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Dive into the research topics where Wim J. H. Hagen is active.

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Featured researches published by Wim J. H. Hagen.


Cell | 2013

Integrated structural analysis of the human nuclear pore complex scaffold.

Khanh Huy Bui; Alexander von Appen; Amanda L. DiGuilio; Alessandro Ori; Lenore Sparks; Marie-Therese Mackmull; Thomas Bock; Wim J. H. Hagen; Amparo Andrés-Pons; Joseph S. Glavy; Martin Beck

The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a fundamental component of all eukaryotic cells that facilitates nucleocytoplasmic exchange of macromolecules. It is assembled from multiple copies of about 30 nucleoporins. Due to its size and complex composition, determining the structure of the NPC is an enormous challenge, and the overall architecture of the NPC scaffold remains elusive. In this study, we have used an integrated approach based on electron tomography, single-particle electron microscopy, and crosslinking mass spectrometry to determine the structure of a major scaffold motif of the human NPC, the Nup107 subcomplex, in both isolation and integrated into the NPC. We show that 32 copies of the Nup107 subcomplex assemble into two reticulated rings, one each at the cytoplasmic and nuclear face of the NPC. This arrangement may explain how changes of the diameter are realized that would accommodate transport of huge cargoes.


Nature | 2015

In situ structural analysis of the human nuclear pore complex

Alexander von Appen; Jan Kosinski; Lenore Sparks; Alessandro Ori; Amanda L. DiGuilio; Benjamin Vollmer; Marie-Therese Mackmull; Niccolò Banterle; Luca Parca; Panagiotis L. Kastritis; Katarzyna Buczak; Shyamal Mosalaganti; Wim J. H. Hagen; Amparo Andrés-Pons; Edward A. Lemke; Peer Bork; Wolfram Antonin; Joseph S. Glavy; Khanh Huy Bui; Martin Beck

Nuclear pore complexes are fundamental components of all eukaryotic cells that mediate nucleocytoplasmic exchange. Determining their 110-megadalton structure imposes a formidable challenge and requires in situ structural biology approaches. Of approximately 30 nucleoporins (Nups), 15 are structured and form the Y and inner-ring complexes. These two major scaffolding modules assemble in multiple copies into an eight-fold rotationally symmetric structure that fuses the inner and outer nuclear membranes to form a central channel of ~60 nm in diameter. The scaffold is decorated with transport-channel Nups that often contain phenylalanine-repeat sequences and mediate the interaction with cargo complexes. Although the architectural arrangement of parts of the Y complex has been elucidated, it is unclear how exactly it oligomerizes in situ. Here we combine cryo-electron tomography with mass spectrometry, biochemical analysis, perturbation experiments and structural modelling to generate, to our knowledge, the most comprehensive architectural model of the human nuclear pore complex to date. Our data suggest previously unknown protein interfaces across Y complexes and to inner-ring complex members. We show that the transport-channel Nup358 (also known as Ranbp2) has a previously unanticipated role in Y-complex oligomerization. Our findings blur the established boundaries between scaffold and transport-channel Nups. We conclude that, similar to coated vesicles, several copies of the same structural building block—although compositionally identical—engage in different local sets of interactions and conformations.


Science | 2016

An atomic model of HIV-1 capsid-SP1 reveals structures regulating assembly and maturation

Florian K. M. Schur; Martin Obr; Wim J. H. Hagen; William Wan; Arjen J. Jakobi; Joanna M. Kirkpatrick; Carsten Sachse; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; John A. G. Briggs

