Fredrik Oberg’s research while affiliated with University of Gothenburg and other places

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Publications (7)


Fig. 1. Overall structure of human AQP2. (A) Overview of the AQP2 tetramer with half helices formed by loops B and E highlighted in yellow. (B) Overview of the AQP2 tetramer from the intracellular side. The color scheme for each of the protomers is used throughout the article (A, purple; B, magenta; C, pink; D, light pink).
Table 1 . Crystallographic data and refinement statistics
Fig. 2. Structure of the C and N termini. (A) Stereo image of the four AQP2 protomers (colored as in Fig. 1) overlaid on OaAQP0 [white; Protein Data Bank (PDB) ID code 2B60], BtAQP0 (light orange; PDB ID code 1YMG), BtAQP1 (gray; PDB ID code 1J4N), and HsAQP5 (cyan; PDB ID code 3D9S). The C termini of all four AQP2 protomers occupy different positions, none of which overlay with any of the previous AQP structures. (B) The crystal contact site between the C-terminal helix of monomer C (pink) and a symmetry-related protomer D (light pink). Leucines lining up on one side of the helix are labeled. (C) Overlay of the N termini of protomer A and D with HsAQP5 (cyan) and BtAQP1 (gray). For protomer A (purple), Glu3 interacts with Ser82 and Arg85, similar to the structural arrangement seen in AQP5. In contrast, protomer D (light pink) resembles BtAQP1 with TM helix 1 extending a full turn into the cytoplasm.
Fig. 3. Cd 2+ binding sites in AQP2. (A) Two Cd 2+ binding sites (Cd1 and Cd2) are found on the cytoplasmic side of the AQP2 tetramer. Yellow spheres represent Cd 2+. The interaction between the C-terminal helix of protomer C (pink) with protomer D (light pink) of a symmetry-related tetramer is also shown. (B) Electron density for the Cd1 site showing 2F obs-F calc map contoured at 1.5 σ (blue) and anomalous difference map contoured at 3.5 σ (orange). Residues serving as Cd 2+ ligands are shown in stick representation. Water molecules ligating the Cd 2+ ion are shown as red spheres. (C) Electron density for the Cd2 site showing a 2F obs-F calc map contoured at 1.2 σ (blue) and anomalous difference map contoured at 3.5 σ (orange). Cd 2+ ligands are displayed as in B. (D) Radioactive Ca 2+ binding assay illustrating how AQP2-expressing Xenopus oocytes bind significantly more 45 Ca 2+ (P < 0.05) than controls, suggesting that Ca 2+ is the physiological ligand for the Cd + binding sites. Mean ± SEM is given of three groups of 10 oocytes per condition.
Fig. 4. NDI-causing mutations in AQP2. (A) Overview of known NDI-causing mutations (yellow) in the AQP2 structure showing how these mostly affect the pore-forming regions. (B) Structural overlay of loop C from the four AQP2s showing the N-glycosylation site at Asn123. A comparison with other mammalian AQPs, here represented by AQP5 (cyan), shows that structure of AQP2 is markedly different at this site. Asn123 as well as two nearby NDI mutation sites, Thr125 and Thr126, are shown in stick representation. (C) Structure around the NDI mutation site at Asp150, showing its connections to Pro225 at the proximal end of the C-terminal tail via Arg152. Hydrogen bonds are indicated by dotted lines. Distances are shown in Å. (D) Close-up of the Cd1 site showing how Ser148 hydrogen bonds to the Cd 2+ ligand Gln57. Mutation of both these residues cause ER retention of AQP2. Bonds are indicated by dotted lines with distances shown in Å.

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X-ray structure of human aquaporin 2 and its implications for nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and trafficking
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April 2014

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737 Reads

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131 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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Significance Human aquaporin 2 (AQP2) is found in the kidney collecting duct, where it translocates water across the apical membrane and is crucial for urine concentration. AQP2 is regulated by trafficking between intracellular storage vesicles and the apical membrane, a process that is tightly controlled by the pituitary hormone arginine vasopressin. Defective AQP2 trafficking leads to nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), a water balance disorder characterized by large urine volumes, leading to dehydration. We have solved the X-ray structure of human AQP2 at 2.75 Å resolution. This structure deepens our molecular understanding of AQP2 trafficking, as well as serves as a structural scaffold for understanding why AQP2 mutations cause NDI.

