S

Sander E. Van der Verren

The Francis Crick Institute

ORCID: 0000-0002-8783-1194

Publishes on Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology, Bacteriophages and microbial interactions, Enzyme Structure and Function. 14 papers and 596 citations.

14Publications
596Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The Role of Functional Amyloids in Bacterial Virulence
Nani Van Gerven, Sander E. Van der Verren, Dirk M. Reiter et al.|Journal of Molecular Biology|2018
Cited by 174Open Access

Amyloid fibrils are best known as a product of human and animal protein misfolding disorders, where amyloid formation is associated with cytotoxicity and disease. It is now evident that for some proteins, the amyloid state constitutes the native structure and serves a functional role. These functional amyloids are proving widespread in bacteria and fungi, fulfilling diverse functions as structural components in biofilms or spore coats, as toxins and surface-active fibers, as epigenetic material, peptide reservoirs or adhesins mediating binding to and internalization into host cells. In this review, we will focus on the role of functional amyloids in bacterial pathogenesis. The role of functional amyloids as virulence factor is diverse but mostly indirect. Nevertheless, functional amyloid pathways deserve consideration for the acute and long-term effects of the infectious disease process and may form valid antimicrobial targets.

Structural mechanism of AadA, a dual-specificity aminoglycoside adenylyltransferase from Salmonella enterica
A.L. Stern, Sander E. Van der Verren, Sandesh Kanchugal P et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|2018
Cited by 46Open Access

Streptomycin and spectinomycin are antibiotics that bind to the bacterial ribosome and perturb protein synthesis. The clinically most prevalent bacterial resistance mechanism is their chemical modification by aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes such as aminoglycoside nucleotidyltransferases (ANTs). AadA from Salmonella enterica is an aminoglycoside (3″)(9) adenylyltransferase that O-adenylates position 3″ of streptomycin and position 9 of spectinomycin. We previously reported the apo-AadA structure with a closed active site. To clarify how AadA binds ATP and its two chemically distinct drug substrates, we here report crystal structures of WT AadA complexed with ATP, magnesium, and streptomycin and of an active-site mutant, E87Q, complexed with ATP and streptomycin or the closely related dihydrostreptomycin. These structures revealed that ATP binding induces a conformational change that positions the two domains for drug binding at the interdomain cleft and disclosed the interactions between both domains and the three rings of streptomycin. Spectinomycin docking followed by molecular dynamics simulations suggested that, despite the limited structural similarities with streptomycin, spectinomycin makes similar interactions around the modification site and, in agreement with mutational data, forms critical interactions with fewer residues. Using structure-guided sequence analyses of ANT(3″)(9) enzymes acting on both substrates and ANT(9) enzymes active only on spectinomycin, we identified sequence determinants for activity on each substrate. We experimentally confirmed that Trp-173 and Asp-178 are essential only for streptomycin resistance. Activity assays indicated that Glu-87 is the catalytic base in AadA and that the nonadenylating E87Q mutant can hydrolyze ATP in the presence of streptomycin. Streptomycin and spectinomycin are antibiotics that bind to the bacterial ribosome and perturb protein synthesis. The clinically most prevalent bacterial resistance mechanism is their chemical modification by aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes such as aminoglycoside nucleotidyltransferases (ANTs). AadA from Salmonella enterica is an aminoglycoside (3″)(9) adenylyltransferase that O-adenylates position 3″ of streptomycin and position 9 of spectinomycin. We previously reported the apo-AadA structure with a closed active site. To clarify how AadA binds ATP and its two chemically distinct drug substrates, we here report crystal structures of WT AadA complexed with ATP, magnesium, and streptomycin and of an active-site mutant, E87Q, complexed with ATP and streptomycin or the closely related dihydrostreptomycin. These structures revealed that ATP binding induces a conformational change that positions the two domains for drug binding at the interdomain cleft and disclosed the interactions between both domains and the three rings of streptomycin. Spectinomycin docking followed by molecular dynamics simulations suggested that, despite the limited structural similarities with streptomycin, spectinomycin makes similar interactions around the modification site and, in agreement with mutational data, forms critical interactions with fewer residues. Using structure-guided sequence analyses of ANT(3″)(9) enzymes acting on both substrates and ANT(9) enzymes active only on spectinomycin, we identified sequence determinants for activity on each substrate. We experimentally confirmed that Trp-173 and Asp-178 are essential only for streptomycin resistance. Activity assays indicated that Glu-87 is the catalytic base in AadA and that the nonadenylating E87Q mutant can hydrolyze ATP in the presence of streptomycin.