@phdthesis{Bartossek2018, author = {Bartossek, Thomas}, title = {Structural and functional analysis of the trypanosomal variant surface glycoprotein using x-ray scattering techniques and fluorescence microscopy}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-144775}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Trypanosoma brucei is an obligate parasite and causative agent of severe diseases affecting humans and livestock. The protist lives extracellularly in the bloodstream of the mammalian host, where it is prone to attacks by the host immune system. As a sophisticated means of defence against the immune response, the parasite's surface is coated in a dense layer of the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG), that reduces identification of invariant epitopes on the cell surface by the immune system to levels that prevent host immunity. The VSG has to form a coat that is both dense and mobile, to shield invariant surface proteins from detection and to allow quick recycling of the protective coat during immune evasion. This coat effectively protects the parasite from the harsh environment that is the mammalian bloodstream and leads to a persistent parasitemia if the infection remains untreated. The available treatment against African Trypanosomiasis involves the use of drugs that are themselves severely toxic and that can lead to the death of the patient. Most of the drugs used as treatment were developed in the early-to-mid 20th century, and while developments continue, they still represent the best medical means to fight the parasite. The discovery of a fluorescent VSG gave rise to speculations about a potential interaction between the VSG coat and components of the surrounding medium, that could also lead to a new approach in the treatment of African Trypanosomiasis that involves the VSG coat. The initially observed fluorescence signal was specific for a combination of a VSG called VSG'Y' and the triphenylmethane (TPM) dye phenol red. Exchanging this TPM to a bromo-derivative led to the observation of another fluorescence effect termed trypanicidal effect which killed the parasite independent of the expressed VSG and suggests a structurally conserved feature between VSGs that could function as a specific drug target against T. b. brucei. The work of this thesis aims to identify the mechanisms that govern the unique VSG'Y' fluorescence and the trypanocidal effect. Fluorescence experiments and protein mutagenesis of VSG'Y' as well as crystallographic trials with a range of different VSGs were utilized in the endeavour to identify the binding mechanisms between TPM compounds and VSGs, to find potentially conserved structural features between VSGs and to identify the working mechanisms of VSG fluorescence and the trypanocidal effect. These trials have the potential to lead to the formulation of highly specific drugs that target the parasites VSG coat. During the crystallographic trials of this thesis, the complete structure of a VSG was solved experimentally for the first time. This complete structure is a key component in furthering the understanding of the mechanisms governing VSG coat formation. X-ray scattering techniques, involving x-ray crystallography and small angle x-ray scattering were applied to elucidate the first complete VSG structures, which reveal high flexibility of the protein and supplies insight into the importance of this flexibility in the formation of a densely packed but highly mobile surface coat.}, subject = {Trypanosoma brucei brucei}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Shkumatov2011, author = {Shkumatov, Alexander V.}, title = {Methods for hybrid modeling of solution scattering data and their application}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-65044}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a universal low-resolution method to study proteins in solution and to analyze structural changes in response to variations of conditions (pH, temperature, ionic strength etc). SAXS is hardly limited by the particle size, being applicable to the smallest proteins and to huge macromolecular machines like ribosomes and viruses. SAXS experiments are usually fast and require a moderate amount of purified material. Traditionally, SAXS is employed to study the size and shape of globular proteins, but recent developments have made it possible to quantitatively characterize the structure and structural transitions of metastable systems, e.g. partially or completely unfolded proteins. In the absence of complementary information, low-resolution macromolecular shapes can be reconstructed ab initio and overall characteristics of the systems can be extracted. If a high or low-resolution structure or a predicted model is available, it can be validated against the experimental SAXS data. If the measured sample is polydisperse, the oligomeric state and/or oligomeric composition in solution can be determined. One of the most important approaches for macromolecular complexes is a combined ab initio/rigid body modeling, when the structures (either complete or partial) of individual subunits are available and SAXS data is employed to build the entire complex. Moreover, this method can be effectively combined with information from other structural, computational and biochemical methods. All the above approaches are covered in a comprehensive program suite ATSAS for SAXS data analysis, which has been developed at the EMBL-Hamburg. In order to meet the growing demands of the structural biology community, methods for SAXS data analysis must be further developed. This thesis describes the development of two new modules, RANLOGS and EM2DAM, which became part of ATSAS suite. The former program can be employed for constructing libraries of linkers and loops de novo and became a part of a combined ab initio/rigid body modeling program CORAL. EM2DAM can be employed to convert electron microscopy maps to bead models, which can be used for modeling or structure validation. Moreover, the programs CRYSOL and CRYSON, for computing X-ray and neutron scattering patterns from atomic models, respectively, were refurbished to work faster and new options were added to them. Two programs, to be contributed to future releases of the ATSAS package, were also developed. The first program generates a large pool of possible models using rigid body modeling program SASREF, selects and refines models with lowest discrepancy to experimental SAXS data using a docking program HADDOCK. The second program refines binary protein-protein complexes using the SAXS data and the high-resolution models of unbound subunits. Some results and conclusions from this work are presented here. The developed approaches detailed in this thesis, together with existing ATSAS modules were additionally employed in a number of collaborative projects. New insights into the "structural memory" of natively unfolded tau protein were gained and supramodular structure of RhoA-specific guanidine nucleotide exchange factor was reconstructed. Moreover, high resolution structures of several hematopoietic cytokine-receptor complexes were validated and re-modeled using the SAXS data. Important information about the oligomeric state of yeast frataxin in solution was derived from the scattering patterns recorded under different conditions and its flexibility was quantitatively characterized using the Ensemble Optimization Method (EOM).}, subject = {R{\"o}ntgen-Kleinwinkelstreuung}, language = {en} }