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TABLE 1. P CO2 of cell membranes vs. cholesterol content 
Figure 1. Effects of cholesterol on CO 2 permeability of artificial phospholipid vesicles with l--phosphatidylcholine: l--phosphatidylserine (PC:PS) at a molar ratio of 8:2. Cholesterol content of the vesicle membranes varied between 0 and 70 mol% cholesterol per total lipids. Vesicle diameter for all concentrations of cholesterol was 150 nm. All vesicles had an intravesicular carbonic anhydrase activity of 10.000 (acceleration factor of the kinetics of CO 2 hydration). Mass spectrometric measurement was conducted at 37°C. A) Original records of mass spectrometric experiments with 70% cholesterol and 30% cholesterol in the vesicle membranes, respectively. On a logarithmic scale (y axis) the concentration of 18 O-labeled CO 2 in the fluid of the mass spectrometric measuring chamber (14, 16) minus its final value at isotopic equilibrium, is plotted vs. time (x axis). The first phase of both records represents the slow linear decay of C 18 O 16 O in the absence of any vesicles. The subsequent accelerated phases are initiated by the addition of vesicles into the chamber. P CO2 representing a given curve of C 18 O 16 O decay is determined by 3 parameters: amplitude and slope of the second (fast) phase and slope of the third phase of the record. P CO2 values obtained from the curves shown are given within the figure, and were calculated by the procedures described previously (10, 14, 16, 25). It should be appreciated that, as published previously (14, 16), these curves are extremely reproducible, and the curves calculated with the fitted vales of P CO2 (and bicarbonate permeability) are perfectly superimposed on and practically indistinguishable from the experimental curves. The reproducibility with which P CO2 values are derived from curves such as those shown becomes apparent in the sd values indicated in panel B. B) Dependency of P CO2 on membrane cholesterol content. Dashed line indicates a range of cholesterol concentrations, for which no or no reliable P CO2 values were obtained; solid lines connect data points representing measured mean P CO2 values; dotted line represents the linear regression of the data points between 30 and 70% cholesterol. The first 3 data points at 0, 5, and 17 mol% cholesterol are greater than or equal to than the upper limit of detectability of P CO2 by the mass spectrometric method, in this case 0.16 cm/s. It is possible that the P CO2 values at 5 and 17 mol% cholesterol are actually higher than the value at 0% cholesterol, as it has been reported that lipid bilayer permeability for small molecules may increase with increasing cholesterol up to 20 mol%, before it decreases with further increases in cholesterol content (49, 50). Between 17 and 30 mol% cholesterol P CO2 is seen to fall by 1 order of magnitude, and between 30 and 70 mol% it decreases by a further order of magnitude. Error bars sd; n 7–18.  
Figure 2. Effects of cholesterol on CO 2 permeability of MDCK cell membranes. Compared to the P CO2 of control MDCK cells (center bar), MDCK cells depleted of cholesterol by exposure to MCD exhibit a drastically increased P CO2 (0.75 cm/s; left bar) and MDCK cells loaded with cholesterol (right bar) show a P CO2 3 times lower than controls. Error bars se; n 12–20. Since the elevated P CO2 of the left bar is not a defined value but just a lower limit, statistical analysis was not possible. *P 0.05 vs. control.  
Figure 3. Effects on P CO2 of hAQP-1 and AqpZ reconstitution in phospholipid vesicles containing 50 mol% cholesterol, and effect of DIDS. A) Increase in CO 2 permeability over control, P CO2 , at various LPRs, i.e., moles of lipid per mole of aquaporin. For hAQP-1, a graded increase in P CO2 with increasing AQP concentration is seen. All P CO2 values between LPR 400 and 140 are significantly different from 0; AqpZ at an LPR of 200 is not significantly different from 0. Error bars se; n 9, 6, 8, 7, 12. ns, not significant. **P 0.02; ***P 0.01. B) Effect of 10 5 M DIDS on P CO2 of liposomes and proteoliposomes. While DIDS has no effect on control vesicles, it significantly inhibits the CO 2 permeability of hAQP-1. Error bars se; n 6 –9. *P 0.05. C) Visualization of reconstituted aquaporins in proteoliposomes by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. hAQP-1 at LPR 140 (a) and AqpZ at LPR 200 (b). Arrows indicate aquaporin tetramers. Number of vesicles analyzed per condition for determination of AQP density in the various vesicle membranes was 600 –900. Scale bar 100 nm.  
Figure 4. Expression of hAQP-1 in MDCK cells increases P CO2 . A) MDCK cells expressing hAQP-1 show an increased P CO2 . DIDS (10 5 M) has no effect on control MDCK cell P CO2 , but significantly decreases P CO2 in AQP-1-expressing MDCK cells. ns, not significant. Error bars se; n 7. **P 0.02 vs. control; $$ P 0.02 vs. hAQP1. B) Western blot showing that MDCK cells transfected with pCB6-hAQP-1 express hAQP-1 protein (arrow). Lane 1: lysed suspension of control cells transfected with empty vector pCB6, applied at a final dilution of cell pellet of 1:16. Lane 2: same sample at a dilution of 1:8. Lane 3: MDCK cells transfected with pCB6-hAQP-1, diluted 1:32. Lane 4: same sample diluted 1:16. Lane 5: same sample diluted 1:8. Lane 6: lysed human red blood cells, diluted 1:800, also showing hAQP-1. Right hand side: molecular mass scale (kDa).  
CO2 permeability of cell membranes is regulated by membrane cholesterol and protein gas channels

