|
|
||||||||
Department of Structural Biology, Max-Planck-Institute of Biochemistry, 82152 Martinsried, Germany
Reprint requests to: Wolfgang Baumeister, Department of Structural Biology, Max-Planck-Institute of Biochemistry, Am Klopferspitz 18, 82152 Martinsried, Germany; e-mail: baumeist{at}biochem.mpg.de; fax: +49-89-8578-2641.
Article and publication are at http://www.proteinscience.org/cgi/doi/10.1110/ps.041148605.
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Apprenticeship with great freedom |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Helmut Ruska was preoccupied with administrative duties during my time as a graduate student in his laboratory and, as a consequence, his supervision of me was very casual. Nevertheless, he was very supportive and he gave me all the resources I needed for my work. In late August 1973, only a few months after receiving my Ph.D., Helmut Ruska died after a short illness.
I had offers from other places, but decided to stay in Düsseldorf, and since it took several years until a successor for Helmut Ruska was found, I enjoyed complete freedom during my postdoctoral years. Thanks to benevolent reviewers, I obtained my first grant in 1974 and I began to work on radiation damagethe electron microscopists greatest foe. I used a variety of methods for a quantitative assessment of radiation damage in lipids and proteins under the conditions encountered in electron microscopy (Baumeister et al. 1976; Hahn et al. 1976). My hope was that a better understanding of the underlying radiation chemistry might enable us to find a remedya vain hope as it turned out (Baumeister 1978).
| Heading into new directions |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Having read about a bacterium of legendary radiation resistance, Micrococcus radiodurans (now Deinococcus radiodurans), and knowing from the literature that a regular protein layer was a component of its cell wall, I focused my work on this structure. Before long, I obtained decent micrographs of this structure (Fig. 2A
), which I called the hexagonally-packed-intermediate (HPI)-layer, but I ran into a dilemma with the image processing. After having done some initial experiments with optical filtration, I became convinced that computer methods were the future; however, with the notable exception of Walter Hoppe in Munich, optical methods were preferred to computer methods in Germany at the time. The arguments in favor of optical image processing (averaging and correction of contrast transfer function) were the size of the images that could be processed and the speed. The downside was lack of flexibility, and the fabrication of suitable masks became a serious bottleneck. Since I had neither access to the necessary infrastructure nor the know-how for computer-based processing, I started a collaboration with Olaf Kübler at the ETH in Zürich who was in an inverse position: He had the software and the hardware that was needed but no data. In the following years, we made substantial progress in elucidating the molecular architecture of the D. radiodurans cell envelope (Baumeister and Kübler 1978; Kübler and Baumeister 1978; Baumeister et al. 1981, 1982).
|
| The first decade in Martinsried: Studying protein architecture on prokaryotic cell surfaces |
|---|
|
|
|---|
I remained unconvinced, and felt that the clever tactics of "single particle analysis" as pioneered by Joachim Frank, a former student of Hoppe, and Marin van Heel at the Fritz-Haber-Institute in Berlin held greater promise. Not only did their approach greatly simplify data acquisition, the combination of intelligent image classification procedures and extensive averaging had the great advantage of yielding significant and interpretable structural data (for a recent review, see Frank 2002). In all fairness, I must add that in spite of a fierce public dispute I had with Walter Hoppe a few years earlier (Baumeister and Hahn 1975; Hoppe et al. 1975) and divergent views on the course to take, he was, in general, supportive when I arrived in Martinsried and began to set up my laboratory. We continued our work with the HPI-layer; a 3-D model was generated in due course and, using cryomicroscopy, an 8 Å projection map was also obtained (Baumeister et al. 1986; Rachel et al. 1986; Fig. 2B
).
With the plentiful resources now at our disposal, we not only extended our structural studies to several other bacterial surface layers, we also widened our repertoire of methods. Our comparative structural studies revealed some common architectural principles (Baumeister et al. 1986, 1988) and sequence analyses led to the identification of new motifs (Peters et al. 1987, 1989; Lupas et al. 1994) such as the S-layer homology domain (for a recent review, see Engelhardt and Peters 1998) but the biological function of Slayers remained an enigma. Intuitively, I still feel that there must be some function beyond mediating adhesion to animate or inanimate surfaces or protecting underlying components of the cell envelope, but this remains pure speculation.