Maturation and inhibition of HIV-1 HIV-1 undergoes a two-step assembly process controlled largely by a single region of its Gag protein. Schur et al. determined a complete atomic model for this region within an assembled Gag protein lattice using cryo-electron tomography together with subtomogram averaging. Amino acids from different parts of multiple Gag molecules come together to form an intricate network of interactions that drive HIV-1 assembly. The final step of maturation into the infectious HIV-1 virus is controlled by structural changes in Gag that alter the accessibility of the final cleavage site to the viral protease. Science, this issue p. 506 Improved cryo-electron tomography and subtomogram averaging show how HIV maturation inhibitor drugs may work. Immature HIV-1 assembles at and buds from the plasma membrane before proteolytic cleavage of the viral Gag polyprotein induces structural maturation. Maturation can be blocked by maturation inhibitors (MIs), thereby abolishing infectivity. The CA (capsid) and SP1 (spacer peptide 1) region of Gag is the key regulator of assembly and maturation and is the target of MIs. We applied optimized cryo-electron tomography and subtomogram averaging to resolve this region within assembled immature HIV-1 particles at 3.9 angstrom resolution and built an atomic model. The structure reveals a network of intra- and intermolecular interactions mediating immature HIV-1 assembly. The proteolytic cleavage site between CA and SP1 is inaccessible to protease. We suggest that MIs prevent CA-SP1 cleavage by stabilizing the structure, and MI resistance develops by destabilizing CA-SP1.


Science | 2016

Molecular architecture of the inner ring scaffold of the human nuclear pore complex.

Jan Kosinski; Shyamal Mosalaganti; A. von Appen; Roman Teimer; Amanda L. DiGuilio; W. Wan; Khanh Huy Bui; Wim J. H. Hagen; John A. G. Briggs; Joseph S. Glavy; Ed Hurt; Martin Beck

Blueprint for a macromolecular machine Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) consist of around 1000 protein subunits, are embedded in the membrane that surrounds the nucleus, and regulate transport between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Although the overall shape of NPCs is known, the details of this macromolecular complex have been obscure. Now, Lin et al. have reconstituted the pore components, determined the interactions between them, and fitted them into a tomographic reconstruction. Kosinski et al. have provided an architectural map of the inner ring of the pore. Science, this issue pp. 10.1126/science.aaf1015 and 363 Reconstitution, spectroscopy, and crystallography allow the construction of a model of the human nuclear pore. Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are 110-megadalton assemblies that mediate nucleocytoplasmic transport. NPCs are built from multiple copies of ~30 different nucleoporins, and understanding how these nucleoporins assemble into the NPC scaffold imposes a formidable challenge. Recently, it has been shown how the Y complex, a prominent NPC module, forms the outer rings of the nuclear pore. However, the organization of the inner ring has remained unknown until now. We used molecular modeling combined with cross-linking mass spectrometry and cryo-electron tomography to obtain a composite structure of the inner ring. This architectural map explains the vast majority of the electron density of the scaffold. We conclude that despite obvious differences in morphology and composition, the higher-order structure of the inner and outer rings is unexpectedly similar.


Nature | 2015

Molecular structures of unbound and transcribing RNA polymerase III

Niklas A. Hoffmann; Arjen J. Jakobi; María Moreno-Morcillo; Sebastian Glatt; Jan Kosinski; Wim J. H. Hagen; Carsten Sachse; Christoph W. Müller

Transcription of genes encoding small structured RNAs such as transfer RNAs, spliceosomal U6 small nuclear RNA and ribosomal 5S RNA is carried out by RNA polymerase III (Pol III), the largest yet structurally least characterized eukaryotic RNA polymerase. Here we present the cryo-electron microscopy structures of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Pol III elongating complex at 3.9 Å resolution and the apo Pol III enzyme in two different conformations at 4.6 and 4.7 Å resolution, respectively, which allow the building of a 17-subunit atomic model of Pol III. The reconstructions reveal the precise orientation of the C82–C34–C31 heterotrimer in close proximity to the stalk. The C53–C37 heterodimer positions residues involved in transcription termination close to the non-template DNA strand. In the apo Pol III structures, the stalk adopts different orientations coupled with closed and open conformations of the clamp. Our results provide novel insights into Pol III-specific transcription and the adaptation of Pol III towards its small transcriptional targets.