September 2012

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604 Reads

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100 Citations

Recent observations that some membrane proteins act as gas channels seem surprising in view of the classical concept that membranes generally are highly permeable to gases. Here, we study the gas permeability of membranes for the case of CO(2), using a previously established mass spectrometric technique. We first show that biological membranes lacking protein gas channels but containing normal amounts of cholesterol (30-50 mol% of total lipid), e.g., MDCK and tsA201 cells, in fact possess an unexpectedly low CO(2) permeability (P(CO2)) of ∼0.01 cm/s, which is 2 orders of magnitude lower than the P(CO2) of pure planar phospholipid bilayers (∼1 cm/s). Phospholipid vesicles enriched with similar amounts of cholesterol also exhibit P(CO2) ≈ 0.01 cm/s, identifying cholesterol as the major determinant of membrane P(CO2). This is confirmed by the demonstration that MDCK cells depleted of or enriched with membrane cholesterol show dramatic increases or decreases in P(CO2), respectively. We demonstrate, furthermore, that reconstitution of human AQP-1 into cholesterol-containing vesicles, as well as expression of human AQP-1 in MDCK cells, leads to drastic increases in P(CO2), indicating that gas channels are of high functional significance for gas transfer across membranes of low intrinsic gas permeability.-Itel, F., Al-Samir, S., Öberg, F., Chami, M., Kumar, M., Supuran, C. T., Deen, P. M. T., Meier, W., Hedfalk, K., Gros, G., Endeward, V. CO(2) permeability of cell membranes is regulated by membrane cholesterol and protein gas channels.


Recombinant production of the human aquaporins in the yeast Pichia pastoris (Invited Review)

August 2012

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44 Reads

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26 Citations

Molecular Membrane Biology

Abstract Aquaporins are water facilitating proteins embedded in the cellular membranes. Such channels have been identified in almost every living organism - including humans. These proteins are vital molecules and their malfunction can lead to several severe disorders and diseases. Hence, an increased understanding of their structure, function and regulation is of the utmost importance for developing current and future drugs. Heading towards this goal, the first problem to overcome is to acquire the proteins in sufficient amounts to enable functional and structural characterization. Using a suitable host organism, large amounts of target molecules can possibly be produced, but for membrane proteins limitations are frequently encountered. In the work described here, we have produced the 13 human aquaporins (hAQPs) in one of the most successful hosts for recombinant overproduction of eukaryotic proteins; the yeast Pichia pastoris, in order to explore the underlying bottleneck to a successful membrane protein production experiment. Here we present exceptional yield of hAQP1, whereas some other hAQPs were below the threshold needed for scaled up production. In the overproduction process, we have established methods for efficient production screening as well as for accurate determination of the initial production yield. Furthermore, we have optimized the yield of low producing targets, enabling studies of proteins previously out of reach, exemplified with hAQP4 as well as the homologue PfAQP. Taken together, our results. present insight into factors directing high production of eukaryotic membrane proteins together with suggestions on ways to optimize the recombinant production in the yeast P. pastoris.


Insight into factors directing high production of eukaryotic membrane proteins; Production of 13 human AQPs in Pichia pastoris