Colleagues in Martinsried (Wolfram Zillig) and in Regensburg (Karl-Otto Stetter) introduced me to the exciting world of extremophiles. Most hyperthermophiles belong to the archaeal domain of life where (glyco)protein surface layers are common. They represent the main macromolecular component of the cell envelope and are intimately associated with the plasma membrane. Some show a high degree of order and have a role in maintaining and possibly determining cell shape (Wildhaber and Baumeister 1987; Phipps et al. 1991b) while others form poorly ordered and flexible surface networks on pleomorphic cells (Wildhaber et al. 1987; Peters et al. 1995). In spite of their apparent diversity, archaeal surface layers have some common structural principles: A stalk of variable length (1070 nm) emanates from a membrane-anchoring domain and connects to a highly variable (filiform or bulky) domain that forms a canopy-like layer by means of end-to-end contacts enclosing a quasi-periplasmic space (Baumeister and Lembcke 1992). A periplasmic space of unusual width and maintained by a rod-shaped spacer protein (Omp
) is also found in the hyperthermophilic ancestral bacterium Thermotoga maritima (Engel et al. 1992; Lupas et al. 1995).
The structural principles of archaeal surface layer proteins is exemplified particularly clearly by tetrabrachion, the giant glycoprotein found on the surface of Staphylothermus marinus, where it forms a poorly ordered, branched network (Peters et al. 1995). This filiform molecule is anchored in the cell membrane at the C-terminal end of a 70-nm-long stalk and branches at the other end into four arms, each of 24 nm length, which form the canopy-like meshwork. A hybrid approach, which used EM and biochemical data as well as molecular biology and bioinformatics, led to a very detailed model structure (Fig. 3
; Peters et al. 1996), the salient features of which, in the meantime, have been confirmed by X-ray crystallography (Stetefeld et al. 2000). The C-terminal part is formed by a right-handed, coiled coil of four
-helices; the almost flawless pattern of aliphatic residues, mainly leucine and isoleucine, throughout the hydrophobic core of the stalk provides an explanation for its exceptional stability. At a proline residue, the stalk switches from a right-handed supercoil to a left-handed one. At a flexible glycine-rich hinge region, the stalk branches into four arms, each formed by a "heavy chain" and a "light chain", which in turn are each derived from the translated 1524-residue polypeptide by internal proteolytic cleavage. The most likely topology of the arms is a three-stranded coil of antiparallel
-sheets. There is a patch of negative charges on the outer face of the coiled coil near the middle of the stalk, which serves as an anchoring device for a large, hyperthermostable protease of the subtilisin family; in the stalk-bound form the protease is resistant to heat inactivation up to a temperature of 125°C (Mayr et al. 1996), while the stalk withstands heating up to 130°C. Obviously, one function of the Staphylothermus surface layer is to provide an extracellular holding compartment for a protease that could otherwise cause havoc.
|
| The next decade: Proteasomes, thermosomes, and other elements of intracellular protein quality control |
|---|
|
|
|---|
By 1990, the 20S proteasome was structurally rather featureless and its subunit composition and stoichiometry were ill-defined. Reports that proteasomes could undergo changes in subunit composition during development (Haass and Kloetzel 1989) made its structural analysis a daunting challenge, since structural methods rely, in one guise or another, on averaging and, therefore, on homogeneous preparations of molecules. This led us to search for proteasomes of hopefully simpler subunit composition in prokaryotic cells. While our initial attempts to find proteasomes in bacteria were unsuccessful, we found them in the archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum (Dahlmann et al. 1989). The Thermoplasma proteasome turned out to be very similar in size and shape to proteasomes from eukaryotic cells, but much simpler in subunit composition; it comprises only two subunits,
(25.8 kDa) and
(22.3 kDa). The two subunits have significant sequence similarity, suggesting that they arose from a common ancestor via gene duplication (Zwickl et al. 1991, 1992a). Due to its relative simplicity, the ensuing years saw the Thermoplasma proteasome play a pivotal role in elucidating the structure and enzymatic mechanism of this intriguing protein degradation machine.
In 1991, a first, three-dimensional structure of the Thermoplasma proteasome was obtained by EM single particle analysis, showing with remarkable clarity the organization of the barrel-shaped complex with its tripartite inner compartment (Hegerl et al. 1991). Immunoelectron microscopy studies allowed us to assign the
-subunits to the two outer rings of the barrel, and the
-subunits to the inner rings (Grziwa et al. 1991). Mass measurements by STEM helped us to establish the stoichiometry (
7
7
7
7), and metal decoration studies of proteasome crystals (not yet good enough for high resolution X-ray crystallography) clearly revealed the symmetry of the 20S complex. The structural model we put forward on the basis of these data stood the test of time and it recurred in all proteasomes, eukaryotic and prokaryotic (Pühler et al. 1992).
