Publications by authors named "Steinhoff H"

Background: Advanced gastric cancer with synchronous peritoneal metastases (GC-PM) is associated with a poor prognosis. Although cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS-HIPEC) is a promising approach, only a limited number of Western studies exist.

Aim: To investigate the clinicopathological outcomes of patients who underwent CRS-HIPEC for GC-PM.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Knowledge about the specific affinity of whole cells toward a substrate, commonly referred to as k , is a crucial parameter for characterizing growth within bioreactors. State-of-the-art methodologies measure either uptake or consumption rates at different initial substrate concentrations. Alternatively, cell dry weight or respiratory data like online oxygen and carbon dioxide transfer rates can be used to estimate k .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microfluidic cultivation and single-cell analysis are inherent parts of modern microbial biotechnology and microbiology. However, implementing biochemical engineering principles based on the kinetics and stoichiometry of growth in microscopic spaces remained unattained. We here present a novel integrated framework that utilizes distinct microfluidic cultivation technologies and single-cell analytics to make the fundamental math of process-oriented biochemical engineering applicable at the single-cell level.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sticholysin I (StI) is a water-soluble protein with the ability to bind membranes where it oligomerizes and forms pores leading to cell death. Understanding the assembly property of this protein may be valuable for designing potential biotechnological tools, such as stable or structurally defined nanopores. In order to get insights into the stabilization of StI oligomers by disulfide bonds, we designed and characterized single and double cysteine mutants at the oligomerization interface.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amphiphilic copolymers consisting of alternating hydrophilic and hydrophobic units account for a major recent methodical breakthrough in the investigations of membrane proteins. Styrene-maleic acid (SMA), diisobutylene-maleic acid (DIBMA), and related copolymers have been shown to extract membrane proteins directly from lipid membranes without the need for classical detergents. Within the particular experimental setup, they form disc-shaped nanoparticles with a narrow size distribution, which serve as a suitable platform for diverse kinds of spectroscopy and other biophysical techniques that require relatively small, homogeneous, water-soluble particles of separate membrane proteins in their native lipid environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As a result of the steadily ongoing development of microfluidic cultivation (MC) devices, a plethora of setups is used in biological laboratories for the cultivation and analysis of different organisms. Because of their biocompatibility and ease of fabrication, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-glass-based devices are most prominent. Especially the successful and reproducible cultivation of cells in microfluidic systems, ranging from bacteria over algae and fungi to mammalians, is a fundamental step for further quantitative biological analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Lyophilization can extend protein drugs stability and shelf life, but it also can lead to protein degradation in some cases. The development of safe freeze-drying approaches for sensitive proteins requires a better understanding of lyophilization on the molecular level. The evaluation of the freezing process and its impact on the protein environment in the nm scale is challenging because feasible experimental methods are scarce.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The characterization of the interaction of sulfonamides with soil is of particular interest in environmental risk and persistence assessment. In the present work electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) was used to investigate the interaction kinetics of spin labelled sulfadiazine (SL-SDZ) with model clay-humic acid suspensions. The ESR spectra showed that SL-SDZ incubated with Leonardite humic acid (LHA) and Ca-hectorite as model clay was immobilized due to covalent binding of its aniline moiety to LHA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The function of proteins is linked to their conformations that can be resolved with several high-resolution methods. However, only a few methods can provide the temporal order of intermediates and conformational changes, with each having its limitations. Here, we combine pulsed electron-electron double resonance spectroscopy with a microsecond freeze-hyperquenching setup to achieve spatiotemporal resolution in the angstrom range and lower microsecond time scale.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amphiphilic diisobutylene/maleic acid (DIBMA) copolymers extract lipid-encased membrane proteins from lipid bilayers in a detergent-free manner, yielding nanosized, discoidal DIBMA lipid particles (DIBMALPs). Depending on the DIBMA/lipid ratio, the size of DIBMALPs can be broadly varied which makes them suitable for the incorporation of proteins of different sizes. Here, we examine the influence of the DIBMALP sizes and the presence of protein on the dynamics of encased lipids.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amphiphilic maleic acid-containing polymers allow for the direct extraction of membrane proteins into stable, homogenous, water-soluble copolymer/lipid nanoparticles without the use of detergents. By adjusting the polymer/lipid ratio, the size of the nanoparticles can be tuned at convenience for the incorporation of protein complexes of different size. However, an increase in the size of the lipid nanoparticles may correlate with increased sample heterogeneity, thus hampering their application to spectroscopic and structural techniques where highly homogeneous samples are desirable.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The cell wall sensor Wsc1 belongs to a small family of transmembrane proteins, which are crucial to sustain cell integrity in yeast and other fungi. Wsc1 acts as a mechanosensor of the cell wall integrity (CWI) signal transduction pathway which responds to external stresses. Here we report on the purification of Wsc1 by its trapping in water-soluble polymer-stabilized lipid nanoparticles, obtained with an amphipathic styrene-maleic acid (SMA) copolymer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Label-based functional studies of biomolecules in their native environment require labeling reactions inside living cells. In cell spin labeling using alkyne-azide click chemistry with a Gd3+-DOTAM-azide complex is shown to provide high spin label stability and narrow EPR lines for EPR spectroscopic detection of a spin labeled protein in living cells at ambient temperatures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amphiphilic maleic acid-containing copolymers account for a recent methodical breakthrough in the study of membrane proteins. Their application enables a detergent-free extraction of membrane proteins from lipid bilayers, yielding stable water-soluble, discoidal lipid bilayer particles with incorporated proteins, which are wrapped with copolymers. Although many studies confirm the potential of this approach for membrane protein research, the interactions between the maleic acid-containing copolymers and extracted lipids, as well as possible effects of the copolymers on lipid-embedded proteins deserve further scrutinization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Peroxidation of cardiolipin (CL) in the inner mitochondrial membrane plays a key role in the development of various pathologies and, probably, aging. The four fatty acid tails of CL are usually polyunsaturated, which makes CL particularly sensitive to peroxidation. Peroxidation of CL is involved in the initiation of apoptosis, as well as in some other important cellular signaling chains.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Energy-coupling factor (ECF) transporters for uptake of vitamins and transition-metal ions into prokaryotic cells share a common architecture consisting of a substrate-specific integral membrane protein (S), a transmembrane coupling protein (T) and two cytoplasmic ATP-binding-cassette-family ATPases. S components rotate within the membrane to expose their binding pockets alternately to the exterior and the cytoplasm. In contrast to vitamin transporters, metal-specific systems rely on additional proteins with essential but poorly understood functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sticholysin I (StI) is a toxin produced by the sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus and belonging to the actinoporins family. Upon binding to sphingomyelin-containing membranes StI forms oligomeric pores, thereby leading to cell death. According to recent controversial experimental evidences, the pore architecture of actinoporins is a debated topic.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Remote programming for adult cochlear implant (CI) users is feasible, safe, and effective. Limited evidence, however, exists on if remote CI programming can also be productively done with paediatric CI users.

