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Otto Epp

Bio: Otto Epp is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photosynthetic reaction centre & Erythrocruorin. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 29 publications receiving 8165 citations. Previous affiliations of Otto Epp include Munich University of Applied Sciences.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Johann Deisenhofer1, Otto Epp1, K. Miki1, Robert Huber1, Hartmut Michel1 
01 Dec 1985-Nature
TL;DR: The molecular structure of the photosynthetic reaction centre from Rhodopseudomonas viridis has been elucidated using X-ray crystallographic analysis and the first description of the high-resolution structure of an integral membrane protein is presented.
Abstract: The molecular structure of the photosynthetic reaction centre from Rhodopseudomonas viridis has been elucidated using X-ray crystallographic analysis. The central part of the complex consists of two subunits, L and M, each of which forms five membrane-spanning helices. We present the first description of the high-resolution structure of an integral membrane protein.

2,910 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Johann Deisenhofer1, Otto Epp1, K. Miki1, Robert Huber1, Hartmut Michel1 
TL;DR: In this paper, an atomic model of the prosthetic groups of the reaction center complex (4 bacteriochlorophyll b, 2 bacteriopheophytin b, 1 non-heme iron, 1 menaquinone, 4 heme groups) was built.

1,737 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A general picture of a minimal reaction mechanism, in good agreement with functional and structural data, is proposed and a reasonable model of glutathione binding is presented.
Abstract: The crystal structure of bovine erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase has been refined by a combined procedure of restrained crystallographic refinement and energy minimization at 0.20 nm resolution. The final R value at this resolution is 0.178. The r.m.s. deviation of main-chain atoms of the two independently refined monomers is 0.019 nm. The structure at 0.28 nm resolution, which has been determined by multiple isomorphous replacement, served as a starting model. The refined model allowed a detailed survey of the hydrogen-bonding pattern and of the subunit contact areas in the molecule. The model contains 165 solvent molecules per dimer, all taken as water molecules. The mobility of the structure was derived from the individual atomic temperature factors. The complete tetramer, including the active sites, seems to be rather rigid, except for narrow loops near to the N-terminal ends and some β turns exposed to solvent. The active centres of glutathione peroxidase are found in flat depressions on the molecular surface. The catalytically active selenocysteine residues could be located at the N-terminal ends of α helices forming βαβ substructures together with two adjacent parallel β strands. In the vicinity of the reactive group some aromatic amino acid side-chains could be localized. Especially Trp-148, which could be hydrogen bonded to SeCys-35, may play a functional role during catalysis. The results of substrate and inhibitor binding studies in solution and in the crystalline state could be interpreted by an apparent half-site reactivity of glutathione peroxidase. The enzyme seems to react in the sense of negative cooperativity with dimers being the functional units. Based on difference Fourier analyses of appropriate derivatives a reasonable model of glutathione binding is presented. Among the residues which could be of functional importance are Arg-40, Gln-130 and Arg-167, presumably forming salt bridges and a hydrogen bond to the glutathione molecule. In conclusion, a general picture of a minimal reaction mechanism, which is in good agreement with functional and structural data, is proposed. The main reaction of the catalytic cycle presumably shuttles between the selenolate and the selenenic acid state of SeCys-35.

629 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The atomic model of the photosynthetic reaction centre from the purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis has been refined to an R-value of 0.193 at 2.3 A resolution, and a group of about 10 water molecules is bound near the binding site of the secondary quinone QB.

594 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An X‐ray structure analysis of the photosynthetic reaction centre from the purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis provides structural details of the pigment‐binding sites that may help to understand why only one branch of pigments is active in the light‐driven electron transfer.
Abstract: An X-ray structure analysis of the photosynthetic reaction centre from the purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis provides structural details of the pigment-binding sites. The photosynthetic pigments are found in rather hydrophobic environments provided by the subunits L and M. In addition to apolar interactions, the bacteriochlorophylls of the primary electron donor (`special pair') and the bacteriopheophytins, but not the accessory bacteriochlorophylls, form hydrogen bonds with amino acid side chains of these protein subunits. The two branches of pigments which originate at the primary electron donor, and which mark possible electron pathways across the photosynthetic membrane, are in different environments and show different hydrogen bonding with the protein: this may help to understand why only one branch of pigments is active in the light-driven electron transfer. The primary electron acceptor, a menaquinone (QA), is in a pocket formed by the M subunit and interacts with it by hydrophobic contacts and hydrogen bonds. Competitive inhibitors of the secondary quinone QB (o-phenanthroline, the herbicide terbutryn) are bound into a pocket provided by the L subunit. Apart from numerous van der Waals interactions they also form hydrogen bonds to the protein.

533 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the electron transfer reactions between ions and molecules in solution have been the subject of considerable experimental study during the past three decades, including charge transfer, photoelectric emission spectra, chemiluminescent electron transfer, and electron transfer through frozen media.

7,155 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: This chapter investigates the anatomy and taxonomy of protein structures, based on the results of three-dimensional X-ray crystallography of globular proteins.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter investigates the anatomy and taxonomy of protein structures. A protein is a polypeptide chain made up of amino acid residues linked together in a definite sequence. Amino acids are “handed,” and naturally occurring proteins contain only L-amino acids. A simple mnemonic for that purpose is the “corncrib.” The sequence of side chains determines all that is unique about a particular protein, including its biological function and its specific three-dimensional structure. The major possible routes to knowledge of three-dimensional protein structure are prediction from the amino acid sequence and analysis of spectroscopic measurements such as circular dichroism, laser Raman spectroscopy, and nuclear magnetic resonance. The analysis and discussion of protein structure is based on the results of three-dimensional X-ray crystallography of globular proteins. The basic elements of protein structures are discussed. The most useful level at which protein structures are to be categorized is the domain, as there are many cases of multiple-domain proteins in which each separate domain resembles other entire smaller proteins. The simplest type of stable protein structure consists of polypeptide backbone wrapped more or less uniformly around the outside of a single hydrophobic core. The outline of the taxonomy is also provided in the chapter.

3,201 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Mar 1988-Nature
TL;DR: A human IgGI antibody has been reshaped for serotherapy in humans by introducing the six hypervariable regions from the heavy- and light-chain variable domains of a rat antibody directed against human lymphocytes.
Abstract: A human IgGI antibody has been reshaped for serotherapy in humans by introducing the six hypervariable regions from the heavy- and light-chain variable domains of a rat antibody directed against human lymphocytes. The reshaped human antibody is as effective as the rat antibody in complement and is more effective in cell-mediated lysis of human lymphocytes.

3,167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
19 Mar 2004-Science
TL;DR: The data strongly suggest that the OEC contains a cubane-like Mn3CaO4 cluster linked to a fourth Mn by a mono-μ-oxo bridge, and the details of the surrounding coordination sphere of the metal cluster and the implications for a possible oxygen-evolving mechanism are discussed.
Abstract: Photosynthesis uses light energy to drive the oxidation of water at an oxygen-evolving catalytic site within photosystem II (PSII). We report the structure of PSII of the cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus at 3.5 angstrom resolution. We have assigned most of the amino acid residues of this 650-kilodalton dimeric multisubunit complex and refined the structure to reveal its molecular architecture. Consequently, we are able to describe details of the binding sites for cofactors and propose a structure of the oxygen-evolving center (OEC). The data strongly suggest that the OEC contains a cubane-like Mn 3 CaO 4 cluster linked to a fourth Mn by a mono-μ-oxo bridge. The details of the surrounding coordination sphere of the metal cluster and the implications for a possible oxygen-evolving mechanism are discussed.

3,112 citations