Another important advance was the expression of fully assembled and functional 20S proteasomes in Escherichia coli (Zwickl et al. 1992b; Fig. 4A
). It not only allowed us to perform systematic mutagenesis studies aimed at identifying the active site, it also greatly facilitated the growth of crystals diffracting to high resolution (Jap et al. 1993). In 1995, the crystal structure analysis was completed in a collaboration with the group of Robert Huber (Löwe et al. 1995; Fig. 4B
). The long-sought catalytic nucleophile of the 20S proteasome, the N-terminal threonine of the mature
-subunit was identified independently and almost simultaneously by site-directed mutagenesis and crystal structure analysis (Löwe et al. 1995; Seemüller et al. 1995). As anticipated from their sequence similarity the (noncatalytic)
-and the (catalytic)
-type subunits showed the same fold: a four-layer
+
structure with two antiparallel five-stranded
-sheets, flanked on one side by two, and on the other side by three
-helices. In the
-type subunits, the
-sheet sandwich is closed at one end by four hairpin loops and opens at the opposite end to form the active-site cleft; the cleft is oriented toward the inner surface of the central cavity. In the
-type subunits, an additional helix formed by an N-terminal extension crosses the top of the
-sheet sandwich and fills this cleft. Initially, the proteasome fold was believed to be unique; however, it turned out to be common to a new superfamily of proteins referred to as Ntn (N-terminal nucleophile) hydrolases (Brannigan et al. 1995). Beyond the common fold, members of this family share the mechanisms of the nucleophilic attack and self-processing (for reviews, see Baumeister et al. 1998; Dodson and Wlodawer 1998; Seemüller et al. 2001; Zwickl et al. 2002).
|
-rings which give access to the two "antechambers" are narrow and partially obstructed, while the constrictions which regulate access to the central cavity are wider. We were able to show with Nanogold-labeled substrates, visible in electron micrographs, that polypeptides indeed enter the proteasome via the orifice at the center of the
-rings. Bulky additions to the polypeptide chain, such as a gold cluster, prevent passage into the interior, suggesting that the discrimination between folded and unfolded substrates is based on a size-exclusion mechanism (Wenzel and Baumeister 1995). Thus the 20S proteasome is a molecular nano-compartment that confines the proteolytic reaction to its interior and sequesters it from the crowded environment of the cell. Interestingly, formation of the active sites by the posttranslational removal of the propeptides of the
-subunits (Seemüller et al. 1996) is coupled to the assembly of the 20S proteasome in such a manner that activation is delayed until the assembly is complete (for review, see Seemüller et al. 2001). This led us to propose the concept of self-compartmentalization as a regulatory principle (Lupas et al. 1997; Baumeister et al. 1998). As mentioned earlier, it began to transpire in the early 1990s that the 20S proteasome of eukaryotes associates with regulatory complexes, in an ATP-dependent manner, to form the 26S proteasome. Now it is firmly established that this 2.5 MDa complex altogether comprising more than 30 different subunits acts downstream in the ubiquitinproteasome pathway and is the central player in intracellular proteolysis. Proteins destined for degradation are marked by covalent attachment of Ub chains, which mediate recognition by the 26S proteasome (for recent reviews, see Hershko and Ciechanover 1998; Voges et al. 1999). In 1993, we were able to provide the first detailed description of the 26S complex, based on electron microscopy and image analysis (Peters et al. 1993). The averages showing the regulatory (19S) particles attached to one or both ends of the 20S proteasome core particle (the "dragon-head" or "double dragon-head" motif) became the classical textbook images of the 26S proteasome. Since then, however, progress has been embarrassingly slow; the notorious instability of the complex and its dynamics have made it very difficult to achieve more than gradual improvements of the structural model (Glickmann et al. 1998; Walz et al. 1998; Hölzl et al. 2000). While it is clear that the role of the 19S regulatory complexes is the preparation of substrates for degradation in the 20S core particleinvolving the recognition of ubiquitinated substrates, the removal of the polyubiquitin chains, the unfolding of substrates, and assistance in translocation across the gates of the 20S complexthe precise topology and role of the 19S subunits is hitherto only dimly understood (Zwickl et al. 1999).