Science | 2015

A structure of the COPI coat and the role of coat proteins in membrane vesicle assembly

Svetlana O. Dodonova; P. Diestelkoetter-Bachert; A. von Appen; Wim J. H. Hagen; Rainer Beck; Martin Beck; Felix T. Wieland; John A. G. Briggs

A coat of many components The formation of coated trafficking vesicles is among the most fundamental of cellular processes. COP1 transport vesicles are involved in retrograde membrane trafficking in the Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum. Dodonova et al. applied cryo–electron tomography to determine the structure of the COPI coat in its fully assembled form on budded vesicles (see the Perspective by Noble and Stagg). They combined structural data with cross-linking mass spectrometry to generate a complete molecular model. The model suggests a mechanism of coat assembly in which coat proteins cluster via flexible interactions instead of forming a protein cage on the membrane. Science, this issue p. 195; see also p. 142 The structure of the assembled COPI intracellular vesicle transport coat differs from clathrin and COPII. [Also see Perspective by Noble and Stagg] Transport of material within cells is mediated by trafficking vesicles that bud from one cellular compartment and fuse with another. Formation of a trafficking vesicle is driven by membrane coats that localize cargo and polymerize into cages to bend the membrane. Although extensive structural information is available for components of these coats, the heterogeneity of trafficking vesicles has prevented an understanding of how complete membrane coats assemble on the membrane. We combined cryo–electron tomography, subtomogram averaging, and cross-linking mass spectrometry to derive a complete model of the assembled coat protein complex I (COPI) coat involved in traffic between the Golgi and the endoplasmic reticulum. The highly interconnected COPI coat structure contradicted the current “adaptor-and-cage” understanding of coated vesicle formation.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2013

Determination of protein structure at 8.5Å resolution using cryo-electron tomography and sub-tomogram averaging.

Florian K. M. Schur; Wim J. H. Hagen; Alex de Marco; John A. G. Briggs

Cryo-electron tomography combined with image processing by sub-tomogram averaging is unique in its power to resolve the structures of proteins and macromolecular complexes in situ. Limitations of the method, including the low signal to noise ratio within individual images from cryo-tomographic datasets and difficulties in determining the defocus at which the data was collected, mean that to date the very best structures obtained by sub-tomogram averaging are limited to a resolution of approximately 15 Å. Here, by optimizing data collection and defocus determination steps, we have determined the structure of assembled Mason-Pfizer monkey virus Gag protein using sub-tomogram averaging to a resolution of 8.5 Å. At this resolution alpha-helices can be directly and clearly visualized. These data demonstrate for the first time that high-resolution structural information can be obtained from cryo-electron tomograms using sub-tomogram averaging. Sub-tomogram averaging has the potential to allow detailed studies of unsolved and biologically relevant structures under biologically relevant conditions.


Cell Reports | 2015

The Selective Autophagy Receptor p62 Forms a Flexible Filamentous Helical Scaffold

Rodolfo Ciuffa; Trond Lamark; Abul K. Tarafder; Audrey Guesdon; Sofia Rybina; Wim J. H. Hagen; Terje Johansen; Carsten Sachse

The scaffold protein p62/SQSTM1 is involved in protein turnover and signaling and is commonly found in dense protein bodies in eukaryotic cells. In autophagy, p62 acts as a selective autophagy receptor that recognizes and shuttles ubiquitinated proteins to the autophagosome for degradation. The structural organization of p62 in cellular bodies and the interplay of these assemblies with ubiquitin and the autophagic marker LC3 remain to be elucidated. Here, we present a cryo-EM structural analysis of p62. Together with structures of assemblies from the PB1 domain, we show that p62 is organized in flexible polymers with the PB1 domain constituting a helical scaffold. Filamentous p62 is capable of binding LC3 and addition of long ubiquitin chains induces disassembly and shortening of filaments. These studies explain how p62 assemblies provide a large molecular scaffold for the nascent autophagosome and reveal how they can bind ubiquitinated cargo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Cryo-electron microscopy of tubular arrays of HIV-1 Gag resolves structures essential for immature virus assembly

Tanmay A. M. Bharat; Luis R. Castillo Menendez; Wim J. H. Hagen; Vanda Lux; Sébastien Igonet; Martin Schorb; Florian K. M. Schur; Hans-Georg Kräusslich; John A. G. Briggs

Significance HIV-1 undergoes a two-step assembly process. First, an immature noninfectious particle is assembled, which leaves the infected cell. Second, the structural protein, Gag, is cleaved in the virus by the viral protease, and this leads to formation of the infectious virus. The immature virus particle therefore represents the key intermediate in HIV-1 assembly. There is currently no high-resolution information available on the arrangement of Gag within immature HIV-1. We have assembled part of HIV-1 Gag in vitro to form immature virus-like tubular protein arrays, and have solved a subnanometer-resolution structure of these arrays by using cryo-EM and tomography. This structure reveals interactions of the C-terminal capsid domain of Gag that are critical for HIV-1 assembly. The assembly of HIV-1 is mediated by oligomerization of the major structural polyprotein, Gag, into a hexameric protein lattice at the plasma membrane of the infected cell. This leads to budding and release of progeny immature virus particles. Subsequent proteolytic cleavage of Gag triggers rearrangement of the particles to form mature infectious virions. Obtaining a structural model of the assembled lattice of Gag within immature virus particles is necessary to understand the interactions that mediate assembly of HIV-1 particles in the infected cell, and to describe the substrate that is subsequently cleaved by the viral protease. An 8-Å resolution structure of an immature virus-like tubular array assembled from a Gag-derived protein of the related retrovirus Mason–Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) has previously been reported, and a model for the arrangement of the HIV-1 capsid (CA) domains has been generated based on homology to this structure. Here we have assembled tubular arrays of a HIV-1 Gag-derived protein with an immature-like arrangement of the C-terminal CA domains and have solved their structure by using hybrid cryo-EM and tomography analysis. The structure reveals the arrangement of the C-terminal domain of CA within an immature-like HIV-1 Gag lattice, and provides, to our knowledge, the first high-resolution view of the region immediately downstream of CA, which is essential for assembly, and is significantly different from the respective region in M-PMV. Our results reveal a hollow column of density for this region in HIV-1 that is compatible with the presence of a six-helix bundle at this position.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2017

Implementation of a cryo-electron tomography tilt-scheme optimized for high resolution subtomogram averaging.

Wim J. H. Hagen; William Wan; John A. G. Briggs

Cryo-electron tomography (cryoET) allows 3D structural information to be obtained from cells and other biological samples in their close-to-native state. In combination with subtomogram averaging, detailed structures of repeating features can be resolved. CryoET data is collected as a series of images of the sample from different tilt angles; this is performed by physically rotating the sample in the microscope between each image. The angles at which the images are collected, and the order in which they are collected, together are called the tilt-scheme. Here we describe a “dose-symmetric tilt-scheme” that begins at low tilt and then alternates between increasingly positive and negative tilts. This tilt-scheme maximizes the amount of high-resolution information maintained in the tomogram for subsequent subtomogram averaging, and may also be advantageous for other applications. We describe implementation of the tilt-scheme in combination with further data-collection refinements including setting thresholds on acceptable drift and improving focus accuracy. Requirements for microscope set-up are introduced, and a macro is provided which automates the application of the tilt-scheme within SerialEM.

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John A. G. Briggs

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Carsten Sachse

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Arjen J. Jakobi

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Martin Beck

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Jan Kosinski

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Christoph W. Müller

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Tanmay A. M. Bharat

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Hans-Georg Kräusslich

University Hospital Heidelberg

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Rene Wetzel

European Bioinformatics Institute

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