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Dive into the research topics where Werner Fanick is active.

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Featured researches published by Werner Fanick.


Biochemical Journal | 2002

The human homologue of yeast ArgRIII protein is an inositol phosphate multikinase with predominantly nuclear localization.

Marcus M. Nalaskowski; Christina Deschermeier; Werner Fanick; Georg W. Mayr

The function of the transcription regulator ArgRIII in the expression of several genes involved in the metabolism of arginine in yeast has been well studied. It was previously reported that it is also an inositol phosphate multikinase and an important factor of the mRNA export pathway [reviewed by Shears (2000) Bioessays 22, 786-789]. In the present study we report the cloning of a full-length 1248-bp cDNA encoding a human inositol phosphate multikinase (IPMK). This protein has a calculated molecular mass of 47.219 kDa. Functionally important motifs [inositol phosphate-binding site, ATP-binding site, catalytically important SSLL (Ser-Ser-Leu-Leu) domain] are conserved between the human IPMK and yeast ArgRIII. Bacterially expressed protein demonstrated an inositol phosphate multikinase activity similar to that of yeast ArgRIII. Ins(1,4,5)P3 is phosphorylated at positions 3 and 6 up to Ins(1,3,4,5,6)P5. The human IPMK fused with a fluorescent protein tag is localized predominantly in the nucleus when transiently expressed in mammalian cells. A basic cluster in the proteins C-terminus is positively involved in nuclear targeting. These findings are consistent with the concept of a nuclear inositol phosphate signalling and phosphorylation pathway in mammalian cells.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Intracellular localization of human Ins(1,3,4,5,6)P5 2-kinase

Maria A. Brehm; Tobias M. H. Schenk; Xuefei Zhou; Werner Fanick; Hongying Lin; Sabine Windhorst; Marcus M. Nalaskowski; Mario Kobras; Stephen B. Shears; Georg W. Mayr

InsP6 is an intracellular signal with several proposed functions that is synthesized by IP5K [Ins(1,3,4,5,6)P5 2-kinase]. In the present study, we overexpressed EGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein)-IP5K fusion proteins in NRK (normal rat kidney), COS7 and H1299 cells. The results indicate that there is spatial microheterogeneity in the intracellular localization of IP5K that could also be confirmed for the endogenous enzyme. This may facilitate changes in InsP6 levels at its sites of action. For example, overexpressed IP5K showed a structured organization within the nucleus. The kinase was preferentially localized in euchromatin and nucleoli, and co-localized with mRNA. In the cytoplasm, the overexpressed IP5K showed locally high concentrations in discrete foci. The latter were attributed to stress granules by using mRNA, PABP [poly(A)-binding protein] and TIAR (TIA-1-related protein) as markers. The incidence of stress granules, in which IP5K remained highly concentrated, was further increased by puromycin treatment. Using FRAP (fluorescence recovery after photobleaching) we established that IP5K was actively transported into the nucleus. By site-directed mutagenesis we identified a nuclear import signal and a peptide segment mediating the nuclear export of IP5K.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate 3-Kinase-A Is a New Cell Motility-promoting Protein That Increases the Metastatic Potential of Tumor Cells by Two Functional Activities

Sabine Windhorst; Ralf Fliegert; Christine Blechner; Katharina Möllmann; Zara Hosseini; Thomas Günther; Maike Eiben; Lydia Chang; Hong Ying Lin; Werner Fanick; Udo Schumacher; Burkhard Brandt; Georg W. Mayr

Cellular migration is an essential prerequisite for metastatic dissemination of cancer cells. This study demonstrates that the neuron/testis-specific F-actin-targeted inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase-A (ITPKA) is ectopically expressed in different human tumor cell lines and during tumor progression in the metastatic tumor model Balb-neuT. High expression of ITPKA increases invasive migration in vitro and metastasis in a xenograft SCID mouse model. Mechanistic studies show that ITPKA promotes migration of tumor cells by two different mechanisms as follows: growth factor independently high levels of ITPKA induce the formation of large cellular protrusions by directly modulating the actin cytoskeleton. The F-actin binding activity of ITPKA stabilizes and bundles actin filaments and thus increases the levels of cellular F-actin. In growth factor-stimulated cells, the catalytically active domain enhances basal ITPKA-induced migration by activating store-operated calcium entry through production of inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate and subsequent inhibition of inositol phosphate 5-phosphatase. These two functional activities of ITPKA stimulating tumor cell migration place the enzyme among the potential targets of anti-metastatic therapy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