In 1991, we found, in a serendipitous manner, a novel ATPase complex. During the lysis of accidentally heat-shocked Pyridictium cells on electron microscopy grids, a massive release of toroidal particles composed of the stacked octameric rings was observed (Phipps et al. 1991a). Not only the shape, but also the heat-shock induction of this complex were reminiscent of the GroEL/Hsp60 family, and therefore raised the possibility that it represented an archaeal chaperonin. Subsequently, we named it "thermosome" to highlight its heat induction and extreme thermostability (Phipps et al. 1993). Independently, a closely related complex (TF55) was discovered in the laboratory of Art Horwich in Yale (Trent et al. 1991). The thermosome or TF55 were the first representatives of the Group II chaperonins found in archaea and in the eukaryotic cytosol. The main structural feature distinguishing the Group II from the Group I chaperonins is, in the absence of a co-chaperonin, a built-in lid provided by the protrusions of the apical domains which can seal the folding chamber by an iris-type closure mechanism (Klumpp et al. 1997; Gutsche et al. 1999).
In 1996, in our quest for a more comprehensive understanding of the protein quality control machinery in Thermoplasma we found a fascinating, large proteolytic complex that works in conjunction with an array of aminopeptidases (Tamura et al. 1996). In view of the shape of the hexamer, we named it "tricorn protease"; soon thereafter we were able to show that tricorn protease exists in the cell as a giant icosahedral complex of approximately 15 MDa, which in addition to its peptide-cleaving activity, appears to serve as an organizing center for the more downstream elements of the protein degradation pathway (Walz et al. 1997). Tricorn protease converts the oligo-peptides (typically about 8 amino acid residues) released by the proteasome into smaller (24 residue) peptides which are degraded further by aminopeptidases (Tamura et al. 1998). These findings stimulated the search for "functional homologs" of tricorn protease in eukaryotic cells; one of the candidates is tripeptidylpeptidase (TPP) II, another giant protein complex with an intriguing structure (Geier et al. 1999; Rockel et al. 2002).
In 2000, we completed the sequencing of the genome of Thermoplasma acidophilum, an endeavor we had undertaken with modest resources (Ruepp et al. 2000). It not only served to further establish Thermoplasma as a model system for studying cellular protein quality control, it also provided the platform for a very ambitious project, namely the mapping of its cellular proteome by cryoelectron tomography; this, in turn, can be expected to shed new light on the pathways of intracellular protein quality control (Fig. 5
).
|
| The latest frontier: Charting molecular landscapes inside cells by cryoelectron tomography |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The key problem in electron tomography, which for many years was a formidable obstacle and a deterrent, is to reconcile two requirements that are in conflict with each other: To obtain a reconstruction that is detailed and largely undistorted, one has to collect data over as wide a tilt range as possible with increments as small as possible (for review, see Baumeister et al. 1999). At the same time, the electron dose must be minimized. Above a critical dose, the specimen undergoes structural degradation that, in the worst case, can render a reconstruction meaningless. In principle, one could fractionate the dose over as many projections as an optimized tilt geometry might require. However, there is a practical limitation; the signal-to-noise ratio of the 2-D images has to be sufficient to permit their accurate alignment by cross-correlation. This problem is further aggravated by the far-from-perfect mechanical accuracy of the tilting devices that causes image shifts and changes of focus. Therefore, following each change of tilt angle, the specimen (or its image) has to be realigned and refocused. Doing this manually and with minimal exposure to the electron beam is utterly impossible.
In the late 1980s when computer-controlled electron microscopes and large-area charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras became available, we saw an opportunity to automate tomographic data acquisition (Typke 1991; Dierksen et al. 1992, 1995; Koster et al. 1992). This made the recording of data sets not only less cumbersome, but first and foremost it allowed the cumulative electron dose to be kept within tolerable limits. The fraction of the dose that is spent on overhead (search, recentering, [auto-]focusing) can be kept as low as 3% of the total dose; in other words, almost all electrons are used for gaining information (Koster et al. 1997). As is evident from the recent resurgence, this has changed the perspectives of electron tomography in a most profound manner; electron tomography had been used from time to time for ultrastructural studies, mostly of plastic embedded biological material, but it has gathered momentum only recently.
As demonstrated originally with "phantom cells," that is, lipid vesicles encapsulating specific sets of macromolecules, automated tomography in a "low-dose mode" has enabled us to combine the potential of 3-D imaging with the best possible preservation of biological samples, that is, embedded in vitreous ice (Dierksen et al. 1995; Grimm et al. 1997). Vitrification by rapid freezing ensures not only a close-to-life preservation of molecular and cellular structures, but it also allows the capture of dynamic events (Dubochet et al. 1988). It avoids the risks of artifacts traditionally associated with chemical fixation and staining or with the dehydration of cellular structures. Equally important, tomograms of frozen-hydrated structures represent their natural density distribution, whereas staining reactions tend to produce intricate mixtures of positive and negative staining. As a consequence the interpretation of such tomograms in molecular terms may be very problematic if not impossible (Baumeister 2002).