Aims/objectives: To assess the safety and feasibility of remote CI programming in CI users for all ages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Up to half of the cellular energy gets lost owing to membrane proton leakage. The permeability of lipid bilayers to protons is by several orders of magnitude higher than to other cations, which implies efficient proton-specific passages. The nature of these passages remains obscure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Styrene-maleic acid lipid particles (SMALPs) provide stable water-soluble nanocontainers for lipid-encased membrane proteins. Possible effects of the SMA-stabilized lipid environment on the interaction dynamics between functionally coupled membrane proteins remain to be elucidated. The photoreceptor sensory rhodopsin II, NpSRII and its cognate transducer, NpHtrII, of Natronomonas pharaonis form a transmembrane complex, NpSRII /NpHtrII that plays a key role in negative phototaxis and provides a unique model system to study the light-induced transfer of a conformational signal between two integral membrane proteins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amphiphilic copolymers composed of styrene and maleic acid (SMA) monomers caused a major methodical breakthrough in the study of membrane proteins. They were found to directly release phospholipids and membrane proteins both from artificial and natural lipid bilayers, yielding stable water-soluble discoidal SMA/lipid particles (SMALPs) of uniform size. Although many empirical studies indicate the great potency of SMALPs for membrane protein research, the mechanisms of their formation remain obscure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Styrene-maleic acid (SMA) copolymers are used to extract lipid-encased membrane proteins from lipid bilayers in a detergent-free manner, yielding SMA lipid particles (SMALPs). SMALPs can serve as stable water-soluble nanocontainers for structural and functional studies of membrane proteins. Here, we used SMA copolymers to study full-length pore-forming α-subunits hKCNH5 and hKCNQ1 of human neuronal and cardiac voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels, as well as the fusion construct comprising of an α-subunit hKCNQ1 and its regulatory transmembrane KCNE1 β-subunit (hKCNE1-hKCNQ1) with added affinity tags, expressed in mammalian COS-1 cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is important to understand how the catalytic activity of enzymes is related to their conformational flexibility. We have studied this activity-flexibility correlation using the example of indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase from Sulfolobus solfataricus (ssIGPS), which catalyzes the fifth step in the biosynthesis of tryptophan. ssIGPS is a thermostable representative of enzymes with the frequently encountered and catalytically versatile (βα)-barrel fold.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ion channel gating is essential for cellular homeostasis and is tightly controlled. In some eukaryotic and most bacterial ligand-gated K channels, RCK domains regulate ion fluxes. Until now, a single regulatory mechanism has been proposed for all RCK-regulated channels, involving signal transduction from the RCK domain to the gating area.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Archaeal photoreceptors consist of sensory rhodopsins in complex with their cognate transducers. After light excitation, a two-component signaling chain is activated, which is homologous to the chemotactic signaling cascades in enterobacteria. The latter system has been studied in detail.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF