Lukas Winter
Johannes Kepler University of Linz
4 Papers
Lukas Winter is an academic researcher from Johannes Kepler University of Linz. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Translocon. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
YidC and SecYEG form a heterotetrameric protein translocation channel.
Ilie Sachelaru,Lukas Winter,Denis G. Knyazev,Mirjam Zimmermann,Andreas Vogt,Roland Kuttner,Nicole Ollinger,Christine Siligan,Peter Pohl,Hans-Georg Koch +9 more
TL;DR: YidC contacts the interior of the SecY channel resulting in a ligand-activated and voltage-dependent complex with distinct ion channel characteristics, and changing the surface charge of the pore by incorporating YidC into the channel wall increases the anion selectivity, and the accompanying change in wall hydrophobicity is liable to alter the partition of helices from the pores into the membrane.
The bacterial translocon SecYEG opens upon ribosome binding.
Denis G. Knyazev,Alexander Lents,Eberhard Krause,Nicole Ollinger,Christine Siligan,Daniel Papinski,Lukas Winter,Andreas Horner,Peter Pohl +8 more
TL;DR: It is shown that ribosome binding to the resting SecYEG channel triggers this conformational transition, which opens the channel to form a large ion-conducting channel, which has the conductivity of the plug deletion mutant.
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Tuning membrane protein mobility by confinement into nanodomains
Andreas Karner,Benedikt Nimmervoll,Birgit Plochberger,Enrico Klotzsch,Andreas Horner,Denis G. Knyazev,Roland Kuttner,Klemens Winkler,Lukas Winter,Christine Siligan,Nicole Ollinger,Peter Pohl,Johannes Preiner +12 more
TL;DR: It is shown that streptavidin crystals grown on mica-supported lipid bilayers can be used as porous supports for membranes containing biotinylated lipids and used to tune the lateral mobility of transmembrane proteins to any value within the dynamic range accessible to HS-AFM imaging.
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Ion conductivity of the bacterial translocation channel SecYEG engaged in translocation.
TL;DR: Voltage minimizes the ion leak that is induced by stalling a translocation intermediate and preservation of the proton motif force is due to a voltage-driven conformational change.
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