With the use of automated procedures and user-friendly software, meanwhile, the recording of tilt series and their processing has become routine. It is in fact now less cumbersome and less time-consuming to obtain a cryotomogram than going through the conventional procedures of plastic embedding and sectioning the material. With smaller structures (e.g., bacteriophages docked onto proteoliposomes) a resolution of 2.5 nm has been obtained (Böhm et al. 2001). With whole prokaryotic cells or thin eukaryotic cells grown directly on EM grids, resolution is usually in the range of 45 nm, but prospects for further improvements are good (Plitzko et al. 2002). Better detectors, in particular, will allow a finer 3-D sampling, which, in turn, will improve resolution (see above) and allow tomography to enter the realm of molecular resolution (23 nm).
Even at the present practical level of resolution, cryotomograms of organelles or cells contain an imposing amount of information. They are, essentially, 3-D images of entire proteomes, and they should ultimately enable us to map the spatial relationships of the full complement of macromolecules in an unperturbed cellular context; however, new strategies and innovative image analysis techniques are needed for "mining" this information. Retrieving it is confronted with two major problems: Cryotomograms are "contaminated" by residual noise, and they are distorted by missing datain spite of optimized image acquisition schemes. Moreover, the cytoplasm of most cells is densely packed ("crowded") with molecules literally touching each other. It is therefore often impossible to perform a segmentation and to extract features, based on visual inspection of the tomograms. Denoising procedures (Frangakis and Hegerl 2001) can facilitate the visualization of features, but advanced pattern recognition techniques are needed for detecting and identifying specific macromolecules by their respective structural signatures.
The most powerful method for improving the signal-to-noise ratio is averaging. Although averaging can obviously not be applied to tomograms of pleomorphic structures in a first instance, such tomograms may nevertheless contain repetitive elements which can be extracted in silico, and the subtomograms containing them can be subjected to classification and averaging. These averages can be used subsequently for replacing the original data in the tomograms, resulting in "synthetic" tomograms with a locally improved signal-to-noise ratio. This strategy was used, for example, to obtain a density map of whole Herpes simplex virions (Grünewald et al. 2003).
In spite of the low signal-to-noise ratio of tomograms, continuous structures such as membranes of cytoskeletal filaments are easy to recognize. Cryotomograms of Dictyostelium discoideum cells grown directly on carbon support films have provided unprecedented insights into the organization of actin filaments in an unperturbed cellular environment (Medalia et al. 2002). The tomograms show, on the level of individual filaments, their modes of interaction (isotropic networks, bundles, etc.), they allow us to determine the branching angles precisely (in 3-D), and they reveal the structure of membrane attachment sites. For the quantitative analysis of large data sets, as is needed for extracting statistically significant quantitative data, it will be necessary to develop algorithms for automated segmentation, to establish connectivity of filaments in noisy data setsa notoriously difficult problemand measure structural parameters of filaments (Fig. 6A
).
|
Alternatively, one could envisage strategies for introducing electron-dense labels marking the spatial distribution of the molecules of interest. Such an approach, however, would no longer be noninvasiveunless it is based entirely on genetic manipulationsand it would be difficult, if not impossible, to achieve quantitative detection. Moreover, it is hard to imagine how this approach could be parallelized such that it becomes a high-throughput technology capable of mapping entire proteomes. For every molecule of interest it would be necessary to repeat the whole procedure, the labeling of cells, the recording of tilt series, and the tomographic reconstruction. Even if this could be accomplished, it would be a daunting challenge to interrelate the individual maps and to reveal the structure of molecular networks, owing to the stochastic nature of cellular supramolecular architecture. Therefore, there is a strong incentive to exploit the information content of cryotomograms by means of intelligent pattern recognition algorithms. With this approach, a tomogram needs to be produced only once, and it is then interpreted in a sequential manner in terms of its molecular architecture. The strategy we are pursuing is "template matching" (Böhm et al. 2000; Frangakis et al. 2002). Provided that high- or medium-resolution structures of the macromolecules of interest are available, they can be used for a systematic interrogation of the tomograms (Fig. 7
). Image simulations have shown that template matching is indeed a feasible approach for identifying macromolecules in "noisy" tomograms. Experimental studies with "phantom cells", i.e., lipid vesicles encapsulating known sets of proteins provide a means of validating the results of the template matching (Fig. 8
). At the present resolution of 45 nm, only very large complexes (ribosomes, 26S proteasomes) can be mapped with high fidelity (>95%); an improvement in resolution to 2 nm will allow the mapping of medium-sized complexes (~200400 kDa, depending on shape). While tomograms with a resolution of 2 nm are a realistic prospect, major technical innovations will be required to go beyond.
