Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Young-Hwa Song is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Young-Hwa Song.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Single-molecule investigation of the interference between kinesin, tau and MAP2c.

Arne Seitz; Hiroaki Kojima; Kazuhiro Oiwa; Eva-Maria Mandelkow; Young-Hwa Song; Eckhard Mandelkow

Motor proteins and microtubule‐associated proteins (MAPs) play important roles in cellular transport, regulation of shape and polarity of cells. While motor proteins generate motility, MAPs are thought to stabilize the microtubule tracks. However, the proteins also interfere with each other, such that MAPs are able to inhibit transport of vesicles and organelles in cells. In order to investigate the mechanism of MAP–motor interference in molecular detail, we have studied single kinesin molecules by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy in the presence of different neuronal MAPs (tau, MAP2c). The parameters observed included run‐length (a measure of processivity), velocity and frequency of attachment. The main effect of MAPs was to reduce the attachment frequency of motors. This effect was dependent on the concentration, the affinity to microtubules and the domain composition of MAPs. In contrast, once attached, the motors did not show a change in speed, nor in their run‐length. The results suggest that MAPs can regulate motor activity on the level of initial attachment, but not during motion.


Nature | 2006

Palindromic assembly of the giant muscle protein titin in the sarcomeric Z-disk

Peijian Zou; Nikos Pinotsis; Stephan Lange; Young-Hwa Song; Alexander N. Popov; Irene Mavridis; Olga Mayans; Mathias Gautel; Matthias Wilmanns

The Z-disk of striated and cardiac muscle sarcomeres is one of the most densely packed cellular structures in eukaryotic cells. It provides the architectural framework for assembling and anchoring the largest known muscle filament systems by an extensive network of protein–protein interactions, requiring an extraordinary level of mechanical stability. Here we show, using X-ray crystallography, how the amino terminus of the longest filament component, the giant muscle protein titin, is assembled into an antiparallel (2:1) sandwich complex by the Z-disk ligand telethonin. The pseudosymmetric structure of telethonin mediates a unique palindromic arrangement of two titin filaments, a type of molecular assembly previously found only in protein–DNA complexes. We have confirmed its unique architecture in vivo by protein complementation assays, and in vitro by experiments using fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The model proposed may provide a molecular paradigm of how major sarcomeric filaments are crosslinked, anchored and aligned within complex cytoskeletal networks.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2010

Proteome‐wide identification of mycobacterial pupylation targets

Christian Poulsen; Yusuf Akhter; Amy Hye Won Jeon; Gerold Schmitt-Ulms; Helmut E. Meyer; Anja Stefanski; Kai Stühler; Matthias Wilmanns; Young-Hwa Song

Mycobacteria use a unique system for covalently modifying proteins based on the conjugation of a small protein, referred to as prokaryotic ubiquitin‐like protein (PUP). In this study, we report a proteome‐wide analysis of endogenous pupylation targets in the model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis. On affinity capture, a total of 243 candidate pupylation targets were identified by two complementary proteomics approaches. For 41 of these protein targets, direct evidence for a total of 48 lysine‐mediated pupylation acceptor sites was obtained by collision‐induced dissociation spectra. For the majority of these pupylation targets (38 of 41), orthologous genes are found in the M. tuberculosis genome. Interestingly, approximately half of these proteins are involved in intermediary metabolism and respiration pathways. A considerable fraction of the remaining targets are involved in lipid metabolism, information pathways, and virulence, detoxification and adaptation. Approximately one‐third of the genes encoding these targets are located in seven gene clusters, indicating functional linkages of mycobacterial pupylation targets. A comparison of the pupylome under different cell culture conditions indicates that substrate targeting for pupylation is rather dynamic.