May 2009

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46 Reads

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44 Citations

Molecular Membrane Biology

Membrane proteins are key players in all living cells. To achieve a better understanding of membrane protein function, significant amounts of purified protein are required for functional and structural analyses. Overproduction of eukaryotic membrane proteins, in particular, is thus an essential yet non-trivial task. Hence, improved understanding of factors which direct a high production of eukaryotic membrane proteins is desirable. In this study we have compared the overproduction of all human aquaporins in the eukaryotic host Pichia pastoris. We report quantitated production levels of each homologue and the extent of their membrane localization. Our results show that the protein production levels vary substantially, even between highly homologous aquaporins. A correlation between the extents of membrane insertion with protein function also emerged, with a higher extent of membrane insertion for pure water transporters compared to aquaporin family members with other substrate specificity. Nevertheless, the nucleic acid sequence of the second codon appears to play an important role in overproduction. Constructs containing guanine at the first position of this codon (being part of the mammalian Kozak sequence) are generally produced at a higher level, which is confirmed for hAQP8. In addition, mimicking the yeast consensus sequence (ATGTCT) apparently has a negative influence on the production level, as shown for hAQP1. Moreover, by mutational analysis we show that the yield of hAQP4 can be heavily improved by directing the protein folding pathway as well as stabilizing the aquaporin tetramer.


A Lipidic-Sponge Phase Screen for Membrane Protein Crystallization

August 2008

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109 Reads

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63 Citations

Structure

A major current deficit in structural biology is the lack of high-resolution structures of eukaryotic membrane proteins, many of which are key drug targets for the treatment of disease. Numerous eukaryotic membrane proteins require specific lipids for their stability and activity, and efforts to crystallize and solve the structures of membrane proteins that do not address the issue of lipids frequently end in failure rather than success. To help address this problem, we have developed a sparse matrix crystallization screen consisting of 48 lipidic-sponge phase conditions. Sponge phases form liquid lipid bilayer environments which are suitable for conventional hanging- and sitting-drop crystallization experiments. Using the sponge phase screen, we obtained crystals of several different membrane proteins from bacterial and eukaryotic sources. We also demonstrate how the screen may be manipulated by incorporating specific lipids such as cholesterol; this modification led to crystals being recovered from a bacterial photosynthetic core complex.


Production, characterization and crystallization of the Plasmodium falciparum aquaporin

June 2008

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37 Reads

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27 Citations

Protein Expression and Purification

The causative agent of malaria, Plasmodium falciparum posses a single aquaglyceroporin (PfAQP) which represents a potential drug target for treatment of the disease. PfAQP is localized to the parasite membrane to transport water, glycerol, ammonia and possibly glycolytic intermediates. In order to enable design of inhibitors we set out to determine the 3D structure of PfAQP, where the first bottleneck to overcome is achieving high enough yield of recombinant protein. The wild type PfAQP gene was expressed to low or undetectable levels in the expression hosts, Escherichia coli and Pichia pastoris, which was assumed to be due to different genomic A+T content and different codon usage. Thus, two codon-optimized PfAQP genes were generated. The Opt-PfAQP for E. coli still did not result in high production yields, possibly due to folding problems. However, PfAQP optimized for P. pastoris was successfully expressed in P. pastoris for production and in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for functional studies. In S. cerevisiae, PfAQP mediated glycerol transport but unexpectedly water transport could not be confirmed. Following high-level membrane-localized expression in P. pastoris (estimated to 64mg PfAQP per liter cell culture) PfAQP was purified to homogeneity (18mg/L) and initial attempts at crystallization of the protein yielded several different forms.


Exceptional overproduction of a functional human membrane protein

December 2007

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128 Reads

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67 Citations

Protein Expression and Purification

Eukaryotic--especially human--membrane protein overproduction remains a major challenge in biochemistry. Heterologously overproduced and purified proteins provide a starting point for further biochemical, biophysical and structural studies, and the lack of sufficient quantities of functional membrane proteins is frequently a bottleneck hindering this. Here, we report exceptionally high production levels of a correctly folded and crystallisable recombinant human integral membrane protein in its active form; human aquaporin 1 (hAQP1) has been heterologously produced in the membranes of the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. After solubilisation and a two step purification procedure, at least 90 mg hAQP1 per liter of culture is obtained. Water channel activity of this purified hAQP1 was verified by reconstitution into proteoliposomes and performing stopped-flow vesicle shrinkage measurements. Mass spectrometry confirmed the identity of hAQP1 in crude membrane preparations, and also from purified protein reconstituted into proteoliposomes. Furthermore, crystallisation screens yielded diffraction quality crystals of untagged recombinant hAQP1. This study illustrates the power of the yeast P. pastoris as a host to produce exceptionally high yields of a functionally active, human integral membrane protein for subsequent functional and structural characterization.

Citations (7)


... Leading to decrease in the expression of AQP2 cannels. The mutations can also inhibit the function of AQP2 channels via disturbing the formations of poreforming structure of AQP2 cannels (10) . Diagrams is adopted and updated from Moeller et al. (8) Acquired NDI: Acquired NDI syndromes are the most common forms of NDI, which can decrease water reabsorption by either reducing the expression of AQP2 channels in the apical membrane, or by disturbing AQP2 trafficking to the apical membrane (5) . ...