|
|
With cryoelectron tomography providing 3-D images at molecular resolution of cells in a close-to-life state, and with the availability of image analysis tools for interpreting the tomograms, we are poised now to integrate structural information gathered at multiple levelsfrom atoms to cellsinto pseudoatomic maps of organelles or cells. The move from proteomics parts lists to precise maps of supramolecular landscapes will provide unprecedented insights into the network structures that underlie higher cellular functions and the structural principles that orchestrate them.
| Epilogue |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The work I have described in this essay would not have been accomplished without the support and the great efforts of many coworkers and colleagues. I have been fortunate to work with generations of talented and motivated students and postdoctoral fellows and I greatly enjoyed the collaboration with fine colleagues, with several of them over long periods of time to this day. I mentioned a few of them in the main text, but for the sake of the space it was impossible to acknowledge them all; the names of most of them appear as coauthors in the list of references. I wish to thank them all. Finally, I had the privilege to work in environments that were very supportive and allowed me to undertake the projects I liked to do, irrespective of the chances of success.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Arrigo, A.P., Tanaka, K., Goldberg, A.L., and Welch, W.J. 1988. Identity of the 19S "prosome" particle with the large multifunctional protease complex of mammalian cells (the proteasome). Nature 331: 192194.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baldwin, J.M., Henderson, R., Beckman, E., and Zemlin, F. 1988. Images of purple membrane at 2.8 Å resolution obtained by cryo-electron microscopy. J. Mol. Biol. 202: 585591.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W. 1978. Biological horizons in molecular microscopy. Eur. J. Cell Biol. 17: 246297.
. 2002. Electron tomography: Towards visualizing the molecular organization of the cytoplasm. Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 12: 679684.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W. and Hahn, M. 1972. Electron microscopy of thorium atoms in monomolecular layers. Nature 241: 445447.[CrossRef]
. 1975. Relevance of three-dimensional reconstructions of stain distributions for structural analysis of biomolecules. Hoppe-Seylers Z. Physiol. Chem. 356: 13131316.[Medline]
Baumeister, W. and Kübler, O. 1978. Topographic study of the cell surface of Micrococcus radiodurans. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 75: 55255528.
Baumeister, W. and Lembcke, G. 1992. Structural features of archaebacterial cell envelopes. J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. 24: 567575.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W. and Vogell, W. 1980. Electron microscopy at molecular dimensions. Springer Verlag, Berlin.
Baumeister, W., Fringeli, U.P., Hahn, M., Kopp, F., and Seredynski, J. 1976. Radiation-damage in tripalmitin layers studied by means of infrared spectroscopy and electron-microscopy. Biophys. J. 16: 791810.
Baumeister, W., Kübler, O., and Zingsheim, H.P. 1981. The structure of the cell envelope of Micrococcus radiodurans as revealed by metal shadowing and decoration. J. Ultrastruct. Res. 75: 6071.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W., Karrenberg, F., Rachel, R., Engel, A., Ten Heggeler, B., and Saxton, W.O. 1982. The major cell envelope protein of Micrococcus radiodurans (R1): structural and chemical characterization. Eur. J. Biochem. 725: 535544.
Baumeister, W., Barth, M., Hegerl, R., Guckenberger, R., Hahn, M., and Saxton, W.O. 1986. Three-dimensional structure of the regular surface layer (HPI-layer) of Deinococcus radiodurans. Appendix: W.O. Saxton and W. Baumeister: Principles of organization in S layers. J. Mol. Biol. 187: 241253.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W., Wildhaber, I., and Engelhardt, H. 1988. Bacterial surface proteins. Some structural, functional and evolutionary aspects. Biophys. Chem. 29: 3949.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W., Walz, J., Zühl, F., and Seemüller, E. 1998. The proteasome: Paradigm of a self-compartmentalizing protease. Cell 92: 367380.[CrossRef][Medline]
Baumeister, W., Grimm, R., and Walz, J. 1999. Electron tomography of molecules and cells. Trends Cell Biol. 9: 8185.[CrossRef][Medline]
Böhm, J., Frangakis, A., Hegerl, R., Nickell, S., Typke, D., and Baumeister, W. 2000. Toward detecting and identifying macromolecules in a cellular context: Template matching applied to electron tomograms. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 97: 1424514250.
