WELCOME TO CRI

QUICKLINKS

Faculty

picture of Hartmut  Luecke

Hartmut Luecke

Molecular Biology & Biochemistry
School of Biological Sciences

Physiology & Biophysics, School of Medicine

Phone: (949) 824-1605

Email: hudel@uci.edu

bass.bio.uci.edu/hudel/

http://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=3283

Hartmut Luecke

Dr. Luecke is studying an essential memebrane protein of Helicobacter pylori. Infection of the gastric mucosa by Helicobacter pylori remains a worldwide problem and contributes to peptic ulcer disease and gastric cancer. Without active intervention, at least 20% of the population of developed countries will continue to be infected by this gastric pathogen. Eradication of the organism would contribute to prevention of disease. Current eradication requires triple therapy, a proton-pump inhibitor and two antibiotics given twice a day for 10 to 14 days. Resistance to either clarithromycin or metronidazole is >20% and rising. No monotherapy is effective. Gastric infection by H. pylori depends on the expression of a channel unique to this pathogen, UreI. UreI is a proton-gated urea channel necessary for rapid access of urea to intrabacterial urease, essential for maintaining the periplasm at pH 6.1 in the acidic environment of the stomach, as low as pH 2.5, thus allowing colonization of the stomach. Expression of the channel is increased in the stomach. The channel has 193 residues with six transmembrane segments and three periplasmic regions. Mutagenesis studies have shown that the proton gating of UreI is regulated by hydrogen bonding between histidines and carboxylic acid residues in these three periplasmic regions. Obtaining a high-resolution 3-dimensional structure of this channel is the major goal of this work. This will enable understanding of the unique proton-gating mechanism of this protein and will provide a structure to which inhibitors, some of which have been discovered already, can be docked and their structure-activity relationship identified. Inhibition of this channel would be expected to result in specific and effective monotherapy for eradication of the organism and usher in an era of test and treat, rather than only treating symptomatic patients. This would provide a preventive approach to serious upper gastro-intestinal diseases, particularly gastric cancer.

Selected Publications:

Vogeley, L., Sineshchekov, O. A., Trivedi, V. D., Sasaki, J., Spudich, J. L., and Luecke, H. (2004). Anabaena sensory rhodopsin: a photochromic color sensor at 2.0 A. Science 306(5700), 1390-3.

Rosengarth, A., and Luecke, H. (2004). Annexin A2 Does it induce membrane aggregation by a new multimeric state of the protein? Annexins 1(2), 129-136.

Pathuri, P., Nguyen, E. T., Svard, S. G., and Luecke, H. (2007). Apo and calcium-bound crystal structures of Alpha-11 giardin, an unusual annexin from Giardia lamblia. J Mol Biol 368(2), 493-508.

Stagno, J., Aphasizheva, I., Aphasizhev, R., and Luecke, H. (2007). Dual role of the RNA substrate in selectivity and catalysis by terminal uridylyl transferases. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104(37), 14634-9.

Wang, Y., Rosengarth, A., and Luecke, H. (2007). Structure of the human p53 core domain in the absence of DNA. Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 63(Pt 3), 276-81.

 

Cancer Research Institute
Irvine, CA