Reference:

Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus: potential treatments and their mechanisms of action. Morphometric evaluation of bony nasolacrimal canal in Libyan adults in Benghazi using CT scan
X-ray structure of human aquaporin 2 and its implications for nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and trafficking

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... Because of their localization and the blood-brain barrier, only RBC cholesterol can freely exchange with plasma lipoproteins. Itel et al. [36] reported the first experiments showing that the permeability of cell membranes for carbon dioxide appears to be regulated by membrane cholesterol content, so there is an obvious effect on the tissue oxygen delivery. Cooper suggested: RBC membrane is sensitive to the C/PL ratio of the plasma, meaning, that increasing membrane C/PL by the exchange with plasma causes a decrease in membrane fluidity, and these changes are associated with a reduction in membrane permeability, a distortion of cell contour and deformability, as well as a shortening of the survival of RBCs in vivo [37]. ...

CO2 permeability of cell membranes is regulated by membrane cholesterol and protein gas channels

... In our investigation, we optimized the production protocol for BoPIP1;2 and BoPIP2;2 proteins from B. oleracea using P. pastoris. We focused on enhancing translation initiation by replacing the start codon ATG [19] with the sequence aaaATGtct, known for its suitability in yeast expression systems [20]. Furthermore, we screened clones at different zeocin concentrations to identify those with the highest gene dosage, as gene dosage correlates with protein production [10]. ...

Recombinant production of the human aquaporins in the yeast Pichia pastoris (Invited Review)
  • Citing Article
  • August 2012

Molecular Membrane Biology

... True to his generous and supportive nature, Stefan encouraged Roslyn to be the sole corresponding author on that first article and he encouraged us both to pursue our independent research interests. One of those was the development of yeast as a host for the production of recombinant membrane proteins (Bill 2001, Oberg et al. 2009, Bill et al. 2011, Oberg and Hedfalk 2013, which is a line of investigation that we have continued to collaborate upon (Nyblom et al. 2007, Oberg et al. 2011, Bill and Hedfalk 2021. ...

Insight into factors directing high production of eukaryotic membrane proteins; Production of 13 human AQPs in Pichia pastoris
  • Citing Article
  • May 2009

Molecular Membrane Biology

... Work here confirmed the feasibility of singlechannel patch-clamp analysis of recombinant hAQP1 reconstituted into proteoliposomes and quantified novel properties of the channel. Recombinant hAQP1 with carboxy-terminal Myc and histidine tags (hAQP1-Myc-His 6 ) was produced at a high purity and concentration from P. pastoris as described previously (43) and was demonstrated to be functional with respect to both water and ion-channel activities. Reconstitution of hAQP1-Myc-His 6 into proteoliposomes using a method adapted from Delcour et al. (40) enabled recordings of single channels of large conductance that were attributable to hAQP1. ...

Exceptional overproduction of a functional human membrane protein
  • Citing Article
  • December 2007

Protein Expression and Purification

... Maintenance of hydrohomeostasis, uptake of nutrients, and excretion of metabolic wastes across the cell membrane are essential for all cells to proliferate or even to survive. Some of these essential tasks are accomplished by two subfamilies of aquaporins (AQPs) [14][15][16][17][18][19][20]: the water channel proteins (aquaporins) and the glycerol channel proteins (aquaglyceroporins) that also conduct water. In fact, the human body expresses a total of 13 types of AQPs, having multiple types of AQPs in a single cell of various tissues to redundantly fulfill the essential tasks of conducting water, glycerol, etc. Intriguingly, P. berghei only expresses a single type of AQP, the multifunctional aquaglyceroporin PbAQP for the multiple essential tasks and so does P. falciparum [21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28]. ...

Production, characterization and crystallization of the Plasmodium falciparum aquaporin
  • Citing Article
  • June 2008

Protein Expression and Purification

... To add to the significance of the sponge phase, other membrane proteins had previously been crystallised from the sponge phase directly, but the solution of the human β 2 adrenergic Gprotein-coupled receptor demonstrates the significance of the method [30][31][32] . Understanding the exact mechanisms of LCP remains an area of extensive study, with Zabara et al. demonstrating that the sponge phase can play an important intermediary role in the crystallogenesis of membrane protein crystals 33 . ...

A Lipidic-Sponge Phase Screen for Membrane Protein Crystallization
  • Citing Article
  • August 2008

Structure