Böhm, J., Lambert, O., Frangakis, A., Letellier, L., Baumeister, W., and Rigaud, J.L. 2001. FhuA-mediated phage genome transfer into liposomes: A cryo-electron tomography study. Curr. Biol. 11: 11681175.[CrossRef][Medline]
Brannigan, J.A., Dodson, G., Duggleby, H.J., Moody, P.C.E., Smith, J.L., Tomchick, D.R., and Murzin, A.G. 1995. A protein catalytic framework with an N-terminal nucleophile is capable of self-activation. Nature 378: 416419.[CrossRef][Medline]
Carragher, B., Fellmann, D., Guerra, F., Milligan, R.A., Mouche, F., Pulokas, J., Sheehan, B., Quispe, J., Suloway, C., Zhu, Y., et al. 2004. Rapid routine structure determination of macromolecular assemblies using electron microscopy: Current progress and further challenges. J. Synchrotron Radiat. 11: 8385.[CrossRef][Medline]
Dahlmann, B., Kopp, F., Kuehn, L., Niedel, B., Pfeifer, G., Hegerl, R., and Baumeister, W. 1989. The multicatalytic proteinase (prosome) is ubiquitous from eukaryotes to archaebacteria. FEBS Lett. 251: 125131.[CrossRef][Medline]
De Rosier, D.J. and Klug, A. 1968. Reconstruction of three dimensional structures from electron micrographs. Nature 217: 130134.[CrossRef]
. 1972. Structure of the tubular variants of the head of bacteriophage T4 (polyheads). J. Mol. Biol. 65: 469488.[CrossRef][Medline]
Deisenhofer, J. and Michel, H. 1989. The photosynthetic reaction center from the purple bacterium rhodopseudomonas viridis (Nobel lecture). Angew. Chemie 28: 872892.
Dierksen, K., Typke, D., Hegerl, R., Koster, A.J., and Baumeister, W. 1992. Towards automatic electron tomography. Ultramicroscopy 40: 7187.[CrossRef]
Dierksen, K., Typke, D., Hegerl, R., Walz, J., Sackmann, E., and Baumeister, W. 1995. Three-dimensional structure of lipid vesicles embedded in vitreous ice and investigated by automated electron tomography. Biophys. J. 68: 14161422.
Dodson, G. and Wlodawer, A. 1998. Catalytic triads and their relatives. Trends Biochem. Sci. 23: 347352.[CrossRef][Medline]
Driscoll, J. and Goldberg, A.L. 1990. The proteasome (multicatalytic protease) is a component of the 1500 kDa proteolytic complex which degrades ubiquitin-conjugated proteins. J. Biol. Chem. 265: 47894792.
Dubochet, J., Adrian, M., Chang, J.J., Homo, J.C., Lepault, J., McDowall, A.W., and Schulz, P. 1988. Cryo-electron microscopy of vitrified specimens. Q. Rev. Biophys. 21: 129228.[Medline]
Engel, A., Baumeister, W., and Saxton, W.O. 1982. Mass mapping of a protein complex with the scanning transmission electron microscope. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 79: 40504054.
Engel, A.M., Cejka, Z., Lupas, A., Lottspeich, F., and Baumeister, W. 1992. Isolation and cloning of Omp
, a coiled-coil protein spanning the periplasmic space of the ancestral eubacterium Thermotoga maritima. EMBO J. 11: 43694378.[Medline]
Engelhardt, H. and Peters, J. 1998. Structural research on surface layers: A focus on stability, surface layer homology domains, and surface layer-cell wall interactions. J. Struct. Biol. 124: 276302.[CrossRef][Medline]
Eytan, E., Ganoth, D., Armon, T., and Hershko, A. 1989. ATP-dependent incorporation of 20S protease into the 26S complex that degrades proteins conjugated to ubiquitin. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 86: 77517755.
Falkenburg, P.E., Haass, C., Kloetzel, P.M., Niedel, B., Kopp, F., Kuehn, L., and Dahlmann, B. 1988. Drosophila small cytoplasmic 19S ribonucleoprotein is homologous to the rat multicatalytic proteinase. Nature 331: 190192.[CrossRef][Medline]
Feynman, R.P. 1998. The meaning of it all. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA.
Frangakis, A. and Hegerl, R. 2001. Noise reduction in electron tomographic reconstructions using nonlinear anisotropic diffusion. J. Struct. Biol. 135: 239250.[CrossRef][Medline]
Frangakis, A., Böhm, J., Förster, F., Nickell, S., Nicastro, D., Typke, D., Hegerl, R., and Baumeister, W. 2002. Identification of macromolecular complexes in cryoelectron tomograms of phantom cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 99: 1415314158.