The Second Messenger Binding Site of Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate 3-Kinase Is Centered in the Catalytic Domain and Related to the Inositol Trisphosphate Receptor Site

Uwe Bertsch; Christina Deschermeier; Werner Fanick; Irute Girkontaite; Kirsten Hillemeier; Heiko Johnen; Wolfgang Weglöhner; Frank Emmrich; Georg W. Mayr

A segment of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase responsible for inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) binding was characterized and confirmed by three different approaches employing the fully active expressed catalytic domain of the enzyme. Part of this moiety was protected from limited tryptic proteolysis by InsP3. Sequencing of two fragments of 16 and 21 kDa, generated in the absence or presence of InsP3, respectively, identified segment Glu-271 to Arg-305 as being protected. 15 monoclonal antibodies, all binding to epitopes within this region, inhibited enzyme activity and interfered with inositol phosphate binding. Detailed enzyme kinetic parameters of 32 site-directed mutants revealed residues Arg-276 and Lys-303 in this segment and Arg-322, located nearby, as directly involved in and five other closely neighbored residues, all located within a segment of 73 amino acids, as also influencing InsP3 binding. Part of this region is similar in sequence to an InsP3 binding segment in InsP3 receptors. Combined with the finding that mutants influencing only ATP binding all lie outside this region, these data indicate that an InsP3 binding core domain is inserted between two segments acting together in ATP binding and phosphate transfer.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Human inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase isoform B (IP3KB) is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein specifically enriched at cortical actin filaments and at invaginations of the nuclear envelope.

Marcus M. Nalaskowski; Ralf Fliegert; Olga Ernst; Maria A. Brehm; Werner Fanick; Sabine Windhorst; Hongying Lin; Susanne Giehler; Jamin Hein; Yuan-Na Lin; Georg W. Mayr

Recent studies have shown that inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase isoform B (IP3KB) possesses important roles in the development of immune cells. IP3KB can be targeted to multiple cellular compartments, among them nuclear localization and binding in close proximity to the plasma membrane. The B isoform is the only IP3K that is almost ubiquitously expressed in mammalian cells. Detailed mechanisms of its targeting regulation will be important in understanding the role of Ins(1,4,5)P3 phosphorylation on subcellular calcium signaling and compartment-specific initiation of pathways leading to regulatory active higher phosphorylated inositol phosphates. Here, we identified an exportin 1-dependent nuclear export signal (134LQRELQNVQV) and characterized the amino acids responsible for nuclear localization of IP3KB (129RKLR). These two targeting domains regulate the amount of nuclear IP3KB in cells. We also demonstrated that the localization of IP3KB at the plasma membrane is due to its binding to cortical actin structures. Intriguingly, all three of these targeting activities reside in one small polypeptide segment (amino acids 104–165), which acts as a multitargeting domain (MTD). Finally, a hitherto unknown subnuclear localization of IP3KB could be demonstrated in rapidly growing H1299 cells. IP3KB is specifically enriched at nuclear invaginations extending perpendicular between the apical and basal surface of the nucleus of these flat cells. Such nuclear invaginations are known to be involved in Ins(1,4,5)P3-mediated Ca2+ signaling of the nucleus. Our findings indicate that IP3KB not only regulates cytoplasmic Ca2+ signals by phosphorylation of subplasmalemmal and cytoplasmic Ins(1,4,5)P3 but may also be involved in modulating nuclear Ca2+ signals generated from these nuclear envelope invaginations.


Biochemical Journal | 2013

Tumour cells can employ extracellular Ins(1,2,3,4,5,6)P(6) and multiple inositol-polyphosphate phosphatase 1 (MINPP1) dephosphorylation to improve their proliferation.

