the N and C termini, respectively. CD and 1H NMR spectroscopic analyses indicate that the stability of structured regions in the molecule clearly depends upon the hydrophobicity of the solvent. In aqueous solutions, the behavior of sPB1-F2 is typical of a largely random coil peptide that, however, adopts α-helical structure upon the addition of membrane mimetics. 1H NMR analysis of three overlapping peptides afforded, for the first time, direct experimental evidence of the presence of a C-terminal region with strong α-helical propensity comprising amino acid residues Ile55-Lys85 connected via an essentially random coil structure to a much weaker helix-like region, located in the N terminus between residues Trp9 and Lys20. The C-terminal helix is not a true amphipathic helix and is more compact than previously predicted. It corresponds to a positively charged region previously shown to include the mitochondrial targeting sequence of PB1-F2. The consequences of the strong oligomerization and helical propensities of the molecule are discussed and used to formulate a hypothetical model of its interaction with the mitochondrial membrane.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Competitive inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type-1 protease by the Gag-Pol transframe protein.

Christina Paulus; Susanne Hellebrand; Uwe Tessmer; Hans Wolf; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; Ralf Wagner

The human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) transframe protein p6* is located between the structural and enzymatic domains of the Gag-Pol polyprotein, flanked by the nucleocapsid (NC) and the protease (PR) domain at its amino and carboxyl termini, respectively. Here, we report that recombinant highly purified HIV-1 p6* specifically inhibits mature HIV-1 PR activity. Kinetic analyses and cross-linking experiments revealed a competitive mechanism for PR inhibition by p6*. We further demonstrate that the four carboxyl-terminal residues of p6* are essential but not sufficient for p6*-mediated inhibition of PR activity. Based on these results, we suggest a role of the transframe protein p6* in regulating HIV-1 PR activity during viral replication.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2000

Proteasome inhibition interferes with Gag polyprotein processing, release, and maturation of HIV-1 and HIV-2

Ulrich S. Schubert; David E. Ott; Elena Chertova; Reinhold Welker; Uwe Tessmer; Michael F. Princiotta; Jack R. Bennink; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; Jonathan W. Yewdell

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Karsten Bruns

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Hans-Georg Kräusslich

University Hospital Heidelberg

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Peter Henklein

Humboldt University of Berlin

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