Frank, J. 2002. Single-particle imaging of macromolecules by cryo-electron microscopy. Annu. Rev. Biomol. Struct. 31: 303319.[CrossRef][Medline]
Geier, E., Pfeifer, G., Wilm, M., Lucchiari-Hartz, M., Baumeister, W., Eichmann, K., and Niedermann, G. 1999. A giant protease with potential to substitute for some functions of the proteasome. Science 283: 978981.
Glickman, M.H., Rubin, D.M., Coux, O., Wefes, I., Pfeifer, G., Cejka, Z., Baumeister, W., Fried, V.A., and Finley, D. 1998. A subcomplex of the proteasome regulatory particle required for ubiquitin-conjugate degradation and related to the COP9-signalosome and elF3. Cell 94: 615623.[CrossRef][Medline]
Grimm, R., Bärmann, M., Häckl, W., Typke, D., Sackmann, E., and Baumeister, W. 1997. Energy filtered electron tomography of ice-embedded actin and vesicles. Biophys. J. 72: 482489.
Grünewald, K., Desai, P., Winkler, D.C., Heymann, J.B., Belnap, D.M., Baumeister, W., and Steven, A.C. 2003. Three-dimensional structure of Herpes simplex virus from cryo-electron tomography. Science 302: 13961398.
Grziwa, A., Baumeister, W., Dahlmann, B., and Kopp, F. 1991. Localization of subunits in proteasomes from Thermoplasma acidophilum by immunoelectron microscopy. FEBS Lett. 290: 186190.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gutsche, I., Essen, L.-O., and Baumeister. W. 1999. Group II chaperonins: New TRiC(k)s and turns of a protein folding machine. J. Mol. Biol. 293: 295312.[CrossRef][Medline]
Haass, C. and Kloetzel, P.M. 1989. The Drosophila proteasome undergoes changes in its subunit pattern during development. Exp. Cell Res. 180: 243252.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hahn, M., Seredynski, J., and Baumeister, W. 1976. Inactivation of catalase monolayers by irradiation with 100 keV electrons. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 73: 823827.
Hart, R.G. 1968. Electron microscopy of unstained biological material: The polytropic montage. Science 159: 14641467.
Hase, J., Kobashi, K., Nakai, N., Mitsui, K., Iwata, K., and Takadera, T. 1980. The quaternary structure of carp muscle alkaline protease. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 611: 205213.[Medline]
Hegerl, R., Pfeifer, G., Pühler, G., Dahlmann, B., and Baumeister, W. 1991. The three-dimensional structure of proteasomes from Thermoplasma acidophilum as determined by electron microscopy using random conical tilting. FEBS Lett. 283: 117121.[CrossRef][Medline]
Henderson, R. and Unwin, P.N.T. 1975. Three-dimensional model of purple membrane obtained by electron microscopy. Nature 257: 2832.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hershko, A. and Ciechanover, A. 1998. The ubiquitin system. Ann. Rev. Biochem. 67: 425479.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hölzl, H., Kapelari, B., Kellermann, J., Seemüller, E., Sümegi, M., Udvardy, A., Medalia, O., Sperling, J., Müller, J.A., Engel, A., et al. 2000. The regulatory complex of Drosophila melangolaster 26S proteasomes: Subunit composition and localization of a deubiquitylating enzyme. J. Cell Biol. 150: 119129.
Hoppe, W. 1978. Three-dimensional electron microscopy of individual structures: Crystallography of "crystals" consisting of a single unit cell. Chem. Scripta 79: 227243.
. 1983. Electron diffraction with the transmission electron microscope as a phase-determining diffractometerFrom spatial frequency filtering to the three-dimensional structure analysis of ribosomes. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 22: 456485.[CrossRef]
Hoppe, W., Gassmann, J., Hunsmann, N., Schramm, H.J., and Sturm, M. 1974. Three-dimensional reconstruction of individual negatively stained yeast fatty-acid synthetase molecules from tilt series in the electron microscope. H.-S. Z. Physiol. Chem. 355: 14831487.
. 1975. Comments on the paper "Relevance of three-dimensional reconstructions of stain distributions for structural analysis of biomolecules." Hoppe-Seylers Z. Physiol. Chem. 356: 13171320.[Medline]
Jap, B., Pühler, G., Lücke, H., Typke, D., Löwe, J., Stock, D., Huber, R., and Baumeister, W. 1993. Preliminary x-ray crystallography study of the proteasome from Thermoplasma acidophilum. J. Mol. Biol. 234: 881884.[CrossRef][Medline]