Sabine Windhorst; Hongying Lin; Christine Blechner; Werner Fanick; Laura Brandt; Maria A. Brehm; Georg W. Mayr

InsP(6) [Ins(1,2,3,4,5,6)P6; phytate] is the most abundant inositol phosphate in mammalian cells with cytosolic/nuclear concentrations of up to 50 μM. We noticed that InsP6 in culture medium at a concentration of ≤50 μM significantly stimulates H1299 tumour cell growth, whereas larger concentrations of InsP6 inhibit growth. A detailed study of the fate of 30 μM InsP6 added to H199 cells revealed a major fraction of InsP6 initially precipitates as cell-surface metal complexes, but becomes slowly re-solubilized by extracellular dephosphorylation first to InsP3 isomers and subsequently to free myo-inositol. The precipitated metal-InsP6 complex is endocytosed in a receptor-independent but intact-glycocalyx-dependent manner and appears in lysosomes, where it is immediately dephosphorylated to Ins(1,2,4,5,6)P5 and very slowly to free inositol. By RNA knockdown, we identified secreted and lysosome targeted MINPP1 (multiple inositol-polyphosphate phosphatase 1), the mammalian 3-phytase, to be essentially involved both in extracellular and in lysosomal InsP6 dephosphorylation. The results of the present study indicate that tumour cells employ this enzyme to utilize the micronutrients myo-inositol and metal-phosphate when encountering extracellular InsP6 and thus to enhance their growth potential.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2012

A Plasmodium multi-domain protein possesses multiple inositol phosphate kinase activities.

Carina Stritzke; Marcus M. Nalaskowski; Werner Fanick; Hongying Lin; Georg W. Mayr

The synchronization of intraerythrocytic maturation of Plasmodium parasites is an important factor in the malaria infection process. Synchronization is mediated by inositol phosphate (InsP(x))-induced Ca(2+)-release from internal stores. To further investigate the InsP(x) metabolism in these parasites a Plasmodium protein possessing inositol phosphate kinase (IPK) activity was recombinantly expressed, purified and enzymatically characterized for the first time. Its main activity is the conversion of the Ca(2+)-releasing second messenger Ins(1,4,5)P(3) to Ins(1,3,4,5)P(4), an important factor in chromatin remodeling and also in Ca(2+)-release. This protein possesses several additional IPK activities pointing to a potential role as inositol phosphate multikinase. Interestingly, we have also identified three putative subdomains of histone deacetylase in this protein possibly linking InsP(x)- and acetylation-mediated transcription regulation. Furthermore, we examined the inhibitory potential of >40 polyphenolic substances against its kinase activity. Because of the important role of InsP(x)-induced Ca(2+)-release in the development of Plasmodium parasites, IPKs are interesting targets for novel antimalarial approaches.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2012

A novel Entamoeba histolytica inositol phosphate kinase catalyzes the formation of 5PP-Ins(1,2,3,4,6)P5

Benjamin Löser; Marcus M. Nalaskowski; Werner Fanick; Hongying Lin; Egbert Tannich; Georg W. Mayr

The parasitic protozoan Entamoeba histolytica is able to invade human tissues by secreting proteolytic enzymes. This secretion is regulated by inositol phosphate-mediated Ca(2+) release from internal stores. To further investigate the inositol phosphate metabolism of Entamoeba histolytica four putative inositol phosphate kinase genes (ehipk1-4) were identified and their expression analyzed by real-time quantitative PCR using RNA of trophozoites. Furthermore inositol phosphate kinase EhIPK1 was recombinantly expressed, purified and enzymatically characterized. Its main activity is the conversion of InsP(6) to 5PP-Ins(1,2,3,4,6)P(5), one of the main inositol phosphates found in Entamoeba histolytica. Remarkably, EhIPK1 possesses several additional enzymatic activities, e.g. the phosphorylation of the Ca(2+)-releasing second messenger Ins(1,4,5)P(3).We were able to identify several compounds with inhibitory potential against EhIPK1. Because of the important role of inositol phosphates in the invasion of human tissues by Entamoeba histolytica, inositol phosphate metabolizing enzymes are interesting targets for novel therapeutic approaches.


Biological chemistry Hoppe-Seyler | 1988

ADP-ribosyl proteins formed by pertussis toxin are specifically cleaved by mercury ions.

Thomas F. Meyer; Robert Koch; Werner Fanick; Helmuth Hilz


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Rat inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase C is enzymatically specialized for basal cellular inositol trisphosphate phosphorylation and shuttles actively between nucleus and cytoplasm.

Marcus M. Nalaskowski; Uwe Bertsch; Werner Fanick; Malte C. Stockebrand; Hartwig Schmale; Georg W. Mayr

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