Neurobiology of Aging | 1995

On the structure of microtubules, tau, and paired helical filaments

Eva-Maria Mandelkow; Young-Hwa Song; O. Schweers; Alexander Marx; Eva Maria Mandelkow

Microtubules and their associated proteins form the basis of axonal transport; they are degraded during the neuronal degeneration in Alzheimers disease. This article surveys recent results on the structure of microtubules, tau protein, and PHFs. Microtubules have been investigated by electron microscopy and image processing after labeling them with the head domain of the motor protein kinesin. This reveals the arrangement of tubulin subunits in microtubules and the shape of the tubulin-motor complex. Tau protein was studied by electron microscopy, solution X-ray scattering, and spectroscopic methods. It appears as an elongated molecule (about 35 nm) without recognizable secondary structure. Alzheimer PHFs were examined by FTIR and X-ray diffraction; they, too, show evidence for secondary structure such as beta sheets.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

The peroxisomal receptor Pex19p forms a helical mPTS recognition domain

Nicole Schueller; Simon J. Holton; Krisztian Fodor; Morlin Milewski; Petr V. Konarev; Will A. Stanley; Janina Wolf; Ralf Erdmann; Wolfgang Schliebs; Young-Hwa Song; Matthias Wilmanns

The protein Pex19p functions as a receptor and chaperone of peroxisomal membrane proteins (PMPs). The crystal structure of the folded C‐terminal part of the receptor reveals a globular domain that displays a bundle of three long helices in an antiparallel arrangement. Complementary functional experiments, using a range of truncated Pex19p constructs, show that the structured α‐helical domain binds PMP‐targeting signal (mPTS) sequences with about 10 μM affinity. Removal of a conserved N‐terminal helical segment from the mPTS recognition domain impairs the ability for mPTS binding, indicating that it forms part of the mPTS‐binding site. Pex19p variants with mutations in the same sequence segment abolish correct cargo import. Our data indicate a divided N‐terminal and C‐terminal structural arrangement in Pex19p, which is reminiscent of a similar division in the Pex5p receptor, to allow separation of cargo‐targeting signal recognition and additional functions.


PLOS ONE | 2014

WXG100 Protein Superfamily Consists of Three Subfamilies and Exhibits an α-Helical C-Terminal Conserved Residue Pattern

Christian Poulsen; Santosh Panjikar; Simon J. Holton; Matthias Wilmanns; Young-Hwa Song

Members of the WXG100 protein superfamily form homo- or heterodimeric complexes. The most studied proteins among them are the secreted T-cell antigens CFP-10 (10 kDa culture filtrate protein, EsxB) and ESAT-6 (6 kDa early secreted antigen target, EsxA) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. They are encoded on an operon within a gene cluster, named as ESX-1, that encodes for the Type VII secretion system (T7SS). WXG100 proteins are secreted in a full-length form and it is known that they adopt a four-helix bundle structure. In the current work we discuss the evolutionary relationship between the homo- and heterodimeric WXG100 proteins, the basis of the oligomeric state and the key structural features of the conserved sequence pattern of WXG100 proteins. We performed an iterative bioinformatics analysis of the WXG100 protein superfamily and correlated this with the atomic structures of the representative WXG100 proteins. We find, firstly, that the WXG100 protein superfamily consists of three subfamilies: CFP-10-, ESAT-6- and sagEsxA-like proteins (EsxA proteins similar to that of Streptococcus agalactiae). Secondly, that the heterodimeric complexes probably evolved from a homodimeric precursor. Thirdly, that the genes of hetero-dimeric WXG100 proteins are always encoded in bi-cistronic operons and finally, by combining the sequence alignments with the X-ray data we identify a conserved C-terminal sequence pattern. The side chains of these conserved residues decorate the same side of the C-terminal α-helix and therefore form a distinct surface. Our results lead to a putatively extended T7SS secretion signal which combines two reported T7SS recognition characteristics: Firstly that the T7SS secretion signal is localized at the C-terminus of T7SS substrates and secondly that the conserved residues YxxxD/E are essential for T7SS activity. Furthermore, we propose that the specific α-helical surface formed by the conserved sequence pattern including YxxxD/E motif is a key component of T7SS-substrate recognition.


Journal of Cell Science | 1991

Effect of MAP2, MAP2c, and tau on kinesin-dependent microtubule motility.

Susanne Heins; Young-Hwa Song; Holger Wille; Eckhard Mandelkow; Eva-Maria Mandelkow

Summary By making use of DIC video microscopy to monitor microtubule motility we have studied the effect of several MAPs (MAPP, MAP2c, tau) on microtubule–kinesin interactions and microtubule gliding. Of the three MAPs tested, MAP2 interferes most strongly with kinesin-dependent microtubule motility.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Structure-based prediction of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SH3-ligand interactions.

Gregorio Fernández-Ballester; Pedro Beltrao; José Manuel González; Young-Hwa Song; Matthias Wilmanns; Alfonso Valencia; Luis Serrano

A great challenge in the proteomics and structural genomics era is to discover protein structure and function, including the identification of biological partners. Experimental investigation is costly and time-consuming, making computational methods very attractive for predicting protein function. In this work, we used the existing structural information in the SH3 family to first extract all SH3 structural features important for binding and then used this information to select the right templates to homology model most of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SH3 domains. Second, we classified, based on ligand orientation with respect to the SH3 domain, all SH3 peptide ligands into 29 conformations, of which 18 correspond to variants of canonical type I and type II conformations and 11 correspond to non-canonical conformations. Available SH3 templates were expanded by chimera construction to cover some sequence variability and loop conformations. Using the 29 ligand conformations and the homology models, we modelled all possible complexes. Using these complexes and in silico mutagenesis scanning, we constructed position-specific ligand binding matrices. Using these matrices, we determined which sequences will be favorable for every SH3 domain and then validated them with available experimental data. Our work also allowed us to identify key residues that determine loop conformation in SH3 domains, which could be used to model human SH3 domains and do target prediction. The success of this methodology opens the way for sequence-based, genome-wide prediction of protein-protein interactions given enough structural coverage.


Trends in Cell Biology | 1995

The microtubule lattice — dynamic instability of concepts

Eckhard Mandelkow; Young-Hwa Song; Eva-Maria Mandelkow

In the February 1995 issue of trends in CELL BIOLOGY, Linda Amos presented her view of our current understanding of the lattice structure of microtubules, 20 years after publication of the original paper describing the A- and B-lattices for flagellar microtubules. However, the question of the lattices of flagellar and cytoplasmic microtubules remains a matter for debate. In this article, Eckhard Mandelkow, Young-Hwa Song and Eva-Maria Mandelkow argue that the B-lattice is predominant, implying structural asymmetry for most microtubules.


EMBO Reports | 2010

Molecular basis of the head-to-tail assembly of giant muscle proteins obscurin-like 1 and titin

Florian Sauer; Juha Vahokoski; Young-Hwa Song; Matthias Wilmanns

Large filament proteins in muscle sarcomeres comprise many immunoglobulin‐like domains that provide a molecular platform for self‐assembly and interactions with heterologous protein partners. We have unravelled the molecular basis for the head‐to‐tail interaction of the carboxyl terminus of titin and the amino‐terminus of obscurin‐like‐1 by X‐ray crystallography. The binary complex is formed by a parallel intermolecular β‐sheet that presents a novel immunoglobulin‐like domain‐mediated assembly mechanism in muscle filament proteins. Complementary binding data show that the assembly is entropy‐driven rather than dominated data by specific polar interactions. The assembly observed leads to a V‐shaped zipper‐like arrangement of the two filament proteins.

Collaboration


Dive into the Young-Hwa Song's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthias Wilmanns

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eva-Maria Mandelkow

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eckhard Mandelkow

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Simon J. Holton

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Will A. Stanley

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anja Stefanski

University of Düsseldorf

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge